THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tuesday March 1, 1988
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.107 (USPS 650-640)
Klansmen invited to free speech forum
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
After two Ku Klux Klan visits to campus were canceled last week, a student organization spokesman said yesterday that the organization was sponsoring a forum on free speech that would bring the Klan to campus.
The spokesman, Michael Foubert,
Lawrence graduate student and director of
Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, said
yesterday that he was putting together a
forum on free speech, which would be held
Monday at 8 in n woodruff Auditorium.
"Part of being educated is being able to make a choice. In a university, you make choices." Fourbert said. "Choices lead to the education of the human being. We are
offering the students and University community the different sides of a particular issue."
Foubert said that the idea for the forum originated with the recent issues involving free speech on campus.
Two members of the Missouri Knights, a Klan affiliate, were scheduled to appear on JKHK's JayTalk 91 and in a journalism class two weeks ago. Both campus visits were canceled by the faculty involved and moved to off-campus locations.
The forum would be in a question and answer format, with Diana Prentice, instructor in communications, moderating the discussion. Foubert said.
Foubert said that the confirmed participants in the two-hour forum included two or three members of the Knights and Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism.
Foubert said that he was attempting to get another journalism professor, a political science professor and representatives from the black community to participate in the forum.
Rev. Leo Barbee, president of Ecumenical Fellowship, said that he had been contacted by Foubert but that he would not participate in the forum.
"There is no difference between what happened last week and this. They're just the same."
Barbee said that he would review the
situation before deciding how to respond to it.
"I think if you don't allow someone to speak, you diminish everyone's freedom of speech." Frederickson said.
redrickson said that he didn't know how people would react to the Klan's participating in the forum but hoped people would learn it and speak and then react to what they had said.
J. Allen Moran, exalted cyclops for the Missouri Knights and a possible participant in the forum, said yesterday that the forum was a step in the right direction.
"A torum atmosphere is nice, but we would like for once to address the entire student body." Moran said.
Moran, who said he planned to file a lawsuit this week against the University of Kansas for violating his right to free speech, said that Tom Robb, the Klan's national pastor, was traveling from Arkansas to participate in the forum.
Foubert said that he planned to limit the Khan to two representatives because he wanted them to be more involved.
Legislators seek to make paying for college easier
"There is a broader question if all sides participate. This is an opportunity for intellectual and rational communication," Foubert said.
See KLAN, p. 10, col. 4
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
In response to decreased educational budgets and increased college expenses, state legislators have introduced two separate bills designed to boost endowment funds and encourage parents to plan for their children's future.
Because contributions to colleges and universities have declined since the stock market decline in October, one legislator wants to make donations to state colleges and universities more attractive to contributors.
State Rep. James Lowther, R- Emporia, introduced a bill in the House of Representatives that would give income tax credit for contributions to postsecondary educational institutions.
Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association, said the bill would encourage more contributions to the University.
"I think it would be a positive thing. Other states have passed similar laws that have been very beneficial," he said. "It would be an additional benefit to contributors."
In addition to encouraging individuals to give money to universities, some legislators have come up with a plan to help parents save money for their children's education.
State Rep. Elaine Hassler, R-
Abilene, and State Rep. Rick Bowden, D-Goddard, are sponsoring a bill that would create the Kansas educational savings plan trust.
The trust would be a way for parents to start saving money for their children's education. Parents would not be the only ones who could invest in the trust. Companies, corporations and others who are interested in the trust could invest or donate to the trust.
Other legislative news p.3.
Both Hassler and Bowden agreed that the bill was created in response to the increased costs of college and the difficulty that middle-income families have in obtaining financial aid from other sources.
Under the bill, investors can purchase agreements with the trust and deposit funds into the trust which would earn interest. When the child is ready to enter college, a parent can withdraw money for tuition and other expenses.
the money from the trust plan could be used at any two- or four-year college or university in the state. Hassler said the bill might be amended to include trade or vocational schools.
Hassler said, "It is getting harder and harder, year after year, for parents as college expenses keep rising. We hope this would help parents plan for their children's education."
The trust would be administered by a seven-member board of directors, which would operate the trust much like a bank. The board would include one member each from the Board of Regents, the State Department of Education, Independent Colleges, the Associated Students of Kansas, the Kansas Public Employee Retirement System and two members from the general public.
Jane Hutchinson, KU director of ASK, asked ASK support the bill.
"Any plan that would encourage parents to plan ahead for their children's education has our support," she said.
Hutchinson said that there has been a significant problem with financial aid and that the KU financial aid office couldn't possibly handle all the requests.
Families whose incomes fall in the $25,000-$50,000 bracket find it very difficult to receive any type of aid.
"Families who might have three or four children to put through college and fall into that income bracket often fall through the cracks," she said.
Tutu arrested during protest
The Associated Press
Members of a procession Tutu and his colleagues had led recited the Lord's Prayer as police sprayed them with with jets of water and loaded them into vans.
CAPE TOWN, South Africa - Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu and other religious leaders from all races were arrested yesterday while kneeling near Parliament with a petition against government bans on anti-apartheid groups.
All of the detainees were freed within a few hours, and the churchmen said they would continue protests regardless of the consequences. Their petition referred to an order last Wednesday that prohited political activity by 18 major anti-partheid organizations.
Riot police blocked Tutu and two dozen other clergymen as they tried
to march toward Parliament from nearby St. George's Cathedral, the main Anglican church in central Cape Town.
They knelt and linked arms as a policeman called through a bullhorn that the gathering was illegal. Officers escorted the protesters into vans as others aimed jets from water cannons at scores of protesters who remained on the sidewalk praying and singing an African hymn.
After being told at a police station that charges might be filed later, the white, black, mixed-race and Indian clergymen were freed. The held a news conference at St. George's, which was surrounded by policemen.
"We are not defying the law," said Tutu, the black opponent of apartheid who won the 1884 Nobel Peace Prize. "We are obeying God. We also obey God every day."
The Rev. Allan Boesak, mixed
race president of the World Allice of Reformed Churches, said the white authorities would view the protest as "an act of subversion."
"We told the South African government that we had decided we would obedient to God," he said. "That is a higher law to us."
In the petition addressed to President P.W. Botha and Parliamen, the churchmen said in part, "No matter the consequences, we will explore every possible avenue for continuing the activities which you have prohibited other bodies from taking."
State Department spokesman Phyllis Oakley said in Washington that the United States condemned "the forceful repression of peaceful demonstrators. By criminalizing and suppressing the exercise of basic political and human rights, the South African government is shutting off avenues for non-violent change."
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Catching ravs
Marla Rose, Wilmette, Ill., junior, basks in the sun in front of the Kansas Union while she waits for a bus. KU Weather Service is predicting mostly sunny skies and a high of 64 today but a 40 percent chance of rain tonight.
Parking board recommends changes
Plan would alter restrictions on visitors, residence halls
Ry Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
KU's parking board has recommended limiting visitor parking privileges to increase the use of new metered parking areas, Ray Moore, chairman of the parking board, said yesterday.
The recommendation includes other changes, such as restricting parking at Joseph R. Pearson Hall to residents only and allowing non-restricted parking at residence hall lots after 5 p.m. Friday instead of noon Saturday.
"The board's philosophy on the recommendation is that parking is quite an expense on campus, and it's not fair to students and faculty to subsidize visitor parking," Moore said.
If the recommendation is approved, it would eliminate the privilege allowing visitors two free parking tickets each year.
The proposal would provide visitor courtesy permits for no more than three hours. Visitors staying longer than that would be charged $1 from 7
a.m. to 1 p.m., $1 from noon to 5 p.m.,
or $2 for the day
"We need to get long-term visitors out of the stickered spaces and into metered spaces. We want them contributing either by pre-paying for a pass or by paying a quarter an hour. It's not right to have metered spaces empty," he said.
Moore said, "If we keep the same freebie parking for visitors, there will be no incentive for visitors to park at the long-term meters provided for their use.
Moore said the meters behind the Kansas Union would not be used by long-term visitors if the University continued to allow free guest parking.
Visitors would park at long-term meters only.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking, said the office had received complaints about the parking lots behind the Union and south of Robinson Center.
Half- and full-day passes for visitors would be good only at metered spaces.
" Their biggest concern is that they are parking in the back of the zoned
parking and are walking past empty metered stalls," she said. "There are still plenty of spaces, they are just being moved farther away.
"Hopefully, next year that will correct itself," Hutine said.
The plan was presented during the University Senate Executive Committee meeting Wednesday but faces several other hurdles before it can be implemented.
The change would raise more than $220,000 for fiscal year 1989, Moore said.
On Thursday, Moore will present the plan to the University Council. If adopted, the recommendation would face a public hearing sometime in April, where the public can express reservations or support of the plan.
It then must be approved by the executive vice chancellor and chancellor before it goes on to the Board of Regents for final approval.
Moore said, "If a viable objection is raised at any one of those steps, the recommendation would be struck for this year.
"Even if everything works with the timeline, the board will not implement changes until the beginning of
the next academic year," he said.
The plan would also change a privilege allowing visitors to park in residence hall lots for one hour during weekdays.
"The residence halls said they don't want to have hall monitors vouch for valid guests at the hall," Moore said.
The status of the JRP parking lot would be changed from use by all students with a residence hall pass to JRP use only.
"Last fall, we ran into a problem with parking at JRP," Moore said. "If a JRP resident left in the evening, there wouldn't be a spot for him to park. Residents were parking way down the hill because students from other halls were using JRP as a commuter lot."
Originally, in conjunction with other residence halls, JRP requested an all-dorm permit, so that residents of one hall could park in other residence hall lots, Hutline said.
"Because JRP was the closest lot to campus, it became evident that there would be a problem for the residents," she said.
Supreme Court agrees to hear drug test case
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday set the stage for its first ruling on mandatory drug testing, agreeing to decide whether the U.S. Customs Service can force applicants for drug-enforcement jobs to be tested.
The testing is defended by the Reagan administration as a necessary step in fighting drug smuggling.
Arguments in the case will be bared in the fall, and decision is likely.
The court said it would hear a challenge by a federal workers union that denounces the taking of urine samples from employees as a humiliating invasion of privacy.
The outcome will affect directly only those drug tests conducted by federal, state or local governments, not those by industry.
The National Treasury Employees Union, which is challenging the policy, welcomed the high court's action.
Union President Robert M. Tobias said the court's ruling would clear up "a legal and moral morass . . . and, we hope, destroy Reagan's plans for
wholesale testing of the federal work force."
The justices will review a ruling by the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court that the Customs Service tests are lawful.
The appeaes court said the tests might be considered searches but did not intrude unnecessarily on the privacy rights of workers.
The tests require workers to provide urine samples in restroom stalls as a person overseeing the procedure waits outside the stall.
The tests are given to those in the Customs Service applying for promotion to drug-enforcement jobs and to outside applicants for those jobs.
Government lawyers said the tests were important now because the Customs Services planned to recruit some 3,000 new employees, including many in the 18-25 age range, in which use of illegal drugs is most prevalent.
The tests were halted in 1986 after a federal trial judge ruled them unconstitutional and ordered them stopped.
---
But after the 5th Circuit court overruled the judge, the Supreme Court permitted the tests to resume in May.
2
Tuesday, March 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Solar Encore
HIGH: 64°
LOW: 36°
Sunny today with a gradual increase in clouds by afternoon. High of 64. Tuesday night will be mostly cloudy with a slight chance of showers by daybreak. Low temperature of 36.
KEY
REGIONAL
North Platte 89/27
Partly cloudy
Omaha 51/27
Sunny
Goodland 10/20
Cloudy
Hays 62/31
Partly cloudy
Salina 62/30
Partly cloudy
Topeka 63/32
Partly cloudy
Kansas City 61/31
Sunny
Columbia 55/30
Sunny
St. Louis 53/32
Sunny
Dodge City 66/33
Partly cloudy
Wichita 63/36
Sunny
Chanute 68/34
Sunny
Springfield 61/31
Sunny
Forecast by Edward Levy.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
WED
Showers
50/40
HIGH
LOW
THU
Sunny
44/25
FRI
Partly cloudy
46/26
SAT
Showers
50/32
SUN
Cloudy
48/31
On Campus
A Red Cross blood drive is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union ballroom. The blood drive also is scheduled for tomorrow and Thursday.
The department of design and the School of Fine Arts are sponsoring a public lecture by Richard Mawdsley, professor of art at Southern Illinois University, on his personal work at 10:30 a.m. today in 315 Art and Design Building.
fruit.
■ As part of the dance film series sponsored by the department of music and the School of Fine Arts, "Ballet With Edward Villela" and "Robert Joffrey Ballet" are scheduled at 4 p.m. today in 155 Robinson Center.
A College Assembly meeting is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Alderson Auditorium.
The department of computer science is sponsoring a lecture by Timothy J. Shimeal, University of California-Irvine, at 4:30 p.m. in 300 Strong Hall. Shimeal will speak about "An Empirical Exploration of Error Detection in Software Fault Elimination and Fault Tolerance."
- The seminar "Christian Faith as Simplicity of Lifestyle" is scheduled at 4:30 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 2014 Oread Ave
The topic is "Inward Simplicity; Holy Obedience."
Phi Beta Sigma is sponsoring the seminar "Earn Substantial Monthly Income Through Membership in a Repair Shop." Phi Beta Kappi, Phipi P. Carlor, C.
A nursing club meeting for pre-nursing students is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Gallery West. The topic is "High Tech Pediatric Nursing Care In the Home." All interested students are invited to attend.
■ An Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center workshop titled "Self-Esteem: Taking Care of No. 1." scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Pine Room.
An Amnesty International meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Browsing Room.
A Student Senate town meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Alderson Auditorium. Landlord-tenant issues will be discussed.
A winter concert with the Concert Band and the University Band is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Murphy Hall's Crafton-Freeman Theatre.
A KU Fencing Club meeting is scheduled at 8:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
A telephone wire circuit tester valued at $200 was taken from a hallway in Ellsworth Hall on Thursday. KU police reported.
- Construction equipment valued at $150 was taken from the pedestrian tunnel between the Kansas Union and the Union parking lot Thursday, KU police reported.
- Fixtures in the men's bathroom in the Kansas Union's Jaybowl received $80 damage Saturday, KU police reported.
reported.
The hood of a Kansas State University van received $100 damage while it was parked in the Burge Union parking lot Saturday, KU police reported.
Four hubcaps valued at $100 were taken from a vehicle in Hashinger
Police Reports
Hall parking lot Saturday or Sunday,
KU police reported.
A pistol valued at $376 was taken from a car in the 1600 block of West 15th Street on Feb. 18, Lawrence police reported.
A stereo值班 at $450 was taken from a car in the 1600 block of West 15th Street on Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
Stereo and radio equipment valued together at $1,345 was taken from a car in the 2300 block of Packer Road on Thursday or Friday, Lawrence police reported.
- one windshield of a car parked in the 400 block of North Second Street received $170 damage from vandals Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
- Bicycles, golf clubs and fishing
equipment valued together at $85 were taken from a garage in the 1500 block of West 26th Street on Saturday or Sunday, Lawrence police reported
A VCR, car stereo and cassette tapes valued together at $990 were taken from a truck in the 2300 block of Ridge Court on Sunday, Lawrence police reported.
Correction
Clarification
A vallyball tournament was incorrectly listed in the calendar in Monday's Kansan. The tournament is sponsored by recreation services, 208 Robinson Center. Play begins at 5 p.m. March 5.
A story in yesterday's Kansan about the new Secure Shuttle service might have been misleading. Students who are on campus late at night may call KU's new Secure Shuttle service for a ride home, Secure Shuttle officials said yesterday. When a student calls from any on-campus location, an operator will tell the caller when a shuttle can be expected.
Students also can ride the shuttle from 12 locations on a designated route, including Gammons, 1601 W. 23rd St., Johnny's Up and Under, 401 N. Second St. and the Eldridge House, Seventh and Massachusetts streets
To contact the Secure Shuttle operator, call 864-4644.
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We know you're giving the Big 8 Tournament your best shot. That's why we're offering the Big 8 Rate to KU students. You can reserve a single or double room, for just $49 per night! Just call the Big 800 number and ask for the Big 8 Rate.
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ATTENTION:BLOOD DONORS BLOOD DRIVE
Time: 9 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Place: Kansas Union Ballroom
(Sponsored by the IFC & Panhellenic)
Presented by the University of Kansas Theatre
BEEF
8:00 p.m.
February 26-27 and
March 4-5, 1988
7:30 p.m.
March 3, 1988
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
'A Blockbuster!'
The New York Times
Best Play 1978
American Theatre Critics Association
GETTING OUT
By Marsha Norman
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved For reservations call 913-864-3982 Special discounts for students and senior citizens
Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee A University Arts Festival event
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 1, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Admissions date isn't a problem
State students meet deadline
By Rebecca I. Cisek
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
The April 1 admissions deadline to the University of Kansas for state residents doesn't seem to be causing a problem for high school students.
Counselors at three high schools said that their seniors knew about the deadline and that most had already applied.
Counselors in Emporia and Johnson County agreed with Williams.
Tommy Williams, counselor at Wichita North High School, said that KU representatives had visited the school recently. Students seem to be informed about the deadline and it isn't causing problems for students, he said.
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, emphasized the need for students to apply even if they were only remotely considering attendee KU.
He said the application form was simple, could be completed in 10 minutes and didn't require a fee. The application forms are available in the office of admissions.
"in-state applications are running behind last year's application.com."
The April 1 deadline also applies to transfer students and students who wish to be readmitted to the University.
Students can't leave the University for a semester and then show up the first day of the new semester expecting to enroll, he said.
The application deadline for out-of-state students was Feb. 1.
The deadlines began last year as a
In-state applications are running slightly behind last year's application count.'
- Bruce Lindvall director of admissions
way to plan for enrollment increases in a time when the University's resources aren't meeting demands. A campus enrollment planning group appointed by then-acting executive vice chancellor Del Shankel recommended the deadline.
Lindvall said that enrollment growth had created problems such as lack of classrooms, crowded classrooms, and the need to open more sections of courses. He said there was little money to do that.
Probably the only exceptions to the deadlines that will be made are for students who submitted their applications to high school counselors on time but whose counselors sent the applications to KU late, Lindvall said.
All Kansas residents will be admitted to KU if they meet the April 1 deadline. Entering freshmen also need to send a sixth- or seventh semester high school transcript and request that their ACT test scores be sent to KU.
Transfer students need to send transcripts from each college they attended and send ACT scores and a high school transcript if they have completed fewer than 24 college credit hours.
Senate filing deadlines are set for this month
The three coalitions are:
By a Kansan reporter
As of yesterday, three coalitions had verbally announced they would enter the KU Student Senate elections in April.
the three贮藏们
■ Coach Coalition with Mark Flanagan running for president and William Sanders running for vice president.
- Integrity Coalition with Frank Partnoy running for president and Brian Kramer running for vice president.
- Top Priority Coalition with Brook Menees running for president and Pam Holley running for vice president.
The Student Senate will start accepting formal applications for presidential and vice presidential candidates tomorrow. The deadline for filing applications is 5 p.m. March 9.
To be eligible, candidates must have served on Student Senate or must have signatures from 150 students supporting their candidacy.
March 9 is the first day that applications for Student Senate candidates will be accepted. The deadline for filing is March 23. All applications must be submitted in person to the secretary at the Senate office in the Burge Union.
Kansas spiders interest scholar
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
Guarisco, a Lawrence resident who has been studying spiders since he attended the University of Kansas 15 years ago, prefers to see them alive.
Some people might cringe at the sight of a spider and smash it, but Hank Guarisco would crringe at the sight of a smashed spider.
Hank Guarisco, Lawrence resident, handles an Amaunobius ferox spider.
*
His interest in spiders has led him to conduct in-depth research that he hopes to develop into a field guide of spiders in northeast Kansas.
Guarisco, who graduated from KU with a systematics and ecology degree, is collecting data on spiders throughout the state for the Kansas Biological Survey.
Paul Liechti, assistant director of the biological survey, said Guarisco's spider research would be valuable because there was little spider data available. He said Guarisco's research was the most complete study of Kansas spiders available.
The biological survey supplies Guarisco with microscopes and other materials to help him with his research.
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
Henry Fitch, retired professor of systematics and ecology, did a study of spiders in 1963. He restricted his study to leaf litters in the Natural History reservation and Rockefeller experimental tract, $ 6\frac{1}{2} $ miles northeast of Lawrence.
Fitch said that an in-depth spider study in Kansas would provide people with more information about Kansas sniders.
"Spiders are a group not very well known. A few species can be dangerous, and people want to know about those spiders," Fitch said.
"Spiders have been studied more now than in the past but not in this part of the country. Hank's work is helpful because it is specifically about Kansas spiders." Fitch said.
The field guide of spiders in northeast Kansas could be published by the Museum of Natural History for its educational series.
Philip Humphrey, director of the museum, said that he encouraged Guarisco to pursue his spider study because of the educational possibilities it could provide.
"It would be the first major publication of its kind. It would be useful to public schools, to scout public in general." Humphrey said.
Guarisco said the guide would be a basic guide of spiders encountered most often in the state. It would also provide natural history background on the spiders.
Information will include how big the spider is, where it lives, what it eats and what eats it, Guarisco said.
Guarisco said it was important to know how the spider population was controlled. A fishing spider can reproduce 2,000 baby spiders. Frogs and lizards feed on these
spiders, so they do not become a problem.
Spiders are important because they control a diverse group of potentially harmful pest species, Guarisco said.
He said that his study helped other araeologists, or spider experts, because it would provide them with accurate species identifications that have not been available.
Greek Council gets organized
Group brings together leaders of three governing bodies
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Leaders of the newly formed Greek Council hope that the organization will improve communication between all fraternities and sororities at the University of Kansas.
The 15-member council consists of members of the executive committees of the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic and Black Panhellenic, which governs both black fraternities and sororites.
The group met for the second time last night at the Kansas Union to discuss how the group should be organized, said David Morris, Interfraternity Council president.
met in late January to discuss setting up the council.
Morris said the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic and Black Panhellenic would try to work together to perform more community service projects.
"It was one of those things we were supposed to be done for a long time," he said.
Morris said that the groups first
Setting up the Greek Council was a way of gaining knowledge about community service and getting the groups more involved with each other. Morris said.
Molly Wanstall, president of Panhellenic, said that the Greek Council was not set up as a governing body but as a forum for discussion. The
council will not have any binding authority over its member groups.
"We're not out to change each other." she said.
London Bonds, Black Panhellenic adviser, said that things were going fine so far and that the group had not run into any problems.
As a result of the council, two representatives from Black Panhelenic, including the group's president, Myron Gigger, will attend the Midwestern Interfraternity Council and Panhelenic Conference this weekend in St. Louis, said Morris.
Bill may alter history requirement
The groups also will participate in Greek Endeavor, a retreat that focuses on leadership skills and ways to improve the greek system, on March 25 and 26.
taught in junior high school, it did not make sense to require it for high school graduation. The committee voted down the proposal.
high school graduation requirement
TOPEKA — The House of Representatives Education Committee endorsed a bill yesterday that would require Kansas history to be taught in accredited state schools between the seventh and 12th grades and voted down two proposed amendments to the bill.
State Rep. George Dean, D-Wichita, tried to amend the bill to eliminate the graduation requirement but still require the course. He said that because the class could be
Kansas history must be taught in state public schools, but current law does not specify when. Lawrence schools teach state history in fourth and seventh grades.
The bill also would make a passing grade in a Kansas-history course a
State Rep. Gary Blumenthal. D-Merriman, proposed an amendment that would make Kansas history a requirement in current U.S. history courses, which are taught in the eighth and 11th grades in state public schools. His proposal also was voted down.
KWALITY COMICS
Quadrennial day keeps calendar constant
By a Kansan reporter
If yesterday was a bad day, then go ahead and cross it off the calendar, at least for the next three years.
Kwality books,
comics, and games.
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But some KU students are glad that February 29th comes only once
every four years.
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Lay away a pair of
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"Leap year is just another day in February that postpones me getting my paycheck from my parents," said Rudy Burlin, Sacramento, Calif., senior.
Stephen Shawl, associate professor of physics and chemistry, said that adding an extra day in February was necessary to keep the calendar intact.
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Tuesday, March 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Officials made good choice in killing abortion squeal bill
For young girls confronted with an unwanted pregnancy, deciding whether to have an abortion involves more than just a moral decision.
Not every 16- or 17-year-old girl is going to be given sympathy and support when she tells her parents the news. Some will be kicked out of their parents' houses or beaten for their mistake. For some, telling their parents will open up a new set of problems perhaps even more devastating than the unwanted pregnancy.
Recently, the Kansas House of Representatives found itself faced with a bill that would require a woman under 18 to have the consent of one parent or of a judge before she could have a legal abortion.
Considering both the domestic implications of such a "squale law" and the failure of an identical law in Minnesota, Kansas representatives made the right choice. The bill was killed in committee last week.
committee last week.
Proponents of the bill emphasized the importance of the involvement of a young woman's parents in her decision. They cited the parents' right to know about the pregnancy.
cited the parents. Right there. That's all very nice, but it ignores the harsher realities of life. Fortunately, Kansas legislators were willing to look at the precedent of Minnesota, where many girls avoided telling their parents and went straight to judges — about 99 percent of whom approved the abortions. Thus the law failed to accomplish any of the things it reputedly promoted, and it meant a lot of wasted time for judges.
lot or wasted time to figure out. The proposed squeal law was a thinly disguised attempt to undermine a woman's right to an abortion, a right upheld by the Supreme Court. Its backers were less interested in family relationships than they were in promoting the anti-abortion cause. It would have been legally questionable and practically unworkable. But Kansas legislators didn't fall for it. They made the right choice.
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Relieve state of ugly plates
Members of the Kansas House Transportation Committee are saying that the new state license plates are not making much of an artistic impression.
Surprise, surprise.
surprise, surprise.
A bill has been introduced by 25 House members that would bring back the state's old license plate design in five years,
then the new plates are expected to wear out.
Five years is a long time to suffer by looking at those new use plates on every Kansas car. But it is a small price to say if the state can admit its error by passing the bill.
pay if the state call admin its error payers The sponsors of the bill said most Kansans were not pleased with the ornate lettering and wanted the state to bring back the traditional two-letter county designations.
traditional two-letter county designations. The new plates have blue numbers and letters against an off-white background, a blue border at the top with "Kansas" in orate letters displayed in the middle. In the upper left-hand corner is a small county-designator decal. The plates also use the SAM-123 numbering system with three letters and three numbers separated by a brown shock of wheat.
It should be of no surprise to the Legislature that Kansans think the new plates are ugly.
Now it must follow the lead of Kansans who hate those plates and show that it, too, can have good taste.
body Dickson for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Other Voices
Organizations deserve free speech
Protecting the rights of minorities to express unpopular views is apparently necessary only when the groups involved don't offend liberal values. When the minority organization isn't one of the chic ones, when it's the Ku Klux Klan, for example, then it's acceptable to muzzle it.
mBZEE2 meeting the right of Klan members to free speech is the acid test of our democracy. Who supports王LAN-propagated values are nothing more than Nazis in silly-looking bedsheets, and their ideology is hateful.
But the Constitution wasn't written to protect popular beliefs. It is ironic that minority groups who themselves have so often availed themselves of constitutional guarantees of free expression are so willing to deny that right to others.
The Sunflower Wichita State University
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Business staff
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.
tactility of stilts
Guest illumina should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The image will be photographed.
writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserve light to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can also be sent to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom 11-11 State 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 (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and summer during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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SWAGGART, YOU SAY?...
NOPE; CHUCKLE; NEVER HEARD
OF HIM... ANYWAY, I THOUGHT
HEH HEH! I TOLD YOU MEDIA SLUGS
I'M NOT IN THAT BUSINESS...
Disabled require adequate care
Kalen has Muscular Dystrophy. He is severely disabled and employs a motorized wheelchair. But even with little use of his body, Kalen enjoys life in his freshly built apartment.
apart from.
But Kalen's dreams of maintaining his independent lifestyle may be in serious jeopardy. Because of the weakening muscles around his lungs, he requires the use of a ventilator while sleeping. Without the equipment he could not live.
The main difficulty for Kalen is that the home care program provided by the Social and Rehabilitation Services of Kansas will only pay for six and a half hours of his personal care. He requires 24 hours of care. Because Kalen can direct his own life independently, SRS granted him a paid attendant for as much time as he needed. The hours were granted last July, but today he is still receiving the six and a half hours daily.
Both local and state SRS officials keep putting him off. The money for his care has been approved. Why is he getting the run-around? That's what Kalen would like to know.
"My right to an internal appeals hearing process has virtually been discarded because SRS has put nothing of my case in writing. In turn, my right to have some control of my own life decisions has been denied because I am never told what is going on with my attendant care." Kalen said. "And, in turn, my right to legal actions has been greatly reduced because SRS has put nothing in writing. Consequently, no one in the legal field has any real touch with what impact all the factors can have on a disabled person's life."
And Kalen is just one example of dozens of disabled people who have encountered problems with SPS
Kalen's live-in attendant works about 17 hours a day and receives pay for only the six and a half hours originally granted by SRS.
with SKS.
I am severely disabled with cerebral palsy. I,
Frederick M.
Markham
Guest Columnist
tore, rely on SRS to provide attendant care. Most of my attendants are good, caring, underpaid individuals who demonstrate much love and pride in their work. This type of emotion is greatly needed in the individuals working in the local and state SRS offices.
I have recently returned to Lawrence from Hutchinson to live in an apartment complex especially designed for the disabled.
especially designed for the use of them.
For the past three months, SRS has informed the disabled clients to call their emergency number in case we need an attendant in an emergency situation. There's only one thing wrong with the system: The answering service must not know what the system is about. When I've called this number to inform them of an emergency situation, they think I'm a drunkard, hang up on me or tell me to call back the next morning and talk with my caseworker. They have not been informed about the emergency program nor my speech difficulty. This, my friends, is poor communication at its best.
One Saturday, because of a mix-up, no attendant showed up to assist me in getting up. I called the emergency number and received the same response. So, I called one of the caseworkers at her residence and told her the situation. She seemed to be more concerned about me having her number than with my well-being. Finally, they told me an attendant would be there. But no one came, and my neighbor came by to check on me and helped me dressed. I never heard from the caseworker again.
The next morning, it happened again. I wasn't going through the maze again, so I called the police. They came with red light and siren. I asked them to call one of my attendants, and they came right away.
The entire situation could have been avoided had we been allowed to call the attendant. But a stupid regulation by SRS prohibits this. My attendants have told me to call them when I was in trouble. It took a warning from a lawyer that SRS would be responsible for whatever happened to me under the above circumstances to get to the point where I can call my attendant.
I reported this incident to the Lawrence Journal-World in a letter to the editor. The letter was turned down because the editor viewed it as a personal attack on the caseworker. I simply asked the caseworker to resign. There were no names mentioned in the letter.
names mentioned in the text.
I think this was an act of very poor and unprofessional journalism on the part of the Journal-World. If they can print a story on how a college student was reunited with his missing car keys, it looks as if they could print a letter that told of a potentially dangerous situation such as the one described above.
The problem here is how to communicate the dangerous situations in which SRS officials are putting the severely disabled. Kalen sums it all up.
up.
"Imagine having no one to get you a drink of water or help you eat breakfast or assist you in toileting if you couldn't do it by yourself." Kalen said. Imagine needing medication vital to your health and having no one there to give it to you. Imagine having no way to use a telephone in an emergency. Without someone to assist you with these things, wouldn't you consider yourself to be at risk in the community?"
Frederick M. Markham is a Lawrence resident.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Stop promoting beer
Last time I looked at statistics on traffic accidents killing young people, the percent of alcohol involvement was right up around 100, so I wasn't surprised to read that beer cans were found with the bodies of the three KU students killed last weekend.
students Nor was I very surprised to find, in the same Kansan which reported about the beer cans, a glossy insert from Miller Lite letting us all know "What to do on Spring Break." Those of us who live to see it. Of course Miller doesn't want us to drive drunk or drink too much. Wedged in among the 16 pages of ads is one paragraph light-heartedly plugging moderation and designated drivers. It also tells us not to get too much sun or eat too much junk food. A nice serious approach. Don't die now any more.
drunk, I can save them the trip to Florida. I have some nice beachfront property for sale right here in Lawrence.
If anyone believes Miller is going to pay for the beachside concerts in South Padre, Daytona Beach and Pensacola; the top comedians; the free movie previews; the volleyball tournaments; the Miller Welcome Centers, and this nationwide ad campaign by selling beer only to people who drink in moderation and don't drive
I have been at the University of Kansas less than two years. In that time, at least seven KU students and one innocent bystander have been killed in alcohol-related accidents. One student lost a leg to a drunk driver. Isn't it time for the Kansan to stop promoting and profiting from the products that cause this slaughter?
John Ericson
Teach people to think
In response to objections to my guest column, I would like to note that the humanities and soft sciences have an amazing accomplishment to their credit: teaching students to think that they were thinking. It is often said, for example, that the humanities address problems that have persisted for centuries. One possible reason for this durability is that the humanities have not been terribly successful in teaching people to think. The obvious lack of substantial progress in areas like social psychology suggests that the soft sciences are equally inept at teaching students to think.
In fact, I have never known courses on Shakespeare or Plato to teach anyone to think. I have, however, met individuals who learned to think by acquiring computer programming skills, who learned to think through training in the hard sciences or who learned to think by
becoming engineers. One mechanical engineering student told me that he sought that degree not to become an engineer but rather to learn to solve problems.
To reiterate, I believe that the humanities and soft sciences are essential parts of a university education, but this importance does not directly rest upon teaching students to think effectively about truly important issues. And courses whose major products are teaching students to think that they are thinking effectively when they are not should generally not be difficult ones.
Maynard W. Shelly Professor of psychology
Support new coach
As an avid KU sports fan since attending the University of Kansas in 1966, I would like to offer an observation of our new head football coach Glenn Mason. At the recent Kansas-Duke basketball game, I had the good fortune of sitting in front of Coach Mason. He was very energetic and vocal throughout the game. If a person did not know better, you would think that he had been a Jayhawk fan for years. If he can transfer his enthusiasm and energy into our football team and staff, we can all be in for some fun times ahead. I hope that all concerned give him, his staff and our team the support they need and deserve.
Bob Laskey Lawrence resident
Lawrence resident
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 1, 1988
TuesdayForum
5
Israelis have taken steps toward peace
A recent guest column in the Kansan by Mahmoud Ali missed the boat on the current Arab Israel conflict. The occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip is not the issue at stake here. What is at stake is the survival of the state of Israel. Israel calls for peace negotiations because it has seen the success of these negotiations in its dealings with Egypt. Ali's claim that Israel merely gave up one piece of land to Egypt to gain another from Lebanon is erroneous and overlooks the value of the Sinai.
Also, the invasion of Lebanon by the Israelis is not and never was justified solely on the basis of the attempted assassination of the Israeli ambassador to London. Lebanon, by 1982, was serving as a base of operations and a training ground for Palestine Liberation Organization terrorists who consistently attacked civilian
When Israel returned the Sinai to the Egyptians, it left behind modern farming facilities, fully-developed settlements, intact airfields and enough oil reserves to fulfill Israel's energy needs for more than a decade. In total, Israel gave up wealth equal to its total gross national product when it signed the Camp David Accords.
Aaron
Rittmaster
Guest Columnist
I will not answer any questions. Please provide a clear description of the image.
Israeli-Jewish targets. Israel only entered Lebanon when it saw that the current "government" in Lebanon would not or could not stop the PLO attacks on civilians.
Ali is correct on one point — Israel did reject President Reagan's 1982 peace plan. But there are concrete reasons why the 1982 plan was unacceptable. Reagan's plan called for an undivided Jerusalem to return to the bargaining table. Israel will not allow Jerusalem to be placed on the bargaining table because it serves as its capital. Even more importantly though, between 1948 and 1967, while Jordan ruled over many of the Holy sites in Jerusalem, Jordan violated a U.N. armistry by not allowing Jews to pray at the Western Wall or use the cemetery on the Mount of Olives, where Jews have buried their dead for 2,500 years. Under Israeli rule, holy
places are governed by those to whom they are holy. For example, the Third Station of the Cross is governed by the Christians, and alloses share control of the site of the dome of the Rock Mosque with the Jews, for whom it is holy as the site of the Temple. Israel cannot bargain with the fate of Jerusalem.
hate of being wrong.
Another reason for the absence of bargaining with the PLO is the PLO's public stance of not accepting political solutions. A direct quote from the PLO Covenant Against Israel (Article 9): "Armed struggle is the only way to liberate Palestine... The Palestinian Arab people affirms its absolute resolution and abiding determination to pursue the armed struggle and to work for an armed popular revolution..."
Recent statements made on PLO sponsored media do nothing to support the statement that the PLO is now willing to recognize Israel's right to exist. Just last month, Yassir Arafat said in a Cairo newspaper interview, "The PLO will not cease to use its military option." Also last month, "Voice of PLO" on Radio Baghdad said: "Come, let us expel the murderous occupiers from every Palestinian city,
village, and camp. . Let us besiege them and strike at them with sticks, stones and bottles. Let us fill our streets with barricades and fight the forces of occupation in all places."
Israel's current actions in Gaza and the West Bank did not come unprovoked. As early as Dec. 10, 1987, PLO Radio Baghdad broadcast a message from Arafat calling for violent riots, to which some demonstrators responded by attacking small groups of Israeli soldiers with rocks, Molotov cocktails and knives. The soldiers were merely attempting to restore a semblance of order to the area when their lives were put in danger by the rioters. The soldiers reacted in self-defense, and escalation on both sides got out of hand. Israel is doing its part by prosecuting identified Israeli soldiers who participated in recent atrocities.
All of this would be a moot point if the Arabs had accepted the 1947 United Nations General Assembly Partition Plan, which would have created an Arab homeland more than twice the size of the proposed Jewish homeland. The Arabs instead chose to invade Israel the day after it declared independence. After the
War for Independence. Jordan occupied the West Bank, and Egypt occupied the Gaza Strip for 19 years, but at no time was a separate Palestinian political unit created. There was no Palestinian political movement independent of other Arab nations until after 1967, when Jordan insisted on getting involved in Syria's and Egypt's war with Israel. By U.N. mandate, the same authority that Ali cities in his arguments, Jordan is the homeland of the Palestinian Arabs, and Jordan is the largest part of the mandate of Palestine.
Israel has taken a major step by opening itself to direct, one-on-one negotiations with a body which accepts the right of the State of Israel to exist. It is now the PLO's turn to make a positive step by repudiating the Covenant against Israel and disavowing the use of violence to force a solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Direct peaceful negotiations require two willing parties.
English department may be stifling students' creativity
Aaron Rittmaster is an Overland Park sophomore majoring in journalism.
Instructors should be able to identify rough diamonds
The modern maxim, "You won't find any great writers coming out of the English department," basically is true. Students commonly experience genuine creativity stifled as faculty members busy try to conform those in their classes to a particular style or segment of literature. Then again, a professor may search for someone with a voice of his own, and when he does indeed hear one, he may mistake it for another's. Of course, that is not to say that on occasion an outstanding faculty member cannot be found in the English department, or that its students cannot learn grammar and spelling essential to fine writing. Naturally, a good writer can major in journalism and so on.
The best learning takes place through questioning, experimenting and reasoning. The truth is no less true after having been questioned; however, a lie may be proven false.
proven false.
Last school year the department of English circulated fiers announcing writing contests for the spring of '87. The exact wording for one of those contests was as
Jay Frank Guest Columnist
ALBERTO LOPEZ
follows: "Edgar Wolfe Award: One or more awards for the best examples of creative writing (prose) by any University of Kansas student." One student (whom this student knew) after diligently examining the above criteria for entry, submitted a factual prose article written with a creative flair. The article had received an excellent grade from a faculty member and had been well-appreciated by others who had read it. After the contest, the writer picked up his paper, which had been judged as follows: "An interesting article but not fiction — 0 (scale 1-10)." Since when does creative prose writing have to be fiction?
that student also wrote a piece for a fiction class with the purpose of doing something different. Although most of his classmates did not grasp this experimental writing and were outraged, the leader of the class returned the
What were the judge's comments? "Experimental, but no story and many errors." Granted, the errors perceived may be attributable to the computer center printout, which makes P's and Q's look like O's and commaes look like periods. However, the actual writing (grammar, syntax, spelling) having been checked and double-checked by both student and teacher, was flawless. "No" by definition means "not any." The writer went back to read the instructor's encouragement to see if that which "works well" had been termed a "story." Indeed, at least in the place that is that comment, there exists "this story."
work to the student with comments including. "This story works well!" The instructor later submitted this example to the above mentioned contest.
exists "this way." Books written by are filled with classics of the world's best writers, ascribed to authors, playrights and poets beloved by mankind. However, many of these innovative writers were not recognized at first. In addition, history has recorded initial rejection of great people in fields of science, religion, exploration and sports, to name a few.
A similar example can be found in the world or art. Last year a show was presented in the galleries of several U.S. cities. The collection was entitled, "Impressionism,
The New Art, 1876-1892." Also displayed with paintings, drawings and sculptures were the words of the critics as they had appeared in print at the time of the New Art. A curious phenomenon existed here. Those high-brows of the art world were outraged at the first impressionists, intolerant of the movement; impressionism was not considered art. Yet the movement persisted and gradually was accepted, embraced and then praised by critics. Ironically, some years later when impressionism was carried one step further by pointilists, the original impressionists, who had at first been scorned, were outraged themselves.
outraged themselves.
It seems some critics in the department of English would call a diamond in the rough a piece of glass. Yet even though uncut, a diamond has the durability to withstand the bite of harsh judgment. Yes, and it has power not only to withstand but also to break the gnashing teeth of false judgment. Rest assured that after it has been faceted under the steady and patient hands of the jeweler, a gem will emerge in a brilliance that shows the baubles of its critics for what they are, mere trinkets.
Jay Frank is a former KU student living in Palm Springs, Calif.
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6
Tuesday. March 1. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NationWorld
Panama strike ineffective
The Associated Press
Stores and offices remain open for business
PANAMA CITY, Panama — A general strike called by opponents of Panama's military regime stumbled yesterday, with transportation and most commerce proceeding uninterrupted.
Intimidation, censorship and an apparent lack of faith in the effectiveness of mass action conspired against the strike's success. The fact that yesterday was payday also hurt the strike.
The strike, called to press for the resignation of strongman Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriage, appeared somewhat effective in industry.
Noriega, commander of the Defense Forces, has been charged in the United States with involvement in
the smuggling of Colombian cocaine and with allowing narcotics traffickers to launder profits in Panamanian banks.
Last week, President Eric Arturo Delvale ordered him to resign. But on Friday, Noriega engineered a vote in the National Assembly, dismissing Delvalle.
Delvalle called for a nationwide strike after his dismissal. He fled from house arrest Saturday and remained in hiding yesterday, defying Noriega's order that he leave Panama.
The strike call was issued Friday by the National Civic Crusade, an alliance of 200 political, labor, professional and business groups that has been campaigning since June for
Noriega's ouster. Opposition leaders say they want the strike to last until Noriega steps down.
Norwegian Stops Some Panamanian banks were closed, but international banks and government offices were open.
Along downtown's Central Avenue yesterday, more than 80 percent of the stores were open. Some businesses kept shutters or security grates pulled down over show windows; but their doors were open, and clients came and went.
Juan B. Sosa, Panama's ambassador to the United States, refused yesterday to relinquish the embassy to an envoy designated by the military-controlled government to replace him. Since Friday, Sosa has maintained that the vote to oust Delvalle was unconstitutional.
News Roundup
IRA HAS SOVIET WEAPONS: The Irish Republican Army in London is equipped with Soviet-made SAM-7 anti-aircraft missiles, Irish and British authorities acknowledged in a TV program broadcast yesterday. The surface-to-air missiles were contained in more than 100 tons of weaponry sent by Libya to Ireland for the IRA in four shiploads in 1985 and 1986, according to the program.
1943, was made available to The Associated Press by the World Jewish Congress and its authenticity was confirmed by Justice Department sources.
the program.
PEACE TALKS INCONCLUSIVE: Secretary of State George Shultz neared the end of a peace mission in Jerusalem yesterday with inconclusive responses from Israel and the Arabs on his plan for negotiations on a Middle East settlement. Final word from Jordan,
the key Arab country, awaited a meeting today with
IMPEACHMENT TRIAL OPENS: The Arizona Senate yesterday opened the first impeachment trial of a U.S. governor in six decades, and within hours an attorney for Gov. Evan Mecham lost a plea for dismissal of the charges against the first-term Republican.
King Hussein in London WALDEIM APPROVED DEPORTIONS: A key Nazi document made public yesterday shows that Kurt Waldheim signed a German letter seeking approval for mass deportation of Greek civilians in 1943 in a "cleansing operation." The document, dated Aug. 15,
LAWYER SUBPOENA NORTH: A defense lawyer in a drug trial in Detroit has subpoenaed L.A. Col. Oliver North to testify about an alleged scheme to smuggle marijuana and cocaine into Michigan from South America.
SIMMONS TRIAL SET: A Russellville, Ark., man accused of killing 16 people, including 14 members of his own family, is competent to stand trial, a judge ruled yesterday before setting a May 9 trial date. Circuit Judge John Patterson accepted a state mental hospital finding that R. Gene Simmons was competent
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Rock Chalk Revue 1988
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 1, 1988
Sports
7
Injured athlete Martin focusing on the future
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
For three seasons, Jackie Martin's basketball skills have helped bring success to the Kansas women's team.
During most of this season, ever, Martin's injury problems have made her cheerleader on the bench.
On Jan. 20, Martin's playing career ended when she ruptured the Achilles' tendon in her right leg against the Colorado Buffaloes. She said that at first, she was frustrated but that she was trying to keep things in perspective.
"It was hard to believe my basketball career was over," Martin said. "Now, I do all that I can to help the team win. When I am screaming on the bench, it is coming straight from the heart. I wish I could be out there playing."
Martin, a 5-foot-11 senior from Dublin, Ga., said that the injury occurred when she caught a pass from Kansas guard Lisa Braddy and attempted to drive to the basket against Colorado. She took one step and fell to the floor in pain.
"I have been blessed with a high tolerance level for pain, but this injury hurt," Martin said. "It felt like someone had kicked me real hard in the back of the leg. The trainer took one look at it and said I was out for the season."
Jayhawks coach Marian Washington said Martin's injury hurt the team's morale.
"Jackie is an inspiration to this team, a player we really miss on the court," Washington said. "But it really helps to have her on the bench, shouting encouraging words to her teammates. She is a special person, one who is a good example for the rest of the team."
Martin came to KU in the fall of 1984, after being recruited by Kansas assistant coach Kevin Cook and former Jayhawk player Lynette Woodard. She was also recruited by Florida State, Auburn, Georgia, Virginia, and Arizona.
Martin visited Arizona first and said she almost went there.
"Some of my friends knew the Arizona coach and told me I should go there." Martin said. "I really liked it there, but I wanted to visit some of the other schools before I made a decision. After I came to Kansas, I knew it was the school for me."
Martin said another factor in her decision was that Lawrence was
much like Dublin, her hometown. Dublin is in southeast Georgia, not too far from Savanna.
Washington has been a big influence on Martin's life. Martin said Washington is both a friend and a teacher.
"I learned patience from Coach because she displayed it all the time in dealing with me." Martin said. "I really like to compete, and my attitude could get testy at times. She is a good friend and a winner."
Martin misses playing the most when Kansas wins, she said. She said it would be difficult to watch the team play in the Big Eight Conference tournament this weekend in Salina.
Last season, Martin was named second-team all-Big Eight during the regular season and was named to the conference all-tournament team in the post season tournament. In the Jayhawks 85-51 victory over Kansas State in the championship game, Martin scored 23 points. She made 8 of 10 field goal attempts and all seven of her free throws. She also led the team with 13 rebounds.
"There were a lot of fans at the game, and it made the game exciting." Martin said. "I think there were more K-State fans, but I used the energy the crowd noise produced to help me to get motivated to play."
Martin is majoring in crime and delinquency studies, and she plans on graduating with a BGS degree in May of 1989. She wants to work with juvenile delinquents someday.
"I want to work at a correction home and help teenagers that are less fortunate." Martin said. "I want to help give them a chance in life. I don't care what part of the country I work in. I'll just go where I'm needed the most."
Martin said decision-making was an important thing for her to learn before graduation.
"When I first came to KU, I had a hard time making decisions," she said. "I think being so far from home, I had to learn a lot on my own. I try to get the most out of everything I attempt. I have been surrounded by good people at Kansas, and the most important thing I have learned here is that there is more to life than basketball and books."
Martin said that next year she would continue to work with the women's basketball team as a manager.
anoth
Ianine Swiatkowski/KANSAN
'Cap Day' to open KU baseball season
Associate sports editor
Bv David Bovce
The first 200 people entering Hogland-Maupin Stadium for the Jayhawk baseball team's home-opener against the Washburn Ichabods will receive a free KU baseball cap.
This is the first ever Cap Day for Kansas baseball and is sponsored by the Kansas Union Bookstores.
the ranch. Coach Dave Bingham said he expected a large crowd at today's game, which starts at 2 p.m., partly because of the free caps and the warm weather.
Admission is free for KU students and $1 for all others.
Kansas is coming off a disappointing weekend, which produced three losses against the seventh-ranked Arkansas Razorbacks.
"We didn't pitch as well as we could." he said. "If you are going to be a quality team you need quality pitching."
Bingham said the games had showed that the team had some shortmings — primarily pitching.
pitching. The weekend games basically were used as a point of reference, Bingham said. Bingham took nine pitchers and used them all.
Jackie Martin
ers and used them. He said he used the games to look at what the pitchers could do so he could begin setting up a starting rotation and giving pitchers their roles.
He also said that he was embarrassed by the 19-4 score in the second game on Saturday.
secon gm, gave
One year Bingham wanted
this year was improved effort. He said he
saw a lot of effort from the offense
and defense but the pitching did not
perform as well as he would have liked.
"Washburn is probably one of the top two teams in their NAIA division," he said.
Bingham said he would start senior Mike McLead against the Ichabods.
Washburn's top hitters last year were junior J.P. Wright, who hit 26 home runs and drove in 83 runs, and senior Terry Middendorf, who had a 404 batting average.
"They are a good hitting club, but their pitching is a little suspect," Bingham said.
Raiders coach named
Last year, the Jayhawks won one of two games against the Ichabods and both games were decided by a run. The last game was a 13-12 victory by Kansas.
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Mike Shanahan, the assistant coach credited with simplifying the Denver Broncos' offense in 1984 to fit the talents of John Elway, will now try his hand with the Los Angeles Raiders.
The Raiders scheduled a press conference yesterday, and the Associated Press learned Sunday that it was to introduce Shanahan as the club's new head coach.
club's new manager, Shanahan, a Broncos' assistant for four seasons, will succeed Tom Flores, who announced his retirement Jan. 20 after nine years as the Raiders' head coach.
Shanahan's hiring was confirmed by a high-ranking Raiders official who asked not to be identified.
who asked.
The news conference was set for the Forum Room of the Airport Hilton, said Irv Kaze, another top Raiders official. That's the same room where Flores announced his retirement following the Raiders' 5-10 season, their worst in 25 years.
Shanahan, who had been the Broncos' offensive coordinator and quarterback coach, is 35 and world
become the youngest head coach in the NFL. He is the youngest coach hired in the NFL since the Broncos hired Dan Reeves at 37 in 1981.
Reeves indicated to Denver reporters Sunday that Shanahan was Davis' pick.
"They're having a press conference tomorrow," Reeves said. "It would surprise me very much if they didn't name my coach. I talked to him this morning, and he's going out there tomorrow. That would make sense.
"I hate to lose him, but I'm happy for him." Reeves said. "It's not easy, but that's life. You always know when you hire good people there will be an opportunity for them to move on. We'll just go on from here."
It has been reported that Shanahan would recruit Denver offensive line coach Alex Gibbs to join him in Los Angeles.
Shanahau could not be reached for comment during the weekend.
he is credited with much of the success experienced by Denver's offense.
Big Eight teams looking to NCAA but not forgetting conference play
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — With the Big Eight race in the final stretch, it's hard not to think of the NCAA Tournament looming a few weeks away.
"Hoppeley," Danny Manning said of Kansas' 82-74 victory over No. 15 Missouri, "it helps our chances out a lot."
Every win from here on is important," said Kansas State Coach Lon Kruger, whose Wildcats defeated Oklahoma State 59-58 Saturday in Manhattan.
Missouri Coach Oach Stewart, though, has other works on his mind.
"I don't think about the NCAA," Stewart said after the 15th-ranked Tigers' loss in Columbia. "I'm thinking about Oklahoma. If a team plays hard all year and does the best it can, it will be selected."
One Big Eight team that doesn't need to think about the NCAA tournament is Oklahoma, ranked fourth in the nation and fresh from a record-setting 134-84 rout of Colorado at Norman.
"If they don't have Final Four written all over them, then I don't
know who does," Colorado Coach Tom Miller said. "Oklahoma is the most explosive team I have ever seen."
seen.
And some say Kansas State, Kansas and Missouri are probables, with Iowa State a possible entry if it can keep up the steam that gave it an 85-4 victory over Nebraska at Lincoln.
But that's a couple of weeks away. Right now, the Big Eight is looking at its final games of regular-season action before heading into the conference tournament, which rewards the winner with an automatic berth.
Kansas star Danny Manning scored 37 points against Missouri, including nine in a 20-0 spurt in the first half that nearly buried the Tigers. Manning scored 23 points in the first half, hitting 9 of 11 field goals, as Kansas opened up a 38-28 halftime lead. The Jayhawks are 7-5 in the Big Eight and 18-10 overall.
Scott Wilke led Colorado, 3-9 and 7-18, with 23 points and set a school record with his 45th consecutive double-figure game.
Derrick Chievous led Missouri, 6-6 and 17-8, with 20 points. Gary Leonard, who paced a 15-5 Missouri surge that brought the Tigers within two points with 11:56 to go, had a career-high 17 points.
The Top Twenty
Bv the Associated Press
1. Temple 25-1
2. Purdue 24-2
3. Arizona 26-2
4. Oklahoma 26-2
5. Nev. - Las Vegas 25-3
6. North Carolina 21-4
7. Pittsburgh 20-4
8. Kentucky 20-5
9. Duke 20-5
10. Michigan 22-5
11. Iowa 20-7
12. Syracuse 21-7
13. Georgia Tech 21-6
14. Bradley 22-4
15. Brigham Young 23-3
16. N.C. State 20-6
17. Wyoming 22-5
18. Loyola, Calif. 24-3
19. Vanderbilt 18-7
20. Xavier, Ohio 22-3
Bo Jackson in training early wants fans to put past to rest
The Associated Press
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Boos no longer greet Bo Jackson when he heads onto the playing field, and he likes the silence.
"II'm trying to forget all about last year. It's over with. It's finished. All I'm concerned about is 1988," said Jackson, who was scorned by Kansas City fans on July 11 when he announced his intentions to play pro football. "I wish everyone else would do the same."
to the same Jackson even arrived in camp six days early, paying his own expenses to work out with the Royals.
to work but with the
"We all know he doesn't need this,
"outfielder Thad Bosley said. "With his talent and ability in football, he could say, 'See y'all later, I'm gone.' But he's here."
Jackson, entering the final year of his three-year, $1.066 million contract, doesn't need baseball for the money. He made a reported $1.684 million last season as a running back for the Los Angeles Raiders. If he fulfills his five-year football contract, he will get $7.4 million.
him this year," first baseman George Brett said, "because the Royals basically have come out and said, "you have to make our team this year". Last year, it was a total surprise.
There'll be a lot more pressure on
"but he knows what he has to do, and as good an athlete as he is, he's willing to accept the challenge. I know what Be can do, and I wouldn't bet against him."
Jackson has played in just 194 professional games and is battling Gary Thurman for the starting job in left field. Thurman, who has been with the Royals since 1983 and has 598 professional games behind him, is being touted as a rookie-of-the-year candidate.
candidate. The Royals insist that Jackson will get a fair chance. But his agent, Richard Woods, isn't so sure.
"I think the biggest issue is 'What will the coaching staff's and front office staff's attitude be toward Bo?' Woops said. "The comments in the off-season indicate there may be negative feelings toward Bo. When you have the front office, the owners, the manager making negative comments about Bo, it does not endure yourself to the organization"
Jackson's teammates seem ready to welcome him back to baseball.
"There was plenty said this winter about me," Jackson said, "so I'll just keep quiet and let those same people talk."
to welcome Centerfielder Willie Wilson, one of Jackson's harshest critics last season, said. "We pretty much have put it all behind us now. We're not going to dwell on it. Right now, he's a baseball player, and he's here to help us win baseball games.
us with bacon on the plate. "This is a new season, with a new attitude, and he has another chance."
charter.
Brett said: "What really hurt Bo more than anything was when he announced he was going to play football. The fans of Kansas City, for some ungody reason, turned on him. For what reason, I don't understand, and I'll never understand it until I die.
"I'm proud to be playing next to this guy. I'm proud to have Bo Jackson as a friend. I'm proud to be a Bo Jackson fan," Brett said.
Brewers mourn Kuenn, the head 'Wallbanger'
CHANDLER, Ariz. — Harvey Kuenn, the former batting champion who managed the 1982 Milwaukee Brewers to the club's only World Series appearance, is remembered as a man who played baseball hard and loved the game dearly.
The Associated Press
Kuenn, 57, the 1953 American League Rookie of the Year and AL batting champion in 1959, was found Sunday by his wife after collapsing in the shower at his home in Peoria, Ariz., police said. The cause of death was not immediately determined.
what they always remember Harvey with one foot up on that dugout step, with that chuck of tobacco, looking out over the field on the way to the World Series," said Larry Haney, a coach with the team since 1977. "Those are some great memories."
Jim Gantner, one of three players
He underwent open heart surgery in 1976. Then, in March 1980, he had his right leg amputated just below the knee after a blood clot cut circulation. He returned to coaching only six months after the surgery.
from 1982 still on the Brewer roster, said Kuenn set an example of courage while battling a series of major medical ailments since the mid-1970s.
"Everybody said he was out of baseball," Gantner said. "Harvey kept fighting and coming back. . . There was a lot of courage in this man."
Kuenn's Brewer team became known as "Harvey's Wallbangers" when it won the pennant in 1982. Replaced as manager a year later, Kuenn stayed with the organization as a scouting consultant, splitting time between his Arizona home and
his native Milwaukee area. He was born in the Milwaukee suburb of West Allis.
"Harvey was not only one of the most genuinely liked people I've ever known, but he also was a solid baseball man in any assignment you gave him, whether he was a player or a coach or a manager or a scout."
a Coach of M-Manager Brewers Manager Tom Trebelhorn called Kuenn's death a "tremendous loss" for the Brewers.
"I told the ballcub that the key way to remember Harvey Kuenn is to play the game the way Harvey played — and that's hard," Treebel-horn said at the Brewers' training camp. "Harvey played hard, he managed hard. He always had time for the ballclub and loved baseball dearly.
"There's not much you can say, except we've lost a very, very good friend and a very good baseball man." Brewers General Manager Harry Dalton said.
Sports Briefs
"I think if the ballelb could have a season the way Harvey was — that's with toughness, integrity and hard work — that's the best way to memorialize Harvey there is."
Kuenn was named the Associated Press AL Manager of the Year in 1982 and taking over when Buck Rodgers was fired and leading the team to the World Series. The team was 23-24 when he took over and finished with a 95-67 record and the Eastern Division crown.
The Brewers won the league pennant by rallying from a 2-0 deficit and beating the California Angels in the best-of-five AL championship series. They lost the World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games.
The Jayhawks lost all the doubles matches, and only sophomore Chris Walker and junior Jim Secrest won singles matches.
TENNIS TEAM FALTERS: The Kansas men's tennis team lost 7-2 to Wisconsin Sunday in Madison.
singles Coach Scott Perelman said that the Jayhawks were in a position to win all seven of the matches they lost but that they did not fare well in three set matches and in tie-breakers.
"It was one of the most disappointing losses since I've been here," Perelman said. "It's taken us six years to get into the top 25, and I don't know what it was this weekend."
The Jayhawks are 6-3 and are ranked 24th in the country.
YROUT CAMP SUCCESSFUL: For 17 University of Kansas men, the first step to becoming a Jayhawks football player is complete.
The 17 walk-on players were selected from 63 hopefuls who participated in an open football tryout Friday at Inzunach Sports Pavilion.
PRIory to Kansas offensive coordinator Pat Ruel said the men selected would begin an off-season workout program tomorrow from 4 to 7 p.m. at the pavilion.
---
pavilion.
"These men will go through a Monday, Wednesday and Friday program, which includes of running and agility drills." Ruel said. "The nature of the program is both physically and mentally demanding, so they won't lift weights. We want to ease them into our system, but not too much. We want to see how each individual develops, leading up to the spring practices."
Ruel said spring football practice would begin March 22. If the men can make it through the workout program, they will have a chance to make the squad.
8
Tuesday, March 1. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Car wreck causes hole in store wall Two KU students uninjured after Sunday night accident
By a Kansan reporter
A Sunday night accident involving two University of Kansas students left a gaping hole in the brick wall of Ed Marling's furniture store, 1601 W. 23rd St., and caused an estimated $16,000 to $20,000 damage to its contents.
According to police reports, Justin E. Jkwere, Nigeria graduate student, inadvertently hit the acceleration pedal as he turned onto Ousdahl Road from the furniture store's parking lot. His car was struck by a car driven by Jay B. Parker, Oskaloosa freshman.
through the wall, the car went into reverse, backed over the east curb again, turned and came to rest over the west curb, with the rear wheels still spinning.
According to the police, Ekwere's car continued west across Ousdahl Road after being hit by Parker's car, hit the west curb, spun around and went back across the street, jumped the east curb and rammed into the furniture store. After it broke
Neither Parker nor Ekwere was injured. Ekwere was ticketed for inattentive driving.
The Lawrence police officer who investigated the accident said that Ekwere apparently stepped on his accelerator pedal when he meant to step on the brake pedal as he approached Ousdaid Road. Ekwere said that his brakes had failed.
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Two mechanics who looked at Ekwere's car after the accident said that the brakes were functioning properly, that the throttle linkage of the car was bent, and that the accelerator was jammed partway open, but they said that it was probably a result of the impact.
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The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Agnes Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Alderson Award, Class of 1913 Award and the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms describing the Award are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 105 Burge Union. Strickland, Alderson, and Class of 1913 Awards are presented to graduating seniors; students of any status may be nominated for the Leflard Award. The nominations for these Awards must be received by the Student Awards Committee, c/o The Organizations & Activities Center, 105 Burge Union, 864-4861, by Wednesday, March 23, 1988 5 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 1, 1988
9
House votes to abandon legal-sized paper
The Associated Press
A bill that would abandon legalized letters and documents in the government and courts as of July 1, 1990, received tentative House
TOPEKA - Some lawmakers literally want the state to trim its paperwork.
approval yesterday. Before then, agencies would be encouraged to use only paper measuring $8\frac{1}{2}$ inches by 11 inches.
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怖道會
時:3月4日(五) 7:00 p.m.
地址:第一 Southern Baptist church (claismith Drive & 19th st.)
请勿:Mr. Gene Tuel
area Rep. of Navigators
KU 中文查經班
Chinese Bible Study Group
REENTERS KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!!!!
The Lawrence雯斯 Association will help any apartment complex organize a Tenants Group.
For more information call 841-7800 or 749-3697.
联络:Albert 843-0686
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
One of Music and Lighting for any
Occasion. 814-1455
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot spots Maximum Party 911-2037
MUSIC******* MUSIC******* MUSIC
Rose Red House Aud. DJ, Serve. 8-track studio,
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry. Call
Brad 749-1275
COLIN FRIELS JUDY DAVIS
D. Hewlett 7-30
KANGAROO 9-30
R Daily
JUFTY
FOR RENT
1 BR House, 10 min walk to campus. Very clean, comfort, and warm, in good condition.
Sublase 3 or 4 Adram furnished, beginning immediately or Summer, 2 baths, Miro, Disheswash, AC pool, Negotiable. interest individuals call 794 5282.
MOTOR COOPERATION SYSTEM
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
Available immediately - Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities. Call B1-1207.
- Studios
- 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom
Rooms for now & summer in rooming houses, 1844
Kentucky, 620-795-3852, 620-795-3853,
8130, 8230, 8235, 749, 149, 179, 149
Completely Furnished Studios, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-5255, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
- Garages
- Apartments and Townhouses
- Pools
- Tennis Court Resorts
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
SUNDANCE
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 11-5
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
GREAT DEAL 3 bedroom, 1 bathroom house
and Kentucky $800.00 per month - 840-400.
$800.00 per month - 840-400.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester 88 . I smoke, a Sarah evening告
BRAND NEW!
Sundance II
Get a Group? Common Goals? Specious well-maintained house on quiet block near town & campus. W/D beds/w multiple rooms. W/D bedrooms, available i-188 $1,250 monthly. 841-4144.
MHS MCHCRAFT offers beautiful furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 814-1212, 841-5255 or 749-4236.
SUBLEASE. Extra twice 2 BR duplex in good location; garage; W/D jockroom. No pets. Refs. req $90/mo. Must see. 843-7736 after 5 or leave message.
Roommate needed for 2 bbr. $20.00/month, water pump water pad & cabinet on premise. On board! A&B 380-3800
Coming to you this fall!
Call today to reserve
your unit for next fall!
Offered by:
Sanctuary site
FOR SALE
- Completely furnished
message
"Conservative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
903-764-2121, for Am. Ann, Deb, or Tom."
- Super energy efficient
841-5255 * 841-1212
MASTERCRAFT
CBI 650 1980, 7000 miles Best Buy, mint condition.
841-7608 Craig
Airline ticket to Albuquerque
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.
HQ VCR Hardly used, Packed with features.
Remes. $165. 841-1254. Ask for Ivan.
For Sale brand new Cannon electronic typewriter. Never been used. 300-950 fm. Please call 1-800-764-2800.
KEYBOARD: Korg Poly 600 Programmable polyphonic synthesizer, like new; KB-190 BK-400
LAVELIERS Close out $10 for remaining boys. Boys Bonds & Antique 731 New York City.
IBM PC/AT Compatible. Hardware, mouses, wired
ideal to Macintosh. Worth $4,000. Ask
*****MOTIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE*
512 E. 9th, 749-893
**MOTIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE**
512 E. 9th, 749-893
In Lawrence call 242-9636.
Osborne portable computer and IBM printer.
Great condition, great price. Sold separately or together.
Call Dione 5:00 a.m. at 841-4793.
Impiraptor
Keyboard, P.A. system, Microphones, etc. Call
(800) 521-2690, s. o. n. p.
MUST SELL IMAGELINES
Carlo Carlo AM/MF cassette.
See in Lawrence 242 948-636.
Queen-size bed $75, FUTON rocker $10, Hitachi
casette deck $75, Dodge Dart $38, 841-807
841-806
rock-cell -roll Thousands of used and rare albums
and CDs Sterling Sheet Music and Quantity's Fite Play Collection Quaintly
real 4-track deck deck $250, electric range $50, accordian $85, 3 ellipsoidal light bands $60, large anvil case $250, Gary 843-0016, leave message.
YAMAHA Receiver and Direct Drive Turbillate,
System complete, cassette recorder,
phone call, *Call Chuck 4163*
AUTOSALES
1961 Ford Escort Stationwagon New tires
(95/28 Ford, AM/CB.3a 10.9 t, p9.8 841-7627
1925 GS 650 L Sunki-motorcycle. Shaft drive.
1925 GS 650 L Sunki-motorcycle condition $1, 844 b14 712
* 10 p.m. - Fr. 11 a.m.
1965 Fiero SE, 6 Cly. 4 Sp., Silver, Top of line
35.00 miles, £7,000, 841-3465.
1885 SUABARU GL 4 door sedan *Dark Blue with moon sun roof, SunCam Dash, Loaded* 41,400
1960 SUABARU GL 4 door sedan *Dark Blue with moon sun roof, SunCam Dash, Loaded* 41,400
76 Volvo 844 GL. Auto sunroof. Some rust. Excellent Condition. 83.000 81.450-8079
Bertone X 1/8 - Two-toned silk. Loaded Ec
cellent condition $34, K$400. 841-600. Leave
either
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' carbo, boats,
cars, bikes, shoes. Buyers' guides.
815-687-0000 ext. 9258.
Now hire maintenance person. Requires general maintenance of 2 restaurants. Must be available 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. M-F. Starting with Bob's smokehouse above Buffalo Bob's smokehouse.
Tun up your import car, $35, satisfaction guaranteed. Mobil repair service, call Aaron at 800-264-5700.
LOST-FOUND
LOST_REST BACKPACK. at the Fieldhouse Sat;
Log in. Please note these notes. Please
log in. Grab 192.858.2.128. Eyes. Repeat.
**
Rax Restaurants is now hiring responsible, mature, hard-working individuals to fill part-time day, evening and weekend openings. Wages start at 3.70 per hour. Flexible scheduling. Apply at raxrestaurants.com.
Found. Black Puppy w/ black chest in area of 11th &
Indiana call 243 973 977 ask for Paul.
Lost gold colored ring with simulated diamonds, stone. Rubbed missing. Great sentimental value.
HELP WANTED
ARLINES NOW HIRING Flight Attendants
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $50K. Entry level positions.
Call 895-600-6000 Ext. A-9738.
RESORT HOTELS. Cruiseines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks NO接受 applications
for reservation. For information & application, write
national College Recruitment, P.O. Box 8074 Hillon
Inolen: Riese bike. 5-speed bike from 1985
india. Reward for into leading to recovery
after rehabilitation.
last: Silver chain bracelet. Was a recent birth-
date. No record.
Alvamar Council Club is seeking housekeeper
hours of service 8 a.m. - 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. - 4 p.m.
on weekdays.
Secretary/Receptionist 9:12 hrs/week. Must be available M, W, m 8 a. f. 12 m. w. bourne $4 hour. General office experience required. App by 719 Massachusetts above. Abbey Bob's
Room 134 Wm. 2/22 Aath 104:19 8:38
Vauent. soundlusts. If found call Diana 843-0126.
Summer Jobs! Two of Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15 August 21. For an interview and call interview details, see EXT. 310
**POSTAL JOBS** $20.64 Start! **New Now!**
Postal Job Application 134 Exam 134
[91] 844-444-4441 Exit 134
BE ON T V: Many needed for commercials
T casting info (1) 800-847-6000 EMI
€0,002
CAMP COUNSELORS WANTed for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, watergames, gymnastics, golf and basketball, sports, campers, camping, dramas, drama, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $80 or more, R & B. Mar. & Mc Sereg, 1765 Mild, NId.
Efficient hard-worker needed to run errands,
clean and maintain office. 2:5 p.m. each weekday
afternoon. Require undergrad with vehicle.
842-7685.
efficient hard worker needed to run errands,
clean and maintain office 2-5 p.m. each weekday
afternoon. Require undergrad with vehicle
842/7065
CLINTON MAHINA will be conducting interviews for 1988 staff positions March 1st and 2nd from 9am at the Air Seasons building, at the reserve warehouse. Positions include store attendant, dock attendant, boat and barge supervisor, assistant crewman. Most positions will start immediately. Full and part-time positions available. Must be 19 in May or September.
TYPIST to transcribe, using WordPerfect on a computer. Participate in interviews, participate other computer work experiences, 60 w.p.m. required; 1/4 time, some flexibility. Send resume to K. Uttier, 216 Barell Road, 60045.
COCKTAIL WAITTRESS. Must be percussion, experienced and at least 21. Apply at THE HAWK.
PERSONAL
Established weekend country band is auditioning for an experienced piano player and fiddle player.
McDonalds of Lawrence has part-time openings for day shift and late shift. Applicants need to be at least 18 years old, have a minimum wage and discount on meals. Now is the time to get you summer job at McDonald's!
GOVENMENT JOB'S. $10,065-$45,920/3y. Warr
hiring. Lines 803 (803) 670-4007 use #I-97958 for
warranty applications.
Mothers help to live in our N.J. home - close to NYC. Female, non-smoker, driver. Call (201) 938-9013. Minimum 3 months starting in May or August.
BiWM 2, attractive, straight acting. ISO the same. Mutual disjacency. Send letter.
Dorothy I. Hope you have a really groovy 21st birthday, Love, Your Hippie Chick.
GOT MONDAY NIGHT BLUES? CATCH THE ACTION. KU HUEKY WE DRIVE YOUR PARTY inquiries call FC1 at 749-5041 or brooke at 864-5041. 3-p.m. F.M. From KUEKY.
TOP PRIORITY
paid for by TOP PRIORITY
HEY KU! Did you know that in the past year an elite group 'hit': it might be Student Senate has wasted $850 on Course Source, jeopardized Tipex Tata, eaten more steak dinners on expansive sides, and not enough for over $74,000 on itself? We know what our top priority should be: let's put some INTEGRITY back in Senate. No more of the same old promises. INTEGRITY IN 38! "Said by the In-
I'm here, where are you? Normal guy, 25, adventureous, handsome, kind, creative, magnetic, and complex. Looking for normal, pretty, warm, in-touch, fun person. Call or email me! Write it. P.O. Box 137, Lawrence.
I Lahh. dAhh. Dahhh is so doggie wonderful! I Lahh. dAhh you come to basketball, we had a bet, if you recall. The dinner tab won't be smash! Doug回升 Duke.
- · · · · HEV KU · · · · ·
· SENR ALOONS · · · ·
- birthday • thank you
* get well • i love you
* parties • functions
841-1790
Mickey. Cliff. Phi Kap. - Surprise you made the personal! Now Rudy can have you! It's been some incredible luck. I only hope it it only imprint. Love. Your favorite Sig Kap!
RCR — it’s been 38 terrific years. Here’s to you.
Bronx Airlines scheduled for:
4.4 to 7.1 and 3.7 to 3.0 and 2.9 to
3.6.
**boat marches 35, 36, 37, 38, 41**
September, 27 **Skiing Professional**, Attractive, to meet to meet 20-30 female for long friendship. Friend not important. Write to P.O. Box 384, Ottawa, Kansas, 66667 with text.
To any surfman - join traveling bodyboarder on surf trip to Kauai over Spring Break. FREE accommodation on North Shore (responsible for own airfare, meals, etc.) from P.O. Box 84138
yellow and White Striped Shirt, Long Dark wavy hair. I saw you at the *Jacket* in the Cafe on Union On Friday the 28th. Look like the place to be around 10 for fine wine. How much? So we could get a red Wavy Hair.
To the Fiero lady, at Park 25, say hi to the Capri
nearest nearest you.
BUS. PERSONAL
Car won't start? Mobile repair service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 811-4629.
I have never tru shared experience and mutual support. No does or fees. Overwhelmed by the need to provide Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine. For confidential information/contact person. Write PO Box 3482
MATH TUOR since 1976, M A. $/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
All sizes, back seamed pantyhose and stocking now stock. The Etc. Shop.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSOFT $6.00. Art & Design Building. Room 206. 894-4767.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE 8, M-F,
professional work processing/d data management,
resumes/letters, manuscripts, theses, etc. TOP-NOTH
SERVICES 843-5062
PRIVATE OFFICE - Obj-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park ... 491-6878
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
and Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
940-726-1388
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided.
841.7216
Instant passport, portfolio resume, naturalization,
imprint, interview ID. I.D. fine portraits.
491-1891-101
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing,
TYPING
Bloom County t-shirts & books Role-playing, war games and miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese Comics and more!
Pregnant and need help? Call Birbright at 843-7021. Confidential help/free pregnancy advice
LEOATARD SALE! All women's leaids,
uniforms, and dance pants up to 50% off! New
Spring arrivals included Dragonfly Dance
New location: 17 East 7th 7th & New
1A. RelIable Typing System Tern paper.
1B. RelIable Typing System 15M IBM
Electronic Typewriter 942-3246
overse woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbies into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-type质 843-263, days or evenings
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation service #17789
South Padre Island deluxe condominiums - the new home for sale for Spring Break. Call 1-800-HIPADR or your travel agent for reservations.
SERVICES OFFERED
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ-
ing. 2 plus Typing: Letters, thesis, law Terry 842-754
or 843-607 evening and night classes.
so value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Freeipal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor, 143-2079.
TRUST TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shots to compositions by dancers, dancers, dancers 811-023-9244.
Acurate, affordable typing experienced in terminology
correcting the correctional selectric,
spelling corrected. 843-9554
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-821-0. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Call back. Hear that you typing 81./pp. 24 hr.
turn around. Call 843-6438 after 5 p.m.
return to room.
AAA TYPING Word processing/spellcheck.
playtime weeks, 88-194-102 After 5pm M-F-
Monday weekends, 88-194-102
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
Momenta
MOMENTA
MAZZER before n. 19
One day service
MAZZER before n. 19
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Prodigying.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, maillist lists. Letter
printing. Spelling corrected. 842-2747.
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 841-9600. Spring special $120/point paper.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE, Letter
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE, spit check,
TOP-NOMIN SERVICE 855-2700
TOP-NOMIN SERVICE 855-2700
protessional typist w/ 15 years experience. Close
laboratory. Phone 892-4999.
THE FAR SIDE
Quality Training. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, and use of reliable service code. Materials available. 845-2100.
RESUME-m professionally typeset and Laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professional resumes, or you can get it for 1/2 price of Kinko's and get it back to you in 24 hours. Call today at 842-388-7691. If no answer, contact the office.
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 BARBARA at 845-0111
WANTED
Female roommate, 2 bedroom duplex at Meadowbrook, owner, room, furnished, 5 minute.
Female roommate wanted. 2 bedroom house 8th
& Kentucky $130 - utilities. Large dog lover
a must. Graduate student or large student
preferred. 829-5300
Male/Female room needed/fully furnished
male, near campus; own bedroom 120m² with
bathroom
Female roommate wanted to share 1/1 story townhouse with other females. One townhouse has a shared AC, 1/2 bath plus. Located close to campgrounds now is road. Luxury and rent. U43-654-3041.
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours available, if you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous. Buckinghamshire B26 8544. B26 8544. Need transportation. Put your used books and magazines to work: Donate to Friends of the Lawrence Public Library. Bring to collection box at the library 707
Male/Female Roommate needmed for 3 bedroom house. $141/month, $\uplus$ utilities or nice. 749-2417-843-6285. Ask for Tm. Bill, or Need Student Training OSU game, B64-2520 ask for
Roommate getting married need older student to share rent 138.75 + $4 utilities in a townhouse.
Oven room on bus route. Please call if interested
842-2737
Nice fun roommate looking for 2 roommates to share 3 bed room apartment for 88-89 school year. Swimming pool, BB/Tennis Courts available. 842-6252 Meadowbrook
Roommate to share house with graduate student.
Dwr. roommate. One room at attic, pet ok.
WDW: 1300
WIDW: 1300
WTD; $130 + $quinnies. 842-647-8
Wanted: tickets to Saturday night's Basketball game. Will pay. Call Mike at 842-054-8
We need 2 "Sing" tickets! Call 841-4039
By GARY LARSON
3-1 © 1988 Universal Press Syndicate
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Sure, I'm a creature — and I can accept that ... but lately it seems I've been developing into a miserable creature."
Classified Information Mail-In Form
set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Policy
Policy words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in 804
words set in 113 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
online advertisement.
insertion of any advertisement
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
44.00 service charge
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
- Prenaid Order Form Ads
- Prepaid Order Form Rules
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Monday is at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 days 15 days 1 month
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16.20 3.35 5.00 7.05 11.30 16.55 20.75
21.25 3.90 5.80 8.10 12.60 18.10 22.60
26.30 4.40 6.55 9.15 13.90 19.70 24.40
31.35 4.95 7.35 10.20 15.25 21.25 26.25
ASSIGNMENTS
001 announcements 300 for sale
002 entertainment 310 auto sales
003 entertainment 310 personal
004 business 800 services offered
005 uplining 800 upselling
006 financial 100 personal
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119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
Classification:
10
Tuesday, March 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansar
Campus Briefs
STUDENT REPORTS RAPE: A 21-year-old KU student reported that she was raped in her apartment in southwest Lawrence between 4:30 a.m. and 5 a.m. Saturday by an acquaintance, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police are not yet sure how the man got into the apartment, or of the nature of the relationship between the two
Few details are being released pending an investigation. Police said the investigation could last a week or more.
MEMORIAL SERVICE THURSDAY: A memorial service for three KU students who were killed in a two-car accident Feb. 19 will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Orave Ave.
Organizers hope people who knew the students will attend the service and share their memories of Baron O. Schilpp, 21, Wichita junior; Paul T. Apprill, 19, Merriam sophomore; and Darrin S. Selby, 20, Wichita freshman.
The Rev. Jack Bremer will preside at the service organized by Anna Koeneman, Shawnee Mission freshman, and Craig Miner, Wichita junior.
SUSPECT RETURNED TO JAIL. A 19-year-old Lawrence man who had been free on bond after being charged with aggravated robbery last November was returned to Douglas County jail Friday after he was arrested by Lawrence police in connection with another robbery.
The man, Chad Beers, is being held in lieu of $100,000 bond on a new charge of aggravated robbery. A
complaint and warrant for his arrest had been filed in Douglas County District Court on Wednesday.
The complaint said that Beers had allegedly stolen $1,319.22 at gunpoint from an employee of a local restaurant in January while she was on the way to the bank with the money.
Heers had been free on $5,000 bond awaiting his March 16 trial for allegedly taking an undisclosed amount of money from the Lawrence National Bank last November.
A preliminary hearing on the new charge is scheduled for March 7.
ADD-DROP DECISION MONDAY: Faculty and students will determine the fate of the proposed add-drop policy when University Senate meets Monday.
policy. The policy has raised concerns among faculty because it sets a three-week drop period and a three-week and two-day add period for all schools on the Lawrence campus. The current policy allows schools to set shorter add periods, and many faculty want to retain that right.
Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union's Wooldruff Auditorium.
sandra Wick, administrative assistant for the Senate Executive Committee, said that she had received 214 signatures in petitions calling for a meeting of the Senate. Only 50 signatures were necessary.
necessary?
If a quorum, or about 250 people, attend the meeting,
the Senate can vote on the add-drop proposal. The
Senate can also request a mail ballot on the issue.
Ann Eversole, chairman of the University committee, said she gave Foubert permission to use Woodruff Auditorium for the free speech forum.
Continued from p.1
Klan
Eversole said that the free speech forum was different from the two canceled Klan visits because a registered student organization was sponsoring the event for a public presentation.
Foubert said that he was in the process of contacting security for the event but that the main problem was finding a representative from the black community.
Foubert said that he expected opposition to the forum but hoped the protests would be peaceful and rational.
"They feel that sharing the stage with the Klan would legitimize their existence and would be an endorsement for giving them a platform to speak." Foubert said.
You could be reading your name right now! Call the Kansan and find out how.
"The nature of the University is the exchange of ideas. This is just like any other topic of forum or interest." Eversole said.
"We are trying to use the event to benefit all sides intellectually."
(913) 864-4358
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Preparation & review of legal docun
- Advice on most legal matters
- Notarization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5665
Funded by student activity fee.
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
TM
Macintosh It is never cost less. But you need to order now.
Make sure your Mac is here by March 31 or April 1. Place your order at the Burge Union by Friday, March 11!
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. the computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st,you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1, 2, 3!
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union. Stop by and place your order before March 11. Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want. ($50 deposit required)
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 3: Pick up your Maceintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
Macintosh SE
Macintosh SE
+
Macintosh Plus or SE? 2-disk or hard disk drive? You choose. The computer that will help you work faster, smarter and more creatively has never cost less!
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
Macintosh Plus...$1200
Macintosh SE with 2 disk drives...$1979
Macintosh SE, 20 meg hard disk drive...$2399
Included in these special prices are: the computer keyboard, mouse, hypercard and multifinder. These special prices are also available to KU faculty and staff.
KUBookstores
BURGE UNION
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Wednesday March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 108 (USPS 650-640)
Lack of funds may postpone public forum
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff write
The free speech forum that would bring the Ku Klux Klan to campus could be postponed because of a lack of funds for security, the spokesman for the student organization sponsoring the forum said yesterday.
The spokesman, Michael Foubert, director of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, said that KU police had quoted a figure for security that was too expensive. Foubert declined to specify what the figure was.
He said that he might need more funds to pay for security but could not ask Student Senate because its meeting would be after the scheduled forum.
"I'm between a rock and a hard place," Foubert said. "If the KU police stick with the quote they gave me, then we would have to postpone the event. We'll just have to wait and see."
The plans for the forum, which would be a panel discussion on free speech, were announced Monday by Foubert. The forum is scheduled for 8 p.m. Monday in the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium.
Foubert said yesterday that Pete Rowland, associate professor of political science, would participate in the forum.
Rowland acknowledged that he would participate but would not comment further.
Foubert said that the other confirmed participants in the forum included two members of the Missouri Knights and Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism. Foubert also said he was attempting to get another journalism professor and representatives from the black community.
Foubert said Monday that Diana Prentice, instructor in communications, had been confirmed as the moderator for the forum. But Prentice said yesterday that there had been a misunderstanding and that she was unconfirmed.
Prentice said that she had talked to Foubert yesterday about the misunderstanding and that she was concerned about the lack of participants in the forum.
"I view it as a discussion on free speech. With what he has now, I don't see that happening." Prentice said.
"If the other people confirm, then I will think about it."
Local black leaders said that they were concerned about the forum but would not comment on possible protests against the forum.
The Rev. William A. Dulin, president of Ecumenical Fellowship, said that he would not comment on any action the black community might take.
"I am very disappointed. They said one thing and did something else. I felt we were on the way to progress. Evidently, nothing has changed." Dulin said.
Both Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, were out of town yesterday and could not be reached for comment.
Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said he hoped the sponsors of the forum would use the First Amendment responsibly.
"I hope this is more than just an act to show, 'Yes, we have this right.' There is a responsibility to any freedom and to any right," Brinkman said.
However, Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, said the purpose of the forum was only to give the Klan a platform to speak on campus.
"I have less of a problem with the student group inviting them than I did with the official invitation to the classroom during Black History Month. I will tolerate them, but they will be protested." Adams said.
Two members of the Missouri Knights, a Klan affiliate, were scheduled to appear on JKHK's JayTalk 91 and in a journalism class two weeks ago. Both visits were moved to off-campus locations.
Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said that he was unset with the idea of the forum.
"They are finally getting what they want. I hope they're happy." Webb said. "Apparently, nobody gives a damn about our feelings, or the Jewish feelings or other minorities."
GUESS
the number of beans
TO WIN A
PANASONIC
MICRO-
WAVE
How many?
Maggie Berg, Leavenworth sophomore, tries to guess how many jelly beans fill the jar at the entrance to Union Square in the Kansas Union. The jar was one of several drawings that attracted people to the third floor of the Union yesterday. The person who comes closest to the actual number of jelly beans receives a microwave oven.
Robertson wants end of libel suit
The Associated Press
SARASOTA, Fla. — Republican presidential candidate Pat Robertson said yesterday that he would drop his libel suit against former Rep. Pete McCloskey rather than go to trial on Super Tuesday, the biggest day of the primary season.
Robertson, who was accused of avoiding combat duty in the Korean War through his father's influence, said he wanted to take the case to voluntary arbitration in an effort to clear his and his father's names. But he said that if McCloskey refused to do that, he would drop the suit anyway.
McCloskey's lawyer, George Lehner, said that a proposal to arbitration was rejected by Robertson's lawyers nine months ago and that to propose it on the eve of the trial "is a little disingenuous" and "a red herring."
Lehner has said repeatedly that McCloskey would not agree to settlement in the case unless Robertson paid legal fees, estimated at $400,000, piled up by the former congressman.
"We are prepared to go to trial." Lehner said after learning of Robertson's announcement. "If he wants to drop the suit," the lawyer said, Robertson must "pay the legal fees" byMcCloskey to defend the case.
McCloskey said it was "not for him (Robertson) to decide" to drop the suit, saying he would oppose any motion by Robertson to dismiss the case.
"I would rather go to trial." McCloskey said in a telephone interview. "He's called me a liar all over the United States. I would much prefer there be a verdict as to which of us has told the truth."
Robertson's $35 million suit accuses McCloskey of defaming him in a widely publicized letter contending that the former television evangelist had used the influence of his father, the late Sen. A. Willis Robertson, to avoid combat duty in the Korean War as a Marine Corps officer.
The case had been scheduled for Tuesday, the same date as Republican primaries and caucuses in 17 states.
“In order to compete in that trial, I would have to break off my campaign today and run the risk of losing Florida, Texas, South Carolina and other parts of the South,” Robertson said at an airport news conference.
KU considers sharing periodicals
Rising subscription costs, dollar devaluation cause shortage
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
KU'might join nine universities in the region in an effort to ensure access to periodicals that individual universities cannot afford because of inflation and devaluation of the U.S. dollar abroad.
Clinton Howard, assistant dean of libraries, said that many serial and journal subscriptions had been canceled because of serious financial difficulties.
Rising subscription costs and the devaluation of the dollar inspired the universities to attempt to unite so that each important journal would be kept by at least one university library in the region.
Under the plan, universities would share copies of journals that cost more than $200 a year. The universities came up with the plan at a meeting Feb. 10 at the University of Kansas.
Attending the meeting were Iowa State University, the University of Missouri, Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, the University of Colorado, Colorado State University, the University of Wyoming, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and the University of Oklahoma.
As a preliminary step, each library is sending the titles it has from a list of 6,000 periodicals to a data base at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
Charlene Grass, associate dean of libraries at K-State, said she thought an alliance of universities could help overcome the problems of cancellations of serials.
"Each university should try to maintain its core periodicals, but I think sharing the peripheral titles would work very well," she said.
By the end of March, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln should have all of the data from the libraries. Then, another meeting is planned to decide whether the libraries should proceed with the plan, Howard said.
Another option or addition to the network might be the development of electronic document transmission. Howard said such systems were expensive but ultimately would be less expensive than subscribing to journals with escalating yearly costs.
"There is some possibility for a cooperative arrangement to work out, but the existence of copyright law really does limit how much libraries can do," he said. "It would be better than no access, though."
Howard said copyright law limited the number of copies that libraries could trade to six copies of a publication within one year.
Devaluation of the U.S. dollar has hurt library subscriptions and acquisitions the most, Howard
“Out of a $3 million budget for fiscal year 1986, the library has spent 40 percent of it in foreign currencies,” he said. “For every percentage point the dollar has declined, we’ve been losing about
$12,000 to foreign publications."
Last year, the library had to cancel $200,000 in periodicals and subscriptions. Howard said.
Book acquisitions also are down. During the last fiscal year, the library has decreased acquisitions by more than 30 percent, from 49,000 acquisitions in fiscal year 1987 to a projected 34,000 acquisitions in fiscal year 1988.
Even with the cuts, the library has still gone $200,000 over its $2.8 million budget for fiscal year 1988. Howard said.
The biggest hope for the library now depends on full funding for the Marinet of Excellence plan.
Ward Brian Zimmerman, director of budget, said that if full financing were provided, KU libraries would receive $350,000 from the state, $100,000 of which would be specifically for acquisitions, including books and subscriptions.
KU libraries also would receive the equivalent of 11 additional full-time positions and $61,000 to increase librarian salaries. Also, the new science library would receive $100,000 and the equivalent of four full-time positions.
"For fiscal year 1987, we increased the acquisitions budget by 2 percent," Zimmerman said. "But prices of domestic subscriptions rose over 9 percent, and the price of foreign journals really hurt us, with an increase of 30 percent."
"The University library has a very high priority with the administration, and we provide what we can, even though it may not be enough for their needs."
Shultz preparing to resume Middle East peace mission; Hussein praises U.S. efforts
BRUSSELS, Belgium — Secretary of State George Shultz appeared last night on the verge of a decision to resume his diplomatic shuttle in the Middle East after reporting to President Reagan.
A U.S. official said King Hussein of Jordan told Shultz at a meeting in London earlier yesterday that he was interested in Shultz's effort to set up Arab-Iraeli negotiations.
The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Hussein did not directly endorse the U.S. initiative but told Shultz he appreciated the effort being made to open talks.
A statement issued by the Jordanian Embassy in London said Hussein had reiterated Jordan's position that an international peace conference should be attended by the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council — the United States, the Soviet Union, China, Britain and France — and "all parties to the
Shultz arranged to confer with Reagan before the president began his talks in the Belgian capital.
Meanwhile, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres said Israel was willing to exchange for peace those parts of the occupied territories not crucial to its security, but Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir has opposed the arrangement. The two men are partners and rivals in Israel's tenuous coalition government.
conflict, including the Palestine Liberation Organization."
The concept of trading territory for peace is an element of the new U.S. proposals that Shultz has pursued in the past week.
President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, in his first comment on his talks with Shultz, said yesterday that he had reservations about the U.S. plan and that he would disclose them only after a final formula was reached.
Mubarak and Shultz conferred Sunday in Egypt.
Professor studies effects of society's new tests on individual
Bv Brenda Finnell
A computer spits out a number, and immediately someone is sent to the employee area. The corresponding worker is tapped on the shoulder, taken out of line and asked to produce a urine sample for a drug test.
Kansan staff writer
This scenario is the way some random drug testing occurs, said Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology. Hanson is studying the role that testing plays in contemporary society.
By studying things such as drug testing, lie detection and aptitude testing, Hanson hopes to discover how humans define themselves as persons through tests.
"As we are increasingly known to other people and ourselves through testing, we are somewhat fragmented as personalities," he said.
Some people are interested in a person's scholarly aptitude or whether he can pass a driver's exam. Others want to know whether he takes drugs or tells the truth, Hanson
said.
"We seem not ever to be reconstituted as whole human beings, certainly not by the organizations we work in, ideal with in mass society," he said.
Hanson said that he was not attempting to make value judgments about testing but that he wanted to look at society as an objective scholar and see how testing affects it.
Hanson studied drug testing last summer and lie detection tests the summer before. He will go on sabbat-
next year to work on his research. He said that he expected it would occupy much of his time for the next couple of years.
He said he planned to use his research to write a book on testing in
Most of Hanson's research is done through personal interviews in the Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City areas. He observes organizations and individuals who conduct testing, including manufacturing, transportation, chemical and heavy industry
The term technology of power
companies and athletic organizations.
"I try to get something of a perspective, from those who give the tests, those who order them to be given and the employees who take them." Hanson said.
Hanson said that he got the theoretical inspiration for his research after studying Michel Foucault, who wrote about the change in the "technology of power" after the early 19th century.
refers to how people's behavior is controlled by encouraging socially acceptable behavior and discouraging socially unacceptable behavior.
Before the 19th century, the masses observed proper role models such as George Washington and improper ones such as Attila the Hun and then conditioned their behavior to be similar to the good model. Hanson said.
---
But in the early 19th century, a dramatic shift took place, Hanson
See TEST, p. 11, col. 1
2
Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
On Campus is on page 8 today
the
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Where's the sun?
HIGH: 51°
LOW: 28°
Today's high will be in the low 50's as rain and gusty winds continue throughout the day, dropping the temperature by midafternoon. Tonight, conditions remain with a low in the upper 20's.
KEY
REGIONAL
North Data
45/25
Showers
Ontario
46/25
Showers
Gardland
46/25
Showers
Hays
48/26
Showers
Salina
48/26
Showers
Toppea
51/29
Showers
Kansas City
52/30
Showers
Columbia
54/32
Showers
St. Louis
58/38
Showers
Dodge City
54/30
Showers
Wichita
57/35
Thunderstorm
Chenango
58/37
Thunderstorm
Springfield
65/42
Thunderstorm
Forecast by Alice V. Ideas
Temperature are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
THU
Clearing
45/30
HIGH
FRI
Sunny
52/34
SAT
Sunny
55/32
SUN
Showers
60/35
MON
Partly cloudy
60/35
THU
Clearing
45/30
HIGH
LOW
FRI
Sunny
52/34
SAT
Sunny
55/32
SUN
Showers
60/35
MON
Partly cloudy
60/35
Cloudy
Four pickup tires valued together at $588 were slashed Saturday in a parking lot west of Memorial Stadium, KU police reported.
Tools valued at $4,201 were taken Monday or yesterday from a business in the 500 block of Minnesota Street, Lawrence police reported.
A light bar and speaker valued together at $19.191 were taken Monday morning from the roof of a KU police car parked in the Carruth O'Leary parking lot, KU police reported. The car received $50 worth of damage.
Police Reports
Ouss, cameras and jewelry valued together at $1,690 were taken between Thursday and Monday from a house in the 1000 block of Jana Drive, Lawrence police reported.
Call 864-4810
A camera, calculator and video equipment valued together at $1,388 were taken yesterday in an incident of West 11th Street, Lawrence police reported.
- clothing valued at $225 was taken Sunday or Monday from a clothesline in the 900 block of Illinois Street, Lawrence police reported.
Four tires valued at $260 were slashed Sunday or Monday in a parking lot in the 1400 block of Apple Lane, Lawrence police reported.
STORY or PHOTO IDEA?
Because of a reporter's error, the Rev. Leo Barbee was incorrectly identified in a story in Tuesday's Kansan. Barbee is pastor of the Victory Bible Church in Lawrence.
Correction
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IFC and Panhellenic wish the performers
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in Rock Chalk '88 Good Luck!
1988
STUDY ABROAD WITH THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS NEXT YEAR AND EARN KU CREDIT!! ACADEMIC YEAR 1988/89 DEADLINES HAVE BEEN EXTENDED FOR THE FOLLOWING PROGRAMS:
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Many other programs in Great Britain offering a full range of courses still have openings.
Financial Aid and scholarships available for qualified applicants.
COME BY THE OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD SOON FOR MORE INFORMATION AND AN APPLICATION 203 Lippincott Hall
T
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 2, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Renovations overdue at KU residence halls
Planning official says staff shortage is cause
By Kim Lightle
By Kim Lightle Kansan staff writer
Renovations of the eight KU residence halls are one year behind schedule because of staff shortages in the facilities planning office, a planning official said yesterday.
Marci Francisco, assistant director of facilities planning, said that staff in the office was reduced from 14 to 8, and which showed the planning process.
The delay in the project has prevented the merger of the student housing department and the office of residential programs. The delay also has halted improvements that would have added study space to McColum Hail and fixed plumbing problems at Ellsworth Hall.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said that the improvements were part of a 10-year plan. He said he had targeted one scholarship hall for renovation every summer beginning in 1986 and one residence hall beginning in 1987.
"It doesn't mean that what we have now is bad." Stoner said. "We just want to continually improve the balls."
The work is on schedule in the scholarship halls. Renovations in Miller and Watkins halls were completed in 1986, and work in Battenfeld Hall was completed in 1987. Pearson scheduled for renovation this summer.
Stoner had scheduled work on Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall to begin last year. McColum was scheduled for 1988 and Ellsworth for 1989.
The renovations at GSP-Corbin would have included converting an unused kitchen and dining area into office space for the combined offices of student housing and the office of residential programs. Now, the student housing department is in McColum and the office of residential programs is in Strong Hall.
The space vacated by the housing office in McColum would become study and meeting rooms under the plans.
Stoner said McCollum needed more space because it was the largest hall but had the smallest area for people to meet.
Mike White, McCollum Hall director, said the lack of study rooms was a problem.
But, he said, "Personally, I wasn't upset about the delay. I knew it would happen."
Alison Crowther, Hull, Great Britain, junior, said the hall needed more study room.
"It's really a problem if you live on a noisy floor," she said. "The cafeteria isn't very conducive to studying, lighting in there is not very good."
Residents at Ellsworth said that they were unhappy about the delay
because it would mean a longer wait for better-regulated water in their showers.
Erin Levine, Glennville, Ill., freshman, said, "It takes forever for the showers to heat up. When they do warm up, they turn cold in five minutes."
Kathy Dufield, Plains junior, said that people on her floor complained about the showers at several floor meetings.
"If I had the power, I would change things now," Dufield said. "I won't be living here next year."
Stoner said renovations would be financed by money from accounts set up when each hall was built. The department has estimated that it would cost $500,000 to renovate each hall. Any increases in costs during the delay would have to be worked around, he said.
"We'll have to live within our means," he said.
Francisco said she planned to get approval from the University director of facilities planning for the GSP-Corbin project this week. Then, an architect from the state's office would come to KU to re-evaluate the list and make cost estimates.
Stoner said that when the project got further along, residents would have a chance to comment on what renovations they thought should be made in the halls.
Henry
Lisa Leinacker/KANSAN
Share the life
Sandy Haberman, nurse technician for the American Red Cross, checks the progress of first-time donor David Dolezal, Kanopolis sophomore. The blood drive began yesterday and will run through tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
KU design chairman leaves post
Missy Kosner, Highland Park, Ill., sophomore practices juggling her devil sticks in front of Watson Library. Kosner took advantage of the warm weather yesterday to demonstrate the balance and coordination skills needed for the game. The high temperature yesterday was 65, but the high today will only reach the lower 50s.
Sticking to it
By Michael Carolan
The School of Architecture and Urban Design is searching for a new chairman to replace a 14-year faculty member who has resigned to take a position in Louisiana.
Kansan staff writer
Chris Theis, associate professor of architecture and urban design, who has been acting chairman in the school since July 1988, will become director of the School of Architecture at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La., on July 1, 1988, said Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design.
"We're all sorry to see him teave, Lucas said. "But it is an excellent opportunity for him, and it gets him to his home state. I think he'll do a wonderful job."
CHECKERS PIZZA
Ken Carpenter, dean of the college of design at LSU, said that students, faculty, and administrators approved of the selection.
"Chris Theis has an excellent track record," Carpenter said. "He is highly regarded by students and faculty, has excellent teaching experience and he's bright, articulate and hardworking."
Lucas said the search for a new chairman was continuing. Their became acting chairman after Stephen Grabow, professor of architecture and urban design, resigned in 1986. All applications for the position are expected by the beginning of April, he said.
A search committee will choose the new chairman by July or August, Lucas said. The committee will most likely select an applicant from outside the University.
Theis came to the KU School of Architecture and Urban Design as an assistant professor in 1974. In 1980, he became an associate professor; and in 1982, he was named associate chairman.
He has taught most of the five years of design studios that make up the core of architecture education at KU. He has taught courses on passive solar design and building technologies.
Lois Clark, assistant dean of architecture and urban design, said that Theis directed the undergraduate program and the fifth-year internship program.
Theis said, "I've seen the school grow. I've contributed in some small way to the growth of this school since I've been here, and I hope that I can do that at Louisiana."
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By Jeff Suggs
Mike Mummert, Lawrence senior, spoke to 14 people in the Kansas Union's Gallery East last night to help organize a political and social organization for atheists at the University of Kansas.
Kansan staff writer
Activism goal of atheist club
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Atheism is disbelief in the existence of supernatural powers.
Mummert said the sole political purpose of the club was to lower the power of religion in society.
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The increasing power of religion in politics has led a KU student to organize an atlueist club on campus.
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there was no religion, there would be no atheist club," she said. "It is a political response to religious ideas."
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Religious leaders exert too much power in politics, he said, citing Pat Robertson as an example.
"He places his view of a god above a view of the people," he said.
Jim Klayder, Neodesha graduate student, volunteered at the organizational meeting to become an officer in the
"I feel religion in general is having an undue influence
Mummert, surprised by the turnout, said the club had enough people to become an officially recognized club on
Mummert also wants the club to be affiliated with the American Atheists, a national organization headed by longtime atheist activist Maladyn Murray O'Hair. Mummert is a member of the national group, which is based in Austin, Texas.
on our society," Klayder said. "It concerns me. It seems that religious people tend to base their notion on what society should be."
Agnostics are people who believe that the existence of supernatural powers cannot be proved but who do not deny the possibility of such powers.
To combat the power of religion, Mummert said, the club would write letters to congressmen, urging them to insist on greater separation of church and state.
Mummert said another purpose of the organization was for atheists andagnostics to get together and discuss beliefs.
"I was happy with the turnout," Mummert said. "I wasn't expecting more than six people to show."
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4
Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
1. 下列关于光的现象,正确的是( )
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Rhodes Scholar bill tackles problem at the wrong end
A good secondary education is about as hard to come by in Kansas as a decent price for wheat or a spring without tornadoes. Kansas' ever-worsening financial straits have brought educational hardship upon many communities already limited by their size.
limited by their size. The state government has realized that there is a problem, but it is taking a backward approach to solving it. Senators are pondering a bill designed to attract Rhodes Scholars to state universities when they should be considering how to produce high school seniors capable of attaining success in their own right.
right.
Often, when there is a seemingly insurmountable problem to be solved, the reaction is to take care of the tiny issues while letting the important ones continue to slide. That seems to be the psychology at work behind this bill. By providing scholarships for Kansas Rhodes Scholars — there are three this year — legislators and constituents can assure themselves that
Measures like this one take the focus away from the real problems. If the bill allows Kansas to attract Rhodes Scholars, the state still lacks what it takes to create good elementary, secondary and even university programs: teachers, equipment and money. At worst, such measures could lead Kansans to think the problems are solved.
think the problems are not true. The problem with education in Kansas does not lie at the postgraduate level. Yes, it certainly would be nice for Kansas to have a few Rhodes Scholars at its universities for purposes of prestige or recruiting. But they would only be dressing up the windows of a condemned house.
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Fundamentalists lose again
The general population sure is lucky the fundamentalists are looking out for it, working to keep exposure to "godless" textbooks out of the classroom.
The Supreme Court, a permanent blister on the foot of fundamentalists, last week upheld a ruling that a Tennessee school district does not have to create separate reading sessions for fundamentalists' children.
The fundamentalists complained about the use of such radical books as "The Wizard of Oz," "Cinderella" and "The Diary of Anne Frank." They also objected to the innocuous fairy tales of Hans Christian Andersen.
fairy tales of Hans Christian. These books and others are considered unacceptable because they deal with occultism, evolution, disobedience to parents, pacifism, feminism and (gasp) secular humanism.
pachish, renishth and other "A dark cloud of religious oppression looms over America's schoolhouse today," said the president of a fundamentalist group
give On the contrary, a potential cloud of oppressive religious groups dissinated before it ever got here.
The fundamentalists have hoped to ride the coattails of the "Reagan Revolution" to return religion to the classroom. And by the way, that's their religion, not anybody else's.
The Supreme Court also has thumped the fundamentalists on "voluntary prayer," tax deductible donations to discriminatory religious academies and "equal treatment" of evolution and creationism in the classroom.
Maybe now that the fundamentalists are zero for four with the Supreme Court, they'll realize that the only way they can protect their children from exposure to these ideas is by locking the children and themselves into a room. A padded room.
Exposure does not compel the children to accept beliefs that contradict their or their parents' religious beliefs. Fundamentalists are fond of trotting out the argument that the home is the place to settle tricky moral questions.
Now it's time to put their actions where their mouths are
Russell Gray for the editorial board
And if the fundamentalists really want to help the rest of us, they should go sit quietly in the corner and wait for the reincarnation of the "Reagan Revolution."
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jenerette.
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 Luscombe...Sports editor
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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 image
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Kimberly Coleman...Classified manager
Jennée Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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I'M NOT IN RIGHT NOW, BUT IF YOU'LL LEAVE YOUR NAME AND NUMBER..."
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BANNER ISSUES
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JIM BORGMAN
CINCINNATI
ENCQUIRER/GRAEB
Swaggart may have been set up
Bush's CIA background gives him experience in hatching sneaky plots
It has the makings of a political bombshell — a high-level Washington mystery worthy of the best-seller list.
The question: Did the forces of Vice President George Bush somehow arouse Jimmy Swaggart's libido, driving the TV preacher into the clutches of a barlot and public disgrace?
No, this is not the product of my demented mind. It originated, more or less, with Pat Robertson, one of Bush's political rivals
Robertson suspects that it's far more than mere coincidence that Swaggart's sex capers became public knowledge shortly before the Super Tuesday primaries.
As Robertson put it: "The timing "stretches the imagination and stretches credulity."
"Nothing happens to people by accident," he said. "It is kind of funny this came up two weeks before the most important primaries in the nation.
haught.
"I think somebody had something to do with it.
Somebody else planned all these things, I am afraid."
Robertson didn't come right out and blame Bush for the Swaggart frolic. But in the same interview, he pointedly talked about how the Bush campaign has been planning all sorts of "dirty tricks" in the primaries.
And what could be a dirtier trick than for one of the nation's leading TV preachers to be caught cavorting with a hooker at a time when one of the nation's other leading TV preachers is running for president?
resident
It's the old guilt-by-association trick.
What Robertson seems to be saying is that because Swaggart has been a rascal, voters might think that other TV evangelists, such as Robertson, are rascals, too.
Naturally, Bush's people say that Robertson's suspicions are about as dippy as anything they've
PETER KENNEDY
Mike Royko
Syndicated Columnist
But as an avid reader of intrigue-conspiracy-cloak-and-dagger novels, I don't think Robertson's suspicions should be so lightly dismissed.
ever heard.
I'm not saying that there is a Bush-Swaggart connection, but let us consider some of the possibilities.
possibilities.
For example, Bush was once head of the CIA. What better background could one have for hatching ornate plots? Sure, Bush looks like a chair boy, but you can't work for the CIA without being somewhat sneaky. It's a required part of your resume.
Is it inconceivable that at a planning session, Bush or one of his operatives said: "Say, why don't we embarrass Robertson by somehow getting someone like Jimmy Swaggart to carry on with a lewd woman, then get the news out to the public just before Super Tuesday?"
"Good thinking. That's even better than making Dan Rather swallow his tongue."
The first step, obviously, would be to find a way to arouse Swaggart's lusts. That wouldn't be easy, of course, because Swaggart has always condemned bed-hopping and other popular but sinful activities.
But as Swaggart himself admitted, according to his church elders, he has long had a secret fascination for pornography. It's a sad vice, but at least it doesn't cause lung cancer or emphysema.
embarrassing tendency, they might have covertly goaded Swaggart by buying him subscriptions to Penthouse, Hustler or other peekabo magazine.
assuming that Bush's plotters knew of this
Or, even worse, they could have bought him a set of porn star Seka's autographed undies, which she sends out in plain brown wrappers.
As the followers of Swaggart and Robertson well know, being exposed to such literature and lewd objects can drive an otherwise normal man to unspeakable acts.
Why, my friend Slåbogn, as a young man, read a novel called "Forever Amber," which was considered the most lurid book of its day, condemned by preachers and the American Legion. Within a year of reading that book, Slats had been so crazed by passion that he got married.
Anyway, let us just consider the possibility that Bush's people did this - forced smut into Swaggart's hands.
The next step might be to have a female agent phone him and breath heavily or even moan, driving him into a frenzy of creepy desires.
Atter that, everything would be easy. A woman of low morals making herself available. Then the fatal visits to the motel while a spook lurks nearby to take pictures of Swaggart and the female.
The result? Tragedy. Swaggart, an otherwise decent man, becoming nothing but a pawn in the big-stakes game of power politics. And Robertson, a victim of a baroque political plot.
I think Robertson's suspicions should be taken seriously and an investigation should be conducted.
The first thing that should be done is to find and interrogate that hooker.
If Robertson is right, chances are that she'll turn out to be a liberal.
Classic religion is best
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Midterms are creeping up, and, as a hobby, I would like to tell a joke. But instead, I will tell one that has some serious overtones.
It is funny and sad to see so much wasted time, money and effort by the American people go into such meaningless vacuums as the PTL, the "Assemblies of God" and the sort. Not only do they confess to doing atrocities, but they fight among themselves in and out of court, for the settlement of the billions of dollars involved.
You might say, "Everyone makes mistakes." This is true; but should a "preacher," someone to give advice and to be a role model, be of the sort that makes mistakes that could cost billions of dollars. Smells funny to me; and I think the I.R.S. smelled it too.
If we accept this mess of "Assemblies" as worthy and valid entities, then we are saying
that anyone can preach and make a living without contributing to the betterment of society. Also, if we are to listen to everyone without some prior credibility established, things would certainly lead to chaos.
Not wanting to get any deeper into the implications of such attitudes, I would like to bring my joke to a close so that I can put this computer terminal to better use.
computer terminal. Did you hear the one about the freak telling the college student not to trust anyone over 30? Oh, that's old; but let me map it out. I have a hard time accepting any religion, or philosophy for that matter, that is younger than I am.
Latey, a couple of people have asked me to check out their "church." "It was founded in 1980 in Kansas City." No thanks. I think I'll stick to the one that got started about 1,988 years ago.
Overland Park senior
Let Klan waste breath
I can hardly see how J. Allen Moran's right to free speech was in any way inhibited by the University of Kansas; he's still whining, isn't
he? Perhaps the University decided to spare him the waste of money and time (not to mention breath) in coming here to discuss his archaic beliefs.
I believe in free speech, and Moran is free to speak until he realizes no one is listening. Moran was quoted in the Kansan as saying, "We (the Klan) would like for once to address the entire student body." Moran is free to set up his grubby little soap box in the middle of Jayhawk Blvd, and orate until he's purple, but I think the students on this campus are intelligent enough not to pay much attention. In fact, I'd consider hiring a non-partisan group to tabulate how many serious listeners he'd get versus how many came to sneer (mark me and ten of my best friends down already). The student body here is modern, and it understands what is meant by all men are created equal and have certain unilainable rights. Moran's old-fashioned and unjustifiable beliefs show that he is not only narrow-minded, but also narrow-visioned, which only makes the revered title 'exalted cyclops' more suiting.
Julia E. Mathias
Overland Park freshman
BLOOM COUNTY
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THERE'S A 465-POUND WOMAN ACROSS THE STREET PRUNING HER AZALEAS WEARING A PAIR OF PEA-SOUP GREEN HOT PANTS!! WHAT'S THE EMERGENCY?
FROM A TASTE PERSPECTIVE, IT'S A CRISIS OF BIBLICAL PROPORTIONS.
FROM A TASTE PERSPECTIVE.
IT'S A CRISIS OF BIBICAL PROPORTIONS.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 2, 1988
5
TAKE YOUR MAC URGE to the BURGE!
Come in and see us at the Burge Union and learn all you want to know about Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm {TM}} $ computers. There will be experts on hand to answer any questions you may have. Experience Macintosh with us! We'll help you with:
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This Friday, March 4, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
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6
Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Meese given gifts, senator claims
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Edwin Meese III's investment manager allocated stock-trading profits to Meesee's brokerage accounts under a procedure that a senator said yesterday raised questions of "possible financial favors or gifts" to the Cabinet member.
stock trades, assigned profits or losses to the attorney general's account.
In a report by its Democratic majority staff, the Senate Subcommittee on Oversight of Government Management said stock trader W. Franklin Chinn pooled Meese's money with that of several other customers in 1855 and 1866 and, after completing
The report said it appeared that Chinn had allocated stock trades on seven occasions to Meese's account in amounts exceeding the balance available in the account to pay for those trades.
available in the account.
In those instances, the amount of the stock trades exceeded the balances in Meese's account by $5,000 to $140,000.
E. Robert Wallach, Meese's longtime friend who is under indictment in the Wedtech Corp. scandal,
Chinn turned a profit of nearly $40,000 for Meese on a $50,000 investment in 23 stock trades during a 19-month period.
was one of the customers whose money was pooled with Meese's, Wallach introduced Meese to Chinn.
("Chinn) wasn't investing Mr. Meese's money as much as he was assigning profits and losses to the accounts of Mr. Meese and his other clients at his own discretion," Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., the subcommittee's chairman, wrote in a letter to the Office of Government Ethics.
No nuclear arms in Cuba, officials say
WASHINGTON — The Cuban military has some surface-to-surface missiles in its inventory, but none has a nuclear warhead and none could reach the United States even if they did, U.S. officials said yesterday.
The Associated Press
dut. 8.521 others until
The defense and administration officials commented under questioning prompted by Republican presidential candidate Pat Robertson's continued insistence, in the face of denials, that Cuba might have Soviet-made nuclear missiles aimed at the United States.
The officials said Cuba had about five dozen Frog-4 and Frog-7 battlefield missiles, which date to the 1960s.
When originally introduced by the
Soviets, the Frog-7 could carry either a conventional or nuclear warhead, "but we're confident no nuclear warheads ever went to Cuba for that missile and it doesn't have any range anyway," said one source who requested anonymity.
mutes, or half the distance between Cuba and Florida. The rocket also has no guidance system to direct it to a specific target.
requested family.
According to the reference book "Jane's Weapon Systems," the Frog-7 has a range of only about 43
White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater dismissed Robertson's missile claim when the candidate first advanced it last month. He said that Cuba had been under extensive surveillance.
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Make sure your Mac is here by March 31 or April 1. Place your order at the Burge Union by Friday, March 11!
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
with prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. the computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1,2,3!
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union. Stop by and place your order before March 11. Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want. ($50 deposit required)
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Macintosh SE
Macintosh Plus or SE? 2-disk or hard disk drive? You choose. The computer that will help you work faster, smarter and more creatively has never cost less!
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Helping You Make the Grade at KU
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 2, 1988
7
NationWorld
Hampshire protesters agree to end takeover of building
The Associated Press
AMHIERT, Mass. — Minority students drew up a contract yesterday to end the eight-day takeover of a Hampshire College building that was held to protest racism at the private liberal arts school.
"We all want it over," said Anita Fearman, a spokesman for the 40 black, Hispanic, Indian and other minority students who have occupied a dormitory office since Feb. 23.
A tentative agreement was hammered out late Monday in meetings with the school's president, Adole Cammonis, and two other administrators.
Students drew up the formal contract yesterday, and college officials were expected to sign it today. Specifics of the contract were not released.
Dean of Faculty Penina Glazer said the administration agreed to meet some of the demands, including the hiring of a full-time adviser for the campus group that occupied the building. Students of Under-represented Cultures.
Protesters said they expected to continue holding the Dakin House office until today despite the apparent agreement.
The school also agreed to allow a professor to serve part-time as dean of multicultural affairs and to try to win grants to increase the number of library books about the Third World, she said.
The college was founded in 1965 as an alternative to the traditional education.
About 100 of Hampshire's 1,100 students are minorities.
VERMONT PRIMARY RESULTS: George Bush extended his New England winning streak and defeated Bob Dole yesterday in the Vermont Republican presidential primary. Michael Dukakis won easily among the Democrats, and Jesse Jackson finished a solid second.
MECAM DENIES CONTACT: Arizona Gov. Evan Mecham tried to contact the first prosecution witness at his impeachment trial yesterday, the witness said. Mecham, absent from the impeachment trial for a second day, issued a statement denying the story. Also, the Arizona Supreme Court refused to order that the impeachment trial be halted until Mecham's criminal trial was held.
News Roundup
PACS HELP GEHPARTH, DOLE: Richard Gephardt and Bob Dole have received the most campaign money from political action committees in their respective parties. Gephardt has gotten nearly twice as much as any other Democrat, and Dole leads all presidential contenders in receipts of money from political action committees, with $645,190 in contributions.
STRIKE SUPPORTERS DISPERSED: Panamanian plainclothes officers fired dozens of shots into the air yesterday to disperse about 15 people who banged pots and pans in support of a strike against the military rule of Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriague. The confrontation occurred as the strike appeared to be gathering support in its second day.
SOVIETS SET CURFew: Soviet authorities have clamped a curfew on the southern city of Sumgait, where weekend rioting broke out and tensions were running high because of a territorial dispute between ethnic groups, a Soviet official said yesterday.
KIDNAPPERS FREE WORKERS: Muslim kidnappers freed two Scandinavian relief workers yesterday. Also, a statement purporting to be from the kidnappers of LI. Col. William R. Higgins said that the U.S. Marine would be put on "trial" for espionage when his captors finish questioning him.
**STING NETS POACHERS** A sting operation in Colma, Calif., caught 52 suspects who allegedly operated a $100 million poaching ring that dealt in tiger, bear, sea lion and rhinoceros parts, a state official announced yesterday. Many of the animal parts were sold to Asians who regard them as aphrodisiacs and tonics, he said.
REAGAN BEGINS TALKS: President Reagan, urging Western solidarity in arms talks with the Soviets, arrived in Belgium yesterday for the first NATO summit in six years. Reagan pledged that U.S. troops would remain in Europe 'so long as European want them to stay.'
CANCER INCREASE EXPLAINED: The pollutants that cause acid rain might be indirectly responsible for elevated rates of colon cancer in parts of the United States, researchers said yesterday. The theory, which has not yet been tested, is an attempt to explain why colon cancer and other cancers are more common in the north central and northeastern United States than in other parts of the country.
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HOW TO HAVE A WONDERFUL SUMMER AND STILL EARN KU CREDIT???
STUDY ABROAD WITH KU!!
PLACES ARE STILL AVAILABLE FOR THE FOLLOWING PROGRAMS:
- Business in Great Britain
- Humanities in Great Britain (history, English,
ut history credit)
- Early Reading Instruction in England (education majors)
- German in Eutin (intermediate) and Holzkirchen (advanced)
- French in Paris
- Italian in Florence
--you in a few days.
- Spanish in Spain
- Art and Design in Belgium and France
The programs are filling up fast so hurry to the Office of Study Abroad at 203 Lippincott Hall for more information and an application. Financial aid and scholarships are available for qualified applicants.
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Get your cholesterol Tested Now!
All adults 20 years of age and over should have a nonfasting, total cholesterol test.
What do I do?
1. Sign in at the admissions desk.
2. The interview nurse will give you an
ANAD
ANAD
(Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders) will hold a support group meeting every Tuesday and Wednesday of the semester at 7:00 p.m. at Watkins Memorial Hospital/Student Health Services. The meeting is free. Those interested are invited to attend. For more information, call the Department of Health Education at 864-9570
3. Walk to the laboratory.
Elevated blood cholesterol is a major risk factor for heart disease that can be changed. The sooner you reduce your risk factors, the longer you'll live.
4. Your blood will be drawn.
5. The results will be mailed to
On the first Monday of every month from 11:30 to 12:30 there will be a Brown Bag Discussion of Diabetic concerns in the 2nd floor conference room at Watkins Memorial Hospital. Everyone is welcome to attend! For more information, call 864-9570.
Call for more information or to register WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES Main Hospital number: 864-9500 Health Education Number: 864-9570
THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
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8
Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
On Campus
A Retiree杯 coffee is scheded Alarm Manager's Adapter in the Adams Alarm Manager's Adapter
A University Forum with Dale Rummer, professor of engineering, is scheduled at 11:40 a.m. today at Christian Educational Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. His speech is titled "Antarctica Experiment Report."
A colloquium sponsored by the Counseling Student Organization titled "Alternative Research Paradigms in the Social Sciences," is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in the
The Center for East Asian Studies is sponsoring a lecture titled "From MacArthur to Mansfield - Personality in U.S. Foreign Policy Towards Japan" at 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Walnut Room. Roger Buckley, associate professor of international relations at the International University of Japan, will be the featured speaker.
Kansas Union's Pine Room
A business lecture titled "Opportunity for the Entrepreneur in
Today's Business Environment: The Jepson Example" is scheduled for 6 p.m. today in 3140 Wescoe Hall. Robert S. Jepson, chairman and chief executive officer of The Jepson Corporation in Elmhurst, Ill., will be the featured speaker.
A Sigma Psi meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Pine Room.
A Campus Christians meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Burge Union's Daisy Hill Room.
STORY IDEA? CALL 864-4810
A KU Young Democrats meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Governor's Room. Garth Burgh, Douglas County Democratic chairman, and Kay Metzger, state Democratic caucus coordinator, will speak about the Kansas caucus process.
The rape victim support services is sponsoring a free film titled "Rethinking Rape" at 7:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Alderson Auditorium.
Local Briefs
STUDENT FACES CHARGES: A resident of Oliver Hall reported to KU police Sunday evening that she was a victim of aggravated sexual battery.
KU police arrested a 19-year-old Oliver Hall resident Monday in connection with the incident. He was held in Douglas County jail on charges of aggravated sexual battery and aggravated burglary and was released on his own recognizance shortly before noon yesterday.
Police said the man, who was unarmed and whom the victim was able to describe, entered the victim's unlocked room between 2:30 a.m. and 3 a.m. Sunday.
Aggravated sexual battery is the forceful, inten-
tional touching of a person, with intent to arouse,
of a man.
Without the consent of that person
A preliminary hearing in the case is scheduled
for 4 p.m. March 4 in Douglas County District Court.
MAN CHARGED WITH RAPE: An 18-year-old Lawrence woman reported to Lawrence police that she was raped Monday night in a pickup truck north of Lawrence.
A 24-year-old Lawrence man who has been accused of the rape was being held in Douglas County jail yesterday in lieu of $25,000 bond.
According to Lawrence police, three men met the victim and three other women at Lawrence Riverfront Park about 9 p.m. Monday to drink beer.
Police said the victim's friends locked her into their car after the three men began making sexual advances toward her. The three men were able to
get into the car, remove her and carry her to their pickup, police said.
According to police, the men drove the victim to an area north of Lawrence, where she was raped by one of the men while the other two men watched.
HOSPITAL RELEASES KU WORKER: Steven Henry, a 24-year-old KU concessions employee, was transported to Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday after being pinned between a truck and a load of soft drinks on a forklift. The accident happened on the lower level of Memorial Stadium.
he was treated for minor injuries to his back and stomach and was released yesterday morning, hospital officials said.
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STUDY IN COPENHAGEN, DENMARK WITH DIS (DENMARK'S INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAM)
L
- Semester, year, summer opportunities
- Courses taught in English by Danish professors
- Unique opportunity to live with a Danish family
- Study tours are an integral part of the course work
- Study tours are an intregal part of the course work
- KU credit awarded for successful completion of the program
- Financial aid and scholarships available to qualified applicants
SEMESTER/YEAR PROGRAMS
- LIBERAL ARTS: anthropology, art history, history literature, political science
- INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS: East-West Business Relations The Common Market, International Finance Marketing in Europe, Labor Management Relations
- ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN: Landscape Architecture Architecture Design Studio, Architecture and planning, The Architect in Danish Society.
SUMMER PROGRAMS:
— CURRENT SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN AFFAIRS (study tour to Berlin, Warsaw, Minsk and Moscow)
— DESIGN IN DENMARK: Interior; Environmental;
Industrial (product and graphic); communications Design; Architectural and Landscape Design
— ELIGIBILITY: Courses are designed for junior/senior level students with at least a 2.8 grade point average.
— DEADLINES: Fall 1988 deadline extended till March 18. Summer deadline is as soon as possible.
Financial aid and scholarships are available to qualified applicants.
COME TO THE OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD FOR MORE INFORMATION AND AN APPLICATION — 203 Lippincott Hall
Spring Break '88
KANSAS
LIFEGUARD
Come see our other shirt designs
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
SPRING BREAK
Sunglasses
Sweatshirts
Shorts
Jayhawk Spirit
935 MASS 749-5194
Open 9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Thur. 1:00-5:00 Sun.
SECURE CAB IS NOW ... SECURE SHUTTLE
LOOK FOR SIGNS AT THESE LOCATIONS
LOOK FOR SIGNS AT THESE LOCATIONS
JOHNNY'S LOUISES WEST
BOGARTS BULL WINKLES
ELDRIDGE HOUSE (SPORTS BAR) THE WHEEL
MAD HATTER THE HAWK
BOTTLENECK THE CROSSING
DOS HOMBRES GAMMONS
JAZZHAUS THE UNION
HARBOR LIGHTS THE LIBRARY
We now pick up at these locations and campus too. Hourly service: Sunday, Monday,Tuesday,and Wednesday.Half hour service: Thursday,Friday,and Saturday On campus call 864-4644.
Hours of operation: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday-11:30 p.m.-2:30 a.m.-Thursday, Friday, and Saturday-10:00 p.m.-2:30 a.m.
Universitv Daliv Kansan / Wednesdav. March 2. 1988
9
Bloomingdale's shops around the state
Two Lawrence companies among 52 selected for exhibition of Kansas products
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA- Two Lawrence companies, Central Soyfoods and Graphic Ideas, Inc., are among 52 Kansas companies that could have their products showcased in Bloomingdale's Department Stores during its Kansas promotion this May.
More than 120 Kansas companies provided products for Bloomingdale's officials to look at and taste. Bloomingdale's, a New York-based department store chain, has 15 stores nationwide.
Gov. Mike Hayden and representatives from Bloomingdale's made the announcement yesterday afternoon at a news conference.
"This is a golden opportunity to showcase our state," Hayden said.
The emphasis of the promotion will be Kansas food products, but there also will be exhibits for crafts, Kan- artists and state cultural exhibitions.
Bloomingdale's representatives will tour different areas of the state to develop display ideas. The group Louisburg and Lawrence yesterday.
"We hope the displays will do the
state justice," said Ray Fisher, a member of Bloomingdale's delegation.
Fisher said the store decided to promote Kansas products in a search for natural products shoppers would like.
The store previously has showcased goods from Louisiana, Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon and Vermont.
Some Kansans might be concerned that the products will be displayed to make the state look unsophisticated. But officials said that although the products might have a homemade
appearance, they would be sophisticated enough for New York shoppers.
Hayden said, "We have a tremendous heritage that is closely tied to agriculture. The products may look homemade, but they will be profitable."
Hayden he hoped that the Bloomingdale's promotion would provide an outlet for further national marketing of Kansas products.
"This effort will open many doors for the marketing of Kansas products not only in New York, but also in the 15 additional Bloomingdale's stores across the United States," he said.
City to aid juvenile crisis intervention service
By Ric Brack
The Lawrence City Commission last night agreed to split with the county the financing of a juvenile crisis intervention service and to issue $2.56 million in general obligation bonds for various city improvements.
Kansan staff writer
in jail in cases when it isn't necessary.
Commissioners voted unanimously to allocate $5,440 from a contingency fund to the Juvenile Intake Service to compensate for a 25 percent reduction in federal financing. The service, a branch of the Shelter, Inc. at 342 Missouri St., provides counseling for children and families. Its goal is to provide alternatives to holding juveniles
Judith Culley, an administrator at the shelter who presented the proposal, said that the service was available for any situation in which a child became involved with the police. Situations involving lost children, runaways and small crimes such as shoplifting usually can be handled by the service, she said. That free police officers to return to the street more promptly.
"Usually, the police are happy to have our help." Culley said.
Culley said that the number of children held in Douglas County jail had decreased by about 25% over the last three years.
May 15, 1986, to Jan. 31, 1987, more than 120 children were held in jail. During that same period last year, only about 90 children were held in jail.
In other action, commissioners authorized the sale of general obligation bonds totalling $2.56 million for city improvements, including repairs on 15th Street.
Also, Barry Newton of the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets, presented recommendations and showed slides of eight sculptures that have been selected to be displayed in the second year of the downtown sculpture project.
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In honor of WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 218 Strong Hall, presents the following programs:
218 Strong Hall, presents the following programs:
March 7-11 — Women's History Display in front of Watson Library
Tuesday, — Women's Feelings Through Music
March 8 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Tuesday, — Women's Constitutional Issues March 22 Perspectives for the Future 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Centennial Room, Kansas Union Tuesday, — Women's Film Festival March 29 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Wednesday, — Auto Mechanics for Beginners*
March 30 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
体育
- A small fee will be assessed; call the Women's Resource Center at 864-3552 to sign up.
ROCK
CHALK
REVUE
"The Untold
Story"
THURSDAY, MARCH 3
FRIDAY, MARCH 4
7:30 p.m.
SATURDAY, MARCH 5
2:00 p.m.
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THURSDAY, $5.00
FRIDAY, $6.00
SATURDAY, $8.00
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KU
10th ANNIVERSARY SALE
Our 10 Week Countdown WEEK #2 March 3 - March 9
Our 10 Week Countdown WEEK #2 March3 - March9
10
PAPERBACK SALE
Overstocks, Discontinued Just $ 1^{49} $ each or 12 for $ 12^{95} $
美
Reference Items Not Included
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.
Your book professionals at the top of Naismith Hill.
Hrs: 8-5 M-F 9-5 Sat. 12:30-3:00 Sun.
10
Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Air Force wardrobe draws flak
The Associated Press
BELLEVILLE, Ill. — An Air Force plan to spend $6.1 million on World War II-style leather jackets to boost flight crews' esprit de corp is drawing flak from civilians and retirees affected by budget cuts.
"I'm upset with this leather jacket bit," Hugh Enyart, a retired Air Force major, said yesterday. "If we have to measure our patriotism by whether or not we have leather jackets, God help us, we're in trouble."
About 280 of the 53,000 "bomber" jackets will go to flight crews with the Military Airlift Command at nearby Scott Air Force Base.
"To me, it doesn't reflect the professionalism of the Air Force," said Enyart. "It reflects a bunch of people wanting leather jackets."
The nation's armed services were ordered in November to slash 10 percent from their budgets for fiscal 1989, which begins Oct. 1. The Air Force share of the reductions for the year amount to about $10.5 billion. Smaller cuts were ordered for fiscal 1988.
1968. Critics say the jackets, which cost $115 each, are a prime example of waste.
Enyart said that after local reports came out about his criticism of the jacket purchases during a time of budget austerity, he had received calls from about 20 people, civilians as well as active and retired Air Force personnel, who supported his stance.
Video Player
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Pier1 imports
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Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1-5
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Bargain Mattress & Senior Curtains $2.50
Showswale for Today Only
MOVIE INFO 811-7000
Granada 1020 Mass.
843-5788
GOOD MORNING VIENAM (R) 7:15, 9:45
Varsity 1015 Mass.
843-1065
(R) 7:30, 9:30
SHOOT TO KILL
Hillcrest 9th & Iowa
842-8400
IRON WEED Nominated for (R) *4:30, 7:10, 9:50
TAFFIN (R) *4:50, 7:30, 9:30
FRANICT (R) *5:00, 7:25, 9:40
CRY FREEDOM Nominated for (R) *5:00, 8:00
Nominated for Academy Awards
MOONSTRICK (R) *5:00, 8:00
Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa
842-6400
SHE'S HAVING A BABY (PG-13) 7:10, 9:20
SATISFACTION (PG) 7:25, 9:30
Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence Kansas
Tonight — From Kansas City
B.C.R.
Afro-Nuclear-Funk-Reggae-Tango-Swing
Thursday, Friday & Saturday
KJHK Presents QUEST FOR VINYL
Don't miss 20 bands in 9 days
performing for a spot on the album
Bottleneck
731 New Hampshire
Lawrence Kansas
Tonight — From Kansas City B.C.R. Afro-Nuclear-Funk-Kegae-Tango-Swing
Thursday, Friday
& Saturday
KJHK Presents
QUEST FOR VINYL
Don't miss 20 bands in 7 days
performing for a spot on the album
Now serving BUM STEER BBQ
every Sunday.
All You Can Eat Buffet
$399
WOW! IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 30TH ANNUAL
DOG SALE!
SALE IN PROGRESS
SCHNEIDER
SAVE ON SLR's
Canon
7D
$18999
When bought with lens CANON T-70 Body
Factory Demonstrator — Factory Warranty
Nikon AF-S DX Zoom Nikkor 18-50mm f/3.5-4.5G VR
Motor loading, advance and rewind, multiple program metering, fu manual override, LCD information panel, dual metering system
HERE ARE ONLY A FEW LENS CHOICES
28mm f2.8 Focal wide angle lens ¥3999
50mm f1.8 Canon normal lens (used) ¥2999
135mm f2.8 Focal telephoto lens ¥2999
ZOOM
$16999
VIVITAR 335
with 35-70mm Zoom
SLR SPECIAL
Vivitar
v335
Compact, easy to use 35mm with interchangeable lenses, compact style zoom, modern LED metering, dependable mechanical shutter
ZOOM
OUTFIT
$27999
After $20 Rebate
Wolfe's Sale Price $299.99 Konica FT-1 Automatic SLR with 35-70mm Hexanon zoom, 80-200mm f4.5 Zoom. Konica bag, lens care kit and 3 rolls of film.
Konica
SPRINT-XII
AF-S NIKKOR 35mm F2.8 ED
MADE IN JAPAN
Motorized 35mm reflex with auto loading; shutter preference automatic for sharpest pictures.
$19999
Nikon
FG
SLR CAMERAS
MINOLTA
Factory Demo Units Focus and shoot simplicity with program exposure, compact design, full manual override.
Body Alone $15999 When you buy any other Nikon mount lens.
NIKON FG with
Canon
50mm f1.8 lens
$15999
| | RETAIL | SALPEN |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Canon A-1 Body | 492.00 | 309.99 |
| Canon T70 Geno (must buy lens) | 368.00 | 189.99 |
| Canon f52/ w/185-105 Pro | 490.00 | 189.99 |
| Canon F30 | 490.00 | 249.99 |
| Canon 167 Medical Outfit | 209.20 | 129.99 |
| Canon RTSi w/ iT 7.17 | 890.00 | 539.99 |
| Konica F1-1 Body | 307.30 | 189.99 |
| Konica F1 Zoom Outfit | 515.00 | 189.99 |
| Konica X7A w/used 50mm | 650.00 | 349.99 |
| Konica X7A w/used 50mm | 300.00 | 179.99 |
| Nikon 4004 Body | 414.00 | 279.99 |
| Nikon I3 Body w/f1.8 E | 1175.00 | 279.99 |
| Nikon Ifg camera Bundle | 1550.00 | 379.99 |
| Nikon Ifg Camera Bundle | 375.00 | 199.99 |
| Olympsum DM-FC Block | 365.00 | 199.99 |
| Olympsum DM47 Titanium | 860.00 | 539.99 |
| Olympsum DM47F74 | 1550.00 | 399.99 |
| Pentax P3 Body w/Pro 70 Pro | 450.00 | 155.00 |
| Pentax P3 Body w/Pro 70 Pro | 450.00 | 155.00 |
| Pentax P3 Body w/Pro 70 Pro | 350.00 | 299.99 |
IF NEW
RETAIL
CANON
AUTOFOCUS
Canon Sprint autofocus 35mm with built-in flash, motor advance, compact.
SAVE $10999
Many Used Cameras Selection Changing Constantly
LENSES FOR MAXXUM
Tele/wide lens set $1999
35MM POINT &
GREAT LENS VALUES IN ALL, POPULAR MOUNTS
100-200 mm 14.5 Miniola 223.00 129.99
28.5mm 14.5 Miniola 235.00 129.99
28mm 7.2 Miniola 188.00 109.99
35-105mm 13.5-4.5 Miniola 131.00 109.99
35-70mm 14 Miniola 123.00 109.99
75-300mm 14.5-6 Miniola 342.00 199.99
75-300mm 14.5-6 Miniola 647.00 139.99
28-200mm 14.5-5 Sigma 599.95 139.99
28-200mm 14.5-5 Sigma 399.95 139.99
60-200mm 14.5-5 Sigma 399.95 139.99
75-300mm 14.5-5 Sigma 399.50 139.99
75-300mm 14.5-5 Sigma 499.50 299.99
SHOOT CAMERAS
TAROT BOOKS
1/2 PRICE
PHOTO
ALBUM
Reg. $13.00
$650
100 page, magnetic or 4X6
pocket album (holds 300 prints).
Choice of colors in country design
or classic colors. All made in USA.
| | IF NEW RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 3M Flash 35 Camera Outlet | 59.95 | 30.99 |
| Conan Ono Air Skip Kit | 293.00 | 180.99 |
| Conan Spirit | 189.00 | 169.99 |
| Conor X Quick Chameleon | 650.00 | 399.99 |
| Conor Quick Skip 35 | 95.00 | 4.99 |
| Noamine 3 SMS | 24.95 | 9.99 |
| Keystone AF 1 Camero | 199.95 | 129.99 |
| Kudah R-1-7 | 199.95 | 129.99 |
| Keystone MLT 4 after calibration | 119.95 | 74.99 |
| Nokin Talker | 200.00 | 109.99 |
Nikon Tale Touch | 328.50 | 199.99 |
Olympus M-3 | 209.00 | 199.99 |
Promaster A F Tile | 129.95 | 149.99 |
Promaster A F Tauto | 129.95 | 109.99 |
Rifah A F Autofocus | 179.95 | 129.99 |
Rifah PZ50 | 119.95 | 149.99 |
Vivitar PS35 Autofocus DX | 139.95 | 49.99 |
Vivitar Tich 155 Zoom | 139.95 | 149.99 |
Yoyohera Macro | 190.00 | 199.99 |
Yoyohera Macro w/ jal Ien | 190.00 | 199.99 |
Yoyohera 1° DX | 290.00 | 199.99 |
Deals On All Kinds Of Home Decks, Camcorders And Accessories
SAVE ON CAMCORDERS IN ALL POPULAR FORMATS
VIDEO BARGAINS
$599
ALEXANDRIA CITY COLLEGE
KODAK MVS 8MM
VHS Compact, HQ, 6X macro zoom, 15 lux low light,
electronic viewfinder, electronic tilting.
AUTOFOCUS 35
$3999
$799
TELE-WIDE
Keystone 35mm with autofocus for sharp 35mm pictures. Built-in flash for indoor pictures, built-in lens protector automatically opens when starting to shoot picture.
MINOLTA VHS-C
shoot cameras.
Nikon, Pentax,
Minolta, Canon
and more.
Lenses for many 35mm point &
$999
Ricoh CCD solid state, 6X macro zoom, superimposed special effects titles in 7 colors, autofocus, 4 high speeds, 5 lux, 2.6 lbs.
$249
Lightweight camcorder (4 lbs.), 6X zoom with macro, electronic finder, low light.
Some Higher
$1199
RICOH R-600
After $1.00
rebate on 2
pack. Wolfe's
2 pack sale prio
Kodakcolor VGA
200
200
Kodak-V R-G 200 135-24
Fine grain and high resolution color print film from Kodak
Kodak'V R-G 200 135-24
$899 GE VHS
RINGLITE
Full size VHS, 7 lux very low light, HQ, 6X macro zoom, electronic viewfinder
Even light for closeups.
Use for stamps, coins,
flowers, small collectibles.
Fits most lenses with optional series 7
adapter.
FLASH $7999
finder.
R-500
O
JAPON MOVE
---
1200mm f12 TELEPHOTO SAVE $24999 1/2
1/2
Factory Retail $550.00
FAMOUS BAUSCH & LOMB OPTICS
1200mm f12 Bausch & Lomb mirror telephoto with camera adapter (requires optional T-adapter to camera). Bring in birds, distant wildlife, shoot the moon.
ELECTRONIC FLASH
IF NEW
DETAIL
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Canon Flash 2441 | 109.00 | 9.49 |
| Canon Flash 2991 | 238.00 | 12.99 |
| Canon Flash 300EZ | 195.00 | 10.99 |
| Canon Flash 300Lt | 268.00 | 23.99 |
| Canon Macroalle M-1 | 588.00 | 19.99 |
| Centex Flash 3440 | 156.00 | 11.99 |
| Macro Eleo FM 1200 | 428.00 | 29.99 |
| MiniPower Power Grip II Set | 310.50 | 19.99 |
| Nikon Flash SB-19 | 51.00 | 9.99 |
| Nikon Flash SB-19 | 69.50 | 19.99 |
| Nikon Flash T280 Synecch Flash | 225.00 | 19.99 |
| Olympus T23 Flash | 220.00 | 9.99 |
| Pentax Flash AF160 | 54.00 | 29.99 |
| Pentax Flash AF2700 | 125.00 | 9.99 |
| Pentax Flash AF2800 | 200.00 | 9.99 |
| Sony 200A Audio | 39.95 | 19.99 |
| Victor 635AF Maximum | 159.95 | 19.99 |
| Stormlet 3600 Nikon 2020 | 169.95 | 19.99 |
| Pro FD4050 Twixmax Nikon | 169.95 | 19.99 |
| Pro FD4050 Twixmax Nikon | 219.95 | 19.99 |
| Pro FD4050 Twixmax Nikon | 69.95 | 19.99 |
| Promatic FD 2500 | 99.99 | 19.99 |
| Promatic FD 4000 | 166.00 | 19.99 |
| Starlight 200I QS Slave | 49.95 | 19.99 |
| Starlight 200I QS Slave | 85.95 | 19.99 |
| Pro DP4050 Olympus | 144.95 | 19.99 |
| Sunpak 300 | 189.95 | 11.99 |
| Sunpak 340 | 144.95 | 11.99 |
TELESCOPES
IF NEW PETAL
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Bress Scope Wood Trim w/stand | 359.00 | 149.99 |
| 150-54 Bushnell | 117.95 | 69.99 |
| 9-20K Sportwear spot Bushnell | 104.95 | 69.99 |
| Bushnell Astro 280 | 180.00 | 69.99 |
| Bushnell Astro 400 | 175.00 | 199.99 |
| Bushnell Astro 454 | 159.50 | 199.99 |
| Bushnell Egge 151-480X | 1359.95 | 349.99 |
| Bushnell Egge 151-480X | 1359.95 | 349.99 |
| Bushnell Spoicing Scope | 720.00 | 199.99 |
| Bushnell 223 w/Merma Mount | 299.95 | 119.99 |
| Swift 839 Aeros Telescope | 595.001 | 119.99 |
BINOCULARS
10x50 EW/A Explorer II 246.95 139.99
10x50 Promaster Fast Focus 89.95 19.99
10x50 WA Banner 155.99 79.99
10x50 WA Sportview 115.95 49.99
7-15x35 Zoom Enormi 118.95 10.99
7x35 Banner Extra Wide 117.95 59.99
7x35 EW/A Explorer II 235.95 89.99
7x35 EW/A Sportview 105.95 49.99
7x35 EW/A Explore Wall 213.95 99.99
7x50 Folman Burchell 69.95 19.99
7x50 WA Enormi 68.95 29.99
7x50 Ensign Burchell 77.95 39.99
7x50 Explorer II 235.95 129.99
7x50 Monochrome Nikon 69.95 129.99
WOLF
Wolfe's
CAMERA & VIDEO
DUCOVER
635 Kansas Avenue *Phone* 913-235-1388
Topeka, Kansas 66051-1437
American Express
STORE HOURS
Thursday 8:30 to 8:00
Other Weekdays 8:30 to 5:30
Closed Sunday
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 2, 1988
11
Test
Continued from p.1
said. People began to believe that proper behavior could be achieved through training or discipline. Because of this, the masses began to be tested to see if they behaved properly.
Hanson said an interesting change was brought about by that shift. Before, people focused their evaluations of behavior on known role models. The people remained anonymous. Now, the people have become the focus, and the testers, such as lab technicians or lie detector examiners, are anonymous.
One way Hanson hopes to study this change in power is by studying how employee attitudes toward drug testing change.
Most business managers anticipate that employees will accept random testing as they become used to it, Hanson said. He wants to find out
whether increasing discipline might cause worker acceptance.
"It's almost like punching a time clock." Hanson said.
clock, Hanson said.
The idea of a time clock was initially controversial, Hanson said. When factories were new, employers had difficulty coordinating worker activities to a time schedule. Workers were concerned about working too long, and employers wanted to be sure that employees worked a full schedule.
schulte.
"Now, punching a time clock is just as automatic as brushing your teeth." Hanson said.
Hanson said he wondered if drug testing was not one more way in which a work force was being conditioned to accept regulations and requirements without question.
Robert Squier, chairman of anthropology, said that Hanson's research was extremely timely and that there was a growing concern about the impact that testing has on U.S. society.
Gas main accidentally cut by workers digging in area
A natural gas main was cut by construction workers yesterday in the 2500 block of Haskell Avenue. No one was injured.
By a Kansan reporter
Maj. Bob Coleman of the Lawrence Fire Department said two persons were evacuated from the area of the gas break.
Randy Kahle, owner of R. D.
Kahle Construction Company, said
the main had been cut by a track
hole during the placement of a
water main by his company.
Kahle said the natural gas main had been lowered into the area about a month ago. He said a pipe
that appeared to be the live main was spotted by workers digging the water main's trench. When the track hoe was rerouted to dig under that pipe, it struck the new live gas main.
Kahle said he was unaware that when Kansas Public Service Co. changed the line, the inactive line remained in the ground. He said inactive lines were usually removed.
Steve Hanna, construction and maintenance superintendent for Kansas Public Service Co., estimated that from 30 to 40 customers were without service for about 30 minutes because of the break.
39c Tacos All March!
Both Lacations 847 Indiana 1720 W.23rd
Taco Extravaganza
TACO GRANDE
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notization of enquiries
- Many other services available
We have the largest jewelry inventory in Lawrence; Guaranteed! And we will beat any prices. Come in and see our extra large selection of:
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
China Crystal Clocks Diamonds
Watches (Jaz, Seiko, Pulsar, Croton, Eyma) Rings Chains
Funded by student activity fee.
"Quality since 1889"
Marks JEWELERS
other assorted Jewelry!
and also take advantage of our cleaning, repairs,and friendly service.
817 Massachusetts 843-4266
reuter's
boot & shoe repair
reutery
boot & shoe repair
lay away a pair of
hand-made American boots
for graduation.
8 w. 9th
841-44
AUTY COMES
8 w. 9th 841-4729
WAULTY COMICS
Mastercard & Visa Accepted___
Kwality books,
comics, and games.
1111 Massachusetts 843-7239
I
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
TRACEY GARCIA
Haircuts...$6.50
for appointments call 842-3699
2323 Court Bruce
PARTY FAVORS
caters to individuals &
organizations
Mike Mark Pat
842-3496 842-0244 841-1166
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THE COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN IS NOW ACCEPTING NOMINATIONS TO HONOR OUTSTANDING STUDENTS, FACULTY AND STAFF FOR
WOMEN'S RECOGNITION PROGRAM
Hall of Fame-designed to honor outstanding women graduates of the University and K.U. faculty or staff who provide models for students as they choose careers and become effective citizens.
Outstanding Woman Teacher-female instructor, student or non-student who has performed effectively and professionally as an educator at the University of Kansas.
Outstanding Woman Staff Member-non-faculty woman who has contributed in a unique way to the University.
Outstanding International Woman Student-woman student from a country other than the United States who has demonstrated academic achievement and participation in various aspects of community or college life.
Outstanding Nontraditional Woman Student-nontraditional woman who has made a unique contribution to the University or community. (Nontraditional includes those who are continuing their education after an absence from school, those who are over 21 and just beginning their college education, those who work full-time and attend school parttime, single parents who are students, or veterans.)
Outstanding Woman Student in Leadership-woman student who has exhibited leadership and active participation in concerns of contemporary women on campus, in the community, state, or national level.
Outstanding Woman Student in Athletics-for participation in athletic organizations and contribution to the development of woman's intercollegiate athletics.
Outstanding Woman Student in Student Services-for outstanding contributions in student or university organizations.
Outstanding Woman Student in Community Services-for active contributions in off-campus oriented work.
OUTSTANDING WOMEN WILL BE HONORED FOR ACCOMPLISHMENTS IN EACH OF THE ABOVE AREAS. THE WOMEN'S RECOGNITION COMMITTEE WILL REVIEW THE INFORMATION OBTAINED AND ANNOUNCE THE AWARD WINNERS AT THE WOMEN'S RECOGNITION PROGRAM ON APRIL 21, 1988.
Outstanding Pioneer Woman-"...for a woman's historic contributions to humanity."
FOR NOMINATION FORMS, CONTACT THE EMILY TAYLOR WOMEN'S RESOURCE CENTER, 218 STRONG HALL, 864-3552.
DEADLINE FOR NOMINATIONS: MARCH 29,1988
Commission on the Status of Women is a student organization funded by Student Senate.
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Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU geology department could work with K-State
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The committee on graduate studies in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has approved a proposal that would create a faculty interchange between geology departments at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University.
Susan Kemper, chairman of the committee, reported on the proposal at yesterday's College Assembly meeting in Alderson Auditorium.
Kemper said the proposal would be a revision in the doctoral program in geology and would become policy if it is reviewed and approved by several subcommittees in the graduate school.
The program would allow KU doctoral students in geology to complete portions of their graduate program with approved geology faculty at K-State.
Also, some geology faculty members at K-State might be able to chair doctoral dissertations and to supervise dissertation research at K-State for doctoral students enrolled at KU.
Tony Walton, chairman of the department of geology, said that if approved, the program probably would start next fall. He said he expected one or two students a year to participate in the interchange. About 15 doctoral students are in geology at KU.
geology at ree. The program would not be required for doctoral students but would create opportunities for students who
want to work with faculty at K-State, Walton said.
The arrangement also would enable K-State faculty to do higher-level research with the assistance of well trained graduate students, Walton said. K-State currently does not offer a doctoral degree in geology.
offer a degree. With the interchange program, students could obtain a broad background in geology education at KU and then do research at K-State, Walton said.
For example, KU students could use K-State's nuclear reactor that can analyze trace elements in rocks with neutron enrichment, Walton said.
"It's an alternative style and operation of sharing of research facilities." Walton said.
Resource center is sponsoring workshop to teach sensitivity in counseling of black clients
Kansan staff writer
The KU Adult Life Resource Center of the division of continuing education will sponsor its second workshop for counselors who work with black clients.
"We had such a good response the first year, we are offering it again," said Colleen Ryan, continuing education counselor, who is coordinating the workshop.
The workshop will be tomorrow and Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn, 1260 West 95th Street, in Lenexa. Registration is $190 for professionals and $90 for students.
The cross-cultural training program has been extended to two days to give participants a chance to practice new techniques and to receive comments and suggestions in small groups, Ryan said.
Tomorrow, Thomas A. Parham, director of the Career Planning and Placement Center at the University of California-Irvine, will present a perspective of African-American
psychology that goes to the roots of the black culture in Africa, Ryan said.
Parham will identify stages of black racial identity and will teach effective counseling techniques that are based on the identified stage of the client. Ryan said.
"The African-American must of necessity be at a minimum bi-cultural to successfully negotiate living in America," Crawley said.
Unfortunately, the reverse is not true for Caucasians, she said. It is sometimes only through training that they can be sensitized to cultural issues.
On Friday, the participants will be able to practice techniques for working with the racial tensions that can interfere with counseling, Ryan said.
That part of the workshop will be presented by three staff members from the Progressive Life Center, a
private, minority-owned counseling center in Washington, D.C. They will use an approach that looks at the world from an African viewpoint.
The approach emphasizes harmony, balance, and sharing within a natural order, Ryan said.
The typical counseling point of view is European. Bias becomes a problem because the counselor believes his own world view is the best and uses that viewpoint in judging others. Crawley said.
ing others. Counselors need to be sensitized to the fact that other appropriate world views exist, she said.
Sadye Logan, associate professor of social welfare, said, "Sometimes we are not even aware of our stereotypes and prejudices."
The first step for a counselor is to look at his own ethnicity and at how it affects his interactions with those that are different, she said.
The danger, Logan said, is that faulty assumptions can be made about a person's thoughts or actions based on the stereotype.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 2, 1988
Sports
13
KU baseball team wins home opener 680 see 'Hawks beat Washburn
By David Boyce
Associate sports editor
After suffering through a 15-39-1 record last year and dropping its first three games at Arkansas this spring, the Kansas baseball team might have been surprised by what met it yesterday at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
35
About 680 fans filled the bleachers and watched the Jayhawks gain their first victory of the season, 16-8, over the Washburn Ichabods. Kansas is now 1-3.
"It was a tremendous crowd," said coach Dave Bingham. "A lot of credit goes to the Kansas Union Book-stores."
The enthusiastic crowd and the offense pleased Bingham, but he said he was less than happy with the defense.
The bookstores sponsored Kansas' first Cap Day, and the first 200 people at the game were given hats.
"I don't like these games," Bingham said. "I like 3-2 and 5-3 games. Today, we allowed (seven) unearned runs, and you can't do that and beat quality teams."
"We should have blown them out in the first, but our defense allowed them to come back," Bingham said.
The Jayhawks didn't waste time, using three hit-and-run plays in the first innning and taking a 5-0 lead.
W
We should have blown them out in the first, but our defense allowed them to come back.
-- Dave Bingham KU baseball coach
Kansas outfielder Steve Dowling slides safely into home plate as Brad Shaffer covers the play. The Jayhawks beat Washburn 16-7. Washburn catcher Sean Jackson tries to make the tag while pitcher yesterday at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
"I'm dissatisfied with all the errors."
Kansas went up 6-0 before Washburn responded with three runs in the third. And by the middle of the fifth, Kansas had only a 8-1 lead.
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
"Mike (McLeod) labored through his five innings, but Darin (Harris) came in and really shut them down," Bingham said. "When he entered, it was still anyone's game."
Kansas scored five more runs in the seventh and put the game out of reach.
Harris started the top of the sixth with Kansas ahead 11-6. He allowed only one unearned run in his three innings.
"Offensively, we are going to score," Bingham said. "I thought (Tom) Buchanan did well. He didn't have a good series at Arkansas, but he came back here and worked hard in practice."
(Spencer) can drive in more than he lets in, then we will do all right," Bingham said, and then smiled.
Buchanan went three for four with an RBI. Jeff Spencer also performed well offensively, going three for four with three RBI.
"If we can get to the point where he
Spencer is playing third base for the first time since high school. He committed five errors in three games at Arkansas and one error yesterday.
"It's just a matter of me getting a rhythm at him," Spencer said. "I've been working hard at it, and it hasn't affected my offense. I can't let my
fielding affect my hitting."
Bingham said he would stick with Spencer at third because he was counting on Spencer's offense.
"He always seems to be in a position to drive in runs." Bingham
Despite the errors, which allowed seven unearned runs, Bingham said the team made progress. He said the pitching was better.
"I thought we played a little tight," Bingham said, "but the first win is always tough."
Center fielder Rocky Helm said that it was nice to have a big crowd but added that he was still waiting for the team to play well for an entire game.
Helm, who went two for three and scored two runs, said he thought he was the best.
"The mood of the team right now is pretty good," he said.
KANSAS 16, WASHBURN 8
Washburn 003 210 001— 8
Kansas 512 005 500— 16
Kansas plays Buffs for last road game
Kansas
512 030 60—16 145
Washburn: Shaffer, Nail (3), Hammons (6)
Rose (8) and Jackson, Kulikowski (7); Kansas
McLeod, McNaught (6) Stopoll (9) and Boeschen,
McLeod (8) Wright, Morozski (4), LShafer
(0-1), 2B-Kansas, Wright, Morozski, Nem-
bler, 2B-Washburn: Waltrip
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
This year, it is not the title but a berth in the NCAA tournament that may be at stake.
When Kansas lost to Colorado in Boulder 66-56 last year, the Jayhawks any chance of tying for the Big Eight Conference title.
But Kansas coach Larry Brown has tried to avoid the tournament hype that has materialized over the last several weeks, trying to take the remainder of the season on a game-to-game basis.
"The kids are just concerned with each game," he said. "Like I said before, it's unfair to make a case now. I want to get into the situation where we deserve it."
Last weekend's 82-77 victory over Missouri, which was ranked No. 15 last week, ended the Jayhawks' "Death March." The four-game, nine-day span started with an upset victory over Kansas State two weeks ago.
Kansas went on to meet then-fifth-ranked Duke at home, losing 74-70 in overtime. Three days later, the Jayhawks traveled to Norma to face the Bulldogs, but they already have at least a tie for the Big Eight title. The Sooners won, 95-87.
"We've played so many teams in the last month. We came out close so
many times and we didn't have anything to show for it," Brown said. "The Missouri game was a reward.
"Playing great teams gives you confidence, but the bottom line is you have to see some success to get the confidence."
The situation is tight not only for a spot in the NCAA tournament, but also for a good seed in the Big Eight tournament, which starts March 11th.
Kansas has an 18-10 overall record and is third place in the conference with a 7-5 record. Following close behind is Missouri, which is 6-6 and in fourth place.
Game 29
KU
The Jayhawks are guaranteed an upper division seed and will definitely have the No. 3 seed for the Big Eight tournament if they win one of their last two games.
Depite its dismal record, Colorado has proven a tough host in the past
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 18-10 (7-5)
Colorado is 7-19 overall and in last place in the Big Eight with a 3-9 record. The bottom half of the conference is tailed between Iowa State, Nebraska and Oklahoma State, who are all tied for fifth place with records of 4-8.
In that case, if missouri wins its last two games, Kansas would still receive the third seed because the team has its tigers in both meetings this season.
Colorado Buffaloes
COACH: Tom Miller
Record: 7-19 (3-9)
CJ
PROBABLE STARTERS
F-24 Chris Piper 6'8" 4.5
F-21 Mitten Newton 6'4" 10.0
C-25 Danny Manning 6'10" 24.8
G-14 Kevin Pritchard 6'3" 11.0
G-33 Jeff Gueldner 6'5" 3.9
F-32 Brent Vaughan 6'8" 5.2
F-23 Brian Robinson 6'10" 10.1
C-54 Scott Wilke 6'10" 21.6
G-12 Steve Wise 6'2" 5.7
G-24 Michael Lee 6'4" 7.4
COVERAGE: Game time 8:05 tonight, March 2, at CU Events Center in Boulder, Colo. The game will be televised on WIBW-TV channel 13 and KSHB-TV channel 41. The game will be broadcast on the Jayhawk Sports Network, KLZR 106 FM.
several weeks. The Buffaloes scored an upset last week when they bea Missouri in Boulder 81-78.
The Jayhawks beat Colorado 73-62 in Allen Field House earlier this year, but Boulder has recently proved to be a special problem for Kansas.
"That was last year's team; this is this year's team." Brown said. "The fact that Missouri and Iowa State and Oklahoma State lost to Colorado should get our kids' attention."
The Jayhawks are 2-2 in their last four trips to Boulder, including last season's loss. Kansas won its two
games by a total of seven points.
Colorado is led by senior center Scott Wilke, who averages nearly 22 points a game. He has scored 10 points or more in a school-record 45 games.
Two Jayhawk women make All-Conference
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Big Eight Conference honors this week included two Kansas women's basketball players.
Lisa Braddy, a 5-foot-7 sophomore guard from Kansas City, Kan., was named to the All-Conference second team. She had six assists last Saturday against the Missouri Tigers, making her the Jayhawks' career single-season leader with 174. Braddy surpassed four-time American Lynette Woodard, who had 170 during the 1978-79 season.
Braddy has 312 assists in two years of playing, and she is in second place in school's history behind Woodard, who had 502 assists.
Sandy Shaw was the other Kansas player honored. Shaw, a 6-0 senior forward from Topeka, was named as an All-Conference honorable mention for her performance this season. Shaw leads the Jayhawks with 354 points, averaging 13.1 points a game.
In addition, Shaw has made 46 of 106 three-point attempts this season, for 43.4 percent, and has 45 blocked shots in her career.
Nebraska forward Maurice Ivy, named the Big Eight Player of the Year, and Oklahoma State forward
Jamie Siess, both seniors, were the only two repeat first-team selections from last year.
The 5-9 Ivy led the conference champion Cornhuskers, as well as the Big Eight, in scoring this season, averaging 18.7 points a game. Ivy, one of four Nebraska personnel to be honored, also averaged 5.7 rebounds a game.
Siss, one of two Cowgirl first-teamers, was second in the conference with an average of 18 points and 8.9 rebounds a game. Other first-team selections included 6-1 senior forward-center Tracy Ellis of Missouri, 6-3 junior center Carmen Jaspers of Iowa State, and 5-11 junior forward Clinette Jordan of Oklahoma State.
Nebraska coach Angela Beck was named Big Eight coach of the year.
Joining Braddy on the second team were 6-2 junior center Crystal Ford of Colorado, 6-0 junior forward Jo Mosley of Oklahoma, 5-8 junior guard-forward Sandie Prophete of Missouri, and 5-8 junior guard Amy Stephens of Nebraska.
Joining Shaw as honorable mention selections were Big Eight newcomer of the year Kim Harris, a 6-1 junior forward for Nebraska.
Valesente finds coaching job with Maryland
Bv Craig Anderson
1980
Assistant sports editor
The positive attitude that former Jayhawk football coach Bob Valesente carried with him even in the worst of times at Kansas wasn't lost in his move to the East Coast.
"I're really excited about the coaching opportunities here at Maryland," he said. "I was looking for what was the best job for me and my family, and I feel like I made the best decision.
Last week, Valesente was named Maryland's offensive coordinator and quarterback coach. Although he said he still had hoped to be coaching at Kansas, Valesente said he was looking forward to his future at Maryland.
"I interviewed (at Maryland) and was offered a two-year contract, something most assistant coaches aren't given. It turned out well."
Krivak contacted Valesente shortly after the second-year Kansas coach was fired Nov. 23. No plans were made for an interview then, but Krivak told Valesente to stau in touch.
Valesente's connection at Maryland was with Terrapin coach Joe Krivak. The two met 20 years ago when Valesente was coaching at Cornell and Krivak was coaching at Syracuse.
During the three months after his dismissal, Valesente interviewed for jobs on both the professional and college football level, including Maryland. At the end of the interview process, Valesente said he had several offers to coach college teams.
KANSAN File Photo
"I wasn't so much making a choice between coaching college and professional football," said
Bob Valesente
the 47-year-old Valentee. "I could have taken some administrative positions, but I decided to stay in coaching."
He had three meetings with Krlvak before deciding to join the Terrain staff.
over the past few years, has regularly challenged for the Atlantic Coast Conference title. The Terrapins have been to eight bowl games in the last 11 years. Valesente tried to resurrect a Kansas football program that had been to six bowl games in its 90-year history.
Valesente will be coaching in a Maryland football program that,
Maryland has regularly sent its players to the National Football League. Recent standouts include Lloyd Burruss and Pete Koch of Kansas City and Boomer Esaison of Cincinnati. Valesente said he expected several Terrapins to be selected in this year's NFL draft.
"There's no doubt that Maryland has a tremendous football tradition," Valesente said. "There's a tremendous commitment from everyone here — students, fans, faculty and staff."
"Another big advantage we have here is that Maryland has 90 players on scholarship, something I was always fighting for at Kansas."
Kansas had a 4-17-1 record in Valesente's two years as coach. Despite the losing record, Valesente said he had done the best job he could in a program that was short of resources when he took over the position.
"I don't have any regrets about the KU experience," he said. "The only regrets I guess I would be that I'll be leaving so many great people. I feel really lucky to have been able to have met so many quality people while at Kansas."
While at Kansas, Valsente's teams had the opportunity to meet some of the most powerful football teams in the nation. Last season, Big Eight Conference foes Oklahoma and Nebraska were ranked at the top of the Associated Press' top-20 poll for most of the year. Between them, the Cornhuskers and Sooners have won or tied for 39 of the last 41 league championships.
Also on the Jayhawks' tough schedule were Auburn, Oklahoma
State and Colorado. Valesente said he wouldn't have wanted it any other way.
"We played a tough schedule, there's no doubt about it," he said. "The Big Eight Conference provided us with great competition."
With the kind of tough schedule Kansas played, it was ironic that losses to Division I-AA teams Kent State, under new Jayhawk coach Glen Mason, and Louisiana Tech during the 1987 season would mark the beginning of Valesente's demise. Kansas would win just one game all season, against Southern Illinois, and go winless in the Big Eight for the second straight season.
Rumors started flying about Valeente's future at Kansas early in the season, something he had no control over. Despite all of the speculation, Valeente said he wasn't distracted from his goal — to build the Kansas program into a consistent winner.
"The coaching staff) had to keep going with what we felt was the right course for the program," he said. "We didn't have time to worry about the other things."
"We're taking things one day at a time now," he said. "It's been tough getting acclimated to the new job, but it's nothing that any other football coach has had to go through when changing jobs. I'm enjoying the experience."
In his new situation at Maryland, Valesente has been going through the rigors that accompany the move to almost any new job. Valesente hasn't sold his home in Lawrence yet, though he said he was very close to doing so. He and his wife, Joan, are still looking for a home in Maryland.
Tartabull to remain with KC
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Outfielder Danny Tartabull, the young slugger who said Monday night that he wanted the Kansas City Royals to trade him, ended his holdout yesterday.
The Royals said that Tartabull, who led Kansas City with 34 home runs last season in his first year with the club and second in the majors, had signed a one-year contract. The terms were not disclosed.
It was reported earlier that Tartabuil, who made $145,000 last season, had been given a $325,000 final offer from the Royals. The team had told him his contract would be renewed automatically if he did not sign yesterday, for what Tartabuil's representatives said would be $290,000.
The Associated Press
Tartabull and John Schuerholz, the Royals general manager, had talked by telephone Monday night, and Tartabull said that he repeated his desire to leave the team.
"I told him, 'At one time, I wanted to play with this organization forever,'" Tartabull said. "Now, I want to be traded. I don't want to play for you. I want out."
Tartabull said that when he told Schuerholz he wouldn't in camp Wednesday, the general manager replied that he'd be fined.
---
"I said, 'John, all that proves that you're acting irrational,'" Tartabull said. "I went on and expressed the same feelings I've had all winter. I told him there were double standards on the team."
14
Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Coaches advised to heed gag rule
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Big Eight coaches need to be reminded that there is a conference rule prohibiting them from publicly criticizing officials, Commissioner Carl James said.
"It's an institutional responsibility first," James said Monday. "It's our responsibility to remind the athletic directors that the rule is there and they need to adhere to the rule. My concern is that they have gone a bit further than they have in the past.
"Occasionally, you'll have some guy say something about officiating. But this time, they have not only gone beyond saying it to the media in an emotional post-game situation, they have extended it to call-in shows and TV coaches' shows."
Oklahoma State coach Leonard
Hamilton was publicly critical of official Jim Bain after a Feb. 21 loss at Missouri. Hamilton, who was thrown out of the game early in the second half after the Cowboys bench was called for a third technical foul, alleged that Bain exhibited favoritism toward Missouri.
Kansas coach Larry Brown then said on his radio show that he was "not comfortable" with Bain and also implied that Bain missed a call when Kansas lost to Missouri in the closing seconds of the championship game of the Big Eight tournament last season.
Iowa State Coach Johnny Orr called for the three officials who worked the Cyclones' loss to Iowa State Feb. 24 to be fired.
"You don't solve officiating problems in the newspaper," James said.
"If you have a complaint, take it to the supervisor, and they do. They call John (Overby), and John works with them. We review tapes of games with the supervisor, and we report that information back to the coach.
"It's all constructive criticism, and we need constructive criticism because our evaluations are based on the tapes. Then we come to May (spring meetings). We have a meeting, go over the approval of the officials. We go over the evaluation the supervisor has based on his evaluation of tapes and input from coaches."
Overby, the supervisor of officials, said officials had been suspended for poor work. He said he could remember only three complaints similar to Orr's in the past seven years.
Corrections
Because of an editor's error, the admission price for the KU baseball games was incorrectly listed in yesterday's story. Admission to home games is $2 for adults, $1 for kindergarten through 12th grade. Preschool children and KU students with a KUID are admitted free.
Because of a reporter's error, former Kansas center Paul Mokeski and former guard John Douglas of the 1978 KU men's basketball team were not included among the former team members listed in Monday's story who went on to play professional basketball. Mokeski currently plays for the Milwaukee Bucks. Douglas was selected by New Orleans in the 1978 draft and played for the San Diego Clippers from 1961 to 1983.
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2222 w. 6th
ATTENTION
The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Agnes Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Alderson Award, Class of 1913 Award and the Rusty Lefel Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms describing the Award are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 105 Burge Union. Strickland, Alderson, and Class of 1913 Awards are presented to graduating seniors; students of any status may be nominated for the Leffel Award. The nominations for these Awards must be received by the Student Awards Committee, c/o The Organizations & Activities Center, 105 Burge Union, 864-4861, by Wednesday, March 23, 1988
5 p.m.
KY 102 PRESENTS squeeze This Friday, March 4 Memorial Hall
10,000 MANIACS
PIRATE
Echo & The Bunnymen
With Special Guests
The Screaming Blue Messiahs
Produced by New West & Contemporary
Thursday, March 10 Memorial Hall
Produced by New West & Contemporarv
KY 102
Wallyball Tournament March 5 & 6
March 5 & 6
Entry Fee: $5.00/team *limited to 25 teams
Entry Deadline: TODAY--5:00 p.m
**sponsored by KU Recreation Services 208 Robinson 864-3546
GRAYSTONE Athletic Club
Spring Break Special Student Membership Rate $100 Now thru May 31
$20
10 Tanning Sessions
Good thru March 11
2 Blocks West of Iowa on 6th 841-7230
Catch the beat of Canada's
Catch the beat of Canada's
NEXUS
PREMIER PERCUSSIONISTS
8:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAY,
MARCH 2,1988
LIBERTY HALL
Program
Music for Pieces of Wood Reich
Rain Tree Takemitsu
Third Construction Cage
Mbira and Kobina Traditional African
Clos d'Audignac Mather
Novelty Ragtime Music Green
Advance tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and Liberty
Hall, tickets will be sold at Liberty Hall on the night of the concert.
All seating is general admission Seating is limited.
Call 813-264-2082
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, National Endowment for the Arts, and the Mid-America Arts Alliance additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Fee. Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association
VISA MasterCard accepted for phone reservations:
Public: $10.50, KU and K12 Students: $5.25; Senior Citizens and
Other Students: $9.50
A University Arts Festival event.
Half price for students
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts New Directions Series
ATTENTION:BLOOD DONORS BLOOD DRIVE
continues today, tomorrow,and through Thursday.
Time: 9 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Place: Kansas Union Ballroom
(Sponsored by the IFC & Panhellenic)
SCHOOL
from New York on Scheduled Airlines!
Special Student and Youth Fares to EUROPE
DESTINATIONS OW RT
LONDON $185 $370
PARIS 206 412
FRANKFURT 220 440
ROME/MILAN 238 476
VIENNA 245 490
ZURICH/GENEVA 225 450
COPENHAGEN 255 475
OSLO 225 450
STOCKHOLM 230 460
HELSINKI 238 476
SO. PACIFIC, AUSTRALIA, SO. AMERICA
Above fares also apply from Washington, D.C. to London, Paris and Frankfurt on non-stop service. Add-on fares from Boston, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Minneapolis and many other cities CALL OR WRITE FOR OUR SPECIAL FARES TO THE WASHINGTON AMERICA
Applications available for Eurail Youth Pass and International Student I.D. Card.
WHOLE WORLD TRAVEL
Part of the world wide network New York NY 10017
17 E. 45th St., Stuyvesant, New York NY 10017
(212) 986-9470
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
"Civil Rights in America," a speech by Juan Williams, author of *Eyes on the Wall*, will be held at Union Ballroom. Don't wait until summer to line up a job. Now is the time to line up a summer job or a yearly position as a nanny. You can help improve the best of the New York City has to offer. If you are over 18 and enjoy working with children, your company helps Lepers Inc. 1032 Long Ridge Road. Stanford, Campbell University 05091 282-0456. ALL FARES are included.
HEY KU1? Did you know that in the past year an elite group (hint: it might be Student Senate) has wasted $850 on Course Source, jeopardized Tipey Tata, eaten more steamed dinners on expensai dishes and had to pay $74.000 on itself? We know what our top priority should be: let's put some INTEGRITY back in Senate. No more of the same old problem: INTEGRITY IN 98! Failed by on the Integrity coalition.
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
TENDER LOVING CARE
NANNIES
P.O. Box 191, 215 Godwin Ave.
Midland Park, NJ
201-848-0508
Last Chance for Spring Break '81 Limited space remains at South Padre Island, North Carolina. Tickets are available at Stainwood, Boatland or skiing. Hurry. Call Sunshine Tour to book your tickets. Credit cards accepted. TO DAY! Credit cards accepted.
Mon.- Sun.
Sat. 10-3 1-4
ETHNIC Arts & Crafts
NANNIES
Come See New York City and Work For Great Families, All Families Screened, Local Support Groups, AIR Fare Pay. $150-$300 a week
HELP FOR COLLEGE) **Sources of Financial**
**Resources:** P.O. Box 1744, Lawrence 60044,
P.O. Box 1744, Lawrence 60044
MASSAGE THAT SPRING "BREAK" Tension doesn't mean you have to go to Florida to relax? Spring back from these aches with the help of Lawrence Therapy. Marriage isn't what won't happen if you get 2% off.
Math. Engineering and Physical Sciences Majors with 3.0 G.P.A., earn $1,000. Up to $2,500 per semester upon entry Find out more about the Navy's Engineer officer candidate program, call Navy Management
RENTERS KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!!! !
The Lawrence Tenants Association owns a very apartment complex on 103 W. 46th St. Tenants group calls more! For more information call 841-8800 or 794-3697.
Work with the PIRG to protect the environment.
Make money, make friends, make a difference!
Stop by the table in the Kansas Union Wed or
Thurs. March 23 or 24 at call 315-5474-7474
The Great Garage Sale event is happening this
weekend! Increased assurance is having a sale this
weekend! Incredible assortment of $5s, hirts,
boxers, Jans and Sweatshirts etc. The most popular
items from KU and other universities! Many first
quality and Under Crad. All sizes and colors.
Register! Regency Ballroom,
March 5 & 8 @ 4 p.m.
Hillel
לִי
Events of the Week
Wednesday, March 2 Purim
Big Brother/Big Sister Costume Make Party Hillel House 6:00 p.m.
Dinner
7:00 p.m.
Services
7:30 p.m.
"Sittell Home Companion"
Lawrence Jewish
Community Center
917 Highland
For Reservations/More Info:
Call Hillel, 749-4242
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 2, 1988
15
GRAYSTONE
ATHLETICT CLUB
ANNUNCIES:
AEROBIC CERTIFICATION BY
AEROBIC PIPELINE
Space Limited. Call
749-1288
for More Information.
Sample Sale
60-80%
- Handmade wool sweaters
- Blouses
- Skirts
cotton, silk, t-shirts
cotton, wool, silk, jean
* Pants
cotton, jean, corduroy
Best Western Hotel 730 Iowa
A Special Program For Women's History Month
WOMEN'S FEELINGS THROUGH MUSIC
Music can effect emotions.
Music can stimulate,
motivate, and sometimes
create a more relaxed
atmosphere. This workshop
will focus on songs written
by women and explore
the feelings and concerns
reflected in their music.
Come and learn more about
women, composers and artists.
Tuesday, March 8, 1988
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Centennial Room,
Kansas Union
Facilitated by:
Dr. Barbara Ballard
ENTERTAINMENT
*Sponsored by the Women's Resource Center, 218强 Hall. For more information, contact HR at 843-3922.
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
Affordable DJ. Music and Lighting for any
event.
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile
Network. Drive the DJ's. Hot spin Maximum Party
Friday, 10am-5pm.
FOR RENT
MUSIC *********** MUSIC *********** MUSIC *JiRED Jade House Audio - D.J. SERVICE, 8-track studio. P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizard. Call Brad 749-1275.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call Mastercraft 4255, or 749-2491. Mastercraft Management
Ocxy efficiency in farm style home with large kitchen WIOD hookup. New yard. Old West Lawrences.
Rooms for now & summer in rooming house, 1344
796-0085, 796-0095, 796-0105, 796-0115,
1402-8272, 797-6491 Leave message.
Available immediately. Nice two bedroom
downstown and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Female grad. student seeking roommate to share
room with graduate students and
electricity. Call Meledy 604-1479-daytime.
GREAT DEAL 3 bedroom,1 bathroom house
Available March at 11 a.m and Kentucky $50.00
per night.
Get a Group? Common Goals? Spacious well-maintained house on quiet block near town & campus? 9 bedrooms w/ multiple kitchens & rooms. Available; 6-18: 126 month. 841-414.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester '18. 1 smoke, call Sarah evening
Large room in Four bedroom house. Nice
Neighborhood. Fenced in backyard. Laundry
facilities. Pets OK $17.50 per 4+ utilities.
$100.00 fee. Call 749-7359 (Ask for Ted.)
MASTERCRAFT OFFERS beautiful furnished
studios and classrooms for students in mind Call 811-742-6811 or 742-782-6911
One bedroom West Meadow condo - carpet, pool,
garage, microwave, fireplace, room - No bed!
Room - No bed!
Roommate needs 2-bath. $300.00/month, glass
$2 water. laundry & pool on premise.
On a weekly basis.
SUBLEASE. Extra nice 2 BR duplex in good location; garage; W D hookup. No pets. Refs. req. $360 mo. Must see. 843-7736 for 5 or leave message.
$30/o. Must see. 843-736 after 5 or leave
message.
Summer Sublease: Campus Place apts. Ren
negotiable. 749-2066.
Looking to Rent?
We have: apartments rooms houses
Lynch Real Estate
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom townhouse, 1bath, pool, and deck. Four persons preferable.
82-2752
Conservative living. SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
(6) 220-4294 for Am. App. or Tom.
1711 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS
SUNDANCE
BRAND NEW! Sundance II
Coming to you this fall!
- Completely furnished
- Completely furnished
* Located on the old
- Located on the old
- Sanctuary site
- Super energy efficient
- On KU bus route Call today to reserve
- On KU bus route
Call today to reserve your unit for next fall! Offered by:
MASTERCRAFT
841-5255 * 841-1212
中国国家税务局监制
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1,2,3,& 4 Bedroom Apartments and
- Garages
- Pools
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Fireplaces
Free Cable TV
FOR SALE
On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri.11-5
73 Crestine Home: 12 x 50' . 2 BR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 pm, or inquire 420 North St. #6, Lawrence.
CB 650 1980, 7000 miles. Best Buy, mint condition.
841-769-3748. Craig.
Classical guitar 75, $74 Dodge dart 200, Marshall
amp b25, Morley Wah pedal 75, $79 Cadillac
Deville $300, Black leather jacket 100, $84-2657
evenings.
FOR SALE - Roundtrip airline ticket to Abuquerque NM - For Spring excursion. Very cheap!
For Sale: Aiwa walkman with built in microphone, phone, and includes Aiwa speakers.
For Sale brand new Cannon electronic type-
meter. In Stock 834-204 10 ppm. Please call
834-204 10 am. 8 pm.
IBM PCAT Compatible. Hardware, mouse, software identical to Macintosh. Worth $4,000. Ankz
KEYBOARD Korg Poly - 800 Programmable polytron synthesizer, like new, Kabel KB-100
Kabel KB-100
*****MOTHIBAL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
512 E. 98-749 4961
Obsorbite computer compute and IBM printer.
Connect with cable to the computer or together.
Call Dione after 6:00 at 841-4738.
Truck track tape covered electric range lamp $80, acu-
flectronics case $250, large airval cage case $250. Gary $69-911, leaves
$39.
Queen-size bed $75, FUTON rocker $70, Hitachi
case desk $70, Dodge Dart $309, 841-2657
841-2658
Rock-n-roll – Thousands of used and rare albums
to be up to 8 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday
and 11 p.m. every Monday through Thursday.
79 Cullins Braum - Low mileage 65,000 - Power windows, locks, seat, cruise, AM-FM Cassette, Equilizer - Excellent condition $2900 call Sean 749-4967
76 Valve 394 GL Auto sunroof. Some rust. Excellent condition. 83.000, 84.105-807
YAMAHA Receiver and Direct Drive Turntable,
cassette, and equalizer. Call Chuck 811-345-6920.
1958 Fiero SE, 6 Cly, 4 Sp, Silver. Top of line stereo, 35.0 miles, 790, 841, 3465.
Alamar Country Club is seeking housekeepers.
Apply in person at 1890 Crossgate Dr. between the hours of 8 a.m. - 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. No phone calls please.
AUTOSALES
RED HOT Bargain! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
buses, trucks. Buyers. Builders. Est. 97.96.
guide. (1) 87-667-0000. www.redhots.com
LOST-FOUND
1965 SUBARU GL 4 door sedan. Blue Dark with
mosun roof. SunCam, Dash. Loaded. 41,000
L.
Last gold-colored ring with simulated diamond,
stone, missing: Great sentiments value
Call 842-395-6100
HELP WANTED
Key found outside of Stauffer Fint 2/29. K来士an Classified files counter to claim.
Lost - Levis Jean Jacket Febt. 32, between 18th & 18th and 12th & 18th. Reward 841-877-67.
Found: Black Puppy "wink" chest in area of 11th &
Indiana call 843-973-0927 ask for Paul.
Bassett Refectile. Just received 2 truckloads.
Bassett Retail $290 direct to public price $179.00, Open to Public 10-8 daily Mark & Kunit Grain Warehouse, Burlington, Kington and T38 New Hampshire, Lafayette.
Room 134 W50 / 2/22 A18 104 10 30 M
Vasum saatul穆م. If found call Diana 845-0126.
I
Bedroom Buyout, 4dr chests $39.99, desks $9.99,
bookcase $9.99, Mark and Quail Furniture
Warehouse, 1601 Burlington, NKC or 738 New
Hampshire St.
BE ON T V. Many needed for commercials.
Casting to T castings (信息 1) 010-685-6000 Ext. 107
**POSTAL JOB** $29.04 Start! **Prepare Now!**
Exam Workshops (601) 944-4444 Ext 153
Workshop (608) 944-4444 Ext 153
AIRLINES NOW HIRING FLIGHT Attendants,
Listings, Salaries to $80k Entry level position
Salaries to $120k
CAMP COUNSELER Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterkilling, gymnastics, riftery, archery, tennis, golf, sports competition, dance, theater. Also kitchen, office maintenance, $100 or more a R & B. M. Marc Sereguy, 1765 Mile, NFid.
> kitchen, office maintenance, $ salary or 80%
> computer, server, Meer Seeger, 1765 Npl. Mild.
II 0003, 312-446-2448
CLINTON MARINA will be conducting interviews for 1988 staff positions March 1st and 2nd from Monday through Thursday, January 24th with reservation desk for suite #). Position includes working in the kitchen, boat and dock maintenance, assistant cook, and dentsist. Most positions will start immediately. Full and part-time positions will be by June 19th if not appointment necessary.
COCKTAIL WAITRESS. Must be perseverable, ex-
actly and at least 21. Apply at THE HAWK,
1310 Gibbons
GOVENMENT JOBS. $10,404,325,291. yr. Now
GOVENMENT JOB: $87,687,000. yr. 1975R
current Federal List:
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS:
PROGRAM INSTRUCTORS (4) teach high school students in summer session. Degree, teaching experience is required. DORMITORY SUPERVISOR(I) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorm. Degree and experience with culturally diverse students are required. (3) live in dorm, tutor, counsel and supervise high school students. At least junior level in college required.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT (1) Bridge student to individual educational programs for KU
Master's degree, post-secondary teaching ex-
perience in a Department of DEADLINE; March 24, 2018. S:00 P. M. Complete job description available at Upward Bound, 408 Hall Street, Philadelphia, PA 19105. Resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 408 Hall Bayle, Lawrence, Kansas 6905 (913) 8445-8140, EARLIS.
deal Instructor/Counselor) (1) design and implement a system to help clients. Serve as Instructor and Counselor.
Looking for roofing laborers. No experience needed. Call 7 on p. 841-6511.
Mothers helper to live in our N.J. home - close to NCY. Female, non-smoker, driver. Call (210) 939-9013. Minimum 3 months starting in May or sooner.
McDonalds of Lawrence has part-time openings for day shift and late shift. Applicants need to be at least 18 years old, have a minimum wage and discount on meals. Now is 1309 W. 6th & 901 W. 21rd
Now hiring maintenance person. Requires general maintenance of 2 restaurants. Must be available for 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. M-F. Starting with Buffalo's Massachusetts above Buffalo Bills' smokebucket.
PART-TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed for the game. The team's most necessary experience will we train you. Attend the meetings on Tuesday, March 6 at 3:30 p.m. for soccer and 7:20 p.m. for floor basketball. 2021 Robinson
Rax Restaurants is now hiring responsible, mature, hard-working individuals to fill part-time day, evening and weekends openings. Wages start at $7,500 for a full-time position in *Rax Restaurants* 70 W. w23rd S. 744-4501
Secretary/Receptionist 9:12 hrs/week. Must be available M.W, F.9 w. 10 m. p. 21st. m. pring $4/hour. General office experience required. Applicant must have Massachusetts above Buffalo Bob's smokehouse.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesmen, Airlines &
sports. Recommendation for summer jobs, internships and career positions. For information & application, write national recreation Recipe. P.O. Box 8414 Hillsboro
TYPIST to transcribe, using WordPerfect on zenith computer, tape-recorded oral history in interviews and supplemental interviews, 60 w.p.m. required; a $1 time, some flexibility of hours. Salary negotiable. Send resume letter to Job Director, Attn: Barbara Koehler.
Summer Jobs! **2** from Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15-23, 2014; interview and call job Jef at 1-800-451-5270. Ext. 310
PERSONAL
Devy: You're legal. Have a great day and Don't have too much fun tonight. Remember rules #1
G/W/M 45, straight acting, fun with, mutual
support. Req. phone, be phone, photo
0 T: 17, Lawrence, Keswick.
Ferris – Denver choked!, Eway and Roman are like a lamb soap. My tell Jack!" Later chucked!
Hell Date "88 Virgil, Thanks, I love Allstar Wrestling! Welcome your Dutch Date, Little Vixen.
I'm here, where are you? Normal guy, 25, adventure hands, kind, creative, magnetic, and complex. Looking for a normal, pretty, warm, intelligent woman, but haven't found her in bars. Is it a girl?
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE 8. M-F:
professional work processing/data management,
resumes/letters, manuscripts, theses, etc. TOP-NOT
TOCH SERVICES 843-5062
Mickey. Cliff. Phil Kap. - Surprise you made the list! There are some incredible weeks. I only hope it'll imitate these months.
S.A.K. - Absence makes the heart grow fonder.
-Waterbed.
BUS. PERSONAL
Jen - Scooby Bury curz today's your day! Partly like a Penguin, but don't catch the fun. Remember no L & R and no hair! Quit laughing with your mouth open C. O. (birthday clothes). Thanks for the memories and the fun you are the best!! You're a very special friend! Happy Birthday!
Impertassport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
Intensive travel, ID. I.D. fine portraits
Swell Studies 798-161
Separated, 7. Athletic, Professional, Attractive,
Lonely male likes to meet 20-30 female for long term friendship. Color not important. Write to P.O. Box 384, Ottawa, Kansas, 60667 with photo.
fus you! Write P.O. box 10317, Lawrence.
Jen - Scouty Bedz cindy today's your day. Party
Danny - Scotty Bedz your day. Party
Kwik Shop 1:30 Sat A.M. you had a pick-up. I had green sweater. Interested? Reply here.
Discover recovery thru shared experience and information on dues or fees. Overstates Anonymous. Monetary. 325 Main. For confidential Memorial Hospital, 325 Main. For confidential Lawrence 6046. Write PO Box 3824 Lawrence 6046
LEOATD 'SALE' All women's leiders,
unirides, and dance pants up to 50% off. New Spring arrivals included Dragonfly Dancewear.
17: East 7th (7h & New Hamphire).
*birthday* *thank you*
*get well* *i love you*
*parties* *functions*
NK Zoo: Well "Partner from Hell," all the hard work and long hours are about to pay off for you. I have a great job, but we have no one to do my Michael Jackson impon-sation for, but we'll always have the fun memories. I couldn't have asked for a better partner. Thanks for being so great! Love, your partner
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at
+1-821- Confidential help/free pregnancy
test
HEY K.U.
SEND BALLOONS
...VEN VJJ...
To any surf course – join travel bodyboarder on surf trip to Kauai over Spring Break. FREE accommodation on North Shore (responsible for surf equipment), etc. from (cfm) 84-9134 before 10 p.m.
841-1790
South Padre Island beach condominiums; the
South Padre Island resort; or your travel agent for
1-800-PADRE or your travel agent for
3-800-PADRE.
Yellow and White Striped Shirt, Long Dark wavy hair. I saw you at the "Jetterson" Cafe in the city. I looked like the place to be around: 1:00 for Lunch and 2:00 for Scoot. So says Jean Jacket, Long red Wavy hair.
COLLEGE WARES
SÉRUME AL LINGUIFE & SINNWILFE. GEY你
SÉRUME AL LINGUIFE & SINNWILFE. GEY你
SÉRUME AL LINGUIFE & SINNWILFE. GEY你
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography Head shots to composites, dancers, dancers, etc. Phone number 814-595-6000.
To the Fiero lady, at Park 25, say hi to the Capri girl nearest you.
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4394
Bloom County t-shirts & bout
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more!
841-4294
Bloom Countv t-shirts & books
A COACH!
A BED!
IT'S BOY!
---
937 Massachusetts 441-9443
Do you want
$30,000 / year?
Do you want
It begins with a quality resume
We can also print from your IBM™ or Mcintosh™ disk.
on MP
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
Printing
HARPER
LAWYER
1910 Mass Suite 201 749-0123
Don't steal 'em from Uncle Ed!
Vintage Sunglasses are Choice!
Assorted color frames and lenses..
T
The Etc.
Find your style at
Shop 732
Massachusetts
843-0611
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-779
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $8/hour, 843-9032
(p.m.)
RU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES ELEKTRONOMICS
RU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES ELEKTRONOMICS
v presents PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Buildin
g
TUTORING TUTORING $^{6.39}$.br. MATH STATISTICS and PHYSICS. B.S. Physics, M.A. Math. M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 841-3064.
PRIVATE OFFICE Off-Gyne and Abortion Services.
Overland Park...Og13 491-6878.
TYPING
Pregnant and need help? *Call* Birthright at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Vice. Overland Park... (913) 491-6878
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at
(913) 491-6878
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac-
crude. 829-745 or Lau, 829-745 and wordprocessing,
829-745 or Lau, 829-745
$5.00
Haircuts
843-8000
A1- Reliable Typing Service
Term papers,
Remotes, letters, etc.
Formatted type, IBM
TCP/IP. 924-3366
Dr. Marguerite Ermeling
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-type quality. 843/263, days or evenings.
Type Typing: Letters, resume, themat, law typ
type 843-867 hours or 943-874
or 843-867 weeks and weekends.
House calls and Boarding facilities Available
Depot/Cite/Brides
Exotic Plate
Wild Life
Animal Hospital
Pamper your pet with the very best of care
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing
13 experience. Letter C Torry 4842 7456
13 experience. Letter C Torry 4842 7456
GENERAL CARE
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term paper writing, my writing correcting Selectr, spelling corrector, 843-5654
A4TYPING TWP word processing/spellcheck.
$11pt, doublespace, pica. After 5pm M-P.
!apt, bold, italic, underline.
6th and Kaisel
Westbridge Shipping Center
(913) 811-7240
[011] 811-7241
Master Care/Univ/Discover Accepting
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $1.25 biparted space East Lawrence. Mrs. Harvey spaced up text.
Call Ruth for all your typing needs 4/1pp. 24 hr.
turn around 8:43 643-648 after 5 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Probing.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings lists. Letter quality
printing. Spelled correct. 942-7247
Call me for your typing needs. Reasonable rates
842-8486 before 10 p.m.
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
and Mathematics. All levels. Call Denni
DISSERTATION, THESES, LAW PAPERS
DISSERTATION, THESES, LAW PAPERS
available. 842-337-8 before p. 6 m. ples.
LOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letter qualifier, special student spirit, spell check
For professional typing/word processing, call
841-406-4900. Spring special $120/paper double
address card.
Professional tystist w/ 15 years experience. Close to campus. Peggy 892-4998.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, gram-
matical correctness and a serviceable
pack-up delivery. 843-0172
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
RESUMES - professionally typeset and Laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professional resumes for $75 or 1/2 price for $12 of Kinks and get it back in you in 24 hours. Call today at 943.828. 10 no answer. leave a message.
THE FAR SIDE
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at 845-0111
WANTED
Female Roominate wanted, summer, large room for 1, or 2 $10/month, trash/cable table furnished for 3.
Female roommate, 2 bedroom duplex at Meadowbrook, own room, furnished, 5 minute to walk.
Female roommate wanted. 2 bedroom house 6th & Kentucky $120 + $u. utilities. Large dog lover a must. Graduate student or serious student prefers. 842-5306.
Male/Female Roommate needed for 3 bedroom
room. Please check with Tom, 7941-2843-8432 or Ken.
Male roommate. Own room in 2 bedrooms
Berkley Flat Apt. 1 blok from Union $130
Female roommate wants to share 1/2 story townhouse with other females. New townhouse has three bedrooms, two baths and AC, 1/2 baths plus. Located close to campus to bus route B, road rent and ullt Aqt-804-5634
Male/M female roommate needed-fully furnished api new campuses/ own bedroom $120 mh³
api new campuses/ own bedroom $120 mh³
Nice fun roommate looking for 2 roommates to share 3 bedroom apartment for 88-49 school year. Swimming pool, BB/Tennis Courts available. 842-625 Meadowbrook
**SEED IMMEDIATELY for Lawrence based band** *kockan*, Vocastir, preferential with other students. Dateseen booked 肌4-841-6441.
*Need Student Toolkit*, OSI game, 684-230 ask for icott
*art time house cleaners wanted*. Day and evening hours available. I enjoy cleaning and are often in touch with the artists our talents. Call 842-6264. Need transportation *your used books and magazines to work* kinate to Friends of the Lawrence Public Bring to collection box at the library 736 'ermont'
Roommate getting married need older student to share rent 138.75 + $4 utilities in a townhouse. Own room on bus route. Please call if interested 842.737.
Roommate for Spacious 3 bedroom duplex in
St. Louis with 2 car garage and $260 mo.
Utilities paid. On bus route B. 842-7972.
Wanted: tickets to Saturday night's Basketball
Game at Ford Field. Mail resume to:
We need 2 "Ski" tickets. Call 842-3409.
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate.
"No, wait! That's not Uncle Floyd! Who is that? ... Crimony, I think it's just an air bubble!"
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16
Wednesday, March 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 2, 1988
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansman to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
yesterday day when they arrived at this class.
"The they were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport." Jones said.
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place." he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It itwent exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole darn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigotry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, III., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
By Meredith Relph
Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal
BAY
KANSAN
After Hours
Playing lacrosse
Getting massaged
Writing on the walls
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
gle.
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250' Klan.
at he had been a member
or 10 months. He said
cause he was "looking for
fermenting."
en a member since 1981.
joined after witnessing whites in Miami.
the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of e Klan was to promote
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ng should be done to get them arriculum."
ill will be heard on the House robably within two weeks, 1 said. The Speaker of the lecies when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said could be considerable debate loor.
n the speaker brings it up on indar, there will certainly be bery stormy debate." Branson
associated Press supplied some ion for this story.
g army sloyals
b) rvidence in a middlclass
b) rvidence near the middlclass
t in Tuesday, security agents
t in opposition, security agents
neighborhood, apparently e it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
onstrators gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of iton, set up barricades of and set fire to a mini-d car.
riot police chased the protesto side streets and apartmentgs Chunks of concrete were leaest least the apartment house.
e fired tear-gas grenades and d tear gas into the buildings ortable tanks, filling the entire orthole with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the
of the street and shouted to
its. "You'll come out like cocks!"
!
did, and reporters on the law no one injured
pokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous one callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters. The organization is associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 2, 1988
Vol. 98,No.109 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigotry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating, and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it."
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
MOTHER OF THE FAMILY
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal
OPEN HOUSE STUDENTS, STAFF, & FACULTY NOW is the time to reserve your COMPLETELY FURNISHED studio, 1, 2, 3, or 4 Bdrm. apartment for Next Semester! Saturday, March 5, 1988 1:00-5:00 p.m.
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Whether you prefer to live alone or with roommates, we have a place for you, designed with you in mind. See you Saturday!!!
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gle
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan.
the Klan an "upbeat
at he had been a member
line or 10 months. He said
cause he was "looking for
verimenting."
en a member since 1981.
joined after witnessing whites in Miami.
the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of e Klan was to promote
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ng should be done to get them urriculum."
ill will be heard on the House robably within two weeks, i said. The Speaker of the secles when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said ould be considerable debate loor.
the speaker brings it up on nard, there will certainly beiry stormy debate." Branson
associated Press supplied some ion for this story.
g army sloyals
by violence in a middle-class
lhood near the bank dis-
in Tuesday, security agents
at an investigation cordi station
or opposed. Radio broadcast neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
instrators gathered yesterday he four-lane street in front of tion, set up barricades of tion and set fire to a mini-
riot police chased the protest-
side streets and apartmen-
gs Chunks of concrete were
used at least in at least
the apartment house.
e fired tear-gas grendes and
d tear gas into the buildings
ortable tanks, filling the entire
orhood with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to its, "You'll come out like cocks!"
did, and reporters on the law no one injured.
pokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters esman Franklin Castrellon Associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both out no bombs were found.
2 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 2, 1988
Vol. 98,No.109 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour
military yesterday in Strong Hall's
recreation ground.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansman to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brohaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and
what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We
stared bigry in the face for an hour."
Mariyl Pollack, Wilmette, III., sohmore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
Knights tell KU students about goals
TORI
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal
KANSAN
magazine
March 2, 1988 Volume 4, Issue 6
ayaz
The writing is on the walls ... 8
The fastest game on two feet ... 10
Rubbing out the kinks ... 12
DANGEROUS
4
ON THE COVER
Marc Roskin, Northbrook, Ill., sophomore, defends the goal while the KU Lacrosse Club works on a pick drill during practice. Photo by Janine Swiatkowski
LADY NET
DEPARTMENTS
Trends: Playing games ... 4
Interview: Marian Washington ... 6
Fiction: 2 Feet and 5.43791 Inches ...14
Reviews: Oscars ... 16
Supremacist right ... 17
New sounds ... 18
POLICE DEPT.
]
会
843-4821
STAFF:
Editor: Kjersti Moen
Associate Editor: Jerri Niebaum
CONTRIBUTING STAFF: David Boyce, Ric Brack, John Buzbee, John Calbou, Bente M. Dahl, Kevin Dilmore, Dave Eames, Brenda Flory, Dale Fulkerson, John Henderson, Jern E. Kaalstad, Donna Kirk, Stephen Kline, Rob Knapp, Lisa Leinacker, Mcie McMahon, Dave Niebergall, Andrew Pavich, Du Ruettimann, David B. Stewart, Rick Stewart, Jani Swatikowski and David White.
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SATURDAY 9 a.m.-1 p.m.
SUNDAYS & HOLIDAYS Closed
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988 3
gle.
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan.
at he had been a member
line or 10 months. He said
cause he was "looking for
fermenting."
en a member since 1981.
joined after witnessing whites in Miami.
the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of e Klan was to promote
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ng should be done to get them urriculum."
ill will be heard on the House
obviously within two weeks,
said. The Speaker of the
ecclesies when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said
could be considerable debate
loor.
n the speaker brings it up on indar, there will certainly be fiery stormy debate. $^{b}$ Branson
ssociated Press supplied some ion for this story.
g army sloyals
By violence in a middle-class
rood near the banking dis-
tion Tuesday, security agents
on an onboarding radio station
neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
instructors gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of iton, set up barricades of and set fire to a mini-14 car.
rt police chased the protest
side streets and apartment
ge Chunks of concrete were
used in the construction at least
the apartment house.
e fired tear-gas grenes and
1 tear gas into the buildings
variable tanks, filling the entire
arhood with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to its. "You'll come out like cocks!"
did, and reporters on the law no one injured.
pokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous nee calls warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters. It is also associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both utl no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
they would contact the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the dart thinned with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigotry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, III., sophomore, said the interview was a great experi-
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p.12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
VOL 4
Bv Meredith Relph
Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal
trends
GAMES ARE IN!
SAN FRANCISCO
BY JORN E. KAALSTAD
Party games challenge artistic talent, strategic thinking and intelligence.
Booze and drugs commonly are attributed to the seemingly brain-dead and uncommunicative Monday morning student. Now, however, some students who show up for class with bloodshot eyes and lofty, distant looks might be exhausted players of board games. Who wouldn't be tired after spending the night probing into ethical dilemmas, destroying Rommel's German tank divisions or fighting evil monsters in the dungeons of a medieval castle?
Many students are choosing "beer-and-pretzel" games for late-night entertainment and as a substitute for partying. These games have few and simple rules and cost between $15 and $30.
No matter which games, students seem to play them with greater intensity now than ever, according to Paul Leader, manager of Comic Corner, 2220 Iowa St. Comic Corner specializes in games that can be categorized as "beer-and-pretzel" games, military strategy games and role-playing games.
Trivial Pursuit was an undisputed best-seller two years ago but has declined in sales and seems to have been surpassed by Pictionary, the game of "quick draw." In this game, people play in teams of at least two. The players try to guess words that a team member attempts to draw. Beverly Finger, Rozel senior, says the game is fun if at least four teams with minimum creativity play. Finger, who occasionally plays Pictionary on Friday nights, says, "It sure beats a Saturday morning hangover."
Win, Lose or Draw is another game that challenges your knack for drawing. But
like most games copied from television shows, it's not too hot among college students.
In Scrubles, another popular "beer-and-pretzel" game, players confront real-life ethical dilemmas. They ponder questions such as, "While walking along a beach, you see a couple engaged in sex. Do you stay to watch?" Players can challenge each others' answers, and then all players vote on the person's ethical sincerity, a great way to learn a friend's moral attitudes.
Angela Baughman, Lawrence freshman, played Scrupples with a friend and her friend's family during Winter Break. She asked her friend — if she knew her brother was spying on the United States government, would she turn him in? Her friend, a journalism major, said, "Yeah. It would make a great story." Baughman answered, "No way. Not your own brother." The challenge was on, and the players all showed their red pitchfork cards. Everybody agreed that the girl was lying, and Baughman won the point.
-
For devoted video heads, there's the Couch Potato Game, which appeals to players with itemized knowledge of TV commercials and shows. Larry Cornelius, manager of Fun and Games, 816 Massachusetts St., says most people buy the game as a joke.
But games are no joke to serious players. Most of those who prefer role-playing and military strategy games are incurable addicts. For them, games are a serious hobby, not just party fun. Some devour the logical and calculated scene of military strategy games in which the players can change history by re-enacting famous war battles.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2. 1988
We Deliver Thur. - Sat. after 5pm
Mon.-Wed
Thur - Sat
11 to 5pm
704 Massachusetts
11 to 9pm
(across from the Eldridge)
le.
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan.
at he had been a member
line or 10 months. He said
cause he was "looking for
verimenting."
en a member since 1981. joined after witnessing whites in Miami.
the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of e Klan was to promote '
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ng should be done to get them urriculum."
ill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, I said. The Speaker of the acces们 will the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said could be considerable debate loor.
the speaker brings it up on
indar, there will certainly be
burry stormy debate." Branson
ssociated Press supplied some ion for this story.
g army sloyals
I by violence in a middle-class neighborhood near the banking district Tuesday, security agents an opposition radio station neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
instructors gathered yesterday he four-lane street in front of thon, set up barricades of and set fire to a mini-4 car.
riot police chased the protest- side streets and apartments. Chunks of concrete were down at police at least
e fired tear-gas grenades and
d ear gas into the buildings
artic tanks, filling the entire
arhood with the acrid, stinging
s officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to us. "You'll come out like cockat!"
did, and reporters on the law no one injured.
jokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was incinerated in Franklin Castellion. Associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with." He said he told his class about the field trip
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnipake, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigly in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wiltree, ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experi-
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
THE TOWNSEND
Bv Meredith Relnh
Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal
0
ILLUSTRATIONS BY DAVE EAMES
Strategic war games might be as old as warfare itself. In 1795, Georg Vurtinurus, a military writer in Schleswig, Germany, developed a complex war game based on the terrain between Germany and France. The game, made to prepare German soldiers for warfare, is strikingly similar to today's commercial games, some of which are Axis and Allies, Risk, and Diplomacy. Typical strategic and tactical board game players are males over 30 with college degrees.
Doug Adams, Bartvillees, Okla., junior, is a serious gamer with a preference for military strategy games. One of his favorites is Advanced Squad Leader. Some players consider this game to be four times as difficult as Monopoly.
For serious gamers, playing can be a costly hobby. The complete set of Advanced Squad Leader has separate modules used to re-enact World War II battles. Most strategy games start at $30, but Advanced Squad Leader can cost as much as $150.
In role-playing games, people assume imaginary characters and delive into a fantasy world of good and evil, orcs, clerics, nolls, minotaurs and giant spiders. For the past 15 years, these games have been popular with heavyweight gamers who often form clubs through which they cultivate their hobby.
According to TSR Inc., manufacturer of Dungeons and Dragons, between one and two million gamers play role-playing games regularly in the United States. Dungeons and Dragons is the most popular among those games.
Jorn E. Kaalstad is a Drammer, Norway, junior major in journalism.
Teri Olmstead, Kansas City, Kan., senior, says role-playing games are better than daydreaming. "Instead of going out and punching someone, you just kill an orc or a metal-eating black pudding."
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--at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan.
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2,1988 5
gle.
at he had been a member
line or 10 months. He said
cause he was "looking for
imentering."
en a member since 1981. joined after witnessing whites in Miami
the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of e Klan was to promote "
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ng should be done to get them urriculum."
ill will be heard on the House
robably within two weeks,
i said. The Speaker of
the aces then the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said
could be considerable debate
door.
the speaker brings it up on ndar, there will certainly be ry stormy debate." Branson
ssociated Press supplied some ion for this story.
g army sloyals
by violence in a middle-class
bhood near the banking dis-
tain Tuesday, security agents
enough an opposition radio station
neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
instructors gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of them, set up barricades of t ranch and set fire to a mini-
rion police chased the protest side streets and apartment gs. Chunks of concrete were scattered at least in the apartment houses.
e fired tear-gas grenades and
1 tear gas into the buildings
atable tanks, filling the entire
rhood with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to ts. "You'll come out like cock-it!"
did, and reporters on the aw no one injured.
jokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in communal areas at Franklin Castries. Associated Press the book "build-evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found."
Thursday March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Kansan staff writer
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
they would conceive the next yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadruped in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bright in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p.12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kaosan
VW
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU
Marian Washington
Full of energy despite small crowds and hints of racism
Often, people used my
BY DAVID BOYCE
-Marian Washington, Kansas women's basketball coach
Often, people used my race to discourage a strong athlete, who happened to be white, from coming to Kansas.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington has spent 14 years combining the two things she enjoys most: coaching and teaching basketball. During her coaching career, she has faced subtle hints of racism when recruiting and sexism when promoting the women's game. But through it all, she tries to look at situations objectively. And despite a few obstacles, she looks forward to every August and the start of a new season. Why? Because Marian Washington loves to coach and to watch student-athletes mature both on and off the court.
Q: As one of only a few black women's coaches at a predominantly white college, has it helped or hurt in recruiting?
A: It depends on what time period you are talking about.
Q: Did you have recruiting troubles during the mid-20s?
A: Yes. I was able to recruit the black player, and I helped change the style of play (to a faster game) in the Big Eight. But often, people used my race to discourage a strong athlete, who happened to be white, from coming to Kansas. But eventually, it has balanced out. I hope it is an old trick that won't be used anymore. Now, sometimes, it might work the other way. One black athlete I successfully recruited told me her coach told her. "Don't let Marian's 'blackness' get in the way." I have never used my being as black as a recruiting tool. Hopefully, with more black coaches, color will never be an issue in recruiting.
Q: In 1897, you filed a complaint with the Big Eight about the number of fouls called against Kansas. Do you think that the number of fouls called against your team has anything to do with your being black?
A: When you have been coaching as long as I have, you try to be objective. You hope
it's not that the referres favor a man over a woman, and you certainly hope it isn't because you are black. This year, there have been only two games where Kansas was whistled for fewer fouls. It's difficult when you are playing a physical game. You look at films. Maybe it's our winning tradition. It is the biggest complaint in our game by most coaches. But right now, it has hurt Kansas.
Q: What do you think of Kansas coach Larry Brown?
A: I think Coach Brown is an outstanding teacher. I just have a lot of appreciation for his competitiveness.
Q: Is your coaching style closer to Brown's pass-oriented style or to University of Oklahoma's men's coach Billy Tubbs' run-around?
A: My philosophy isn't any different than when I started. I love the running game and pressure defense. It's fun to watch Tubbs, but you need discipline — not to say Oklahoma doesn't have discipline. But you really have to respect what Brown does. For women, we are just beginning to develop the really good athlete to do what the men can do. I think if girls get the training that boys get during high school, we will see a lot of great women players. Still, in many high schools, girls' coaches don't really have the knowledge of the game like the boys' coaches have. Part of my challenge is to find girls with potential. But right now, I spend a lot of time teaching basic things.
Q: What keeps you motivated as a coach?
A: I think that basically, you have to love what you are doing; that's the starting point. But usually, there is something different each year. Hopes of great success or working with a group of new kids is always a motivating factor. Also, coaching allows me to share some of my real self, I guess. I stay in coaching because I love working with kids. For me, coaching has always given me a chance to help them enjoy the game. I spend a lot of time working with them, and to see them grow is a big lift.
**Q:** When will you know when it's time to put down the whistle and retire?
**A:** When does anyone know? Sometimes it's age. Sometimes it's a different adventure. Coaching is so stressful; it's when I stop having fun that I will probably start
something else. Also, when I start feeling like I am not contributing or reaching the student-athlete, then I will probably leave.
Q: In your 14 years of coaching, have you felt like you were not contributing?
A: I think everyone does sometimes, and especially in athletics. Athletics is very emotional. Coaching is like a roller coaster ride. When things are going well, you feel you could do this forever. But on the very next day, a loss can put you at the ebb of quitting. You just have to hang in there.
Q: What moments stand out the most in your years of coaching?
Q: Is coaching something that stays with you 24 hours a day, or can you leave it in the office when you go home?
A: I think the year that we played in a four-tem team tournament at Madison Square Garden is one moment. There were three nationally ranked teams, and that was when Kansas became nationally known for women's basketball. Another moment is when we played a home game against Missouri and we won after three overtimes. And last year's victory in the Big Eight Tournament at Salina is a moment I will always treasure.
A: It's something, unfortunately, that stays with me 24 hours. Depending on your personality, it can be a detriment to your health. When you are as competitive as I am, you are never satisfied. It is hard to leave it in the office. I am involved in so many committees that, for me, it's a year-round thing. But over the last year, I have been finding time to relax.
Q: What do you do to relax?
A: What do you do to relax?
A: Currently, I am studing tae kwon do. It gives me a chance to discipline my mind. I also enjoy music.
Q: Is it tough to work hard as a coach and see your players work hard in practice and then perform in front of a sparse crowd?
A: I went through a period of time where I was frustrated by the lack of response. With all the accomplishments we have had and still no response sort of saddens me. One day, maybe, we will have that full house.
David Boyce is a Kansas City, Kan., senior majoring in journalism. He also is the associate sports editor for the Kansan.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2; 1988
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SARAH LAWRENCE
le.
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan.
at he had been a member
one or 10 months. He said
cause he was "looking for
arteriment."
en a member since 1981.
joined after witnessing whites in Miami.
the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of e Klan was to promote
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ng should be done to get them urriculum."
ill will be heart on the House probably within two weeks, I said. The Speaker of the aces when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said could be considerable debate loor.
the speaker brings it up on ndar, there will certainly be try stormy debate." Branson
ssociated Press supplied some ion for this story.
g army sloyals
by violence in a middle-class
mind near the banking dis-
trict. Tuesday, security agents
ed an opposition radio station neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
instructors gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of, set up barricades of and set fire to a mini- car.
not police chased the protest-
side streets and apartment
Chunks of concrete were
am at police at least in the
building.
e fired tear-gas greanades and
1 tear gas into the buildings
artable tanks, filling the entire
rhood with the acrid, stinging
'fifter in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to ts. "You'll come out like cock-it"
did, and reporters on the aw no one injured.
boksenman for the Panama Commission said anonymous callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters. usman Franklin Castellon Associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both at no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 98, No.109 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
Kansan staff writer
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert. Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversoe, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Kansan staff writer
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansman to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole dame thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigot in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and epulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
T VOL
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a kU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
MARK GILBERT
Marian Washington, Kansas women's basketball coach, directs her队 in a sideline huddle during the Oklahoma game. Kansas won the Feb. 4 game 71-68.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988
Craig Sands/KANSAN
gle.
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan.
at he had been a member or 10 months. He said cause he was "looking for perilment."
en a member since 1981.
joined after witnessing whites in Miami.
the Klan an "upbite,
ion," and said that one of
e Klan was to promote
".
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ng should be done to get them urriculum."
ate
It will be heard on the House nobably within two weeks, said. The Speaker of the ecclesies when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said
could be considerable debate
loor.
the speaker brings it up on ndar, there will certainly be ry stormy debate," Branson
ssociated Press supplied some ion for this story.
g army sloyals
I by violence in a middle-class n寝 near the banking dism Tuesday, security agents an opposition radio station neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
instructors gathered yesterday
ne four-lane street in front of
city, set up barricades of
and set fire to a mini-
lcar.
iot police chased the protest-
side streets and apartment
32. Chunks of concrete were
constructed from at least
an apartment building.
e fired tear-gas grenades and
1 tear gas into the buildings
eritable tanks, filling the entire
tank with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to ts. "You'll come out like cock-it!"
did, and reporters on the aw no one iniured.
okkensman for the Panama Commission said anonymous callers warned Tuesday早sterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters. A call to Associated Press的build evacuated and searched both it no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Kansan staff writer
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmans to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with." He said he told his class about the field trip.
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnip excite, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place." he said. "I had two kids in my class tail me just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
canceled.
expose racism.
"It itwent exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared virgy in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophmore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
Bv Meredith Relnh
Special to the Kansan
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU
TOMMY GILBERT
clause of Lawrence Municipal
AFTER HOURS
Graffiti
W"
BY JOHN BUZBEE
At the University of Kansas, it's on the walls, the ceilings, the floors, the desks, the tables.
hen a society turns to toilets for its humor," former journalism professor John Bremner wrote, "the writing is on the wall."
Wherever one person leaves the seed of one message, graffiti blooms. It's not like a subway, and people who don't spend much time in bars or bathrooms around campus often do it. We see the people who do read the graffiti learn to accept it or even expect it.
*Common you . . . There's a lot of space to be filled here," someone scribbled on a men's room wall in Wescow. The Wescow Hall bathrooms are famous, or infamous, for their colorful, mindless and probably read more than the local newspaper.
Debates about homosexuality, religion, racism and jingoism are common on the bathroom walls. But the most popular tonic is the Greek system.
"Q. Why do GDIs live in dorms?"
*Q. Why do GIRLS live in cities?
*A. Because they couldn't make it through rush.*
And in response: "Yup, no matter how hard they try to act like brain-damaged sheep, the intelligence in their eyes betraps them."
A friend said that on a women's room wall, someone had written: "I am a pretty, nice, intelligent girl who is not in a sorority. I feel that I am my own person and people like me for myself. I've had friends that pledged houses and now they are snobs." Followed by: "Lay off Greeks" and "Please stop stereotyping girls who are in sororities."
To respond to the writing on the wall, the preferred method is to write a message near the original and draw an arrow to it. That way, thoughtful insights aren't lost on the next person who comes by.
"I'm a lesbian — and proud of it."
"What is it that is beyond annihilating infinity yet resides in your living room?" he wrote to challenge men's room visitors. No one has answered yet.
Other philosophers use the stalls to post their arguments.
Dr. Zen, a bathroom philosopher reminiscent of Kilroy during World War II, has appeared in Wescoe men's rooms for at least a few years. He probably originates from different authors, but almost always raises the intellectual level of the graffiti.
"Good for you!"
Graffiti itself often is discussed.
Lisa Leinacker/KANSAN
"There is graffiti on the Great Wall of China.
(Note: no more in Monaco, too.)"
There is graffiti on the Great Wall of China.
"I saw graffiti in Moscow, too."
NEW ORIGINALS
600
Gun,
man!
house on Ninth Street.
"An orthodox Marxist approach to religion overlooks the revolutionary ideology inherent in vanity." And, "Religion evolved as a collective means of persecution and self-satiety." (The American Heritage Dictionary defines satiety as the condition of being sated, completely satisfied.)
Much of the graffiti is meant to be funny, although it often is racist or socialist. "It used to be wine, women and song," he said. "It was a bit like this."
Not everyone is amused by the graffiti. In a Wescow women's room, someone wrote, "After reading this, I'm glad I go to a private college with some admissions standards."
In places off-campus, the tone changes. Violent symbols depicting swastikas and Satan cover the concrete walls of the abandoned Theta Chi fraternity house at Ninth Street and Emery Road.
In the Wheel's men's room. the graffiti is a little more
Steve Simpson, a bartender, says he doesn't mind the graffiti. "I think it's kind of neat because of the special atmosphere here," he says. But he doesn't encourage him to call it balls, even when they ask him for something to write with.
Graffiti is institutionalized at the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th, and it's about institutions. Campus heros such as Kansas coach Larry Brown and former football star John Riggins have signed parts of the wall reserved for celebrities. Other areas are covered with Greek letters and names of students participating in walk-outs.
In contrast are a Star of David and light, mindless statements such as "You don't know what you are 'til you are what you are" spray painted on the walls, ceilings and floor. Some homeowners statement shine through: "For a good time call."
CLAPTURE
EN
SEE
NUR
DORV
DUCKS
PAL
REM
rebellious:“Sinatra is King.” But the Crossing, 618 W.12W, has the really rebellious writing:“Free Kansas! We are an oppressed nation.” That kind of thinking doesn't go unchallenged。“So many revolutionaries, so few revolutions,” someone scribbled, describing the graffiti as well as the bar.
As he stood in the men's room at the Crossing, Erik Walker, a student from Baylor University in Texas, said he didn't pay much attention to the writing. "If it was better graffiti, I'd think it was funny," he said.
The Crossing once had the best bathroom walls in town, covered with political and philosophical humor. They have been painted over, so the new manager, Tim Conroy, put up a chalkboard to encourage more good graffiti.
"A lot of the stuff is really profound, and a lot of it is humorous," Conroy says. "There's a lot of poetry I've memorized in a bathroom."
John Buzbee is a Hutchinson senior majoring in journalism.
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THE LADY JAYHAWKS
gle.
NEILEN
at he had been a member
or 10 months. He said
because he was "looking for
perimenting."
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250" Klan.
en a member since 1981.
joined after witnessing whites in Miami.
I the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of the Klan was to promote
- not police chased the protest to side streets and apartments. Chunks of concrete were leaked that least the apartment house.
See FORUM, p.12, col. 1
ce fired tear-gas greanes and dte tear gas into the buildings portable tanks, filling the entire sorbhood with the acrid, stinging
in the speaker brings it up on endar, there will certainly beery stormy debate." Branson
ate
ionstrators gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front ofation, set up barricades of ig trash and set fire to a mini-
dll will be heard on the House
robably within two weeks,
a said. The Speaker of the
decides when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate floor.
ing should be done to get them urriculum."
Associated Press supplied some tion for this story.
d by violence in a middle-class orchard near the banking dis On Tuesday, security agents yed an opposition radio station e neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for orieza demonstrations.
ng army isloyals
Cards & Gifts
Downtown, 1107 Mass.
officer in charge stood in the center of the street and shouted to nts. "You'll come out like cocktail!"
e did, and reporters on the saw no one injured.
pokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous one callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was found in the Panama Francisco pokesman Franklin Castrellon ei Association Press the build's evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
8 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2; 1988
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU camus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmest to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with." He said he told his class about the field trip
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
yesterday when they arrived at this class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
canceled.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
Jones said he had asked the Kliansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnip exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place." he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigty in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
VOL. 10
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU
Violent symbols cover the concrete walls of the Chi Chi fraternity house.
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KANSAS
LACROSSE
X
"the fastest game on two feet!" University of Kansas Lacrosse Club Spring. 1988 Schedule
March 5 3 p.m. Missouri
6 2 p.m. K.C. Lacrosse Club
26 11 a.m. Missouri
3 p.m. Washington University
27 12 noon St. Louis Lacrosse
Craig Sanos/KANSAN
April 9 2 p.m. K.C. Lacrosse
16-17 Western Ill. Tournament
23-24 Missouri Tournament
30 2 p.m. Washington University
May 1 12 noon
St. Louis Lacrosse
- All Home Games (in bold) played at Shenk Complex, 23 & Iowa
gle.
at in Missouri, there were 0, but more than 250' Klan.
at he had been a member
tine or 10 months. He said
cause he was "looking for
perimenting."
sen a member since 1981.
joined after witnessing
whites in Miami.
I the Klan an "upbeat, ion," and said that one of the Klan was to promote ."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2,1988 9
ate
ing should be done to get them urriculum."
ill will be heard on the House robbably within two weeks, a said. The Speaker of the leccles when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate floor.
in the speaker brings it up on endar, there will certainly be bery stormy debate," Branson
Associated Press supplied some tion for this story.
ag army isloyals
d by violence in a middle-class
boundary near the banking dis-
On Tuesday, security agents
yed an opposition radio station
neighborhood, apparently
ie it broadcast an appeal for
origea demonstrations.
onstrators gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of ation set up barricades of g trash and set fire to a mini-
-riot police chased the protest to side streets and apartment gs. Chunks of concrete were 'down at police from at least the apartment houses.
ce fired tear-gas grenades and d ear tear gas into the buildings portable tanks, filling the entire orchard with the air, stinging
officer in charge stood in the e of the street and shouted to nts. "You'll come out like cockas!"
e did, and reporters on the saw no one injured.
spokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous one callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was loaded on the spokesman Franklin Castrellon reAssociated Press the builds evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 2,1988
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
Kansan staff writer
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed mingling yesterday in Strong Hall's Room.
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organization
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars before they left."
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnip hike, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
exnose racism
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigotry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, III., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it."
Knights tell KU students about goals
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
TWO
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU
AFTER HOURS
ACROSS The fastest game on two feet STORY BY BENTE M. DAHL PHOTOS BY JANINE SWIATKOWSKI
W
hen the North American Indians played the game, they called it "baggathaway." Thousands of men roamed through the forest for days with net-headed sticks, throwing and catching a rubber ball. The purpose of this war-like game was to thrust the ball between two trees or painted poles. The game had few
rules. Thousands of goals were scored, but legend has it that the team with the fewest casualties won the game.
Today, people play the game on grass fields 110 yards long and 60 yards wide, and they call the game lacrosse. The teams have 10 players each and usually are found in high schools and colleges. The net-headed stick is still the tool of the game, and the players still thrust the ball between two poles. But the trees have become steel goals by a goatle. The rules are similar to those of hockey, and the team with the most goals in one hour wins the game.
Lacrosse is mainly an East Coast sport, but Midwestern states such as Illinois and Colorado have caught on. Kansas does not have a tradition of lacrosse, but last semester, a group of students started the KU Lacrosse Club and organized three games without a coach. Now, the club has 35 members and a coach and is a recognized student organization playing in the Gateway Lacrosse League. Other teams in the league are from the University of Missouri, Washington University in St. Louis, the Kansas City Lacrosse Club in Kansas City, Mo., and the Michelob Club Team in St. Louis.
Mark Glassman, Lake Forest, Ill., junior, is one of the students who started the KU club. He played lacrosse in high school and loved the sport too much to give it up in college. "I missed the game and wanted to play more," Glassman says. "I knew other guys felt the same way, so we got a team together and played a couple of games."
This season's first outdoor practice was Feb. 19 at the Shenk Complex field at 23rd and Iowa Streets. The players cheered and applauded each other, defying the freezing winds on their bare legs. With frenzied speed, they constantly swing their sticks to catch, cradle, pass and scoop the ball, propelling it from player to player toward the goal, all the time fending off opposing attackers.
Lacrosse is a new sport not only to the University of Kansas, but also to the coach and many of the players. The coach, Richard Swartzel, is a Lawrence real estate sales manager. He had never played lacrosse before he joined the club this semester. "I discovered it two years ago in Colorado at the National Lacrosse Tournament in Vail. I fell in love with the sport." Swartzel says.
Lacrosse has the crash of football, the dash of basketball and the soul-stirring action of ice hockey. Some call it the fastest game on two feet. Players develop speed and coordination as they run, pivot and dodge white crazing the ball. They also learn how to split-second timing and decision-making, so the players constantly watch both teammates and opponents.
Swartztel met Glassman at Kinko's earlier this year when Glassman was copying fliers for the club. He was delighted to hear that KU had a lacrosse team and quickly joined. The team needed a coach, so Swartztel stepped in. Since then, he has learned the game's principles and strategies, mostly from the experienced players.
want a year old Swartzel lacks in experience, he makes up for in enthusiasm and ability to organize, motivate and discipline the players. Swartzel plans to build the team into
E
a competitive club, but he knows that the players are the key to success. "The team has some excellent people," he says. "The bottom line is that this team is going to be what the players make it."
Charlie Sedlock, Kansas City, Kan., junior, is one of about 10 newcomers to the sport. "I started out of curiosity. I knew about the sport and wanted to try it," he says. Sedlock is excited about the team's first league season. "We were not too serious last semester, but we're ready to play to win now." he says.
Besides offering a good way to get in shape, lacrosse can be an outlet for built-up aggression. "You swing sticks at people. It's a good way to blow off some steam," says Cory Powell, the club's vice president. There might have been too much stick swinging at times last semester, says Powell, an Evergreen, Colo., junior who has played lacrosse for eight years. He broke his collar bone, Glassman dislabeled a shoulder and a third player broke his nose. "We weren't in shape back then, and we weren't serious enough." Powell says.
The players also hope to go a long way, just as their sport has. Since the Indians played "baggathaway," many things have changed, including the name. When white men first played the game, they named it "lacrosse" after the town where they played, Lac fle ila la Crosse in northern Saskatchewan, Canada. Another theory suggests that the French Canadians saw a resemblance between a bishop's crozier and the stick the Indians used to play "baggathway." Hence the word "la crosse." French for "the cross."
Swartzel thinks the KU Lacrosse Club has potential. Many of the members have played on prestigious high school teams, and they know how to teach the inexperienced players. "Hopefully, KU Lacrosse will be in the National Lacrosse Tournament in less than five years," he says. "I would love to take it there."
Chris Cooper, Chapel Hill, N.C., senior, is one of the more experienced players back in North Carolina. It is also a player to go it at IK Lakes.
The KU Lacrosse Club has no place in the history books yet, but only a few months after the team was formed, it became a recognized student organization and was recorded in the Student Senate's funds book. The club has received $1,600 to spend on advertising, sticks and balls, game fees and field preparation. Money for other expenses comes from the players. The team will spend five weekends on the road this spring, and the players say they each will spend about $30 a trip. The players also are responsible for buying their own blue lerses, helmets, pads and gloves.
Finances are tight, but the players' injuries are healed, and KU Lacrosse is ready to play this season. The team has worked hard this winter to get in shape. The first home game is Sunday, when KU takes on the Kansas City Lacrosse Club at the Shenk Complex.
Everything has its price, except for the coach. "This is something I do voluntarily." Swartzel tells. He considers fund-raising an important part of his job. "Nike has exerted itself in supporting the team, and I plan to find other ways to raise money."
During late-night practices in Robinson Center, the players have sweated through aerobics, running and stick handling. Swartzel is impressed with them. "When 25 players show up for practice at 10 on Friday nights, you know they are willing to sacrifice a lot for the game," he says.
Bente M. Dahl is a Haslum, Norway, senior majoring in journalism.
gle.
Cory Powell, Evergreen, Colo., junior, goes airborne to catch
hat in Missouri, there were 00, but more than 250" Klan
seen a member since 1981 he joined after witnessing st whites in Miami
hat he had been a member nine or 10 months. He said because he was "looking for overtening."
d the Klan an "upbeat,ation," and said that one of the Klan was to promote le"
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
when the speaker brings it up on calendar, there will certainly be very stormy debate." Branson
bill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, son said. The Speaker of the decides when the bill will be!
thing should be done to get them curriculum."
th Branson and Lowther said
would be considerable debate
e floor.
Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
violence in the hutches class
neighborhood.
On Tuesday, security agents
oyed an opposition radio station
he neighborhood, apparently
use it broadcast an appeal for
Noriega demonstrations.
monstrators gathered yesterday
! the four-lane street in front of
station, set up barricades
and set fire to a mini-
dairy a car.
i-riot police chased the protest to side streets and apartment bung. Chunks of concrete were found. At least f the apartment houses.
sed by violence in a middle-class
b sorhood near the banking dis-
ng army isloyals
ice fired tear-gas grenades and ed tear gas into the buildings portable tanks, filling the entire borhoe with the acrid, stinging
o officer in charge stood in the e of the street and shouted to nts, "You'll come out like cocks!"
10 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988
e did, and reporters on the saw no one injured.
spokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous one callers warned Tuesday a day that a bomb was detonated in Panama. Keseman Franklin Castrellon he associated Press the build- evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
1958 MARCH 4, 1958 11
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Rack.
David Ambler, vice candleholder for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organization, led the the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansman to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview viedearday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
yesterday when they arrived at his class. "They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before the trip, left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant, he the turnip excite, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brohaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
By Meredith Relph
VOS
Special to the Kansan
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a kU
___
23
Far left: the KU Klucse Club braces the elements during an afternoon practice. Left: the St. Louis Junior, book on from the sidelinet.
Craig Sandu/KANSAN
JAMES
h a pass during a drill.
team works through one of many scrimmages. Left to right: Dan Conway,
The work teams through one of many scrimages. Left to right: Dan Grossman, Denver sophomore; Fed Nash, Wilmette, III.; freshman; and John Armstrong, Englewood, Cole, sophomore.
Marc Roskin, Northbrook, Ill., yawns (left) shouts instructions to the defenders while tending goal.
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2,1988 1
gle.
st writes in Miami.
d the Klan an 'unbeat
hat he had been a member nine or 10 months. He said because he was "looking for coermenting."
hat in Missouri, there were 00, but more than 250" Klan.
seen a member since 1981. he joined after witnessing st whites in Miami
d the Klan an "upbeat,ation," and said that one of the Klan was to promote le."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
hing should be done to get them curriculum."
bill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, son said. The Speaker of the decides when the bill will be.
th Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate e floor.
when the speaker brings it up on calendar, there will certainly be very stormy debate." Branson
Associated Press supplied some mation for this story.
ng army disloyals
ced by violence in a middle-class iborhood near the banking dis-
On Tuesday, security agents oyed an opposition radio station he neighborhood, apparently appeal for Noriae demonstration.
monstrators gathered yesterday
f the four-lane street in front of
station, set up barricades of
nurse and set fire to a mini-
bird.
i-riot police chased the protest-to side streets and apartmentings. Chunks of concrete were d down at police from at least f the apartment houses.
ice fired tear-gas grenades and
tear gas into the buildings
portable tanks, filling the entire
borocho with the acrid, stinging
o officer in charge stood in the e of the street and shouted to ints. "You'll come out like cockes!"
e did, and reporters on the saw no one injured.
spokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous tone callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was being used by thekesman Franklin Castellron he associated Press the build-as evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 98, No.109 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Amble, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the forum had not been confirmed yet.
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnipoke, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared biogot in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it."
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
VOTE
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KKL
AFTER HOURS
Dale Eddy
Alene Ebrew, a Lawrence masseuse, beats her therapy by rubbing her hands first.
MASSAGE Rubbing out the kinks
BY RIC BRACK
"Y
ou can just hang your things on those hooks, and let me know when you're ready."
With that, she left the
room. As I undressed, I looked around. A bookshelf had a cassette player and tapes below large double windows. Another wall displayed a chart showing pressure points on the body. I looked at the shelves on the wall behind the waist-level massage table. They held an assortment of oils and lotions and a small hot plate.
As I pulled myself up onto the table, I noticed that the surface below the sheets was heated. It was comfortable. All she is asked from outside the door.
"Yeah, I guess so." I replied, leaning back on my elbows. She laughed a bit as she came into the room and told me that the sheet I was lying on was supposed to be covering me. Luckily, I'm not very modest, and she soon had covered me appropriately and was asking me what kind of music I wanted to hear.
"I'm not sure," I answered, "What do you have?"
She read several titles from the tape case, which held everything from classical music to New Age artists. I settled on some African music. She started the tape, and
gle.
iat in Missouri, there were 90, but more than 250" Klan.
FEBRUARY
een a member since 1981. te joined after witnessing it whites in Miami.
iat he had been a member nine or 10 months. He said because he was "looking for perimenting."
AMY BILLINGSELY- Retail Sales Rep of the Month LINDA PROKOP-Regional Sales Rep of the Month PATTY GENNERS-Campus Sales Rep of the Month
d the Klan an "upbeat-
tion," and said that one of
the Klan was to promote
ie."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
en the speaker brings it up on lendar, there will certainly be very stormy debate." Branson
1 Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate floor.
JANUARY
SARAH HIGDON-Retail Sales Rep of the Month
NOELLE APPLEGATE-Regional Sales Rep of the Month
LORI PAM-Campus Sales Rep of the Month
WE'RE PROUD OF OUR PEOPLE.
bill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, an said. The Speaker of the decides when the bill will be
The University Daily Kansan would like to congratulate the following members of its sales staff. They have been named Sales Representative of the Month for January and February in their respective sales divisions. These Sales Representatives have reached an outstanding level of excellence in account service.The dedication and commitment that these individuals have shown are what makes the University Daily Kansan one of the top college newspapers in the country. We're proud of that and we're proud of them.
hing should be done to get them curriculum."
ate
Associated Press supplied some tion for this story.
we'll do today,
what everyone else
will do tomorrow--
the trendsetter
in lawrence!
army isloyals
onstrators gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of ation, set up barricades of a train and set fire to a mini-
d by violence in a middle-class orhood near the banking dis- On Tuesday, security agents ved an opposition radio station : neighborhood, apparently e if broadcast an appeal for priea demonstrations.
riot police chased the protesto side streets and apartments. Chunks of concrete were broken at least the apartment houses.
e fired tear-gas grenades and
d tire gas into the buildings
tritable tanks, filling the entire
rhood with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to ts. "You'll come out like cock-t"
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2,1988 12
did, and reporters on the aw no one iniured.
boksmans for the Panama Commission said anonymous callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters. Cassman Franklin Castellron Associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
12. KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca I. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Restaurant.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
By James Buckman
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
Kansan staff writer
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
canceled.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place." he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brohaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, III., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Bv Meredith Relph
BASILICANE
Knights tell KU students about goals
Special to the Kansan
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU member.
with the music's pulsing drums and vocal harmonies in the background, she heated some water on the hot plate.
Soon, I felt her hands on the sole of my right foot, then on the toes and the top of my foot. I heard myself moaning with pleasure. Embarrassed, I regained my composure and opened my eyes to watch her work.
She let me smell several scented massage oils: cedar, rose, jasmine, honeysuckle, opium and rain. I chose rain because it reminded me of a cool spring morning. As she filled the oil in the water on the hot plate, I relaxed and waited.
While we talked about the benefits and science of massage, I watched how intently she worked. She never slowed down or took her eyes from the part of my body that she manipulated.
Shortly after athletic activity begins, lactic and carbonic
She worked her way up the front of my right side, then down my left side. When I was sure that it must be ending, she asked me to roll over, and she started on my back side.
Massage creates a tranquilizing effect by releasing beta endorphins, pain-blocking substances produced in the brain. According to the American Massage Therapy Association, a professional association with offices nationwide, massage improves the function of joints and muscles, improves circulation and body tone and relieves mental and physical fatigue.
Massage can also help regenerate injured muscles and can clean exercise-induced toxins from the system. "Science doesn't have the capability to prove it, but it works," says Valerie Poidevin, who has done massages for members of the University of Kansas track teams for about a year.
According to my masseuse, Elaine Brewer, massage can benefit people with leg problems and people who strain their necks, eyes and backs. Her customers range from law professors and students to musicians and computer operators. "Most of my customers are people who want to get away and just relax for an hour and a half," says Brewer, who has been practicing massage therapy for two years at Elaine Brewer Massage Therapy, 729 1/2 Massachusetts St.
acids appear in the muscles. These waste products cause the pain and cramping that athletes suffer during and after a workout. "Massage helps cleanse and pump out those toxins," Poidevin says. She says that after five minutes of rest following exercise, muscles recover about 20 percent of their normal strength. So a person capable of doing 50 push-ups will be able to do 10 after a five-minute rest. But if five minutes of massage is substituted for the rest period, muscle recovery rates are somewhere between 75 and 100 percent.
Bruce Blanc at Lawrence Massage Therapy, 927 1/2 Massachusetts St., also says he gets many student customers during exam times. "People come in with five years of accumulated stress and expect to fix them in a half-hour session," Blanc says. He and Brewer emphasize the importance of massage as preventive maintenance. Brewer says that although she is massaged two to five times a week, most of her regular clients receive treatments weekly or twice a month. In Lawrence, an hour-long massage costs $20 to $30.
According to the AMTA, massage also can be useful for bed-ridden people. Massage increases nerve regeneration, builds a stronger core of red blood cells and aids in lymph movement. Lymph is a fluid that removes waste materials from the muscles. Unlike blood, which has the heart muscle to move it around the body, lymph has no organ of its own and depends on muscle activity to move it through the body. Massage can compensate, at least in part, for lack of exercise and muscular contractions in physically inactive people.
Besides reducing the likelihood of muscle damage in athletes, massage can increase efficiency of the immune system and reduce stress. "About 80% of disorders are based on stress," Brewer says. Brewer and Poidevin say they massage student customers who are stressed because of schoolwork, especially before or during finals.
Despite the facts, many people still can't distinguish between massage parlors and massage therapy clinics. Blanc says he thinks some people are afraid to get a massage because they must disrobe. He says he couldn't massage one student because she was so ticklish. Every
time he touched her, she began to giggle uncontrollably.
The AMTA claims that during stressful periods when people spend a lot of time in "in their heads," they ignore their surroundings and focus on the body is even greater. Massage therapy helps reconnect mind and body so they can function as an efficient unit.
"I think massage is great," says Dennis Anthony, a Lawrence chiropractor. Chiropractic is used primarily to align vertebrae, although Anthony sometimes does work that resumes massage. "If a muscle is overstressed, it may take an hour-long session to work it out." Anthony says, "It's better to go to someone who does massage every day." Anthony refers patients to Brewer and Poidevin and also is massaged by Poidevin.
Brewer, Poidevin and another masseur will open a new massage clinic in mid-March at Eighth and Rhode Island streets. The clinic will be called Amma Health Services. Amma is the Japanese word for massage.
Brewer, during the past year, has taught the fundamentals of massage to about a dozen people, and she hopes that Amma Health Services eventually will offer a regular massage school. The AMTA approves schools so they can credit massage therapists, although the AMTA can also test and credit therapists who don't go to approved schools. Kansas does not require licensing of professional masseuses and massaeuses. However, Brewer, Poidevin and Blanc all are AMTA members, so Amma Health Services will be able to credit massage therapists.
While we talked, the kneading, tapping, oiling and rubbing continued, front and back, head to toe. As the hour ended, I realized that the neck pain I had had when I climbed onto the massage table was gone. I was able to relax my arms and shoulders, something I hadn't done for weeks. From the first touch, I was compelled to ask my masseuse if it was common for her customers to fall in love with her because I certainly had. Too soon, it was over. But I assured Brewer that I would return, and I walked out to my car with a wider smile and more spring in my step than I'd had all semester.
Ric Brack is a Great Bend junior majoring in journalism. He also is a Kanan staff writer.
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--at in Missouri, there were 10, but more than 250" Klan.
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9:30 to 5:30 M.-Sat.
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1:00 to 5:00 Sunday
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2. 1988 12
gle.
at he had been a member
nine or 10 months. He said
because he was "looking for
perimenting."
een a member since 1881.
e joined after witnessing t whites in Miami.
d the Klan an "upbeat,
tion," and said that one of
he Klan was to promote
e."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ing should be done to get them curriculum."
will be heard on the House
probably within two weeks,
n said. The Speaker of
the decides when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate floor.
in the speaker brings it up on endar, there will certainly be ery stormy debate. "Branson
by violence in a middle-class
hrighway near the bank disb
n on Tuesday, security agents
en against opposition radio stati
Associated Press supplied some tion for this story.
g army sloyals
neighborhood, apparently it broadcast an appeal for riega demonstrations.
nstrators gathered yesterday
e four-lane street in front of
set up barricades of
train, and set fire to a mini-
ger.
iot police chased the protest- side streets and apartments. Chunks of concrete were from at least an apartment building.
fired tear-gas grenades and
tear gas into the buildings
ratable tanks, filling the entire
rhood with the acrid, stinging
fficher in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to s, "You'll come out like cock-!"
did, and reporters on the w no one iniured.
ikesman for the Panama commission said anonymous je callers warned Tuesday sterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters. sman Franklin Castellron Associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both it no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed morning yesterday in Strong Hall's Rugby Ground.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations
By James Buckman
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klanism to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip.
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klausen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnip exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place." he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, III., soh-
more, said the interview was a great experi-
ment.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
Knights tell KU students about goals
TAP
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
Special to the Kansan
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the Ku Klux Klan were used, with "KIK"
fiction
2 Feet and 5.43791 Etc.Etc. Inches
IX XX
BY JOHN CALHOUN
T the young me radio.
Who would have thought?
The world spun. Slowly.
Everyone thought. But nobody told me!
The sky was a small rectangle framed in wood, and its sky blue light filtered into the room through glass. To the floor. To this man's eyes. To this young man. To his young eyes.
This room is so small. This world is so small. Considering the infinite expanse of the universe, more integers mean nothing. Ten feet by ten feet? Ten thousand miles by ten thousand miles? What's the difference? Ten infinity by ten infinity. Hah!
The young woman's eyes looked down. At the floor. She did not see the sky.
Didn't anyone ever tell her? Come to think of it, who told me? In school. Hah. First grade, second day of class — "Now class, today's lesson is that at some point in our life, we will all die." The last point. Hah! Point! Our life racing a point.
"Are we really going to die?" the young woman asked. She sat with her back to the wall and her knees pulled up close to her breasts. She was staring at a single stain of red on the carpet, from her feet and 5.43791 etc. etc. inches from her toes.
As sure as we are all born, we understand that will all die as well. What a silly question. Did she really not believe it? Had one told her that if you're born you die?
Are we really going to die? The young man thought.
The young woman spoke again. "Is it true? Will everything end in twenty minutes?"
The young man looked down from the window, the sky, and focused on his friend, the young woman.
The young man glanced at the clock on the wall and then back to the young woman.
"Yes," he said and paused. "You heard the radio, twenty minutes until the warheads fall." The sky falls.
"Is it possible we might survive?"
The second hand on the wall clock ticked. "No." he answered.
The young woman fell silent again. He had said everything she had not wanted to hear. The silence would catalyze the decay of her nerves. She remained motionless on the floor. She could not see the sky. She did not want to.
The room was just a room. Her bedroom to be more precise, but that is as precision as any bedroom need be. There was more space and volume outside the four walls than there was within. However, in containing a small volume of the universe, the four walls represented the universe. A rectangular window was set in the wall next to a clock, and a male and a female of the species sat facing each other. The male looked at a blue rectangle through glass, and the female stared at a red stain 2 feet and 5.43791 etc. etc. inches from her toes.
In eighteen minutes, there would be no life left on a planet. This room was on that planet. Nothing more need be said about the room.
The young man also sat on the floor. He sat opposite her, to one side, facing her. His back was propped against the bed.
The world spun.
The young woman thought about her boyfriend.
"Do you remember when we first met?" the young woman asked.
My God, could I have forgotten about her?
She's probably at work right now. Would she try to find me? Seventeen minutes. God no. Sweet girl. God no. Run and hide.
The clock ticked.
The young man thought about his girlfriend
"How come you never asked me out?" the young woman asked.
"Why did you ever ask me out?"
"Would you have gone out with me?"
"Of course I would have."
She was looking him in the face. Her expression looked to be one of surprise. He studied it.
Surprised that I didn't know? Or was it just the way her face should be composed seventeen minutes before she dies? Sixteen minutes. I always thought we were just friends. I thought she considered me as simply a friend.
"I thought you just considered me as a friend," he said.
The young man watched the sky as the second hand ticked.
He didn't know how to react. So he stared back at the sky. She stared back at the stain on the carpet.
"No," she responded. She became silent again. She didn't know what to add.
A flock of birds? Swans? Run and hide! When were the aliens supposed to land? When were the more intelligent beings supposed to arrive and save us? From
Monnie's ground but you?
Died, dying, dead. What is there? What is the answer? What is there really? What is real?
ourselves. Surely there should be something about our world and its life that is worthy of saving. Our marvelous art? Our big technologies? Our music? Our great philosophies?
Han! Our great philosophies didn't amount to crapp. No answers. All kinds of problems, no answers, and we sit on the floor beneath the falling bombs. They couldn't even . . . Momma . . . from ourselves.
Help us! Save us anyway! And her.
PLEASE?
The young man felt tears welling in his eyes. The sky went out of focus.
'I love her," he whispered.
His gaze fell to the floor and carpet.
74. KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988
This gaze came from her nose. She broke the silence. "I always wanted to go out with you. I always wanted you to ask." She looked up at him and whispered. "I was too shy."
"I always wanted to go out with you," he replied. He stared at her blurry calves. "Why didn't we then? Why didn't you ever . . . What went wrong?"
More questions, no answers.
are questions, no answers.
Still staring at her calves he replied, "I met a girl and fell in love. You met a boy and fell in love." He paused.
The stars spun, the world pitched, the universe rolled, and the clock ticked. Ten minutes!
The Boy's
4
He swept his eyes with the back of his hand and bent closer to the planet. He stared through his feet. I love her!
Her foot suddenly slipped. It was no longer 2 feet and 5.43791 etc. etc. inches from the red stain. She leaned forward to the young man.
"Would you have kissed me?" she almost clouded.
The young man hunched closer to the planet, nearly doubled over. "Yes, I would have loved to have kissed you." I love her! And I never cheated on her.
"Kiss met!" She wrapped her arms about his shoulders, cradling him.
He looked up into her eyes. They said, "Kiss me. Please, please just kiss me!"
kissed her.
She's now. Where are they?
Eight minutes. To shell with eight minutes.
"Once I ..." the young woman started.
He back down at his feet.
"He stared back at me." "Once when I was young . . .," she started
"""""
Buy you the universe. A small piece. This room is the universe. It represents nothing with respect to the infinite size and complexity of the universe, but as a representative sample it contains all the universe. All the questions, equations and answers. And none of them. This world . . . universe . . . is infinite and nothing. No one will ever be.
"why did we never go out?" she asked the walls
And so do we represent its helplessness. There are no aliens. They destroy themselves. We are the sole protectors of the
at in Missouri, there were 90, but more than 250" Klan
een a member since 1981.
ie joined after witnessing
t whites in Miami.
at he had been a member
nine or 10 months. He said
because he was "looking for
perimenting."
d the Klan an "upbeat,
tion," and said that one of
he Klan was to promote
e."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ning should be done to get them curriculum."
bill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, on said The Speaker of the decides when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate floor.
en the speaker brings it up on lendar, that will certainly be very stormy debate." Branson
Associated Press supplied some tion for this story.
ng army isloyals
d by violence in a middle-class
orphard near the banking dis-
m Tuesday, security agents
received an opposition radio station
neighborhood, apparently e it broadcast an appeal for riga demonstration.
nstrators gathered yesterday
ne four-lane street in front of
form, set up barricades of
and set fire to a mini-
lature GAR.
iot police chased the protest
side streets and apartment
s. Chunks of concrete were
built on the street at least
the apartment houses
fired tear-gar grenades and
tear gas into the buildings
ritable tanks, filling the entire
rhood with the acrid, stinging
fisser in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to s. "You'll come out like cock!"
did, and reporters on the w no one injured.
PROCESSOR MAXAZENE, March 2, 1988
klesman for the Panama commission said anonymous ee callers warned Tuesday sterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters, and they are associated with Associated Press the build-evacuated and searched both t no bombs were found.
47
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 2,1988
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca I. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Amble, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Kansan staff writer
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klanmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
canceled.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnipKE, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
exnose racism
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigovry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it."
Knights tell KU students about goals
WHO
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
By Meredith Relph
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU
Special to the Kansan
F
universe, and we can do nothing. Most intelligent, and most helpless.
ILLUSTRATION BY ANDREW PAVICH
The sky was blue, and the planet spun still. And the second hand ticked.
I'm sorry child, but we are nothing. Though we destroy all lives and life on this world, it will spin still. The galaxies will fall still. The universe will continue to be infinite and nothing . . . still.
She spoke. "Would you make love to me . . . now?" "Five minutes? "I want to die naked with you."
"Iused to think there was a heaven when I was little," she said.
there was an equation and an answer.
The galaxies halted. The universe froze.
The sky became solid. Is there nothing greater?
The young man blinked at the brilliancy of the sky. The young woman stopped rocking him. The planet stopped spinning. The second hand froze between seconds. All was silent. The distance between the stain and the young woman's toes became immeasurable.
For some reason the young man sat straight up. He straightened his back. He no longer stooped to the world; he stared at the sky.
"There is," he said flatly. Why did I say that?
There must be something greater than me or her or her or that. What's the equation? There must be something greater!
I can see her at work. Is she nothing?
Am I not anything? And we? We!
"What?" "What?"
Suddenly all was still.
The universe waited for an answer. "RELEASE!!"
PEEKER
The answer was not in the sky. It was not on the planet. It lay beyond the universe. It was infinitely far away. He stared past the
"Will you make love to me!
sky. The answer is inside nothing.
He looked down into the young woman's eyes. She was pleading for an answer. The young man was dying for an answer. They were both dying. Everyone dies.
The second hand still waited between seconds. And he spoke softly. "No."
the second hand clicked. The world spun.
The universe fell. The girl's girl withdrew to 2 feet and 5.43791 etc. etc. inches from the stain. The young man looked up and thanked the sky.
But there is . . . something. Something so remote from the universe that it is within ourselves. Through our eyes. Our own invention. Now I have the answer. The equations are infinitely many. But the answer to all of them is the same. I have that answer. And the universe is infinite again.
The young woman leaned back against the wall. Everyone had to die. She did not cry. She understood. There were many things greater than four minutes. An infinite many things.
Momma bought me the universe!
And if we could tell them about the sky. If we could describe to them the sky . . . They would not believe us. They could not believe us.
And the universe swam!
"I love you, you know," she said.
"And I love you too," he answered.
They both smiled.
John Calhoun is a Prairie Village junior majoring in education.
I love the world. This world. I love life.
And death. And all we are is four minutes.
Not a bad four minutes. And I love four
minutes. In four minutes only black falls.
Only black falls with the sky.
The sky!
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-KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988 14
at in Missouri, there were 00, but more than 250" Klan
iat he had been a member nine or 10 months. He said because he was "looking for perimenting."
een a member since 1981. je joined after witnessing t whites in Miami
d the Klan an "upbeat,
tition," and said that one of
the Klan was to promote
e."
See FORUM, p.12, col. 1
ate
ning should be done to get them curriculum."
bill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, on said. The Speaker of the decides when the bill will be
ien the speaker brings it up on lendar, there will certainly be very stormy debate." Branson
Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate floor.
KANSAN MAGAZINE.March 2,1988
Associated Press supplied some tion for this story.
g army isloyals
d by violence in a middle-class orchid near the banking dis- on Tuesday, security agents ved an opposition radio station neighborhood, apparently e it broadcast an appeal forriega demonstrations.
instructors gathered yesterday
ee four-lane street in front of
tion, set up barricades of
snow, and set fire to a mini-
laire.
hot police chased the protest side streets and apartment ts. Chunks of concrete were down at police from at least he apartment houses.
: fired tear-gar grenades and
tear gas into the buildings
rtable tanks, filling the entire
rhood with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to s. "You'll come out like cock-!"
did, and reporters on the w no one injured.
kiesman for the Panama
bommission said anonymous
eilears warned Tuesday
stderday that a bomb was
in commission headquarters.
sman Franklin Castellon
Associated Press the build-
evacuated and searched both
t no bombs were found.
17
Thursday March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and resident of Slightly Older Americans fortitle *Fr*
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with." He said he told his class about the field trin
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
yesterday, which they did in the class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail me just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double cross me."
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
canceled.
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It itwent exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole dang thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
expose racism.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and
what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We
stared bigry in the face for an hour."
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
POLICE
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
revie
reviews
Oscars:
Riding on
the hype train
BY KEVIN DILMORE
So why should I be any different?
The nominations for the 60th annual Academy Awards were announced Feb. 17, and the hype train is just beginning to pull away from the station. Rest assured that every talent agent, movie buff and entertainment reporter will be on board to toss out Oscar predictions at every station before the awards ceremony April 11.
because the Academy has a penchant for giving nominations based more on individuals' status than on their performances, I have broken the categories into two subsections: one for those who deserve the award and the other for those who probably will receive it.
BEST ACTRESS
Cher, "Moonstruck"
Glenn Close, "Fatal Attraction"
Holly Hunter, "Broadcast News"
Sally Kirkland, "Anna"
Meryl Streep, "Ironweed"
Who deserves it AND will receive it! Holly Hunter. Hunter is a spitfire of an actress. She manages to charge the screen whenever she appears as Jane, the intense, young news producer in "Broadcast News." Hunter does something that is tough for any new face — she gets an audience to like her during the opening credits and she doesn't have to say a word. She just has to buy a few newspapers. She was talented and lucky enough to get two of the best comedic roles written for women this year: Jane in "Broadcast News," and Ed McDunnough in "Raising Arizona." The Oscar is not intended to honor two performances, but Hunter shone brightly in both.
Who deserves it? Anne Ramsey. Her nomination was one of the most pleasant surprises this year. Ramsey's portrayal of Momma makes the film funny and unforgettable among 1987's crop of disposable comedies. The success of "Throw Momma From the Train" came from Ramsey's ability to make Momma hideous and hilarious. But
BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Norma Aleandro, "Gaby — A True Story"
Anne Archer, "Fatal Attraction"
Olympia Dukakis, "Moontruck"
Anne Ramsey, "Throw Momma From the Train"
Ann Sothern, "The Whales of August"
she still made stars Danny DeVito and Billy Crystal look good. Ramsey's is an example of a great supporting performance.
Who will receive it? Olympia Dukakis. She is fresh in the minds of voters, and the Academy will want to acknowledge "Moonstruck." Dukakis plays Cher's mother, Rose. This first-time nominee has been getting a lot of press lately, which could give her the edge she needs to win. Voters bombarded by coverage of the Winter Olympic Games in Calgary and the presidential caucuses might mark the most familiar name on the ballot — Olympia Dukakis.
BEST ACTOR
Who deserves it AND will receive it? Michael Douglas. In five years, audiences might not remember the plot of "Wall Street." They might not remember who wrote the pulsing electronic score — it was the Police's Stewart Copeland. But they will remember the greedy business magante Gordon Gekko. Douglas' intensity and charm overshadowed everyone else in the film, including director Oliver Stone. Gordon Gekko was the best role written for the screen in 1987, and Douglas nailed it.
Michael Douglas, "Wall Street"
William Hurt, Broadcast News"
Marcello Mastroianni, "Dark Eyes"
Jack Nicholson, "Ironweed"
Robin Williams, "Good Morning,
Vietnam"
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Albert Brooks, "Broadcast News" Sean Conervy, "The Untouchables"
HA HA HA
EVERYTHING WAS GOING GOOD'TILL I ASKED FOR AN OSCAR!
OOH STOP IT, YOU'RE KILLIN' ME!
Hee Hee HA HA
SPIELBERG
KliNe
Morgan Freeman, "Street Smart"
Vincent Gardenia, "Onstruck"
Denzel Washington, "Cry Freedom"
who will receive it? Albert Brooks. Brooks' placement in this category exposes a flaw in the Academy's nomination system. Because he is unrecognized by the average film viewer, the Academy automatically placed him in the supporting category. Jack Nicholson is a supporting actor in "Broadcast News," but Albert Brooks is a star. He is also one of the funniest writers and directors working today, as those who have seen "Modern Romance" or "Lost in America" can attest. As Aaron Altman, the brilliant but insecure news writer, Brooks proves again that he is a talented and underrated actor.
Who deserves it? Lee Ermey, "Full Metal Jacket." The Academy made a terrible oversight by not nominating him. Ermey's hard-boiled gunny Sergeant Hartman is the best part of the film. His performance grabbed viewers by the gut and did not let go for the entire time he was on screen.
BEST DIRECTOR
Bernardo Bertolucci, "The Last Emperor"
John Boorman, "Hope and Glory"
Lasse Hallstrom, "My Life as a Dog"
Norman Jewison, "Moonstruck"
Adrian Lynne, "Fatal Attraction"
Who deserves it? Stanley Kubrick, "Full Metal Jacket." Kubrick is one of the greatest film craftsmans alive. The Academy's failure to nominate him is dumbfounding. This picture is destined to become one of the greatest films of the decade. The film was
nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay, but this single nomination is an understatement of the film's quality and Kubrick's directing.
Who will receive it? Norman Jewison. He is trendy. "Moonstruck" is a favorite of the Academy this year. Jewison is a Canadian director who has directed films ranging from "In the Heat of the Night" to "Fiddler on the Roof." "Rollball" and "Agnes of God." But there is no discernible style in "Moonstruck." Jewison did not create a mood, he merely shot the footage.
BEST PICTURE
"Broadcast News"
"Fatal Attaction"
"Hope and Glory"
"The Last Emperor"
"Moonstruck'
Which deserves it? "Full Metal Jacket." A reason the film was practically shut out may be that the Academy slattered praise all over "Platoon" last year and does not want to reward Vietnam War films in a row.
Which will receive it? "Broadcast News." Everyone liked this film. The romantic comedy about love in a network newsroom is genuinely funny. The actors are talented and well cast, the plot is interesting and entertaining, and the screenplay is one of the wittiest this year. The Academy is ready to honor a comedy again, and "Broadcast News" is a fine one. Among the nainees, this is the best film of the year.
Enjoy the awards.
Kevin Dilmore is an Abilene senior majoring in film studies and journalism.
Craig Sand/CANSAN
lissouri, there were it more than 250"
had been a member
10 months. He said
he was "looking for
entering."
member since 1981. ted after witnessing es in Miami.
Klan an "ubpeat,
and said that one of
lan was to promote
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
te
should be done to get them iculum."
will be heard on the House bably within two weeks, said. The Speaker of the cides when the bill will be
the speaker brings it up on ndar, there will certainly be dry stormy debate," Branson
Branson and Lowther said would be considerable debate oor.
associated Press supplied some tion for this story.
army isloyals
by violence in a middle-class borhood near the banking dis- On Tuesday, security agents yed an opposition radio station u neighborhood, apparently se it broadcast an appeal for lorigea demonstrations.
nondrators gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of tation, set up barricades of og trash and set fire to a mini-
i-riot police chased the protest to side streets and apartment ngs. Chunks of concrete were d down at police from at least f the apartment houses.
ice fired tear-gas grenades and ed tear gas into the buildings portable tanks, filling the entire borrhoe with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the e of the street and shouted to ints, "You'll come out like cockes!"
16
e did, and reporters on the saw no one injured.
spokesman for the Panama Commission said anonymous hone callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was驻 in commission headquarters. kesman Franklin Castellon he Associated Press the build- es evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988
Thursday March 2, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Older Americans for titled "Fr sity Envi
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansman to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a cue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with." He said he told his class about the field trip
yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport." Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnip cake, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
"It went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole darn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We were born with that. I think."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
canceled.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
expose racism.
Knights tell KU students about goals
TOMMY JAMES
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
Scrutinizing Supremacy
BY BRENDA FLORY
by John S. Hill and Wang; 269 pages; $17.95
Hill and Wang; 269 pages; $17.95
Armed and Dangerous: The Rise of the Survivalist Right by James Coates
Him and Wang, 200 pages
Talk show host Alan Berg pulled up to his Denver town house on a cool June evening in 1894. The radio personality didn't know that Bruce Carroll Pierce, a 30-year-old neo-Nazi, was standing behind the bushes. Pierce held a machine gun.
On May 16, 1986, David and Doris Young,
a middle-aged couple, drove to the red-brick
elementary school in the quaint rural town
of Cokeeville. Wwo. With armloads of firearms and a bomb,
the Youngs herded the terrified children and teachers into a classroom.
They demanded $300 million and a chance to talk with President Reagan.
Their goal was to take some of the children to an isolated island to start a "new race." Later, it was found that
After 13 rounds, "Berg didn't make a sound. He just went down like I pulled the rug out from under him." Pierce later told another member of his right-wing group, the Order. Pierce seemed pleased that he had rid the world of a "filthy Jew."
ARMED AND DANGEROUS
James Coates
The Rise of the Survivalist Right
their rambling journals often referred to Adolf Hitler.
James Coates, Chicago Tribune writer, has spent the past three years reporting on events such as these. In his book, "Armed and Dangerous," a November release from Hill and Wang, Coates takes his audience on a revealing tour through the netherworld of the strange force he calls the "Survival Right."
MEMUES:
Members of the Posse Comitatus, Latin for "power of the country," believe that the county sheriff should be the highest governmental authority. Paying income taxes, making Social Security payments, even purchasing license plates and acquiring driver's licenses violate this principle. And because the group's doctrine was "divinely revealed by God," paying taxes is a sin.
In his news-style narrative, Coates devotes eight chapters to the interrelated factions of the extreme right-wing movement. He offers the reader a history and insight into the ideologies and philosophies that are the foundation of many of these groups. Coates has followed groups such as the Order and the Posse Comitatus, which he notes are most active in the West and Midwest.
consentishing Coates dives directly into the hearts of the hidden right-wing camps spread throughout the United States. He paints a picture of paranoid sociopaths who hoard massive amounts of armaments and supplies in preparation for Armageddon, which they think will take place in the year 2000. Coates goes beyond the surface and reveals the violence and the bizarre religious rituals that seem to be commonplace in what he calls "Survival Sickness."
Anti-Semitism abounds in the minds of these groups' members. They consider whites to be members of God's chosen race, and their goal is to keep the race pure. They blame "devil-driven Jews" for anything that has gone wrong with the affairs of humans since the fifth century B.C. Many of the groups have secret plots to overthrow the U.S. government, which they call the
Zionist Occupational Government
stationed in Denver, Coates has been the Chicago Tribune's western-states correspondent since 1884. He grew up a Catholic in Wisconsin. After earning an undergraduate degree in journalism from the University of Wisconsin in 1967, he joined the Tribune. "Armed and Dangerous" is his second book. He and Michael Killan wrote "Heavy Losses: The Dangerous Decline of
American Defense."
"Armed and Dangerous" is timely as the extreme right-wing movement takes an upswing in the United States. In Fort Smith, Ark., the jury selection began Feb. 16 for the trial of 14 supremacist leaders, including Bruce Carroll Pierce.
Although Coates doesn't offer any of his own opinions, he provides a complete, sometimes gruesome view of the supremacist scene. Readers will wring at the account of a brutal hanging of a five-year-old boy. They will squirm as Coates explains in detail the way a man was tortured by having his skin torn away with razor blades and pilors. "Armed and Dangerous" isn't a great work of prose, but its content and in-depth reporting make the book an unforgettable account of humans at their worst.
But the trial isn't stopping the followers of this movement. Recently, the racist group Aryan Nations, an Idaho-based organization, tried to establish its branches in Utah. And, closer to home, the Missouri Knights, a group affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan, plans to produce a television show for broadcast in Kansas City on the American Cablevision community access channel. Such programs are already showing in California and Philadelphia. Two weeks ago, the issue of a Klan visit knocked at the University of Kansas' front door when a journalism instructor and a host of KJIKH's JayTalk 91 invited two members of the Missouri Knights to speak on campus. But that door was never opened.
Pierce has already been convicted of playing a role in the killing of Berg. The 14 leaders were charged with plotting to overthrow the U.S. government or kill federal officials.
Brenda Flory is a Lawrence senior majoring in journalism and personnel administration. She also is a Kansan wire editor.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE.March 2,1988 18
Craig Sandv/KANSAN
fissouri, there were more than 250"
had been a member : 10 months. He said he was "looking for entering."
member since 1981. ed after witnessing is in Miami.
Klan an "upbeat, and said that one of Ian was to promote
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
te
will be heard on the House bably within two weeks, said. The Speaker of the cides when the bill will be
Branson and Lowther said
would be considerable debate
oor.
should be done to get them iculum."
1 the speaker brings it up on ndar, there will certainly be ry storm debate. " Branson
associated Press supplied some ion for this story.
by violence in a middle-class orchid near the banking dis-On Tuesday, security agents yed an opposition radio station e neighborhood, apparently se it broadcast an appeal for orgiea demonstrations.
g army isloyals
constrators gathered yesterday the four-lane street in front of ation, set up barricades of and set fire to a mini-dar car.
riot police chased the protesto side streets and apartment ugs. Chunks of concrete were down at place from at least 10 feet.
e fired tear-gas grendashes and d tear gas into the buildings ortable tanks, filling the entire orthood with the acrid, stinging
officer in charge stood in the of the street and shouted to its. "You'll come out like cocks!"
did, and reporters on the aw no one injured.
jokersman for the Panama Commission said anonymous one callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was in commission headquarters. esman Franklin Castellion & Associated Press the build-e evacuated and searched both but no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right."
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
By James Buckman Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing with over." He said he told his class about the field trip.
yesterday when they class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnip exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigry in the face for an hour."
Marianl Pollack, Wilmette, ill., som-
more, said the interview was a great experi-
ment.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
Knights tell KU students about goals
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
WARREN TAYLOR
By Meredith Ralph Special to the Kansan
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies,
THE BOOTH
reviews
GODFATHERS
MORNING
SCHOOL
WEEKEND
DEATH
THEY MIGHT BE GIANT
BOGTONTORY THE GURRE
Craig SanduKANSAN
New Sounds
surprisingly, this LP is getting lots of play on college radio stations — not that it means much in these days of low musical standards.
BY JOHN HENDERSON
THEY MIGHT BE GIANTS, "They Might Be Giants" (Bar/None/Records)
They might be giants, but they're dwarfs when it comes to musical talent. Not
The lyrics are silly and don't make any kind of point. Great. If I wanted free form dada, I'd watch Sesame Street. The music is sub-Divo without the production. The B-32s did this kind of thing better, and that's not saying a whole lot for They Might Be Giants.
The group's first album, "The Godfathers," was a triumphant leap in cohesion and power compared to the early singles this band recorded under the name the Sid Presley Experience. Now, with a major label contract and a U.S. debut full of hype, the Godfathers seem set to take over the charts. There's just one thing holding them
THE GODFATHERS, "Birth, School, Work,
Death" (Epic Records)
back — the music is boring. Not bad, just boring. It's as if they were told to "mellow out" by the music executives at the big company and did so at the expense of their music.
If the Godfathers had come across as having a good time, it would have been enough to push this album into the "Cool!" category. The one song that works, "When Am I Coming Down," succeeds because it doesn't rely on the band's normal formula of medium-tempo, guitar-based songs with trite lyrics. In this song, sitar-like guitar sounds and acid-influenced lyrics work.
The album isn't a new release. It's a reissue of the band's first LP, which went out of print long ago in the United States. What makes "Boys Don't Cry" worth reviewing is the press release that accompanies it. According to the release, "The Cure's purpose has always been to create interesting music and sneak a little weirdness into the charts." I suppose that, in a sense, they have done just that. This is by far the best Cure album, which is odd, considering that they've had nearly a decade to improve upon their formula. Later albums, such as "The Top," "Faith" and "Pornography," don't remain true to their purpose. They seem to have forgotten the "interesting music" and the "weiriness." What happened?
THE CURE, "Boys Don't Cry" (Elektra/
Asylum Records).
"Boys Don't Cry" includes the song "Jumping Someone Else's Train," an ironic tale of distaste for fashion mongers, "Killing An Arab" is an interesting rework of the climactic scene from Albert Camus "The Stranger." This album is excellent, full of double-entends and clever arrangements, marred only by the knowledge of the corporate teddy bears these guys became. I don't know what happened.
eagle.
I that in Missouri, there were 1,000, but more than 250" the Klan.
that he had been a member or nine or 10 months. He said I because he was "looking for experimenting."
t been a member since 1981;
t he joined after witnessing
inst wites in Miami
lied the Klan an "upbeat,ization," and said that one of the Klan was to promote plea."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ething should be done to get them e curriculum."
ue bill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, isn said. The Speaker of the se decides when the bill will be d.
both Branson and Lowther said
e would be considerable debate
he floor.
When the speaker brings it up on calendar, there will certainly be a very stormy debate." Branson
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18
ammonators gathered yesterday g the four-lane street in front of station, set up barricades of ing tree and set fire to a mini-
tri-riot police chased the protest- into side streets and apartment dings. Chunks of concrete were down at police from at least of the apartment houses.
ng army lisloyals
ked by violence in a middle-class
bhcorhood near the bank dis-
sign. On Tuesday, security agents
royed an opposition radio station
the neighborhood apparently
behind the ideal for Noriega demonstrations.
lice fired tear-gas grenades and ped tear gas into the buildings i portable tanks, filling the entire hboroom with the acrid, stinging ss.
e officer in charge stood in the tie of the street and shouted to lents, "You'll come out like cockes!"
8 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988
ne did, and reporters on the e saw no one injured.
spokesman for the Panama
al Commission said anonymous
phone callers warned Tuesday
yesterday that a bomb was
wked in commission headquarters.
speaksman Franklin Castrellon
the Associated Press the build-
evaused evacuated and searched both,
but no bombs were found.
Thursday March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic
Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca I. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment; Voices from the Right."
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Kansan staff writer
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be a bit messy," she said. "I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place," he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 must to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadruped in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole darn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We what a narrow-minded bigot looks like."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
Knights tell KU students about goals
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
VILLA
By Meredith Relph
Using bibliical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies,
Special to the Kansan
JAMES TAYLOR
NEVER DIE YOUNG
JAMES TAYLOR, "Never Die Young"
(Columbia Records)
James Taylor is a strange bird. Through his heroin years in the early 1970s until now, he hasn't changed his tune much. He's probably still getting over ex-wife Carol Simon. Poor J.T. His memories seem to be all he has left, and this LP is full of them. His songs always have been characterized by rather stupid, yet likeable, familiar vocals and sparse arrangements. Taylor has come full circle into the 1980s and is now the mellow male counterpart to Suzanne Vega and the thinking man's John Denver. You're either already a fan, or you couldn't care less. I wish J.T. would go home.
THE POGUES, "If I Should Fall From Grace With God" (Island Records)
In Great Britain, the Pogues are heroes. They have made popular a music form that
THE POGUES
All I Should Halt From Glee
With Gad
many considered dead, and they have united mums and children in the drunken joy of song. This album is not nearly as irish-oriented as the Pogues' first two. One takes cues from film themes (you might recognize these guys from the "Straight To Hell" soundtrack), other ethnic music and just plain weirdness.
I usually slam the major labels; they blow 99 percent of their time and money on bands like Motley Crue and ignore anything worthwhile. But Island Records did sign the Pogues. Wow. This album won't go gold, but it will do all right and probably sell for years. So if you're a boring person with little knowledge of what party music is all about, buy this.
John Henderson is an employee at Pennyline Records & Tapes, 844 Massachusetts St. and runs Time to Improve, a Lawrence-based recording studio.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2, 1988 19
I that in Missouri, there were 1,000, but more than 250" the Klan.
I that he had been a member or nine or 10 months. He said I because he was "looking for experimenting."
been a member since 1981.
he joined after witnessing
inst whites in Miami.
lied the Klan an "upbeat,ization," and said that one of the Klan was to promote ple."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ate
ue bill will be heard on the House probably within two weeks, son said. The Speaker of the se decides when the bill will be d.
ething should be done to get them e curriculum."
oth Branson and Lowther said e would be considerable debate he floor.
When the speaker brings it up on calendar, there will certainly be e very stormy debate." Branson
e Associated Press supplied some mation for this story.
ng army lisloyals
ked by violence in a middle-class neighborhood near the banking district. On Tuesday, security agents royed an opposition radio station the neighborhood, apparently uase it broadcast an appeal for Noriage demonstrations.
monstrators gathered yesterday
* g the four-lane street in front of
station, set up barricades of
airway and set fire to a mini-
dary a car.
ni-tri-ron police chased the protest into side streets and apartment dings. Chunks of concrete were scattered across at least of the apartment house.
lice fired tear-gas grenades and
iped tear gas into the buildings
a portable tanks, filling the entire
hoodward with the acrid, stinging
oe officer in charge stood in the die of the street and shouted to dents, "You'll come out like cockes!"
one did, and reporters on the te saw no one injured.
spokesman for the Panama al Commission said anonymous phone callers warned Tuesday yesterday that a bomb was ated in commission headquarters. pokesman Franklin Castrellon the Associated Press the build- was evacuated and searched both s, but no bombs were found.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 2,1988
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Regents Room.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
Michael Robert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the forum here.
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klansmans to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
He said he told his class about the field trip yesterday when they arrived at his class.
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansmen Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnip excite, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place." he said. "I had two kids in my class tail me just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn’t try to double cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhaha," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole damn thing, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigly in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, said the interview was a great experience.
"It was absolutely both fascinating and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
By Meredith Relph Special to the Kansan
CORRECTION
Special to the Kansan
Using bibical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU
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king kleagle.
son said that in Missouri, there were than 1,000, but more than 250"ers of the Klan.
an said that he had been a member Klan for nine or 10 months. He said e joined because he was "looking for rls and experimenting."
ion has been a member since 1881.
He was the first black president
against whiteism in Miami.
on called the Klan an "upleat, organization," and said that one of sails of the Klan was to promote in people."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
ebate
The bill will be heard on the House floor probably within two weeks. Branson said. The Speaker of the House decides when the bill will be heard.
something should be done to get them in the curriculum."
Both Branson and Lowther said there would be considerable debate on the floor.
"When the speaker brings it up on the calendar, there will certainly be some very stormy debate." Branson said.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
ging army disloyals
marked by violence in a middle-class neighborhood near the banking district. On Tuesday, security agents destroyed an opposition radio station in the neighborhood, apparently because it broadcast an appeal for anti-Noriega demonstrations.
Demonstrators gathered yesterday along the four-lane street in front of the station, set up barricades of burning trash and set fire to a mini van and a car.
Anti-riot police chased the protesters into side streets and apartment buildings. Chunks of concrete were hurled down at police from at least two of the apartment houses.
Police fired tear-gas grenades and jumped tear gas into the buildings rom portable tanks, filling the entire neighborhood with the acrid, stinging ames.
The officer in charge stood in the aiddle of the street and shouted to residents, "You'll come out like cockpaches!"
None did, and reporters on the cene saw no one injured.
A spokesman for the Panama
anal Commission said anonymous
phone callers warned Tuesday
ud yesterday that a bomb was
lanted in commission headquarters.
Spokesman Franklin Castellon
id the Associated Press the build-
g was evacuated and searched both
ys, but no bombs were found.
20 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 2,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 2,1988
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 109 (USPS 650-640)
KKK heated topic
Issues aired at meeting
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Students, faculty and administrators met yesterday to update each other on the forum scheduled for Monday that would bring members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus.
About 15 people attended the two-hour closed meeting yesterday in Strong Hall's Rise.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the meeting was not called to make any decisions about Monday's forum. Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said the purpose of the meeting was to open the lines of communication.
"What better way to pique interest in the klan than deny them by camping" $^{489}$ or $^{490}$.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Old Americans for Freedom, is organizing the forum titled "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment: Voices from the Right." Ann Eversole, director of the organizations and activities center, said the site of the forum had not been confirmed vet.
Foubert said that the only way to educate people about the Klan was to allow people to view the group for themselves.
Foubert said he had received threats from people who said violence would result if the forum took place. He received threats from a clergyman, a faculty member and others who had left messages on his answering machine. The callers said they would blame Foubert's group for any violence that might occur.
Jim Denney, director of KU police, said that security for the forum would require more than 100 hours of planning but that he didn't yet have enough information on the event to make plans.
Class meets at airport to question KKK
By James Buckman
A KU journalism class interviewed two members of the Missouri Knights yesterday morning in almost complete secrecy at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
Kansan staff writer
See KLAN, p. 10, col. 1
Harry Jones, the instructor of the reporting class that conducted the interview, originally had intended his class to interview members of the white supremacist group, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, in his classroom on the KU campus in February.
But controversy and pressure from members of the black community, partly because Jones invited the Klausmen to speak during Black History Month, caused Jones to find an alternate means of conducting the interview exercise.
Jones said his students were not told that they would conduct the interview yesterday.
"The class had a clue that it was going to be in March," he said. "I did it today because I wanted to get the damn thing over with."
I wanted to get the talk over with.
He said he told his class about the field trip
"They were told at 8:30 when they arrived in room 101 downstairs to get in their cars and go out to the airport," Jones said.
In a note given to his students before they left for the airport, Jones said the trip would be voluntary, with the expectation that the event would attract no attention and occur without incident. The note said that at the first sign of any incident or disturbance, such as a protest demonstration, the students would be free to leave and consider the class
canceled.
Jones said he had asked the Klansman Tuesday night to do the interview. He said he had an agreement with the members that he would give them only short notice before the interview so that they could not arrange for demonstrations or controversy to call attention to their cause.
"I had them meet me at a restaurant near the turnpike exit, and then I drove them in my own car to the meeting place." he said. "I had two kids in my class tail我 just to make sure they didn't have somebody tailing us. They didn't try to double-cross me."
He said that the secrecy surrounding the class exercise had successfully allowed for him to carry out his original objective: giving his students a chance to report on and
expose racism.
"It it went exactly as I had planned except that it quadrupled in the educational value because of all the brouhah," he said. "It heightened their interest in the whole dang, and the more interested they are, the better they write.
"We learned what a bigot looks like, and what a narrow-minded bigot looks like. We stared bigry in the face for an hour."
Marilyn Pollack, Wilmette, III., sophomore, said the interview was a great experi-
WASHINGTON
"It was absolutely both fascinating, and repulsive at the same time," she said. "I'm glad we did it.
Missouri Knights members J. Allen Moran, an exalted cyclops, and Dennis Mahon, a king kleagle.
See CLASS, p. 12, col. 1
Knights tell KU students about goals
By Meredith Relph
Craig Sands/KANSAN
Special to the Kansan
Using biblical parallels and historical allusions to illustrate their philosophies, two members of the Missouri Knights of the ku Klux Klan met yesterday with a KU journalism class at Lawrence Municipal Airport.
The visit had been postponed since mid-February, when several groups protested the presence of the group on campus during Black History Month. The Klansmen had been scheduled to take part in a classroom interviewing exercise for a Reporting II class and appear on KJHK's JaVayt 81 as part of a call-in forum.
"We are not race haters," Mahon said. "We are race separatists. We want a separate white nation."
Both on-campus appearances were canceled Feb. 19 following community outrage and accusations that KU was supporting racism by allowing the group to speak. Both appearances were moved to off-campus locations.
Dennis Mahon, a kleagle, and J. Allen Moran, an exalted cyclops, answered questions, presented the foundations of the Klan's beliefs and outlined the organization's plans for an "all-white society."
Mahon cited drugs, divorce and mixed marriages as the reasons for what he called the decline of white society in the United States. He said that the new society was planned in the Northwest United States and would exclude blacks, Jews and all people who are not of "pure white ancestry."
The Klansmen were unable to give a time frame for the establishment of such a
They also explained the foundations of
the KKK and said that the Klan had been formed after the Civil War by ex-Confederate soldiers to protect widows and orphans during the reconstruction of the South.
"The Klan saved the South," Mahon said.
Moran said that contrary to what was popularly believed about the Klan, it was not a diving organization.
"Membership has doubled, even tripled, in the last few months," he said.
However, they would not produce membership figures, citing a KKK oath of secrecy.
Mahon said that in Missouri, there were "less than 1,000, but more than 250" members of the Klan.
Moran said that he had been a member of the Klan for nine or 10 months. He said that he joined because he was "looking for answers and experimenting."
Mahon has been a member since 1981.
He was treated after witnessing
yellows that white people
Mahon called the Klan an "upbeat, secret organization," and said that one of the goals of the Klan was to promote "pride in people."
See FORUM, p. 12, col. 1
Qualified admissions bill sent to House floor for debate
Committee passes proposal without recommendation
Bv lill less
Kansan staff writer
Several members of the committee said that they opposed the bill but that they thought the entire House should have the chance to vote on it.
Despite opposition from much of the House Education Committee, a qualified-admissions bill was passed yesterday to the House of Representatives floor.
The bill was passed without a recommendation.
"There are some issues that are bigger than one committee," state Rep. David Miller, R-Eudora, said. "It's appropriate for all of us to deal with this one."
A committee can either kill a bill or send it to the Legislature with a positive recommendation, a negative recommendation or no recommenda-
she said.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said she thought the bill was moved without recommendation because it was the only way to get it out of committee.
"There would not have been votes to get it out of committee otherwise."
The bill would require entering freshmen to have completed a high school curriculum set by the Board of Regents with at least a C average.
The curriculum recommended includes three years of math, science and social studies, four years of English and two years of foreign language. The foreign language requirement would not take effect until 1994, the others in 1992.
Branson said there was strong partisan disagreement on the bill, with Republicans favoring it and Democrats opposing it. However, Branson and state Rep. Jesse Harder, D-Buhler, voted to send the bill without recommendation. Branson said she did it as a courtesy to state Rep. Denise Apt, R-Iola, chairman of the committee. Apt introduced the bill.
State Rep. James Lowther, R-Emporia, who moved that the bill be sent without recommendation, also said there seemed to be partisan disagreement on the bill.
But Branson said the failure to pass the bill with a recommendation also meant that there was not enough Republican support for the bill because the Democrats were a minority on the committee.
Lowther said he supported the qualified admissions bill.
"I look at it as a way to see that Kansas high school students have a
better opportunity to succeed," he said.
But Branson said there were other ways to better prepare students for college, such as strengthening programs at the primary and secondary levels and raising teacher salaries to attract more qualified teachers.
Lowther said that another complaint he had heard about qualified admissions was that some school districts did not have the capacity to offer classes that would be required under the bill.
"But to me that's all the more reason to pass it," he said. "If they're not offering the classes,
The bill will be heard on the House floor probably within two weeks, Branson said. The Speaker of the House decides when the bill will be heard.
something should be done to get them in the curriculum."
Both Branson and Lowther said there would be considerable debate on the floor.
"When the speaker brings it up on the calendar, there will certainly be some very stormy debate," Branson said.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
STOP
Busing
Because of a lack of campus parking, science library construction workers park at 23rd and Iowa streets and ride a bus to work.
Noriega purging army of suspected disloyals
The Associated Press
PANAMA CITY, Panama — An opposition leader said yesterday that Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega was purging his army of suspected opponents.
Guillermo Cochez, a national legislator and vice president of the opposition Christian Democratic Party, told reporters that Noriega apparently had fired two senior colonels and two majors suspected of being disloyal.
Cochez said they included Col. Marcos Justines, who as chief of staff was No. 2 in the Panamanian Defense Forces and next in line to succeed Noriega.
For a second day, the strike was
Cochez said Col. Elias Castillo, the army chief and the No. 4 mm in the military hierarchy, also was fired, along with two majors, Moises del Rio and Fernando Quesada.
Cochez said he could not absolutely confirm the firings, but several diplomatic sources said they also had heard the reports and tended to believe them.
"I think the purge is good for the democratic process because it will show the other officers that he (Noriega) is not interested in the institution, only in himself." Cochez said. "Most officers are supporting Noriega because they consider it an institutional problem."
Demonstrators gathered yesterday along the four-lane street in front of the station, set up barricades of burning trash and set fire to a mini van and a car.
marked by violence in a middle-class neighborhood near the banking district. On Tuesday, security agents destroyed an opposition radio station in the neighborhood, apparently because it broadcast an appeal for anti-Noriega demonstrations.
Anti-riot police chased the protesters into side streets and apartment buildings. Chunks of concrete were thrown at them, but least two of the apartment houses.
Police fired tear-gas grenades and pumped tear gas into the buildings from portable tanks, filling the entire neighborhood with the acrid, stinging
The officer in charge stood in the middle of the street and shouted to residents, "You'll come out like cockroaches!"
None did, and reporters on the scene saw no one injured.
A spokesman for the Panama Canal Commission said anonymous telephone callers warned Tuesday and yesterday that a bomb was planted in commission headquarters.
Spokesman Franklin Castrellon told the Associated Press the building was evacuated and searched both days, but no bombs were found.
2
Thursday, March 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
On Campus is on page 8 today
Weather Forecast
LAWRENCE
Variable Cloudiness
HIGH42°
LOW:30°
Today will be cloudy with a slight chance of a light shower. The temperature should hold steady in the low 40s. Overnight the low will dip to 30 under clearing skies.
KEY
REGIONAL
North Platte
40/25
Partly cloudy
Omaha
38/22
Partly cloudy
Miami
43/22
Partly cloudy
Topeka
49/30
Partly cloudy
Kansas City
40/27
Partly cloudy
Columbia
39/28
Mottt cloudy
St. Louis
39/30
Mottt cloudy
Goodland
42/20
Partly cloudy
Hays
42/30
Partly cloudy
Salina
43/31
Partly cloudy
Dodge City
40/28
Partly cloudy
Wichita
45/31
Partly cloudy
Chanute
40/31
Partly cloudy
Springfield
45/32
Partly cloudy
Forecast by Scott E. Dergan
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
S-DAY
FRI
Mostly sunny
46/28
HIGH LOW
SAT
Sunny
52/39
SUN
Warming
63/43
MON
Partly cloudy
62/40
TUE
Thunder showers
60/35
5-DAY
FRI
Mostly sunny
46/28
HIGH LOW
SAT
Sunny
52/39
SUN
Warming
63/43
MON
Penty cloudy
62/40
TUE
Thunder showers
60/35
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A man who answered the telephone at a purchasing exchange telephone number said that the sweepstakes still were in progress and that Work was one of thousands with a chance at the top prize, said to be more than $2 million. The man would not give his name and would not respond to other questions.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday March 3, 1988
Campus/Area
3
FBI visit attracts protesters
Political, legal groups decry bureau's tactics
I SPY
FOR THE
FBI
Chris Cunnyngham, Leawood junior, protests past actions of the FBI on the University of Kansas campus.
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
More than 30 people protested actions of the FBI yesterday in front of Green Hall in a rally sponsored by Latin American Solidarity and the National Lawyer's Guild while the agency interviewed law students inside for job opportunities.
Dwaine Hemphill, third-year law student from Louisville, Ohio, and member of the National Lawyer's Association, explains reasons for the 11 a.m. noon rally.
"We want to express our outrage at the FBI for their misconduct," Hemphill said. "They have deviated from their law-enforcement purpose by surveillance groups in opposition to the government."
"We also want to protest their policy in regard to libraries. They should not be trying to coerce librarians into the role of government informants."
Hemphill said the protestors, who stood in half-circle outside of Green Hall carrying placards saying "No More Domestic Surveillance!" and "No More Library Visits," were not protesting recruitment or interviews conducted by the FBI.
Hemphill and Scott Gesner, first-year law student, representing the University of Kansas chapter of the National Lawyer's Guild, sent a letter Friday to Michael Davis, dean of law, asking him to cancel interviews in protest of FBI behavior.
Davis said he didn't cancel the interviews because several students had signed up and because he didn't think the reasons Hempill and Gesner gave were reasons to cancel the interviews.
Davis said the number of students interviewing this year was a little larger than usual
Gesner said the rally was a positive event because it provoked a lot of dialogue and discussion about the FBI.
He said that free expression about the issue was important and that he was glad the FBI had been asked to appear at a public forum next week.
The FBI has agreed to a public forum at 12:30 p.m. March 10 in 104 Green Hall. FBI representative Max Geiman will be the speaker.
Special Agent Mike Kortan, who may join Geiman at the forum, said the protest yesterday was the first he was aware of in this area. But he said he did not believe there was any impact on the interviewing held in Green Hall yesterday.
"The purpose of the forum will be to answer questions and clarify concerns," Kortan said. "Some of the issues, such as the so-called 'library incident' and national investigations of groups against the U.S. foreign policy in El Salvador, have been lumped together."
Hemphill said, "They are going to speak for 10 to 15 minutes and then open it up for questions. I don't know how many of them they will really answer, but I am impressed that they have agreed to speak to us."
One FBI program that has been questioned is the Library Awareness Program, a national counterintelligence effort in which agents asked librarians to provide library records.
In January, an FBI agent showed a KU law librarian a photograph and asked whether the person in the picture had checked out a particular government document.
The FBI is asking librarians to betray the confidentiality inherent in librarianship," said Shelley Miller, member of Latin American Solidarity and librarian at Watson library. "It is not reasonable for them to ask us to betray our code of ethics."
Miller also defended Latin American Solidarity as a group that meets publicly every week and needs no investigation by the FBI.
In a prepared speech, Rhonda Neubauer, a member of Latin American Solidarity, said the FBI spied on legitimate political movements against intervention in Central America, including the Latin American Solidarity group in Lawrence, to disrupt the national opposition to President Reagan's foreign policy objectives in Central America.
Kortan said FBI representatives at the March 10 forum would attempt to clarify some facts among the allegations that had been raised.
David Scheuer, Lawrence sophomore and one of the protesters, said, "I don't know why the FBI chooses to investigate people whose only crime is to disfigure with the foreign policy. I would think they would better spend their time finding people who blow up abortion clinics."
However, not all students at the rally opposed the FBI.
Richard Haskins, first-year law student from Lawrence, said, "I believe that First Amendment rights of free expression should be protected, but I believe that the front of Green Hall is an incorrect forum for the protest. Concerns expressed by these people do not represent everyone at the law school."
Adam Taff, first-year law student from Lexena, interviewed yesterday with the FBI for a job opportunity.
tie," Taff said. "But I don't want the public to get the wrong idea that every law student in Green Hall feels the same way. I think it's important that both sides are represented."
"Just because the FBI asks for information doesn't mean they are a heinous organization."
"I think that the protest is fantas-
"Taff said the demonstration probably didn't have much of an effect on students who wanted to interview with the FBI. "If they were interested in interviewing, they signed up and interviewed," he said.
House committee backs proposal to fund salary raises
Bv lill less
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The House Appropriations Committee endorsed a bill yesterday that essentially would fund the salary portion of the Margin of Excellence proposal.
The committee approved Gov. Mike Hayden's proposal to increase faculty salaries at Board of Regents schools by 5 percent and other employees' salaries by 4 percent. However, the committee also ratified a decision made three weeks ago to add $1.7 million for non-teaching faculty salaries.
The University of Kansas would receive $537,000 in additional funds for the salaries.
The committee heard and approved subcommittee reports on budgets for the seven Regents schools, the University of Kansas Medical Center, the Kansas State Veterinary Medical Center and the Regents office.
State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka, the chairman of the committee, said he was concerned about adding money to the governor's proposal. Hayden has said repeatedly that he would not sign any budget that spent more than it took in.
However, the bill would spend almost $2.17 million less than Hayden's recommendation. The committee voted to remove $4.58 million from an operating grant for Washburn University.
The University of Kansas would receive $537,000 in additional funds for the salaries.
The Legislature may vote to place Washburn under financial administration of the Regents. Now, the state Department of Education administers finances for Washburn. The committee decided to remove the $4.58 million until the Legislature decided whether to put Washburn under Regents administration.
The $4.58 million will be used in the Department of Education budget.
KU requested about $128.6 million in general-use operating budget for the 1989 fiscal year, a 9.4 percent increase from the 1988 fiscal year.
The governor recommended a general-use operating fund of about $127.5 million, an increase of 8.3 percent from 1988.
The committee recommended adding $512,000 to KU's general-use operating fund.
Rock Chalk ticket sales reflect schedule change
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
The bill would appropriate a total of $224.47 million to KU and $205.05 million to the Med Center. Additional funds were allocated for other state operations at KU.
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
David Shaeffer, the business manager and Springfield, Mo., senior, said that because Saturday's show had been moved from evening to afternoon, tickets sales weren't as high as last year's sales. He also helped ticket sales for Thursday and Friday which are up from last year.
Ticket sales for the 38th annual Rock Chalk Revue are having some ups and downs, the business manager for the show said yesterday.
Last year, about 3,000 tickets were
bought for Saturday evening's performance which sold out a month in advance. Shafeffer said that today there were still about 600 tickets available for Saturday's afternoon performance.
About 50 percent of the ticket sales goes to the Lawrence United Fund
Tonight's performance starts at 7:30 p.m. Seat choices are limited for Saturday's show. Tickets for the show are available through the Student Union Activities ticket office or can be ordered from participating fraternities and sororities.
Committee debates bill to establish honors scholarships
State scholars may get aid Committee debates bill to establish honors scholarships
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
Kansas high school seniors who are named Kansas honor scholarships may be able to receive scholarships from the state, if a bill debated today in the Senate Education Committee receives a favorable recommendation.
The bill would establish the Kansas honors scholarship program, which would provide Kansas honors scholars with a $500 one-time scholarship to be used at any state college or university.
Kansas honors scholars are high school seniors selected by the Board of Regents for high academic achievement.
Sharon Brehm, director of the KU honors program, said the idea behind the bill was a good one.
"the principle that the state would make a financial investment in having talented students attend state universities is excellent," she said
Legislators are also considering a bill that would establish the Kansas Rhodes scholarship, which would provide financial assistance to Rhodes scholars from Kansas who enrolled in graduate programs at a state university.
Brehm said that both bills were a step toward attracting the brightest students to Kansas colleges and universities. But she said that the Kansas honors scholarship also would affect more students and possibly help curb the exodus of talented students to out-of-state universities.
"We have to deal with two problems," Brehm said. "One, we have to make state institutions financially attractive to students, and two, we need to make the educational institutions in the state compete with
other institutions."
Brenda Selman, assistant director of admissions, said the scholarship could be used as a recruiting tool.
"Anytime that the state can guarantee students additional money, it is helpful," she said.
Mark Shelton, Topeka junior and a Kansas honor scholar, said he felt the scholarship program was a good idea because some scholars felt slighted that they received scholarships from out-of-state universities, but didn't receive any type of monetary award for their achievement from institutions in their own state.
"They not only needed the money to attend school, but they felt slighted that they didn't receive any money from KU when they received large scholarships from schools like Stanford," he said.
Plus/minus grading system passed
Kansan staff writer
By Brenda Finnell
A new grading system for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences that was approved yesterday could be a plus for some and a minus for others.
In a 213-165 mail vote, the College Assembly passed a plus/minus grading system that will probably be enacted next fall, said James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences.
Carothers said that the grading system would be similar to plus/minus grading systems currently used in some of the University of Kansas' professional schools.
Frances Ingemann, chairman of the committee on undergraduate studies and advising, said the committee would probably develop the guidelines for enacting the new system.
Stephen Shaw, associate professor of physics and astronomy, originally
During the Feb. 2 assembly meeting, Shawl proposed that all assembly members have the opportunity to vote on the plus/minus system in a mail ballot.
Shawl said yesterday that he was pleased that the new grading system had passed.
"I'm obviously thrilled," he said.
"I'm glad to see people agreed with the arguments that were proposed."
Shawl said the plus/minus system would allow teachers to give students better and more accurate evaluations of work. The plus/minus grading system is also more fair to students, he said.
But Lin Holder, a graduate-student assembly representative and a teaching assistant, said she was in favor of the system more as a teacher than as a student.
There are subtleties in a plus/minus grading system that allow teachers to more accurately reflect a
Compression means teachers would award fewer F's and A's. Students who currently receive A's could receive an A- under the new system.
Noelle Henrickson, Gladstone,
Mo., senior and student assembly
representative, said she did not favor
the plus/minus system. She said it
would make students more grade-
conscious due to education-conscious.
Ingemann said the committee on undergraduate studies and advising had considered the plus/minus grading system and recommended it not be used both last fall and during the 1986-87 academic year.
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But graduate students may experience grade compression because of academic rigor in awarding grades, she said.
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The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Agnes Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Alderson Award, Class of 1913 Award and the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms describing the award are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 105 Burge Union. Strickland, Alderson, and Class of 1913 Awards are presented to graduating seniors; students of any status may be nominated for the Leffel Award. The nominations for these Awards must be received by the Student Awards Committee, c/o The Organizations & Activities Center, 105 Burge Union, 864-4861, by Wednesday, March 23, 1988
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4
Thursday, March 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Good music sounds better when profits help the needy
The rock, blues and jazz sounds echoing from Liberty Hall's ornate ceiling tonight will mean a good time for KU students and Lawrence residents who enjoy live music. But for some of Lawrence's less fortunate citizens, it will mean food in their stomachs and heat in their homes.
College students often think they don't have the money to donate to "good causes," but somehow paying four dollars, or three dollars and two cans of food, to hear live music doesn't hurt so much. That money will go to two Lawrence volunteer organizations: the Lawrence Interdenominational Nutrition Kitchen, or LINK, and Warm Hearts.
The problems of the underprivileged are not always readily visible. Fortunately, Lawrence's citizens, businesses, churches and clubs have not ignored them. LINK feeds an average of 80 hungry or lonely people, many of whom are children, each of the three days a week it operates. Warm Hearts helped pay heating bills for 315 needy households last year.
But Warm Hearts has run out of money this year. And winter is not over vet.
Tonight, the Art Band, the Homestead Grays, Lonnie Ray and the Blues All Stars, and Tommy Johnson will go onstage to raise money for the organizations. One band member said it was his way of paying back organizations that had helped him out in the past.
Cheers to the four bands for donating time, effort and talent to help out LINK and Warm Hearts. Cheers to those organizations for doing something good for the cold and hungry people in Lawrence. And finally, cheers to the people who attend the concert tonight. It may be the most enjoyable donation they could make.
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Here's to Rock Chalk Revue
Another opening, another
traight mark the success of the 38th annual Rock Chalk
Royale KILS variety show, exgravaganza.
This year's show features musical productions by five fraternity and sorority pairs and in-between acts that range from the juggling of Rex Boyd to the hymns of the KU Inspirational Gospel Voices.
"The overture is about to start . . ."
Rock Chalk has a tradition of providing an evening of entertainment and an opportunity to spotlight hidden talent. And all this is done for charity. Last year, Rock Chalk raised $12,000 for the United Way of Douglas County.
So cross your fingers and hold your heart. Participants and organizers have spent countless hours writing, planning and rehearsing this year's show — often at the expense of schoolwork and sleep. Their dedication is commendable. To all involved with Rock Chalk Revue — break a leg.
"It's curtain time and away we go. Another opening of another show!"
Alison Young for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jenerette.
Other Voices
Free speech applies to all groups
"Great universities, such as this one, serve as places where widely divergent views are expressed, debated and analyzed," University of Kansas Chancellor Gene A. Budig said in a statement last week.
However, the expression, debate and analysis of views held by two Ku Klux Klan members scheduled to appear on a University of Kansas student radio talk show and in a reporting class will be postponed. Reasons for the postponement of both appearances have been offered by different officials. But the underlying reason seems to be because of pressure from local black leadership.
Two of the main groups that have embraced the freedoms contained in the First Amendment are blacks and journalists. It is sad to see how quickly they can forget that the First Amendment applies to everyone and not just specific groups.
Kansas State Collegian Kansas State University
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CINCINNATI
ENGINEER © 1980
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Nerf
Gephardt can't maintain a stance
When opportunity knocks, Missouri congressman jumps to the door
It says something about American politics when Bruce Babbitt, a candidate who thinks and is willing to say what he thinks, is eliminated from the presidential race while Richard Gephardt comes out of two primaries still going strong. To call Congressman Gephardt an opportunist would be an understatement. The man doesn't have just a checkered past; he's got a plaid one.
When he was running for Congress in a blue-collar, largely Catholic district in South St. Louis, Mr. Gephardt's comments on abortion sounded like a papal encyclical: "Life begins with conception."
Of course that was in the 1970s; now it's the 1980s, and the candidate is out to win over a different constituency: voters in Democratic primaries nationwide. He knows which party is most influenced by feminist groups that have made abortion their measure of a candidate. Now the congressman tots "freedom of choice," and, to quote an item in U.S. News and World Report, says he won't veto bills with appropriations for abortion.
His demagogy on trade may be the best-known part of the congressman's appeal, but it shouldn't obscure the long list of his switches. When he was representing an anti-busing district, he was all in favor of one of those cocamarie constitutional amendments to ban this new Yellow Peril, the school bus. Now that he's seeking a presidential nomination and must play statesman, he's against such an amendment. It's an improvement, but one must wonder why enlightenment should have come only with presidential ambitions. He used to be for tuition tax credits — a handy way for the government to channel funds into parochial schools like the Catholic ones in his district. He's changed his mind, or at least what he says, about that proposal, too.
Only a little more than a year ago, the congressman was quite broad-minded about making some changes in the Social Security program — "When you put anything off bounds, saying you would not even think about it, you can often find yourself in a position where the other alternatives are as difficult. if not more difficult."
Paul Greenberg Syndicated Columnist
His comments on Social Security were decidedly different by the time of the Iowa primary. By then, it had become clear that he was dealing with the most sacred of sacred cows in national politics: "Ronald Reagan and his administration want to cut Social Security every chance they get, and that's why we need a Democratic president in 1988." No one should be under the illusion that Mr. Gephardt can demagogue only trade issues.
Congressman Gephardt used to be against an import tax on crude oil, a stand that doubtless pleased St. Louis consumers who saw only the short-term costs and not how an adjustable tariff could keep oil prices stable over the long haul and ease the threat of extortionate prices set by a foreign cartel. Candidate Gephardt is now in favor of a $5 tariff on every barrel of imported oil in order to support the domestic petroleum industry and give the country a measure of "energy security." His new position ought to help him in the oil states. In another candidate, this change might be considered growth. In one with Richard Gephardt's record of changing positions as he changes constituencies, it's hard to fight the susicion that it's only ambition.
At one time, Mr. Gephardt opposed allowing states to delay nuclear power plants within their borders. By the time the presidential campaign got to New Hampshire, where the nuclear plant at Seabrook has few political friends he was reborn as a States Righter on this issue.
With the exception of his about-face on abortion, Mr. Gephardt's most dramatic switch may have come on defense issues. Once upon a time, he was a mid-American hawk from McDonnell-Douglas country. Back in 1882, he got a 90 percent rating from the American Security Council, which has never met a weapons program it didn't
like. He was all for the development of nerve gas, the neutron bomb, and the MX missile.
Congressman Gephardt can still talk a good game: "The American people will not and should not put a Democrat in the White House if they believe we are the party of a weak America." But he no longer votes that way. He's now for a freeze on nuclear weaponry and has supported slashing the budgets for both the MX rail missile (by $250 million) and the Strategic Defense Initiative (from $7.7 to $3.1 billion.) He talks abut cutting the defense budget by $40 billion within three years and slowing or eliminating programs like the Stealth bomber, the MX missile, Star Wars, and maybe Trident II. His rating with the American Security Council has fallen from 90 to 10 percent, and he's trying to out-dove candidates like Michael Dukakis and Paul Simon. The hawk once was definitely has molted.
As a congressman, Dick Gephardt voted for the Reagan tax cuts in 1981. As a presidential candidate, he rails against such cuts as special favors for the rich and exploitation of the poor. It's as if he can't run across an issue without demagging it. He used to be against supporting farm prices, like many another congressman from an urban district. But in Iowa, he was bragging about sponsoring just such a price-program program. ("You've got to have supply-management. That's what the Harkin-Gephardt Save the Family Farm Act is about," he told a farm-belt audience.)
This guy is consistent only in agreeing with the particular electorate he's pandering to at the moment. Yet he's survived the Iowa and New Hampshire primaries handily. His success says something about the state of American politics, and what it says is not good. When a principled candidate like Paul Simon, who represents the best tradition of his party in his honest, low-key fashion, can be in deep trouble while Richard Gephardt prospers, something is wrong in American politics — and maybe with the American spirit. Or at least with the American mind. You can tell how healthy a country is by the kind of leaders it produces, and this candidate's success is not a good sign.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
End U.S. aid to Israel
The recent kidnapping of Lt. Col. William Higgins in Beirut is one of the many consequences of stubborn U.S. policy in the Middle East. U.S. politicians who benefit from the U.S. Jewish lobby get money and votes and continue to look at the Middle East through Israeli interests rather than through U.S. interests.
capable element that could protect the U.S. embassy. After the PLO left Lebanon, count how many attacks were recorded against the U.S. embassy and how many Americans and Westerners have been kidnapped and taken hostage.
Before 1982, (when Israel invaded Lebanon and forced the Palestine Liberation Organization to leave Lebanon with her mighty U.S. weapons and through U.S. pressure on the PLO), there was no single incident of kidnapping of U.S. personnel or attacks on the U.S. embassy in Beirut. The PLO was the only
After the summer of 1982, when Israel occupied southern Lebanon, the U.S. Marines came to protect the occupiers, the Israelis. In a single night, more than 240 young Marines were sacrificed for the sake of Israel. That attack was just the start of U.S. sacrifices, and I am afraid that the kidnapping of Higgins is not the end of these sacrifices until the United States has an objective policy in the area.
In addition, even though Iran is a U.S. enemy in the area, the U.S. still sold weapons to her because the Israelis wanted it. Because it was Israel's idea, it was all right. The United States approved Israeli aid on her hand, selling weapons to Jordan Arabia, one of the U.S.'s best allies, the region, not suitable to the Israelis, so the United States, using Congress, objected to such a sale.
I think our government and our politicians should care more about U.S. lives abroad and our tax dollars. They should care about where the money goes, rather than getting money and votes for their own personal benefit. Or, we should abish lobbying for a foreign government so that we feel free to implement our own objectives efficiently and systematically.
spected to assist in Because of the Israeli lobby, our congress
men are very generous with Israel. They give Israel more privileges than any other country in the world. These privileges include free trade, sharing of high technology, access to the U.S. weapons market, tax deductions on private contributions and overall $3 billion annually in free military and economic aid. Ironically, all of these privileges don't seem to satisfy the Israelis; they still use spies to get more. Our congressmen get money and votes from the Israeli lobby, and we the people end up paying the Israelis from our tax dollars and with our national security.
Allison Scott
Paola sophomore
BLOOM COUNTY
CRISIS, BINKLEY!
WAKE UP, BOY.!
by Berke Breathed
WE'VE RUN OUT OF ANXIETIES! YOU'RE BECOMING TOO DARNED COMPLICENT ABOUT THINGS!
CAN YOU THINK OF
ANYTHING THAT MAKES
YOU Wake UP IN A
COLD SWEET THESE
DAYS?
CENTURYXI
HOLD IT! MARIE
NOT OSMOND AND DEBBIE
A BOONE JUST CLOCKED
THING. IN TO SING
"I AM WOMAN"!!
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 3, 1988
5
U2, Whitney Houston take honors at Grammy awards
Little Richard briefly hijacks ceremonies to claim 'victory'
The Associated Press
But Little Richard upstaged everyone as he hijacked the nationally televised 30th Annual Grammy Awards for several frantic moments, claiming that he had won the Grammy for best new artist.
NEW YORK - U2, the Irish rock group with a passion for politics, picked up two Grammys yesterday for their album "The Joshua Tree," which sold 12 million copies, and declared, "This is just a beginning."
"I am the architect of rock 'n roll," he shouted to the crowd's roaring approval.
"I have never received nutnin — y'all never gave me no Grammys, and I've been singing for years," said the man who sang "Tutti Fruti" and "Good Golly, Miss Molly."
After again announcing that he, in fact, had won the award, Little Richard revealed the Academy's choice — Jody Whatley, a Madonna sound-alike from the old dance band, Shalamar.
U2 guitarist The Edge, born David Evans, pulled out a list as he accepted the Grammy for best rock group with vocal "The Joshua Tree." He thanked luminaries such as Martin Luther King Jr., Amnesty International, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Morris the Cat, President Reagan and college radio stations.
Whitney Houston, a winner two years ago with her debut album, took honors for best female pop vocalist for her effervescent single, "I Wanna Dance With Somebody," from her LP. "Whitney."
U2. Whitney Houston, Los Lobos and Michael Jackson each had four nominations this year, but none
"Somewhere Out There," a ballad written by veteran songwriters James Horner, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil for the animated film "An American Tail," won as song of the year. "We wrote it for the mice," Weil said.
And none had a prayer of overtaking Sir Georg Solti, conductor of the Chicago Symphony, whose recording of Beethoven's 9th Symphony won a Grammy for best orchestral recording and raised his lifetime total to 26 Grammys.
threatened to equal Jackson's eight award sweep in 1984.
Jackson's "Bad" album won an early Grammy, for best produced non-classical recording for produc- tion Bruce Sweden and Humberto Gatica
Vladimir Horowitz, the pianist who had 20 Grammys entering the ceremonies, won two more for best classical instrumental performance and best classical album for "Horowitz in Moscow." He also received the President's Special Merit Award.
Ladysmith Black Mambazo, the South African vocal group featured on Paul Simon's "Graceland" album, also won a Grammy for best traditional folk recording for "Shaka Zulu."
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Gear up for Spring Break!
J&M Sportswear, creators of the Beak 'em Hawks, Jayjammin', Six Hawks Jammin' shirts, and originators of the Jayhawk Jams and boxers, is having a HUGE garage sale this weekend to clear out literally thousands of misprinted, overrun, and unprinted sweatshirts, T-shirts, collegiate boxes and jams from K.U. and many other universities. The prices are fantastic! Sweatshirts are priced as low as $3, and T-shirts are as low as $11.
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6
Thursday, March 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Kansas City growth may overtake Lawrence
Area businessmen taking advantage of development boom along K-10
By David Sodamann
Will Kansas City be The Blob That Ate Lawrence?
Become a professional student, get tenure, marry into an old family, find your niche in life here. Do anything to hang around another decade or two or three, and you'll probably see it happen.
Near the Missouri line south of Kansas City, at intersections of rustic rural lanes that wind through lost-in-the-last-century hills, far-sighted planners have already posted street signs reading 300 and something-or-other Street South. The numbers are so high they are frightening.
Like The Wave circling a sports stadium, Kansas City is rippling outward, with homes and hospitals, warehouses and whatiz-marts springing from once fertile farmland.
And just like overly-enthusiastic fans in the cheap seats, so anxious to be part of the human curl, Lawrence area developers have already started jumping to their feet and throwing their hands into the air Banzai-style. They know it won't be long until that big breaker brings business opportunity.
Kansas Highway 10 from Lawrence to suburbia is seen as the highway to economic heaven.
"We definitely think it's going to be a growth area in the future," said Bill Martin, Lawrence Chamber of Commerce economic development expert. "We're not anticipating any boom but just steady growth."
Martin doesn't see a need yet for thousands of acres of industrial parks along the highway, but the chamber has created the 300-acre East Hills Industrial Park on the big-city side of town to accommodate much of the business growth foreseen here in the next 20 years.
Farther east, the city of Lenexa is playing the role of point man in Kansas City's march down K-10. Not long
Analysis
ago, Lenexa, once little more than a country village,
appeared 10 square miles along the line of advance.
"We see things continuing to move out that way," said Roger Kroh, director of Lenexa's economic development commission.
"We foresee a lot of activity there." he said.
INTECH
At the junction of K-10 and Interstate Highway 435, an area that's still just a little bit country, a 130-acre mixed use development is planned. Owners of limestone mines near the crossroad are thinking of turning their digs into underground storage facilities and office spaces, Kroh said.
Caught in the middle, and enjoy it, is Mike Leib,
president of Orthopedic Casting Laboratories, or OCL.
He said his company's Intech Business Park, one mile east of Eudora on K-10, was showing promise.
Intech Industrial Park is one mile north of Eudora, off Kansas Highway 10.
Leib's Lawrence-based firm recently completed a headquarters for itself and a subsidiary, Summit Medical, in the 93-acre park, where it is visible from the highway.
"Since the first of the year, a lot of prospects have been coming through," Leib said. "It's looking season."
OCL produces patented, pre-fabricated splinting systems for medical use. Summit distributes the systems.
Catherine Wheeler/Special to the KANSAN
"We haven't done a whole lot of marketing," he said. "We've just been trying to get our building done."
Many of those interested in Intech, Leib said, have been basketball fans who traveled K-10 to the University of Kansas for Jayhawk games. They liked what they saw as they drove by and called to ask about the park.
The response proves a point. Leib said OCL planners recognized right away that the K-10 corridor was going to
develop. And although no one has any idea how long it will take, development is inevitable.
Leib said OCL was planning Intech Park carefully.
Wait, the word in line 2 is "carefully".
The word in line 3 is "carefully".
So it's a typo in line 3.
I will just use "carefully" if it looks correct.
If it looks correct, the text is:
Leib said OCL was planning Intech Park carefully.
Lebanese pianist Phalabi said, "We don't worry to do little or little time." he said. "We think it will be a real nice place for people to work."
OCL has set aside 15 acres in the park for itself. The remainder is open to others. But developing the park is not a priority, Leib said. So the company will have time to choose its neighbors carefully.
Intech Park is attracting the attention of those who want to do business near Kansas City and its airport but are not in Kansas City.
"It's a little less convenient, but you can save a whole lot of money." he said.
Kroh sees a variety of developments along K-10
commercial, residential, industrial and, perhaps, even a race track. It will take a few years, he said, but development is inevitable.
The towns of Eudora and DeSoto will become havens for Kansas City area executives who want to live in the country, Kroh predicted.
Martin said planners in Douglas and Johnson counties don't want K-10 development to get out of hand. They're planning to avoid sprawl and to make efficient use of space and community services.
"From what I can tell," Kroh said, "they want to do everything right. People are wanting to plan it right and do it right."
But there's time enough. Just wait and see.
Mark's Jewlers 843-4266 817 Massachusetts
843-4266
817 Massachusetts
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Bruce Twarg
11:40 a.m.: lunch
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U D C S C
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Friday & Saturday, March 11-12, 1988
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Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
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V
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Friday & Saturday, March 11-12, 1988
2:00 p.m.
Saturday, March 12, 1988
Crafton–Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
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COHAN/SUZEAU DUET COMPANY
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Friday & Saturday, March 11-12, 1988
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COHAN OF NEW
V
AARON HAYES
Steve Schaffer of Hoxie, KS, is majoring in Electrical Engineering.
"With a Mac in my room, I can access mainframe computers across campus."
"For my electrical engineering courses, I often need to download programs and data files and do other work with the university's mainframe computers. Using a modem and telecommunications software, I can connect to them over phone lines.
"The Mac and electronic mailboxes have made it much easier for engineers to work together. Recently my project team created a large document in sections and put it together on the mainframe. Our final print on the LaserWriter $ ^{ \circledast} $ looked professional.
"Why a Macintosh? It's easy to use and still a powerful computer. There's plenty of software, from simple word-processors like MacWrite® to complex computer-aided design (CAD) programs. A Macintosh can keep up with me as my needs expand."
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
Macintosh Plus...$1200
Macintosh SE
with 2 disk drives...$1979
Macintosh SE
with 20 meg hard disk drive...$2399
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union. Stop by and place your order before March 11. Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE, that you want. ($50 deposit required)
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
KUBookstores
Burge Union
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. March 3. 1988
NationWorld
7
Robertson says trial now would sacrifice campaign
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Pat Robertson wants to drop his libel suit against a former congressman who questioned his war record because going to trial now would "sacrifice his presidential campaign," his lawyer said yesterday.
But Robertson's accuser said, "He's chickening out of the trial just like he chickened out 37 years ago."
Former Rep. Paul McCloskey, R-Calif., has accused Robertson of using his father's political influence to avoid combat duty in the Korean War.
McCloskey has said in recent weeks that he wouldn't settle the suit unless Robertson paid the costs of defending against the suit, which McCloskey estimated at $400,000.
The trial, set to begin on Tuesday when Robertson hopes to do well in delegate-rich Southern primaries,
would force him off the campaign trail for three weeks, attorney Douglas Rigler said.
In dropping the lawsuit, "Robertson does not intend to back away at any time from his denial of the charges that Mr. McCloskey made," Rigler said.
“If the judge will give me about another month, I'd love to go into it.”
Robertson said yesterday in South Carolina that he wanted to press ahead with the suit but couldn't be in court and out campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination at the same time.
In January, the judge refused to postpone the trial until June 20.
Under rules of civil procedure, a plaintiff cannot drop a case without the defendant's consent once the lawsuit has been answered or without a court order dismissing the case.
Progress reported in Afghan talks
GENEVA — Negotiators yesterday launched their latest and possibly last round of Afghanistan peace talks, and the U.N. mediator said he was confident of forging a settlement ending Soviet involvement in the country.
"This was a good session," said Pakistan's acting foreign minister, Zain Norani, as he emerged from the first closed-door meeting late yesterday. "We are cautiously optimistic."
The Associated Press
Pakistan is representing the Afg han guerrillas in the talks.
Afghanistan's foreign minister,
Abdul Wakil, told reporters that his
meeting with mediator Diego Cor-
dovez was "very nice."
Cordovez has been the go-between since the indirect negotiations began nearly six years ago. Because Pakistan is refused to recognize Afghanistan's Soviet-backed government, the delegations sit in separate rooms, with Cordovoz shuttling back and forth.
Soviet leader Mkailah S. Gorbachev announced last month that if a settlement were signed by March 15, the withdrawal of an estimated 115,000 Red Army troops from Afghanistan could begin by May 15.
Pakistan wants any settlement to be accompanied by formation of a transitional government, replacing the present one headed by President Najib.
PHOENIX, Ariz. — An alleged death threat against a grand jury witness was "a political matter," not a crime, a defense lawyer suggested yesterday at Gov. Evan Mecham's impeachment trial.
primary in my mind," said Department of Public Safety Lt. Charles "Beau" Johnson, "I did not really think of it in the political sense."
Johnson and another former member of the governor's DPS security detail have testified that they were told that Mecham's aide, Lee Watkins, threatened last November that the governor's legislative liaison, Donna Carlson, might "go on a long boat ride" if she didn't stop testifying before a grand jury that was investigating Mecham.
House easily passes civil rights bill
But Mecham's former security chief, testifying for a second day, said he considered the incident a potential felony and personally told Mecham a crime could be involved "The criminal nature of it was
Lawyer calls death threat 'political'
WASHINGTON — The House overwhelmingly passed a landmark civil rights bill yesterday that would broaden protections for women, minorities, the elderly and the handicapped, but President Reagan has vowed to veto the measure.
The Associated Press
Reagan threatens veto, says bill intrudes into private sector
The Associated Press
Both chambers easily passed the bill by the two-thirds margin needed to override a presidential veto, but it was unclear whether the huge margins would hold up following Reagan's vow yesterday to reject the measure.
The Civil Rights Restoration Act, considered by many lawmakers the most significant civil rights measure in 20 years, was sent to the White House on a 315-98 vote. The Senate passed it by a 75-14 vote in January.
In the 1984 case brought by Grove City (Pa). College, the Supreme
The restoration act was designed to reverse a 1984 Supreme Court decision that narrowed the scope of four important civil rights laws meant to prevent taxpayer-financing of discrimination.
In the letters, sent from Brussels, Belgium, where Reagan is attending a NATO summit, the president said the bill "dramatically expands the scope of federal jurisdiction over state and local governments and the private sector" and "poses a particular threat to religious liberty."
In letters delivered yesterday to several House Republicans, Reagan said flatly that he would veto the law. It was presented in its current form.
The bill also says farmers receiving crop subsidies, people on food stamps and other individuals receiving federal assistance are not required to comply with the anti-discrimination statutes.
The restoration act clarifies that entire institutions and government agencies are covered if any program or activity within them receives federal aid. The broad coverage also applies to the private sector if the aid goes to a corporation as a whole or if the recipient principally provides education, health care, housing, social services or parks and recreation.
Court said in a 6-3 opinion that Title IX, a law barring sex discrimination in federally funded education programs, applied only to specific programs or activities receiving federal assistance and not to the institutions of which they are part.
Sponsors of the restoration act said Congress always intended broad civil rights protections on the theory that "those who dip their hands in the public till should not object if a little democracy sticks to their fingers," as Rep. Augustus Hawkins, D-Calif., put it.
But opponents said that the bill went far beyond restoration. Like Reagan, they complained that it was too intrusive into the private sector and religious organizations.
Rep. George Gekas, R-Pa., said,
"The wording of the law is going to bring about unintended consequences like you could never imagine."
GOP leaders trade barbs; Bush leads in polls
The Associated Press
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and Vice President George Bush swapped fresh attacks in new television commercials as the campaign intensified for support in a critical round of Southern primaries on Super Tuesday next week.
Fresh public opinion polls showed Bush had a large lead in Texas and Florida, the states with the biggest delegate prizes in next week's festival of primaries. Dole aides conceded that the outlook was generally
bleak for their man from one end of Dixie to the other.
"We hope to bounce back the following week" in the Illinois primary, said one aide, speaking on condition of anonymity. "We'll be heavy in Illinois. I think if Dole doesn't win Illinois, it's just about over."
Bush was sounding increasingly confident.
"All across the South we're going to have our day in the sun," he said as he made his way across Dixie.
Under attack once again by Dole for his role in the Iran-Croutain affair, the vice president said, "I have every right to set the record straight. . . . You know we not going to sit out there unprotected."
A senior aide, Rich Bond, said the campaign had begun running a commercial in South Carolina criticizing Dole for not supporting President Reagan enough.
Dole has begun airing a commercial attacking Bush for saying "c'est la vie" — "That's life" — to the textile imports that have damaged the economy in North Carolina and South Carolina.
"If they move their negative (commercials) to other places, we're going to come back," said Bond.
Campaigning in Louisiana, Dole said there might be some connection between Bush's tenure as head of the CIA and rumors that Panamanian strongman Manuel Norgiea, indicted in this country on drug charges, had been on the spy agency payroll. He refused to elaborate.
U. N. WANTS ARBITRATION: The U.N. General Assembly yesterday voted overwhelmingly in an emergency session to order the United States to submit to binding arbitration its plan to close the PLO U.N. mission. The United States' Western allies joined the majority. Israel cast the only dissenting vote.
News Roundup
PEACE IN SPACET A U.S. artist said yesterday that he signed an agreement with the Soviet
Union to launch what could be the first sculpture in space: a huge ring with "peace" written on it in different languages. Arthur Woods said he signed the agreement last week with Dmitri Poletayev, a representative of the Soviet space agency Glavkosmos, to launch the sculpture in 1990 or 1991.
PANAMANIAN FUNDS: The United States is taking legal action to prevent Panama's military-dominated regime from withdrawing Panamanian government funds from U.S. banks, a lawyer representing opposition forces said yesterday. Meanwhile, Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams raised the possibility that the United States will withhold the next payment due to Panama for tolls, fees and services for Panama Canal operations.
SHULTZ BACK TO MIDEAST: President Reagan, vowing to "spare no effort" in the pursuit of peace, ordered Secretary of State George P. Shultz yesterday to return to the Middle East for more talks with Arab and Israeli leaders.
NATO DEMANDS CUTBACKS: NATO leaders yesterday demanded huge cutbacks in Warsaw Pact tanks and artillery that "cast a shadow" over Europe and endorsed President Reagan's efforts to negotiate strategic arms reductions with the Soviet Union.
ANTI-APARTHEID PROPOSAL DENOUNDED:
The U.S. State Department yesterday denounced a South African government proposal to block foreign financing of political groups and individuals, perhaps including those receiving $25 million from the U.S. government.
Tuesday's proposal, apparently aimed at more groups than the 17 anti-apartheid organizations hit by the South African government last week, would restrict groups found to receive foreign money.
LONDON COMMUTERS REBEL: A mutiny broke out on among usually meek and patient London commuters, with passengers refusing orders to leave their delay-plagued subway train until its driver took them to their destination. Only about a dozen rebellious passengers were involved in the Tuesday night incident on the "tube." as the subway system is known.
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Thursday, March 3, 1988 / University Dailv Kansan
SenEx debates advising ideas
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee discussed problems about the current advising system when it met yesterday with a group of associate deans.
"We think the problems of enrollment, within the professional schools or college, must be corrected soon," said Evelyn Swartz, SenEx chairman.
James B. Carothers, associate liberal arts dean, said the fundamental issue was money.
"We do not have adequate resources to hire adequate faculty and GTAs to meet demands," he said.
Carothers also said there was a consumer mentality in many students' minds, meaning students expect to be able to get a certain course at a particular time. They need to be aware of optional courses that fulfill requirements, he said.
SenEx also discussed the idea of having two full days when only advising would occur.
Sharon Bass, associate professor of journalism and SenEx member, said teachers had difficulty making the present advising system a part of their schedules.
W,
"I would rather stay up on campus all day and into the night for two full
- Evelyn Swartz
We think the problems of enrollment, within the professional schools or college, must be corrected soon.'
days than have the disruption for two weeks of the semester," she said.
Carothers and some SenEx members also expressed concern that the original purpose of advising, discussing career plans and educational goals, had changed with the increase in closed classes and the time pressures during the two-week advising time.
SenEx members said many students and their advisers now had to discuss the strategy of how to get a particular class.
Jane Hutchinson, Wichita junior and SenEx representative, said students weren't always certain what enrollment requirements were or whether they were completing the proper enrollment procedures.
Edwyna Gilbert, associate liberal arts dean, said the advising support center did a good job of helping students. She said students, especially those with undeclared majors, needed to go to the center early in the semester to get help with their college plans.
MARIE LYNCH
Wheel watchin'
Vanna White, of television's "Wheel of Fortune," tells why she came to Topeka for the opening of West Ridge Mall. About 10,000 people came out to see White hoping to getting her autograph yesterday on the mall's first day of business. White said she liked malls and loved to shop.
Restaurant owners want critics to be licensed
The Associated Press
HARTFORD, Conn. — A bill to require licensing of restaurant reviewers has been introduced in the Legislature after an owner complained that her establishment was savaged by a critic who didn't know a Bolognese sauce from bottled tomato sauce.
ever, restaurant spokesmen said debate over the bill helped accomplish its main purpose.
Lawmakers give the bill little chance of passage because of concerns that it would violate the First Amendment free speech rule. How-
"We wanted to provide a message to reviewers, the public and some editorial people that ... some of the persons providing the reviews are less than capable," Carroll J. Hughes, executive vice president of the 700-member Connecticut Restaurant Association, said yesterday.
Hughes persuaded lawmakers to draft the bill after Lucille Trzienski.
co-owner of Casagrande restaurant in Wallingford, complained that two "grossly inaccurate" reviews last month caused her business to drop 15-20 percent.
Hughes said he gets a dozen complaints a year from restaurant owners about reviews. No state licenses restaurant critics, he said.
Alan Neigher, an attorney who specializes in media law, called the proposal "preposterous."
Under the proposal, restaurant critics would have to be licensed through the Department of Consumer Protection. A critic could be fined $500 for reviewing without a license.
The proposed license requirements include experience in food-service operation and management, graduation from a recognized culinary arts degree program, or a combination of at least six years of experience and formal training.
On Campus
■ The non-traditional students organization is sponsoring "brown bag blues" at 11:30 a.m. today in Kansas Union's Alcove B. This is an opportunity for non-traditional students to discuss any problems they are having.
cass any problem.
■ A pharmaceutical chemistry lecture with Ken Audus, pharmaceutical chemistry, is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. today in 6031 Haworth Hall. The lecture is titled "Blood Brain Barrier In Vitro."
The third of a three-part film and lecture series titled "The German Democratic Republic" is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in Miller Hall's
Conference Room. The series is sponsored by the KU German club.
■ A communications studies lecture with Martha Solomon, Auburn University, titled "Martin Luther King: The Sources and Force of Metaphor in the 'I Have a Dream' Speech" is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in 4033 Wescoe Hall.
the KU German Club.
■ A general meeting of the society for East Asian studies is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Parlor A.
Kansas Union's A tutor
An anthropology lecture with David S. Geddes, Toulouse, France, archaeologist and lecturer, titled "The Origins of Agriculture in Mediterranean Europe" is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Pine Room.
■ A computer science collouquio with Ray Ford, University of Iowa, titled "Concurrent Algorithms for Real Time Memory Management: An Exercice in Semantic Concurrency Control Design" is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall.
in 300 Strong Hall.
An informational meeting for students interested in undergraduate research awards for this summer is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in
Nunemaker Center's upstairs lounge
A Campus Crusade for Christ meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Javahawk Room.
- The University Geo-Political Forum is sponsoring a public address with former Sandistas at 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Alderson Auditorium.
The Schools of Business and Journalism and the department of theatre and film are sponsoring a lecture with Tony Schwartz, New York author and editor, at 7:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union ballroom.
Kansas union barrison A Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the Burge Union's Daisy Hill Room.
A KU fencing club meeting is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
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10
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Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
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9
Panel debates drug tests Applicants for safety jobs would be tested
By Jill Jess
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A Senate committee heard testimony yesterday on a bill that would require drug tests for applicants for state safety-sensitive jobs, and at least one committee member questioned whether alcohol should be one of the drugs tested for.
The bill defines safety-sensitive jobs as state law enforcement officers who are authorized to carry firearms, state correctional officers, the governor and lieutenant governor, heads of state agencies who are appointed by the governor and employees on the governor's staff.
Galen Davis, Gov Mike Hayden's special assistant for drug and alcohol abuse, told the Federal and State Affairs Committee that all applicants for and current state employees in safety-sensitive jobs could be tested through urine samples for cocaine and marijuana use. Current state employees would be tested only if
The tests would indicate illegal drug usage, not alcohol usage. State Sen. Norma Daniels said alcohol was a bigger problem.
there were reason to suspect drug use.
But State Sen. Norma Daniels, D-Valley Center, asked Davis why he hadn't included alcohol testing in the bill. She said alcohol abuse was more prevalent than illegal drug use, thus costing the state more money because more state employees were affected.
"I think we're missing the big fish," Daniels said.
Also, Susan Irza, director of personnel services in the state Department of Administration, said she didn't think alcohol testing could be done through urine samples. Blood tests probably would have to be done to determine alcohol use, and these are often ruled unconstitutional.
Only illegal drugs were included in the bill. Davis said that most supervisors were aware of behaviors related to alcohol abuse but that most were not familiar with illegal-drug-abuse behaviors.
The bill does not give guidelines for administration of the tests. However, Davis presented guidelines that he, Irza and Stephan drew up that would include prior notification of testing. The testing would be done by an employee's private physician. Results would be confidential, and rehabilitation programs would be made available for employees who test positive.
Davis said that Attorney General Robert T. Stephan had said the drug testing procedures in the bill would be considered constitutional.
The testing would cost about $222,000 in the next fiscal year. Hayden has included the program expenses in his recommended letter.
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Judges can restrict the driving privileges of a person convicted of drunken drive or suspend or revoke the person's license, but that doesn't always prevent the offender from driving, O'Neal said.
TOPEKA — A device that would prevent convicted drunken drivers from starting their cars if they had alcohol on their breath is a way to keep them off Kansas roads, two state representatives told a House committee yesterday.
Many Kanans think people convicted of drunken driving or other alcohol-related driving offenses should be put in jail, State Rep. Michael O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, told the House Federal and State Affairs Committee. But their real concern is keeping those people from driving.
TO:
ASK to renew efforts for Margin support
Breath-test car device proposed
THE BEST OF LUCK TO:
The Associated Press
California, Washington, Oregon, Texas and Michigan have adopted legislation authorizing judges to require use of the interlock device. Other states have similar bills pending or have judges who already use the interlock device as a sentencing tool.
O O
By a Kansan reporter
THI
ALPHA DELTA PI - DELTA UPSILON
GAMMA PHI BETA - SIGMA NU
PI BETA PHI - PHI KAPPA PSI
DELTA GAMMA - PHI GAMMA DELTA
The Associated Students of Kansas will launch another letter writing campaign and student lobby day to remind legislators that students support the Margin of Excellence plan.
"It's a tool for judgers," O'Neal said. "They would use it when they thought it was appropriate."
A bill introduced by O'Neal and State Rep. Robert Wunsch, R-Kingman, would allow judges to require offenders to install ignition interlock devices in their cars.
Jane Hutchinson, director of ASK
ASK representatives will visit living groups on campus this week to
The device, which looks like a citizens band radio, is hooked into the car's ignition switch. The driver must breathe into a tube hanging from the device, and if his blood-alcohol content is above a certain level, the device prevents the car from starting.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-
Lawrence, said that he wasn't aware of the new campaign but he was glad that students were showing their concern.
ROCK CHALK "88 SEE YA ON STAGE! LOVE, ALPHA CHI - BETA
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get students to write their legislators. The student lobby day is scheduled for April 5.
at the University of Kansas and a Wichita junior, said that the success of the last campaign prompted the effort. The last campaig brought in 1,000 letters supporting the plan.
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ROCK CHALK REVUE
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Thursday, March 3
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10
Thursdav. March 3. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Klan
Continued from p.1
"If the event occurs, there will be a strong community and public reaction," he said.
Foubert said he had to check on the money needed to provide security for the event and on the panel members because some had withdrawn.
Security costs for the event have been estimated at $450 an hour.
Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, said that when organizations sponsor events they must pay for additional costs such as extra security. If Foubert didn't provide security for the event, the University would be liable for any injuries that might occur only if it were negligent or had violated someone's rights.
Pete Rowland, associate professor of political science, said he would not be on the panel because no blacks would be participating.
Foubert said that no blacks had agreed to participate in the forum and that two people had withdrawn their participation.
Diana Prentice, instructor in communication studies, said she would not be the moderator for the event because of scheduling problems and
because the panel was not coming along the way she had hoped.
Charles Howard, Clarksville, Ark., graduate student and teaching assistant in communication studies, said he might consider replacing Prentice as the event's moderator, depending on the panelists.
Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism, said he would speak on freedom of expression as a panelist "although I don't think that they (the Klan) believe in free expression."
Russ Ptacek, Wichita junior and host of the radio show JayTakl91, said he had accepted Foubert's invitation to act as a questioner of the panelists. Ptacek would be covering the forum for the student radio station KJHK. Faculty members at the station recently canceled a campus visit of the Klan to appear on the show.
"There is some value in listening to what they have to say," he said. "You learn what hate groups are all about."
J. Allen Moran, exalted cyclops of the Missouri Knights, said 20 to 25 Klanmen and Skinheads would be present at the forum to provide security for the two Klan panelists. He also indicated an interest in setting up an information table near the forum.
Moran said that the Klan would not file a planned lawsuit against the University if Monday's forum was not canceled.
He said that both he and Klan pastor Thomas Robb of Harrison, Ark., would be panelists in the discussion.
But Foubert said that the Klan would not be allowed to distribute information and that the additional Klansmen and Skinheads would not provide security.
He said he was debating whether to reserve the forum for only people associated with the University or open it to the public.
Kansan reporter Joel Zeff and Reporting II student Steven Wolcott contributed information to this story.
Companies told to stop aspirin ads
The Associated Press
ROCKVILLE, Md. — Prodded by the Food and Drug Administration, pharmaceutical companies agreed yesterday to avoid any advertising that claims aspirin can help prevent a first heart attack, despite a report in a medical journal that draws this conclusion.
At a news conference, FDA Commissioner Frank E. Young said he had told the manufacturers that if they promoted their products for a use not supported by an FDA analysis, they could be guilty of mislabeling, which could lead to regulatory action by the FDA
He said the manufacturers agreed to use voluntary restraint and to stop further promotion of aspirin as a protection against a first heart attack.
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Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 3, 1988
11
Science
A
Scalpels, cameras operating in unison
Med Center photographers shoot surgery
Rv James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
Bright lights glare. The photographer works quickly to get just the right picture of the subject, knowing she doesn't have a lot of time. Several masked faces watch, waiting for the photographer to finish so they can work.
Satisfied that the job is done, the photographer backs off. Doctors in green masks descend upon the subject.
Elisa Monroe, a photographer in the department of audio visual services at the University of Kansas Medical Center, has just finished her first day of photographing surgery at the Med Center. Surgery is just a small part of what the five photographers at audio visual services photograph. They document procedures at the hospital to aid in education.
research and promotion. This includes shooting everything from microscopic slides and X-ray images to child abuse cases and patients' progress.
Back inside the operating room,
doctors repair Monroe's subject,
and are given a new hearing aid.
Afterward, Monroe looks relaxed while talking with Stephan Spector, chief of the Med Center's photography division. Monroe confesses that she was a little nervous.
Monroe's photographs eventually could be used by the surgeon to help him teach class or could be published in a scientific journal.
"I asked Stephan about it, and he said he always was a little nervous," she said. "You never know what you are going to get into."
Spector, who graduated from the University of Kansas in 1980, said that his staff took pictures of everything doctors were involved with and that the procedure was one of the easiest jobs his staff did.
"We will shoot whatever they are working on, whether it's a spine or a brain or some other organ," he said.
John Weigel, a urologist at the Med Center, said he used the phi laparoscopy in his practice.
"If we get something unusual, we like to get a shot of it in OR," he said.
He said he used the photos for patients' charts and for documenting certain cases to help counter lawsuits. He said that residents also used the photos as teaching material later in their careers.
John Kennison, another photographer in the unit, said that photographing surgery could be unpredictable.
Sometimes, you get up there and
things will go radically wrong while you are standing around waiting," he said.
"At times, they will want you to go ahead and get the shot. If it is really a problem, they will just call it off right there," he said. "You don't ever know exactly what you are going to walk into. You just kind of have to be a boy scout."
"The operation may be very standard, everything is going well and everything is upbeat," he said. "At other times, it may be very tense. They may be close to a code blue. What's supposed to be a routine operation has turned a little crazy.
Noel Klein, also one of the division's photographers, said the staff's photographers needed to be able to sense the mood in the surgery suite.
"You just have to watch your step then."
Kennison said that getting the right shot sometimes took ingenuity
"I've sometimes shot way down inside the chest cavity. You have to improvise," he said. "I've stood on stools. I've stacked up little risers before and have stood right in front of the anesthesiologist and just kind of leaned right over the edge."
Although the subject matter probably is not for the weak-stomached, none of the photographers are bothered by the graphic nature of the task.
Spector said, "I thought it would be real tough. Really, you can't see that it's a person because they are draped. All you see is the area.
"It's a lot easier for me to shoot a surgery than a car wreck. In surgery, it's usually something positive. It's healing. The first few times I did it, it was really cool and dazzling. Like anything else, you get
used to it."
The photographers are required to wear scrubs and aren't allowed to touch anything in the sterile fields draped in blue, including the surgeons.
Spector said the most difficult thing to do was document child abuse cases. He said that most often, the cases involved only a bruise but that other times, they involved sexual abuse or even gun-shot wounds.
Klein said that even though they dealt with painful situations common to a hospital, it was exciting to witness the healing process.
"Before scoliosis, the patient is all bent out of shape." he said. "They come in afterward, we photograph them for their progress reports, and we see them cured."
Right: Elissa Monroe takes a picture during a hernia operation. Monroe is the newest of five photographers in the department of audio visual services at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Top left: Stephan Spector, chief of the Med Center's photography division, explains how to photograph over a doctor's shoulder without touching anything in the sterile fields. Middle left: Doctors perform a hernia operation, assisted by two nurses. The doctors tell the photographer when it is a good time to take a picture. Above: Spector heads back to audio visual services after he and Monroe have finished photographing the operation. Right: Monroe copies slides the doctors will use to instruct medical students. Photos by Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
100%
12
Thursday, March 3. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Class
Continued from p.1
"I was highly offended by what they said. They should be heard so people know what loonies they really are."
She said that the class had been excited about doing the interview, but that yesterday morning was full of tension for the class.
"All of a sudden we were nervous," Pollack said. "It is scary facing people you know are like that. Suddenly, I didn't know what I was going to ask them."
But she said the class was not intimidated by the men.
"Everybody turned into attacking reporters very quickly. It was an aggressive interview," she said.
Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism, said he conferred about potential security problems with KU and city police before the meeting. He said that the airport was an appropriate site for the event because of its location.
"For somebody to try to create a disturbance, it would take some doing," he said. "And it would be very easy to secure if necessary."
Kautsch, who did not stay for the class interview, said the event successfully completed Jones' intentions.
through with it and to try to complete it under conditions of the sort he assumed from the beginning," Kautsch said. "Those conditions included a lack of distraction and disruption."
"I was pleased with the way it worked. The exercise was executed as was originally conceived."
"We had an obligation to go
Jim Denney, director of the KU police, said that he learned of the meeting yesterday morning, and that the department did not provide security for the meeting.
"It was not a situation that required it," he said.
Wayne Webb, president of the Black Student Union, said that he was not aware that the interview had
taken place.
Forum
"I had no idea," he said. "They kept that totally secret, and they did a good job of that."
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that she was not aware that the meeting was to occur, but that she had been told that it had happened. Ramaley had just returned from Chicago yesterday morning.
Jones, when asked if the interview had ended his class' involvement in the controversy surrounding the Klan's appearance at the University of Kansas, answered simply:
Kansan reporter Joel Zeff contributed information to this story.
Continued from p.1
"We don't want to be the majority," he said. "Most of the majority are dummies. We have high standards for membership in the Klan."
Mahon said that he had received letters from KU students expressing interest in the Klan, but because of the confidentiality oath, he could not reveal any information about the letters.
Moran said that the Klan's intent to file suit against the University for obstruction of freedom of speech had
been changed since a forum had been planned for 8 p.m. Monday. The site for the forum has not yet been confirmed.
The Klansman said they were planning to bring about 25 members of the Missouri Knights to the forum. Mahon said that they would be in the audience as observers.
"Our members will be in their street clothes, no robes or hoods," Mahon said. "We will have a few skinheads with us because they are
good street fighters. They will be there to protect us in case someone approaches the podium with a weapon."
Skinheads are members of a white supremacist movement who are characterized by their shaven heads.
The Klansmen were asked whether they planned to recruit during their campus visit.
"Recruiting doesn't matter," Moran said. "We've had inquiries
already."
Mahon said that the Klan believed that people needed only to follow the natural inclination to congregate with one's own kind.
"We support the Constitution," Moran said. "The Constitution was written for white people. We want to give the country back to God."
---
Reporting II student Steven Wolcott contributed information to this story.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 3, 1988
13
Sports
KU defeats Colorado; Manning, Newton ejected
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
What had been a physical game all night turned into a melee.
A couple of pushes here, some con-
tinue to fall, the flared
tawards, the end of the temp.
When it was all over, Kansas forwards Danny Manning and Milt Newton and Colorado forward Brian Robinson were ejected from the game.
The fights broke out with Kansas leading 67-53 and 3:54 left after Newton and Robinson got into a showing match just in front of the basket.
The Jayhawks proceeded to take revenge for losing two of their top scorers of the night and to defeat the Buffaloes by 21 points, 85-64.
According to Kansas coach Larry Brown, Robinson hit Newton under the neck. Manning, who had not been involved in the initial confrontation, charged after Robinson, who by then had backed off to the baseline.
Manning took several swings at
Robinson before a referee separated the two.
A timeout was called, and the coaches calmed their teams while the referees discussed the incident.
But when the referees informed Brown and Colorado coach Tom Miller of their judgment, the two coaches began their own screaming match.
"It was a hotly contested game and both teams went after it. It was our last home game and we wanted to win it."
"Most of the Big Eight games are pretty physical," Miller said. "I don't know what caused the fight to happen, but I don't think this game was any more physical than our others.
Some pushing and shoving had been occurring away from the ball during the game, but referees were calling only the most obvious fouls.
Brown said, "They had to do it. Danny retaliated. The officials had to throw him out for something like
that."
The result put Kansas at an apparent disadvantage, having lost its top two scorers. Manning left the game with 25 points and 11 rebounds, and Newton left with 18 points and five rebounds.
Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard shot three technical foul shots, missing two before sinking the third.
Robinson finished with 11 points and three rebounds.
Colorado's Steve Wise, who finished with 16 points, made all four of the Buffaloes' technical free throws, bringing the score to 68-57.
hung the scoring Colorado center Scott Wilke landed a short jump shot, but the Buffaloes ran into foul trouble and the Jayhawks scored nine straight points and extended the lead to 20.
The Buffaloes started launching desperation three-pointers, scoring just five points in the last two minutes. Colorado's Dan Becker landed a three-pointer with 1:18 remaining, and guard David Kuwasman
tipped a shot in with less than a minute to play.
Kansas guard Otis Livingston was fouled by Kuo man and sank both his free throws. Freshman forward Mike Maddox, who had not played in the last two games, was in for 6 minutes last night and scored all four of his points in the last minute of the game.
"It was quite a struggle almost to the end." Brown said. "We got great play off the bench in the second half, something we didn't get in the first half. There are a lot of positive things going for us right now."
The Buffaloes cut Kansas' lead to
The Jayhawks started off the way they had in recent games. KU took an 11-point lead after Manning completed a three-point play in the middle of the first half.
Center Mike Masucci, who has played in the last six games, did not travel with the team to Boulder. The 6-10 freshman remained in Lawrence because of academic problems.
three at halftime, outscoring the Jayhawks 12-4 in the last five minutes of the half.
Colorado took the lead for the first time in the game early in the second half when Newton fouled Wilke, who finished the night with 17 points and nine rebounds. Wilk sank both his free throws, and Colorado took a one-point lead.
Wise's three-pointer after a KU bucket to the Buffaloes a two-point lead, but guard Kevin Pritchard's three-point play gave Kansas the lead.
The Jayhawks never trailed after that, extending the lead to seven when Pritchard landed his jumper with 11 minutes to play in the game.
Newton's four straight points with more than six minutes left gave Kansas a 10-point lead. Less than two minutes later, guard Scooter Barry added four more points for a 14-point advantage. His basket were the last before the brawl broke out.
KU women prepare to defend Big Eight championship status
Bv Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas women's basketball team is playing with intensity and excitement going into the Big Eight post season tournament this weekend in Salina, according to Jayhawks coach Marian Washington.
Kansas, the defending Big Eight Tournament champion, has won three games in a row and four of its last five. Washington said the team had been practicing hard this week and was preparing well for the tournament.
"We had great practices on Monday and Tuesday," Washington said. "We plan to tone down the intensity level in our practices as the weekend nears. We will rest on Thursday and reinforce some things on Friday."
The Jayhawks are seeded fourth in the tournament and will play at noon on Saturday against the fifth-seeded Oklahoma Sooners.
Two years ago, under a different format for the Big Eight women's tournament, each of the top four seeds would play a first round game at home. The four winners would then advance to Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., to decide the tournament champion.
Washington said she liked the tournament's new format. Now all eight teams could play on a neutral court to decide a champion.
"The first round game is the biggest obstacle for a team to overcome." Washington said. "It
At last year's championship game, there were about 6,000 fans who attended. It was a very exciting time for our team.' Marian Washington
KU women's basketball coach
is a long season, and I think it is only fair that each team be given an opportunity to play on a neutral court."
Washington said that Salina was a great place to have the tournament, though its scheduling was bad. She said the Big Eight women's tournament ended a week before the other conference tournaments did, making it tough on the Big Eight champion because of the two-week waiting period for the NCAA tournament.
Washington said that she would like to have both the Big Eight men's and women's tournament championship games at the same arena because of the large crowd size. The men's tournament is played at Kemper Arena.
Despite the tournaments being at separate places, Washington said she would not trade Salina's facilities for any other.
"At last year's championship game, there were about 6,000 fans who attended. It was the best turnout of any women's conference tournament in the country, including the NCAA Final Four in Texas. It was a very exciting time for our team," she said.
Lady
Michigan
Janine Swiatkowski/KANSAN
Cheryl Jackson, a 5-foot-9 guard, is trapped by Michelle Arnold, a 5-9 guard, and LaTanya Nelson, a 5-11 forward.
Kansas 85 Colorado 64
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | T | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Manning | 33 | 11-20 | 7-3 | 11 | 4 | 1 | 25 | 18 |
| Piper | 29 | 3-6 | 1-2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 25 |
| Minion | 9 | 0-6 | 1-2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 25 |
| Mitora | 7 | 0-3 | 1-2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 1 |
| Normore | 9 | 0-2 | 0-0 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
| Pritchard | 36 | 5-10 | 0-8 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 16 |
| Maddox | 6 | 2-3 | 0-0 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 1 |
| Newton | 6 | 2-3 | 0-0 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 18 |
| Newton | 19 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 18 | 0 |
| Barry | 19 | 2-3 | 2-6 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 6 | 7 |
| Guelderen | 19 | 1-3 | 5-2 | 6 | 2 | 3 | 6 | 7 |
| Mattox | 2 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 18 | 0 |
| Team | 2 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 18 | 0 |
| Team | 31-60 | 21-26 | 43-17 | 13 | 13 | 85 | | 85 |
Percentages: FG, 517, FT, 808. Three-point goals: 2.5 (Newton 2-5) Blackouts: Shots 3.0 (Norton 1-8) Streams: 3.2 Techslices: Nomura 1, Manning 1 (selected), Newton 1 (ejected).
Colorado
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | T | P |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Robinson | 2 | 5-9 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 11 | 4 |
| Vaughan | 27 | 1-2 | 0-4 | 0 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| Wilke | 20 | 7-1 | 0-4 | 0 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| Lee | 29 | 5-10 | 5-0 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 16 | 4 |
| Lee | 27 | 1-7 | 4-4 | 0 | 2 | 6 | 2 | 1 |
| Chapman | 9 | 0-0 | 1-4 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 0 |
| Becker | 28 | 3-7 | 3-6 | 4 | 1 | 4 | 10 | 0 |
| Moisi | 5 | 5-7 | 3-6 | 4 | 1 | 4 | 10 | 0 |
| Olesa | 12 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Kuoasman | 2 | 1-3 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Penix | 2 | 2-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Nash | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Team | 0 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Triple | 23-60 | 16-12 | 29-14 | 29-14 | 22 | 64 | |
**Totals**
*Nemesides:** FG, 383, FT, 762. Three-point goal: 2-10 (Wase 1-3). Blocked shots:
2. Turnovers: 11. Steals: 6. Technicals: Robinson (electived)
**official:** Kansas 37-34. Officials: Schumer, Sell,
Dabrow.
A. 8, 866.
White has no plans to retire
The Associated Press
HAINES CITY, Fla. — There was a time when veteran second baseman Frank White thought this would be it: his final season.
his third season.
That was three years ago, when he negotiated a contract through the 1988 season with the Kansas City Royals. He will be 38 when the season ends. And he figured the Royals would have a younger replacement for him.
Since then, White has won two straight Gold Gloves at second base, tying him for the major league record of eight with Bill Mazeroski of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The Royals have no replacement in sight. And Frank White has no plans to call it quits after 1988.
"If the Royals don't do anything with me (after) this season and don't offer what I believe is fair, Japan is a strong option. It'd be a cultural experience, not only for me but for my whole family." White said.
Athletes' reports of drug testing differ
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Several University of South Carolina athletes say they were tested randomly for drug use, despite the findings of a task force that said no random tests had been done since the spring of 1986.
but owners said they were given advance notice of the tests, and a former player said random testing ended soon after it began.
ended soon after it began. The task force's report led to the firing Tuesday of Athletic Director Bob Marcum and Paul Akers, who was in charge of drug testing at the university. Marcum formerly was the athletic director at the University of Kansas.
Football coach Joe Morrison called a team meeting after hearing the news and canceled the first day of spring practice. He also asked players not to talk to the media about the firing. Players at the meeting said that Morrison was upset.
"I was tested about five times, twice randomly," said senior wide receiver Sterling Sharpe. "They came up and said, 'See Dr. Akers after practice.' That was about a half day's notice."
Bob Marcum
"We never knew until Dr. Akers showed up at the Coliseum," he said.
"When we saw him, we knew why he was there."
Coach Terry Dozier said members of the basketball team never were notified in advance of drug tests.
Senior defensive back Greg Philpot said he was tested at random "a couple of times."
"They'd tell you to see Dr. Akers," Philpot said. "The time frame would vary."
Philpot said he was puzzled by Marcus's firing. But, he added, "I don't understand a lot of stuff that goes on around here. Nothing surprises me at the university of South Carolina. That's just routine around here.
Wide receiver Ryan Bethea, whose arrest for simple possession of marijuana and possession with intent to distribute cocaine last month led to his suspension from the team, said he was tested at random about three times.
"Who are they going to fire next? They fired the defensive coordinator Tom Gadd (after the 1987 season), the offensive coordinator (Frank Sadler after this past season) and now the athletic director. Who's next? Joe ?"
Bethea was referring to the death of Rico Marshall of Forrestley, Md., which came shortly after Marshall signed a letter of intent with the Gamecocks. According to police, Marshall swallowed several chunks of crack, a cocaine derivative, to escape arrest. An autopsy revealed that Marshall died of cocaine intoxication.
Clemson upsets No.9 Duke in final minute
"You had to drop your pants and urinate in front of the doctor or one of his assistants," Bethae said. "Then they sealed it right there."
"They take my situation and Marshall's situation and say the athletic department has a drug problem. That's ridiculous." Bethea said. "They're looking for a scapegoat. Why? I don't know. I guess they think it'll make them look better to fire somebody."
good job for this school," Bethea said. "Bob Marcum didn't have anything to do with my situation or that recruit's situation."
Bethea said Marcum's firing was uncalled for and unjust.
"Bob Marcum has never really been a friend of mine, but he did a
Linebacker Matt McKernan and punter Rodney Price said they never were tested at random. Wide receiver Danny Smith also said he wasn't tested at random, but added, "I know for a fact it's done."
CLEMSON, S.C. - Grayson Marshall made a short jumper with 1:11 left, and Tim Kincaid made four free throws in the final minute last night as Clemson stunned No. 9 Duke 79-77 in an Atlantic Coast conference game.
McKernan said the South Carolina drug program "is no different than anybody else's."
The Associated Press
With the score tied 72-72 with 1:33 left, Marshall drove the lane and made a 13-footer and gave Clemson its first lead since midway through the first half.
Quin Snyder hit the second of two free throws to cut the lead to one with 45 seconds left. But Marshall, who had been in the student infirmary Monday with the flu, hit the front end of a one-and-a half.
one eight seconds later.
Kincaid then hit two straight one-and-ones — with 31 seconds and 19 seconds left — to give Clemson a 79-73 lead.
Clemson, which is last in the ACC, now is 13-13 overall and 3-10 in the league after only its second victory in its last 10 games.
Duke dropped to 20-6 and 8-8 after being knocked out of the race for the league title. The loss is Duke's third straight, the Blue Devils' longest losing streak since 1983-84.
loving streak since 1953.
Duke, which had beaten Clemson seven straight times, led 42-40 at the half and increased its lead to five early in the second half. But Clemson, with
16:55 left, tied the score at 50 on two free throws by freshman Dale Davis, who finished with a career-high 23 points and 17 rebounds.
high 25 points and Prescott
The Blue Devils raised the lead, 61-55, but
Clemson again rallied to tie at 63 but did not go
ahead until Marshall's basket.
anesis
He was the first victory over Duke for Coach Cliff
Ellis in his four years at Clemson.
Kincaid finished with 16 points for Clemson, which shot 57.1 percent to Duke's 39.7 percent. Jerry Pryor and Elden Campbell each had 12 points.
Duke was led by Snyder and Danny Ferry, who each scored 20 points.
Kansas swimmers vie for Big 8 championship
By Tom Stinson
Gary Kempf, Kansas swimming coach, is through erasing his chalkboard. The calendar countdown that he started in his office on December 1 is finished.
is insured
The Big Eight Swimming Championships begin today in Lincoln, Neb., and Kempf says he is ready.
Kansan sports writer
the work is done and the rest is done," Kempf said. "Now we find out who wants it the most. And I believe in our people."
Last year both the Kansas men and women finished runners-up to Nebraska in the three-day conference championships. But Kempf said that this year could belong to the Jayhawks.
"I'm expecting good swims. And if we don't get them, I think the finger points to me. If we are mentally prepared like I think we are physically prepared, then I think we're going to be dancing all three days."
"Nebraska is still the favorite, and they have to assume that role." Kempf said. "But this is the first year in a while that I don't consider us an underdog.
The Nebraska man have held the Big Eight title since 1980 and the Nebraska women have held it since 1985.
Kempf said head-to-head races and relays would be the key to the conference title. The Jayhawks have the possibility of placing as many as
"They have a chance to do something better than they've ever done," said Kempf, a seven-time individual Big Eight Champion. "What an opportunity."
In a recent coaches poll, the Kansas and Nebraska women were tied, and the Nebraska men had a slight lead over the Kansas men.
three or four swimmers in the finals of each individual event, or as few as one.
"Our balance will show itself now," Kempf said. "It hasn't done that yet because of the dual meet scoring."
---
The Jayhawk women lost to Nebraska 61-5.1-5 and the men lost 64-9 on February 13 in Lawrence. Nebraska was the only Big Eight opponent to defeat the Jayhawks.
A dual meet scores the top three finishes in individual events along with the winning relay. A championship meet scores the top 12 finishes and the relays, as well as offering more depth of events.
Jones' toughest competition could come from his teammates, sophomore Scott Berry and possibly junior Bobby Kelley. The two finished fourth and second respectively last year, but Kelley may swim different events.
Senior Chuck Jones will try to record his fourth straight title in the 1,650-yard freestyle along with repeating his 1986 victory in the 500-yard freestyle.
Four Jayhawk individual league champions, two from each squad, are returning to the championship meet.
events.
"Mentally, I think I'm ready," Jones said. "And, physically, I should be ready. Berry will give me a good race. I think I can beat him, and I hope to beat him.
"I consider myself the best distance swimmer in the conference, until someone beats me. And that's not going to happen."
Junior Erin Easton will be trying for her third straight win in the 200-yard individual medley. Junior Glenn Trammel will be defending his 200-yard backstroke title and junior Barbara Ann Smith will be defending her 1,650-yard freestyle title.
14
Thursday, March 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
New football staff hopes to blend 29 recruits with current players
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Sometimes the toughest thing for a freshman football player to do is adjust to playing on the major college level.
Football is more physical in college, said new Kansas offensive coordinator Pat Ruel.
King Dixon
Dayton, Ohio
Maurice Douglas
Columbus, Ohio
Kenny Drayton
Homestead, Fla.
Paul Friday
Detroit, Mich.
John Fritch
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Curtis Garrett
Detroit, Mich.
Stuart Hess
Muerster, Tex.
Tim Hill
Columbus, Ohio
James Holt
Wichita, Kan.
Scott Imwalle
Vansalia, Ohio
Che-Chaka Johnson
Detroit, Mich.
John Henry Johnson
Highland Park, N.J.
Kelvin Johnson
Linden, N.J.
Rob Licursi
Strongsville, Ohio
B.J. Lohsen
Burnon, Cal.
Drew Main
Independence, Kan.
Rodbrick Martin
Duke, Ten.
Ron Peape
Columbus, Ohio
Darrin Samuels
Dickinson, Tex.
Tony Sands
Fl. Lauderdale, Fla.
Al Satches
New Orleans, La.
Jason Stallman
Yorkville, Ill.
Jason Tyler
Kansas City, Mo.
David Wick
Artooch, III.
Ruel said the new staff had just five weeks to recruit, compared to the normal time of a year.
"I feel we did a great recruiting job for the amount of time we had," Ruel said. "Next year, w will be established and have more time. We will concentrate more on the Kansas and Kansas City area kids. But if a young man can play the game, it doesn't matter where he's from."
The Kansas coaches recruited 29 men, including two junior college players. Ruel said the team was short on players in the skilled positions, including running backs. The Jayhawks recruited eight running backs.
Maybe the fastest of the backs is 5-foot-9, 185-pound Roderick Martin from Roosevelt High School in Dallas. Ruel said Martin's 400-yard relay team held the national high school record.
"Roderick comes from a family of great athletes," Ruel said. "His brother Roy will be competing in the Olympics this summer, in the 200-meter dash for the United States. In one game last year, Roderick carried the ball eight times for 137 yards. He will be a great addition to the team."
Martin, who only played football his senior year, also returns kick offs. Ruel said Martin returned three
kick off last season for touchdowns. Ruel said the kicking game would improve next year with the addition of B.J. Lohsen. Lohsen is a junior college transfer from San Joaquin-Delta Junior College in Stockton,
Calif.
"It is amazing how the kids have responded to his program," Ruel said. "This is the fastest transition and the best response I've been around so far. I'm really impressed."
Cain.
"B.J. was recruited by Illinois, Michigan, and Ohio State," Ruel said. "He is a junior who had a 42-yard pattent average his first two years. He can also kickoff."
V
TRUTH IS FREEING
One must sort out issues and take a stand.
BUT it is essential to be free to listen to many views.
READ: John 8:32 and 2 Timothy 1:7
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread
843-4948
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
SPECTACULAR SUNDAY BRUNCH
SPECTACULAR SUNDAY BRD
10 a.m-2 p.m.
Featuring assorted salads,
homemade breads,
fresh fruits,
hot & cold meats,
and delicious desserts.
Located in our ballroom.
2222 W. 6th Park Inn INTERNATIONAL* 842-7030
Park Inn INTERNATIONAL
NEED MONEY?
Here's the Solution!
Part-Time Positions Available $6-$8 per Hour We Offer:
- Paid Training
- Advancement Opportunities
- Guaranteed hourly wage plus incentives
- Pleasant working conditions
- Flexible Hours
Call for an appointment or apply in person today.
841-1200
ENTERTEL
E. O.E. m/f/h
STORY or PHOTO IDEA? Call 864-4810
Hey DU's, have you guys found your pencil yet? 'Cause without it, you can't be writin' wrong! It's been a bloody good time. Love, The ADIN's
SUA FILMS March 3, Thursday, 7:00 & 9:30 p.m.
ALEXANDRA CATENAU
WILLIAM RAUL SONIA
HURT JULIA BRAGA
KISS OF THE
SPIDER WOMAN
A ROOM WITH A VIEW
This Weekend
March
4, 5, 6
Friday
3:30, 7:00
9:30 p.m.
Saturday
3:30, 7:00
9:30 p.m.
Sunday
2:00
Woodruff Auditorium/KS Union
Woodruff Auditorium/KS Union
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
XPRSS-VIDEO
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
Video Player Four Movies Two Days
Macintosh™
Computers...
your key
to success.
Macintosh™
If you need abortion or birth
control services, we can help.
Confidential pregnancy testing • Safe, affordable abortion
services • Birth control • Tubal ligation • Gyn exams •
Testing and treatment for
sexually transmitted diseases.
Providing quality health care
to women since 1974
Insurance, VISA &
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For information and appointments (913) 345-1400
Toll Free (866) 1-800-227-1918
Comprehensive
Health for women
4401 West 109th (1435 & Res)
Overland Park, Kansas
For information and appointments (913) 345-1400
Toll Free (except KS) 1-800-227-1918
The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Presents
The University Symphony Orchestra
Jorge Perez-Gomez. Conductor
Edward Laut. Cello Soloist
3:30 p.m. Sunday March 6, 1988.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Program
Cello Concerto in B Minor, Op. 104
Dvořák
Symphony in D Minor Franck
Free and Open to the Public
ATTENTION: BLOOD DONORS
BLOOD DRIVE Ends Today
Time: 9:30-3:30 Place: Kansas Union Ballroom
(Sponsored by the IFC & Panhellenic)
EAGLE
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
"Civil Rights in America," a speech by Juan Williams, author of Eyes on Eyes and Inside the U.N. Ballroom. Don't wait until summer to line up a job. Now it's the time to line up a summer job or a yearly position as a nanny. Fearless and fearsome are the best of the New York City has to offer. If you are over 18 and enjoy working with children, helpers or helpers Inc., 1632 Long Ridge Road, Stamford, Connecticut, 06907, 202-654-8850. ALL FEARS ARE CARED FOR.
HEY KU! Did you know that in the past year an EU club (hint: it must be Student Senate) has wasted $650 on Course Source, jeopardized Tupy Taxi, eaten more steal than we need, and spent over $7,400 on itself? We know what our top priority should be: let's put some INTEGRITY training there. And we're misses. INTEGRITY IN '88! Paid for by the integrity coalition.
Last Chance for Spring Break '18! Limited space remains at South Padre, North Padre, Daytona Beach Park, North Daytona Beach Park, or for booking. Hurry, Call Suncheat Tours toll free 1-842-301-5911 for reservations and information TODAY. CREATE A CAREER WITH GIRLKINS *BREAK* THEN don't mean you have to go to Florida to relax? Spring back from those aches with the help of Lawrence Education Therapy We want you to get 2% off RENTERS KNOW YOUR HIGHTS!! The Lawrence Tenants Association will help any apartment complex organize a tenancy (council member) for more information call 841-8000 or 749-3697.
The Great Garage Sale! *Gear up for Spring Break.* J & M Sportwear is wearing a sale this weekend in its swashbuckling assortment of f-shirts, tops, sneakers and accessories from IKU and other universities! Many first quality and Under Cost. All sizes and colors. Includes Legacy Halloween. March 8 & 9, 4 p.m.
15
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 3, 1988
SUMMER JOBS
Work with the PIRG's to protect the environment.
Make money, make friends, make a difference!
Stop by the table in the Kansas Union Wed or
Thurs. March 23 & 24 or call 314-534-7447 for info.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquaters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
REVOL
The story is about to be told.
Thursday, March 3
Friday, March 4
7:30 p.m.
Saturday, May 5
2:00
ROCK CHALK
HOCH AUDITORIUM
LAWRENCE COMMUNITY
THEATRE
presents
A my name
is Alice
March 3,4,5 ... 8 pm
6 ... 2:30 pm
10,11,12 ... 8 pm
13 ... 2:30 pm
RESERVATIONS 843-7469 Contains Adult Material
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
ETHNIC Arts & Crafts
** 怖道會 **
时:3月4日(五) 7:00 p.m.
地: First Southern Baptist church
(CLAismith Drive & 19th st.)
請員:Mr. Gene Tuel
area Rep. of Navigators
联络:Albert 843-0686
KU 中文查經班
Chinese Bible Study Group
ENTERTAINMENT
**MUSIC** "" "" **MUSIC** "" "MUSIC"
Red House Audio - D.J. Serve; 8-track studio,
P.A, and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry. Call
Brad 749-1275.
AT YOUR REQUEST in Lawrence's Best and Affordable D.J. Music and Lighting for any event.
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ. Hot spins Maximum Party Thrush. 841-7083.
FOR RENT
Available immediately. Nice two bedroom
downstreet and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Rooms for now & summer in roosing room. 1344
Room number 598, Rooms for summer in roosing room.
8272, 8273, 749-149 Leave message.
completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3-4 & 6 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient, designed with you in mind. Call 1-800-84235, 849-749-8161. Mastercreatr Management
Occhi efficiency in style farm home with large kitchen WD hookup. Nice G'West Walt Lawrence Kitchen. Great price.
Female grade student seeking roommate to share 2 bedroom 2 bath apt. Summer/Fall $195/month plus electricity. Call Melody 864-417 471daytime. 842-0831 evenings, weekends.
Looking to Rent?
We have: apartments rooms houses
Lynch Real Estate call Marie at 843-1601 or 841-3323 or Dick at 842-8971
1711 Massachusetts Lawren,c, KS.
*G got a Group.* Common Goals? Spacious well-maintained house on quiet block near town & campus. 89 bedrooms / w multiple kitchen & baths. 412 included, available 61-820 $150.
GREAT DEAL 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom house,
Available March 8 at 11th and Kentucky $80.00
per room. Call (847) 553-9022.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester. 88 I smoke. call Sarah early
Large room in Four bedroom home. Nice
neighborhood. Fenced in backyard. Laundry
facility. Pets OK. $137.50 per + 4 utilities.
Room. Call 749-7353 (Ask for Ted.)
MASTERCHAFT offers beautifully furnished apartments, all great locations! Design by the K.U. student in mind. Call 842-3415 or 749-4236.
One bedroom West Meadow coodon - carpet, pool,
wet bar, microwave, fireplace, sunroom. No
breakfast machines.
SUBLEASE: Extra nice 2 BR duplex in good pool
inside; garage; W D lookup. No pets. Hreqs, req
$380/mo. Must see. 843-7736 after 5 or leave
One bedroom duplex within walking distance of KU. Connair air, low costifies a 72 month. A condominium. Call 1-800-345-6242.
Summer Sublease 3 bedroom townhouse, 1
bath pool, and pool. Four persons preferable.
to maintain needed for 2-bdr. $20.00/month, water pump system & & pool on premises. On 3-bdr., $45.00/month.
3 three bedroom townhouse avail. April, Carpert,
fregrepe, fregrepe room for 3 students, 843-7333
YUANXIANG HOTEL
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom
- Apartments and Townhouses
- Tennis Court
- Basements Fireplaces
- Fireplaces
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 11-5
SUNDANCE
BRAND NEW! Sundance II
Coming to you this fall!
- Completely furnished
- Located on the old Sanctuary site
- Sanctuary site
- Super energy efficient
- On KU bus route
Call today to reserve your unit for next fall!
Offered by:
MASTERCRAFT
841-5255 * 841-1212
tiny cooperative living, SUNFLOWER HOUSE.
749-0671, ask for Ann, Deb, or Tom.
FOR SALE
15' Color TV 1 yr ago, $100, remote TV converter
18' Color TV 1 mcastset walkman $10, interested TV
23' Color TV 1 mcastset walkman $10
1927 Plymouth Gold Duster $7000 miles AM/FM
Run well. Very good condition. $50 TV
72 Crestline Home, 12' x 50', 2HR. Extra insulation, new plumbing, completely reconditioned, 318-237-4522 after 5:30 pm, or inquire 420 North St. #4, Lawrence.
77 Honda Accord, Blue, runs good, 700-749.586-
BLAUACPKT'S BEST. 8900 Berlin 600 Car stereo, AM-
erverse tapecked, 80 wait arm, Autoreverse
tapecked, 11/27 JETZN. Purchased new 10/10 for $1,855.
77 Honda Accord, Blue, runs good, 700-749.586-
BLAUACPKT'S BEST. 8900 Berlin 600 Car stereo, AM-
erverse tapecked, 80 wait arm, Autoreverse
tapecked, 11/27 JETZN. Purchased new 10/10 for $1,855.
Collection of Playboy magazines from 1968 to 1964. Good starter set call Hugh 864-2562.
Classic pair gets $75, *74 Dodge dart* 200, *Marshall*
*25*, *Marey Wiley wad* 175, *79* *Cadillac Devile* 300, *Black leather jacket* 100, *841-2657*
evenings.
Must sell by March 6 for best offer **$41,285**
C 691 1800, 7000 mile Best Buy, mint condition.
KEYBOARD Korg Poly 100 = 900 Programmable polyphonic keyboard Korg Poly 180 = 950 Korg KB-180 with Caption Call 84-7377
FOR SALE - Roundtrip airline ticket to Albuquerque, NM. For Spring access. Very low fuel. 25% discount.
For Sale Fuji 18-speed Touring bike $150.00
491.96
For Sale: Aiwa walkman with built in microphone, radio and includes AIwa speakers. Includes CD player.
For Sale: Waterbed with bookshell headboard,
For Sale, nice. 100.00. Call evenings 843-2928.
HQ VCR Hardy used. Packed with features.
Remote. $165. 841-1254. Ask for Ivan.
AUTO SALES
rock-nell. Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunda-
s Sunday.
Queen-size bed $75. FUTON rocker $78. Hitachi
deskboard kit $72. Dart Dwarf $309. 841-2657
79 Cutlass Braung - Low mileage 60-000 *Power window, locks, saat, arm, AMF-M Cassette, Equivalent - Excellent condition! $2900 call Sean 748-8477
****MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
512 E 78, 749-4961
Nordica Skin Boots - size 61/2, used once. Worth $260. best offer taken. Katie 843-3118
**Level 4 & track tape deck $250, electric range $50, scope**
**Level 3 & track tape deck $150, electric range $50, scope**
**avail case $250, Gary $89,016, leave**
**avail case $250, Gary $89,016, leave**
**1922 Nissan Stanza. Red. 5-Spd. 4-Dr. back-hatch,**
**76-248. Clean. New Clean. Must see.**
**76-248.**
Oakborne portable computer and IBM printer Great condition, great price. Sold separately or in stock.
1805 SURAKU GL 4 door sedan. Dark Blue with
colorful leather. Carousel Dashboard. 41,000
lbs. 817-760.
1955 Firer SE, 6, CY. 4, Sp. Silver. Top of line
stereo, 35,000 miles. $7,000. 814-3455.
VAMAHA Receiver and Direct Drive Turntable.
System complete with receiver and cassette
drive. Model B41-8258.
Model B41-8259.
**taxi car**
Astro $9.552 Caravan $9.88
Aerostar 4.94 x 2.18 Slider Bizer $10.36
Bronco II 4.94 x 2.18 Slider Bizer $10.36
Bronco II 4.94 x 2.18 Slider Bizer $10.36
Bronco II 4.94 x 2.18 Slider Bizer $10.36
Bronco II 4.94 x 2.18 Slider Bizer $10.36
Chevrolet Clyde II 500 $610. Dalton $4.25
F I S $3.65 Warranties, Rentals, Financing. You
options, package colors, you want
$4.844.
LOST-FOUND
RED HOT Bargain! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, planes 697-600-4001, #9758
Found. Levis gray line Jean Jacket in 1003
Mauley Tuesday. Larry Cipriat at Jim 161 for 2015.
**PLEASE ENTER THE TITLE OF THE DRESS YOU WANT.**
**DISCLAIMER:** THIS IS NOT A SPECIFIC PIECE. ALL ITS DESIGN EFFECTS ARE GENERAL. NO WARRANTY.
Found: Black Puppy w/white chest in area of 11th &
Indiana call 843-9737 w/ask for Paul.
Lost gold colored ring with simulated diamonds,
missing great sentimental value.
Call 484-800-9651
Key found outside of Stauffer Flint 2.29. To claim Kaunas Classifiers counter to claim.
Lost gold-finned ladies watch Jan 25 between Johannesburg and Flint-Flint *Sentinelian*
Call 749-666-8500
Lest Levin Jean Jacket Fete 20, between 10th & 16th
and 18th & Kent Reward 841-8767
Last: Silver chain bracelet. Was a recent birthday present. Please call 654-2629. Reward
HELP WANTED
**STYLEN** Personnelized **WARPED** information given for information and return of tag. Call 844-603-844.
ARLINES NOW HIIRING Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $0k. Entry level positions.
Call 805-687-6000 Ext. A-9738.
Alvamani County Club is seeking housekeepers.
Apply person at 180 Crossgate Dr. between the
house of 8 a.m., 11 a.m. or 2 p.m., 4 p.m. No
house or apartment.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, water sports, wilderness sports, campings, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary or more a R & B R & Macer, Seleg 1765, NIdle, MN.
BE ON TEH! Very needed for commercials.
Todd儿 to. Casting info (1) 380-690-600 Ext.
www.riverhead.edu
*OSTAL JOBS! $2,664 Start! Prepare Now!
Exam Questions for Examination Exam
9108 9144-4444 Ext. 153
Established weekend country band is auditioning for an experienced piano player and fiddle player.
COCKTAIL WARTNESS. Must be permanent, experienced and at least 21. Apply at THE HAWK.
GOVERNMENT JOB. $10,450-$40,020/jr. Year.
Hiring Your Area. (903) 877-0000 or R.9758 for
hire.
current Feral Lest
Kansas Union Food Service needs part-time help
for line work and business. Varied hours 3/45 per
week. Kansas Union Personnel
office. Level 5, EOE.
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEERS
PROGRAM INSTRUCTORS (4) teach high school students in summer seers to cultivate diversity is required with culturally diverse youth is required. DORMITORY SUPERVISOR(1) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorms and experience with culturally diverse students.
ONCE LOCATED IN KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS;
Degree and experience with culturally diverse youth required. PEER COUNSELER/TUTORS (3) live in dorm tutor, counselor, or adjunct junior level in college required. RESEARCH ASSISTANT (Bridge Student Instructor)/Counselor) (1) design and implement individual educational programs for RU students.
job description available at Upward Bound, 484 Hall Bay. Send letter of application, current job description to C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 484 Hall Bay, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60453 (912) 60433
nearest individual to the instructor and Counselor, the instructor and Counselor, the instructor and Counselor, and familiarity with KU required to participate.
Looking for roofing labor.cb. No experience.
Need Call 7 a.m. 841-0511.
McDonalds of Lawrence has part-time openings for day shift and late shift. Applicants must have a degree in a field offered above minimum wages and discounts on meals. Now is the time to get your summer job at McDonald's!
Be a NANNY
- Seaside Connecticut towns New York City.
- Great salary & benefits.
- Great salary & benefits, airfare provided
- families pre-screened by us
- Choose from warm, loving
- must enjoy working with children
- Year round positions only
Now hire maintenance person. Requires general maintenance of 2 restaurants. Must be available 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. M-M-F. Starting wage $4/hour. Apply at ljl2 Massachusetts above.
PART-TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed for Intramural Floor Hockey and Soccer at Rockford High School. Attend the meetings on Tuesday, March 8, 6:30 p.m. for soccer and 7:00 p.m. for floor hockey. **292 Robinson**
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesmen, Airlines &
Amusement Parks, cruiseships, internships and career positions. For information & application; write national Collegiate Recruitment, P. G. Box 8024.
R&R Restaurants is now hiring responsible, mature, hard-hard individuals to fill part-time day, evening and weekend openings. Wages start at 3.70 per hour. Flexible scheduling. Apply at R&R Restaurant.
Jana - Just think, 6 months from today and you
John Flewert. Kinda scary! *I Love You*
John. John
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications for summer jobs in oceanographic & application; write national Collegiate Recreation. P. O. Box 8074 Hilton
Care for Kids, Inc.
Summer Jobs! **1.**对 Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15 August 21. For an application and interview call (800) 476-3460.
Ashley - Met you Saturday when help me met you. Are you ready to leave again? Maybe under your windmill! Chris
Buke: Paum, Sweeper, Van, TZV2, Fumia, Padium, Daytime, Kitaarman, Beebergs, Femmes, Olduvai, Econolondis, Nachos, McKodes, Hroom,Ray, Love always, Dave.
Big Food and oozz, good luck finding that ring
Phi Pia!'s. Love, Jenn and Kim.
Doug (the Phil Delt) Thought for the day:
pontyals and earrings.
Wanted: Part-time or Full-time temporary worker with secretarial & flipping skills, computer experience. For more information call Mike at 841-7205 ask for Mike.
messiest. Thanks for all the hard work. The times were long but well worth it. Keep up the spirit and give 's me the best show that we can. Thanks for everything. Ned.
Jovey. Thanks for putting up with me during R.C. I could have done it without your support.
PERSONAL
Hey, Hey Hagain! Thanks for an awesome
love, hey Kats and a good luck in Rock Chair!
Hove, love Kats and a Duddy.
*engage and Fork:* Thanks for everything. *Writin'
*nongluck* could not have happened with three tranger or more perfectly matched weirdos you tuys are the best. Nick.
Ferris - Denver choked; Eliway and Roman are
Gekaes, Days is a lank soap. Who tell IJack?
**"I know."**
Hey bro what up? '7 Just wanted to say Happy
Can't wait until Patreo XZ. Love your illumination.
Until Patreo XZ. Love your illumination.
Kanchenbach — Happy 21st! We I right last year?
No doubt!
We Doin' it! We Doin' it! We Doin' it!
Doin' it!
G/J/W 48, straight acting, (cun with, mutual
involvement). Photographs in photo.
D/L. l虫 105, Lawrence. KS. 66044.
Separated 37, Athletic, Professional, Attractive, for long term friendship. Color not important. P.O. Box 834, Ottawa, Canada, 66007 with photo. Snuggle Unny - one year of intensive love make up. All photos are © 2016 by Jillian Dodd.
McGoey - Have a good weekend that ever you,
don't forget me sitting home watching TV.
the 'happy' one year.
She's happily beat on the bdk. At least she was able to powerful
Kwik Shop 1:10 s.t. A.M. you had a pick-up. I had
green sweater. Interested? Reply here.
To the two girls I had sex on the beach with on Sunday. Thanks I had a blast. Can't wait for the next time. At least I won't have to pay for "it" then! Steve.
I'm here, where are you! Normal guy 25, adventures, handsome, kind, creative, magnetic, and complex. Looking for a normal, pretty, warm, inquisitive person. Will you sit down to write it? Write P.O. Box 137, Lawrence.
making new friends that you'll never forget. The never ending rehearsals are over, enjoy the next three nights! You've given the Beta team a much to be proud of. Break legs! Love, Cindy!
To the Form lady at Park 25, say hi to the Capri
near you meet.
Steve, Tracy, Kristin, Keith, and the cast of "Ears Before Their Time." Opening night is finally here! Now it's time for all of your hard work on them. You can sing or teach most people know. It's more than singing, dancing, and acting. It's learning to work well and closely with people you may not have known before.
bk, hc, gm. GREAT.
The Guy Goes - blue eyes, black hatts (red & white hairs) College Woods bus - Tues/Thurs..
-a m. Would like to meet you. Interested? Reply here - to C.
Yellow and White Striped Shirt. Long dark waxy hair. I saw you at the "Jetsons" Cafe in the Union Park in Greenwich, where the place to go was for lunch during the street. So we joined Jacket. Long red Waxy hair.
Dumbo, Lindahomely, Huey, KA, Common Stock,
Earfully yours.
Keep your ears peeled cause we nose this show is grand in the land of sand. We sphinx your great.
The Not So Common Cast
BUS. PERSONAL
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. The hospital offers. Overaters Monday, 7-9am Memorial Hospital, 325 Main. For confidential information/contact person. Write PO Box 30428
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE 8, M-F;
professional word processing/data management,
resumes/letters, manuscripts, theses, etc. TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 843-5062
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
Passport, ID, I.D. fine portraits.
Swedish Studio 798-169
LEOATDAR SALE! All women's leaords, urinants and dancewear to up 50% off. New Spring arrivals included Dragonfly Dancewear. New location: 17 East 7th (7th & New
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
SENSUAL LINGERIE & SWIMWEAR. Get your full color catalog today. Send $5 (includes postage and handling) to: SATIN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 15701-280, LENEXA, KS 62115
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
Hawkins 615-879-2400. www.dennishawkins.com
Ormer of 231d
841-4294
Bloom County t-shirts & books
>Involving war names and
Brown Role-playing, war games and miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese Comics and more 1
TUTORING TUTORING 8.50/kg, MATH STATISTICS and PHYSICS. B.S. Physics, M.A. Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 841-3043.
Do you want
Do you want $30,000 / year ?
We can also print from your IBM™ or Mcintosh™ disk.
It begins with a quality resume
TYPING
Kingston Printing
1-AI Reliable Typing Service Term papers.
Resumes, letters, etc. Professionally typed, IBM
Electronic Typewriter. 824-3246
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
fine lingerie
PARTY TIME!
formals, 60's ties peace earrings and necklaces.
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scribings into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2638, days or evening
Place earrings and hair accessories here.
927 Mass M-Sat 10:5:30 841:2451
1 plus Typing. resumes, thesis, law typ
2 plus Typing. weeks, letters Torty 484/475
or 484/271 evening and weekdays
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in pattern theses, mice, misc. ITM correcting Sobetric, and other tools.
SUNDAY, CHICAGO TRIBUINE. New on sale at the following locations: Convenience Store 8th and Indiana. Kwik Shop 8th & Mias, Kansas Union, Chicago Delivery 814-5073.
Call Rush for all your typing needs. $1/tip. 24 hr.
free time. Call 843-648-301 after 5 p.m.
TRUCE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shots to corporate representatives, dancers, choreographers. 841-0925. www.trudelight.com
SERVICES OFFERED
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter qual-
ity printing. Spelling corrected 842-2747.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
license without patrol testing upon
successful completion. Transportation provided:
841-2316
Accurately typing by former Harvard secretary,
Earl Hawkins, page East Lawrence. Mrs.
Matlina 841-1219
Call me for your typing needs. Reasonable rates
842-4826 before 10 p.m.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park. (913) 491-6878
$80 Value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Free Spinal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor, 943-297-7000
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M A, $8/hour, 843-9032
[0 p.m.]
DISSERTATIONS, THESES LAW PAPERS
Mommy's Typing & Graphics. One day service
available. 842,378, before 9 p.m. please.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver license obtainable, transportation phone # 74788
Pregnant and need help? Call Bibirght at 183-8211. Confidential help/free pregnancy
QU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome
photo printing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $60.00 Art & Design Building.
from 798 864-4767
FAST. ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letter
FAST. ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE spell check
TOP-ATOM SERVICE 885-7263
Professional typist w/ 15 years experience. Close to
campus. 692-8998
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 814-4800. Spring special $1.40/page, double space.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, etiquette and a helpful service: www.qualitytyping.com 813-0427 843-0427
RESUME* - professionally typeset and Laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professional resumes and 10 for 1/2 price of Kinko's and get it back you in 24 hours. Call today at 942-388-100. No answer, email resume@resume.com.
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at 847-0111
THE FAR SIDE
FRINGE PLUS assistance with compo-
dence, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
disserations, papers, letters, applications.
resumes. Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
WANTED
Female Roanmate waiter, summer, large room for 1.0 or 2.8/$160/month, trash/cable paid, furnished room with bathroom.
Female Roommate wanted, non-mother please.
Rent 175.00 + $2 utilities. Call Lily 749-1254.
Female roommate: 2 bedroom duplex at
1300 East 4th Street, furnished, 5 minute to
store. $120. 749-3559
Female roommate wanted to share 1/2 story townhouse with other females. New townhouse for $39,000. A/2 bus plus. A/2 btu plus. Located close to campus next to bus路. Low rent. Live and call. 843-561-3041
Female roommate wanted. 2 bedroom house 8th &
Kentucky $120 + $1/ utilities. Large dog lover a
must. Graduate student or serious student
referenced. 842-3306
Male/Female roommate needed fully furnished
male. new campus, own bedroom 1/2th mth s₁
mth s₂.
Male roommate. Own room in 2 bedroom
Berkeley room. 1 block from Union, $130 +
749-8912.
Male/Female Rommate needs for 3 bedroom house. $14/month, suitilities. Very nice. 749-241/843-8262 Ask for Tim, Bill, or Ken
Roommate getting married need older student to share rent 138.7 + $3 utilities in a townhouse.
Own room on bus route. Please call if interested
942-2737.
NEED IMMEDIATELY for Lawrence based rock band; Vocalist, preferably with other musical abilities. Dates booked Call 842 769 1301 Nice fun room lookalike rooms for 8:48 - school year Swimming pool, BB/Teens Courts available. 842-2625 Meadowbrook
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours available, if you enjoy cleaning and are willing to work. Buckinghamshire B24 6284. Need transportation. Put your used books and magazines to work! Donate to Friends of the Lawrence Public Library. Bring to collection box at the library 707
Roommate for Spacius 3 bedroom duplex in
Baltimore, MD. $200-$500/mo.
Must pay up on bus route 84-797-721
Please contact me at 84-797-721
WANTED! One non-student can play anytime between 3:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. p.m. 64-6191 Wanted tickets to Saturday's Nike basketball game. 84-8254 We need 2 "Sling" tickets! Call 841-4039
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
3.3
Although troubled as a child, Zorro, as is well known, ultimately found his niche in history.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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---
16
Thursday, March 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
TAKE YOUR MAC URGE to the BURGE!
Come in and see us at the Burge Union and learn all you want to know about Macintosh $ ^{ \mathrm { T M } } $ computers. There will be experts on hand to answer any questions you may have. Experience Macintosh with us! We'll help you with:
- Word Processing
- Graphics
- Business Applications
- Desk-top Publishing
- Programs
- Any additional needs
- You may even win a PRIZE!
This Friday, March 4, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
KU Bookstores
BURGE UNION
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm {T M}} $
Macintosh™ Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Friday March 4,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.110 (USPS 650-640)
Hazardous chemicals spill into creek
Stephen Wade/KANSAN
Three members of the Douglas County Hazardous Material Response Unit leave the scene of a toxic chemical spill seven miles east of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike. The herbicide Ethalfluralin was found leaking from an overturned tractor-trailer truck yesterday.
By Ric Brack Kansan staff writer
Hazardous chemicals from a tractor-trailer truck carrying more than 40,000 pounds of the herbicide Ethali-furalin spilled into a creek about seven miles east of Lawrence after the truck overturned Wednesday night.
Leavenworth County officials said yesterday that the accident occurred on the Kansas Turnpike near Pony Creek about 11:15 p.m. Wednesday, but officials did not find out until 14 hours after the accident that hazardous chemicals were leaking from the truck
The truck's driver, Michael W. Shannon, 32, Olathe, received only minor injuries in the accident.
Ethalfuralin will explode if it is exposed to temperatures exceeding 86 degrees Fahrenheit and can be melted. It is heated, or absorbed through the skin.
The leak was discovered at about 1 p.m. yesterday after a turnpike investigator began experiencing dizziness and headaches while he was photographing the accident scene. No other person was reported affected by the chemical.
"That was the first indication that something wasn't right out there," said Mike McCulley, a turnpike authority dispatcher.
McCulley said that after that discovery, the right lane of the eastbound side of the turnpike was closed to traffic about 2 n.m. yesterday.
Officials cordoned off an area about one half mile on either side of the accident to ensure that no one gets into the hill or cause the chemical to explode.
Ron McCutcheon of the Environmental Protection Agency's Kansas City, Kan., office, said last night that Environmental Specialists Inc. from
Kansas City, Mo., began to clean up the chemical around 10 p.m. last night.
He said the first step of the cleanup would be to empty the remaining chemical from the truck and to remove the wrecked truck from the
McCutcheon said removal of the truck and its chemicals should be completed by morning. He said that the chemical that was spilled on the shoulder of the turnpike, on the ground below, and in Pony Creek
would be picked up by a vacuum truck today and would be taken to a disposal site.
After the chemicals have been removed, McCutcheon said, state officials will determine whether any soil will need to be excavated.
Yesterday afternoon, the Douglas County Hazardous Materials Response Unit built two dams on Pony Creek to contain the chemical.
McCutcheon said that two large pools of the chemical were found near the truck and that the pools had
Pony Creek flows to the south from the accident scene to Nine Mile Creek. Nine Mile Creek flows into the Kansas River.
overflowed into the creek.
McCutcheon said last night that there was no danger of contamination to the Lawrence water supply.
Leavenworth County Commissioner Gerald Orok, who was on the scene yesterday afternoon, said that 864 cases of the chemical were in the trailer. He said each case contained two two-and-a-half-gallon bottles of
Truck leaves toxins in area creek
40
79
Location of truck accident at Powell Creek 7 miles outside of Lawrence.
Kansas Fluoride
KU
Lawrence
10
the chemical.
Emergency workers set up roadside command posts upwind of the site to avoid the fumes. Units from the Lawrence Fire Department and the Kansas Highway Patrol assisted at the accident site.
Timetable for Soviet exit is set
The Associated Press
GENEVA — Afghanistan and Pakistan agreed yesterday on a nine-month timetable for the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan and said half the soldiers should be out of the country in the first 90 days.
The two points long had hindered progress toward a settlement aimed at ending nine years of fighting in Afghanistan, where an estimated 115,000 Soviet troops are backing the government against Muslim guerrillas.
But a U.N. report released yesterday warned that success at the Geneva talks could leave another problem unresolved: the return of more than 5 million Afghan refugees who have fled to neighboring Pakistan and Iran.
The report said the refugees were unlikely to return unless the Afghan government of President Najib was informed of the opposition and refugee representation.
Agreement on the withdrawal timetable had been widely expected.
Afghan Foreign Minister Abdul Wakil said he was confident that remaining issues, which he did not specify, also would be resolved, provided "Pakistan could abide by the tacit and formal agreement not to raise anything new."
Pakistan represents the insurgents in the talks.
Pakistan has said that a successful settlement must be accompanied by formation of a broad-based transitional government to replace the Afghan government.
Hoch is new site of forum
Bv loel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
The free speech forum tentatively scheduled for Monday has been moved to Hoch Auditorium for security reasons after increased opposition in the University community.
Michael Foubert, director of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, organizers of the forum, said yesterday that he had decided to move the forum from the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium because of the possibility of a large crowd and security problems.
The forum, which would involve bringing members of the Ku Klux Klan to campus, is scheduled for 8 p.m.
"By moving the forum, we can accommodate more people and not worry about the other events that mattering on in the Union," Hohbert said.
Ann Eversole, chairman of the university events committee, said she would like to
"It's hard to predict what will happen," Eversole said. "There is a lot of interest, and I'm sure there will be demonstrations."
Foubert said there had been speculation that only KU students and faculty could attend the forum. But
Protests of KKK planned
See SECURITY, p. 10, col. 1
By James Buckman Kansan staff writer
About 50 KU students and Lawrence community members gathered last night at the Burge Union to decide what actions they would take if members of the Ku Klux Klan appear Monday night in a campus forum on free speech.
The meeting included both whites and blacks and people of different religious backgrounds. The group, whose members had met once before and had called themselves Students Committee, changed its name to Students and Community Against Oppression and Racism last night.
After extended discussion, the group voted with a show of hands to
See MEETING, p. 10, col. 1
Art history students experiment with bronze
Course teaches 'creation of art'
Bv Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Elden Tefft probed beyond emerald flames into an orange-glowing hole in the floor of his studio in the Art and Design Building. He checked a gauge on his yard-long thermometer, then pulled it from the furnace. After only seconds of exposure, the tip of the rod was red-hot.
of his safety helmet. "Back-ups, take your positions."
"it's time. You know what to do." Tefft,
professor of art, shouted the shield
Four students wearing green lace coats and leather safety leggings went into action. Two of them manned a clamp and extracted from the furnace a metal crucible containing molten bronze. It glowed as if blown from a volcano.
The students on the "pour team" hooked the crucible to a power winch and hoisted it a foot from the floor. They maneuvered the cooling container over five plaster molds, which had been secured in a pit filled with sand. The team centered the crucible over holes in the molds and steadily began to pour.
The bronze, beated to more than 2.000
degrees Fahrenheit, flowed into the molds.
After each mold had been filled, the remaining bronze was poured into steel troughs, to cool and be used again someday.
The bronze pour was only one of a series of hands-on art experiences provided in Methods and Materials, an art history course offered this semester. There are about 20 students in the class.
Stephen Addiss, professor of art and one of the class instructors, said students would visit various classes during the semester in addition to the annual dental brush painting to ceramics and textiles.
"It is possible to get a Ph.D. in Art History, yet still not know what goes into the creation of art," he said. "This class lets
PBH
Molten bronze is poured into the molds after heating in the furnace for about an hour. From left: Julie Naggs, Bettendorf, Iowa, senior; Kim Tefft, Lawrence graduate student; and Eldon Tefft, professor of art.
BASILI
Lindley Lewis, Manchester, Tenn., senior, and Eldon Teft chip away a plaster mold to reveal the bronze sculptures. The pieces will later be washed and polished.
students get technically and creatively involved in the process of art."
"It is a very complicated course to arrange," she said. "We must ask many artists to give up their time to do this."
Jeanne Stump, associate professor of art history and the other instructor of the course, said this was the first semester the course had been offered in about six years.
Stump said the class was a necessary static outlet for students to work with art for real-world applications, not museums.
"For some students," she said, "this bronze pour could be a once-in-a-lifetime experience."
Scott Almsberger, Overland Park senior, watched as the mold of his form study project was filled. Although he would not know the fate of his semester's work for another hour, he said he was not worried.
"I'm more nervous about rugby practice right now," Almsberger said.
But Julie Naggs, Bettendorf, Iowa, senior and a member of the pour team, said she loved it.
"I had seen a pour once, but I had never seen it," she said. "It was fun, but it was pery-wrashing."
Although hers was one of a few sculptures that did not cast, Naggs said the experience was thrilling and that she planned on doing it again.
After the pour, students celebrated their success by roasting hot dogs and popping popcorn over the cooling floor furnace. Teft raised a punch glass and toasted the poul team for their efforts. He said he played host to a pour party after every pour to wish students good luck on their projects and to appease the gods.
"Also, if you are known for good pour parties, people will turn out to help you be said."
Almsberger said he gained an insight to art from the class.
"After looking at a bronze sculpture that has been around forever, it's interesting to know how it was done." he said.
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
A student holds a snake cast in bronze. The process took about nine hours of work.
2
Friday, March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Partly sunny, chilly
HIGH: 41°
LOW: 30°
Today will be partly sunny but still a little cool as the high will reach 41.
There will be lingering clouds overnight with a low of 30.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte 42/24 Mostly cloudy
Omaha 43/23 Partly cloudy
Goodland 48/28 Mostly sunny
Hays 48/29 Mostly sunny
Salina 47/28 Mostly sunny
Topeka 41/30 Partly sunny
Kansas City 39/28 Partly sunny
Columbia 39/30 Cloudy
St Louis 40/31 Rain
Dodge City 53/30 Mostly sunny
Wichita 50/33 Mostly sunny
Chanute 48/35 Partly sunny
Springfield 48/30 Rain
Forecast by William Hibbert Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
SAT
Partly sunny
46/33
HIGH LOW
SUN
Mostly sunny
56/36
MON
Showers
58/40
TUE
Partly sunny
50/30
WED
Mostly sunny
55/30
SAT
Partly sunny
46/33
HIGH
LOW
SUN
Mostly sunny
56/36
MON
Showers
58/40
TUE
Partly sunny
50/30
WED
Mostly sunny
55/30
On Campus
- A geotechnical conference is scheduled all day today in the Kansas Union. Call 864-3968 for information.
- Music and dance scholarship auditions are scheduled all day today and tomorrow in Murphy Hall.
The School of Engineering and the Society of Women Engineers are sponsoring SWE-KU Engineering Day, beginning at 9:30 a.m. today in the Burge Union. The event is for women high school students and their teachers.
The department of personnel services is sponsoring a staff training and development new employee orientation at 10 a.m. today. Call 864-4946 to register.
The center for international programs is sponsoring a worldview brown bag lunch with John Janzen, professor of anthropology, at noon today in the Kansas Union's Alcove C. The topic is "Establishing Connections with Scholars and Healers in Africa."
The office of foreign student services is sponsoring a spring break celebration from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
tomorrow at Ecumenical Christian ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
■ The department of sociology is sponsoring a lecture titled "Critical Theory and Post-Modernism: Paradigms of Social Theory" at 3 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Pine Room. Douglas Kellner, University of Texas, is scheduled to speak.
■ An aerospace colloquium with Capt. Ken Verderame, U.S. Air Force, titled "Astronaut Training" is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in 3139 Wescoe Hall.
An Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Burge Union's Pioneer Room.
A women's studies psychology colloquium titled "Social Modulations of Reproductive Aging in the Animal Model" with Judith Ann Le Fevre is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in 547 Fraser.
Kansan Classified (913) 864-4358
The Chamber Choir's spring concert is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Murphy Hall's Swarthout Recital Hall.
Sigma Nu From Our Cast To Yours Good Luck!!!
And Congratulations on a Fantastic Show!
BΘΠ/AXΩ, Fij/iΔΓ
ΦKΨ/IBФ, ΔT/AΔΠ
Gamma Phi
Gummit.
--adjacent to the southern Hill Lawrence, Ks. 913-843-3228
SPECTACULAR SUNDAY BRUNCH
10 a.m-2 p.m.
Featuring assorted salads,
homemade breads,
fresh fruits,
hot & cold meats,
and delicious desserts.
Located in our ballroom.
Park Inn
INTERNATIONAL
842-7030
Park Inn
INTERNATIONAL
- Now through April 3rd Fish Sandwiches $1.09
LENTEN SPECIALS
- Salad Special With Coupon
TASTE THE ARBY'S Difference!
Hours:
Sun.-Thurs. 10:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 10:30 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
1533 West 23rd Street
Look For Our Grand Opening March 5
50¢ OFF ANY SALAD Arby's good through 3/11/88
Arby's
Arby's
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC at the Universidad Católica Madre y Maestra, Santiago
Semester Study in the
With four to five semesters of Spanish, you can:
Study the Spanish language, and the history, culture, and politics of the Caribbean.
and police 5 or more Caribbean.
Learn about Dominican society firsthand.
Live in a Dominican home.
Participate in a two-day orientation in Puerto Plata and excursions to areas of interest in the region.
Participate in a voluntary service project with Dominicans.
For information and an application, contact the Office of Study Abroad on campus, or the Academic Programs Department. Council on International Educational Exchange, 205 East 42nd St., New York, NY 10017 (212) 661-1414
The Spanish Language & Caribbean Area Studies Program at the Universidad Católica Madre y Máea is administered by the Council on International Development and the University of Kansas Center. Consortium of which the University of Kansas is a member.
The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Presents
The University Symphony Orchestra
Jorge Perez-Gomez, Conductor
Edward Laut. Cello Soloist,
3:30 p.m. Sunday March 6 1988
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Program
Cello Concerto in B Minor, Op. 104
Dvorák
Symphony in D Minor
Franck
Free and Open to the Public
This spring, make a break for it.
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3
Dealing with Donald Trump
Co-author of entrepreneur's autobiography tells how he did it
By Julie Adam
By jane adam
Donald Trump might know the art of the deal, but Tony Schwartz knows how to play his cards right.
Schwartz talk to about 106 people last night in the Kansas Union Railroad. Earlier, he spoke to seers.
Schwartz, who is co-author of the best-selling book about Trump, "The Art of the Deal," yesterday told students during a campus visit and lecture how he got one of the richest men in the world to ask him to write his autobiography.
Schwartz said that he first met Trump, a New York entrepreneur and magnate, in an Atlantic casino that Trump owned. Trump was being photographed sitting on a throne surrounded by piles of chips and coins, some of which were stacked in the shape of Trump Tower, a skyscraper that Trump owns in New York City.
Schwartz said he had wanted to interview Trump for an article for New York magazine.
He then decided to follow up that article by interviewing Trump about apartment house tenants who successfully fought Trump when he tried to buy the building they were living in.
Trump did not want to be interviewed, but Schwartz said that he would write the story whether Trump cooperated or not. Schwartz finally got the story and Trump's cooperation but not until Trump tried to intimidate him by having six lawyers present during his interview.
Schwartz said that he thought Trump admired that he had been so steadfastness and that he hadn't been snowed.
A year later, Schwartz interviewed Trump for
Playboy magazine. During the interview, Trump asked Schwartz if he wanted to be coauthor of his autobiography.
For Schwartz, a former New York Times reporter, writing the autobiography was a test of his journalistic ethics.
During a talk with a journalism class, Schwartz said that he had always thought of himself as an independent journalist, someone who writes whether or not the story's subjects approved.
With the Trump book, he had to decide whether he wanted to sacrifice the complete independence of a newspaper journalist or do a kind of writing that would be screened by his subject. Trump.
But he said he didn't consider his decision to write the book as selling out because the book was as honest an autobiography as had ever been done. He said he told Trump that issues they were writing about had to be represented hopeless.
Schwartz said that during the two years he spent with Trump researching the book, they had big and small battles about its content. Schwartz said he usually won out on the big
Schwartz said that the book portrayed Trump as both men saw him. He called Trump a colorful, controversial entrepreneur who played by his own rules. Schwartz wrote the book in the first person, as if Trump wrote it himself.
SALVATORE RICO
Schwartz said that he now makes his living doing other kinds of writing. He is working on a script for a new NBC series that is set in the U.S. attorney's office in New York City.
Tonv Schwartz
Schwartz, who is 35 years old, has written an episode of "L.A. Law." He said he wanted a job in which reporting was as important as writing.
Colony Woods tenants are paid for high bills
Kansan staff writer
By Kim Lightle
Students whose electricity bills were inflated at Colony Woods Apartments because outdoor lighting and pop machines were attached to their electricity circuits have been reimbursed.
The management of the 370-unit student apartment complex at 1301 W. 24th St, along with several residents who have had inflated bills, said yesterday that the overcharges had been resolved.
, couldn't figure out why the bills were so high," he said.
Alan Cardozo, Prairie Village sophomore, learned in January that he had been paying for a pop machine and 11 outside lights that were hooked up to his fuse box.
Cardozo said that he had been reimbursed $270 for the overcharge and that the machine and lights had been disconnected.
"I got what I deserved," he said.
"It just made me mad because I don't like to be screwed."
Jane Ellis, manager of Colony Woods, said that Kansas Power & Light had determined reimbursement by the number of hours the lights were run and wattage of the lights.
Ellis said that the residents had been notified that their reimbursement checks were in the office, but many residents had not picked them.
up
Chris Fletcher, Overland Park junior, said his wiring problems still had not been resolved, but he agreed with the Colony Woods management about the amount of reimbursement he was entitled to.
The fuse box in Fletcher's apartment is hooked up to an outside light; and the only way for him turn of the fire is to turn off his furnace, he said.
Fletcher said that he and his roommates had received a letter from the management stating that they would be paid for every month they were overcharged.
Although the overcharges have been resolved, some students at College Woods still are complaining that their high monthly electricity bills.
In an effort to trim those bills, KP&
most efficient electrically billing system.
Cynthia Benner, Weston, Mo. junior, said her monthly electric bill went from $180 to $63 after KPL changed her billing rate from the standard rate to the peak management rate.
Ed Collister, lawyer for Colony Woods owner Randall Davis, said he understood that residents were unhappy with the bills but said that wasn't the owner's fault.
"Nobody likes bills," he said. "I complain about paying them, too."
JAMES JOHNSON
Warm-up
Many leave country to study Rising number of KU students abroad reflects national trend
Debbie Ray and her husband, Lonnie Ray, members of the band Lonnie Ray and the Blues All Stars, sing a tune at the Winter Warm-up '88. The concert last night at Liberty Hall was a benefit for two local charities: Warm Hearts and Lawrence Interdenominational Nutrition Kitchen, or LINK. Three other bands performed at the concert: the Homestead Grays, the Art Band and Tommy Johnson.
Kansan staff writer
By Brenda Finnell
The lure of a unique culture draws some students. Others are intrigued by the foreign language.
Although their reasons are as varied as the number of places they study, increasing numbers of students, both at KU and around the country, are choosing to study abroad.
Although there has been only a modest increase this year in the number of KU students studying abroad, the number of such students has greatly increased during the last five years.
This academic year, 274 students are studying abroad, seven more than last year. Five years ago, 185 students studied in foreign countries
The increased interest in studying abroad at KU follows a national trend, according to figures released Monday by the Institute for International Education, the largest higher-education exchange agency in the United States.
The institute figures showed that during the 1985-86 school year, 48,483 students took courses for credit in foreign schools. These figures showed an increase from the 1982-83 school year, when 27,145 students studied abroad.
The study abroad program in Costa Rica is the most popular at KU, said Janis Perkins, assistant director of study abroad. France and Great Britain rank second and third in popularity.
Students who want to study abroad must have a 3.0 grade point average and meet foreign language requirements that the individual programs specify.
Most students choose to study abroad during their junior or senior year.
The decrease in the dollar's value in foreign countries has had some effect on study abroad participation but has primarily made this year's increase smaller than expected, Perkins said.
When the dollar decreases in value, the cost of living in a foreign country increases.
Pat Prohaska, president of KU's 70-member Study Abroad Club, said, "A few people might not be able to afford it, but there is still a big interest in it."
Prohaska said he tried to emphasize how a study abroad experience could enable students to view different ways of living around the world.
"It can change their attitudes and opinions of what happens in the
Human rights struggles have opened people's eyes to the world and made them more aware of world events, Prohaska said. That awareness makes many want to study in foreign countries.
An increase in terrorism several years ago made many students afraid to study abroad, Prohaska said. That trend is now changing.
He said that his club hoped to organize a program that would enable foreign students who study at KU to meet KU students who have studied in their countries. This arrangement would also give KU students a chance to practice their language skills.
The club now publishes two news letters, one for KU students studying abroad and one for people on campus interested in study abroad activities.
Prohaska also said that he hoped a magazine for study abroad students could be started. Students who return each fall from study abroad programs could submit accounts of their experiences abroad.
Marcia Reed, Solomon senior studied in Seville, Spain, last year (2016). He broadened his experience another culture and become fluent in Spanish.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
KU visit to Costa Rica marks exchange program's success
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
During six days in Costa Rica, a delegation of about 100 KU officials, former students and their families last week celebrated the 30th anniversary of the student and faculty exchange program with University of Costa Rica.
The group, led by Mary Elizabeth Gwin Debicki, director of study abroad, participated in the signing of a new exchange agreement between the University of Kansas and the University of Costa Rica.
The delegation left for Costa Rica Feb. 25 and returned Tuesday. Chancellor Gene A. Budig, who signed the new agreement, left Feb. 26 and returned with the rest of the
group.
"It was a very meaningful trip," Budig said. "It gave us the opportunity to thank those people for years of friendship and partnership."
Budig said that the Costa Ricans were receptive to the KU group and wanted to know more about KU.
"I now have a far greater appreciation for the difficulties they encounter on a daily basis," Budig said. "It is a very important part of the world, and we must pay more attention to Central America."
Budig said that he met with the rector of the University of Costa Rica and discussed the importance of international relations, the understanding of different cultures
and the role university exchange programs played.
The exchange program between KU and the University of Costa Rica has been called the oldest inter-university exchange in the Western hemisphere. More than 600 KU students, 350 Costa Rican students and 200 faculty members have been involved in the exchange program during the last 30 years.
"Many of the students did not know each other. The program provided a common thread that made them instant friends."
"The trip was spectacular," Debicki said. "It was beyond our wildest dreams. Everything went better than we ever expected."
Debicki said that the trip was a reaffirmation of the friendship between KU and Costa Rica.
"I have a revived sense of purpose since my trip to Costa Rica. I am excited that I am connected with a program that is loved by so many people." Debicki said.
The only problem with the trip was that Budig and the group were unable to meet with the Costa Rican president, Oscar Arlas Sanchez, Debcik said. But the group did meet with Costa Rican government officials. 5
group did meet with Costa Rican government officials.
Debicki and Budig said they hoped to return to Costa Rica.
Budig said, "This was my first trip to Costa Rica, but if will not be my last."
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4
Friday, March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
State finances Washburn, so Regents should control it
It's up there right next to the Lawrence downtown mall and a Kansas death penalty — on the list of issues that just won't die.
It is the enduring proposal to include Washburn University in the Kansas Regents system. And like the other issues, it seems inevitable that it will come to fruition. Someday, Washburn will become a Regents member. It is simply a question of relevance.
The issue was raised recently when a Kansas Legislative committee had hearings on a bill that would change the way money the state grants to Washburn yearly is routed to the school.
The state now grants Washburn $4.6 million, one quarter of the school's entire budget, according to Stanley Koplik, Regents executive director. Adding Washburn to the Regents system would cost the state $10 million more.
The bill in question doesn't address making Washburn a Regent school. Rather, it would simply reform the paper trail the state money leaves and would add some auditing oversight responsibilities for the Board of Regents.
responsibilities for the Board of Regents. However, the bill still leaves Washburn without any practical oversight from the Regents, which coordinates and plans the development and curriculum of the other schools. Washburn has state money but is not involved in the Regents plans for improving higher education in Kansas.
improving higher education in Kansas. If the state is going to help finance Washburn to the tune of millions when Regents institutions are suffering from underfinancing, it may as well include Washburn and make it part of the system. Then, Washburn can play a role in improving educational opportunities in Kansas and be part of the solution rather than just an extra line item.
Todd Cohen for the editorial board
Students got their first taste of the yearlong Kansas Union renovation last week when Union Square opened for a "snack" preview.
Union Square worth the wait
Union Square has been worth waiting for. And if the food services area is any indication of things to come, students ought to look forward to seeing the completion of the total product.
It may take time to work out some kinks in the new system, and students may have to suffer through long lines and frustrated employees. But that shouldn't matter.
frustrated employees. But their skills The simple problems will work themselves out, and the University of Kansas ultimately will have a student union on a par with those at other universities and colleges.
The University and its students have spent their time and their money well on Union Square, and the renovations yet to be revealed should be equally appealing.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board. Russell Gray for the editorial board.
Other Voices
KU reinterprets academic freedom
Journalism students at the University of Kansas learned a bitter lesson this past week about the fragility of freedom. For no matter how inspiring and high-sounding the statements of principle, no matter how determinedly resolute the guarantees they all mean very little, in the end, unless good people are willing to stand up and fight for what they know is just and proper.
As it happened, those who sought to defend academic freedom were in the minority — an alarmingly small minority Thus Harry Jones, the
eddion were — and they were easily overwhelmed. Thus Harry Jones, the journalism instructor who had invited two representatives of the Ku Klux Klan to be interviewed by students in his advanced reporting course, says now that he and his class will reschedule the meeting off campus sometime in March.
The Lawrence ministers whose protests led to the caucination clearly regard the development as a victory, and KU Chancellor Gene A. Budig says it was all a matter of respecting "the deepest sensitivities of the community." Academic freedom, he said, was not compromised.
Academic freedom was compromised. Quite blatantly. There were essential rights at stake here, rights far more important than the community's sensitivity. Budig's proper response was to make this clear to the protesters, and to make clear precisely what is negotiable and what is not.
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Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Ehlen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
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Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
images 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 of staff position.
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The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They
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can be mailed or brought to Letters, guest columns and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorialists are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Dally Kansan (USP5-650-840) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuarter Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60454, daily during the regular school year, including Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday, during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Commerce, Kan. 60444. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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Chicago Tribune.
This Week's Special:
Dole on a Roll
OF COURSE IT'S NOT VERY APPETIZING.—IT'S GOOD FOR YOU.
Maybe Klan issue will open eyes
Foreign students at KU have felt the pain of less-than-subtle racism
The Howard Beach racial killing.
The case of 16-year-old Tawara Brawley in New York.
York.
The occupation of a building by 100 minority
workshops.
students in Pakistan Klan issue at the University of
Kansas.
The theme weaving through these occurrences is a disturbingly familiar one: racism. It has reared its ugly head again. For a while, racism had been brewing and lurking in poisonous silence all over the country, and it finally exploded on our home turf with the KKK issue.
home turf with the AKR. I woke up.
As a foreign student, I have quietly watched the arguments volleyed to and fro like a tennis ball.
But with racism practically breathing down my neck. I feel compelled to take on a role beyond that of a mere spectator.
Before coming to the United States, I had the impression and belief that this was a wonderfully free country where people from different ethnic backgrounds blended into a single group called Americans. This image was a little shaken up by what I have seen and heard around the country and on campus. It has dawned on me that the picture I had painted was too pretty, too simple and too naive.
But so are the images that beam at me from the media: black and white athletes with arms around each other as they celebrate their victory for the United States; black and white citizens determination written on their faces as they carve out a future for their country. The picture-que scene stands in stark contrast to the horror stories of domestic racial discrimination.
王
Janet Neo Staff Columnist
orces of domestic racial disminuator.
And the tussle for the presidency has worsened
the matter. As the campaigns heat up, so do the fiery efforts to segregate voters and supporters into percentages of blacks and whites. What is the objective of this incredible statistical research, anyway?
Secretary of State George Shultz's visit to Israel is but one of the numerous peaceful talks and summits that always generates a great amount of interest. These and the lobbying efforts for world peace by the citizens are indeed commendable. But how can these hopes materialize if people cannot even make peace with their own brethren? The sincerity and credibility of these efforts are crippled by the traces of racism at home. The endeavors seem condescending at best.
Talk about cognitive dissonance.
Talk about cognitiv.
And sad to say, discrimination based on skin color can lead to shades of white and black alone. Foreign students at KU return to their countries not only with their respective degrees but also with haunting memories of how frightening feelings of racial prejudice can be.
ing feelings of fear. During a recent review session, an Asian instructor gave a summary on a subject she had painstakingly prepared. Before she had spoken more than three words, the crowd in the packed auditorium turned ugly, hurling jeers, laughter and boos at her accent. She continued her clearly understandable speech as if she had been through
the ritual hundreds of times.
I sat huddled in a corner, mute with fear and shock. I was horrified and appalled at how people could derive joy from trampling on someone's feelings.
feelings.
A friend has also talked about her being constantly deserted whenever her class breaks up into groups of two or three for science experiments. She is ignored and given the cold shoulder, especially at the beginning of a semester.
Specially at a time And these are not solitary incidents. Whenever a foreign student trips over English pronunciations or commits errors, chances are good that teachers and jeers are ready to accompany them. I find it difficult to erase from my mind the looks of bewilderment and extreme fear that are written on the victims' faces. Some U.S. citizens harbor no qualms whatsoever about inflicting emotional pain on people they consider inferior to themselves.
selves.
The stories go on and on, but it is useless to harp on these mortifying tales. Racists never like to be cured, even if they are aware of their illness. Students from foreign places who have experienced racism first-hand find solace in the fact that they will return to their own country some day. Meanwhile, they have to "stand it."
day. Meanwhile, they have no aesthetic ideas or great philosophies as to how racist problems can be solved. Racism is a disease that does not seem to have an antidote. My only hope is that with the KKK issue people will be more aware of and sensitive to others with different backgrounds and skin colors.
janet Neo is a jorh Baharo, Malaysia, junior majoring in broadcast journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
done for the school, Stephanie Quincy? It's good to find out now that this is the type of person who is running our Student Senate. Thank you, Stephanie, for my further disillusionment with the system. Good luck to the candidates running for the Student Senate this year. You can do no worse.
Call was insulting
Tedra Wilensky Overland Park senior
After listening to JayTalk 91 on KJHK, I would like to address Stephanie川's call that came toward the end of the show. The school hired two presidential candidates for the Student Senate. She stated during the show that she did not see a real choice between "debate geeks" and "people who plan parades." It is unbelievable that our student body vice president has labeled the debate squad, which happens to be the best in the country, as "geeks" and people who plan homecoming for the student body as people who only know about planning a parade. The show was beneficial to the students because it gave us the chance to find out what the issues were and the candidates' credentials. Stephanie Quincy calls in with stereotypes and judgments. The debate team brings honor to our University and are extremely intelligent people. Homecoming provides the University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence with tradition and celebration of our school. What have you
Klan forum a bad idea
Michael Foubert has invited members of the Ku Klux Klan to participate in a forum on free speech. There is no reason to believe that the Klansmen have expertise in that subject. There is reason to believe that their presence will profoundly offend citizens of our University community. Foubert's action has the potential for considerable harm with no potential for good.
I value dearly the constitutional protections that will permit Foubert's obnoxious act. I understand that the constitutional right of free speech protects the Klausmen's expression of opposition to that and other constitutional rights.
rights.
Foubert has the right to harm our community in this fashion. However, the rest of us have the right to vigorously resist being harmed
to vigorously Yell. Sense Stimuli.
For example, if the Black Student Union, or
another University organization, were to sponsor a forum appropriate for Black History Month at the same time as Foubert's forum, members of our community would have the opportunity to indicate support by attendance at theforum of their choice. Then, while large numbers of our citizens are attending an event consistent with the public trust that the University holds, Foubert can be edified by the reflections on free speech of the Exalted Cyclops.
Joe Sicilian Chairman, department of economics
Irrational views live on
It is interesting that on one page of the newspaper we can read a column about a group that advocates white supremacy and a letter by a person who berates the Kanman for promoting a liquid that causes "slaughter." Perhaps there is a sociological trend of promotion of irrational views. Indeed, Maynard Shelly's letter appears on the same page and confirms the trend. He assures us, however, that such a trend is trivial thought-fodder. The spirit of Victor Goodpasture lives on.
Mark Dugan
Olathe law student
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 4, 1988
5
Group still seeking change in ordinance
By Christine Martin
Kansas staff writer
A Lawrence group is working toward bringing a proposal to prohibit discrimination against homosexuals before the Lawrence City Commission again.
In January, the commission voted 3-2 to take no action on amending Lawrence's human rights ordinance to prohibit homosexual discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodation.
Liz Gowdy, spokesman for the Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, said yesterday that she hoped the ordinance could go before the commission by the end of the year.
Kansan staff writer
843-4266
“It’s important the City Commission knows that people are working toward this and that the local community in general is aware they made no decision,” Gowdy said. “And the message has been that it’s OK to harass people.”
Lawrence's current human rights ordinance, passed in 1983, prohibits discrimination based on race, sex, color, nationality, religion, age, ancestry or handicap.
Gowdy said that the Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence was
working with other groups, such as the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas and the Kansas chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, to organize rallies and raise funds to change the ordinance.
Gowdy said that her group was putting a reporting system together that would keep track of alleged cases of discrimination based on sexual orientation.
City Commissioner Bob Schumm, who voted against amending the ordinance, said that further study should be conducted on the issue before it was brought before the commissioners again.
Schumm said that the City Commission had done its job in discussing the amendment and that if residents wanted to propose the amendment again, Lawrence residents should vote on it.
City Commissioner Sandra Praeger, who also voted against amending the ordinance, said that the commission would be open to review the ordinance again if additional facts were presented.
"I don't like discrimination. I wish we didn't have to have a human rights ordinance at all. That would be the ideal," Praeger said.
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Friday, March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Bill would end 'wellness' charge State employees who smoke criticize health insurance surcharge
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas employees who smoke might no longer have to pay $120 a year for a "wellness program" if a bill presented to the House committee on pensions, investments and benefits is passed.
Sgt. J卵 Brothers, president of Classified Senate, said the senate strongly supported the bill.
"One of the things that concerns us is that restrictions might not be placed just on smokers, but on others too, such as those who are overweight," he said.
state employees who smoke must pay a $10-a-
month surcharge under a health insurance con-
trol.
tract with Blue Cross and Blue Shield. The surcharge went into effect Jan. 1.
surcharge goes into the bank. The bill is general and would keep the state from imposing surcharges on some state employees and not others.
But Administration Secretary Edward Flentje told the committee Tuesday that the bill would encourage state employees to smoke and that if the penalty were revoked, it could result in higher premiums for those who could least afford it.
If former disables,
"it could happen, but it is more likely that the oracle would happen," he said.
Brothers said that Flintje traditionally had not been supportive of state employees and had
described a previous request by classified employees for a 4 percent cost-of-living increase as ludicrous.
Unarles Dodson, executive director of the Kansas Association of Public Employees, told the committee Tuesday that the penalty had created emotional and psychological havoc.
Brothers said that the health care program for state employees was an important benefit for employees who traditionally were undercompensated for their jobs.
David Lewin, KU director of personnel services, said legislation that restricted smoking in public buildings had drawn more negative reaction than had the surcharge.
Lower turnout at KU blood drive could be a problem for Red Cross
Kansan staff writer
Blood donations during the three-day University of Kansas blood drive fell about 200 pints short of its goal, American Red Cross organizers said yesterday.
Dodie Faulconer, a Red Cross nurse from Wichita who organized the drive, said the volunteers were hoping that KU would provide 750 pints of blood during the drive, which began Tuesday.
Instead, only about 550 pints were donated.
Faulconer said KU's goal was based on the amount of blood donated in the past.
She said the Red Cross would have to be satisfied with the amount donated, although the low number of units could cause problems for the Red Cross.
"It's not that I'm disappointed," she said. "This blood was needed. It's just that we have three mobile units up here that aren't out someplace else collecting blood."
Faulconer said donations at Kansas State University, which usually donates about twice as much blood as KU, were down too. That blood drive also ties up the mobile blood collecting units.
That's why the drop in donations at both universities will affect the Red Cross, she said.
"It's counted on, and it will be noticed." she said.
Faulconer didn't know why donations were down but said she didn't think it was because students were afraid of contracting AIDS from the process.
Students had different theories for the drop in donations.
By James Buckman
Sarah Terrell, Wichita junior and a donor, said the drop in numbers didn't have as much to do with an AIDS scare as it did with people's fear of the process of donating blood.
"I think people are mainly scared of their own reaction," she said. "I think it is their own personal needle thing."
Sean Westhoff, St. Louis' junior, agreed that the fear of AIDS probably did not deter many students. He said he thought students didn't donate as much because they weren't aware of the drive.
Tom Gooden, St. Louis junior and a volunteer at the blood drive, said the drop in numbers could pally be attributed to the drive's taking place during mid-terms.
Reports say 31 have swallowed toothbrushes
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Many have brushed, but only a few have swallowed.
So say researchers who scrutinized medical literature and found exactly 31 cases in all recorded history of people somehow managing to swallow their toothbrushes.
Four of those incidents occurred in Durham, N.C., in recent years, Dr. Allan D. Kirk of Duke University Medical Center and colleagues reported in the March issue of the Archives of Surgery.
Two of the North Carolina swallowers apparently had drunk a large quantity of alcohol, and a third was a 60-year-old woman who had a seizure while brushing her teeth.
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"Best Play of 1978!" American Theatre Critics Association
GETTING OUT By Marsha Norman
F
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Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee A University Arts Festival event
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Box Office All seats reserved For reservations call 913-864-3982 Special discounts for students and senior citizens
Presented by the University of Kansas Theatre
GETTING OUT
By Marsha Norman
Best Play 1978
American Theatre Critics Association
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
ENTERTEL
8:00 p.m.
February 26-27 and
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Crafton-Preyer Theatre
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841-3775
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 4, 1988
7
NationWorld
CONTRA AID REJECTED: The House yesterday rejected a package of $30 million in "humanitarian" aid for Nicaragua's contras and for young victims of the war. The proposal had been pushed by Democrats as an alternative to military aid for the rebels. The final vote of 216-80 was a defeat for House Speaker Jim Wright and his Democratic lieutenants.
SHULTZ URges NEGOTIATIONS: In Jerusalem, Secretary of State George Shultz yesterday renewed a U.S. drive to open Arab-Israeli peace talks by urging Palestinian Arabs to form a joint delegation with Jordan for negotiations. Shultz would not say what approaches he had in mind for Israel's Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, whom he will meet separately today.
News Roundup
POLYGRAPH BILL PASSED: Lie detectors would be largely banned from use in job interviews and the private workplace under legislation approved by the Senate yesterday. On a 69-27 vote, the Senate approved a bill co-written by Sens. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, outlawing about 85 percent of the current use of polygraph examinations.
SPIELBERG, LUCAS TESTIFY: Filmakers Steven Spielberg and George Lucas asked a Senate panel yesterday in Washington to give artists final rights over their works, including the unapproved coloring of classic motion pictures.
OFFICIALS DISCUSS SWAGGART: In Springfield, Mo., national officials of the Assembles of God, unable to agree with
Louisiana church leaders on a punishment for evangelist Jimmy Swaggart, have passed the case to the Executive Presbytery of the church's General Council, which has called a special meeting of the 250-member General Presbytery for March 28. The church said that the decisions of General Presbytery were final.
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MIDTERM TIPS
Midterm examinations can be a time of high stress for students. The best way to avoid undue stress during midterms is to be well-prepared. The following "tips" can help you improve your test scores and keep stress to a minimum.
- To remember information, brief and frequent review sessions every few days work better than longer "marathon" reviews before exams. Repetition and review are central to memory.
- Devote a part of each daily study period throughout the semester to review of old material.
- Test yourself before you go to the test! Ask yourself questions and answer them out loud in order to prove to yourself that you know the material.
- "Cramming" fast in, fast out. Use it to review a few facts only, and never crum new material you've not read before.
- Take a wristwatch to your tests, and keep track of the time. Note the point distribution on your exam and plan your time accordingly.
Between 5-7 p.m.
- On any exam, always read the directions first. Underline key words.
- On Math exams, leave time for quick "common sense" proofreading.
Do your answers make sense?
- Answer the questions you know first, and do them quickly. Then go on to the ones about which you are less certain.
For more information contact the:
Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064
University Counseling Center, 116 Bailey Hall, 864-3931
Sponsored by Student Affairs.
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Friday, March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Getting a view from 'inside' Cast members of KU play go behind bars to research roles
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Before they went in front of an audience, they went behind bars.
To research their roles, some cast members of the University Theatre production "Getting Out" toured prisons, interviewed prison guards and even spent time with inmates in locked cells.
The free play, which runs at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in Murphy Hall's Craft-Preyron Theatre, recounts the first day of freedom for Arlene, a young woman who has spent the last eight years in prison for murder.
Scenes of Arlene's past and present life are depicted simultaneously on the stage, with two actresses playing Arlene at different ages.
Jill Towsley, a Topeka senior who plays the young Arlene, she talked to inmates for about an hour in the Shawnee County Jail in Topeka.
"I didn't expect a chance to ask them questions. I didn't even prepare," she said. "But the guard was so helpful. She helped me get them talking."
She said she was more nervous before she went into prison than while she was locked in with the prisoners. She didn't fear physical harm; she feared the impression she would make.
"What they have been through is highly personal, and I didn't want to trivialize their experiences," she said. "I didn't want them to think I was just this stupid girl in a dumb play."
Eric Anderson, Overland Park junior, said he went to the Johnson and Douglas County jails and interviewed guards to prepare for his role.
"A lot of people don't realize that a prison guard does not get to go home for lunch," he said. "A guard is locked in jail 40 hours a week."
Louisa Bradshaw, Topeka junior, visited a jail in Louisville, Ky., where the play is set. She said she learned from the visit something about Arlene, her character, and about herself.
character, and about how to do it.
"I saw the fine line between living outside and doing something that could put you in prison and how capable everyone is of crossing that line," she said.
The cast will perform in front of what could be its toughest critics today when 15 inmates of the Kansas Correctional Institution at Lansing attend the show.
Charla Jenkins, director of public relations for University Theatre, said the inmates would meet with the cast after the show.
"We felt we had a responsibility as a state university to increase the awareness of issues in this show," she said.
John Callison, deputy director of the correctional institution, said the 15 inmates were all honor inmates held in minimum security. Two or three staff members will be sent to watch the inmates, he said.
will be sent to watch
"This is sort of like taking a group of high school students on a field trip," he said. "It's a very relaxed sort of thing."
Callison said that trips such as this one helped prepare inmates to re-enter society and that he appreciated the chance for the inmates to see "Getting Out."
"It's nice that someone took an interest in us," he said. Towsley said she had no idea how inmates would react to the play.
"I hope they do not see the characters as stereotypical," she said, "but the stereotypes exist for a reason.
"I hope the play speaks for the inadequacies in the prison system and points out the need for more psychological support. Some prisoners become so dependent they can forget how to choose what to wear in the morning."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 4, 1988
9
Interns link China to Kansas
Students seek economic ties by studying country's businesses
By Dayana Yochim Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
A new internship program at the University of Kansas might help establish opportunities for more trade between Kansas and Chinese businesses.
Clyde Stoltenberg, associate professor of business and campus coordinator of the program, said that since August, two student interns have been making contacts and establishing a presence for Kansas businesses in the Henan Province in the People's Republic of China.
The students, David McClure, a graduate student in Chinese, and Tim Cook, who earned a bachelor's degree in East Asian history from KU last summer, will be in Henan taking classes at Zhengzhou University and visiting Chinese businesses until the end of May.
The students are researching Chinese businesses to determine how they operate and how Kansas companies could establish economic ties
with them.
As part of the student exchange, two Chinese students are studying at KU but are not involved in commercial activities, Stoltenberg said.
Can we re-recruit us? "I hope over time, we can get them to send people from their foreign trade offices to link up with Kansas businesses," Stoltenberg said. "Now, our primary goal is to establish a permanent presence in the province."
Stolttenberg said that the KU interns reported regularly to the Department of Commerce in Topeka, which then relayed the messages to Kansas businesses.
"They are helping to advance the interests of particular companies by making arrangements for them and providing information about ethnic background that may be useful." Stoltenberg said.
He said that he hoped Kansas and the province could exchange delegations of educators, businesses and governments in the future.
John Tollefson, dean of business, said that this was the first time the program had been offered and that it was unique in terms of the partnership with Henan.
"We view this program as a model and hope to extend our ties to other countries." Tolleison said.
Tollefson said that the program originated in the Legislative Educational Planning Committee and was open to any Regents school in Kansas.
BUSINESS:
Because of the success of the program, Gov. Mike Hayden's budget includes funding for next year's program, said State Rep. Denise Apre, R-Iola.
The internship program is sponsored by the committee, the Department of Commerce and the School of Business.
The program has been allotted $25,000 to cover expenses for two student interns living in Henan, Apt said.
TACHA NAMED TO POST: Deanell Tacha, a former KU vice chancellor for academic affairs, has been selected president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association's board of directors.
Tacha, who is a judge in the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, will become president of the board on July 1.
Briefs
BOMB SCARE: Employees of K-Mart, 3106 Iowa, were evacuated about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday after a bomb threat was received on the telephone, Lawrence police reported.
The caller said that a bomb was in the building and that it was about to explode. After the time period specified by the caller had expired, customers and employees were allowed to return to the building.
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Fridav. March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Continued from p.1
Security
he said the forum would be open to everybody.
Security for the event will be provided by KU police and paid for by Foubert's group at $450 an hour.
Foubert said he was attempting to raise the necessary funds through donations. He said he would ask Student Senate for some additional funds but would not specify whom he was soliciting. He said he was not receiving financial support from the Klan.
Jim Denney, director of KU police, said that he was reviewing the situation and discussing security plans for the forum.
"Nobody invited them. We will treat the Skinheads as members of the crowd," Foubert said. "If they illegally interfere, then they will be considered as lawbreakers. They are potentially dangerous. But I have had assurances from the Klan that no violence would occur."
Foubert said that he was still concerned about the Klan's statement that they would bring 20-25 Klansmen and Skinheads as observers.
J. Allen Moran, exalted cyclops of the Missouri Knights, a Klan affiliate, said that the Skinheads and other Klansmen would be in street clothes, unarmed and would only observe.
However, Foubert said that the Skinheads might try to provoke the crowd into making the first move.
"They like to look like they're the victim. We will try and control that," Foubert said.
Foubert said that the confirmed participants in the forum were still Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism, Moran and Thom Robb of Harrison, Ark., who calls himself the national pastor of the Klan. He said that Russ Ptacek, the KJHK host who invited the Klan for JayTalk 9 two weeks ago, would be on the questioning panel.
roubert said that he was asking three other students to participate in the forum but would not reveal any names. He would not say whether anyone in the black community had agreed to participate.
"Wednesday, the chances were slim this would be pulled off," Foubert said. "Now, we're 75 percent closer to our goal. What will determine the forum on as planned is what happens today."
Foubert said that the decision on whether the forum would be canceled would be released at 3 p.m. today.
demonstrate peacefully on Monday night if the Klansmen came to KU. If the forum is canceled, the group decided that they will organize a peaceful protest to show unity against all forms of racism and oppression. That protest would take place at a later date.
Continued from p. 1
Some at the meeting said they thought that many people wrongly believed that protesters, by opposing the Klansmen's participation in the forum, were arguing against freedom of speech.
The Rev. Leo Barbee, pastor of Victory Bible Church, suggested that the group do nothing Monday night during the forum. He was concerned that a demonstration could call attention to the Klan and possibly fuel a dispute, which he said some people wanted only to exploit the controversy.
Group members said they wanted people to understand that they did not dispute the Klansmen's right to appear at KU. They said their protest was against what the Klan stood for.
The meeting, which lasted about two hours, featured concerns about false perceptions born out of the tensions surrounding the Klan visit.
"We are against the Klan," said Dana Crow, Topeka senior and president of Hillel, a campus Jewish organization. "We don't believe in their ideology, but people have a
Meeting
Pearl Rovaris, Topea senior, said that the Klansman's visit did not involve a free speech issue and that the fear she felt in the face of the Klan's inherent hatred toward her made such issues unimportant.
right to hear them."
She said that people who considered free speech the only issue did not understand the fear she felt knowing that she and other blacks, simply because of the color of their skin, could become victims of physical violence by the Klan.
Crow said that another misconception fostered by the media was that the tension concerned only blacks.
the tension contained in sagt.
"It is important we are not silent," she said. "We have genuine fear." Kanyan report tool Zeff contributed.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 4, 1988
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
11
Arts & Entertainment
Symphony leader Perez-Gomez has style of conductor
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
His hand clutches a baton to translate scores to musicians as his mind grasps plans that will lead to more successes for the University Symphony Orchestra.
The future of the orchestra is now in the hands of this man. Jorge Pergamino
Jorge Perez-Gomez, director of the University Symphony Orchestra, conducts in one of his classes.
Perez-Gomez started his position as director of the orchestra this summer after the former director, Zuohuang Chen, returned to his native China after two years of conducting orchestra at KU.
a
What Chen brought to the KU orchestra in his two years here, Perez-Gomez sees as a challenge to continue and improve with new ideas of his own.
Perez-Gomez will show his new ideas when he conducts his first spring concert at KU with the University Symphony Orchestra at 3:30 p.m. Sunday at Crafton-Prever Theatre in Murphy Hall.
"I hope I can continue on those lines," he said. "It's really much easier to continue to develop on that ground than to have to start from scratch or from the beginning."
Perez-Gomez said that Chen left a very positive impression of what the orchestra
But Perez-Gomez has more on his mind than skeletons of a former administration. His goals for a more extensive collaboration among the theatre, dance and orchestra keep him making plans and becoming more than just an orchestra conductor.
"We all have our different styles, but I think that if the purpose is to love the music and enrich the student's life, everything will be fine," he said with gestures that resembled the motions he made conducting.
Perez-Gomez is hardly unqualified to talk about love and dedication to music.
His love for music started when he was 9 years old in Mexico City, when he was learning to play the piano. After high school, he went to the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and got his bachelor's degree in orchestra conducting.
His realization that he wanted to conduct orchestra instead of perform in it
And he learned that the entire orchestra was the conductor's instrument.
was sealed after he went to Italy to study with the late Franco Ferrera. There, he developed the passion for conducting and the understanding of its importance.
"Speaking of the possibilities of the orchestra as an instrument, you have so much to work with color-wise, and the different nuances that you can create out of the orchestra is such that I don't think any instrument can compare with it. So you as a conductor have so many possibilities in front of you," he said.
After Perez-Gomez received his master's degree in conducting at Northwestern University and his doctorate at Eastman School of Music, he was offered the job of being resident conductor for the Tula Philharmonic.
But he really wanted to teach and conduct at the same time. And in 1897, Perez-Gomez, came to KU and found his dream becoming a reality.
With four degrees, three in conducting and one in industrial engineering, Perez-Gomez arrived with every intention of making KU and Lawrence his home.
But all of his years studying in the
Spanish accent have not affected his clear
Spanish accent.
"The ideal situation for me was always to find a possibility to perform as a conductor and also to teach because I love to teach," he said.
"One of the great satisfactions I get is to see people grow and have their music."
And a great satisfaction for the orchestra was to have Perez-Gomez as the person to replace Zuohuang Chen, assistant professor of music and tuba.
"He is as good of a leader in orchestra and conductor as we could have hoped for." he said.
Perez-Gomez is setting goals for the orchestra program and the students, too. He wants students and people attending the orchestra to sing as music as an experience, not just a melody.
"My main objective is to really have them be in love with the music, though. They sometimes lose perspective of what
the music is and put emphasis an abstraction," he said.
"We all relate to a landscape or to a love, tragedy, or to being in love with someone or to something that has happened in our lives. But we only relate to music as quarter notes or half notes or signs on a page. That in itself doesn't mean anything. That is like words in a language without a context."
Perez-Gomez also feels an obligation to get the orchestra to have more community recognition and to get high school students from around the area to be involved in the KU orchestra.
But Perez-Gomez thinks that the experience of attending a concert is not actively shared by enough people. People
find watching television or turning on the radio easier than listening and making the effort to understand a symphony piece, he said.
"Perhaps what people don't know is that being in the concert is a unique experience because you don't only listen to music through your ears but also through your eyes," he said.
"I'm not saying that you go to a concert to work, but there is something alive in you that gets touchee when you are in a live performance that you just don't have
Perez-Gomez said that nothing could be a substitute for a live performance. Those who, watch him on Sunday will find out what he means.
Movie features vintage glimpse of Down Under
By Kevin Dilmore Konson staff writer
Adnsdlt Stdll Writer
Although the title might lead people to think it is a comedy, "Kangaroo," now playing at Liberty Hall, is a carefully directed drama fueled by strong performances.
British actor Colin Friels stars as Richard Somers, a well known novelist and essayist, who is suspected by police of being a German spy during World War I. Tired of constant abuse and accusations, he and his wife, played by Judy Davis, leave England after the war and move to Svdnev, Australia.
There, Somers shows an interest in Australian politics. Before he realizes it, he becomes entangled with an underground Fascist army led by a general known only as "Kangaroo," placed by Hugh Kebs-Byrne.
Film Review
Friels is compelling as Somers, a character based on writer D. H. Lawrence. He begins in the film as a self-centered bore, appearing as the stereotypical conceited writer. But Friels slowly peels away the skins of his character as he becomes more involved with Kangaroo. He draws the audience into the film by slowly becoming sympathetic and concerned for what he calls a country without a history.
Kangaroo tries to enlist Somers in his plot to overthrow the Australian government because he wants a writer to justify rebellion to the people. But Somers is unsure of both Kangaroo's intentions and his own feelings.
The film's director, Tim Burstall, deftly balances the performances in "Kangaroo." In one section of the film, Somers becomes somewhat withdrawn while deciding whether to work with Kangaroo. As his screen presence diminishes, Bursall slowly emphasizes Harriet, Somer's wife, Judy Davis lends a quiet strength to scenes that otherwise would drag. Davis won the Australian Academy Award for her role.
Instead of having Hugh Byrne play Kangaroo as a pompous dictator-to-be, Burstall mutes the actor a bit. Keys-Byrne avoids the expected swaggering image to play Kangaroo as a charming and almost lovable hero. When soldiers swear oaths to die for Kangaroo's cause, they are credible.
Though Burstall concentrates on the acting, the smaller details of the film are not ignored. For instance, he takes great care to light every interior, using a low-key style that casts shadows as if from kerosene lamps. He maneuvers Friels through patterns of light and darkness that reflect his character's indecision.
"Kangaroo" is a well-crafted film that might not incite an audience to cheer but does offer more depth and entertainment than the title may imply.
"Kangaroo" is rated R for violence and sexual situations.
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12
Friday, March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Council considers shift in visitor parking rules
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Faculty members expressed concern yesterday over proposed parking changes that might make it more difficult for special guests to park on campus.
Ray Moore, chairman of the parking board, said at the University Council meeting in Blake Hall that one proposed change was in visitor parking.
Visitors still would be issued three-hour courtesy permits, but those wishing to park on the campus longer would have to pay at metered stalls or buy a pass that would cost a maximum of $2 a day. The proposed changes would also eliminate allowing visitors to have two violations a year forgiven.
David Downing, professor of aerospace engineering, was concerned about parking privileges for employers who come to interview students for jobs. By the time the employers pick up a parking permit at an
academic office, their cars often already have been ticketed, he said.
Downing said that the parking board should have a better set of rules for privileged parking so it would not have to make so many exceptions on an individual basis.
Evelyn Swartz, chairman of SenEx said, "We don't want to see our slots given to anybody, but we also don't want to be rude to people, especially if they employ our students."
Ron Francisco, associate professor of political science, said that the Senate Executive Committee suggested that the board should create permits that allowed people to drive on restricted areas of campus to drop people off.
Moore said that the board would set guidelines for exceptions to the proposed changes. But he said he was concerned about where to draw the line.
The more exceptions that are made, the less parking will be available for permit holders.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 4, 1988
Sports
13
Seniors to play final home game
KANSAS
25
KANSAS
24
KANSAS
20
KANSAS
27
Seniors (from left) Danny Manning, Chris Piper, Archie Marshall and Sean Alvarado enjoy a preseason photo session. Alvarado was redshirted this season.
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
For some time, the fans in Allen Field House have had the privilege of watching Danny Manning, Archie Marshall and Chris Piper play.
The three have become a dynasty of sorts. They were instrumental in building a 55-game home court winning streak. They have appeared in three straight NCAA tournaments, and two years ago, they helped send Kansas to the Final Four.
Tomorrow night, the dynasty will come to an end.
The three senior forwards will appear in their last game in the field house tomorrow night against Oklahoma State.
Manning and Piper will play, but Marshall, who injured his left knee against St. John's in December, will watch from the bench.
Marshall injured his other knee in 1986 when Kansas played Duke in the Final Four. He was red-signed season to rehabilitate the knee.
"When we lost Archie, that was a terrible blow," Piper said. "But for Archie's sake, it hurt so much because we saw him struggle so hard to come back."
The game likely will be emotional. A ceremony has been planned to honor the three seniors before the game.
"I thought about it." Manning said. "I know it will be an emotional game. Hopefully, it won't get too carried away."
Junior forward Milt Newton said he thought otherwise.
"I told Danny and Piper I know they're going to cry," he said. "It will be a really emotional game. We'll just go out and play hard."
"I hope Danny goes out and scores 100 points and Piper gets a career high. We want to see them go out with a real big bang."
It will be Kansas coach Larry Brown's second recruiting class to graduate. He said he remembered watching his first recruiting class, including Cedric Hunter and Mark Turgeon, play their last game.
Emotions will be running just as high this time around.
Brown said he was excited in a way about Manplaying his last game.
"Each year, it gets tougher for me and our staff," Brown said. "I have more and more respect for Piper every day. It'll be tough to see him go. And Archie, I don't know how I'll be able to handle that. As many problems as we've had, I don't think the team recovered from that very well.
While the Jayhawks reminisce, they also must deal with Oklahoma State tomorrow night.
"It's like a step forward for him," Brown said. "It's one more phase in his career. I hope people understand what a great opportunity they've to watch him play."
If Kansas wins, it will have 20 victories, the magic number many use to evaluate a team's chances for reaching the NCAA tournament.
The Jayhawks also might meet Oklahoma State in the first round of the Big Eight tournament. Kansas, with a 19-10 overall record and a 8-5 conference record, has clinched the third seed in the tournament. The Jayhawks will play the second seed, which could be the Cowboys.
Oklahoma is coming off a 97-88 loss to Iowa in Stillwater. The Cowboys are 14-14 overall and 4-9 in the conference.
tice yesterday to rest after Wednesday's 85-64 victory over Colorado.
The Jayhawks had a short prac-
Manning was apologetic at yesterday's press conference for his involvement in the second-half fight that started between Newton and Colorado forward Brian Robinson.
"I wasn't really thinking about the game at the time when I should have been," he said. "It was a bad example on my behalf, and hopefully it won't happen again."
Forward Mike Musucci, who did not travel with the team to Colorado, practiced yesterday with the team. Brown said the 6-10 freshman had stayed in Lawrence to talk to his professors about missing classes and skipping study hall.
"The bottom line is they have to take care of all their responsibilities," Brown said.
Game 30
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
DATE: 19-10 (8-5)
COACH: Leonard Hamilton
Record: 14-14 (4-9)
Oklahoma State Cowboys
PROBABLE STARTERS
F-24 Chris Piper 6'8" 4.6
F-21 Mitten Newton 6'4" 10.3
C-25 Danny Manning 6'10" 24.8
G-14 Kevin Pritchard 6'3" 11.2
G-33 Jeff Gueldner 6'5" 4.0
F-21 Richard Dumas 67" 17 PPG
F-21 William Woods 65" 5.1
C-42 Sylvester Kincheon 61" 9.0
G-32 John Starks 63" 15.0
G-11 Derick Davis 510" 5.1
COVERAGE: Game time 8:05 tomorrow night, March 5, at Allen Field House. The game will be televised on WIBW-TV channel 13 and KSHB-TV channel 41. The game will be broadcast on the Jayhawk Sports Network, KLZR 106 FM.
By Keith Stroker
KANSAN Graphic
Kansas will defend Big 8 tourney title
Kansan sports writer
At noon tomorrow, the Kansas women's basketball team will begin a quest to defend its Big Eight Conference tournament championship.
The Jayhawks, 18-9 overall and 8-6 in the Big Eight, will play the Oklahoma Sooners, 14-12 and 7-7, in the opening round at the Bicentennial Center in Salina.
Kansas played the Sooners twice this year, winning both games 71-68. Kansas coach Marian Washington said that Oklahoma was a good team and that Kansas would have to be ready to play.
"The key to any good team is to have a strong point guard who can drive the lane and create offensive opportunities," Washington said. ("Margaret McKeon) is that person for Oklahoma. If she has a good game, it could be tough for us to win."
McKeon, a 5-foot-7 sophomore, is averaging 10.1 points a game.
ady
Layhawks
Washington said Kansas would have to hit its free throws and rebound effectively in order to win.
"Against a team that likes to fast break, such as Oklahoma, a team has to be able to rebound in order to control the running game," Washington said. "We will put pressure on them a lot, too, to try to create some turnovers."
Braddy said the record did not mean much to her now and probably would not mean anything until the season was over. She said she was concentrating on helping the team win.
Lisa Braddy is having a good year at point guard for Kansas. A 5-foot-7 sophomore from Kansas City, Kan., Braddy said she knew how important it was to win a first-round game.
"If you can win the first-round game, it's like getting over a hump." Braddy said. "Oklahoma doesn't have anything to lose, since we beat them twice this season. It won't be easy, but if we play our game, we should win."
Brady was selected to the All-Big Eight second team this week. She had six assists against Missouri on Saturday, giving her 174 for the season, which set a new school record. Lynette Woodard had the old record of 170, which she set during the 1980-81 season.
Sandy Shaw, a 6-foot senior forward for the Jayhawks, said the team was relaxed and confident going into the tournament.
"We have had a couple of hard practices this week, and the team is looking good," Shaw said. "We have won three games in a row, and we feel we can beat anyone at this point. We have to take it one game at a time, and all we care about right now is Oklahoma."
the tournament is intense. Shaw said, and every team must be taken
Kansas senior forward Sandy Shaw was named honorablement All-Big Eight Conference earlier this week.
PROBABLE STARTERS
**Kansas Jayhawks 18-9 (8-6)**
Coach: Marian Washington PPG
F-23 Sandy Shaw 60* 13.1
F-22 Lisa Baker 511* 6.9
C-55 Deborah Richardson 64* 10.5
G-12 Chery Jackson 51* 4.8
G-11 Braiden Adalay 57* 19.3
**Oklahoma Leafs 14-12 (7-7)**
Coach: Valentine Goodwin-Colbert PPG
F-33 Jo Mosley 61* 15.2
F-35 Tina Ogden 511* 4.3
F-32 Erika Notzke 63* 8.2
G-10 Pam Zachary 56* 5.9
G-14 Margaret McKeon 58* 10.1
KANSAN Graphic
"The Big Eight tournament is an exciting time," she said. "All eight teams stay in the same hotel in Salina, which makes it very intense. It is a lot of fun after you play a game, and you see the other team packing its bags. You know you get to stay because you won the game."
The Jayhawk-Sooner matchup will be scheduled tomorrow for JKJH-KF
behind him.
Big Eight Conference Women's Basketball Tournament
March 5-7, 1988
Bicentennial Center, Salina, Kansas
8 Kansas State
*2:00 pm Saturday
1 Nebraska
2:00 pm, Sunday
5 Oklahoma
Noon Saturday
4 Kansas
7:00 pm, Monday
6 Oklahoma State
*8:00 pm Saturday
3 Colorado
*4:00 pm, Sunday
Big Eight Champion
NCAA Tournament
Representative
State
Saturday
2 Missouri
- Or 30 minutes following conclusion of the first game, whichever allows for maximum
KANSAN Graphic
KU track athletes hope to qualify for NCAA indoor championships
Kansas pole vaulter Chris Bohanan has one more chance to qualify for the NCAA Indoor Track Championship, March 10-12 in Oklahoma City. Bohanan, a 5-foot-10, 16-pound junior, will compete in the pole vault tomorrow in Boulder, Colo. He would have to clear at least 17-3 to qualify. Wednesday night, Bohanan cleared 17-0 at the Arkansas Invitational. He said he felt confident for tomorrow's meet.
By a Kansan reporter
"I've been in kind of a rut this season, and it is scary," Bohanan said. "My heights have not been as good this year as in the past, but I am vaulting better than it looks. I just need to work on my technique a little more, but other than that, I am confident I will make the height."
"I need to take about seven seconds off of my time in order to qualify." Watche said. "In order to do that, I will need some tough competition to make me run faster. This is a last-chance qualifiers meet, and I think that is incentive enough to push me over the top."
Four other team members will travel to Indianapolis for the Capital Invitational meet at the University of Indiana. Each will also attempt to qualify.
Stadium dedicated in honor of Howser
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -The Kansas City Royals and Florida State University officially dedicated Dick Howser Stadium yesterday in honor of the late major-league player and manager.
Watchee, 6-2 and 158 pounds, has a best time in the 3,000 meters of 8:09. He will need an 8:02 to qualify.
Jon Joslin, Stacey Smiedala and
Steve Heffernan will each run in the half mile. Craig Watcke will try to qualify in the 3,000 meters.
The Associated Press
A new $175,000 scoreboard carrying Howser's name and a bronze bust of the former Royals and New York
Yankees skipper were commemorated during a half-hour dedication ceremony.
"Today, for all of us who knew and loved Dick, who cared for him, our dream has come true . . . Dick Howser Stadium," said Howser's widow, Nancy.
In addition, Florida State President Bernard Sliger announced plans to fully endow a $650,000 project to
finance the school's 13 baseball scholarships, which will be awarded in the future as Dick Howser Championship Scholarships.
"We're taking this unusual step to honor one of the finest men ever to wear our colors," said Sliger. "Long after the names of the winners fade, the champions live on with us. Dick Howser was, and is, one of the true champions."
Chievous' 35 points ices Sooners' streak
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Missouri senior forward Derrick Chievous had 35 points and 18 rebounds and freshman forward Doug Smith scored 19 points in the second half last night as the Tigers stopped No. 4 Oklahoma 93-90 in overtime.
The Associated Press
The loss ended Oklahoma's 12-6 game winning streak.
The Sooners, 26-3 overall and 11-2 in the Big Eight Conference, will need a victory over Nebraska at home tomorrow to wrap up the outright regular season conference title. Missouri improved its record to 7-6 in conference play and 18-8 overall.
Oklahoma overcame a 14-point halftime deficit and tied the score at 84-84 in regulation. Missouri, which improved its record to 7-6 and 18-8, watched Oklahoma senior guard Ricky Grace shoot a long three-pointer at the buzzer that fell short.
broke an 88-88 overtime tie
Gumm, a 6-10 native of Detroit, scored only two points in the first half but took charge midway through the second半. His thunderous dunk
Chievous, Missouri's all-time leading scorer, made two free throws with 27 seconds left to make the score **92-RR**
Oklahoma junior guard Mookie Blaylock, fouled by Chieveus, scored two free throws to bring the Sooners closer at 92-90, then Missouri sophomore guard Lee Coward hit a free throw for what turned out to be the winning margin.
Both Grace and Missouri senior forward Greg Church missed the first shots of one-and-one free throw situations in the final 10 seconds.
Oklahoma junior forward Stacey King, who fouled out in overtime, led the Sooners with 23 points, and Blaylock had 19. Redshirt freshman guard Terrence Mullins had a career-high 15 points for the Sooners.
With 7 seconds remaining, Missouri junior guard Mike Sandbothe missed the front end of a one-and-one and Oklahoma rebounded. Grace then ran the ball up court and launched a desperation heave 10 feet past midcourt.
STUDENT-ATHLETE HONORS: The Jayhawk Scholars Reception, honoring 102 Kansas student-athletes who have maintained at least a 3.0 grade point average this year, will be at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
Sports Briefs
At halftime of the Kansas men's basketball game against Oklahoma State, the athletes will again be honored, and nine of them who had a 4.0 GPA will be announced.
Also at halftime will be a super shootout, involving seven people who won their individual shootout contests at halftime of the men's games during the season; the tennis team will receive its Big Eight Conference 1987 championship rings; and Kansas graduate Sheila Connolly, a 1987 softball first team All-American and first team academic All-American, will be honored.
---
SNOW POSTPONES BASEBALL:
Yesterday's Kansas baseball game against Central Missouri Stadium at Hogwalt-Maupin Stadium was postponed until 3 p.m. Monday because of snow.
The Jayhawks play Missouri Southern here in a doubleheader at 1 p.m. Sunday.
14
Friday, March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Swimmers close in on NU
By Tom Stinson Kansan sports writer
The Kansas men's and women's swimming teams made a big leap last night in ending Nebraska's domination of the Big Eight Conference Swimming Championships during the first day of competition at Devaney Center in Lincoln.
The Jayhawk wk women three events, leading the Cornhuskers by 27 points. The Kansas men trailed Nebraska by only four points after what coach Gary Kempf called both teams' weakest day of competition.
"We came to play today," Kempf said, "The first day is our weakest day, but I'm pleased. With four sessions left, we have a long way to go, but it's there for us. It's reachable."
The Nebraska men have held the Big Eight Championship since 1980, and the Nebraska women have held the title since 1985.
Junior Barbara Ann Smith and freshman Klea Seavall led the Kansas women, with each winning an individual event and swimming legs on the Jayhawks' winning 800-yard freestyle relay team.
Also on the relay team were freshman Jennifer Carani and junior Sue Spry.
Swin won the 500-yard freestyle as the Jayhawks dominated the event, placing four women in the top five of the conference. Carani, sophomore Marcia Otis and freshman Sara Bergman finished second, fourth and fifth, respectively.
Seavall won the 200-yard individual medley by touching out junior teammate Erin Easton. Easton was trying for her third-straight league victory
in the event. Freshman Gina Brown finished fourth in the race.
mfinished football
Spry and sophomore Susan Bloomfield placed second and third in the 50-yard freestyle, respectively, and the Jayhawks' 200-yard medley relay team of junior Jenny Fisher, Easton, Brown and Bloomfield finished second.
In the women's one-meter diving, senior Lori Spurney and freshman Kelley Kaulzier finished fifth and sixth, respectively.
The Kansas men were led by their 400-yard medley relay team of junior Glenn Trammel, sophomore Pat McCool, junior Dan Mendenhall and sophomore Andrew Billings. The relay qualified for the NCAA Championships in April and set a school record with a time of 3:19.7.
Trammel also placed second in the 200-yard individual medley with teammates freshman Jeff Stout and senior Todd Neugent finishing fifth and sixth, respectively.
Billings set a school record in the 50-yard freestyle preliminaries with a time of 20.65. However, junior teammate Allan Chaney finished ahead of Billings in the finals at third place. Billings and Mendenhall placed fourth and fifth, respectively.
in the men's 500-yard freestyle, in senior Chuck Jones finished third, along with teammates sophomore Scott Berry, junior eighth-place John Easton placing fourth, sixth and seventh, respectively.
Sophomore Andy Flower and senior Denny Puckett scored sixth and eighth, respectively, in the one-meter diving.
ATTENTION KU
BASKETBALL FANS!
At I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
You "Win" when the JAYHAWKS "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
KU
by 15 points, you'll receive a 15% discount etc
So Cheer The Jayhawks On To Victory...
Against Oklahoma State
and then come in to celebrate
with us!
I Can't Believe It's
YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Stores
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Louisiana Purchase
843-5500
23rd and Louisiana
1 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily; noon-11 p.m. Sun.
Mary Jo Raftery
Karen Maginn of Omaha, NE, is majoring in Mathematics.
"Computers will always be a part of my life, and for now Macintosh $ ^{ \mathrm {T M}} $ is my choice."
"The Macintosh™ saves time and headaches. I've used lots of different computers and Macintosh is the best of all of them. It's easier. It does more."
"Besides using the Mac for the usual, like writing papers and creating a resume, I've learned to write programs for it. The great thing about the Mac is that it lets you know when you've made a mistake and what it is. Other computers don't. So you save countless hours correcting errors.
"I'm a math major and computers will probably always be a part of my life. But I don't want them to be my life. That's why I want a computer that's easy to use and makes correcting mistakes easy. My first choice for a career? Something important at IBM. But for now, my first choice in computers is Macintosh."
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
Macintosh Plus...$1200
Macintosh SE
with 2 disk drives...$1979
Macintosh SE
with 20 meg hard disk drive ... $2399
with 20 meg hard disk drive...$2399
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union. Stop by and place your order before March 11. Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE, that you want. ($50 deposit required)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
KU
KU Bookstores
Burge Union
fine jewelry and repair 843-4266 817 Massachusetts
Mark's Jewlers
KWALITY COMICS
Kwality books,
comics, and games.
1111 Massachusetts 843-7239
EVEA
fifty's
NABIL'S RESTAURANT
People make the difference at Nabil's
Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11-2 841-7226
Dinner Sun. & Mon. 5-9 9th and Iowa
Tues.-Sat. 5-10 Hillcrest Shopping Center
fifiS
55 GALLON TANK SALT WATER SET-UP
$199.00
55 GALLON WITH TANK AND FLORESCENT TOP
$600.00
$129.00
Vacation 10 day fish feeders
99¢ each limit 2
---
花
Assorted Swordfish 2 for $1.00 limit 4
Pink tip Anemone $1.50 each
sale good thru 3/10/88
Fish
LITTLE PAL PET SHOP
Southern Hills Mall 1601 W.23rd Open 7 Days
Lawrence, Ks. 749-3767
Panhellenic would
like to thank all the participants in Saturday's Dance-For-Hearts
(Proceeds to benefit the American Heart Association)
ANNOUNCEMENTS'
Classified Ads
Don't wait until summer to line up a job! Now is the time to line up a summer job or a yearly position. You can apply by presenting representatives name of the best the New York City has to offer, you are all collectible. Family Helper Uses. 1032 Long Ridge Road, Stamford, CT 06904-384-695. ALL FEARES ARE EMPLOYABLE
MASSAGE THAT SPRING "BREAK" Tension doesn't mean you have to go to Florida to relax! Spring is better ashes with the help of my therapist. They're great. We won't break you, either. students get 25% off
RENTERS KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!!!
The Lawrence Tennis Association will help you apartments purchase a Tenant's lease and complete maintenance. For more information call 841-7800 or 749-3697.
The Great Garage Sale! *Gear up for Spring Break.* J A M Sportwear is having a sale this week. Bags, T-shirts, Jams and Swisht恤s are the most popular items from KU and other universities! Many first quality and Under Coot. All sizes and color. Registry Ballroom. March 5 & 9. 4 p.m.
ROCK CHALK
REVUE
The story is about to be told.
Thursday, March 3
Friday, March 4
7:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 5
2:00
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"Civil Rights in America," a speech by Juan Williams, author of Eyes on the Prize, will be given March 10, 8 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom. Last Chance for Spring Break '18 Limited space remains at South Padre, North Daytona Beach, Fort Walton Beach and Steamboat Colony. Bottles for $4.95, foils for $1.80-1821-3811 for reservations and four tickets TODAY. Credit cards accepted.
** 伟道會 **
时:3月4日(五) 7:00 p.m.
242: First Southern Baptist churah
(Maithish Drive & 1946 st.)
請員Mr. Gene Tuel area Rep.of Navigators
KU 中文查經班
Chinese Bible Study Group
联络:Albert 843-0686
ENTERTAINMENT
LIBERTY
HALD VIDEO
Check Us Out First!
Mon-Thurs. classes $1.50.
Fri-Sun, lapets $3.00, players $8.00
per entry $1.00 all at the home.
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GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional, radio DJ's. Hot spots Maximum Party Thrust. 841-7063
**MUSIC******
15
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 4. 1989
FOR RENT
AVAILABLE HIMMEDIALYTIE. Bedroom for rent close to campus on bus line. Off street parking available.
Available immediately -- Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downown and campus. Deposit plus utilities. Call 841-1207.
Rooms for now & summer in rooming house. 1344
826-877-2596, 794-183-2100 N.磅
842-277-739, 794-183-2100
Completely Furnished Studios, 1-3-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call (855) 2025, or 749-2415. Mastercraft Management
Cough efficiency in style farm home with large kit
house campus. $260 heat card. 841-144.
Easy bus campus. $260 heat card. 841-144.
Female grad student seeking roommate to share
room with friends and family plus electricity.
Call Melody Mahlon 417-416-7194.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester 88 I smoke, call Sarah evenings
Get a Group? Common Goals? Spacious well-maintained house on quiet block near town & campus. 9b bedrooms w/ multiple kitchens & baths. Available, 6-18 $1,250 month. 841-4144.
Large room in Four bedroom home. Nice
bedroom with ceiling fan, washer and dryer.
facilities. PES OK $13.50 per month . *satisfies*
needs of children and adults.
MASTERCRAFT offers beautifully furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 814-1212, 814-5255 or 794-4296.
One bedroom duplex within walking distance of
the university, available for $249/month. 827-64370.
Available now. 845-7978
One bedroom West Meadow condo - carpet, pool,
wel bar, microwave, fireplace, room. No
entrance.
Reserve your room or summer or fall at Sunflower House, an inexperience in cooperative housing.
SUBLEASE. Extra nice 2 BR duplex in good location; garage; W/D pickup. No pets. Refs req $300 mo. Must see. 843-7736 after 5 or leave message.
Summer Sublease 3 bedroom townhouse, 1bath pool, bath and pool. Four persons preferable
Three bedroom townhouse avail. April; Carpart, fireplace, 3 pools, some pets, cable, cable TV, laundry, pool, gym.
Looking to Rent?
We have: apartments rooms houses
Lynch Real Estate
call Marie at 843-1601 or 843-3232
or Dick at 842-8971
Mary Jane Wakehouse Jawrence, KS
West Hills Apartments
Now leasing for June or August
1012 Emery Rd.
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts.
furn. or unfurn.
No appointment Needed
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
Open the doors to
LAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
an apartment with:
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Large lacuzzi
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Satellite TV
- Private balcony or porch
- Private balcony or porches
- Laundry Facilities
Naismith Place Apts.
60th Court & Ousdahl
841-1815
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
1. 2. 3. & 4 Bedroom
Apartments and Townhouses
- Tennis Court
- Pools
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 11:15
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
SUNDANCE
BRAND NEW! Sundance II
Coming to you this fall!
- Completely furnished
- Located on the old Sanctuary site
- Sanctuary site
- Super energy efficient
- On KU bus route
On KU bus route Call today to reserve
Call today to reserve your unit for next fall! Offered by:
MASTERCRAFT
841-5255 * 841-1212
FOR SALE
13" Color TV 1 yr-old, $100, remote TV converter
6" Color TV walkman kodak, $250, interested K41
847-7523
1972 Plymouth Gold Duster 67000 miles AM/FM.
well, very good conditions; $550 Ticket
73 Crestline Home 12' x 50' 2 BR. Extra insulation, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 pm, or inquire 420 North St. #6. Lawrence.
BAUFUNKT'S BEST. Berlin 8000 Car stereo, AMFM long wave/short wave radio, Autoreverse tapeedep, 80 watt Amp. All remote control. Serviced 11/27/87. Purchased new for $1,856.
CB 550 1980, 7000 miles. Best Buy, mint condition.
841-7608 - Craig
Classic a guitar $74, 75 Dodge dart $200, Marshall amp £75, Moreley Wah pedal $79, 69 Cadillac Deville $300, Black leather jacket $100, 841-2657 evenings.
Collection of Playboy magazines from 1968 to 1984. Good starter call set Hugh 846-2562.
eoR SALE - Roundtrip airline ticket to
Vancouver. For Spell recess, Very
reasonable. If in doubt, call.
0123456789
For Sale: Aiwa walkman with built in microphone, radio, and includes Aiwa speakers.
Warranty Offer
For Sale F18 18 speed Touring bike $150.00
441.0798
For Sale Waterbed with bookshell headboard,
New heater, nice. 100.00. Call eveningss 845-329-2687
Helena Elite Scooter - 125 liquid motor engine. 60
km/h. 45-65 mpg. Much much more. N1, 800
km/h. 60-90 mpg. Much much more.
HQ VRC Hardy, hardy. Packed with features.
Remote. $165. 841-1254. Ask for Ivan.
Remote 861. $185-$144 Ass. Kit 9x14w
Jukebox For Sale - Old model Seedburg Will
Jukebox For Sale - Old model Seedburg Will
take best offer Call 841-9479
**GORILLA GOLD USED FURNITURE**
***MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE*
132 E 9th. 749-4961
Nerissa Skin Boots - size 6½, used once
Worth £299.00
Weight 82g, 93.119
Walker & Co.
Obsborne computer database and IBM printer
Great company. Quick & easy setup.
Gallup Dell after 9:00 at 841-764
Queen size bed $75, FUTUO rocker床 $105, cabinette dock $75, Dodge Dart $80, 843-267
954-328
Rock-n-roll = Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. or later Saturday and Sunday 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Fires at Five Mile Park
10-track A4-pack deck $250, elephant scale $60, coupe $30, 16-inch hardcover $80, large avail case $250, Guild $43-901, leave us to decide.
AUTOSALES
1982 Nissan Stanza, Red, 5-Spd, 4 Dr. backack,
a/am fm. fm. Clean. New. Must sell.
New.
1984 Honda CRX 1.5, 5 spp. Blue, 52K, A/C,
FM/A/MC/FAX, $4600, 749-3031
1995 SURAUH GL 4 door sedan. Dark Blue with
moon sun roof. Cameras Dash, Locked, 41,000
pounds.
79 Cutlass Braugam - Low mileage 66,000 - Power windows, locks, seats, cruise, AMF Cassette. Equalizer - Excellent condition! $2900 call Sean 749-4667
1965 Fiero SE, 6. Cly, 4. Sp., Silver. Top of line
steer. 35.0 mmeles $7,000. 841.3465
BE ON T V. Many needed for commercials.
To cast children (to contact info (1) 800-867-6000 Ext
Miles, $6.75. Must sell. Call 814.7966.
Cars, $10.00. Compact. $8.91
96 Firebird, 4 red, 14 top, 18,900 automatic, 18,900
caller, Call in 10 p.m., 1-631-858-2400, Call in
10 p.m., 1-631-858-2400
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, repo's. Surplus Your area. Buyers
with 20 or more credits.
POSTAL JOBS $2,964 Start! Call now! Clerks-Carriers! Call for Guarantee Exam
1988 Mini-vans. Astro $352. Caravan $649. Chevrolet
$394. Honda $694. Dodge $794. Fiat $894. BMW
$109. Nissan $149. SEL $149. Ram $50
$126. Ranger $6 $446. Full-size Trucks Chev-
chev Clyseen $150. Dakota $425. F150 $150
Chevron C100M 120W
Jasmin S 80cm X F
140 cm x 60 cm
you choose options, option package, you want
to choose options, option package, you want
HELP WANTED
LOST-FOUND
Kane found outside of Stauffer-Flint 2/29. To kansas Classified counter to claim.
Lost gold-toned watch Jan. 25 between
Robinson and Stairfort-Film. Sentimental.
Found: Levis gray lined Jean Jacket in 1006
Mailed Tuesday. Misc.刺站: Calf I. John 4041 to 5831
my heart 1½ years ago at the Carriage Club Country Club. If you have it please call me. Lost gold colored ring with simulated diamonds, rubbed Stone missing. Great sentimental value. 824-635-9000.
STOLEN - Personalized "WABBIT" license plate stolen on station 2/27/08. Reward given for information and return of tag. Call 864-0468, M-F, 8 p.m.
CAMP COUNSELOR wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water sports, gymnastics, campfishing, sports hoops, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $400 or more plus R B & M. Marc Sieger, 1765 Magnolia, ND.
Summer Jobs! Two of Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15 through August 30 and interview call Jeff at 810-451-570 Ext. 310
AIRLINES NOW HIRING FRIEND Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $50k. Entry level positions.
Call 805-876-6001 Extr. A-9784.
Lost - Levi Jean Jacket Febt 30 between 10k & Kent
and 12k & Gent Bent, Reward 841-8767
Aerobic Instructor Needed. Experience
required; call for aid. 862-1038 10-MR.
Jett at 8:00 a.m.-5:29 p.m. EXT. 310
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and evening classes. Classes with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to operate broadcast equipment. Contact Audio-Technica.
COCRAIT WAITFREE. Must be permeable, explain at least 21. Apply at THE HAWK, Otoh Osoba
World Sport Schwinn Bike For Sale. Good Condition call 842-5559
Kansas Union Food Service needs part-time help for line work and busing. Varied hours 3.45/ per hour. Apply in person. Kansas Union Personnel Office, Level 5. EOE.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,040-$20,320.hr. Now Hiring.
Hire your employee (80) 677-0000 or call
(80) 677-0000.
Established weekend country band is auditioning for an experienced piano player and fiddle players.
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS:
dent Instructor/Counselor)i design and implement
dental instruction. Serve as Instructor and Counselor,
freshman. Serve as Instructor and Counselor.
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION teach high school students in summer session. Degree, teaching experience and experience with culturally diverse students in summer session. VESOR1) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorm. Degree and experience with culturally diverse youth required. PEER COUNSELING to supervise high school students. At least junior level in college required. RESEARCH ASSISTANT (Bridging 30+)
Looking for roofing laborers. No experience.
Respond 7 a.m. to 841-6511.
perience, and familiarity with KU required
DEADLINE: March 23, 1986. 5:00 P.M. Complete
Bauley Hall. Send letter of application, current
resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie
C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 408 Bauley Hall,
Lawrence, Lawrence, Kansas, K6003 (913) 844-3415 EOE AA
PART-TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed for侵入性 Floor Hatch trainers, perimeter patrols and train you. Attend the classes on Tuesday, March 8, 6:30 p.m. for soccer and 7:30 p.m. for floor hatch. *202 Siren*
now hire maintenance person. Requires general maintenance of 2 restaurants. Must be available 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. M-F. Starting job on Monday in Smoketowns Massachusetts above Bob's Smoketowns smokehouse.
RESOFT HOTELS, Cruiseline, Airlines &
Amenture Parks NOW accepting appl
es positions for information & application; write
national Collegiate Recreation, P. O. Box 8074 Hilton
R&B Restaurants is now hiring responsible, mature, hard-handing individuals fill part-time day, evening and weekend scheduling. Wages start at 3.70 per hour. Flexible openings. Apply at www.rbrestaurants.com.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseshelter, Airlines & Amusement Parks, Job Opportunities, internships and career positions. For information & application: write Naresh Gopal, Inc., P. O. Box 8047, Island Haitong Hotel Area. P. O. Box 8047, Island Haitong Hotel Area.
Wanted: Part-time or Full-time temporary worker with secretal & filing skills, computer experience helpful. For more information call Mike at 841-7205 for Mike.
Ashley: *Met you Saturday when you helped me*
Jessica: *I am going to be there again? Maybe under your windmill!* Chris
PERSONAL
AX/Tani. You are a great woman! Your loamate is too Mumman.
David (Black Haired AKA), Mr. Dance Fever—you know, maybe “time soon” and…want me! M$! St. Louis LaTeen
bighw
Dung (the Phi Delt) Thought for the day:
music and earrings.
Ferris - Denver choked! Elway and Roman are days, Days is a lamb soap. Who'll tell Jack?
FLU FYFY!! You're the kitty for me.
Happy 20th Birthday! I love you!! It's the sixth day - How about 6 big wet kisses? Yours? Torey, Fluffy.
ATMACAST. Thanks for the hard work. The times were long but well worth it. Keep up the spirit and let's give 'em the best show that we can. Thanks for everything. Ned.
Discover recovery thru shared experience and knowledge of the patient. Anonymous Mondays 7-8:30, Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine. For confidential information/contact person, Write PO Box 3428
G/W/M 45, straight acting. fun to be with, mutual
photo. phone. photo. D/ot. I89, Lawrence. Ksrs 102.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE 8.5, M-F.
professional word processing/data management,
retumes/letters, manuscripts, theses, etc. TOP-ON
TERMINUS SERVICES 834-5062
birth Happy, Carol! Love, Joe and Denise!
I'm here, where are you? Normal guy. m.,
nurse. h. backpack. teacher. friend.
and complex. Looking for a normal, pretty, warm, intrigual woman, but haven't found her in bars. Is it her?
Happy Birthday, Caroll! Love, Joe and Denise
lunches on Sunday! Normal meal 25 adv.
Joyce: Thanks for putting up with me during R.C. I could have done without your support. I would love to thank you.
O'TARRAD SALE! All women's leathers,
uniforms, and dance pants up to 50% off! New Spring arrivals included. Dragonfly Dianeweat
from 17: Erst Thr 7th & 18th New Hampshire.
Keggy and Pork: Thanks for everything. Writin' Wrong couldn't have happened with three stranger or more perfectly matched weirdos you guys are the best. Nick.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa. I.D., fine portrait
this you! Write P. O. Box 173. Lawrence
or Jeff Oliver at Hall C, car okay. Radcliffe at
Burke.
WANTED: Guy — blue eyes, black hips (red & white design).
Coolie Woods rows — True/Thurs.
—8 a. m. would like to meet you. Interested? Reply here. to C.
To the two girls I had sex on the beach with on Sunday. Thanks I had a blast. Can't wait for the next time. At least I won't have to pay for "it"! then. Steve
Kwik Shop 1:30 SAT A.M. you had a pick-up. I had sweater. inweater? Answered. reply here.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birt Birthright at 843-821. Confidential help/free pregnancy
To the one w/Dark has who catches the T/A/7:30 am
The other w/Dark has who catches the T/A/7:30 am
Uncensored. Glances can be made.
Separated, 7, Athletic, Professional, Affective, Lonely male like to meet 20-30 female for love. Classified as Male/Female. P.O. Box 384, Ottawa, Kansas, 66067 with photo. So Meghan, I mean you will be on 21 the 5th. At least I will.
KSENSI A LINGERIEE S SWINWEAR. Get your
portraits and handouts to: KSINW "N" LACE.
postage and handling to: SATIN "N" LACE.
SUNDAY CHICAGO TRIBUANCE: New on sale at the following locations: Convenience Store 8th & Indiana, Kwik Shop 9th & Miss, Kansas Union, Sun Home Delivery 814-5073.
Please Protect Your Skin.
8 Beds— No Waiting
Open 7 Days!
PERRY ELLIS
BUS.PERSONAL
V V V
Unlimited Use:
$15/mo. &2visit
$45/mo. No visit fee
($2 mo. minimum)
Packages:
7 Visits/$7/203
10 Visits/$25
gh
GOLDEN WEEDLE COTTONS
Relaxed Fit 100% Cotton Shirts
since 1980 25th & Iowa EUROPEAN 841.6232
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-231-69.
The Etc. Shop
COVER UPS &
Classic Clothing
100% Cotton Dress Shirts
Guys & Gals
Monday-Saturday
11-5:30
Thursday 'til 8:00
伞
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shot in a compartment, actors, dancers, etc.
since 1980
BEACH WRAPS
VISA-MC-AM.EXP.-DISCOVER CARD
EUROPEAN 841-6232
SUNTANNING
BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
伞
BEACH TOWELS
IHE BEACH HOUSE
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj-Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park...(913) 461-6878.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at Confidential. Confirmial free/pregnancy testing.
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
and Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
Hawkins 718-639-2250.
SINGLE EARRINGS
TUTORING TUTORING $8.90/MATH MATH
MATLAB, 8 years experience; call
Math, M.S. statistic, 8 years experience call
formals, 60's ties. peace earrings and necklaces.
BEACH HOUSE GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
927 Mass M-Sat 10-5:30 841-2451
TYPING
PARTY TIME!
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Do you want
$30,000 / year?
Kingston Printing
1. Reliable Typing Service Term papers,
2. Standard Typewriter, typesetized type,
3. Electronic Typewriter 842-3246.
See us
It begins with a quality resume
+ type Typing: Letters, resumes, law, thesis law
+ type Typing: Buses, buses, buses, buses, buses,
w 843-2671 evening and weekends.
i-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, gratuitally correct pages of letter-quantity form. 843-263, days or evening.
BLUE HERON
Immortal Sleep Designs
i plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typings
ii plus Typing: Reports, letters, law types 842-9754 842-9817 842-9831 and weekdays.
iii plus Typing: Textbooks.
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
A COACH!
A BED!
IT'S BOTH!
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in termperature correction, correcting Silelectric, pelling corrected. 843-9054
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
Bloom County t-shirts & books
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more!
482-490 before 10 p.m.
Call R.I. 'service for all of your tying
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $1.25 double space pad. East Lawrence, Mrs
Call me for your tying needs. Reasonable rates
Call Rufa for all your typing needs $1. pp 24 hr
turn around. Call Rufa-643-648 after 5 p.m.
$80 Value when presented toward new patient room.
$30 Value when presented toward new patient room.
Spinal Exam Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor.
Call R.J.'s rfing service for all of your typing needs. 841-9492 before 9 p.m. please.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
Mommy's typing and service
service on 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. please.
SERVICES OFFERED
GU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekatchane processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. ASPORT $0.00. Art & Design Building, 936-847-6777, 936-847-6778
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years. Driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7769
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Prolessing.
Term papers, papers, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings list. Letter
quality printing. Spelling corrected 842.2747
< AST. ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letter
< AST. ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letter
TOP-MOTH PITCHS 843-506
TOP-MOTH PITCHS 843-506
TYPLING Plus assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. B14-6254
MATH FUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hour, $43-002 (2)
1-800-752-6845
space, pica.
Professional typist w/ 15 years experience. Close
Pregnant? We can help. Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City provides confidential outpatient abortions. Don't be afraid to ask for the help you need. Call (865) 766-2277.
For professional typing/word processing, call
M91 841-4000. Spring special $120 page, double
shipping.
- Peggy Blake's.
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at
THE FAR SIDE
quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, gram
writing, punctuation and corrective service.
*up delivery* in bags 854 607
*down delivery* in boxes 854 607
WANTED
842-4273. Must provide own transportation.
Female Roommate wanted, summer, large room for 1 or 2 $180/month, trash/cable paid, furnished or unfurnished. 841-3861.
Female roommate wanted, non-smoker please.
Rent 175.00 * + utilities. Call Lilly 749-1254.
Female roommate, 2 bedroom duplex at:
805 Lexington Avenue, furnished, 5 minute to
square; $120, 749-3559.
Male roommate Owen room in 2 bedroom
Berkeley Flats Apt. 1 Bock from Union. $130
Roommate 1 Bock from Union. $130
MED IMEDIATELY for Lawrence based rock band. Vocals, preferably with other musical abilities. Dates booked. Call 843-3243
Nice fun room lookalike for 2 rooms to share 3 bedroom apartment for 88-89 school year. Swimming班/BT/Teens Court available.
Female roommate wanted. 2 bedroom house 9th &
Kentucky $120 + $u utilities. Large dog lover a
must. Graduate student or serious student
preferred. 842-3006.
HELP! 2 girls need a ride to Daytona for Break.
Can we go with you? "Call 843-6226 or 843-6225"
Male/Female Female needed for meetup
2471/947-8133 Ask for Tim, Bill, or Ken.
2471/947-8133 Ask for Tim, Bill, or Ken.
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours available; if you enjoy cleaning and are interested in learning how to perform your talents. Call 842-6264. Need transportation. Put your used books and magazines to work. Contact us at info@842-6264.com.
Roommate getting married need older student to rent 138.75 + utilities in a townhouse on one room on bus route. Please call if interested 842-2737.
**ommate for Spacius 3 bedroom duplex in**
Meadowbrook.
$290/mo.
On bus route. 843-797-7.
www.ommate.com
WANTED! One non-student ticket to the OSU
campus on Thursday, October 14 between
3:30 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. (964-8191)
leave message
wanted Tickets to Saturday night's Basketball
Call Al Maki at 612-530-4792
By GARY LARSON
© 1968 Universal Press Syndicate XII
At the popular dog film, "Man Throwing Sticks."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- Policy
Sets set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
Insertion or any advert
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Credit card £4.00 service charge
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Prepaid Order No. MAIL Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
**Deadline** is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
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Address.
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KMHS.
Date ad begins. Mail teacher
Total days in paper. University De
Amount paid. 119 Stauffer
Difficulty on job. Lawrence, K
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LLOW KANSAN POLICY
make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
Lawrence, KS 66043
Lawrence, KS 66043
---
16
Friday, March 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
TAKE YOUR MAC URGE to the BURGE!
Come in and see us at the Burge Union and learn all you want to know about Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $ computers. There will be experts on hand to answer any questions you may have. Experience Macintosh with us! We'll help you with:
- Word Processing
- Graphics
- Business Applications
- Desk-top Publishing
- Software Programs
- Any additional needs
- You may even win a PRIZE!
Today, March 4, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
KU Bookstores
BURGE UNION
Macintosh™ Helping You Make the Grade at KU
---
Monday March 7,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 111 (USPS 650-640)
KKK to speak at forum today
Peaceful protests expected at free expression program
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
An open free speech forum involving the Ku Klux Klan has been confirmed for tonight at Hoch Auditorium, the director of the student organization sponsoring the event said Friday.
Michael Foubert, director of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, announced that the forum, "Freedom of Expression in the University Environment," would go ahead as planned. The forum is open to the public and scheduled for 8 p.m. at Hoch Auditorium.
"All parties must work together to have this thing come off. I feel extremely positive about this. Things have jelled very well," Foubert said.
William Whitcomb, a Justice Department mediator in the Community Relations Service agency in Kansas City, met with KU and city officials Friday to help ensure a peaceful demonstration today.
"Mr. Whitcomb is a communication link. He will make sure the students contact the right people and not have the communications fouled up." Ambler said.
Police prepare for forum p.11.
Coalition plans protests p.11.
"There is naturally tension around this event," Foubert said yesterday. "But most of the tension is fear. Fear can be dealt with by education. A lot of people are expecting things to happen that will not happen. People must go to the forum with an open mind."
Foubert said that he was still concerned about possible confrontations at the forum but was confident that the protest would be non-violent.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that Whitcomb offered help in the communication between students and community leaders and the KU administration.
Ambler said that although he was appreciative of Whitcomb's help, he didn't think it was necessary.
"His service is useful in a community that is unable to resolve its
problems, but that is not the case here. The black community understands what the University has to do. We may not always agree, but there has been good communication," Ambler said.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that she was surprised at Whitcob's involvement, but acknowledged the students' right to contact different people for assistance.
Ramaley said Whitchow was contacted by the Black Student Union last week. Last year, Whitchow mediated a dispute about efforts at the University of Missouri-Columbia to end discrimination on campus.
Whitcom met Friday and Saturday with local community leaders to discuss the forum and possible security problems.
Whitcomb was unavailable for comment.
The Rev. William Dulin, president of Ecumenical Fellowship, did not want to comment on Saturday's meeting or Whitcomb's involvement, but did acknowledge the involvement of different individuals.
"To all the real genuine concerned individuals that wish to promote long-lasting change in the community, I applaud them. Those that are involved only to promote their own self-interest are detrimental to the community." Dulin said.
"We are prepared as well as we'll ever be," Moran said. "The main things we hope to do is dispel nationwide stereotypes of the Klan. We don't mind the protest. It's part of free speech, as long as it doesn't turn violent."
J. Allen Moran, exalted cyclops of the Missouri Knights, a Klan affiliate, will participate in the forum along with Thom Robb, a Klan pastor from Harrison, Ark. Mark said that he was prepared for tonight's forum.
Along with Moran and Robb, Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism, has confirmed that he would participate in the forum. Other members of the panel, the moderator and the student questioners will be announced today. Foubert said.
KU seniors remember a special night
By Anne Luscombe Kansan sports editor
Center stage — Danny Manning.
One narrow beam of light encompasses him, putting him in the spotlight no matter where he goes.
He runs up and down the court as if to elude it, but it is always there. It is present just as surely as his talent is.
He shrugs it off and tries to throw the spotlight in the direction of the other role players, his teammates. That was his wish, that his teammates would be recognized for their contributions, that they would get to play, even if it meant he sat on the bench. He wanted them to get the attention he felt they deserved, granting him a larger stage to perform for 7 seconds Saturday night, one of them was.
Archie Marshall, who didn't stepped foot on the court except in practice since the St. John's game Dec. 30 when a second knee injury ended his season and his career, had suited up for the final home game. He went through the pregame warm-up motions with the rest of the team, then took his normal seat at the end of the Kansas bench.
ALEXANDRA HERNANDEZ
But he didn't stay there.
With 1:33 left in the game, Marshall stripped off his warm-ups and hobbled toward the scorekeeper to court. The crimed wrestlw wild.
Manning grinned as he flipped the ball Marshall's way. It was all going according to plan, the way Marshall had dreamed it. Marshall was open, wide open. Kansas coach Larry Brown yelled at him to shoot. Manned yelled at him to shoot. Even Oklahoma State coach Leonard Hamilton yellled shoot. Marshall fired off an unsteady bomber toward the basket.
It was way off
"Archeh had been talking about playing for a long time. He said, 'Hey, put me in the corner, I'll shoot a three-pointer and then call a time out and take me out,'" Manning said. "We did it and he missed the shot!"
Forward Chris Piper was a little more gracious in his depiction of the three-point attempt than were Manning and Brown.
"Archie playing was great," said Piper, who also played his final game in Allen Field House. "That was the highlight of the game. He came close to sinking it."
See TRIBUTE, p. 13, col. 1
Kansas forward Danny Manning battles for a rebound. Manning led the Jayhawks to a 75-57 win over Oklahoma State. Saturday's game was the last in Allen Field House for Manning and fellow forwards Archie Marshall and Chris Piper.
Krakow says no to forum
Krakow said that early last week he had told Michael Foubert, organizer of the event, that he would participate in the forum. He said at 11 p.m. last night he had not informed Foubert of his withdrawal.
"I did a lot of soul-searching," said Krakow. He said he had been contacted by many people, including members and leaders of the black and Jewish communities about his participation in the forum.
Student Body President Jason Krakow said last night that he would not be a panelist at tonight's free speech forum and instead would speak at a rally outside Hoch Auditorium.
Krakow said, "I don't think anyone has been successful in pressuring me one way or the other," but he said he felt that people had been trying to pressure him.
Gunman kills one in Emporia church
Krakow said his role at the forum would be to defend the right of a student organization to invite to campus any speaker it wanted. He said he could convey that message by speaking at the rally outside. If he went inside, he might legitimize the Klan, Krakow said.
Foubert said last night that he was disappointed by Krakow's decision but remained committed to the forum.
"If (Krakow's) decision to withdraw from the forum was intended to communicate that he, as student body president, could not lend what he believed would be credibility to other panelists, then we hope that no one would perceive his presence outside the fourm as lending credibility to the innuendo and half-truths spewed forth by some opponents to this forum."
The Associated Press
EMPORIA — A heavily armed man walked into a crowded church here yesterday and opened fire, killing one person and wounding four others before church members chased him into the street and subdued him.
The gunman entered through a side door of the Calvary Baptist Church shortly after 11 a.m. during services and fired several rounds from a semi-automatic handgun at the 100 people inside, police Chief Larry Blomkenmack said.
"He had no particular target. He
just entered and started riring random
thoughts."
The gunman, identified as Cheumphon Ji, 29, was not a church member, and no motive was known, police said. He was taken to the Lyon County Jail, but no formal charges were filed immediately.
Authorities did not know his hometown but said he said in town just before the shootings in a car with California plates.
The gunman carried a bag and wore ear protectors of the type used on firing ranges, said pastor, Donald Kusmaul.
"He started shooting," Kusmau said. "There was no time to think. I hit the floor and it helped signal to everybody that it was serious, to get down. I just heard these loud reports. It was very loud, rapid fire."
up and ran toward him and chased him out into the street, Kusmaul said.
Parishioners scrambled for cover under pews. As the gunman tried to reload, one of the church trustees got
The trustee, Jerry Waddell, hit the gunman with a hymnal, and he and other members of the congregation tackled him and held him for police, Kusmaul said.
Police found a duffel bag filled with handguns and ammunition in the church. Blomenkamp said.
Scott Davies, an usher, said the gunman first took aim at him.
"I started to walk over toward him and by that time he had the gun pointed directly at me and took aim and fired," Davies said. "I jumped behind a wall in the church and looked back out to make sure what was happening was real, and it was. He began just shooting across the
auditorium itself randomly at people about five or six shots.
"There was about five or six seconds of just silence and there began to be cries and screams, hollers. It was just chaotic."
Police identified the man who was killed as Thomas G. DeWeese, 47, of rural Americus. His daughter Beverly, 18, was among the four wounded. She was treated and released from Newman Memorial County Hospital in Emporia.
Sandra Matti, 43, of Emporia,
remained hospitalized in fair condition
with a shoulder wound. Robert
Adamson, 14, of Emporia, was in
good condition at St. Mary's Health
Center with a thigh wound. Daniel
Goza, 14, of Emporia, was released
from Newman Hospital.
Watch out for spring break rip-offs
Bv Iulie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Mike Moore tried for a year to get his $20 deposit back from a spring break travel deal he invested in last year. After a year, he figured the money was as good as gone.
A couple of weeks later he paid the rest of the money for the trip.
Moore, a Hutchinson junior, said that last year, he and some friends had bought a travel package to South Padre Island for spring break. He said he paid a $20 deposit to a travel company that was advertised in the newspaper to ensure himself a $foot on the trip.
Moore said that the next day, the campus representative of the travel company called to tell him the trip to South Padre Island had been canceled but that he could have an alternative trip to Florida instead.
"Moore didn't want to go to Florida so he wanted his money back. The payment for the trip was returned to him, he said, but the deposit of $20 was never paid back.
When planning a spring break vacation, students need to do more planning than deciding which beach to party at. Advance research can help students avoid being a victim of an bad travel deal.
Moore and his friends were victims of a spring break rip-off.
Spring Break
Torskey said that last year a complaint was filed by students who bought trips to Mexico and weren't told where they were staying or when their departure was.
said Eric Torskey, a consumer affairs associate at the Consumer Affairs Association. 819 Vermont St.
Torskey said that his office could advise students on many different aspects before investing in a spring break package.
Students should understand all the terms of the package before signing anything or paying for it. Students should make sure that all parts of the contract are clear, and that all terms of a contract are clear, he said.
For example, students should know the dates of arrival and departure, the name of the hotel where they are staying, the length of their reservations and the exact things they will be getting in the package, Torskey said.
Students should find out if the deposit on their hotel room is included in the package, said Jon Tadtman, coordinator for group trips at the Lawrence Travel Center. 1601 W. 23rd St.
He said that students could expect to pay hotels deposits of $50 to $150, which they get back at the end of the trip if no damage is done to their hotel rooms. But some students don't realize that they have to pay that deposit, and they spend all their money paying the deposit and have no money left for the rest of the trip.
Gene Wee, program adviser for Student Union Activities, said that SUA switched to a different travel company than the one used last year because of a conflict over hotel deposits.
This year, SUA decided to offer different travel packages with a different tour company. SUA is offering trips to Winter Park, Colo. and Cancun, Mexico. KU's spring break begins Saturday and ends March 20.
Wee said that in general, few problems occur on spring break ski trips than on trips to the beach.
If a problem does occur when students reach their spring break destinations, Torskey suggested that they could call the Better Business Bureau or the Consumer Affairs Association in that county.
Rosemarie Bonita, director of trade practice at the Better Business Bureau in Miami, said that the most common problems students had when they reached the beach was with their hotel accommodations.
See BREAK. p. 16. col. 1
SIR ALFRED TERRY
---
2
Monday, March 7. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
LAWRENCE
Spring is near!
Today will be mostly sunny with a high of 62. Increasing cloudiness by late afternoon. Tonight, mostly cloudy skies and a 40% chance of showers after midnight. The low will be 43.
HIGH: 62°
LOW: 43°
KEY
REGIONAL
North Platte
48/37
Showers
Omaha
53/35
Sunny
Soodland
51/39
Showers
Heya
54/40
Cloudy
Salina
58/43
Partly cloudy
Topeka
82/44
Sunny
Kansas City
80/42
Sunny
Columbia
62/40
Sunny
St. Louis
63/39
Sunny
Dodge City
54/40
Mostly cloudy
Wichita
53/44
Mostly sunny
Chanute
68/47
Sunny
Springfield
68/46
Sunny
Forecast by Brent Shaw. Temperatures are today’s high and tonight’s low.
Tulsa
89/48
Sunny
5-DAY
TUE
Chance of showers
52/30
HIGH LOW
WED
Mostly Sunny
54/32
THU
Mostly sunny
60/39
FRI
Chance of showers
57/34
SAT
Mostly sunny
53/31
Local Briefs
DOLE CAMPAIGNS IN MISSORI:
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole
will speak at a campaign rally at 7:30
p.m. in the International Ballroom at
the Alameda Plaza Hotel, 401 Ward
Parkway, in Kansas City, Mo.
FAIR HOUSING CLEAREDATED: Two local groups will sponsor a "Celebration for the Spirit of Fair Housing" from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on April 16 at South Park, 11th and Massachusetts streets.
The Lawrence Tenants Association and the Lawrence Association of Neighborhoods will sponsor the event to celebrate National Fair Housing
Gregg Stauffer, president of the Lawrence Tenants Association, said that the day would consist of a
number of speeches and presentations by about 10 citizen groups and community leaders.
The event is being held to raise the community's consciousness about discrimination in housing and what legal rights they have, he said.
SENATE DISCUSSES FORUM:
University Council will hold a special meeting with the Faculty Senate today to discuss the Ku Klux Klan forum, which will be held in Hoch Auditorium tonight, and the add/drop policy.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, will be available for comment and questions at the meeting, which will be held at 3:30 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium.
KU alum seeks U.S. House seat Eckert claims he will bring government back to people
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
A 1982 KU graduate announced Friday that he would seek the Republican nomination to challenge Democrat Rep. Jim Slattery for his Second District Congressional seat.
Stanley Eckert, 32, a Lawrence resident, announced at a state news conference in Topeka that he will seek the same nomination he tried for in 1984 and 1986. He picked Friday for his announcement, he said, because on March 4, 1789, the U.S. Constitution took effect.
"In honor of the Constitution, I'm dedicating my campaign to bring government back to the people," Eckert said.
"It will give me more time to get out and about the district earlier," Eckert said. "I think that's a big plus in the overall picture. I think this is a race the Republicans can win."
Eckert also said that getting an early start in the race would improve his prospects.
Eckert said he thought he could improve on his showing in the 1986 two-candidate primary, in which he received 49 percent of the vote and won seven of the district's 13 counties.
If elected, Eckert said he would
like to see the government cut down the amount of paperwork it dealt with. He also said that he wanted the U.S. Government to reveal the whole story about U.S. servicemen listed as missing during the Vietnam War.
Eckert wears a bracelet bearing the name of U.S. Air Force Sgt. Donald Lint, whose plane disappeared over Laos in 1970. Lint's parents told Eckert they had heard reports in the late 1970s that Lint was alive.
"If this is true of one person, there could be more Americans alive over there." Eckert said. "There is a story that needs to be told. The government is sitting on it, and I want it out even if it means going to Asia myself."
Here at home, Eckert said, he also would like to see the government relax its regulation of the farming industry. Too much regulation, he said, keeps farmers from getting their goods to market.
"I want the farmer to be able to control his own destiny," Eckert said. "You have to get the government off his back and give him more freedom to enter the marketplace."
Eckert holds bachelor's degrees in political science and economics from
Police Reports
A 10-speed bicycle valued at $200 was taken Saturday morning from a back yard in the 700 block of Maine Street, Lawrence police reported.
Stereo equipment valued at $600 was taken Friday night from a home in the 600 block of Illinois Street, Lawrence police reported.
valued together at $412 were taken Friday night from a car in the 1300 block of W. 24th Street, Lawrence police reported.
a cellular phone and a radar detector valued together at $2,495 were taken Friday or Saturday from a car in the 1300 block of Vermont Street, Lawrence police reported.
A car stereo and other items
Faculty study changing education priorities
Kansan staff writer
By Dayana Yochim
To coincide with a change of priorities in public school systems, the University of Kansas School of Education has begun an 18-month re-evaluation of its curriculum, emphasizing the preparation of school administrators.
Along with faculty from five other universities, five KU education faculty members attended a conference this weekend designed to stimulate thought about what the future of school administration would be like.
The conference. Program for Professors of School Administration, was funded through the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis and took place in Tempe, Ariz.
Howard Ebmeier, associate professor of education policy and administration, said that the conference
brought the different universities together to discuss the development of new programs for teaching school administration.
About 550 graduate students are enrolled in the educational policy and administration program in the school.
"Priorities in education have been changing slightly over the last decade," Ebmeier said. "Seven or eight years ago there was a movement supporting basic skill development. Now, the current emphasis is on developing advanced thinking skills and creativity in children."
Ebmeier said that the School of Education had been reevaluating its program for the past $1\frac{1}{2}$ years, and that the conference helped facilitate the revision process.
"There could be three changes brought about through this process,"
Ebmeier said. "We would modify what we teach, how we deliver the program, such as the sequence of classes, and change the methodology of the way we taught."
Susan Twombly, assistant professor of educational policy and administration, said that school administrators were trained on a model developed in the 1930s.
"The speakers at the conference had very different visions about the schools of the future." Twombly said. "They were there to challenge us to think of what the future would be like. It's not a matter of changing the education administration program, but changing the underlying assumptions."
George Crawford, associate professor of educational policy and administration, said that he did not think that the quality of school
administrators was declining.
"We sometimes get biased reports and biased opinions about what is wrong with the way schools are run," Crawford said.
“It's reasonably obvious that policy makers and the country are not enthusiastic about signing over money to education. Ten years from now administrators will have to be prudent managers of public funds. They will have to be skilled for doing more with less money.”
Crawford said that the University administration and the School of Education monetarily supported the re-evaluation process.
Other universities attending the conference were Arizona State University, Auburn University, Fordham University, Temple University and Miami University of Ohio.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 7, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Removal of hazardous chemical in progress
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
Cleanup of a hazardous chemical found leaking Thursday at the site where a truck overturned seven miles east of Lawrence will continue into this week, an official with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said Saturday.
Environmental Specialists, Inc., a Kansas City, Mo., firm, began cleanup at 11 p.m. Thursday and worked non-stop until about 6:15 p.m. Friday, said Marvin Glotzbach, environmental geologist with the department.
The spill was not discovered until about 1 p.m. Thursday, 14 hours after the driver of the truck fell asleep and drove off the turnpike, turnpike authorities said. The accident occurred about seven miles east of the East Lawrence turnpike exit, in the east-bound lane of Interstate 70. One lane of the turnpike was closed until late Friday.
It was only after a turnip authority investigator began experiencing dizziness
and headaches while he was photographing the accident scene that officials learned that the truck was loaded with more than 40,000 pounds of the chemical Ethalfuralin, also known as Sonalan. The chemical was leaking onto the ground and into Pony Creek.
The chemical will explode if exposed to temperatures exceeding 86 degrees Fahrenheit, and can be harmful if swallowed, inhaled or absorbed through the skin.
Turpike officials said yesterday that their function was to maintain a safe traffic flow on the turpike and that it didn't include investigating whether a truck involved in an accident was carrying a potentially harmful load. That obligation is with the trucking company, Sgt. Tom Jaenson of the turpike authority said yesterday.
Jaenson said that turnip officials questioned a load only if it clearly was leaking from the truck, or if the truck had been damaged badly enough to allow people to get into it and possibly be hurt. Neither was the case in the Wednesday night investigation of
the accident, he said.
The company that owned the truck involved in the accident, F and S Truck Lines of Kansas City, Kan., refused to comment when reached yesterday by telephone.
Glatzbach said F and S Truck Lines was responsible for the cost of cleanup. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is supervising the cleanup.
On Thursday and Friday, the tractor and trailer were pulled out of the ditch and loaded with the remaining unbroken bottles of the chemical onto trucks that hauled them to McGraw Chemical and Fertilizer, a state-licensed agricultural sprayer in Leavenworth.
Workers also used vacuum trucks to begin pumping water out of Pony Creek, Gltzbach said. He said about 125 gallons of the chemical were unaccounted for.
Glotbach said water was standing in Pony Creek from a culvert under the turnipte to where a dam was built about 200 yards north of Nine Mile Creek. He said all of that water
Glotzbach said he was at the accident scene from Thursday afternoon until cleanup crews left Saturday afternoon.
would be removed
"The problem we have now is that it's too wet to get the equipment down to the creek."
He said crew worked until about 2:30 p.m. Saturday, but were forced to wait until this morning to make further attempts at cleanup.
Precipitation ended late Saturday, and with yesterday's warmer temperatures, Glotzbach said the ground probably would be dry enough by this morning to allow the movement of equipment to the creek.
He said the state would determine sometime this week whether any soil would be excavated after the removal of creek water was completed.
Gerald Oroke, chairman of the Leavenworth County Hazardous Materials Committee, said Pony Creek intersects Nine Mile Creek about one-quarter of a mile south of
the turnpike and although it did have some water in it, it wasn't flowing at the time the spill cured.
Nonetheless, Oroke said, he and members of the Fairmount Township fire department had built an earthen dike on Pony Creek about 200 yards from where it intersected Nine Mile Creek to contain the chemical in case of a sudden rainstorm. The chemical floats on water.
Nine Mile Creek flows into the Kansas River, which runs through Lawrence. The Lawrence water supply is in no danger. Water from the Environmental Protection Agency.
The dike was built under Glotzbach's direction.
The load of Sonolan, an agricultural herbicide, was bound for a Farmland Industries plant in Kansas City, Mo. from a company in Omaha, Neb., Orroke said.
The driver of the truck suffered minor injuries in the accident.
$15,000 donation collected by Revue
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Hard work really does pay off
Hard work really does pay off. At least it did for the participants of the Rock Chalk Revue, who raised the most money in donations in the 38 years of the revue, $15,000, to go to the Lawrence United Way.
This year's theme was "The Untold Story."
The Rock Chalk Revue team of Gamma Phi Beta sorority and Sigma Nu fraternity won eight of the 10 Rock Chalk awards, which were given out Saturday. Their skit, "X-Plain-Y," was about a couple expecting a baby. The main characters were an "X" chromosome and a "Y" chromosome, who debated the sex of the baby The chorus members, also chromosomes, debated other characteristics of the baby.
The Gamma Phi Beta/Sigma Nu team won the most charitable award for raising about $10,800 in ticket sales, said Carl Johnson, director for the group.
The Gamma Phi Beta/Sigma Nu team won awards for best script, best original song, best production number, best overall production and most charitable. Amy Christian, Lawrence senior, won best female performer, and Susan Crawford, Lawrence junior, won best supporting actress.
Johnson said both Gamma Phi Beta and Sigma Nu were surprised that they won the eight awards.
The Delta Gamma sorority and Phi Gamma Delta fraternity team won the other two awards with their skirt "Fourth Floor." Brad Claffin, Overland Park senior, was named best male performer and Mike Reynolds, Hutchinson senior, was named best supporting actor.
"We were really overwhelmed," he said. "We were hoping the awards would be more spread out."
Dave Shaffer, business manager for the revue, said the revue raised approximately $38,000 this year. He said that at least $15,000 would be donated and possibly more after he paid expenses and figured out the exact profit the three-day show raised.
This year's donation was the highest ever, Shaeffer said. Last year's donation was $12,000.
KU GOP leader voted alternate
By lill less
By Jill Jess Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The chairman of KU College Republicans was chosen Saturday as an alternate delegate to the National Republican Convention at the state convention here.
Brenda Eisele, Fredonia sophmore, was selected as one of 14 alternates to the convention, which will be in August in New Orleans. Eisele also was elected recently as state chairman of the College Republicans.
She said that different age groups would be represented at the national convention.
"They usually try to get college students," Eisele said. "They feel that younger people can relate better to other young people."
She said that the KU College Republicans planned to support the Dole campaign at a national meeting of the organization in Kansas City at the end of this month. Eisele said that the KU chapter would encourage other chapters to support Dole.
Fourteen delegates, including Gov. Mike Hayden and Sen. Nancy London Kassaebum, R-Kan., were chosen Saturday. Fourteen alternates also were chosen. Of all the delegates and alternates chosen, only one alternate position had more than one candidate.
All 34 Kansas delegates, 20 of whom were chosen at district conventions Feb. 20, have signed letters of commitment to Dole.
Dole said in a telephone call to the convention from Jefferson City, Mo., that he was optimistic about his position in the race going into Super Tuesday. He said that although he might not get as many votes as had been expected in some Southern states, he thought that he had an overall advantage over Vice President George Bush
"It's a choice between someone with a record and someone with a resume." Dole said.
He said that he thought his chances were best in states with rural communities.
"The Dole method will sell wherever there are farmers." Dole said.
DONIPHAN
in addition to Hayden and Kassaeum, delegates chosen were; Fred Logan Jr., state GOP chairman; Kansas Speaker of the House Jim Braden, Clay Center; state GOP vice chairman Mary Alice Lair, Piqua; national GOP committee members Jack Ranson, Wichita, and Marynell Reece, Scandia; state GOP treasurer Duane Nightingale, Topea; state GOP secretary Janet Boisseau, Wichita; state Rep. Rochelle Chronin, Needosha; Mia Daw-
Lawrence City Commissioner Sandra Praeger congratulates Brenda Eisele, Fredonia sophomore. Eisele was selected as one of the 14 alternative delegates to the Republican National Convention.
son, Topeka; Wyandotte County GOP vice chairman Adolph Howard, Kansas City; Hayden's legal counsel, John Peterson, Overland Park; and Judy Kay, Lawrence, the director of Dole's regional office in Topeka.
Pineapple pins finance Dole supporters' campaign trips
Kansan staff writer
By Jill Jess
TOPEKA — Larry Rogers wanted to hit the road with the Bob Dole candidate to show his support for the senator who served sodas in Rogers' drug store in Russell.
So he decided to kill two birds with one stone. In meeting a demand he saw for Dole souvenirs, he has been able to trek the campaign trail while helping spread the word about Dole.
phernalia could be found, Rogers said.
When Dole went to Russell to announce his candidacy for president in November, no Dole para-
But now, five months later, supporters of Kansas' favorite son candidate can purchase anything from a gold lapel pin featuring a pineapple and "Dole '88" to a T-shirt reading "Dole supporters are winners," all thanks to Rogers and the Dale Dole fan from his hometown.
Rogers and Robert McCurd, president of the Russell chamber of commerce, decided that the souvenir market was the perfect way to finance trips along the campaign trail as well as to make
the Dole name visible.
"You put one lapel pin or one sweatshirt or one hat or one pin on someone, and you can't even count the number of people that are going to read the Dole name in one day." Rogers said.
Proceeds from the souvenir sales help pay for travel expenses. Money left over will go to the Dole Foundation, Rogers said.
He said that demand for the paraphernalia had been extraordinary.
"Everybody wants something to do with Bob Dole." Rogers said.
people from Russell helped to sell the souvenirs across the country. He and Rogers said that their wives were in St. Louis on Saturday, selling campaign souvenirs and rounding up support for Dole.
Rogers said that supporters from Russell had been to Iowa, New Hampshire, Minnesota, Missouri, North Caroina and Oklahoma, selling paraphernalia and campaigning for Dole.
McCurdy said that about 12
Rogers said that if Dole won the candidacy at the National Convention in New Orleans in August, the senator probably would come to Russell to announce he his running mate would be.
"It's not for sure," Rogers said. "But he has hinted at it to me."
Rogers OI' Dawson Drug Store in Russell advertises that "Bob Dole Served Sodas Here."
When Dole was in Russell in November he went back to his old place of employment and served sodas again to begin his caimania.
Rogers said that the latest item in Dole-wear had sprung from the event.
"Dole soda pins — I don't know why we didn't think of them earlier," he said.
Bush campaign reaches Missouri after S.C. victory
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Confident after his victory in the South Carolina primaries, Vice President George Bush yesterday tried his luck at miniature golf and urged Missourians to vote during the Super Tuesday primaries.
hopeful arrived at the Kansas City downtown airport shortly after 2 p.m. yesterday and told about 30 supporters that his brother lived in St. Louis and his mother was born and raised in Missouri.
back to Missouri feeling pretty good about what happened in South Carolina yesterday," Bush said, adding that he was confident about the Missouri primaries on March 8.
"So I can kind of claim I'm one of you," Bush told the cheering crowd.
The Republican presidential
"I under-determined what we'd do in South Carolina," he said. "I don't want to give this area away to anybody."
Bush won almost 50 percent of the vote in the South Carolina Republican primary Saturday. He said he was now concentrating on March 8, the so-called Super Tuesday when states hold primaries or caucuses.
After speaking at the airport, Bush spent about an hour in a mall in
"As you can imagine, I'm coming
North Kansas City where he paid $1 for five tries at a miniature golf green — failing to sink a shot.
"I might urge you all to vote," he said. "Missouri is right smack in the middle of the radar on Super Tuesday.
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Monday, March 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Best way to disarm Klan is through peaceful protest
Dateline LAWRENCE.
Two members of the Ku Klux Klan appeared on a radio talk show at the University of Kansas. Outside the radio station, thousands of students and members of the community held a peaceful candlelight vigil to protest the KKK's bigoted views.
That is what should have happened at KU.
After the show, the KKK went away fully aware that their ideas were rejected at KU; and students went back to class now more aware of the Klan and racism in today's society.
That is what should have happened at RC Instead, under pressure from community members, the on-campus radio interview and an on-campus classroom interview that was part of an exercise in covering extremists, were canceled.
canceled. But in reaction to the cancellation, a student organized tonight's free speech forum that will feature two Klansmen. And students are planning a peaceful protest.
n students are planning to The University now has a second chance.
Tonight, every student, every teacher, every member of the community who opposes the Klan and their narrow, bigoted views should exercise their right to peacefully protest. Protest not against the Klan's presence but against their ideas.
To silence the Klan is to become like them. To deny them a platform is to endorse their beliefs.
platform is to endorse them. The University is a place of ideas, a place of thought and a place to grow. No ideas, no thoughts and no growth can occur by suppression or oppression for any reason.
Peace is more powerful than any message of hate that the Klan can preach, and the peaceful protest of this community can disarm the most explosive racist. Twenty voices shouting "hate" cannot drown out 10,000 saying "peace." And peaceful voices are respected and influential.
Tonight, let the KKK speak and let the community learn. And then move forward to eliminate racism and unite the community.
The editorial board
Those words soon will be heard across the state when Harney silt loam, which covers about 4 million acres of Kansas, is designated the official state soil. A proposal to do just that is now in the House Agriculture and Small Business Committee, and it is expected to breeze through.
Step proudly there, son, you're walking on the official dirt of the state of Kansas.
Official state things a waste
Meanwhile, a Senate committee is reviewing a proposal to make the emerald the official state gemstone. That particular gem wasn't chosen because Kansas is a hotbed of emerald mining; rather, members of the jewelers' association say they picked it because of its association with the Emerald City in "The Wizard of Oz."
The Wizard of Oz.
It seems that Kansas is following a national trend to designate official state anythings. For example, Florida has an official state beverage — orange juice; Pennsylvania has an official state dog — the Chesapeake Bay Retriever; and Hawaii has an official state fish — the Humuhum-u-nukumku-a-pu'a'.
kansas soon could be on par with Wisconsin, which has an official state flower, tree, bird, rock, mineral, animal, wildlife animal. domestic animal, symbol of peace, fish and song.
animal, domestic animals. There is some validity in the proposal to designate Harney silt loam as the state soil. It is something to be proud of because it is unusually productive; but that fact should show in the superior crops that the soil is capable of producing. Making the soil "official" will not improve it.
the soil official will warn the proposal to make the emerald the state gemstone, however, makes no sense. Kansas should move away from being recognized as the state that Dorothy hated and wanted to leave. The state has more to promote than its "Wizard of Oz" heritage.
Alan Player for the editorial board
State symbols are supposed to communicate characteristics of individual states. But telling the rest of the nation what kind of dirt Kansas has will not make a strong statement about the state. Neither will promoting a gem that can be found only under Kansas jewelers' counters.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jenerette.
News staff
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alan Player...Editorial editor
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Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Ehlen...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 Schroero...Traffic manager
Kriniarly Coleman...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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TO VICKS BURR
VAPO-BUR
YEAH, AND AH'M STILL - AH'SAY -
AH'M STILL YOUNG!
SUPER TUESDAY
JIMBORGMAN
CINCINNATENATIONAL 1985
Rev. Stonewall JACKSON and Albert E. LEE
Inviting the KKK hurts other rights
If a member of the Ku Klux Klan appeared on campus, with a soapbox, to speak, I would acknowledge his or her rights to speech though I would exercise my own right to protest and to demonstrate. Yet I do not feel it appropriate that the Klan be invited by a University organization to speak on campus. Why? How can I justify such a position? If the Klan were to appear through an invitation of any kind, my freedom and that of other targets of the Klan would be diminished. This, of course, has been virtually ignored in the outpouring of letters and comments by self-appointed defenders of freedom of speech these past two weeks.
practice.
Academic freedom and freedom of speech can only be upheld in an atmosphere of freedom and security, where all feel sufficiently secure to exercise their rights. If a member of the campus community — a black or Jewish or Catholic student or faculty member, for instance — fears reprisal for speaking out, his or her rights, all of our rights, have been diminished. The purpose of the Klan is to intimidate blacks, Jews and Catholics.
David M.
Katzman
Catholics.
Do we agenerate the potential for intimidation?
The threat to our rights? Who, after all, will be intimidated by the Klan? I have lived in Lawrence and taught at the University of Kansas for 19 years, and I have often heard (and participated in) discussions among Jews and blacks about speaking out on issues and defending minority rights. One opinion is always expressed and sometimes (if not most often) prevails: "If we speak out, we will make things worse; we will bring threats and violence against ourselves and our children." Intimidation occurs. The fears are real. When I was president of the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, and my name was
Guest Columnist
listed in the telephone directory as president, I received dozens of threats against my life. On this campus, I have received death threats, some scrawled across my office door. Many of us are aware that in recent years, Klan-affiliated groups have murdered Jews and blacks. And others will continue to speak out, taking perhaps foolish risks to do so. But not all Jews or blacks believe that the risk of defending free speech is worth it; some believe it is better to keep quiet than to bring the wrath of the vigilantes on their families.
wrath of the vigilante on Jews. Those who call themselves the Klan do so because of the power of the Klan. It represents violence against minorities, intimidation and vigilantism against blacks, Jews and Catholics. If they used another name, they would have to deliver threats overtly; instead they can rely on the symbols that the Klan stands for. In other words, they call themselves the Klan because the Klan in its various incarnations has a century-long tradition of beating and killing blacks, Jews and Catholics. Thus they adopt a code that no longer needs to be articulated but has the desire effect.
effect.
I am not arguing against the rights of Klan members. Instead I take issue with those who have defined the issue simplistically: that their rights are diminished if the Klan is not invited to campus to speak. What they are not considering is that if the Klan does appear by invitation, the rights of many others, the potential victims of the Klan, will be diminished. To invite the Klan is to
take the initiative in diminishing the rights of some of the members of our academic community.
mity.
There is one other issue that I find disturbing. Somehow the media and most people I have talked to believe that the potential victims of the Klan — blacks, Jews and Catholics — should be the ones to debate the Klan members.
the nubes.
That is why I was invited to debate the Klan. I noted that to debate the Klan because I do not believe that I or any other minority person should be the one to take issue with them. After all, the Klan and its affiliated organizations claim to be speaking for and in defense of white Christians. I, as a Jew, as an outsider, am beginning to believe that the Klan must speak for a good part of white Christianity because I have not heard very many objections by white Christians to their claim. Many people have taken pen in hand to defend what they seem to feel is the simple violation of academic freedom; no letter writer in this paper seems to be disturbed by the Klan's claims to speak in defense of this nation as a white, Christian one. Frankly, I believe that racism and anti-semitism are not black and Jewish problems; they are problems for whites and Gentiles.
teens; they are Freedom of speech is important and worth defending; I believe in it strongly enough to defend my rights and those of other Jews and blacks against intimidation by the Klan. I also believe in speaking out against those who would tear this good society apart, who would set white against black. Gentile against Jew, native born against immigrant, and have against have nots. At this moment, on this campus, indifference and silence might well be the greatest evil. David M. Katzman is a professor of history.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Issue drew sympathy
Over the past few weeks, a great deal of controversy has gone on about the Ku Klux Klan's visit to the University of Kansas. As we all know, the Klan will not be appearing on campus. Instead, KJHK will present a taped version of the interview they were going to have live on the air.
Something that needs to be pointed out is that the Klansmen were not denied their First Amendment rights. The reason is that the Klansmen were invited to KU, they did not request to come. All KU did was revoke the invitation. If the Klansmen had asked to come, and the University had said no, then we would have violated their First Amendment rights.
However, a greater problem has arisen since the invitation was revoked. Many of us have seemed to develop some sympathy for the Klan. I'm not saying that we agree with Klan doctrine, but several people were very upset that the invitation was revoked. Many of us mistook this as a violation of the First Amendment. Editorials were written in favor of the Klan's right to speak.
The KKK is a horrible organization whose actions are nothing less than those of other
terrorist groups. As a Roman Catholic, I know that the Klan has no more compassion for me than they do for any minority. I think they are a hideous group of people who profess to be Christian, yet do not follow the Christian principles of "Love thy neighbor as thy self."
principal I think the Klan should have come and spoken to the journalism class, answered questions from their audience, done their point-counterpoint on JKHK, and then gotten the hell out of Lawrence.
the next one.
However, this did not happen. One of the programs that the KKK coming to KU was that they would attract people to their organization. After all, not everyone is in favor of such programs as affirmative action, and the KKK is well known for their political opinions on that issue. There was concern that some people would sympathize with the Klan.
people woud sympathize. But by reason of the invitation, KU has handsome sympathy for the Klan — maybe not for their political standpoint, but for their right to speak.
I think we made a great mistake by not letting them come here and get the whole thing over with, instead of allowing this to become the much bigger issue that it has.
Rex Johnson Wichita senior
Free speech has limits
This KKK thing is being misconstrued as a matter of free speech and respect for the opinions of others. It is not surprising to me
that blacks in the community see the Klan visit as something which would threaten them. The Klan represents a position on racial distinctions which has no place in a democratic society; there is no room for debate on the question of equality for all races in our society, and indeed in the entire world today.
It is extremely difficult for Caucasians to see what blacks see when the ghost of the KKK is revived; it is difficult for non-Jews to see what the Jews see when the ghost of the Nazis is revived; it is difficult for other Americans to see what Native Americans see when the ghost of manifest destiny permeates society and permanently mars the face of the Earth.
Supreme Court interpretations of the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States clearly recognize the limits on the right to free speech; we are all too familiar with the "yell fire in a crowded theater" analogy. We also have seen recently that it is within the rights of free speech to parody a religious leader's relationship to his mother. A parallel can be drawn in the KKK case: it is within the KKK's right of free speech to talk about their beliefs to people who invite them to do so; it is not the obligation of a university to invite them, anymore than it is the obligation of a publication to print the parody of Falwell. Bringing the repugnant message of the KKK onto the campus of the University of Kansas is akin to inhaling plutonium dust to prove that it causes cancer.
Robert Bruce Scott Great Bend graduate student
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 7, 1988
5
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS CALENDAR
MONDAY
9 a.m. — IBM microcomputer workshop:
"Introduction to Lotus." Sponsored by academic computing services.
Provides location and registration information.
2:30 p.m. — Women's softball.
Kansas vs. Indiana State, Jayhawk Softball Field.
6 p.m. — Hallmark Symposium.
Robert Manley, designer, and Altman and Manley of Boston and San Francisco. Spencer Museum of Art Audio-
7
6:30 p.m. — Soccer. Mandatory meeting for menagers. Recreation services, 202 Robinson Center. Instant team scheduling, 8:30 a.m. -4 p.m. Tuesday
308 Robinson Center.
7 p.m. — Japanese film; "The Seven Samurai"; Downs Auditorium, Dyche Hall, Sponsored by center for East Asian studies
7 p.m. — Water Safety Instruction Class, eight of nine classes. Lawrence High School.
7:30 p.m. — floor hockey. Mandatory meeting for managers. Recreation services, 202 Robinson Center. Instant team, 202 Robinson Center. 4 p.m. 202 Robinson Center.
8 p.m. — Faculty recital. Hicks Brasher, baraque obee. St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
TUESDAY
8 a.m. - Staff training and development
- "Advanced Supervision." Also 8 a.m. Thursday. Offered by department of personnel services. Call 864-4946 to
9 a.m. — Macintosh workshop:
"Introduction to MS-Word." Offered by academic computing services. Call 864-0494 for information.
4:30 p.m. — Computer science colloquium: "The Grammar of Dimensions in Machine Drawings." Dov Dori, visiting professor. 300 Strong Hall.
7 p.m. — Emily Tailor Women's Resource workshop: "Women's Feelings through Music," Centennial Room,
Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — KU College Republicans general assembly meeting. West Gallery, Kansas Union.
7:30 p.m. — Linguistics Colloquy:
"Phonology and Phonetics of Stress
Clash in English." Mary Beckman, Ohio
State University. 207 Blake Hall.
8 p.m. - Student recital, Concert Choir, Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall
8:30 p.m. - KU Fencing Club meeting, 130 Robinson Center.
8:30 a.m. — Accounting seminar.
Review of university accounting procedures.
Pioneer Room, Burge Union.
9 a.m. - Staff training and development:
"Writing Position Descriptions"
Offered by department of personnel
864-8946 to register
10 a.m. — Retiree club coffee.
Adam Lounge, Alumni Center.
1 p.m. — IBM microcomputer work
11:40 a.m. — University forum:
"The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence." Bruce Twarog, assistant professor of physics and astronomy. Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Call 843-4933 before noon March 8 to make lunch reservations.
shop: "Introduction to MS-DOS."
Offered by academic computing services. Call 864-0494 for location and registration information.
3-30 p.m. — Income tax workshop for foreign students. Sponsored by office of foreign student services. Daisy Hill Room. Burge Union.
6:30 p.m.— Campus Christians meeting. Daisy Hill Room, Burge Union.
7 p.m.— Student Senate meeting. Kansas Room, Kansas Union.
THURSDAY
10
10 a.m. — Affirmative action workshop: "Search, Screening and Selection." Governor's Room, Kansas Union.
11:30 a.m. — Brown Bag-Merenda: "The Pope's Visit to Latin America." J. Laurence Day, professor of journalism
109 Iuniinco Hall.
2:30 p.m. — Panel discussion: "The inauguration of Korea's President, Roh Tae Woo." Sponsored by the center for East Asian studies. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
1 p.m. — Macintosh workshop:
"Introduction to Pagemaker." Offered by academic computing services. Call 864-0494 for information.
3:39 p.m. - Geography colloquium series: "Research in Golltto and the Brunca Region, Costa Rica." Donna Luckey, assistant professor of architecture, 317 Lindley Hall.
4 p.m. — Society for East Asian studies general meeting. Shogi following. Parlor A, Kansas Union.
4 p.m. — Michener Lectures on Social Biology: "The Honeybee Community — Old and New Problems in Communication and Orientation." 1005 Haworth.
6 p.m. - Rice and beans program:
"B men in Honduras and Nicaragua."
Betty Nelson, Topeka, Sponsored by
Latin American Solidarity, Ecumenical
Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
7 p.m. - The American Past with Calder Pickett on KANU 91.5 FM.
7 p.m. — Film screening: "H.M.
Deserters," the latest work of Polish
filmmaker Janusz Majewski. Hoch Auditorium,
No charge.
8 p.m. — Lecture: "Civil Rights in America." Juan Williams, reporter, Washington Post, Kansas Union ballroom, Sponsored by Student Senate.
8 p.m. — University Chamber Orchestra premier concert. Zhilian Xu, conductor. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
FRIDAY
11
9 a.m. — IBM microcomputer work-
shop: "introduction to Word Perfect."
Offered by academic computing services.
Call 864-0404 for location and
**Noon — Men's basketball. Big Eight Tournament begins. Kemper Arena, Kansas City. Mo. Call 864-3141 for ticket information.**
7 p.m. — Opera is My Hobby with James Seaver on KANU 91.5 FM.
7 p.m. — Latin American FILM
Festival: "Castles of Purity" Downs
Auditorium, Duche Hall
8 p.m. — Spring Gala. University Dance Company with Cohan/Suzuke Duet Company of New York. Also 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturday. Tickets on sale at Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved. Public $6 both night. KU students $5 March 11, $4 March 12. Call 664-3982 for reservations. Crafton-Preyre Theater, Murphy Hall.
7 p.m. - Latin American Film
**Union spring break hours:** Kansas
Union closed March 12, 13, 19; open
7 a.m.-5 p.m. March 14-18; limited food service. Burge Union closed March 12-
10. University Placement Center, Legal Services for Students, Organizations and Activities Center, and Burge Duplicating Center open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. March 14-18. Normal hours for both unions resume March 21.
SATURDAY
12
9 a.m. — The Vintage Jazz Show with Michael Maher on KANU 91.5 FM.
10 a.m. — The Jazz Scene with Dick Wright on KANU 91.5 FM.
All day — Geological Society of America South-Central Section meeting. Through March 15, Kansas Union. For information, call 864-4974.
1:30 p.m. — Museum workshop:
"Make It bigger: Looking Into Microscopes." Offered by Museum of Natural History, Ages 7-13, Call 864-4173 for information.
SUNDAY
Spring break library hours begin
Watson Library open noon-5 p.m. March
13, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. March 14-18, 9 a.m-
5 p.m. March 19, noon-midnight March 20.
normal hours resume March 21.
2:30 p.m. — Children's art class:
"Symbols of Myself: Medieval Imaginations."
Ages 7-12. Offered by Spencer Museum of Art. Call 864-4710 for information.
"Animal Story Hour." Offered by Museum of Natural History. Ages 3-6. For information call 864-4173.
1:30 p.m. — Museum workshop:
3
3 p.m. — The KU Concerts on KANU 91.5 FM
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ARE YOU...
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DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!
Write your legislator
Letter writing tables will be on
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"The Mac is the first computer I've really felt comfortable using."
"I've used a Macintosh since I was a freshman. I can use about a half-dozen programs to crunch numbers, process words and even organize my thinking.
"In high school, I used an Apple II, and I've tried more than once to use an IBMPC $ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $ for something besides games. Somehow I feel more in control at a Macintosh.
"As a journalist, the Mac helps me produce near-perfect documents more quickly. It makes it easier to get my ideas down on paper — then go back to revise them and correct my mistakes. Add-on software programs can also give you a dictionary, a thesaurus and other writing tools."
"Using a Mac gives me a sense of accomplishment I've never gotten with another computer. It helps me to do my best."
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
Macintosh Plus...$1200
Macintosh SE
with 2 disk drives...$1979
Macintosh SE
with 3 disk drives ... $2399
with 20 meg hard disk drive...$2399
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union. Stop by and place your order before March 11. Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE, that you want. ($50 deposit required)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
KU Bookstores
Burge Union
6
Monday, March 7. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Racial incidents increase Campuses report protests and death threats
The Associated Press
AMHERST, Mass. — Twenty years after race riots tore up cities and an assassin killed civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., a rise in campus racial incidents is shaking some of the nation's ivory towers.
"Even from our crude figures we can see a tremendous increase in the number of reports of racial incidents in schools," said Eva Sears of the University for Democratic Renewal, a Ku Klux Klan watchdog group in Atlanta.
"We're not talking about juvenile jokes here. We're talking about something that can have a horribly, horribly vicious outcome." she said.
The number of incidents logged by the center has jumped from 14 in 1985 to 56 last year, she said.
They range from racist jokes on a talk show at the University of Michigan last year to alleged beatings of black students by whites at the University of Massachusetts in 1986 and earlier this year. Last spring, a caricature of a black man with a bone through his nose was drawn on a
At the University of Pennsylvania last week, campus police maintained round-the-clock protection for a black activist who reportedly received death threats. A school fraternity was ordered to close for 18 months for sponsoring a strip show in which white students jeered black dancers.
University of Wisconsin fraternity lawn.
In Massachusetts, 40 members of minority groups at Hampshire College ended a 9-day takeover of a school building last week to protest racism. A similar takeover at the nearby University of Massachusetts ended last month after meetings with the school's chancellor.
And more than 300 Dartmouth students rallied in Hanover, N.H., last week to protest bigotry while police guarded the offices of a conservative weekly publication that launched stinging attacks on a black professor.
"It was just a matter of time before things began erupting," said Joseph E. Lowery, president of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference in Atlanta.
Black leaders say recent racial unrest is rooted in an apparent lack of civil rights progress in the last two decades.
"We've come to the 20-year anniversary of the riots of 1967 and the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King and I think people are saying, 'Wait a minute,' things haven't improved for blacks," said Samuel L. Myers, president of the National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education, which represents 117 predominantly black colleges.
Black leaders say the embers of racism have been ignited by attempts to recruit blacks and keep them in college.
But there are signs that many students are resisting racism.
More than 1,400 blacks and whites rallied at the University of Michigan last year to denounce racist acts on campus.
The Associated Press
School claims students harassed black prof
The hearings adjourned Saturday evening, and a second day of hearings was scheduled yesterday. But before the hearings even started, Review editor Chris Baldwin said he expected to be expelled.
The students confronted Cole in his classroom after publishing an article last month in the Review that was harshly critical of Cole's teaching abilities.
HANOVER, N.H. - Four staff members of a conservative student newspaper faced a Dartmouth College disciplinary board Saturday, charged with harassing a black professor in an incident that sparked charges of racism at the Ivy League school.
The students, part of the off-campus Dartmouth Review, faced possible expulsion for a confrontation last week with William Cole, a black music professor who sued the paper two years ago for libel, then dropped the case.
The school charged Baldwin of Hinsdale, III., photo editor John Quilhot of Fort Wayne, Ind., executive editor John Sutter of St. Louis, and contributor Sean Nolan of Lexington, Mass., with harassment, disorderly conduct and violation of the right to privacy.
Baldwin said the Review contacted Cole by telephone for his response before publishing the first article, and Cole responded with profanities. The Review published those remarks in its article.
Then the four staffers approached Cole after one of his classes.
"We wanted to establish clearly that we were not denying Professor Cole space in the paper," Baldwin said.
The students went to his room armed with tape recorders and cameras, which led to the charges of violation of privacy. Baldwin said that because the incident took place in a public classroom on campus, Cole couldn't have any reason expectation of privacy.
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PANDA GARDEN WANTS to recognize and reward your semester of dedication and hard work. During the week before SPRING BREAK, we will treat you to 2 free Crab Rangoes and tea with each dinner you order upon presentation of coupon; Monday through Thursday. This applies to drive-thru as well as dining in. We are very proud of you all and would also like to thank you for making PANDA GARDEN so successful.
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E
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 7, 1988
NationWorld
7
Officials say Iranian boats fired at U.S. helicopters
The Associated Press
AL MANAMAH, Bahrain — U.S. helicopters on a reconnaissance flight escaped heavy machine gun fire yesterday from an oil platform and several boats in the central Persian Gulf, U.S. officials said. Iran was believed to be behind the attack. No casualties were reported.
The attack came about 25 hours after a U.S. warship, on patrol farther north, fired at what were believed to be Iranian speedboats moving toward one of the U.S. Navv's offshore supply barges.
The two encounters shattered one of the longest periods of quiet in the gulf since the gulf's so-called "tanker war" began four years ago. There
have been no reported attacks on shipping by either Iraq or Iran since Feb. 12.
The Navy did not say who fired on the U.S. helicopters yesterday, but there appeared no doubt that it was Iran, which controls many of the oil platforms in the central gulf and uses some as supply and staging bases for the armed boats that patrol the waters and attack neutral shipping.
U. S. aircraft have been fired on from the oil platforms on a few previous occasions but none are known to have been hit. On Feb. 12, Iran claimed its anti-aircraft gunners on Sirri Island, in the south-central Gulf, had driven off several U.S. choppers. The Pentagon denied the incident occurred.
Catholics demand religious freedom
Large Czech crowds signal growing resistance to government
The Associated Press
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia — Thousands of Roman Catholics packed a cavernous cathedral yesterday and hundreds shouted "We want religious freedom!" in a sign of growing religious resistance to the communist government.
The Mass at the St. Vitus Cathedral, across the street from the home of President Gustav Husak, drew an estimated 8,000 people in one of the biggest religious services in the capital since the communist takeover in 1948
Several dozen plainclothes security officers were posted inside and outside the cathedral. Police arrested 13
leading dissidents and religious activists Friday, apparently to prevent them from attending the Mass, and briefly detained seven other dissidents.
After the Mass, about 1,000 people gathered beneath the balcony of the residence of Cardinal Frantisk Tomasek. Several hundred chanted "We want bishops." "We want religion, we want the pope" outside Tomasek's residence which adjoins the castle where Husak lives.
year. The service was the culmination of a pilgrimage by Catholics from the Czech lands of Bohemia and Moravia.
During the service, a message read by Tomasek from Pope John Paul II was greeted with thunderous applause.
The two-hour Mass was celebrated in honor of Blessed Agnes, an 13th-century Czech princess who is to be canonized by the Vatican later this
The chanting crowd afterward appeared to reflect growing discontent among church members at the governments' refusal to agree to Vatican candidates to fill Czechoslovakia's 10 vacant bishop posts. No new bishops have been named since 1973, and the only three are older than 75.
JERUSALEM — Israeli soldiers killed two Arab teenagers yesterday and dragged an injured boy from his sick bed during violent sieges at two hospitals in the occupied territories, officials said.
The Vatican has refused to accept
government proposals to name as bishops members of the state-sponsored Pace In Territory organization, that lists not recognized by the Holy See.
Israelis kill two in siege of hospitals
The simmering discontent culminated in recent weeks in a 31-point petition which demanded more bishops, more priests and separation of church and state as well as the right to question Marxist dogma and to petition authorities without harass.
The document has been signed by more than 300,000 church members, making it the largest such action anywhere in the Soviet bloc since 1945.
The Associated Press
The army said an officer and two soldiers were indicted on charges of aggravated assault in connection with the beating of two bound Arabs last month in the West Bank city of Nabus, Jordan.
Arab protesters hoisted hundreds of outlawed Palestinian flags to mark a PLO-organized "Flag Day." Arab reports said soldiers shot and killed a donkey wearing both Palestinian and Israeli flags.
The beating, which lasted more than 30 minutes, was taped by CBS News and sparked international criticism of the crackdown in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, which Israel occupied after the 1967 Middle East war.
News Roundup
TIBETANS DEMAND INDEPENDENCE: Thousands of rioting Tibetans set bonfires in Lhasa's streets, and several people were killed during more than 12 hours of clashes with police, according to reports that reached Beijing yesterday. The protesters were demanding Tibet's independence from China. The riots came at the time of important Buddhist festival in Tibet's capital.
ROBERTSON UNDECIDED: Republican presidential hopeful Pat Robertson said yesterday that he had not decided whether to pay court costs incurred during his libel suit against a
former congressman, although the payment remains a condition for dismissal of the case. U.S. District Judge Joyce Hens Green agreed Friday to dismiss the $55 million lawsuit Robertson filed against former Rep. Paul N. McCloskey Jr., R-Calf, provided the GOP candidate pay the court costs, estimated to be between $10,000 and $20,000.
SWAGGART RETURNS TO PULPIT: Evangelist Jim Swaggart returned to his television program yesterday and told his followers that he would tell them someday about the unspecified sin to which he confessed two weeks earlier.
Although Swaggart stepped down from his pulpit after a tearful confession Feb. 21, an Assemblies of God spokeswoman said Swaggart has not yet been officially ordered to refrain from preaching as part of his rehabilitation.
ALASKA EARTHQUAKE: Residents of Alaska's southern coastal areas were ordered to evacuate low-lying areas yesterday after a major earthquake, which reportedly measured 7.0 on the Richter scale, rattled much of the state. There were no immediate reports of damage or injuries from the quake centered offshore, about 210 miles south of Cape Yakataga.
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A104 Physical Education
My first time tutoring was a night to remember. My student was something called Bone Crusher Reed, a.k.a. Billy Jo, defensive tackle for the football team.
I had the shock of my life when he answered his dorm room door. He was about six foot seven...in diameter. And when he shook my hand, I thought I'd never get it back.
So there I was, face-to-knee with the big man on campus, wondering how I was going to relate American Literature to The Hulk.
But then he pulled out a can of Orange Cappuccino. I was shocked! Could it be that this tough jock liked its delicate taste? And when Bone Crusher brought out the bone china, I was beyond belief.
Reading the expression on my face, he said, "What can I say? I like it. The Cafe Francais is pretty good, too" Well, who's going to argue, I thought. As we sipped our Orange Cappuccino, I discovered that Billy Jo loves reading novels; his only problem was poetry. So I gave him tips on reading Emily Dickinson, and he gave me a copy of Ann Beattie's "Falling in Place."
All I could think was, Dad's never going to believe this!
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8
Monday, March 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Research helps build KU reputation Professor uses computer to study genetics of schizophrenia
By Stacy Foster
A KU psychology professor's research could help the University of Kansas become one of the leading schizophrenia research centers in the country, the chairman of the psychology department said last week.
Kansan staff writer
Rue Cromwell, M. Erick Wright distinguished professor of psychology, said the central focus of his research had been on how the brain processed information and the mechanisms that produced schizophrenia.
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
Cromwell has been studying schizophrenia for almost 20 years. He is now studying possible genetic variants related to schizophrenia.
The variants are studied to see how the brain processes information. Through his research, Cromwell has found that schizophrenics process information differently than normal people.
10.
Cromwell tests these variants in a computer program called COGLAB or cognitive laboratory. The program detects variants that are common in schizophrenics.
Two research students are learning the program so it could be used here. The program was first developed at the University of Nebraska by Will Snoalding, one of Cromwell's former students.
Ken Sewell, Topeka graduate student, said that they would be giving a demonstration of the program to one of Cromwell's graduate classes today. When the program is perfected it can be used at the Meninger Foundation and the Veterans Administration Hospital in Topeka.
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Cromwell said the tests can detect the genetic characteristics in high risk persons, such as first-
Rue Cromwell
degree relatives, which are siblings, parents and children
Current schizophrenia data suggest that almost 12 percent of the offspring of diagnosed schizophrenics could develop schizophrenic characteristics themselves.
his themical role. Cromwell said this figure could be misleading because 83 percent of those offspring show no sign of schizophrenia. They often have exceptional
Cromwell said the tests can detect the genetic characteristics in high risk persons, such as first-degree relatives which are siblings, parents and children.
abilities and hold occupations that require creative or intellectual talents.
The other 17 percent, however, show signs of severe schizophrenic characteristics, he said.
"The genetic factor which determines schizophrenia may be a sensitivity factor that can go either way." Cromwell said.
Cromwell's work with schizophrenia makes the University's research of the disorder more complete, said Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, department chairman of psychology.
"Kansas has some recognition because of the work of Dr. Adams, but this will make it more complete with the addition of the behavioral sciences," she said.
Adams said Cromwell's work with the behavioral science aspect of the disorder could be used with his study.
Ralph Adams, professor of chemistry, has studied the chemical compounds of schizophrenic brains.
"We might be able to see some chemical background to the sensory processes that Rue studies, but right now that is something we haven't developed," Adams said.
C. R. Snyder, professor and director of clinical psychology, said Cromwell's record for training clinical psychologists was unmatched in the United States.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 7, 1988
9
QUEST FOR VINYL
Bands vie for spots on album
[Image shows a live concert scene with a guitarist in the foreground, playing an electric guitar and singing into a microphone. Behind them is a crowd of fans, some raising their hands in excitement, while others are watching attentively.]
By Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
They were bouncing, slamming,
swinging and flying. The crowd at
"Quest for Vinyl" at the Bottleneck,
737 New Hampshire St.
danced so hard to the music late
Saturday night that the ceiling
nearly came down.
Actually, part of the panel ceiling above the dance floor did fall after a member of the audience jumped off the stage and hit the soft ceiling panel while the Homestead Grays cranked out the closing tunes of "Quest for Vinyl."
"The last half hour of the show. I watched everyone dancing and felt that all of Lawrence came together," said Brad Schwartz, KJHK station manager and the one who developed the show during the last month and a half.
The scene was an appropriate closing for the three-day recording event, sponsored by JKHK. The event featured 20 of Lawrence's finest bands trying to win a spot on the album "Live from Lawrence."
From cow-punk rock to rhythm and blues to reggae to rockabilly, the many musical faces of Lawrence was seen by about 1,500 people.
"We certainly have a potpourri of musical talent in Lawrence," said Jef Morrow, Lawrence resident, who listened to the five bands that played Saturday night. "The Lawrence music scene is as active now as any where in the past potential was there, and now it's been realized."
Stephan Simmons, drummer for Drowning Incident, a local band that played Friday night, said the three-day event was similar to Woodstock, a huge weekend music event in 1969.
"It's kind of a mini-Woodstock." Simmons said. "This has been a great opportunity for people who don't see shows to come and see the many different sounds Lawrence has to offer."
With only 45 minutes allotted to each band to play, band members and several JKHK staff members shuffled drum sets, guitars, keyboards and amplifiers hourly.
I'll just use the image as a placeholder. If you need any specific details or images, please specify them.
Matt Kesler, bassist for the Kansas City-based Pedal Jets, who played Saturday night and were featured on the last KJHK album. "Fresh Sounds from Middle America Part III," said the show was put together well.
"It's surprising how smoothly bands are getting on and off after their sets." Kesler said.
037
Kesler said the album, should go over better than the last one because it's live.
The album should be out by late April, said Bill Rich, owner of the Fresh Sounds record label, which will promote the record.
"We are working on the six-month plan. It is crucial to have this album out by the end of the semester." Rich said. "We hope to have the mixed done by the end of spring break so we can get any remixing, pressing and shipping finished and stay on schedule."
The album will contain about 55 minutes of music, limiting the number of bands that make it on the album to about 15. Rich said. He said he planned about 500 copies of cassette tapes, which could hold 90 minutes of music, and 1,500 copies of records.
their songs on last year's album.
Rich said ticket and T-s shirt sales probably wouldn't cover the $8,000 cost of producing the album. He said some type of benefit fundraising concert might be scheduled.
Other college radio stations said they had never finished a live album.
"We don't really care if we get on the album," Newman said. "We just wanted to play."
For example, Howard Zimmerman, station manager of WVUA at the University of Alabama, said that he hadn't heard of an entirely live album done by a college radio station but that he would like to hear one.
Jerry Landers, drummer for the Lawrence-based Ultraviollets, who played Thursday night, said the quality of the sound system, which was provided by Ramaon Studios, 646 Locust St., and The Music Shack, 1023 E. 23rd St., was the best he had ever heard.
Todd Newman, vocalist for the Topeka-based Todd Newman Band, which played Friday, said he was pleased with the band's performance. The band had one of
Members of the audience seemed happy with the sound system but more so about the loudness and audacity to hear local and regional bands.
Ann Polizzotto, Manhattan Beach, Calif., sophomore, who attended all three shows, said she had come to hear the diversity of music offered in Lawrence.
"It's too bad that the bands only play for a short time, but you get to hear more diversity," she said.
Melissa Jones, Lawrence freshman, said she hoped Lawrence would keep its music for itself.
But Lawrence didn't keep the music to itself completely. The three-day show sparked the interest of a major recording company.
A representative from Elektra Records, a label that has signed the college band Guadalcanal Diary, said that he had heard about the event and that he went to Saturday's show.
Top; The Homestead Grays, who closed Stairday night's Quest For Vinyl show, worked the crowd up to the point that bouncers had to keep people from smashing into the stage.
Above left; the keyboards were lively during the 3-day festival as 28 bands performed in hopes of having a spot on the album
Above; Karl Hofmann, recording engineer for the shows,
watches a television monitor of the stage while he adjusts sound levels in the sound room. The make shift recording studio was set up in an office next door to the Bottleneck.
Healthy Hawk
STUDENTS AND ALCOHOL
At most schools, drinking is taken for granted as part of college life. According to some surveys, 3 out of 4 college students drink. It is accepted (most students expect to drink) in the school cafeteria.
Most college students drink to feel good and have fun, to relieve stress, to escape, to enjoy the taste of the beverage, to be more at ease at get-togethers, to be one of the crowd, and to get high. Most students consider drinking to be normal and respectable. But for many, alcohol can cause serious problems.
slowly think, poor comprehension, and frequent dislike of others.
SOCIAL CONFLICTS. When alcohol lesions inhibit a person may say or do something that a person who gets them may allow friends and instructors, and may be unwelcome at social gatherings. Problems related to sexual behavior are also common.
POOR GROATS. Heavy drinkers almost always suffer academically as a result of slowed thinking, poor concentration, and frequent absence from class.
PSOH stands for Psychology of Social Hospice. It involves the study of alcoholic hues the body. This sets the stage for illness that can affect class attendance as well as participation in sports and other activities.
ACCIDENTS AND INJURIES. Falls, cuts and bruises are common results of alcohol abuse. Serious injuries can occur. Automobile accidents are one of the most common causes of death for college students, and often the victims include passengers and hostesses, as well as the drinks themselves.
There is an accouon problem if you or someone you know DRINKS OF COFFEE or escape from problems. DRINKS OF OFFAIR or of intoxication. DRINKS while intoxicated. DRINKS MORE AND MORE to achieve the same effect. IS INJURED as a result of drinking. GETS IN TROUBLE with the law as a result of drinking. EXPERIENCES BLACKOUTS or loss of memory. HAS PHYSICAL COMPLIANTS relating to alcohol use. GOES TO CLASS or work intoxicated. GOES TO CLASS or work intoxicated. The best thing you can do for yourself is to admit that you are the best thing you can do for a friend is to talk about.
The best thing you can do for yourself is to admit that help is needed and get it right away. The best thing you can do for a friend is to talk about the problem and see that he/they are ready.
For more information or assistance contact:
For more information or assistance contact:
University Counseling Center, 116 Bailey, 864-3931
Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-864
Mental Health Center, 121 Strong, 864-9580
Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism
2200 West 25th Street, 841-4138
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10
Monday, March 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Babies' actions predict problems KU researcher says infants can respond to their environmen
KU researcher says infants can respond to their environment
By James Buckman Kansan staff writer
A baby's behavior can give researchers insight into problems that the child may face later in life, a KU researcher told staff members Friday at the Osawatomie State Mental Hospital.
Kansan staff writer
Frances Horowitz, an internationally-respected researcher in child development and vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, told about 100 staff members and psychologists that the study could help researchers predict the baby's behavior later in life.
The newborn infant comes into the world much more behaviorally competent than people thought. The normal newborn infant relates to outside stimulation through its senses like sight, smell and hearing. At every stage, the infant is processing information.'
"It helps us understand the basic
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Frances Horowitz vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service
"The newborn infant comes into the world much more behaviorally competent than people thought," she said. "The normal newborn infant relates to outside stimulation through its senses like sight, smell and hearing. At every stage, the infant is processing information."
Horowitz said she was researching the possibility that at birth, some children were genetically more prone to certain behaviors than other children.
SUPERIOR REFRIGERATION & HEATING
ago, researchers thought babies weren't aware of their surroundings. But researchers now think babies can take in information and respond to their environment to a great extent, she said.
She said she thought that some children were born so fragile from a behavioral standpoint that no environment would be able to help them avoid problems later in life.
building blocks of behavior," she said. "It can give us an early window into the individual differences that may be very important for subsequent development."
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The
The University of Kansas Department of Theatre and Film Presents
Janusz Majewski's
1985
Polish-Hungarian Film
C.K. DEZERTERZY
(H.M. DESERTERS)
with a special introduction and commentary by the director
7:00 p.m. Thursday, March 10, 1988 Hoch Auditorium
Janusz Majewski
Free and Open to the Public
Partially funded by the KU Department of Theatre and Film, College Honors Program, Center for International Programs, Academic Affairs, and the Department of Polish Studies.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 7, 1988
11
Police ready for forum Skinheads to be part of security,KKK says
By Ric Brack
Kansas staff writer
J. Allen Moran, exalted cyclops of the Missouri Knights, an affiliate of the Ku Klux Klan, said yesterday that his group would bring about 25 people to attend the free speech forum at Hoch Auditorium tonight, but that only a few of those would actually be a part of the Klan's security force. He said that none would be armed.
Moran said that some Skinheads could be included in his group attending the forum. Skinheads are members of a white supremacist movement who are characterized by their shaven heads.
Jim Denney, KU police director, said yesterday, "The Skinheads have been acting as their tough guys. It's a nice little symbiotic relationship."
Denney released little information
about what security measures will be taken by the combined force of KU and Lawrence police officers to secure the auditorium and the area around it.
He said that formulation of a security plan was tougher than for most events because there were so many unknown quantities involved in the form of demonstrations that have been planned by various groups for 'the event.
"There will be quite a few police officers inside Hodat Auditorium," he said.
He said the demonstrations and protests added an element of uncertainty to any planning that was done, because police couldn't forecast whether the demonstrations would remain peaceful or if groups other than those already announced would join in the protests.
preserve the atmosphere of free speech. Demonstrating and protests are within people's rights. But anyone who disrupts the event and commits a crime will be arrested," Denney said.
"One of our primary roles is to
Moran said that members of his group would be unarmed unless they were involved in violence.
Moran, in a telephone interview yesterday said, "We want to see this thing go off as smoothly as possible."
"We're going in basically naked. We've never done that anywhere before." Moran said.
It was announced last week that the forum would be moved to Hoch Auditorium from the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium because of the possibility of a large crowd and security problems at the Union.
Calm protest of forum planned
By Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
A coalition of community members and University of Kansas students met for nearly four hours last night in a closed meeting to plan protest strategy for tonight's free speech forum that includes the Ku Klux Klan.
The group, called Students and Community Against Oppression and Racism, said they would meet at 7 p.m. outside Hoch Auditorium to conduct a peaceful demonstration during the forum. The forum begins at 8 p.m.
plans the group may have.
The group will distribute fliers all day urging others to join their protest. The group already distributed some fliers Saturday night at Allen Field House before the Kansas-Oklahoma State basketball game.
Also, the group will hand out red ribbons, which the group said symbolized solidarity against racist doctrines like those of the Klan. Tables will be set up in the Kansas Union and in front of Wescose Hall if the weather permits.
Linda Pointer, Lawrence junior,
and Clarice Brooks, Denver junior,
read the group's statement. The
statement denounced the terrorist
tactics of the Klan.
within the University community."
Members of the congregation at St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1621 Crescent Road, also were encouraged in church services yesterday to show up for tonight's demonstration wearing white shirts and red ribbons.
The Rev. William Dulin, pastor of Calvary Church of God in Christ, 646 Alabama St., released a statement earlier yesterday. He refused to comment at the meeting last night.
"On the night of the Klan appearance, we will sponsor a prayer vigil, and may the grace of God guide us all." Dujin said.
Commission to act on cab company request
A new 24-hour taxi service could be started in Lawrence if the Lawrence City Commission grants a Lawrence resident a license at tomorrow night's meeting.
Shackelford could not be reached for comment.
By a Kansan reporter
Buford Watson, city manager, said Shackelford would operate the service with three vehicles.
must also meet minimum safety standards.
Shackleford's request for a license will come two weeks after Ward Thompson, president of Transportation Inc. and owner of Yellow and Union Cab Companies in Lawrence, discontinued service from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m.
Watson said that to begin operating, a person needed to have a license and liability insurance. The vehicles
nights meeting.
The resident, Paul Shackelford,
will ask the commission tomorrow for a license to operate a taxi service.
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12
Monday, March 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
KU women's basketball team beats NU, OU; heads to finals
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
SALINA-Yesterday, for the second year in a row, the Kansas women's basketball team ended any championship hopes the Nebraska Cornhuskers might have had by defeating them in the semifinals of the Big Eight Conference tournament. The score this year was 87-84. Last year it was 74-73.
See related story
Last season, Kansas was the top seed and favored to win. This year, however, the Cornhuskers were the top seed.
Kansas, 20-9. will play tonight in the championship game at 7 p.m. against the Colorado Buffaloes. Colorado defeated the Missouri Tigers in their semifinal game 84-30.
The Cornhuskers' loss marked only the second time in the history of the Big Eight tournament that the top-seeded team had not reached the finals. In 1986, Oklahoma did not make it.
The Jayhawks defeated the Oklahoma Sooners on Saturday 67-66, advancing to Sunday's semifinal game. Nebraska, 22-6, advanced by defeating Kansas State 71-51.
Kansas forward Sandy Shaw scored 33 points, making seven of eight from three-point range. Her effort tied the fifth highest, single-game scoring total in tournament history. The Jayhawks' Lynette Woodard had the highest, scoring 38 points in 1981 against Colorado.
Kansas guard Lisa Braddy made four clutch free throws in the final 22 seconds of play to help seal the victory.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said the team approached yesterday's game as if it were the finals.
The past two games have been great for us," Washington said. "Sandy gave us a big lift with her shooting this afternoon. We made some adjustments in the second half which helped us to win."
Shaw, whose 33 points was her career high, said she felt confident every time she shot the ball.
"I was in a good flow today and it felt good," Shaw said. "It was the best offensive game of my career. I can't wait until tomorrow night."
Things did not begin well for Shaw. With 14:55 left in the first half, Shaw took an elbow to the head by teammate Deborah Richardson and it looked as if she might not play the rest of the game.
rest of the game.
After an official's timeout and a break, Shaw returned to the game with a bandaged head. But it didn't seem to hurt her performance. Shaw received stitches after the game but should be able to play tonight.
Braddy said she tried to relax when she shot her free throws at the end of the game.
"I pretended like I was in practice," Braddy said. "It was just me and the goal. I was confident the shots would fall."
Nebraska coach Angela Beck, whose team defeated Kansas twice during the regular season, said, "Kansas played a great game and they deserved to win today. We lost the game in the early part of the season, but a very well played ballgame, a credit to women's basketball."
With 2:01 left in the first half, Kansas trailed 44-38. Two free throws each by Richardson and forward Lisa Dougherty brought the score closer with Nebraska leading at halftime 44-42.
In the second half, Kansas scored the first eight points and took a 50-44 lead with 17:13 left. The Jayhawks, helped by the outside shooting of Shaw, went on to take a 63-50 lead with 13:26 left.
The Jayhawks outscored Nebraska 25-6 in a stretch that put them on the road to victory.
Kansas held seven to 10-point leads throughout the second half, until the 3:51 mark. The Jayhawks led 79-69 at that point.
Nebraska scored six straight points in the next minute of play, cutting the score to 79-75. Braddy two free throws with 1:08 left gave Kansas an 83-78 lead, but the Cornhuskers wouldn't quit.
Nebraska's Amy Stephens and Maurice Ivy each made a three-pointer basket, making the score 83-82 with 27 seconds left in the game. Braddy then made the free throws that gave the Jayhawks the victory.
Braddy had 16 points, five rebounds and five assists; Dougherty had 13 points and six rebounds; and Richardson had six rebounds.
Nebraska was led by Ivy, who had 29 points and 11 rebounds. Stephens added 20 points, including four of six from three-point range.
The winner of tonight's championship game will get an automatic berth into the NCAA women's tournament. Washington said yesterday's win should allow Kansas to get into the NCAA tournament, even if they lose tonight.
Kansas 67
Oklahoma 66
Despite Kansas' two victories over Oklahoma during the regular season, the first-round game was expected to be close. In both regular season games, Kansas won 71-68.
Saturday at the Bicentennial Center in Salina, the game was even closer. Oklahoma was unable to get a shot off with five seconds remaining, and Kansas won 67-66.
Lisa Dougherty led Kansas with 18 points and helped build a 13-point lead in the first half.
The Sooners battled back and tied the score at 34 at halftime.
"I thought it was a great game," Kansas coach Marian Washington said. "We missed some shots underneath, but Oklahoma is a very talented team."
Richardson 6 3/4 15, Shaw 5 0/1 11, Omanl 1 0/2 1
Braddy 3 0/8 Basker 4 3/4 11, Doughty 7 4/7 18,
Stroughter 1 0/2, Page 1 2, Jackson 0 1 0,
Nelson 0 1/0, Totals 18 10-15 67.
Kansas 67, Oklahoma 66
Utah Jazz 11, Boston 9, 7, 17. Quinnen 0-0-1, Notaats 8-3-15
Los Angeles 21, Minnesota 18, 4, 6. Brick 4-1-6, 7-9-10, 17-19.
Hafftine Tied 34-34, Total fouls - Oklahoma 21, Kansas 18. Failed out—none. Three point shots—Oklahoma 5 (McKenon 19, Zachary 3, Rushing 1), Kansas 6 (Shaw 16,) Rebound 3, Assists 4, Dakota 4 (Douphrey 10), Assists —Oklahoma 12 (McKenon 6), Kansas 14 (Brady 8), Techniques —
Kansas 87. Nebraska 84
Katharina 1-2, 3-4; Aisha 12-2-23, 3-4; Anod 1-0-0, 2-5;
Brady 5-6, 9; Baker 4-2, 8; Dougherty 5-4, 13;
Stroughter 2-1, 2; Page 0-0, 0; Jackson 2-2, 3;
Totals 32 16-25 87
Haliase 1-4-6 4-6, 1v. 16-2 1y. 17-2 1m.
Haliase 1-4-6 4-6, 1v. 16-2 1y. 17-2 1m.
Haliase 1-0-3 4-6, 1v. 16-2 1m. 17-2 1m.
Haliase 1-0-3 4-6, 1v. 16-2 1m. 17-2 1m.
Haliase 1-0-3 4-6, 1v. 16-2 1m. 17-2 1m.
Fouled out - Nebrasaca - Flame. Three point
shots - Nebrasaca 1-6 (Siphens 4-6) 39
shots - Nebrasaca 1-6 (Siphens 4-6) 39
shots - Nebrasaca 1-6 (Siphens 4-6) 39
shots - Nebrasaca 1-6 (Siphens 4-6) 39
(11) Kansas 39 (Richardson, Dougherty 6)
Assists - Nebrasaca 8 (iv. Siephens 2), Kana-
se 2, Kanase 2
(11) Kansas 39 (Richardson, Dougherty 6)
Assists - Nebrasaca 8 (iv. Siephens 2), Kana-
se 2, Kanase 2
KANSAS
Kansas forward Sandy Shaw looks to score against the defense of Nebraska forward Kelly Hubert. Shaw received a head injury after being hit by an elbow from teammate Debra Richardson. Shaw recovered and scored 33 points in yesterday's victory over the Cornhuskers. Kansas will face Colorado tonight in the Big Eight Conference tournament final.
Women win Big Eight swimming; men place second
Kansan sports writer
By Tom Stinson
Kempf, the Kansas swimming coach, did backflips nine straight times between 1976-1984. Each one of those years the Kansas women's swimming team won the Big Eight Championship.
Gary Kemp's backflipped a little out of practice, but it was satisfying.
Saturday night, Kempf once again got to perform the dive, as his women's team regained the conference title.
The Jayhawk women dominated the championships and the favorite, 17th-ranked Nebraska during all three days of competition, winning 715.5 to 84.
"It was a tradition I started when we won my first championship in 1976." Kemp said. "But it's had a little layoff the last few years. It was a little rusty, but it was fun."
Iowa State was third with 332.5 and Missouri was fourth with 236.
"I'm proud as hell of them," Kempi said. "We've struggled during the year, but I always maintained that they were hard workers and talented. And now it came together and they just dominated.
they just performed from the top of the lineup to the bottom. We just had more desire than Nebraska."
The Kansas women won 13 of 20 Big Eight titles during the weekend at Bob Devaney Sport Center in Lincoln.
Nebraska won the men's championship for the ninth consecutive year with 583 points. Kansas was a close second with 524. Iowa State was third with 390 and Missouri was fourth 170.
"The progress we made on the men's side was just fantastic. We didn't win the championship, but we were right up there. We feel like we
have one championship back home where it belongs." Kempf said. "Now we want the other. Next year we want both."
Kempf was named the Big Eight men's Coach of the Year.
Barbara Ann Smith was named the meet's Outstanding Female Performer as she led Jayhawks with three individual victories.
"I was really shocked to win," Smith said. "I was only on two relays, and I thought you'd have to be more than just an individual swimmer to win."
The Mequon, Wis., junior won the 500-yard freestyle, the 400-yard individual medley and the 1,650-yard freestyle. Her time of 16:34:45 in the 1,650 set a Big Eight meet and a school record as well as qualifying her for the Women's NCAA Championships on March 17-19.
'I wanted to break the record and
make the NCAA cuts in the 1,560. But I was still shocked when I touched. From what people said, Coach was doing a song-and-dance on the deck during the race and the crowd was really behind me," Smith said.
Freshman Kelley Kauzlarich broke the league and school record in the one-meter diving with a score of 469.1.
Kauzlarich, senior Lori Spurney and sophomore Jilie Pierce all qualified for the NCAA championships in the one-meter competition, and Kauzlarich and Spurney also qualified in the three-meter diving. Sophomore Andy Flower qualified for the men's championships in the three-meter competition.
Kansas diving coach Barry Sustera was named the league's women's diving coach of the year for the second straight year.
resman Kelly Seavall, freshman Jennifer Carani, Smith and junior Sue Spry broke the league meet record with a time of 7:30.92.
The women's 200 freestyle relay team of Spry, junior Erin Easton, freshman Gina Brown and sophomore Susan Bloomfield qualified for the NCAA meet with a time of 1:34.97.
the second straight year
The women's 800 freestyle relay of
The men's 400 medley relay of junior Glenn Trammel, sophomore Pat McCool, junior Dan Mendenhall and sophomore Andrew Billings broke the league record, the school record and qualified for the NCAA meet with a time of 3:19.71.
The other two men's relays, the 400 and 800 freestyle, also broke school records. Billings led off the 400 relay with a 100 time of 45.0 to break the school record and lead the team to a 3:00.34 clocking. Also on that NCAA qualifying relay was Trammler,
junior Allan Chaney and freshman John Easton.
The 800 relay was Billings, senior Chris Cook, Billings and Trammel swam a 6.39.75.
"We knew we could make the (qualifying) cuts if we swam together," said Trammel, who also qualified in the 100 backstroke. "It was just a matter of if we could put it together at the same time and we did."
Billings completed his rewriting of the Kansas sprint freestyle records, with a 20.65 seconds in the 50. Easton added a school record in the 200 freestyle with a time of 1:38.9.
"We (the men) were a little disappointed we didn't win, but we went up and swam a great meet." Trammel said. "We never let down, we fought all three days. We just got hurt in a
Kansas guard Jeff Gueldner defends Oklahoma State guard Chris Gafney. KU defeated the Cowboys, 75-57, Saturday in Allen Field House.
Oklahoma
4
STATE
'Hawks trounce Cowboys, 75-57
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
There were only two minutes left to play in the Kansas-Oklahoma State game, and guard Clint Normore was dribbling near the three-point line when he motioned for a timeout.
See SWIMMERS, p. 14, col. 1
Kansas was ahead 71-53 at the time. When the Jayhawks finally broke from their huddle and took their places on the floor, No. 23 was with them.
Forward Archie Marshall was there for one last collegiate appearance.
He had sat out all last season in order to recover from his first knee injury sustained in the 1968 Final four game against Duke. Then he suffered another season-ending knee injury in December against St. John's.
Marshall had already surprised the fans in Allen Field House when he went through the pre-game routine in his Jayhawks warm-up suit with the rest of the team.
The fans went wild when Brown put Marshall in the game, welcoming him with a thunderous standing ovation.
Kansas coach Larry Brown had planned to put him in, a call timeout and pull him out. But Marshall stood unguarded by the sideline in his uniform and knee brace so he let loose with a jump shot from way
outside the three-point circle.
The ball sailed wide of the basket and bounced off the rim. Normore ended up with it.
Brown called another timeout and pulled the seniors out one by one. Oklahoma State forward Richard Dumas and guard John Starks, both from Tulsa, ran from the visiting bench to exchange hugs with Marshall.
Then forward Chris Piper came out, finishing his last home game with 10 points and six rebounds.
width 10 pts
Last of all was forward Danny Manning, who led the Jayhawks with 31 points, 10 rebounds, six assists and four steals.
By the way, Kansas defeated the Cowboys 75-57.
That seemed to be the attitude on Saturday night. It wasn't the game that was important as much as the celebration that went with it.
But the players knew they had to finish business first. Kansas guard Jeff Gueldner, who tied his season-high with 10 points and added four rebounds and five assists, started the game off with a layup, but both teams struggled in the first few minutes. With 14:48 on the clock, Kansas had the advantage with a score of only 7-5.
score of 82. Kansas outscored the Cowboys 15-6 in the next 7 minutes, with Manning contributing nine of those points.
Throughout the game, it was obvious that Manning was trying to feed the ball to teammate Piper.
"he was trying to get me some points," Piper said. "It wasn't a big deal to me, I just wanted to win the game. But it seemed like a big deal to him.
"I think he was going for a triple-
double," he added, jokingly.
A triple-double is when a player scores in double-figures in rebounding, points and assists. But Manning finished with a double-double, the 41st of his career.
See JAYHAWKS, p. 14, col. 5
The Cowboys shot only 42 percent from the field for the game, the 12th consecutive time the Jayhawks have been able to hold an opponent down below 50 percent. Kansas also outbounded Oklahoma State 38-28 and
And while Manning was passing the ball to Piper, the rest of the Jayhawks were passing the ball to him.
"In the back of my mind, I was thinking to get the ball to Danny and Chris," said guard Kevin Pritchard, who was suffering from tendinitis in his left knee since Friday and fouled out of the game with five rebounds and two points. "It was their last game, and I came into the game just to play the hardest defense I can and rebound as much as I can."
Kansas 75 Oklahoma State 57
M FG FT FT A R A TP
Guelderen 27 4-8 2-2 2 4 5 10
Manning 37 14-20 3-4 10 6 3 31
Newton 30 6-11 1-3 10 6 2 13
Piper 27 5-7 0-2 6 2 2 10
Pritchard 24 0-3 0-2 6 2 2 10
Barry 19 1-2 0-4 6 2 1 5
Harris 19 1-2 0-4 6 2 1 5
Livermore 2 0-0 1-2 0 2 1 5
Maddox 1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0
Marshall 1 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0
Masucci 8 0-3 0-0 1 2 2 0
Mattox 8 0-3 0-0 2 0 0 0
Normore 8 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 2
Team 8 0-0 0-0 1 0 0 0
32-81 11-17 38 23 10 75
Totals 32-61 11-17 18-23 17 17 75
SG, 65, 68, FG, 64, 73
Percentages: FG 525, FT 647, Three point goals: 0-4 (Newton, 19) Manning (Manning, Piper), Travers (15) (Manning 4). Steals: 10 (Manning 4). Techniques: None.
Oklahoma State
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Dumas | 32 | 9-15 | 9-5 | 3 | 4 | 0 | 21 |
| Woods | 28 | 3-1 | 2-2 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 21 |
| Kincheon | 31 | 0-3 | 2-2 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 24 |
| Starks | 40 | 1-6 | 3-4 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 24 |
| Starks | 32 | 1-1 | 0-0 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 24 |
| Jeffries | 18 | 1-6 | 2-0 | 7 | 1 | 4 | 24 |
| Smith | 8 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Davis | 8 | 1-2 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Galney | 2 | 0-1 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Fowler | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Fowler | 21-50 | 14-18 | 28-11 | 28 | 11 | 9 | 57 |
Percentages: FG, 420, FT, 778. Three-point goals: 1-7 (Starks) 1-5. Blocked Shots: 1 (Gatney). Turnovers: 20 (Dumas 8). Steals: 6 (Dumas 2), Starks 2). Technicals: None.
Hail: Kansas 30-20. Officials: Reynolds Wilson, Wulkow
---
A. 15,800
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 7, 1988
13
SportsMonday
Manning, Piper and Marshall make their triumphant exits
25 OKLAHOMA STATE 32 MISSISSippi 26 MAHSI 4
Manning finishes the fast break with a dunk in the second half.
Continued from D.1
"Oh, he did not," Brown retorted. "Hey, it looked good from my role." Piner said.
angle, Piper said. Marshall was just glad he had the opportunity to finish his career at Kansas on the court.
"I really wasn't't thinking about anything else," he said. "I was just excited about getting in the game. I'll tell you everything that happened tonight."
Sophomore guard Kevin Pritchard said seeing Marshall return to the court reminded him of the past, of Kansas when Kansas had a healthy team.
"Seeig Archie come back was the greatest feeling," Pritchard said. "It was the funniest thing. It was just like old times. He looked a little nervous before he went out there, just like he used to."
Marshall's return to the court was an added bonus, an unexpected encore to the night's festivities. The fans had come to pay tribute to the three seniors, to shower them with thanks, applause and roses. They came to say goodbye to their hero of the last four years, Manning.
During his stay at Kansas, the forward ran up the record charts, breaking everything in sight. He was the superstar, the drawing card. Even his opponents respected him. Duke's Danny Ferry gave Manning his vote for player of the year after the Blue Devils played the Jayhawks. Coaches would rework their defenses to add extra coverage on the All-American.
"Obviously Manning's a great player," Hamilton said. "Great players play great. He has a lot of class and he represented Kansas well. I know how Kansas will miss him, but I can't say that I will."
Manning is a Kansas commodity. His name sold tickets and sweatshirts and adorned signs. Not since Wilt Chamberlain had a Kansas player enjoyed such instantaneous name recognition. But the exclusive Kansas market is closing. The regina of 2,758 points, up 749 from last year.
"He's one of the best players to over play, and that's not putting anybody else down." Brown said.
Until someone surpasses him,
Manning is the best all-round player
the Jayhawks have ever produced.
The evidence is in the record books.
And soon, he will belong to the NBA.
"This was kind of bittersweet," Manning said of his final game in Allen Field House. "It's bad in a way because I'm leaving my teammates, but it's good because I'm going to face new challenges ahead. It was kind of hard to hold back the emotion. I feel very good about my career. I was very privileged to play under Coach Brown. Although, I don't feel that way all the time!"
With Marshall injured, the burden of leadership fell on Manning and Piper. These two seniors were supposed to be instrumental in turning around a flailing Kansas team. Brown had long lamented about Manning because he had not stepped forward as a leader. But Manning's style is more subtle. He is more passive than what Brown wanted.
But Pritchard said the differences between Piper and Manning were the key to their success.
"Leadership is what I've learned from them," he said. "They're really different, but they complement each other. Danny shows by what he does. Piper, he's more vocal. He'll tell you if you're doing something wrong."
Manning's career is obviously the
more flamboyant, the more visible of the three seniors. Marshall's, marred by injury, ended before it was given a chance. And in the background, always there, was Piper.
"I'm happy." Piper said of his career at Kansas. "You always want to do better, but I achieved more than most people ever thought I would—more than I ever thought I would. You can't really sum up my career with one thing. I'm just happy to be able to contribute to the team."
Kansas' victory over Oklahoma State was really incidental. The game was simply the excuse for the fans to gather for the final send off. Many were reluctant to leave, hanging outside of Parrott Athletic Center, peering through windows into the interview room to get glimpses of the departing seniors, chanting and holding up signs.
"When I think back on the things the kids will remember the most, probably more than anything, they will remember the crowds," Brown said. "People are going to look back on this experience and I hope they appreciate what a privilege they've had to see Danny, Archie and Chris. As a coach, I don't think I can be any prouder of these kids than I am now."
And if the noise level and the dozens of roses that covered the court when the seniors were announced a final time are any indication, it seems the fans indeed realize what they've witnessed.
KANSAS
23
Marshall accepts congratulations from Piper.
Photos by Joe Wilkins III and Stephen Wade/KANSAN
24
Manning holds back Oklahoma State's Royce Jeffries after tempers flared briefly between Jeffries and Kansas forward Milt Newton-
KU
Students try to see Manning in his final post-game conference at Allen Field House.
23
Marshall prepares to take the final shot of his Jayhawk career.
KANSAS
25
21
LAH
17
STATE
Surrounded by four Oklahoma State defenders, Manning shoots in heavy traffic.
14
Monday, March 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU season. full of twists and turns, draws to close
editor's note: This is the first of a tour-series reviewing the different aspects of the 1987-88 Kansas men's basketball season.
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Back in October, spirits were high as 16,000 Kansas men's basketball fans jammed into Allen Field House to welcome in the 1987-88 season with another session of "Late Night with Larry Brown."
Kansas had received high pre-season rankings from most of the nation's leading basketball publication. No. 7 spot by the Associated Press.
The Jayhawks looked good on paper. They had no reason to expect anything else but an excellent season. Although losing Mark Turgeon and Cedric Hunter had made the guard position a weak spot, Kansas had 10 players returning.
There was senior forward Chris Piper, the stabilizer of the team. Kevin Pritchard, who had started 30 out of 36 games last season, was likely to start off at shooting guard, where he had averaged nearly 10 points a game. And of course, there was Danny Manning, who was being touted as this year's likely national player-of-the-year.
Brown had recruited some big in-
ternational teams and take
some pressure off Mignogna.
He had gone to the junior college ranks to find Marvin Branch, a 6-10 center out of Barton County Community College. Branch originally had signed with Pittsburgh, but was released from his letter-of-intent there and chose to play for Kansas instead.
There were also two juco recruits at the guard position, junior Otis Livingston and Lincoln Minor, the latter described as "mutty as a fruitcake."
*Best of all, there was senior forward Archie Marshall, returning from a knee injury suffered in 1986 playing against Duke in the Final Four. He had been redshirted last season in order to rehabilitate the knee. The team, especially Manning, was estatic at having him back.
"I had thought that by this time, would be a team that people would mention as a possibility for the national championship," Brown said. "That was the way we approached the season."
Suddenly, Kansas' dreams of being a nationally-ranked team deflated like a punctured balloon.
The season had notes of trouble from the very beginning. It started off with the first day of practice in October, when Joe Young, a 6-7 forward from Dodge City Community College, was declared academically ineligible. As a transfer, Young did not have the 48 hours necessary to compete, a requirement the University had failed to check.
Young stayed for the fall semester, but transferred in bitterness to Washburn University in Topeka where he will complete his remaining two years of eligibility.
In November, the team went to Hawaii again for the Maui Classic. And again, the Jayhawks came out struggling with a 1-2 record.
Piper was having a hard time as well. He received arthroscopic surgery which corrected a knee injury, but still had to cope with a nagging groin injury which could only be corrected with surgery. He was adamant at playing the rest of his senior season and chose to delay the necessary surgery.
Meanwhile, Brown was having problems with the point-guard position. He had been starting Minor for the first seven games. In December, playing against Appalachian State, Livingston was banned from the second half of the game after talking back to Browd. Oddly enough, two games later, he started his first game for Kansas against North Carolina State, and stayed as a starter for eight out of the next 10 games.
The emotional pit of the season came Dec. 20 against St. John's. Never mind that the Jayhawks lost the game. Far more important was losing Marshall again to a knee injury, this time for good. Brown broke down on the bench for the first time in his career. It was a spiritual hole that would not be filled until the last game of the season, when Marshall appeared for a scant seven seconds against Oklahoma State.
The actual nightmare with the roster changes did not start until after the new year had started. It began with a loss to Iowa State in Ames. It was the first game without Marvin Branch, who was declared academically ineligible that morning. Brown, Piper and Manning had never won in Ames, and this would be the seniors' last chance at it.
It was not to be. The game had showed an inkling of the doubt and readjusting the team would go through before it could turn around and look up again in confidence.
The Jayhawks took a breather with a break in the conference season with a 95-69 victory against Division II Hampton.
The real problems showed against Notre Dame. In another road loss, Kansas gave up a first half lead, and returned to Lawrence wondering just what could pull them out.
Nebraska did not do anything to help, a last-second shot by freshman forward Beau Reid defeated the Jayhawks 70-68. Brown considered it the most disappointing game by far.
"It was not so much losing the game, but it was the way we lost it."
The Jayhawks hit another low when Kansas State defeated the Jayhawks, breaking the 55-game home court winning streak in Allen Field House.
At that point of the season, the Wildcats were on a roll and the Jayhawks were floundering, trying to find the stability that was missing.
Kansas knew the Streak had to end sometime. Losing to the hated intrastate rival was humiliation in itself. But having them break the Streak was even worse.
A quiet sadness pervaded the Kansas locker room after the game. Some of the assistants openly had tears in their eyes, and the players dressed with an air of resigned acceptance that it was over.
Manning, who had never liked dealing with the press after games, had nothing to say after the loss. He merely walked out of the locker room.
Pritchard was in the corner publicly blaming himself. The Streak had been getting louder.
The losing streak continued into the next game, when Oklahoma descended upon the field house. The high-scoring, fast-talking, poll-climbing Sooners had hoped for the chance to break the Streak, but K-State had already done that.
Kansas lost to seventh-ranked Oklahoma 65-73, but an eight-point margin. Far worse than the defeat, however, was the injury to Mike Masucci early in the second half. The 6-10 freshman forward suffered a concussion after Manning elbowed
him in the forehead. He stayed overnight in the hospital, but still suffered headaches and sat out of practice for two days after doctors found a tiny crack in his forehead.
Brown went into the Colorado game missing not only Masucci, but Harris as well. Harris had missed two practices as well due to personal problems and would not play against the Buffaloes.
But that was before Branch was taught to form problems and miscellany Musselgi jacu
The 6-10 senior was redshirted this year when Brown decided he had enough tall men to warrant storing Alvarado and Mark Randall away.
It was a near-panic situation. Only nine players would be able to suit up against Colorado; only three of them were taller than 6-5.
Alvarado had practiced with the team all season, but had not been in a game situation since last year. Once he took off the warm-up suit and checked in at the scorers' table, there could be no turning back.
Fortunately for him and the team, Kansas' victory over Colorado marked the beginning of the turnaround.
The Jayhawks won four straight conference games, taking revenge on earlier losses to Iowa State and Nebraska.
THE OVERWATCHERS
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
By far the most satisfying in the winning streak was beating K-State for the last time in Ahearn Field House 64-63. Pritchard landed a three-pointer to take the lead in the last minute, and sophomore guard Jeff Gueldern, starting only his fourth collegiate game, grabbed the loose ball in the final seconds to secure the victory.
It is Gueldner who is providing one of the surprises of the season. Brown has moved Pritchard to point guard, and Gueldner to the off-guard spot. He has started eight out of the last nine games, and out of those eight, Kansas has won seven of them.
Even though the Jayhawks lost 74-70 to Duke in overtime, and then 95-87 to Oklahoma in Norman, they have won their final three games, pulling off a 20-10 overall season and finishing 9-5 in the Big Eight for the No. 3 seed going into the tournament.
Although the season was not what Kansas coach Larry Brown and the Jayhawks had expected, Brown was pleased with the team's effort in its final stretch.
Where they were 'on the bubble' just a month ago - doubtful for getting into the NCAA tournament - Kansas has renewed faith in itself and in the future.
other," Randall said. "I don't think it was that we played badly, we just, weren't doing the little things to win the games. We were only losing some of the games by a couple of points. Now I think we're doing the little things that it takes to win."
"All it was I think was the team needed time to get used to each
Hadl returns to Kansas football staff as receivers coach
Bv Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Hadl was head coach for the Los Angeles Express of the defunct United States Football League from 1984-1985.
Former Kansas All-American John Hadd will return to his alma mater to coach football, although not in the position he applied for in December.
Mason was named to succeed Bob Valesente, who was fired in December. Despite alumni support, Hadi was passed over by the search committee after applying for the position.
"There are no hard feelings." Hadl said. "In this business, sometimes you get the job and some times you don't. So heck no, there's no
Head coach Glen Mason announced Friday that Hadl would coach wide receivers next season. Hadl coached quarterbacks and wide receivers for the Los Angeles Rams in 1982 and for the Denver Broncos in 1983.
hard feelings.
"It feels great to be back. This is my hometown and I wanted to get back here. I'm looking forward to getting back into coaching."
He left the University after being linked to recruiting violations that ultimately led to NCAA sanctions against the Kansas program, including a two-year probation.
This will be the second assistant coaching job for Hadl at Kansas. He was a member of Don Fambrough's staff from 1978-1981.
happened years ago."
When the NCAI put Kansas on probation, it included a condition that an assistant coach, that it did not name, would have no contact with the program for three years. NCAI enforcement director David Berst confirmed that Hadi was the coach involved.
“(The violations) were never brought up by Glen.” Hadi said. “Only the press has brought it up. It’s behind me. A lot of things were involved at the time. It’s something that
"When I made my decision known, most people laughed." Mason said. "They said, 'where did you come up with this one?' They want to know why I would hire someone more popular than I am. But I don't worry. I think John can be very instrumental in getting us where to go."
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Shaw scores a career-high 33 points after injury
By David Boyce
Associate sports editor
It was at then that the senior forward crumpled to the floor in pain.
SALINA — With 14:55 left in the first half, it didn't appear that Sandy Shaw would score a career-high 33 points and lead the Jayhawks to an 87-84 victory.
Shaw went to the sidelines having scored no points and was examined by Kansas athletic trainer Brenda Hess. She was then wrapped around her head.
"She didn't hesitate to cut my hair." Shaw said.
weave seconds later, with her hair a little shorter and a blood stain on the back of her neck.
promptly hit a three-point shot that tied the score at 11. She finished the game going seven-for-eight from the three-point range.
"I was a little dizzy," Shaw said, "but my shot felt really good."
Nebraska coach Angela Beck credited Shaw for being a battler and playing the game of her life.
"I have never seen her any better." Beck said.
Offensively, Shaw agreed with that observation. But before the game, Shaw said she was nervous because she was coming off two games in which she didn't perform well offensive.
"Once I got into the flow, though, I felt good," she said.
Kansas coach Marian Washington
said that Shaw had been in a slump the last two games and her offense definitely was needed.
"The coaches said she would be on to tour and I am glad she was."
Beck said she wasn't concerned that the bandage around Shaw's head might have been a motivator for Kansas.
"We did not notice it." Beck said.
"But I'm sure it gave Kansas an emotional lift. She got some good shots and it fired her team up."
After the game, Shaw was all smiles despite news that she would have to have stitches soon after she left the Bicentennial Center in Salina.
"It still stings a little," she said.
The injury occurred when Shaw
"I remember the Nebraska player playing tough defense when Deborah (Richardson) elbowed me in the head." Shaw said. "She already broke a teammate's nose in practice. I guess she has really strong elbows."
received a pass and a teammate elbowed her in the head.
She said she re-entered the game because she realized the team needed her to score.
For the remainder of the first half she hit four three-pointers and finished the half with 19 points. Her last three-pointer in that half came when Nebraska held its biggest lead, 39-31, and appeared to be on the verge of breaking the game open.
Jayhawks
forced 20 turnovers while the Jay-
hawks had 15.
Continued from p. 12
Kansas had a 10-point halftime lead with the score 30-20. But the Jayhawks started the second half with three straight baskets. Piper's layup at 16:12 gave Kansas an 18-point advantage for a 42-24 score.
Manning had two slam dunks within three minutes, both with assists by forward Milt Newton, who finished with 13 points and four rebounds. The second slam at 4:47 extended the Jayhawks' lead to 21, the biggest lead of the game.
theUGWs, Oklahoma State's freshman scoring wonder, had a total of 21 points and nine rebounds.
Kansas closed out the conference season 9-5 and 20-10 overall. The next step is the Big Eight tournament, which starts this Friday at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
The third-seeded Jayhawks have less than a week to prepare for the first round, when they will meet Oklahoma State for the third time this season.
The Cowboys finished 14-15 overall and 4-10 in the Big Eight to tie for sixth place with Nebraska. Because Oklahoma State defeated the Cornhuskers in both regular season games, Oklahoma State will receive the sixth seed.
"That was a nice game. I just wish Archie made his three-pointer," Brown said. "It was a hard game to play and a hard game to coach. There was a lot of emotion involved.
Swimmers
Continued from p. 12
The Kansas men won two events in the championships, Trammel in the 200 backstroke and the medley relay.
couple events."
Big Eight Swimming Results
at Lincoln, Neb.
(All race distances in yards)
Thursday 50; freestyle: 1, Hansen II, 18.09.9
Friday 46; freestyle: 2, Hansen II, 18.09.9
20.7.5, 4. Andrew Bills, KU, 20.7.7, W
Saturday 46; freestyle: 3, Hansen II, 18.09.9
Team: 1. Nebraska 585 2. Kansas 524. 3. Iowa
Steve, 390. Michigan, 170.
penh, M.C. Kelley relay; 1, Kansas (Trammel, M.C. McMoon, M.C. Bindings), 3:18; mtl, M.C. McMoon, M.C. Bindings), 500 freestyle; 1, NJ. Nut, J.B. 4:28; Kruger, M.C. McMoon, M.C. Bindings), 6
200 individual mannequin, 1. lena UM, 150.38 kd,
2. lena BH, 150.38 kd,
3. Jeff Souch, KU, 181.41 k, 6. Told Neu-
nber, 3. Jeff Souch, KU, 181.41 k, 6. Told Neu-
nber
Friday - 400 individual midway; 1, Ivvin, NU
3:57.22, 2, Kruger, NU 3:57.77, 3, Berry, NU
3:59.36, 4, Kalley, KU 4:01.57, 5, Matt Hell, KU
4:04.44
20 free essays! 1. Newmark NJ, NU 138-833 2. Jain
NJ, NU 138-833 3. Cook NJ, NU 141-118
Cook NJ, 140-89, 5. Billington NJ, 141-118
100 butterfly; 1, Uishch, UISCH, 49.07.2, StuA,
3.98.3, Renl, NU50.24, MendelshuA,
MendelshuA
100 base跑步 1, Hammett, ISU, 48.9. 2, Trommel, KU, 48.9.1. 3, Venue, ISU, 48.9.4. 4, Stout, KU
100 breast stroke to 1, Frampton, UK; 55,75 mm²
2. Record M.COU, KU; 56,82 mm², Neugut, UK;
3. Record M.COU, KU; 56,82 mm², Neugut, UK;
Three-meter diver: M-1ayang, NU, 591 J 9:26. Dick
3.8. Butterfly, BIS, 508, 6.5. Andy花.
KU, 481 J 9:26.
Saturday ... 1650 freese laps. Knuger NJ,
Nashville ... 1438 freese laps. Knuger NJ,
Bell, NJ 15:37:34, Berry, KU 15:44:93,
Bell, NJ 15:37:34, Berry, KU 15:44:93,
000 freebie relied: 1, Nebrausk, 6.3/14, meet record 2, Iowa State, 8.3/11, Kansas, 6.9/75
7. 8 mm簿片, KU, 45.92,
200 mm簿片, KU, 45.92,
300 mm簿片, KU, 150.56,
250 mm簿片, KU, 152.15, 3
Nüß, KU, 152.15, Nüß, KU, 12.4,
Hell, KU
200 breast stroke: 1, Frampton, NJ; 202.877
Neugent, KJ; 204.8, 3, Irvine, NJ; 205.244
Neugent, KJ; 204.8, 3, Irvine, NJ; 205.764
400 treestyle swing: 1, Iowa State; 295.57
Nebrakua, 259.71; 3, Kanawa; 300.343
200 butterfly; 1, Suan U, 14, 18-8, 2 Hanley, MU
14, 8-18, A詹曼, NU, 15, 11-4, Dementiu, MU
14, 8-18, A詹曼, NU, 15, 11-4, Dementiu, MU
400 10629885 Basketball, UMass Amherst Smith, KU, 5-4-1
800 10629885 Basketball, UMass Amherst Smith, KU, 5-4-1
800 10629885 Basketball, UMass Amherst Smith, KU, 5-4-1
800 10629885 Basketball, UMass Amherst Smith, KU, 5-4-1
Bergman, KU, 600-800
Bergman, KU, 600-800
202. Individual maltay: 1, Kary Sellay, KU,
2016.AA; 3, Erin Emman, KU, JU; 4, Nevenhillvilt
Nevenhillvilt
Outstanding male performer — Eric Haneau, ISU
Couch of the Year — Gary Kemp, KIU. Diving Coach
— Michael J. McGinn.
record 2, Kannas, 14-18, 19, 3, Iowa B (14-60)
record 3, Kannas, 17-15, 18, 4, Minnesota B (15-70)
record 3, 79-30, 59: see record 2, Missouri, F(74, 4, 4)
record 4, Missouri, F(74, 4, 4)
Thursday, 50 free firestakes: 1, Matherny, NU, 23.6.8,
spray, KPU, 23.7.8, Susan Bloomfield, KAU, 23.8.
*
Team: 1, Kansas 715.8, 2, Nebraska 844, 3, Iowa State 322.9, 4, Missouri 236.0
Three-meter diving: 1. Cleannan, NU48. 62 points.
2. Dunn, NCU35. 6, Kelley Kusichter, KCU39.
3. Kuhn, UC39. 6, Kelley Kusichter, KCU39.
Friday - 200 free厢 relay: 1, Kansas (Spy,
Easton, Brown, Bloomfield). 1-94. 2. Nebraska.
3. Oklahoma.
100 butterfly; 1, Brown, KU; 56.03, 2, Barker, KU;
3, Eaton, UM; 67.22, 4, Baskell, CKU;
5, Hooker, UM
460 individual member 1, Smitty, KU, 42.44.68. 3,
Kevin Fukuyama KU, 43.79.11. Jennifer Haymonets,
Jenny Fukuyama KU, 43.79.11. Jennifer Haymonets,
Hurley, UJ; 10:59.6, *E.*, Easton, UJ; 10:53.7, *Heather Heddy*, KU; 10:51.8, *Michael Heddy*, KU; 10:49.6, *Ukraine*, KU; 10:48.9, *Bloom*, KU; 10:48.9, *Bloom*, KU; 10:48.9, *Bloom*, KU; 10:48.9, *Bloom*, KU; 10:48.9, *Bloom*, KU;
Saturday, 1,680 freestyle: 1, Smith, KU
10:34:45, marbles: 2, Jennifer KAU, KU
10:34:45, dancers: 2, Jennifer KAU, KU
1710.4b-3, 3.jobberck KO, KU-712,
200 backstroke 1, B Bergmann, MG-707.31.4,
B Bergmann, MG-707.31.4, NU-209.21.4,
4. Hines KO, U127.3, Reyroldus, KI-212.6,
100 freestyle, 1. Snyi KO, KI-74.2, Bloomfield
300 breech stroke long. 580
300 breast stroke short. 1,025 H. Hurley
N: 22:58 S. 3 (the Eternian, KU, and Adam)
S: 26:58 S.
200 freezies! 1, Strym, KU, 183/192, 2, Sawal, KU
185/121, 3, Brum, UU, 1-82/74, 5, OHL, KU
186/113, 4, Brum, UU, 1-82/74
Fisher, KU, 21-07.3, S. Reynolds, KU, 21-02.3
Bloomfield, KU, 21-07.3, S. Reynolds, KU, 21-02.3
Bloomfield, KU, 21-07.3, S. Reynolds, KU, 21-02.3
M. Salerno, KU, 52-03, M. Salerno, KU, 52-03
300 butterfly; 1. Brown K.U. 2.0/3.2, Castillo
3.6; 2.8; 3.7; Eaton M.U. 9.1/4.1, Casul, K.U.
8.1; 8.4; 8.5; 8.6; 8.7; 8.8; 8.9; 8.10; 8.11; 8.12; 8.13; 8.14; 8.15; 8.16; 8.17; 8.18; 8.19; 8.20; 8.21; 8.22; 8.23; 8.24; 8.25; 8.26; 8.27; 8.28; 8.29; 8.30; 8.31; 8.32; 8.33; 8.34; 8.35; 8.36; 8.37; 8.38; 8.39; 8.40; 8.41; 8.42; 8.43; 8.44; 8.45; 8.46; 8.47; 8.48; 8.49; 8.50; 8.51; 8.52; 8.53; 8.54; 8.55; 8.56; 8.57; 8.58; 8.59; 8.60; 8.61; 8.62; 8.63; 8.64; 8.65; 8.66; 8.67; 8.68; 8.69; 8.70; 8.71; 8.72; 8.73; 8.74; 8.75; 8.76; 8.77; 8.78; 8.79; 8.80; 8.81; 8.82; 8.83; 8.84; 8.85; 8.86; 8.87; 8.88; 8.89; 8.90; 8.91; 8.92; 8.93; 8.94; 8.95; 8.96; 8.97; 8.98; 8.99; 8.10; 8.11; 8.12; 8.13; 8.14; 8.15; 8.16; 8.17; 8.18; 8.19; 8.20; 8.21; 8.22; 8.23; 8.24; 8.25; 8.26; 8.27; 8.28; 8.29; 8.30; 8.31; 8.32; 8.33; 8.34; 8.35; 8.36; 8.37; 8.38; 8.39; 8.40; 8.41; 8.42; 8.43; 8.44; 8.45; 8.46; 8.47; 8.48; 8.49; 8.50; 8.51; 8.52; 8.53; 8.54; 8.55; 8.56; 8.57; 8.58; 8.59; 8.60; 8.61; 8.62; 8.63; 8.64; 8.65; 8.66; 8.67; 8.68; 8.69; 8.70; 8.71; 8.72; 8.73; 8.74; 8.75; 8.76; 8.77; 8.78; 8.79; 8.80; 8.81; 8.82; 8.83; 8.84; 8.8
moved to dorm room 1; Kauzarchik, K40.1, meet
resident 2; A. Ansan, K46.75, 3. Sburry, K48.
1. M. Ansan, K46.75, 3. Sburry, K48.
1. M. Ansan, K46.75, 3. Sburry, K48.
400 fretless relay: 1, Nebraska, 3.274.4, 2.
Canada, 3.129.3, 8.5, United State, 3.492.4
Outstanding female performer -- Barbara Ann Smith, KU. Coach of the Year — Ramsey Van Horn, ISU. Diving Coach of the Year — Barry Suaterka, KU.
Tennis team to play LSU
By a Kansan reporter
Not only will the Kansas men's tennis team be making the transition from indoors to outdoors today, but the Jayhawks will face their toughest test to date when they take on second-ranked Louisiana State in Baton Rouge.
Louisiana State is led by junior Felix Barrientos from Manila, Philippines, who is ranked 15th nationally in singles play.
Five of Louisiana State's singles players are ranked in the top 100 of the country, and the doubles team of Barrientos and senior Jeff Brown is ranked fourth.
"This is a great opportunity for us to play them on their home courts," said coach Scot Pereleman. "This will prepare us, not only for the Big Eight schedule, but for the NCAA tournament as well."
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
The Jayhawks, ranked 22nd,
have only one single player and
one doubles pair ranked. Freshman John Fallo is tied for 69th,
and the team of sophomores Chris Walker and Craig Wildey is ranked 17th.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 7.1988
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SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom
Apartments and Townhouses
Townhouses
- Garages
- Tennis Court
- Microwaves
- Close to Campus
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas Sunrise Village 6th & Gateway Call 841-1287 Mon.-Fri.11:5"
West Hills Apartments
- Basements
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
*way NAT*! - Sublace a 2 bedroom Hickfair Kits
Att. $13,000 per person and low utilities. Just one block from Union. If interested, call 749-4912.
(Ask for Bob).
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
No appointment Needed
NAISMITH PLACE OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Satellite TV
- Private balcony or porches
- Laundry Facilities
...and much more!
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Ousdahl
841-1815
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRIC
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
contract
* Swimming pool
- 10 or 12 month
contract
Exercise Weightroom
- Swimming pool
- Swimming pool.
- Free basic cable.
- Free basic cable
- Laundry room
- Laundry room
* Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kw Valley Management, Inc
--responsibilities would include staff training, train-
ing an inter-program coordinator, QA for
QA internships, Bachelors, Degree in
a related field.
FOR SALE
13' Color TV 1 yr-ear, $100, remote TV converter
m/cased TV must walkman $k, Interfaced TV
$k
1972 Plymouth Gold Duster $7000 miles. AM/PM
Runs well. Very good condition. $450. Kit
64K XT clone w2 drives, Hercules, comm board
& amber monitor $650. 841-3857
73 Grestine Home: *1. 2 x 18*. BQ Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 38-257-4522 after 5:30 pm, or inquire 420 North St. #. Lawrence
BLAUPKN'S BEST. Berlin 8000 Carl Stereo, AMF long wave/short wave radio, Autoreverse tapeclic, 90 watt Arm. All remote control. Ser. Stereo/Radio/Multimedia Mk. Must sell by March 6th for best offer. 841-2480.
BUY TICKETS FOR STING/ URGENT. CALL 749-3378
CB 650 1980, 7000 miles. Best Buy, mint condition.
641-203-6747. CRAYOL.
Classic guitar $75, *74刀dage dart* $200, Marshall
amp 75$, Morley Wah pedal $75$, *69 Cadillac*
Deville $300, Black leather jacket $100$. 841-2657
evenings.
Collection of Playboy magazines from 1968 to 1964. Good starter call set call HG46-2526.
FOR SALE NM Handwritten air ticket to Albany
NM Handwritten air ticket to New York,
reasonable. If interested call 749.7218.
For Sale: Aiwa walkman with built in microphone 100 160 call enquiries 844-226-1292
For Sale Fuji 18-speed Touring bike $150.00
841-9076
Jukebox For Sale - Older model Seeball. Will take best offer. Call 841-9479.
For Sale: Waterbed with bookish headboard,
waterproof mattress, hydration pods,
Honda Eagle Scooter - 125 liquid coated engine, 65 mph digital display, temp gauge, clock, wind speed monitor, new $1,800 Askins 924700 call to 1838.
Queen size bed $75, FUTON rocker $10, Hitachi
deck $75, Dodge Dart $30. 841-657-967
841-657-967
One way ticket to Denver for sale. $100. Leaves
Friday, March 1). If interested, please call Jenny
****MOTHIBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
152 E 9th. 749-4961
Rock-n-roll – Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday
AUTO SALES
Firebird, Red, t-10p, 6v automatic, 18,900
miles, in.trade loader, $250. Call before 11 a.m.
on Friday.
Must sell Ford Lyra 1984 5-1 speed AM-FM arm-cord
d 2 dr. $74,000 m v clear 300 cm
d 2 dr. $74,000 m v clear 300 cm
1844 HORA CRX 1.5, 5 spp. BLD, 52K, A/C/M/F/CMASS, $4600, 749-3031.
ADMINISTRATIVE AIDE POLICE DEPARTMENT
BORN AT $89.11$ per hour. Entry level pro-
fessors must have a Bachelor's degree and staff assistant to the Police Chief. Assists on research and studies and training in QUALIFICATIONS:
Graduation from an accredited college or university. Some experience on public administration.
1985 SURAU GL 4.0 door sedan *Dark Blue with*
*um/ roof sun, roof Dash, Loaded*, 41, 400
Lakewood
TYPEWRITERS: IBM Selectric II make offer,
good, condition. Phone 964-8234 after 3 p.m.
(212) 750-2200.
Found: Levis gray line Jean Jacket in
Mallorat Tuesday, March 1st. Ciprian at
1843-1861 to see
1958 Fiero SE, 6 Cyl. 4 Sp. Silver, Top of line
35,000 miles, $7,000, 811-3465.
1982 Nissan Stanza, Red - 5-Bpd - 4-Dr. hatch-back,
a-um-fm. Clean, New Cheap. Must see.
3002 Nissan Sienna, Red - 5-Bpd - 4-Dr. hatch-back,
a-um-fm. Clean, New Cheap. Must see.
188 min Wimax, Astro $9.553 Caravan $6.981
188 min WiFi, Astro $9.553 Caravan $6.981
$19.566 Mid-Size Truck S1 E1 EL 430. Ram 50
$12.16 Ranger S $6.446 Full-size Trucks Chev-
Cheyenne C10 Dakota S $6.154 F 150 S
$3.855 Warranties, Options, Financing. You
options, options package, colors, you want
843-849
Last gold-tone lakes watch Jan. 25 between
last-frill and Fluent-Flint. Sentimental.
Please call 796-804-3280.
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' carn, boats,
planes, rep'd Surd's. Your area. Buyers
with credit cards.
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES NOW HIRING Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $50K. Entry level positions.
Call 605-867-6000 Ext. A-9788.
Lon- On March 3 near auditorium at Hawkeye - on Monday then please call Ted 843-9932. Small but insecure
Vikamar Country Club is seeking housekeepers.
Apply in person at 1809 Crossgate Dr. between the
sessions of 8 a.m. - 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. No phone calls please.
Aerobic instructor Needed. Experience necessary; call for anpst. 842-183-104 M-F.
BE ON T.V. Many needed for commercials.
Take casting into (1) 803-687-4000
TV9767
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming canoeing, sailing, waterkiesing gymnastics; swim lessons; camp activities; pampers, camping, crafts, dramas; OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, $ salary or $0.00. Bachelor's degree, 1765 Mile, NFld, IL 61003; 6103-342-4644
POSTAL POSTS: $2.064 Start | Prepare Now!
Workshop 1981; 91-444 E441 Eat
Workshop 1981; 91-444 E441 Eat
CENTER DIRECTOR/YOUTH ACTIVITIES
SUPERVISOR Parks & Recreation Department
professionals in the management, administration and supervision of youth activities program and the supervision of a recreational center. Would include a final debrief to ensure preparation for opening new center.
QUALIFICATIONS. Bachelor's Degree in Recreation, physical education or related field from an accredited institution and possessed professional with the Kansas Parks and Recreation Association. Applications accepted through May 15, 2018 at: Administrative Services Building, floor 6 & Massachusetts, Lawrence KS 60044.
CLEER TYPIST I - three $1.82 Per Hour. Four positions available - i one in the Police Department, one in the Human Relations/Human Resources department, and one in the institution of education and training equivalent to graduation from high school or G.E.D. Must have a minimum of 40 WPM typing speed. ALL AP. Candidates must be able to perform the JOE SERVICE CENTER, 833 OHIO, PHOR TO MAKING APPLICATION
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER POLICE QUALIFICATIONS: Combination of education and training equivalent to graduation from high school, supplemented by vocational training or experience in science or other similar training in programmable testing programs or instructions for an electronic computer.
COCKTAIL WAITTRESS. Must be permissible, ex-
and at least 12. Apply at THE HAWK,
1310 Echo.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT half-time position. The Office of Residential Program announces a half-time graduates assistance position starting June 17, 2018, in housing applications & contracts, contacts with prospective students and parents, Office of Admission, application, resume, and names of references to: 128 Strong Hail, Applicant deadline: March 11, 2018. EOE/AA Employer.
GOVENOMENT JOB'S. $10.040-$25.920. prw Jr.
GOVERNMENT JOB'S. $87.067-897.000. prw I. 87958
for current Federal List.
HELP WANTED: Looking for an energetic,
professional office space at night.
Call 212-760-4388, Call 212-760-4388.
Kansas Union Food Service needs part-time help for line work and busing. Varied hours 3/45 per hour. Apply in person. Kansas Union Personnel Office. Level 5. EOE.
PROGRAM INSTRUCTORS (4) teach high school students in summer session. Degree, teaching experience and experience with culturally diverse youth is required. DORMITORY SUPER-
Masters a degree, post-graduate in education.
Master's degree, 5th KU required.
DEADLINE: March 23, 1986. 5:00 KU required.
job description available to Upward Bound, 408
Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence, resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 408 Bayle Hall,
Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence, 692 (645) 80345
EEO 414 EOA 414
Degree and experience with culturally diverse students. Bachelor's degree in education, 1 year in dem. tutor, counsel and supervise high school students. At least junior level in college religion or English. Admission required (Instructor/Counsel) 112 design.
PART-TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed for intramural sports. You will be required to train you, we will train you. Attend the meetings on Tuesday, March 8, 6:30 p.m. for soccer and 7:30 p.m. for floor basketball. 2021 Robinson
do instructor Instructor/Counselor (11) design and implement
student instruction. Serve as instructor and counselor
Serve as instructor and counselor
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy cleaning large, hard surfaces in your talents, Transparent Palace is interested in your talents. Transparent Palace is interested in your talents.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesines, Airlines &
for summer jobs, internships and career positions.
For information & application write National Collegiate Recruitment, P O Box 6748
Rax Restaurants is now hiring responsible, mature, hard-working individuals to fill part-time day, evening and weekends openings. Wages start at $125 per hour. Apply at Rax Restaurants 707 W. 23rd St. 74-8501.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines &
for summer jobs, internships and career
positions. For information & application; write
national College Reception, P.O. Box 8074 Hillon
The applicant must hold a professional degree in engineering, architectural engineering or related fields with experience in design of environmental infrastructure or education. Prefer five years experience in field of mechanical and electrical design for buildings, a licensed engineer issued by or acceptable to Kansas State Board of Technical Professions, an accredited Grant of Energy Conservation Programs.
Summer Jobs! 2. One of Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to as counsellors. Employment is from June 15-30. For further information and interview call Jeff I 441-850-3270 Ext. 310
The University of Kansas is seeking an Assistant Director for the Office of Facilities Planning for the Lawrence campus to assist the Director in Engineering planning, design, inspection and implementation.
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekend hours available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to operate broadcast equipment. Contact Audio-
PERSONAL
A.B.C: "For me, the single word 'God' suggests
the answer to the question 'What is squall, feal,
and grotesque?' André Breton.
**Position available immediately and renewable**
**Position available immediately and complete job description**
contact James E. Modig, Campus Director of
Research and Development, University of
141 Carruth O'Leary Hall, Lawrence, KS 66045
(013) 694-3431) Application for application number:
188276208651 188276208651
Salary range starting at $2,000 to $3,000 depending upon experience and qualifications. An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.
**arbitrary Action/Equal Opportunity Employer**
Wanted: Full-time or Part-time morning worker with 1 hour photo lab experience. For more information call 841-7205 ask for Mike.
World Sport Schwinn Bike For Sale. Good Condition call 842 5599.
Normal Guy - Would you settle for a gal not quite
you've loved Eloon Jones? If so, reply here,
"blue eyes."
I am a child. I am happy to be here.
G/WJM 45, straight acting, fun to be with, mutual
friendship. In life: book, phone, photo.
D. Hire: 187 Laverne Ave. Brooklyn NY 10236
MISCELLANEOUS
JULES - Happy 20h you be little toaster struler! JULES - Happy 20h you be little toaster at daqifairest! Anges, Ang, Vick, and Sher
Dear Margi, Just a quick little to say I Love You!
Love, Pooky
To the one w/Dark hair who catches the T/7.30
another, but one w/White hair. Gances can be
used when they're 'Utsy'. Utsy
Nancy, HAPPY ANNIVERSARY! Thanks for the best year of my life! Love, South
BUS. PERSONAL
BEACH
TOWELS
Call me Missy and I'T have to hurt you (NOT!) Happy Birthday from your annoying friends
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. No dues or fees. Overrates for services. Telephone: 252-847-6091. Memorial Hospital, 232 Main. For confidential information/contact person. Written P.O Box 4082
THE BEACH HOUSE
FAST, ACCURATE, DEFENDABLE 8.5 - M-F
notes/lesson materials, maps, etc. (Tuesday)
lessons/lesson materials, maps, etc. (Thursday)
imstant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
lift, ID. I.D. fine portraits
Swell Studio 749-1611.
SENSUAL LINGERIE & SINMWEAR. Get your full color catalog today. Send $5 (includes postage and handling) to: SATN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 15701-280, LENEXA, KS 66215
SUNDAY CHICAGO TRIBUNE: New on sale at the following locations: Convenience Store 8th & Indiana, Kwik Shop 8th & Miss, Kansas Union, Sun Home Delivery 814-5073.
SUNLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-236.
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shots to composites, Models, actors, dancers, etc.
HARPER
LAWYER
伞
TUTORING TUTORING $6.90/hr. MATH
Math. M.S. statistics. B years experience call
Math. M.S. statistics. B years experience call
REEF sandals
QUALITY TUFONING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All Levels. Call Dennis
842-1065
THEF
BEACH HOUSE
FROM SOFA TO SLEEPER
COMFORT AND
SINGLE EARRINGS
---
9 EAST 8TH
BLUE HERON
BEACH HOUSE
$30,000 / year?
TYPING
It begins with a quality resume
See us
749-0334
*A reliable Typing Service. Term papers,
typed by IBM Electronic Typewriter 84-326-3460
Kingston Printing
Do you want
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac-
cemy and wordprocessing. 842-7954 or Liais 842-7954.
Wordprocessing.
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
84 L. 4294
Bloom County t-shirts & books
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more |
1 plus Typing : Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ
2 plus Typing : Letters, resumes, thesis, Torty 8425
or 848-2671 evening and weekends
i-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your wordribs into accuracy spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2063 days or evening.
SERVICES OFFERED
AAA TYPING: Word processing, spellcheck.
$11/pg, doublespace. After 5 p.m. T-F
7:00.
**$50 Value when presented toward new patient service**
**Spinal Exemption** Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
**Spinal Exam**
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, mice, IBM 1834 correcting Selective, Cognitive.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7740
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary,
Mary Huffman, East Lawrence. Mrs.
Mattia M141-1219
KJ PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. Ekachroness
processed within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSORT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206. 864-4767.
Call me for your typing needs. Reasonable rates
842-848 before 10 p.m.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., 88/hour, 843-9032
(0.m.)
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion ser-
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 943-821-7
Confidential help/free pregnancy
Pregnant? We can help. Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City provides confidential outpatient abortions. Don't be afraid to ask for the help you need. Call (818) 756-2277.
DISTRIBUTIONS THIESEN, LAW PAPERS
DIRECTIONS LOWEST SERVICE
service available. 443-378-0 p.m. please
FAST. ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE. Letter
qualifier in special student report, spell check
and proofreading.
Donna's Qualifying Typless and Word Professing
recruits, applications, mailing lists. Letter quali-
fication applications.
Call B is a typing service for all of your typing needs. Call B for all your typing needs. $1/24. hr Call B for all your typing needs. $1/24. hr
For professional typing/word processing, call Mavr 814-4800. Spring special $12/page, double $15/page.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
availability 841-5716.
Professional typist w/ 15 years experience. Close to
campus. Paggy 842-8996.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, gram-
matical correctness and a reliable service.
Pack pick-up delivery. 843.0472
Pack pick-up delivery. 843.0472
THE FAR SIDE
*Pick-up/delivery available.* 845-0247
**TYPING ASSistance with composition, editing, grammar, research, theses, dissertation, papers, letters, applications,
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at 845-0111
WANTED
BabySafety needed Mon-Thur late afternoon
842-4733. Must provide own transportation.
Female needed to care for our 2 children this summer. We are an active, outgoing family in search of someone with similar qualities. We are located 1 hour from NYC and Phi and hira from Chicago. You will be sent a letter of interest with phone A&S to Mrs. Herman, 6 Carriage Ct., Maribor, NJ 07476.
Female Roommate invite, summer, large room for 1 or 10/month, trash/cable paid, furnished
Female Roommate wanted, non-smoker please Rent 175.00 + $4 utilities. Call Lilly 749-1254
Female roommate, 2 bedroom duplex at $160.00, furnished, 3 minute to hotel. $120.74 - 749-5598
Female roommate wanted. 2 bedroom house 8th
floor. Must be at least 18 years old.
Must. Graduate student or serious student
at least 2 years from high school.
NEED IMMEDIATELY for Lawrence based rock band; Voice, preferentially with other musical abilities. Dates booked. Call 843-4242 Nice fun room lookalike for 2 rooms to share 3 bedroom apartment for 88-89 school year. Swimming pool/BT/Tennis Courts available.
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours available, if you enjoy cleaning and are able to travel. Call 842-6284. Need transportation. Put your used books and magazines to work.
Male roommate. Owner room in 2 bedroom Berkeley Park Flat 103b from block from 8130 + 749-8124 749-8124
Put your used books and magazines to work
with the collection. Bring to collection box at the library. Bring to collection box at the library.
Male roommate (a) wanted for summer 88 Spring.
Large, large, tiny, non-smoking 3 bedroom apartment in Meadowbrook, near campus. Call 843-0541.
Roommate getting married need older student to share rent 138.75 + $4 utilities in a townhouse. Owner room on bus route. Please call if interested 942-7373.
Roommate needed to share houseb $225.00 plus t₁ utilities. Call 8421963 10-M-F
Wanted: Student to exchange practice in Spanish for extensive conversational practice in English.
By GARY LARSON
Portraits Drawn $1.00
www.sketchers.com
Bold Face count as 3 words
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No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
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Blind box ads please add $4.00 service charge.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
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Classifications
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University Daily Kansan
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
16
Monday, March 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Florida and Padre trips getting costly, scarce
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Students who neglected to make spring break plans early still have travel options, but they probably can't go to Florida or South Padre Island, Texas, local travel agents sav.
If students absolutely have to go to the hot spots to join their non-procrastinating friends, travel agents might find reservations, but they will probably have to pay more than they would if they had planned in
advance, said Sally Shaw, a travel consultant at Maupintour Travel Service. 831 Massachusetts St.
Shaw said Thursday that South Padre Island and most reservations in Florida were sold out but that Maupintour suggested that students making late reservations go somewhere less popular for spring break. Shaw said that she suggested Los Angeles, San Diego or New Orleans as vacation spots that would cost about the same as trips to Florida or South Padre Island.
Shaw said that Maupintour was still receiving several phone calls from students who wanted to make spring break plans for Florida or South Padre Island.
A round-trip plane ticket to Florida
purchased by the student
student number, $80, sble said.
Gene Wee, program adviser for Student Union Activities, said that students who were looking for a late spring break travel package could be put on a waiting list for the two trips sponsored by SUA. If students can
pay the amount of the trip in full as a replacement for a last minute cancellation, they can go to Winter Park, Colo. or Cancun, Mexico.
Jon Tadtman, coordinator for group trips at the Lawrence Travel Center, 1601 W. 23rd St., said that a lot of students thought that they could purchase a travel package at the last minute. But, he said, most of the favorite spots get booked up quickly and students who want to plan a spring break trip at the last minute would have trouble.
Break
Continued from p. 1
She said students who encountered housing problems in Florida should call the Division of Hotels and Restaurants and file a complaint in the county where the problem occurred.
Students should keep all the receipts from their spring break in case they have to file a complaint, she said.
But students can take measures to prevent spring break rip-offs before
they happen by taking precautionary measures when they start planning. They can check on the travel agency or company from which they have purchased their spring break package, Torskey said.
The Consumer Affairs Association can inform students if a company has had any complaints filed against them. The association can gather information on the company or will
contact the Better Business Bureau in the city the company is operating from. Torskey said.
If students think that they may be victims of a spring break rip-off, they can file complaints with the Consumer Affairs Association or with the state attorney general.
Torskey said that it wasn't uncommon for people to solicit spring break packages over the telephone. The
solicitors try to get credit card numbers and then book trips without permission under those credit card owners' names.
If a student is a victim of this kind of practice, Torskey said, they could file a complaint under a fair credit billing act within 60 days of the time the charge appears on the bill.
PUT YOUR LINGUISTIC SKILLS ON THE LINE.
SINGING AND DRAFTING ON THE TELEVISION BOX.
If you're a college graduate with a degree in foreign languages, here's your chance to "talk" yourself into a great career opportunity. The U.S. Army is seeking linguists, both male and female. If you successfully complete training, you'll be putting your experience to work while earning a good salary to start, with good opportunities for quick advancement, plus food, lodging, medical and dental care.
It's an opportunity that could lead to several civilian career possibilities, and give you a real edge on life. Contact your local Army Recruiter for more information.
Call 843-1711 ARMY. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
Macintosh It's never cost less. But you need to order now.
TM
Make sure your Mac is here by March 31 or April 1. Place your order at the Burge Union by Friday, March 11!
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union.
Stop by and place your order before March 11.
Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want.
($50 deposit required)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1, 2, 3!
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
KU
Macintosh SE
+
KU Bookstores
BURGE UNION
Macintosh Plus or SE? 2-disk or hard disk drive? You choose. The computer that will help you work faster, smarter and more creatively has never cost less!
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
Macintosh Plus...$1200
Macintosh SE with 2 disk drives...$1979
Macintosh SE, 20 meg hard disk drive...$2399
Included in these special prices are: the computer keyboard, mouse, hypercard and multifinder. These special prices are also available to KU faculty and staff.
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{T M}} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Tuesday March 8,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 112 (USPS 650-640)
The Ku Klux Klan is heard at KU
[Image of a large crowd gathered in front of a building at night, with bare trees and darkness surrounding the area. The crowd appears dense and is facing away from the camera.]
The University of Kansas
About 2,500 people remained outside Hoch during the forum. Many were disappointed when only 2,000 were allowed to enter
After the forum, Kansas Highway Patrol officers escorted members of the Ku Klux Klan onto a University bus.
2,500 fill grounds for rally
By Kathleen Faddis and Christine Martin
Kansan staff writers
Shadows of protestors' signs danced on the stone front of Hoch Auditorium last night, silhouetted by the bright television lights.
A crowd of more than 2,500 people, some carrying signs that read, "The KKK is coming to town — hold onto your freedom," and chanting "Go Girl" for him. He was back in Hoch Auditorium last night to protest the Ku Klux Klan on campus.
People started arriving in front of Hoch about 6:30 p.m., and within 30 minutes people stood on the sidewalks and the muddy flowerbed in front of Hoch and overflowed onto Jayhawk Boulevard.
The rally's organizers, Students and Community Against Oppression and Racism, began speaking at 7 p.m. They used the raised flowerbed as their platform.
Dewayne Hickman, Kansas' City, Kan., senior, and a spokesman for the group, encouraged the crowd not to enter the auditorium. He told the crowd, "Don't pass through those doors; pass through the doors of life."
A protestor read the names of people killed by racial violence in the United States, including two KU students in 1970.
A tearful Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, then spoke before the group.
"I tried to keep quiet," he said. "I tried not to recall."
But then Adams told of a time 20 years ago when he and his wife were threatened by Klansmen in the South.
"God was with me, and I did not die," Adams said. "Tonight we are speaking up against death."
Adams led a peaceful crowd, who clasped hands and sang, "We Shall Overcome."
At 7:16 p.m. the doors of Hoch opened to let the crowd in to the forum as a group of protesters chanted, "Don't go in."
About five minutes after doors opened, all the available seats were filled. The doors were then closed and remained closed for the rest of the evening.
The official demonstration ended at 8 p.m., and the crowd was encouraged to attend the prayer vigil at the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church. 1646 Vermont St.
At 8:15 p.m., several angry protesters managed to open the middle door of Hoch after breaking a glass pane. Police kept the crowd at bay, and no one got into the auditorium. No one was injured.
Jason Krakow, student body president, asked the crowd to leave at 8:55 p.m.
"We've had our peaceful protest, and they closed the doors to eliminate any anger or conflict," Krakow said. "It's best to disperse now."
After more than an hour, the group began marching down Jayhawk Boulevard, breaking away from the crowd. Their voices droned in time to the beat of the drum.
Earlier in the evening, a group of American Indians from Haskell Indian Junior College joined the crowd, chanting and beating drums. The group of about 150 was organized by Terry Dribble, head of the Haskell Intertribal Club.
Another group that joined the protest was from the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road. The Rev. Vince Krische, director of
the center, said he was pleased with the turnout.
The Rev. Nelson Thompson, executive director of the Martin Luther King Urban Center in Kansas City, Kan., and president of the Kansas chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said that he was in favor of the protest but that the Klan should not have been invited to the University of Kansas.
"There's no place for them here," Thompson said. "Free speech does not take precedent over human decency and dignity."
At 10 p.m., as the crowd began dispersing, some led a candle-lit procession away from the auditorium. When they had gone, all that remained were a few scattered protestors, discarded leaflets and signs.
Kansan reporter Elaine Sung contributed information to this story.
Forum is delayed by gospel singing
By Brenda Finnel and Joel Zeff Kansan staff writers
Determined to quell the Ku Klux Klan members participating in the free speech forum last night, about 15 audience members sang gospel hymns, delaying the forum for 15 minutes.
The group, which included several black ministers from the Lawrence and Kansas City areas, continued to sing after the forum got under way. The forum, sponsored by Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, took place between 8 p.m. and 10 p.m. at Hoch Auditorium before an audience of about 2,000. About one-third of the audience left before the forum was finished.
"We shall overcome. We shall all be free. They shall not be heard today," the group sang to a standing ovation from the audience.
The sing began after opening remarks by Michael Foubert, forum organizer; Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president; and James Seaver, professor of history and the forum's moderator. The group continued singing and at times marched through the crowd before leaving peacefully at 9:30 p.m.
The Rev. Calvin Jackson, pastor of the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church, 1646 Vermont St., and member of the singing group, said that the group sent a message to the Klan to leave the community.
"We are not going to sit down and hide. We will make sure we will not be afraid. Bring the Klan to our face and we will not sit back," Jackson said after the forum.
Members of the South Side Baptist Church in Kansas City, Mo., said they drove into Lawrence last night to prevent panelists at the forum from speaking. They achieved that by singing while panelists tried to speak, they said.
After several futile attempts by Seaver to silence the group, members of the audience began shouting at the group to be silent.
"Let them speak! Let them speak!" members of the audience shouted.
Seaver then appealed to the group to allow the forum to continue.
"This is a forum on freedom of speech." Seaver said. "We are obviously not being allowed freedom of speech."
Seaver then took control of the forum by prompting the panelists to speak over the singing, encouraging them to make their initial statements before answering questions.
The panelists included J. Allen Moran, an elevated cyclops of the Missouri Knights, a Klan affiliate; Thom Robb, national chaplain of the Klan, from Harrison, Ark; Ted Frederickson, associate professor of journalism; F. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology; the Rev. Jack Bremer, director of Ecumenical Christian Ministries; and Laird Wilcox, an expert on extremist groups.
Panelists gave initial statements before answering questions from three student panelists. The students were John Cissell, Mission senior; Russ Ptacek, Wichita junior; and Steve Kidwell, Leawood graduate student.
Questions ranged from the importance of free speech in U.S. society to allegations of violence in Klan activities.
"We as free men have a right to listen and to learn," Robb said to the audience. "Only out of hatred and bigotry are you not willing to hear what we say."
Members of the audience repeatedly interrupted Moran and Robb during their answers by beckoning and shouting profanities at them.
William Dann, a Lawrence resident and political activist, was escorted out of the auditorium by police after accusing protesters in the audience of hypocrisy. Police said Dann was escorted out for his own safety. He was not taken into custody.
Frederickson said that the First Amendment protected the right of all groups to express their opinions but that it did not require people to listen to the groups.
"If our society does not allow the Klan to speak, then we do not live in a free society," Frederickson said. "We have the most problems with racial violence when we can't talk about the issues. I think people need to understand people singing, if we could hear and talk about this calmly."
Both Moran and Robb evaded questions from the panelists, instead choosing to explain their separatist ideology.
"You don't have a rainbow anymore when you mesh all the colors together." Robb said. "You only have a rainbow when the colors are separate."
Foubert, director of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, said that the forum went smoothly and that he was pleased at the outcome.
"It came very, very close at the beginning in getting out of control." Foubert said after the forum. "But, I feel very relieved that this is over. I put myself on the line. People said it would never happen."
Kansan reporter Tom Stinson contributed information to this story.
(1)
The Rev. Jack Bremer, director of Ecumenical Christian Ministries; James Seaver, professor of history and the forum panel moderator; Laird Wilcox, an expert on extremist groups; and F. Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology, take a moment to discuss questioning.
Forum's peaceful ending a good sign, officials say
By Jill Jess
Kansan staff writer
The doors flew open and the police flooded out, escorting two men who were trying to ignore the crowd.
"Oh my God, it's them," a member of the crowd exclaimed as Thom Robb and J. Allen Moran of the Ku Klux Klan made their way from a back door of Hoch Auditorium to a KU bus that would remove them from campus and from the court that had been brewing for three weeks.
About 100 KU students followed the Klansmen to the bus, shouting "KKK, goodbye" and "Burn in hell." But the free speech forum sponsored
KKK on campus
Further coverage on page 6
by Slightly Older Americans for Freedom last night at Hoch ended peacefully.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that faculty, staff and students behaved admirably and that that was a good sign for the future.
"We will continue to learn more about the needs of faculty and students on campus," she said. "I am confident that we will respond effectively to the questions that had been
raised and we will move ahead to make the campus a better place."
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said, "I want to say how proud I am of students, faculty and staff at the University. They recognized the rights of others to free themselves from strengthen our commitment to eradicate racism from the campus climate."
At an afternoon news conference, Olpher Oliver, assistant director of the KU Police Department, had said law enforcement officers at the forum would try to be heightened in their efforts for vesties and riot belts, and carried eight
sticks.
Oliver also said that the Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the Kansas Highway Patrol would assist KU and Lawrence police at the forum and outside.
However, Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the KU police said after the forum that she was not at liberty to say how many and which branches of law enforcement were in attendance.
About 45 Lawrence police and Douglas County sheriff's officers first entered the auditorium at about 6:30 p.m.
Another load of law enforcement officers arrived about 8:20 p.m. and lined the outside of Hoch.
Asked if he expected any problems, an officer in the lobby pointed at the doors and said. "What do you think?"
People outside asked each other for information about what was going on
However, no arrests were reported, and officials inside said that at no time were they worried about security.
The lobby of Hoch was closed to avoid security risks as people outside pounded on the doors and begged those inside to let them in.
About 2,500 people protested and banged on the doors, trying to get into the packed auditorium. Doors had opened at 7:16 p.m. and closed at 7:21 p.m. all available seats filled.
Rumors flew around the crowd, many suggesting violence that never happened.
inside, and many crowded around radios and a television mobile unit which had the scene in Hoch on its screens.
No injuries were reported, and minimal damage occurred with two windows being broken in the front doors of the auditorium.
KU police officials said a news conference concerning security at last night's event would be held today.
---
Kansan reporters Ric Brack and Rebecca J. Cisek contributed information to this story.
2
Tuesday, March 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
S
MARCH SHOWERS
HIGH: 48°
LOW: 29°
LAWRENCE:
Cloudy and cool with a 50% chance of showers. High temperature of 48. Tonight skies will remain cloudy with a chance of rain possibly changing to flurries. Low 29°
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte 47/24 Cloudy
Omaha 42/31 Cloudy
Goodland 43/21 Cloudy
Hays 45/25 Cloudy
Satina 46/27 Cloudy
Topeka 46/32 Partly cloudy
Kansas City 51/32 Cloudy
Columbia 63/41 Cloudy
St. Louis 59/44 Cloudy
Dodge City 50/31 Cloudy
Wichita 50/39 Cloudy
Charlotte 53/40 Partly cloudy
Springfield 57/41 Partly cloudy
Forecast by Grayson Law Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
WED
Sunny 47 / 32
HIGH LOW
THU
Showers 53 / 32
FRI
Clearing 50 / 30
SAT
Sunny 54 / 29
SUN
Sunny 60 / 35
REGIONAL Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
North Platte 47/24 Cloudy Omaha 42/11 Cloudy
Goodland 43/21 Cloudy Hays 45/25 Cloudy Salina 48/31 Cloudy Topeka 49/30 Partly cloudy Kansas City 51/32 Cloudy Columbia 53/41 Cloudy St Louis 59/44 Cloudy Dodge City 48/31 Cloudy Wichita 50/39 Cloudy Chanute 50/41 Partly cloudy Springfield 57/41 Partly cloudy
Forecast by Leward Levy Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low. Tulas 58/45 Cloudy
WED THU FRI SAT SUN
Sunny 47 / 32 Showers 53 / 32 Clearing 50 / 30 Sunny 54 / 29 Sunny 60 / 35
HIGH LOW
Film star 'Divine' dies
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Harris Glenn Milstead, known to moviegoers as Divine, the campy, 300-pound transvestite star of such films as "Pink Flamingos" and "Hairspray," died while sleeping in a hotel room, a spokesman said yesterday. He was 42.
Milstead apparently died of asphyxiation, and the Los Angeles County coroner's office has begun an investigation into John West of PMK Public Relations.
He said Milstead, star of the latest John Waters-directed star, "Hairspray," was in Los Angeles to appear in an episode of the syndicated television series "Married . . . With Children."
Milstead to have appeared in that role dressed as a man, but he was best known to movie fans as the bizarre female impersonator star of such cult classic films as "Pink Flamingos," "Lust In The Dust," "Polverest" and "Female Trouble."
The Divine character was garishly made up and outrageously chesty, as well as loud, raucous and foul-mouthed. Milstead's appearance made the first Waters films a favorite for after-midnight showings at arty cinema houses.
Milstead played one non-transvestite role in his career, that of a Sydney Greenstreet-type character in the 1985 film "Trouble In Mind."
Milstead is survived by his mother and father, Frances and Harris Milstead, of Florida, West said.
Dartmouth editor denies harassment
HANOVER, N.H. — A white student editor testified before a Dartmouth College disciplinary panel that his staff was polite and did not harass a black professor in an incident that sparked racial turmoil at the Ivy League school.
The Associated Press
But Professor William Cole told the panel, which met Saturday and Sunday, that the four white staff members of the conservative Dartmouth Review were bigots and that they harassed him.
The students said they were acting as journalists when they confronted Cole on Feb. 25, several days after the off-campus newspaper published an article that sharply criticized Cole.
The defendants were Review editor
Christopher Baldwin, photo editor John Quilhot, executive editor John Sutter and contributor Sean Nolan.
The Committee on Standards heard nearly 16 hours of testimony concerning last month's confrontation.
The disciplinary board will begin deliberating the fate of the four staff members tonight. They face possible expulsion on charges of harassment, assault and misconduct in their privacy for taking Cole's picture and recording him without his consent.
"It came out in the testimony we were well-behaved, we were polite" to Cole, said Baldwin. He rebulted the invasion of privacy charge, saying college regulations don't extend privacy rights to a professor in a public building after class.
Committee endorses car breath-tester
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - The House Committee on Federal and State Affairs yesterday endorsed a bill that would allow judges to order an interlock ignition device to be installed in the cars of people convicted of drunken driving.
A similar bill was passed last week by the Senate and sent to the House.
would be required to breathe into a tube before starting his or her car. If the device, which is installed under the car's dashboard, detects alcohol, the car will not start. The bill also provides a penalty for tampering with the device.
An interlock ignition device is a breath tester designed to prevent a person from driving a car if that person has been drinking. A person
The committee also endorsed a bill that would allow a home offering day care for children to provide the same service for an adult.
Briefs
KC REDEVELOPMENT PLAN: An associate professor in the School of Architecture and Urban Design will present a model and slide show of a redevelopment plan students designed for the Kansas City river tomorrow in Kansas City.
River's Edge. A New Vision of Kansas City" at 12:15 p.m. at the Planning Center, 200 Boatman Center, 920 Main St. in Kansas City, Mo.
Glenn LeRoy will present the 7-foot model titled "The Kansas City Riverfront: An Urban Framework" and will show the slide show "At the
The presentation was the work of 17 KU seniors and was presented to Kansas City, Mo., Mayor Richard M. Brown, and his Department Task Force in early February.
The model will be on display until March 18 at the Planning Center.
On Campus
sor, is scheduled to speak.
■ The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center has scheduled the workshop "Women's Feelings Through Music" at 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Centennial Hall.
colloquium titled "Phonology and Phonetics of Stress Clash in English" at 7:30 p.m. today in 207 Blake Hall.
- The department of personnel services is sponsoring a staff training and development session titled "Advanced Supervision" at 8 a.m. today. Call 864-4946 to register.
A KU College Republics general assembly meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in the gymnasium.
A spring concert with the chamber choir is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Murphy Hall's Swarthout Recital Hall.
Why not fill your wallet while you're filling your brain.
The department of computer science is sponsoring a colloumn titled "The Grammar of Dimensions in Machine Drawings" at 4:30 p.m. today in 300 Strong, Dov Dori, a visiting professor
A KU training club meeting is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
The department of linguistics is sponsoring a
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3
Experiment brings racism to classes
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
James Jackson walked into an English 102 classroom in Fraser Hall误到 7 at 3:30 a.m. and told the 18 white students and one black student how much he hated white people.
James Jackson
student how many buttons on the black man stood about 6-foot-4 and was dressed in a red checked shirt, headband, one black leather glove and dark sunglasses.
None of the students realized, though, that they were subjects of an experiment and that Jackson was only role-playing a black racist. Jackson is actually a KU graduate student from Baltimore majoring in psychology.
One of his opening lines as guest speaker in the English class was, "I'd rather slap one of you than shake your hand because I really do not like whites."
Jon Bell, graduate teaching assistant in the English department, said that he set up the mock racism session in two of his classes yesterday.
Jackson's appearance was scheduled on the same day as a campus visit by members of the Missouri Knights, a group affiliated with the Ku
This whole issue is not about racism in itself or freedom of speech. It is about hating someone for no reason at all.'
T
James Jackson Baltimore graduate student
Klux Klan, because Bell wanted his predominantly white classes to see hatred from a vulnerable point of view.
The students were informed at the end of the class what the session was all about and why they had been misled.
"This whole issue is not about racism in itself or freedom of speech. It is about hating someone for no reason at all." Jackson said.
nor class or effect. Bell said he was hoping to get a student response of fear, anger or inferiority. In the first class, the students cross-examined Jackson's violent and racist comments, but the mood was relatively calm.
In the second class, the mood of the class was filled with more aggression. At one point, Bell said, it looked as though violence might erupt in the classroom, but tempers were cooled to a discussion level.
Jackson said that by getting angry, the students started understanding the object of the lesson.
Lisa Guild, Topeka freshman, visited both classes
She said the session made her think about racist issues.
Bell said, "The flight or fight response in animals and in us is not one of hate. However, if your fear of otherness, of the unknown, can beat you, then you will begin to hate. And hatred, like the common cold, is acquired through contact with hatred."
"I felt like it was very enlightening," she said. "I haven't seen that type of situation where there was that much hate in the room," she said.
Gary Decock, Overland Park sophomore, said he understood the message Jackson was trying to convey to the class.
"It was very convincing. It showed that we have stereotypical ideas on how people should act.
Selective admissions rejected
Kansas House defeats bill requiring core courses for students
TOPEKA — After a two hou debate, the House yesterday failed to approve a bill that would have ended the state's long-standing policy of open admissions to all state universities.
House members voted 43-80 against the bill, sponsored by State Rep. Denise Apt, I-Noia. Apt said she will not get the bill debated again this session.
The Associated Press
Currently, the six state Board of Regents universities must admit all graduates of Kansas high schools. The universities can set admissions requirements for out-of-state students
Under Apt's bill, the universities would have been required to admit only those Kansas high school graduates who had passed a certain set of classes while in high school.
"When we send a student not prepare to, set them up him." All said.
However, State Rep. Gary Blumenthal, D-Merriam, said the bill would limit some young Kansans' opportunities to go to college.
Denise Apt
W,
When we send a student not prepared to college, we set them up for failure.
state representative, R-Iola
"If we are so concerned about the products that come out of our Kansas high schools, why aren't we strengthening the K through 12 programs?" Blumenthal asked.
Under Apt's bill, the required set of classes would have been stipulated by the Regents.
Several House members said they were worried the Regents could change the required courses at any time if Apt's proposal had passed.
Currently, the Regents recommend the courses for college-bound students. They include three years of math, science and social studies, four years of English and two years of a foreign language. The foreign language requirement would not have taken effect until 1994, and the others in 1992, under Apt's bill.
However, members rejected on a voice vote an amendment that would have placed the current Regents recommendations in the bill and thus not allowed the required courses to be changed if the bill passed.
Although the bill's opponents have said many rural school districts can't offer all the required courses, especially foreign language. Apt said that districts could use telecommunications and cooperation between districts.
State Rep. Don Crumbaker, R-Brewster, however, said Apt's proposal was too restrictive.
"It can be done," Apt said.
"Many students don't realize when they start high school that they'll want to go off to college." Crumbaker said.
Several other House members said they knew of young people, especially minorities or students with learning disabilities, who had not done well in high school but then succeeded in college.
"This is a proposal that will do nothing but limit opportunities," Blumenthal said.
Commission receives 12 racetrack proposals
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Kansas Racing Commission received 12 proposals yesterday from groups that want to build and operate pari-mutuel ractacks within the state.
Jimmy Grenz, the commission's executive director, said the commission must hear formal, daylong presentations on each proposal, and the Kansas Bureau of investigation must check the backgrounds of the officers of the groups involved. After that, the commission will schedule public hearings, then review the proposals as a group, Grenz said. The commission could take between one and four months to issue the first licenses, he said.
Voters approved an amendment to the Kansas Constitution allowing pari-mutuel betting on dog and horse races in 1986.
Under Kansas's pari-mutuel laws, the profits from racing must go through a non-profit group to charities. However, those organizations can contract with companies to build, own and operate tracks.
Here is a list of the 12 proposals for pari-mutuel racetracks in Kansas:
Edwardsville, dog and horse racing.
Kansas City, near the intersections of Interstate 70 and I-435, dog racing.
Racing
■ Kansas City, a half mile south of I-70, near Kansas Highway 132,
dog racing.
Kansas City, about 5 miles north of I-70, east of I-435, dog and horse racing.
Wichita, three applications for site on i-135 near the Kansas Coleium, two applied for dog breeding and two applied for both horses and dog racing.
Pittsburg, three applications for dog racing.
Eureka, horse racing.
Hutchinson, horse racing.
Mail vote to decide policy for add-drop
By Terry Bauroth Special to the Kansan
Amy Randles, student senator, moved yesterday in a special session called by the University Senate that the vote on the policy occur by mail ballot.
■ Eureka, horse racing.
■ Hutchinson, horse racing
The University's add-drop policy will be decided by mail ballot.
The mail-ballot vote will occur because only 87 members of the 1,235 member Senate attended the meeting. According to University of Kansas regulations, a quorum, or 247 members, would have had to attend before the Senate could have taken action on the measure.
Senate is composed of all faculty members and 62 student senators.
Randles said that the best thing would be to go to a mail ballot.
After the meeting Randles said,
"It's to the students' advantage that
everyone in the body has a say."
Mail ballots will be sent to all student and faculty members at the end of this week or the first of next week. The members will have seven academic days to return the ballot.
A majority yes vote would support the add-drop policy as passed by University Council. That policy gives students three weeks and two days to add a class and three weeks to drop a class.
A no vote would support the existing add-drop policy, which provides four weeks to add a class and five weeks to drop a class, leaving the option for individual schools to set shorter add periods.
Sandra Wick, administrative assistant to Senate Executive Committee, said the last time a mail ballot was sent to Senate members was in 1984 concerning the grade appeals board. She estimated that about 400 members voted.
Students to donate their spring breaks to Appalachia
By Ellen Stohr
Special to the Kansan
"It's something everyone should do," said Aracelia Perez, Plainview, Texas, senior. Perez, who went on the trip last year, is planning to go again this year.
Most students envision spring break as a time of fun and relaxation on sunny beaches or snowy slopes. But for 30 KU students, spring break will be spent rebuilding homes in the Apalachian Mountains.
The program is sponsored by the Christian Appalachian Project, one of many organizations that provides help to the poor of Appalachia.
"It makes you grateful for the things you have." Perez said. "You get caught up in your own little world of academics and don't realize
Perez said that last year, she and several students from the University of Kansas and across the country concentrated their efforts on a home in the mountains that had no electricity, gas or water. They helped put up siding, built a new porch and repaired inside walls.
On Saturday, the KU students will leave Lawrence to work in three towns in Kentucky and Tennessee. They will repair homes, plant gardens, provide day care and visit the elderly.
Spring Break
It makes you grateful for the things you have. You get caught up in your own little world of academics and don't realize there's another world out there.'
— Aracelia Perez Plainview, Texas, senior
Christian Appalachian Project Lancaster, Kentucky
KU students help needy on spring break
Christian Appalachian Project
Lancaster, Kentucky
Rockcastle Resource Center
Livingston, Kentucky
Woodlawn Community Land Trust
Clairfield, Tennessee
there's another world out there."
"Not everyone chooses to live like we do," she said. "The pace is definitely slower and more simple, what we're not ignorant to what's going on."
Perez said that while she was working in Appalachia, she learned more about herself and other people.
One thing that struck Perez was the level of poverty.
"There is more poverty in the United States than people think," she said. "Helping the poor is as great of a need here as it is in other countries."
Interest in helping the less fortunate has been increasing, said Dale Romme, staff assistant at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road, and coordinator of this year's trip.
"There is a big movement toward people wanting to do something humanitarian," he said.
from across the United States. Although most of those volunteers are short term, some are long term. Long-term volunteers receive housing, meals, medical and dental insurance and a monthly stipend.
Romme said the work of the volunteers was not just a giveaway. The sponsoring organizations try to get the people involved and proud of the project so that they continue the improvement.
Romme, who has been to Appalachia three times with different organizations, said that volunteers came
"If the volunteers help plant a garden, they hope the people will continue to cultivate it," he said. "But some people love having things done for them because they don't want to do it themselves."
Romme said that most of the people in Appalachia worked but received such low wages that they depended on welfare. Often, he said, the poorest people live high in the mountains.
"But overall, the majority live in towns," he said. "It's not like the Beverly Hillbillies; the standard of living is just depressed."
Schooling is a minor priority to the people, Romme said. Although many don't place great value on an education because they will never leave the hills, religion is important to them, he said.
The project is very Christian oriented. The program leaders hope that each volunteer experiences community living, prayer in life and humanitarianism.
"They seem to have a peacefulness with themselves and nature which gives them a feeling of some control in their lives," Romme said.
"We grow from seeing another culture satisfied with their lifestyle," Romme said. "They don't gripe and complain. It's very humbling for those who go."
Romme said that most who went came back thankful for everything they had and were amazed at the drastic cultural differences.
Monica Philpot, Germantown,
Tenn., senior, said she gained so much from her experience last summer that she would work in a camp over the summer.
"Many students go thinking about what they've going to give the people."
Philpot spent spring break working in a day-care center.
"I really fell in love with the kids and where they were from," she said. "You get a feeling that they really need you."
Philipo said that though many of the children lived at poverty level, it was hard to get people to change the stereotype that those were problem children because they were poor.
"The kids are just like normal kids," she said. And although she wished she could do more to help them, one of the head volunteers told her that she just could give them the best week of their lives.
Philip said that although she was not very religious, the trip was very pleasant.
"It changed my life; I feel so much better about myself.
Student Senate Presents:
A political reporter for the Washington Post and author of "Eyes on the Prize."
JUAN WILLIAMS
Speaking On:
CIVIL RIGHTS IN AMERICA
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Tuesday, March 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Kansas basketball era ends as seniors leave field house
An era has ended at the University of Kansas.
As the Jayhawks' all-time leading scorer and the all-time Big Eight career scoring leader, Manning has shot, blocked and rebounded his name into the record books.
An era has ended at the University of Danny Manning has played his last game in Allen Field House. For four years, he has amazed us with his talent and finesse on the basketball court.
Many KU students only will remember KU basketball with Manning. They entered the University with him in 1984 and will leave with him this spring. Others who came in after the start of the Manning era now will face KU basketball without him.
But Manning can't and won't take the credit alone. His undying selflessness never was more apparent than at Saturday's Oklahoma State game. He wanted the other seniors to shine, and shine they did.
The highlight of the game came when Coach Larry Brown sent Archie Marshall in to try a three-point shot. Although Marshall missed the shot, it was a crowning moment after the heartbreaking injury he suffered early in the season.
Manning and his teammates have built a 106-33 team record in four years, creating a dynasty at KU that will stand for many years.
Chris Piper, who as a consistent contributor to the team has played with a nagging injury all season, scored 10 points and bad six rebounds.
many years. The senior class of 1988 soon will leave the University for greater things. But the seniors also leave behind a team that will continue without perhaps the best player in KU's history.
They will do fine.
They will do the Danny, Chris and Archie — good luck in the future. And
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
Bill overlooks high-risk jobs
"It's nobody's business what I do in my spare time."
So goes the rallying cry of those who object to on-the-job drug testing. But what some people do in their spare time can mean the difference between life and death for others
The Kansas Senate is considering a bill that would require applicants for "safety-sensitive" state jobs to take drug tests. Current employees in such jobs also could be tested if suspected of drug use.
suspected of drug use. The bill is a laudable attempt to address the problem, but it seems to veer from the mark when it comes to defining "safety-sensitive."
Police officers, train traffic controllers, bus drivers - those whose jobs involve public safety - must operate with their senses at their sharpest or put other people's lives in jeopardy Offending the sensibilities of such people is far less serious than letting them perform their jobs under the influence of drugs. These are the jobs that should be labeled safety-sensitive
But according to the bill, not all of them are. The bill starts off reasonably enough with drug tests for law enforcement officers authorized to carry firearms. It follows with tests for state correctional officers.
So far. so good.
So far, so good.
But the next job described as safety-sensitive is that of the governor, who rarely packs a pistol or spends his time controlling prison inmates. Gov. Mike Hayden, who recommended the drug testing bill, seems to want to use himself as an example. His message is "Look, guys, if I can do it, you can, too."
The list of "safety-sensitive" jobs continues with the lieutenant governor, heads of state agencies who are appointed by the governor and employees on the governor's staff.
governor and employees on the governor's staff. Not making the safety-sensitive list are those who work for the state in transportation jobs, jobs that involve public safety to an even larger extent than do those of police officers or prison guards.
prison guards. The bill is a good idea, and it should be passed. But it would better meet its purposes if it were expanded to include all state employees whose jobs involve the safety of the public.
it's a good idea, Gov. Hayden, but at this point it's not enough.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jeneterte.
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Justice
JIMBORGMAN
CINCINNATI ENCOURDERS
2008
WHEN ED MEESE SLEEPS
FacEx analyzes KKK issue
The reactions and counter-reactions to the decision of three KU faculty to cancel a classroom visit and a radio talk show appearance of two Ku Klux Klan members are dividing the University community. Unfortunately, some of these reactions are based on a fundamental misunderstanding of what occurred.
I. The Chronology: The Key Events
independently, a student enrolled in Journalism 690 - Advanced Broadcast Reporting, acting on his own, scheduled an appearance of the same KKK members on a JKHK radio program. The radio program was part of the student's coursework, and as such was subject to the direct supervision of a faculty member. The program was also subject to the supervision of another faculty member with advisory responsibilities at the radio station. While setting up the program, the student was informed by the KKK members about the forthcoming classroom visit. The student subsequently told the reporting instructor that the classroom visit would be mentioned on the radio show. At that time, the instructor said that if the classroom visit were mentioned, he would postpone the visit because such publicity would frustrate his educational objectives. Shortly thereafter, both the planned classroom visit and the scheduled radio talk show became generally known in the community.
Here is the chronology of key events, as Faculty Executive Committee understands them. An instructor teaching news reporting arranged an in-class/situation interview for his students. His purpose, as with a number of other situation interviews he had scheduled, was to teach students how to interview and expose extremists. He chose two KKK members for this exercise. His plan was to have the extremists arrive in class on Wednesday, Feb. 17, without advance notice, be questioned by the students and then leave, after which the students would write their accounts of the visit. The classroom visit was not designed to, and would not have given, the KKK a public platform to dispense to the public-at-large its message of hatred and racism.
On Wednesday evening, Feb. 17, a group of ministers from Lawrence and Kansas City issued an ultimatum to the University administration, demanding that the classroom visit and radio talk show appearance be canceled. Some important premises of the ultimatum seemed to rest on incorrect information. When the ministers and others claimed that the University was teaching racism, supporting extremism and going out of its way to "officially sponsor" a forum for the espousal of hatred, the ministers and others misunderstood the facts. The in-class/situation interview exercise was nothing of the sort. The radio talk show certainly was not intended to be used for such purposes, although it appears that the show's hasty preparation did not provide enough assurance that it would be balanced and safe from exploitation by the extremists.
safe from exposure.
Unfortunately, the ultimata placed the three faculty in the reporting instructor and the other two faculty) in an unavoidable dilemma; one not of their own making. These faculty members had available to them eminently sound and sensible educational reasons for deciding, in the exercise of their own academic freedom; to postpone both events. Unfortunately, the faculty were forced to make these educational judgments in the context of a situation with uncertain volatility, one element of which was an ultimata widely perceived in the University community as suggesting that that some kinds of individuals, such as members of the KKK, had no right to appear on a university campus. Canceling the visits for educational reasons would inevitably suggest to many observers that academic freedom had been sacrificed in the face of community pressure.
The academic freedom of teachers, as traditionally understood, consists of freedom of inquiry and research, freedom of teaching, and freedom of utterance and action outside the confines of the University. Academic freedom is premised on the understanding that "truth is
II. Academic Freedom
discovered through research and inquiry and that there is no such thing as a truth not subject to question."
Our nation's commitment to academic freedom is longstanding. As stated by United States Supreme Court in Keyshani v. Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York. "Our Nation is deeply committed to safeguarding academic freedom, which is of transcendent value to all of us and not merely to the teachers concerned. That freedom is therefore a special concern of the First Amendment, which does not tolerate laws that cast a pall of orthodoxy over the classroom. . . . The classroom is peculiarly the 'marketplace of ideas.' The Nation's future depends upon leaders trained through wide exposure to that robust exchange of ideas which discovers truth 'out of a multitude of tongues, (rather) than through any kind of authoritative selection."
From the very beginning, FacEx committed itself to the proposition that academic freedom should not be sacrificed and that the right of the faculty involved to make their own judgments about how to fulfill their educational goals should not be abridged. We believe that the University administration, from the very beginning, understood not only the nature of this right but also that it could not exert pressure upon the faculty making these judgments, let alone dictate their decisions, without violating this right.
Justice Frankfurt stated in Wieman v. Updegraff, "To regard teachers — in our entire educational system, from the primary grades to the university — as the priests of our democracy is therefore not to indulge in hyperbole. It is the special task of teachers to foster those habits of openmindedness and critical inquiry which alone make for responsible citizens, who in turn, make possible an enlightened and effective public opinion. Teachers must fulfill their function by precept and practice, by the very atmosphere which they generate; they must be exemplars of openmindedness and free inquiry. They cannot carry out their noble task if the conditions for the practice of a responsible and critical mind are denied to them."
In short, one of the core elements of academic freedom is that faculty are entitled, within the bounds of the limited constraining principle that teachers cannot abandon the prescribed curriculum, to make their own educational judgments about how their educational mission will be fulfilled in the classroom.
When confronted with the ultimatum and the reality that the decisions were theirs to make, the faculty members had three choices: to cancel the visits (and possibly pursue, in their discretion, alternative means of achieving their educational objectives), to hold the visits as planned (which might have involved an announcement to that effect or simply making no announcement at all) or to postpone their decisions until later (on the basis that more time was needed to evaluate their educational objectives and other developments). FacEx monitored the situation closely throughout the week of Feb. 15, this included contacts with the faculty involved, with the dean of journalism and with the administration. Through these inquiries, FacEx satisfied itself that the University administration neither exerted pressure upon the faculty nor disregarded the faculty members' right to make judgments about what would occur in their own classrooms. FacEx offered to meet with the ministers, but this offer did not result in a meeting. FacEx was not in a position to contain pressures exerted from outside the University community except to make sure that the faculty understood that whatever decisions they made, including taking the option of postponing their decisions until later, would receive the support of the administration. No fact was discovered by FacEx or was brought to FacEx's attention suggesting that the faculty involved lacked this understanding.
It is highly regrettable that the three faculty were required to make educational judgments with the public attention riveted on them. It is for this reason that FacEx prepared a statement Friday morning, prior to the announcement of the
faculty members' decisions, which expressed FacEx's support for and solidarity with the faculty members, regardless of what decisions they might choose to make. The decisions the faculty members ultimately made were supported by sound instructional rationales: The radio show was not ready to proceed, and the publicity attendant to the classroom visit frustrated the instructor's educational objectives. Neither decision necessarily leads to the conclusion that academic freedom was sacrificed. Of course, the faculty involved were clearly subjected to considerable pressure from outside the University community. But in the end, the faculty members, to the best of our knowledge, made their own decisions about how to fulfill their educational objectives with the knowledge that whatever decision they made would receive the University's support. This is precisely what is to be expected from the University in the defense of academic freedom. (One of our University colleagues has suggested that it was the responsibility of University Senate Executive Committee to advise the faculty that the scheduled visits should not be canceled. This suggestion is incorrect. How the individual faculty member's educational objectives should be fulfilled were decisions only for those faculty. For SenEx or anyone else to insist that the KKK be allowed a classroom forum would have violated the academic freedom of the faculty involved, just as much as ordering the faculty to cancel the visits would have violated that freedom.)
Once the faculty members' decisions are under stood in this way, it does not follow that this University's commitment to "that robust exchange of ideas," which is the core of the First Amendment and academic freedom, is now diminished (In hindsight, it is unfortunate that the public statements issued by the administration were not worded more clearly. Some aspects of the releases, as reported in the media, confused many faculty members, especially those not privy to the chronology of events in this particular case. The FacEx statement addressing this matter, which was released to the press on Friday, Feb. 19, received no coverage in the media. In order to avoid difficulties in future situations, the procedures through which information is released to the public, with particular attention to how well current procedures served the University community in this situation, should be reviewed and evaluated.) Extremist views, even views as repugnant as those held by the KKK, are entitled to be heard in the University community. Of course, it is essential that such views be presented in formats that show sensitivity and respect for the views of others and that provide ample opportunity for critical comment and evaluation. Extremists should not be allowed to exploit the University forum in ways that make the University appear as a partner in the propagation of extremist values. The freedom is to express ideas. Obviously, this freedom does not equal an unqualified right to a classroom forum; academic freedom means that the individual faculty member is entitled to decide how and in what manner expression occurs in the classroom.
III. Human Rights
The experiences of past couple of weeks raise one other issue, which is completely separate from academic freedom and the importance of the free marketplace of ideas. Much more needs to be done at the University, and in our society generally, to eradicate racism, to provide equal opportunity, to increase sensitivity to and understanding of the concerns of racial, religious, and ethnic minorities, and to protect human rights. Those within the University community, and we hope those in the public-at-large as well, should renew and expand upon their efforts to preserve and promote these values. To this end, we pledge our unqualified support to the Task Force being convened by the Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, that will be addressing a wide-range of minority concerns.
The above is a statement by the Faculty Executive Committee.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 8, 1988
TuesdayForum
5
Republicans play for high stakes today
Super Tuesday results probably will favor Bush but Kemp's quest for the presidency could end
Today, Super Tuesday, 20 states will choose their delegates to the Republican National Convention in New Orleans. About one-third of the Republican delegates are at stake, so the Super Tuesday results will be some of the most important of the campaign. But a victory in the South does not mean a victory in the entire country. The candidates who survive Super Tuesday will still have a long race to run before the final tally in New Orleans.
The four remaining candidates are Vice President George Bush, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, Rep. Jack Kemp of New York and Pat Robertson, Dole and Bush are billed as the mainstream front-runners, and Kemp and Robertson are the conservative alternatives. All four men have similar (although not identical) views on many issues; they all support SDI and the contrasts and oppose increases in the income tax rate and protectionist tariffs. But the differences between the candidates are also very pronounced and important.
Bush is probably the candidate with the most foreign policy experience. His resume is very diverse, ranging from CIA director to United Nations ambassador to Vice President. Domestically, Bush wants to reduce the deficit by large cuts in federal spending. His education package includes merit pay and teacher competency tests.
Dole is certainly the most politically experienced candidate. He began his career in local politics and worked his way up to his current position as ranking Senate Republican. Dole's views on most issues are similar to those of Bush, but Dole tends to have a more pragmatic view of things; he looks at issues from the standpoint of a veteran congressman. For example, Dole refused to support the INF treaty until he was sure it was free of extra and possibly crippling amendments from the House or Senate. Dole opposes tax increases but does favor user fees for federal services and has worked to eliminate loopholes in the tax codes. He differs sharply from Bush on the budget deficit: Rather than cut specific programs during his first year, he advocates a freeze on all spending not directed at the truly poor. There are also small but key foreign policy differences; for example, Support aid supports to the contras in order to remove the Soviet presence in Nicaragua, not to overthrow the
Thomas R.
Walker
Guest Columnist
government. Dole also supports IRA-like accounts for higher education and a welfare/education program of job training and counseling.
NZNZN
Kemp bills himself as the true conservative of the race and the true inheritor of the Reagan mantle. Kemp is best known for his work on the tax reductions of the early '80s, and he now favors further reductions in capital gains tax. He wants to eliminate the budget deficit by freezing all domestic pro-
WMB
The most probable results of Super Tuesday will be a Bush victory, a narrow and important second-place for Dole and an overall third-place for Robertson, with Kemp gaining few delegates and possibly even dropping out of the race.
probably win these. After Super Tuesday, most of the action will move west, and Dole will have the advantage. All Dole needs is a victory in one or two states and solid second-place finishes in the others to stay in the race and even win the nomination.
grams except Social Security and letting the economic growth naturally eliminate the deficit. His foreign policy resembles that of Reagan during his first term; he is a strong supporter of the contras and other rebel groups (Afghanistan, Angola) and of Israel.
Robertson's strengths lie in the traditional conservative issues related to family and social values. He wants to encourage home child care, voluntary school prayer and a general "moral awakening" of the United States. His domestic and foreign policy views are fairly straightforward conservative.
Which of these candidates survive to the convention depends to a large degree on the Super Tuesday results. Kemp, for example, has consistently been ranked fourth. Without a powerful (and seemingly unlikely) showing on Super Tuesday, Kemp is all but finished.
The situation is much more complex for the other three. Bush has always been ranked first in the South, and the odds are good that he will "win" Super Tuesday. He has the strongest Southern organization, and Texas is one of his home states.
Dole actually does not need to win Super Tuesday. His strength lies in the West and Midwest. A number of Western states are electing delegates on Super Tuesday along with the block of Southern states; Dole will
JMB
WINTERMAN
If it were not for the effects of Robertson's candidacy, Bush possibly could give Dole a mock-out punch in the South. But Robertson has a very strong and devoted organization, and the South is, he says, his home could even win a state of two. Robertson's campaign is having a strong destabilizing effect on Bush and is a powerful threat in strong Bush states such as Texas and Florida.
The most probable results of Super Tuesday will be a Bush victory, a narrow and important second-place for Dole and an overall third-place for Robertson, with Kemp gaining few delegates and possibly even dropping out of the race. Of course, even this is just a scenario. Super Tuesday is a first in U.S. politics; thus it is impossible to feel comfortable with any predictions. Today, the only opinions that matter will be those of the voters.
Thomas R. Walker is a Concordia freshman-majoring in economics and is policy chairman of KU College Republicans.
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6
Tuesday, March 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KKK on campus
PENNSYLVANIA
Ed Zeitler, Wichita freshman, confronts a police officer after Hoch Auditorium. The police forced the door closed and a window was broken in an attempt to enter the front door of locked it with handcuffs until after the forum.
Administration defends position on Klan's visit Students' rights stressed
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
KU administrators met several times yesterday with campus, community and media groups, explaining the University's reasons for allowing members of the Ku Klux Klan to participate in a free speech forum.
the day of meetings began at 8 a.m., when students and black leaders met with Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, and asked that the forum be canceled. They contended that Shlightly Older Americans for Freedom, the group led by Michael Foubert that sponsored last night's forum, was not a legitimate organization.
The Rev. Calvin Jackson, president of the Lawrence chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and vice president of the Ecumenical Fellowship, questioned how Foubert could be the faculty adviser, president and treasurer of the group.
Ramaley said later yesterday afternoon during a University Senate meeting that the organization met University regulations to qualify as a campus group.
She said that the requirements for a student organization included having at least one appointed officer, having 75 percent of its membership as students and abiding by University general rules for student organizations.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, emphasized what he called the sacred right to organize on the University campus.
Speech forum sponsor
MORE KILLER
At a news conference at 4:45 p.m., Amler told about 25 members of the regional press that student organizations could bring any speaker they wanted to campus.
As administrators met inside强 Hall, the group Students and Community Against Oppression and Racism distributed fliers on Jayhawk Boulevard protesting the forum.
Ardra Tippet, St. Louis sophomore and a spokesman for the group, said that her group had received threats and racial slurs as they passed out the fliers but that the group was planning a non-violent protest.
75. 2019. 3. 22
At a late afternoon news conference, both Ramaley and Ambler wore red ribbons symbolizing their protest of the Klan's views.
Slightly Older Americans stress open discourse
Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, center, Lenny Wesley, Wichita senior, far right, and other members of the Lawrence community assemble outside Hoch Auditorium. Protesters started gathering about 6:30 p.m., yesterday.
By a Kansan reporter
Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, the group that sponsored last night's open forum at Hoch Auditorium, became a University-recognized organization four years ago. Student organizations and activities classifies the group as sociopolitical. The group's primary function is to promote political discourse without actually advocating a particular policy.
Michael Foubert, the group's adviser and treasurer, said the group was formed during the 1984 election season to offer students a middle-of-the-road viewpoint that differed from the conservative ideals of the Young
Americans for Freedom and the liberal stance of the KU Democrats.
In October 1985, the group sponsored a lecture and workshop series discussing the arms race and disarmament. The group brought Lawrence Weiler and Frank Rubenfield, two experts on nuclear arms
The group's name, Foubert said, was picked to poke fun at the Young Americans.
Files in the student organizations and activities office list the group's membership at about 35, but Foubert said he would estimate that the group had between 12 and 20 members. Foubert also said the group usually meets informally about once a month.
T
The group's primary function is to promote political discourse without actually advocating a particular policy.
policy, to campus to talk about the arms race.
JEWISH POLICE GENERAL BENNIE MEYER
In 1986, the group helped sponsor Kim Doughtery, a KU student who participated in a pro-peace march across the country. The march began in Los Angeles, and Doughtery was one of the few who finished the eight-month walk.
This year, the Student Senate allocated about $230 for the group.
William Dann, Lawrence resident, is escorted from Hoch Auditorium after disrupting the forum. Dann was not arrested in the incident.
Joe Wilkins IIUKANSAM
POLICE DEPT. OF TERROR
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Dennis Mahon, a king kitele of the Missouri Knights, a Ku Klux Klan affiliate, coordinated the Knights' personal security.
Skinheads go to forum to join Klan protesters
(1)
Bv Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
Young men with shaved heads got a lot of attention last night.
John F. Noonan, Webster Groves, Mo. freshman, is not affiliated with the Ku Klux Klan. But the fact that he calls himself a skinhead made many people think he supported the Klan at last night's free speech forum.
"The UDK put out the information that all skinheads are white supremocrats," he said. "I'm not a white supremacist. I'm a Catholic."
Noonan said that he and some friends attended the event hoping to educate people to the fact that not all skinheads are hired thugs for the Klan.
Noonan, clad in a bomber jacket, a T-shirt and blue jeans held up with red suspenders, wore his hair about a quarter-inch long. As a crowd grew around him and taunted him, he explained that the Klansmen offended him.
A member of the congregation weeps at prayer services at the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church
punks," Noonan said. "It's just what people call them."
"There's Skinheads, and there's
A member of the crowd asked him,
"Are you a white supremacist?"
Noonan said, "That's an insult to me."
Last night, the police paid close attention to all skinheads, both those for and those against the Klan.
As he spoke, the crowd continued to grow. Finally, police officers escorted him to safety.
One Skinhead, clad in blue jeans and a denim jacket with a small Klan insignia patch on the front, stood in the parking lot behind Lindley Hall during the forum. He said that he was guarding the Klansmen's cars.
Before the forum, Klansmen said they might bring about 25 Skinheads to provide security for Klan speakers J. Allen Moran and Thom Robb. Because of the crowd at the forum, it was difficult to determine how many actually attended.
Protesters would see the skinheads and ask them questions such as, "Are you a Nazi? Are you with the Klan?"
150 gather to pray for safe protest
Bv Iames Buckman
Kansan staff writer
About 150 people gathered last night at the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church, 1646 Vermont St., to pray for non-violence and safety for those protesting a Ku Klux Klan visit to campus.
Though the church's minister, the Rev. Calvin Jackson, was at the forum at Hoch Auditorium, several ministers from Lawrence led the group in prayer.
The service started at 8 p.m. and lasted a little more than an hour.
The Rev. Leo Barbee, pastor of Victory Bible Church, 1629 W. 19th St., said the group prayed for unity and for a peaceful demonstration.
"And we prayed that God would protect the people and that God would be glorified," he said. "We prayed that there would be no one hurt or injured."
"This is spiritual warfare, not person-to-person warfare, and God
Barbee said that he still wished that no one had attended the forum.
"I figured that we should not have graced them with our presence, but some did, and that is their perogative," he said. "We are not enemies; we are all friends."
has to be the protector."
Gregg Jackson, a Lawrence resident who attended the service, said that because of his Southern upbringing, the Klan visit didn't shock him. Jackson said the prayer service had helped facilitate unity.
Barbee said that he hoped citizens would work with the University to solve problems of racism brought to light by the events surrounding the KKK's campus visit.
"I think what they were doing in church had a purpose to it," he said. "I think it mostly was to draw the blacks and whites in this town together."
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 8, 1988
NationWorld
7
U.S.-built Japanese cars being exported to Japan
The Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore. — Honda rolled the first shipment of U.S.built cars exported to Japan by a Japanese automaker onto a ship yesterday and took aim at calls for increased trade protectionism to help U.S. automakers.
Tetsuo Chino, president of Honda North America Inc., drove the first of 540 Accord coupes onto a ship docked at the Port of Portland on the Columbia River. Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., a leading critic of trade protectionist legislation in Congress, accompanied Chino.
The gray car was followed by a line of matching gray and white Accords driven by Honda workers as dozens of Honda executives and dealers, government, union and shipping officials watched and applauded.
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funding for most of its operating budget. In fiscal year 1988, Gallaudet received $62 million from Congress;
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Deaf students protest new president
WASHINGTON — Gallauet University students vowed yesterday to keep their campus closed indefinitely after the school's board of trustees reaffirmed its selection of a hearing president to head the nation's only liberal arts university for the deaf.
Spilman and several other board members listened for about 30 minutes to complaints from the 100 or so students, then left without speaking to reporters.
school's 2,200 students protested at the Capitol after board of trustees chairman Jane Basset Spilman told the students that the board would not reconsider its decision to hire Elizabeth Ann Zinser as Gallaudet's next president.
Ideas for KANSAN MAGAZINE Kjerstl Moen editor
Gallaudet was created by an act of Congress in 1864 and relies on federal
As Spilman made her announcement in the school's field house, students receiving the package there would meet and began a one-mile walk to the Capitol.
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"We're going to keep the school closed," said student leader Jerry Covall. "We will stop when we get a deaf president."
The selection of Zinser, an administrator at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, was the product of a "careful, reasoned" search process. Spilman said.
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8
Tuesday, March 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Woman allegedly spurned gunman
MARK KLEIN
DANIEL ROSNER
Special to the KANSAN Cheun-phon Ji, shown with attorney Irvin Shaw, was arraigned yesterday on murder and attempted murder charges.
The Associated Press
EMPORIA — A man who drove up to a Baptist church and then allegedly opened fire on worshippers had been spurned by a woman who used to belong to the congregation, a church member said yesterday.
church member. One person was killed and four were wounded in the Sunday morning shooting spree at Calvary Baptist Church. Parishioners wrestled the gunman to the ground after a church trustee chased him outside and struck him with a hymnal.
Police identified the man as Cheun-phon Ji, 29, a Taiwan native, who earned a master's degree in business administration from Emporia State University in December 1984. He returned to this eastern Kansas community of 26,000, about 110 miles southwest of Kansas City, just minutes before the assault, Police Chief Larry Blomenkamp said.
Ji was charged yesterday with one count of first-degree murder. He also was charged with six counts of
attempted first-degree murder involving the four people who were wounded and two who were shot at.
Magistrate Judge Francis Towle set bond at $1 million. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for March 31.
hearing test Investigators yesterday sought people who knew Ji when he lived in Emporia, trying to find a motive.
Emperor Renita Rothe, 34, a member of the congregation, said Ji had attended Bible classes in her home in 1983 or 1984 with a woman he hoped to marry.
"She just wanted to share the Lord with him," she said. "But we knew he was different. He had a different kind of religion, you know, Buddha and all that."
Rothe said Ji attended only two classes, and rarely spoke during them. When the woman refused his proposal to marry him and to return to Taiwan to care for his parents, he became bitter. He also was upset when she married someone else two years ago.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 8, 1988
Sports
9
'Hawks win Big Eight tournament at buzzer Team earns automatic NCAA spot
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
SALINA — Kansas forward Lisa Baker hit a three-foot bank shot as the buzzer sounded, giving the Jayhawks a 70-69 victory over the Colorado Buffaloes and a second straight women's Big Eight Conference Tournament Championship.
Baker, who made eight of 10 field goals attempts, led the Jayhawks with 21 points and six rebounds. She said the last play originally was designed so that Deborah Richardson would get the ball.
"I set a pick for Richardson so that she could get the ball," Baker said. "When she wasn't open, I got the pass from (Lisa) Braddy. I was ready. I wasn't surprised when I got the ball."
Baker's basket came after Colorado's guard Tracy Tripp made a jump shot in the lane with 11 seconds to play, giving the Buffaloes a 69-68 lead.
Kansas, 21.9, will receive the Big Eight's automatic berth into the NCAA tournament. The 40-team tournament will begin March 16.
Despite being held to just 12 points last night, Kansas forward Sandy Shaw was voted the Most Valuable Player for the tournament. Shaw scored 33 points in Sunday's semifinal game against Nebraska. She said she was prepared for the Colorado defense.
"I knew they were going to come out on me hard tonight," Shaw said. "I was looking to get the ball inside. When I did take the shot, I felt like it was a good shot. It felt good."
Joining Shaw on the All-Tournament team was Jayhawks forward Lisa Dougherty. Other first team selections were Missouri senior Tracy Ellis, Colorado senior Erin Carson and Nebraska senior Maurt Ivy, who was last year's MVP
Dougherty said that making the first team was nice, but that the main thing was to win the championship. She scored 45 points in the tournament.
"Other teams tried to intimidate us all season because of the championship last year." Dougherty said. "We didn't listen to them. We just continued with our game plan and it paid off tonight."
Kansas was 9-1 in games decided by three points or less this season. The Javahaws' only loss came
against the Buffaloes, 56-55, on Feb. 6 in Lawrence. The Jayhawks defeated Colorado on Jan. 20, 72-71, in Boulder.
Dougherty said the fact that Kansas had played well in the close games should help them in the NCAA tournament.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said Colorado played a good game and should, as well as Nebraska, receive an at-large bid to the tournament.
"Colorado is a well-coached team, and they deserve a lot of credit for their effort," Washington said. "I want to thank God for the opportunity to win again. It wasn't easy because we had to heat a great team tonight."
Washington said the victory this year was not much different than last year
"I don't think anyone expected us to do it last year, but we came in and won," Washington said. "This year, people thought we probably had a shot, but with the parity in this conference, it was tough for anybody to win it. It'm just happy for our seniors and our other players who had a chance to experience both."
Colorado, 20-10, had three players score 15 points, including Carson. She said the game could have gone either way.
"We lost the game, and it was an important one," Carson said. "But, we played one heck of a ballgame. I think we have a good chance for an NCAA bid. It's not going to be over yet. I'm not ready to take my uniform off, and I'm not sure when I will."
Colorado coach Ceal Barry was disappointed and said neither team deserved to lose.
"I give credit to Kansas and Marian for their win," Barry said. "Both teams are quality teams. We knew the Big Eight title would come down to how everyone played defensively. Kansas kept us out of our rhythm all night and we never seemed to flow in our offense.
"What a nightmare the finish was. It's hard to believe it's over. You want one more tick on the clock."
The game, which was close throughout, was tied at 40 at half-time. Colorado led for most of the first half and its biggest lead was six points. The Buffaloes led 32-26 with six minutes left, and with 2:15 left, they led 38-32.
In the second half, Kansas took the
lead 45-44 for the first time in nearly 18 minutes on a basket by Baker at the 17:28 mark. The Jahaywks built the lead to five points with 10:03 left, but never led by more than three points the rest of the way.
Contributing to the Kansas victory were Dougherty with 14 points, Richardson with six rebounds and Braddy with seven assists.
Bridget Turner and Crystal Ford each scored 15 points for Colorado. Carson made three of four threepoint shots, and Tracy Tripp added six rebounds and six assists for the Buffaloes.
Kansas had two players set tournament records during the weekend. Shaw had seven three-point baskets against Nebraska for an 87.5 percent three-point shooting average. Both are single-game records. Richardson also set records for blocked shots in a game, seven against Colorado, and in a tournament, 11.
Kansas 70 Colorado 69
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | A | R | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Shaw | 34 | 5-13 | 1-2 | F | 5 | 4 | 12 |
| Straugher | 26 | 8-10 | 5-6 | 6 | 1 | 4 | 12 |
| Braddy | 27 | 6-10 | 5-6 | 6 | 1 | 4 | 27 |
| Dougherty | 35 | 6-9 | 2-3 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 4 |
| Jackson | 35 | 6-9 | 1-3 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 4 |
| Paole | 35 | 1-3 | 2-3 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| Richardson | 35 | 3-6 | 0-6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
| Team | 35 | 3-6 | 0-6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
| Total | 29-6 | 11-17 | 12-32 | 17 | 14 | 70 |
totals
FG: 580, FT: 647. Three-piece goals: 1- (2:5W). Blocked Shots: 9 (Richardson 7). Turnovers: 19 (Shaw 8). Stainless: 5 (Richardson 2). Technicals: None.
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | Tp |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Wampler | 1 | 2-6 | 4-6 | 0 | 4 | 1 | 8 |
| Tripp | 32 | 4-9 | 0-0 | 6 | 6 | 2 | 8 |
| Ford | 31 | 5-11 | 5-6 | 6 | 6 | 2 | 15 |
| Turner | 36 | 4-12 | 7-10 | 5 | 2 | 2 | 15 |
| Carson | 32 | 6-12 | 0-0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 15 |
| Wilson | 13 | 0-4 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Woodford | 9 | 1-0 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| DevWitt | 8 | 0-3 | 0-0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Watts | 18 | 2-8 | 0-0 | 4 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| Totals | 12 | 2-8 | 12-16 | 40 | 10 | 18 | 69 |
Percentages: FG: 409, FT: 750. Threepoint goals: 3-4 (Carson 3-4). Blocked shots: 3 (Tumer, Ford, DeWitte). Turnovers: 11 (Mann, 13). Tackles: 13 (Wampfer 4). Technique: None
Half: Tied 40-40. Officials: Benson, Fisicaro.
A: 3,918
THE FANCLUB SHOW
Station Breidenthal/Special to the KANSAN
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington triumphantly holds the basketball net after the Jayhawks defeated Colorado 70-69 last night at the Bicentennial Center in Salina.
Each point crucial when KU, Colorado play for NCAA tournament berth
Associate sports editor
By David Bovce
SALINA - Another one-point game, and it came as no surprise.
For the third time this season, Kansas and Colorado played a one-point game, and for the second time, Kansas won. The score was 70-69.
points separating the two teams. At that point, both teams began trading baskets.
This game, though, meant much more than the previous two. Last night's game determined the Big Eight Tournament Champion.
The dramatics started with about 5 minutes left in the game and only three
On three occasions Kansas took a three-point lead. The last lead came when the Jayhawks went ahead 66-63 on a 13-foot jump shot by senior Lisa Dougherty with about two minutes left.
Colorado then scored four unanswered points to take its first lead in seven minutes, 87-66
With 37 seconds remaining, Lisa Baker hit two free throws, giving Kansas the lead. But with 12 seconds left, Colorado forward Tracy Tripp scored the Buffaloes' final points.
"It was an open shot," she said. "I didn't know how much time was left."
With 10 seconds remaining, Kansas coach Marian Washington called a time out to plot strategy.
"I wanted to set up a play to Deborah Richardson," Washington said. "We thought they would anticipate it enough to leave Baker open."
Colorado coach Ceal Barry said she thought either Sandy Shaw or Lisa Braddy would take the last shot.
Braddy took the in-bound pass and drove to the ton of the kev. With 5 seconds remaining, she dumped a pass to Baker.
Baker turned around and hit a rainbow jumper high off the glass at the buzer. Kansas 70. Colorado 69. The Jayhawks had defended successfully their tournament championship.
championship. The shot by Baker caused the basketball team to rush center court to celebrate in an estatic frenzy.
"That kind of composure under that kind of pressure is something that needs to be commended," Washington said of Baker's shot.
Meanwhile, the Colorado players sat on
the bench in disbelief. Their eyes reddened with tears.
"I hate to see anyone lose this kind of game," Barry said.
Colorado forward Erin Carson said she was proud of her team's effort.
"At least I know we played well," Carson said. "We played a heck of a game and so did Kansas. I just can't believe it's over. I still have my suit on."
In the regular season games Kansas beat Colorado 72-71 at Colorado and lost 56-55 at home.
Seniors leave lasting mark on KU team
Editor's note: This is the second of a four-part series examining the 1987-88 Kansas men's basketball season.
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
During last week's press conference, senior Chris Piper turned to face teammate Danny Manning on his right.
per person language.
The real question: What will Kansas do without any of the three seniors next season?
"You know, I don't know what he's going to do without me next year," Piper said jokingly.
The team already had to adjust when it lost its first senior, Archie Marshall, to a season-ending knee injury in play against St. John's in December.
Losing Marshall was the first step in what turned out to be a rocky season. Emotionally, it hit the team like a bomb, and the players' reactions following the loss showed how hard Marshall is at the Jayhawk network Marshall was.
He had been injured once before, in Dallas when the Jayhawks were playing Duke in the Final Four. He was redshirted last season in order to rehabilitate the knee. But when Marshall went down for the second time, Kansas coach Larry Brown broke down on the bench, crying in a game for the first time in his coaching career.
"There was no doubt in my mind that he could play like he played before he got hurt," Brown said. "He could have only improved as the season went on."
Marshall's teammates struggled through the experience with him.
During games, Manning wears a white terrycloth band on his right wrist with No. 23 on it in black marker - Marshall's uniform number.
"Archie is the nicest guy I know," Alvarado said. "He worked so hard to get back. It's hard having an injury, and then when you get there, you get hurt again. It's hard to accept."
Redshirt center Sean Alvarado recalled how he and forward Milt Newton had gone over to Marshall's house on New Year's Eve, the day before the operation. The three made dinner together and celebrated the coming of the new year.
It was made a little easier to accept during the last home game, when Brown put Marshall in with 1:33 left. His three-point shot sailed wide of the basket, but seeing him in uniform and on the floor one last time was all his teammates could have hoped for.
That network of support characterizes the team. Their appreciation for each other is evident. When one senior talks about his last year at Kansas, he inevitably brings up one or both of the other seniors.
For example, later in the same news conference, Manning had been talking about how the season had gone.
"Piper here is the heart and soul of the team." he said.
Piper gave him a sidelong glance, but Manning was not ioking.
Even Newton referred to Piper as "Elmer" – as in Elmer's glue. Piper has been the stabilizer, the leader, the link that has always held the team together.
"He gets us where we're supposed
to go." Newton said. "He knows every position on the floor. Sometimes he even tells Danny what to do."
Piper had been hit with injuries himself. He had a minor knee injury in the beginning of the season that was corrected with arthroscopic surgery. But more crucial was the groin pull suffered earlier in a pre-season pick-up game. An operation would be the only way to solve the injury. It would have kept him out of action for an indefinite amount of time.
But Piper refused to let up on his last season. He had been redshirted his freshman year and therefore had no remaining eligibility. He chose to delay the surgery until after the season.
"He wouldn't have allowed me to sit him out, anyway," Brown said. "The doctors assured us that no more damage could be done."
Piper continued playing, often having to sit out during practice with an ice pack because of the pain.
By the middle of January, the roster had been depleted to the limit. The Jayhawks were in a four-game losing streak, and people doubted Kansas' chances for the national tournament.
“Going into this year, we were expecting a lot of things,” Manning said. “It seemed like every time we lost another player, it would knock us down on the ladder a farther.”
Despite the player changes, Manning finished off the year strongly, with five 30-plus games out of the last eight.
But despite scoring 20-plus points in 21 out of 30 games this season, Manning never quite has expressed contentment with his performances. He always tells the press, "I could have done better."
"I've told him all along, it's all going to benefit him," Brown said. "Now he is the most relaxed and comfortable he's ever been. He's never played any better. I just really believe that when he looks back at this, he'll know it has enhanced him and made him better."
The team relied on Manning's inside play, knowing that by giving him the ball inside almost would ensure a basket. But next year, when Manning is no longer here, it may prove to be another tremendous adjustment.
"When you lose someone with that caliber of play, you know it will be hard to adjust," said redshirt forward Mark Randall. "But we the personnel that can handle it and adjust to it next year."
"Danny is a great player, and it'll be sad to see him go. But we lose players every year, and you have to adjust somehow."
Newton said, "It will be a whole lot different without Danny. He made up for a lot of our talent deficiencies. He thinks like a coach when things are down."
But Brown and the team remember what Manning has to look forward to.
Sports Briefs
"You have to look at the bright side," Alvarado said. "He gets to make money next year playing basketball. He's got a future to look forward to."
SOFTBALL TEAM SPLITS GAMES:
The Kansas softball team split a doubleheader with Indiana State at Jayhawk Field yesterday. The Jayhawks won the first game 3-0, scoring all of their runs in the fifth inning. In the second game, Indiana State defeated Kansas 1-0, picking up the winning run in the sixth inning. The Jayhawks are now 3-5.
MASON HIRES STAFF: Kansas foot ball coach Glen Mason on Friday announced his staff for next season.
Mason named Jim Hills defensive coordinator and inside linebacker coach and Pat Ruel offensive coordinator and offensive line coach.
Hilles was Wisconsin's interim head coach in 1986 following the death of Dave McClain. Last season he was defensive coordinator under Mason at Kent State.
Ruel has been offensive coordinator at Northern Illinois for the past two seasons.
Fellow, Browning, Adamile, Mitchell and Warner were all assistants under Mason at Kent State.
Eumont is the only holdover from Bob Valesente's staff last season.
The rest of the staff included Vic Eumont, defensive line; Bob Fellow, outside linebackers; Mitch Browning, secondary; Vic Adamle, running backs; Reggie Mitchell, tight ends; John Hadi, wide receivers; and Dave Warner, quarterbacks.
The Jayhawks will send vaulters Scott Huffman, Patt Manson, Chris
POLE VAULTERS QUALIFY: The Kansas men's track team will send four pole vaulters this weekend to the NCAA Indoor Track Championships in Oklahoma City.
Bohanan and Lance Adams
To qualify for the tournament,
participants must vault 17-3 or bet-
ten.
"It's been a pretty frustrating season for him," said men his assistant track coach Rick Attig. "He'd be doing some things that threw him off, but he's making the changes now. He's jumping extremely well now."
Adams, Raytown, Mo., senior qualified for the national tournament by a vaulting a personal best 17-6 $ _{2} $ at the Central Missouri State Invitational.
Bohanan, Riviera, Texas sophomore, vaulted 17-3 last weekend in the Colorado Invitational.
CONNOLLY INDUCTED: Sheila Connolly, a former outfielder on the Kansas softball team, was inducted into the Kansas Hall of Fame on Saturday during halftime of the Kansas-Oklaima State basketball game.
Connolly played center field for the Jayhawks for three years and also played shortstop for 20 games last season. She earned All-Big Eight honors in 1986 and 1987 and was named first team All-American and academic All-American as a senior in 1967. She holds the Kansas softball record for most career at-bats with 565, and hit 391 in 1987, the second-highest single-season batting average ever.
---
LACROSSE CLUB LOSES: The Kansas Lacrosse Club opened its season Saturday against Missouri in Columbia. Kansas lost 12-2, with Michael Beaty, St. Louis sophomore, scoring Kansas' only goals.
10
Tuesday, March 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Kansas baseball team beats CMSU 7-3
By Tom Stinson
Karen sports writer
Kansan sports writer
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham got what he wanted and what he said his team needed yesterday afternoon. He got to watch his team play a game.
The Jayhawks defeated Central Missouri State 7-3 at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
The game was played yesterday because of a postponement Thursday. Sunday's double-header against Missouri Southern was also postponed until Thursday because of a wet field.
"We need to play six games this week," Bingham said. "I've been
looking forward to this week to establish our lineup before we go down south."
Kansas travels to Edinburg, Texas, during spring break to play eight games in six days.
eight games in each day The Jayhawks are scheduled to play four games in the next three days.
"This was by far our worst effort," Bingham said of the 2-3 Jayhawks. "It was a sloppy win. And the most noticeable excuse was that we haven't played since last Tuesday.
Scott Taylor was the starting pitcher for the Jayhawks, who committed four errors during the game. Taylor completed six innings and
allowed only two earned runs on seven hits.
"I wanted to get some things accomplished with this game," said Taylor, an Arkansas City junior. "I wanted to win first and then work on my control. They didn't make me work too hard on my control. But that's what I want — to make them swing at my pitches."
Taylor also recorded seven strikeouts. Sophomore Tom Bilyeu collected a save as he finished the game's final three innings. He allowed two hits and recorded two strikeouts in relief.
The Jayhawks were led offensively by junior Pete Simmerson, who went
two for three at the plate with a home run and two RBI. Junior Troy Mentzer hit a two-run home run and junior Tom Buchanan went two for three and scored two runs.
The Jayhawks take on Missouri Baptist at 2 p.m. today at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. Sophomore Steve Renko will be the starting pitcher for Kansas.
KANSAS 7, CENTRAL MISSOURI ST. 3
CMSU 101 000 001----3 9 0
Kansas 101 012 20x----8 4
Kansas 110 012 20x—7 8
CMSU; Baldwin, Mitchell, (5); Stone, (6)
Sharpe (4) and Jacobs; Kansas; Taylor, Blyeir
(3) and McGraw; Kansas; Stokes, (5)
SV-Bleyir, 28-Kansas; Heim, Ruelas, Simmerson,
Mentzer, HR-Kansas; Simmerson,
Mentzer.
Advertise in the Kansan
reutery
boot & shoe repair
Lay away a pair of
hand-made American boots
for graduation.
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RINGS sized, repaired, cleaned
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jewelers 749-4333
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FREE SOFT DRINKS WITH ANY CUP YOU BRING IN!
Convenient
Food Mart
TODAY ONLY!
PAPA GUIDO'S PARLOR
hand-made Italian pizza
FREE DELIVERY 841-7855
Convenient Food Mart
Hambuger
Pepperoni
Sausage
Canadian Bacon
Onions
Black Olives
Mushrooms
Jalapenos
Anchovies
Pineapple
extra cheese
extra sauce
Toppings
9th & Indiana
Pie Prices
PROCESSES 10" 14"
cheese 4.00 7.00
1 topping 4.50 7.95
2 toppings 5.00 8.90
3 toppings 5.50 9.85
4 toppings 6.00 10.80
5 toppings 6.50 11.75
Papa's Big "O" 6.50 12.50
Veggie 6.00 12.00
Super 7.00 13.00
Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m
Open Sunday too! 11 a.m. 1 a.m.
COUPON
COUPON
buv one get one FREE
Tuesday Special:
FARU
buy 14" and get 10" FREE with coupon
620 W. 12th behind the Crossing 841-7855
HEY KU STUDENTS!
ARE YOU
Write your legislator
- Tired of overcrowded classes?
Letter writing tables will be on Wescoe Beach and Strong Hall Rotunda
DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT!
- Mad that you can't graduate on time because the classes you need are closed?
- Upset about teachers leaving?
March 7,8,9,and 10
Sponsored by A.S.K. and the Higher Education Rescue Operation
Classica in celery or natural $44.95
Arte in natural, white, or pink $42.95
Sandals by
Get A Jump On Spring Break
9:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat.
ESPRIT Free 90-Day Layaway! College Shoe Shoppe
TWICE AS STRONG AS OTHER LEADING MOUNTAIN BIKE FRAME TESTED BY SEATTLE POLICE DEPARTMENT. Built in Seattle. Nature's environmental test laboratory
837 Thurs. 'til 8:30
843-1800
Sun. 1-5
RALEIGH MOUNTAIN TECHNIUM®
Made in the USA
RALEIGH MOUNTAIN TECHNIUM®
STUDIO MONTAIN BIKE FRAMES.
Massachusetts
Technium frame of heat-treated 6061-T8 aluminum alloy — same as used in aircraft landing gear — absorbs shock, reduces rider fatigue. Exclusive new Monostay Wishbone increases rear end frame stiffness and power transmission efficiency.
Unbeatable at $549.00
Shimano Deere S1S shifting system. Shimano Deore Camilliers and AT-61 Ubrake. Araya RM-25 rims with stainless spokes.
Color: Artic White Weight: 29 lbs.
Bicycle Stand
Introducing the Super Taco from Taco Bell. A bigger taco stuffed with crisp lettuce, cheddar cheese, juicy beef and hearty beans. It's a mouthful alright. But for a limited time. So hurry.
RALEIGH
1220 W. 6th St.
Lawrence Schwinn Cyclery
1408 W. 23rd St.
Nobody beats Microtech's price- More For Your Money
Southern Hills Mall
842-6363
TACO BELL
Super Taco
Limited Time Only
△
△
△
99c
Plus Tax
$799
sale ends 3/12/88
Because it means that virtually everyone can now afford an easy-to-use personal computer and word processing system that runs the same as either the IBM's PC or the iPC® 30 Model 10.
And think about all you get. In addition to a fully configured, easy-to-compatible keyboard that helps you type on the computer you get the popular Keyboard with a Click™ that helps reduce typing errors, the only thing more useful is a keyboard backed by a nationwide network of servers that can be accessed yet yet easy-to-understand user manuals.
Placing a price tag of just $798 on all fully configured (with monitor), dual-drive Model "10" *4* Personal Computer and Word Processing System from Leading Edge* is truly an event of historic importance.
$799
sale ends 3/12/88
Follow the price and service leader
MICROTECH Computers
2329M Iowa 841-9513
AUTHORIZED DEALER
Leading Edge Inc. is a licensed dealer in the field of optical networking equipment and related products. Leading Edge provides its customers with the highest quality of networking products. It is an independent company, not affiliated with any other manufacturer or supplier.
LEADING EDGE
An American Idea
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sporting goods, inc.
francis
843-4191 731 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
MATHEW BURNS
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Open lap lanes for
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Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
"Civil Rights in America," a speech by Juan Williams, authors of Eyes on the Prize, is being held at Florida's MASSAGE THAT SPRING "BREAK." Tension doesn't mean you have to go to Florida to relax. Spring back from those睦 with the help of friends and teachers. We won't break你, either. students get 20% off.
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable Music and Lighting for any occasion.
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional radio, DJ's. Hot spins Maximum Party Thrust. 841-7083.
MUSIC******* MUSIC******* MUSIC******* MUSIC*
House audio · D.J. Service, 8-track studio,
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizard,
Call Brad 749 1275.
KANGAROO 7:30
9:30 EURYTHMICS LIVE $3.00
LIBERTY HALL 748
1312
LIBERTY
FOR RENT
SUMMER SUBLET Affordable, new one
bedroom fully furnished, near campus
University Dailv Kansan / Tuesday, March 8. 1988
AVAILABLE IMEDIATELY. Bedroom for rent
parking. $120/month. 41-965-8100 at 6:00 PM
parking. $120/month. 41-965-8100 at 6:00 PM
Completely Furnished Studios, 1:2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call (855) 2025, or 749-2815. Mastercraft Management
parking $125.00 341-6522 after 6:00 PM
Available immediately - Nice two bedroom
apartment for two or three people. Between
two rooms in campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Call 841-1287
Roomy studio apartment in farm style home with large kitchen WD hookup. Nice yard. Old West Lawrence. Easy bus to campus. $28 heat付
941-4144
Excellent location, 2 bedroom room in fourplex,
1800 sq. ft., landscaped yard, utilities,
utilities, available April $1,500 at 1341 Oshawa
Female grade student seeking roommate to share
2 bedroom 2 bath 2 aftm. Summer/Fall $196/month
electricity. Call Melody 864-417 daytime.
842-0831 evening, weekends.
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, cell-fans, free utilities, phone, cable, W/D use. Two blocks from KU. K$125. $195. $84-3689. $7 deposit. Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming house on 1344 Kentucky share kitchens & labs. $120 + deposit. $748 - 1439. Message messages.
Get a Group? Common Goals? Spacious well-maintained house on quiet block near town & camps. 84 bedrooms w/ multiple kitchens & campers. Available, including $1,800 monthly. Buital-4144.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester. 18 I smoke. call Sarah evening
MASTERCRAFT offers beautifully furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 814-1212, 814-5255 or 794-4295.
One bedroom West West Condo carpet, pool,
kitchen. Place, indoor/room, sun-room.
No pets! $885. 796-6732.
odore bedroom duplex within walking distance of KL. Central air, low utility, latters a $7 month fee.
Reserve your room for summer or fall at
the location shown. Call 749-6871 and ask for the
living room.
Reimate Needed to share 2BD House. Close to
Ballard Place. New Summer. Not Sunny.
Or Fall - call 845-6212
SUBLEASE. Extra nice 2 BR duplex in good location; garage; WD hookup. No pets. Reqs: $480 mo. Must see. 845-7736 after 5 or leave message.
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts. furn.or unfurn.
OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
Great Location near campus
BRAND NEW! Sundance II
SUNDANCE
Coming to you this fall!
Completely furnished
Completely furnished
Located on the old.
Sanctuary site
On KU bus route
Call to the route
- Super energy efficient
Call today to reserve your unit for next fall! Offered by:
MASTERCRAFT
841-5255 * 841-1212
SUNRISE DARTMENT
- Studios
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments and
Apartments and
Townhouses
- Garages
- Pools
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Fireplaces Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Looking to Rent?
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri.11-15
apartments
rooms
houses
We have:
Lynch Real Estate
call Marie at 843-1601 or 841-3323
or Dick at 842-8971
1711 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS
subjects 2BD, 1 Bath, Apth at Edinburgh Place,
subjects 3BD, sublease until May 31.
83-5277
Summer Sublease 3 bedroom townhouse, 10x8,
pool, and deck. Four persons preferable.
16225 N. 27th St.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
- Free basic cable
- Exercise Weightroom
- Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Manageme
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
Greentree
C-O-N-D-O-M-N-U-M
C·O·N·D·O·M·I·N·I·U·M·S
1726 Ohio
1726 Ohio 1 Bedroom
- Low utilities
- Washer and dryer in each unit
- Less than 3 years old
- Private parking
- Available June or August
- of August
- $350 per month
Call 842-2532
Why Wait! . Subluate a 2 bedroom B凯莱坪
Att. $1,800 per person and low utilities. Just one block from Union. If interested, call 749-4912
(Ask for Bob).
FOR SALE
640K XT clone w/ 2 drives, Hercules, comm board
& amber monitor $650. 841-3675
72 Crestview Home. 12' x 50'. 2 BR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 pm, or inquire 420 North St. #6, Lawrence.
Apple iPad Computer System, 128K. cardual.
Apple iPhone Computer System, 32K. cardual.
printer. Print Shop. Multi-phone. Flight
controller.
Collection of Playboy magazines from 1968 to 1984. Good starter call set Hugh 864-2526.
or sale: Waterbed with bookshelf headboard.
New heater, newie. 100.00. Call eveningws. 843-292-288.
Going to Copper Mtn for Spring Break? I have one ticke for sale. $i price call Mr. 841-524-326
Classical guitar $75, 74 Dodge dart $200, Marshall amp $25, Morley Wah pedal $75, 69 Cadillac Deville $300, Black leather jacket $100, 841-2657 evenings.
For Sale: Alwa walkman with built in
phone. Alwa speakers.
10:00 to elliott 843-292-9200
10:00 to elliott 843-292-9200
Honda Elite Scooter = 125 liquid cooled engine. 65 mm digital, display, temp, gauge, clock, wind speed, 69-85 mm. Much more much. New $1,800 asking $295 - OBO call 841-1365.
FOR SALE - Roundtrip airline ticket to Albuquerque, NM - For Spring愈验. Very cheap!
****MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
312 E. 9th, 749-4961
Rock n-roll - Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to p. 8 every Saturday and Sunda
6:30 p.m. to midnight
Students/Rommates/Married: Beautiful.
spacious, mobile home. Quiet Area, Privacy.
Separate Exercise Room, Storage, Resale Value, Many Extras. 749-3523
Queen-size bed $75. FUOTO trocker $80. Hitachi
cardette deck $75. Dodge Dart $30. 814-2657
814-2658
One way ticket to Denver for sale. $100. Leaves
Friday, March 11. If interested, please call Jenny
1972 Plymouth Gold Duster 7600 miles AM/FM
well. well. very good conditions, $50 to
$100.
TYPEWRITERS: IBM Selectric II make offer,
good condition, phone 864-8243 after 3 p.m.
(8:30 a.m.)
AUTO SALES
1922 Nissan Sanza. Red, 5-Spd, 4-Dr. Hatch-back,
a/c, am-fm. Clean. New. Cheap. Must see.
(305) 827-6000. www.nissan.com
185 SUBARU GL 4, door sedan. Dark Blue with moon/sun roof. Campust Computer 41,000
price. Logo: BAYOU BASE. Call 841-780-6921.
1984 Honda CRX 1.5, 5 spd, Blue, 52K, A/C/M/FAM/CASS, 4600, 7400-7500
1988 mini-vans. Astro $5.53 Caravan $9.61.
Aeronat 4, 9x4 Ski 4, 9x2 Ski 3, Bronco 12
Bronco 12, Polaris 12, Subaru 12,
$12.16 Ranger $5.64 Julius True-Chevy
Cheyenne C1000 6501 8000 Dakota $4.52 F 150
$3.855 Warranties, Rebates, Financing You
options, package options, colors, you want
843-849
1985 Fier SE, 6 Cly. 4 Sp. Silver, Top of line
star. 35.00 miles 81.904.843.346
83 Saab 900 Turbo 6100 miles auto 3 dr. electric
windows/acridors $850, 843-865.
Firebird, Red, 4 to 16, v6 automatic, 18,000
Firebird, Red, 4 to 16, v6 automatic, Call before
a.m. after 10 p.m. 1-661 1934
842-0765.
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, repo d. Surplus. Your area. Buyers
Call with IEM* 8016410 See service desk or Cars.
Call Aaron at 801-4629
MORE CARS.
LOST-FOUND
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, repo. dur. Surplus. Your area. Buyers
guide. (1) 805-697-4000 ext s.9758.
Last golden-tassel indices watch Jan. 25 between.
Last gold-tassel and Stauffer-Flint *Sentimental*
Please call us at (800) 674-1391.
HELP WANTED
Aerobic Instructor Needed. Experience necessary, call for appt. 842-198-104 M-F.
Lost: On March 3 near auditorium at Hawthorn — feeding glasses. Brown in brown case. If found, cell phone call #845-703. Amount lost is $15.
BE ON T V. Many needed for commercials
too cast. Can tung (1) 85-687-4007 Unit 3
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics and dance; play sports, sports, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $100 or more. Campfire meetings, 1765 Mileb, NDl, 312-844-2444.
GOVENMENT JOBS. $10,640-$35,200/yr. Now
given the current Federal List (20)
current federal list (20)
GRADUATE ASSISTANT half-time position. The Office of Residential Program announces a half-time graduates position in position starting September 2015. Dates include housing applications & contracts, contacts with prospective students and parents; Office of Admission, application, resume, and names of 3 references to: Fred McElain; Office of Residential programs, 128 Strong Hall. Application deadline: March 11.
POSTAL JOBS! $20.64 each! Prepare Now!
Work at The University of
Exam Work
(916) 644-4444 Ext. 153
Immediate openings to update Lawrence/Kansas City 1083 Lee. Conduct brief due to schedule change. Apply online and be welcomed. We will train. Salary plus incentive bonus plus merit award. Mail resume to: R.J. Palmer, 255 W. Monroe St., after 9 a.m. Monday-Friday, RL Pol & Co, 901 W. Monroe St.
HELP WANTED: Looking for an energetic, responsible person to clean office space; night shift or lunch hour.
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS:
PART TIME JOBS. Sports officials are needed for Intramural Floorball and soccer. You will train you will train you. Attend the meetings on Tuesday, March 8, 6:30 p.m. for soccer and 7:00 p.m. for floor球. *820 Robinson
PROGRAM INSTRUCTORS (4) teach high school students in summer session. Degree, teaching experience to be required. DORMITORY SUPERVIOR(1) coordinate staff and live in dorm. degree and experience. PEREZOUNSELORS/TUTORS (3) live in dorm, tutor, counsel and supervise high school students in research. Junior level in college research experience. PEREZOUNSELORS/DENTIST Instructor/Counselor (1) design and implement individual educational programs for KU students in research. Master's degree, post-secondary teaching experience, and familiarity with KU required. Master's degree, post-secondary teaching job description available at Upward Board, 408 Bailey Hall. Send letter of application, current resume and names of references to Nettie Mitte, Department of Education, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66545 (913) 864-3155 AAJ. EE AA
— Must be available this summer
NEEDED: KU on Wheels Coordinator
- Must be KU student and enrolled in at least 6 hours Fall 88 & Spring 89
- Details and application procedures available at Student Senate Offices 105 Burge Union No calls please
- Starts May 1, 1988 through May 31, 1989
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks offering appraisal
positions. We are in the interm渡 position
for information & application; write Na-
ture, Michele C., P. O. Box 8074,
Hillam Island Head, SC 29813.
Summer Jobs! Two of Minnesota's finest summer youth camp, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15-28, 2014; interview and interview Jeff at eJff-481-527-0E1. Ext 310
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks meet new accepting apps
and technology. For information & application. write National Collegiate Recreation, P.O. Box 8074 Middletown, NY 11653.
Hax Resiainants is now hiring responsibility, hard work, hard individuals to fill part-time day, evening and weekend openings. Wages start at 3% per hour. Flexible scheduling. Apply at haxresiduals.com.
伞
— Must be available for 3 hour time blocks each day
— 20 hours per week
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy
part time work, a job at Pallet Park is interested in your talents. Transporta-
tion duties.
Wanted: Full-time or part-time morning worker with 1 hour photo lab exp. For more information, call (800) 256-3478.
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekend hours available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to develop computer contact. Contact AudioLib Network, 844-4400.
— Application deadline:
March 28, 1988 4:30 p.m.
PERSONAL
REET sandals
Summer interns, out of state $400/month, great work experience for more info, call 823-1776.
World Sport Schwinn Bike For Sale. Good Condition call 842-9559.
BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
9 EAST 8TH
Annie and Simone. Here's your message! Happy!
Have an awesome break! From the invisible
A B C : "For me, the single word 'God' suggests everything that is slippery, shady, saugall, foul water."
Bill Happy Birthday to my favorite aX! HLOpe
you have an awesome day. Party some for me
749-0334
Love, Pauly.
Pakistan.
You A.K.A. A.JOB C. Happy 21st B-day.
Your 14-Hour Day.
Dear Margi, Just a quick little to say I Love You! Love, Poppy.
Jana and Diane: Just remember who's zooming in at the break. From her louse chick from hell roomie.
Kwik Shop 1:30 SAT A. Mur. Sme' I'm interested
how to catch the fuzzy little dog.
If so, how can I catch it?
L. B. Thanks for always being there. Bowie - Madonna - Yoda - Chocolate - Teddy Bears - Poetry - Lusie. We hate math!! Stay wonderful. Hugs, smiles, Love, Jen.
Normal Guy — Would you settle for a gail not quite so normal and良 John Ellison? If so, reply here.
Hugs, smiles, love, lov.
McGowan:
"Thanks for an awesome
Friday night was a blast! Wabbit.
The girl who sat in seat FI Thursday night, and she red. I would like to talk with you again. If you are interested call 864-6746. The guy in seat FI109.
The one w/Dark who catches the T/7-30
am but he doesn't. Glances can be
done on cipher 1 htey. I have it.
BUS. PERSONAL
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. No dues or fees. Overaters at Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine. Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine. For confidential information contact person. Write P.O Box 3482
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at
Confidence help! confidential free pregnancy
testing
SENSUAL LINGERIE & $WMWEAR. Get your full color catalog today. Send $5 includes postage and handling to: SATIN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 15718, LENAEX, KS 66215
SUNDAY CHICAGO TRIBUNE: New on sale at the following locations: Convenience Store 9th & Indiana, Kwik Shop 9th & Miss, Kansas Union, Sun Home Delivery 814-503.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 8421261
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shots to composition students, dancers, etc. Busts in 414-833-7609. www.lightportfolios.com
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
Bloom County t-shirts & books Role-playing, war games and miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese Comics and more!
Do you want
$30,000
It begins with a quality resume
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
See us
Printing
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
and Mathematics. All levels. Call Demis
[208] 562-2933. www.campus.mit.edu/qs
M M
BEACH
TOWELS
THE BEACH HOUSE
Vintage Sunglasses are Choice! Assorted color frames and lenses
Find your style at
Shop Massachusetts
843-0611
---
Don't steal 'em from Uncle Ed!
TUTORING TUTORING $5.68/mi. MATH
Math. M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
Math. M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
$89 Value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Free Spinal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
843-3579.
DRIVER SEDICATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving U.S. students (for 20 vehicles) with driver's license obtainable; transportation provided, 841-776-9011
SERVICES OFFERED
p.m.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Cygn and Abortion Sec-
ture Ring Rank (46) 411-6078.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birtchirat at 843-6831. Confidential help/free pregnancy
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac-
cruity. Work with layout and wordprocessing.
825-745 Loria; 825-745 Loria; 825-745 Loria.
job-winning resumes, cover letters, 12 years experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. KHOTOGRAPHY LLC. Ekhonkroo PHOTOGRAPHY LLC. 804-756-3922. Passport $60.00. Art & Design Building.
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality form. 843-263, days or evening.
MATH BUTOR since 1976, M.A. $/hour, 843-9032
'n m.'
**repeat?** We can help. Planned Parenthood of
Kansas City provides confidential out-of-
patient abortions. Don't be afraid to ask for the
help you need. Call (818) 756-2277.
1.RAI-信理 Typing Service Term paper,
typing system, typewritten, type18M,
Electronic Typewriter 823-246.
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typed
2 plus Typing: Callery Terry 842-7545
3 plus Typing: 842-8071 evenings
AAA TYPING Word processing, spellcheck,
AAAA TYPING After 5 m.p. t-FMT-
TYPING Words, pages, 843-1024.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary,
$1.25/bound spacepd. East Lawrence. Mrs.
Fred.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in terminating
clearing and correcting Selenite.
spliced correcting *843-9544*
spliced correcting *843-9544*
CAMP DIRECTOR -- Girl Scout Camp Wiedemann is seeking a seasonal director. Send resume to or contact. Outdoor Program Director, Wiedemann, 2000 N. Woodland, Wichita, KS 67208. EOE 67208.
CAMP COUNSELORS Positions Available:
Assistant Director, Wrangler, Waterfront Staff,
General Counselors. Contact Outdoor Program
Director, Wichita Area G.S.C. 2009; Woodland,
Wichita.
Call R.J.'s rping service for all of your typing needs. 814-9542 before 9 p.m. please.
Call me for your typing needs. Reasonable rates
842-4988 before 10 p.m.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES. LAW PAPERS.
DISSEMINATION ON ORGANIZATIONAL
available 493-5378, before p. 9 m. please
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letter
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 843-5021 spell check
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 843-5021 spell check
Donna's Term Typing and Word Proessing.
Term paper, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing. Spelled correct. 842-7247.
Professional tystist w/ 15 years experience. Close to campus. Pggy 89-896.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, editing, fast reliable service.
TYPIING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications Form at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBABA at
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at 843-0111
THE WORLDCOCTORS. Why pay for tying when they are free? On the contrary, resumes, law review. Since 1983. B4-314-77.
THE FAR SIDE
WANTED
Babyitter needed Mon-Thur late afternoon
Babysitting needed female
Female Christian roommate, non-smoker on
weekends.
Prostate cancer provides own Transplant
Female. Female. Female. Hot-smoker or
bourb�r, ouit商业. Bedroom and Fall
at home.
Female needed to care for our 2 children this summer. We are an active, outgoing family in my community. I am a parent and are located 1 hour from NYC, and Phila and 5 hr. from PA. I have a strong interest of internet with phone - ASAP to Mrs.
Female Roommate wanted, summer, large room for 1 or 2 persons, trash, cable paid, furnished with toilet, desk, work space.
Female roommate wanted. 2 bedroom house sigh
roommate required. Master's degree or
must. Graduate student or serious student
Female Roommate wanted, non-smoker please. Rent 175.00 + t_ utilities Call Lilly 749-1284
Female roommate: 2 bedroom duplex at house, furnished, furnished 3 at school. $120 - 749-3559
Nice fun roommate looking for 2 roommates to share 3 bedroom apartment for 88-89 school year. Swimming pool, BB/Tennis Courts available. 849-700-0000 Meadowbrook
NEED IMEDIATELY for Lawrence based Rock hand, Vocalist, preferably with other musical abilities. Dates booked. Call 843-4243.
Nine low response calls for *L*.
Male roommate. 0wn room in 2 bedroom
Borkley, NJ - close by from Union $130 -
789-482-6121
Male roentlem (a) wanted for summer 88 Spring
89. Large, tidy, non-smoking 3 bedroom apartment in Meadowbrook, near campus. Call 845-0941.
Part time house cleaners wanted. Day and evening hours available, if you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous. Buckingham Palace is interchangeable with the library. Put your used books and magazines to work! Donate to Friends of the Lawrence Public Library. Bring to collection box at the library 707-291-8625.
Roommate getting married need older student to share rent 138.75 + *utilities in a townhouse. Owner room on bus route. Please call if interested 842.2737.
Roommate needed to share townhouse $225.00
pairs it匀业. Call 842-1983 10-M-F.
Wanted: Student to exchange practice in Spanish
conversational practice in English. Call 749-5389.
E-mail: tcherr@microsoft.com
By GARY LARSON
©1988 Universal Press Syndicate
36
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---
12
Tuesday, March 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
O
C
--days of Aerobics for
--days of Aerobics for
Cornucopia
S
1801 MASSACHUSETTS MONDAY-FRIDAY 11 A.M.-10 P.M.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M.-10 P.M.
days of Aerobics for ONLY 7 dollars
EXTRAORDINARY FRUIT, SOUP & SALAD BAR $3.25 WITH COUPON
$3.25 WITH COUPON
OFFER EXPIRES 4/08/88
THE Fitness Factory
AEROBIC STUDIO
23rd & Louisiana
In The Malls
Shopping Center
Good Through 3/12/88
2 12 " 2-topping pizza + 2 soft drinks
$7.75 + tax
CHECKERS
PIZZA
2214 YALE HD. 841-8010
VIDEO BIZ
892 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(813) 745-3551
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 3-22-88
not to be used with any other promotion
CHECKERS PIZZA
BOSS PIZZA Shoppe plc.
PIZZA Shoppe
(913) 749-3507
BUCK!
PIZZA
Dine-in or Delivery
King & Queen resort
2 16 " 2-topping pizza + 4 soft drinks
$12.99 + tax
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK with the purchase of any sub 1618 W. 23rd St.
PIZZA Shoppe
842-0600
1 Pound
SPAGHETTI
Garlic Toast
32 oz Pepsi
King Size
PIZZA
single topping
32 oz Pepsi
$4.95
Free Delivery
$8.95
CHECKERS PIZZA
12 " 2-topping pizza + 1 soft drink
$3.99 + tax
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
--the delivery is Fast. Friendly, and
---
1 Original Runza
1 Order of French Fries
1 Order of Onion Rings
Italian cheese extra.
*Not good with any other offer.
One coupon per person per visit.
Coupon expires March 21, 1988
COUPONS
2 Medium Drinks
RUNZA
DRIVE·INN
RESTAURANT
CHECKERS PIZZA
16 " 2-topping pizza + 2 soft drinks
$ 6.75 + tax
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
$1.00 VALUE
FUTON FRAME BREAKTHROUGH
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
3-Way Frame
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
"Couch potato lounger"
PENNYLINE
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
ERV w/cupon
$150 $99.95
$175 $109.95
$195 $119.95
Ristorante
20% OFF
(coupon expires 3/26/88)
710 W. 6th Waterhed Works 842-1411
Operational Plant
Lancaster Lawrence Booth K.C.
Cleveland Cleveland Minneapolis
Oversight Date 08/12/12
Company ID 96-03121
*Informed* *Informed* *Informed*
(Acquisition Number) (Acquisition Number)
(Acquisition Number) (Acquisition Number)
HOT 5000 WITH OTHER SPECIALS
EXPIRES 03/28/88
$2.00 OFF
LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER
NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER
Expires:, April 2, 1988
$3.00 OFF
Any Large
Standing Ovation
14 POINT SERVICE
SAN ANTONIO
jiffylube
14 POINT SERVICE
INCLUDING, OIL AND FILTER CHANGE,
LUBRICATION OF CHASSES 9, SAFE CHECKS
AND THE FINISHING TOUCHES
PYRAMID
Pizza
30% OFF Permanent waves reg. $50.00
ACROSS FROM KROGER'S 914 W.228D
With 2 or more toppings
Exp. 6/1/88
"We Pile It On"
30% OFF Haircuts reg. $15.00
842-3232
749-07/71 14 East 8th expires. 4/29/88
Attn: supervisor of help desk Ann Roe
14. 4.20RD
--permanent wave or hair color when you bring in this coupon.
*Offer expires March 23, 1988
京都飯店
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
ROYAL PEKING RESTAURANT FREE
FREE
Complimentary Make-up with
A
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
2 Crab Rangoons with Any Dinner
2 Crab Rangoons with Any Dinner 711 W.23rd 841-4599
Expires 5/31/88
Headmasters.
≡
809 Vermont
--expires 3/22/88
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any 2 or more pizzas
25 $ ^{¢} $ BOWLING
This coupon
entitles bearer
to one 25¢ game
during open bowling
(weekday afternoons)
842-1212
CINCH NEW SEMESTER NEW YOU
Let It Roll!
For The Jouvent
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
843-2899 OF ANY PACKAGE
Level 1
Call 864-3545
THE KANSAS UNION
JAYBOWI
843-2899 OF ANY PACKAGE
No Membership — YOU DECIDE
1st SESSION FREE
2619 w. 6th near Carreros, on KU Bus Route
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
SPORTS
UNLIMITED
- Nike Shoes • Tiger Shoes
- New Balance Shoes • Foot Joy Shoes
- and many more
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Now On Sale:
WEIGHTS
1 mo./$20
Til May 31/$30
includes sauna, open hot tub, & optional tanning
- Biggest Selection Of Tights In Town
- New Spring Break T-Shirts
1012 Massachusetts 843-0412
25th & IOWA
841-6232
15/mo. VISIT
10/mo. NO FEE
2 mo. minimum fee
10 miles $25
TANNING
8 Beds-No Waiting!
Unlimited Use:
$15/mo $2/visit 3 visits/$10
$4/mo No visit fee 7 visits/$20
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
50¢ OFF Any 1 pizza
expires 3/22/88 EUROPEAN
TAN. HEALTH & BEAUTY
---
842-1212
THE BUM STEER
€.99
NAME ___
ADDRESS
DATE ___
BBQ Beef, Ham, or
2554 Iowa 841-smok“e”
Expires 3-15-88
Turkey Sandwich
Turkey Sandwich
CameraAmerica
Not good on delivery.
One Hour Photo Finishing 841-7205 1610 W. 23rd Spring Break Special!
Spring Break Special!
Buy 4 Rolls of Film, Get 1 Free!
Wednesday March 9,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.113 (USPS 650-640)
Dole, Gephardt fail Super Tuesday test 3 Democrats vie for lead in race SUPER TUESDAY Bush big winne most of So
The Associated Press
Michael Dukakis circled Dixie and claimed a national candidacy on Super Tuesday, Albert Gore Jr. passed his do-or-die Southern test and Jesse Jackson greatly improved on his 1984 performance.
Super Tuesday's loser was Richard Gephardt, who won his home state of Missouri but fared badly elsewhere. He was failing to meet the 15 percent threshold required to win delegates in many states.
With a splintered outcome, three of the Democratic candidates could — and did — argue they did well on the ballot.
For Jackson it was victories in three big states and an impressive improvement over his campaign four years ago. For Dukakis it was a display of support outside his native New England and claim to a national candidacy. And for Gore it was the right to claim wide support across the South and a spot among the contenders for the nomination.
Gore immediately took aim at Dukakis as his chief rival and compared him to Walter Mondale and the Democrats' 1984 debacle.
"I think Mike Dukakis is going to represent for many voters the same old formula that led to the loss of 49 out of 50 states twice in the last five elections." Gore said.
He said the race "is going to be a long, hard-fought contest. It's also going to be a long, hard-fought contest in the fall. We need to select the candidate with the best chance of winning."
Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, countered:
"Remember, this was a place where the guy from
Massachusetts wasn't supposed to do well at all.
"This has been a great night for us. To be able to take Texas and Florida, the two big ones, and to do well across the board demonstrates that this is a national candidacy, a national campaign."
Jackson's big victory in Virginia with nearly half of the vote and strong showing elsewhere he would fare better than his 1984 campaign, when he won only Louisiana.
"I've won Southern states today, either number one or number two, with a new Southern message," Jackson said.
"And that message is fundamentally, we the people must stop drugs from threatening our national security and our streets, we must fight to end economic violence. That message is getting through.
"We've gone from a narrow mainstream to a broad-based river," Jackson said.
See DEMOCRATS, p. 9, col. 1
DONKEY PARK
Democrats
Dukakis: 6 states won Florida, Maryland, Idaho Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Texas
Gore:5 states won
Gore: 5 states won Arkansas, Kentucky, Oklahoma North Carolina, Tennessee
Jackson: 5 states won Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana Mississippi, Virginia
Gephardt: 1 state won Missouri
Simon: 0 states won
Republicans
RHINO
Bush: 13 states won
Bush: 13 states won Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri Rhode Island, Tennessee, Virginia
Dole: 0 states won
Robertson: 0 states won
These figures reflect results as of 2 a.m. today
The Associated Press
Knight Ridder Graphic
George Bush swept the South on Super Tuesday, overwhelming Bob Dole in lopsided Republican voting. Dole sought to deflect the shock, but the presidential aspirations of Jack Kemp and Pat Robertson were dealt shattering blows.
Bush won decisively, not only throughout the region but in nearly all 17 states holding GOP contests. He scored a narrow victory in Missouri but trailed both Robertson and Dole in the initial returns from the Washington caucuses.
Bush was leading with 571 of the 712 delegates up for orabs.
"This is a unique political happening," an elated Bush told cheering campaign workers in Houston. "It exceeded my fondest expectations."
A more subdued Dole told his supporters in Chicago, "Tomorrow, we will be on the road to recovery."
Dole, shut out in the South, turned his sights north to the Illinois primary Tuesday, where he hoped to stage a comeback.
confused.
"I want to congratulate the vice president . . . He'll probably sleep better tonight than I will," he said. "We'll take turns."
take turns.
Dole's campaign chairman, William Brock, acknowledged that the campaign had suffered a serious defeat.
"The psychological bit is very heavy," he said.
The psychologist he is very likely to
Yesterday's voting appeared to put the other two GOP
candidates, Kemp and Robertson, well out of contention
for the party nomination.
However, Robertson了 in early returns out of the Washington caucus. He also outpiled Dole in two other races.
"It it isn't too bad for an amateur, but it's not near what I expected," Robertson said. He suggested that he might win the Illinois primary and said, "I do have resources left. We have the largest donor base of any candidate and I can carry all the way to New Orleans."
Bush won decisive victories all over, capturing more than 50 percent of the vote in many states, including delegate-rich Florida and Texas.
At stake Tuesday were 712 delegates to the Republican National Convention. Virginia was alone among the 17 GOP contests that held a "beauty contest!" that awarded no delegates. It takes 1,139 votes for the nomination.
Bush led with 571 delegates yesterday, giving him 688 when combined with the delegates he won in earlier contests. Dole had 100, for a total of 165; Robertson had 10, for a total 18; and Kemp had four, for a total 39.
See REPUBLICANS, p. 9, col. 1
Officials postpone postage increase
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Higher stamp prices won't take effect until next month, postal officials said yesterday after postponing a final decision on the effective date of the new rates.
The board of governors of the U.S. Postal Service will hold a special meeting March 22 to discuss putting the new rates into effect.
"Although no definite decision on an effective date for rates has been scheduled, the board has set April 3 as the target date to give mailers advance notice to plan for the new rates," the agency said yesterday in a statement released after its meeting.
Under the law, the agency has to give 10 days notice once it votes to impose new rates, so a vote on March 31 put the new prices in force by April.
The new prices, recommended by the independent Postal Rate Commission last Friday following 10 months of deliberation, called for a sweeping series of increases averaging more than 17 percent. Included would be a 25-cent first-class rate.
At yesterday's meeting, new Postmaster General Anthony Frank said that he would like to restore some of the recently cut postal services when higher stamp prices take effect but that he was concerned about the costs involved.
The Postal Service also announced that it was offering telephone sales of stamps nationwide during the transition to the new rates.
Callers will be able to use their Visa and MasterCard credit cards to order the new non-denominated 'E' stamps.
Customers who want to order the new stamps can do so. 24 hours a day, by calling 1-800-TAMP24.
KU police use extras at forum
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
When the crowd outside Monday's free speech forum started to get unruly, law enforcement officials had a decision to make.
"We had people in front of the building trying to break in, literally climbing all over the building trying to get in second-floor windows." Ralph Oliver, assistant director of KU police, said yesterday. "I was scared people were going to get trampled to death."
KKK on campus Further coverage on p10,11
He said three broken windows and reports of fighting prompted a decision to deploy the second half of a combined force made up of about 120 area law enforcement officers. The second half had been held in reserve as a contingency force.
Most of the first half of the force was inside the auditorium, he said.
"A contingency force can be used in two ways," Oliver said. "First, it can be used as a deterrent, or you can wait until all hell breaks loose and then bring in the contingency force to clean up the mess."
The force was used as a deterent after a joint decision was made by Oliver, Jim Denney, director of KU police, and Lawrence police chief Ron Olin.
At 8:20 p.m., 50 Kansas Highway Patrol troopers, outfitted with riot helmets, visors, and carrying billy clubs, got off a bus and marched up the road to the auditorium.
Roll On!
"I don't want to brag," Oliver said,
"but we brought them in at the perfect time."
Some students taunted the troopers as they took positions around the building, guarding the doors and windows that some had been attempting to break through.
Oliver said earlier security estimates of up to $450 an hour were based on a security force including only KU police officers for three or
"Once that presence was there, people did calm down." Oliver said.
The cost of the 128-man security force was $1.5 million, Oliver said yesterday.
See SECURE, p. 11, col. 5
Laws, penalties are tough at spring break hot spots
Bv Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
Spring break revelers under the age of 21 had better behave more like Frankie and Amnette than Bluto and Flounder if they plan to spend their time and money for things other than jail and fines.
Law enforcement officials in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Daytona Beach, Fla.; South Padre Island, Texas; and Aspen, Colo., warn that officers will not be lenient with minors drinking alcohol or anyone driving drunk.
During an eight-week period that included spring break last year, Cefkin said Fort Lauderdale police made 1,478 arrests. He said 461 of those arrested were students.
Fort Lauderdale
"City officials here have said they don't want the students back," said Ott Cefkin, a spokesman for the Fort Lauderdale police department. For that reason, he said, law enforcement officers aren't as lenient as they might be in other areas that try harder to attract spring break business.
The legal drinking age in Florida is 21. That age requirement will be strictly enforced, Cefik said.
Slightly more than a third of the students arrested were cited for possession of alcohol by a minor, about 19 percent for disorderly
Spring Break
conduct and 3 percent for possession of an open container in public.
Cefkin said those offenders were usually fined $25 and released. He said those fined and released under the city ordinance would get no criminal record, but if other charges, such as fighting or resisting arrest, were attached to the drinking offense, they would be cited under the state driving law. That would mean a court date and a possible criminal record.
Daytona Beach
Almost all the bars in Daytona Beach make provisions for admitting students between 18 and 21. The students must wear a color-coded wristband or bartenders and law enforcement officials can keep an eve on them.
If the offender is charged under state laws, though, the offender may have to spend time in jail until he can go before a judge.
If they are observed drinking, those under 21 will be thrown out of the bar, said Lt. Lexie Williams, crime prevention officer with the Daytona Beach police department. He said that a person seen giving alcohol to a minor would face a $35 city fine.
Williams said that if students were arrested on a weekend, they would be jailed until court reconvened Monday.
Officials from both Florida cities said that driving under the influence would be handled with less leniency than most other drinking offenses.
If the DUI case doesn't involve an accident, leaving the scene or injury, the offender will be cited for DUI and held in jail until a $500 bond is posted. A court appearance is mandatory.
Cefkin and Williams said the courts would usually try to move out-of-state offenders through the system rapidly, so they wouldn't have to come back to town for a court date.
Another Florida law that students should be aware of is a 1987 state disorder conduct statute, which makes it illegal to climb walls or hang from balconies.
Hotel owners are able to enforce the law because it gives them the power to detain, until police arrive, people seen engaging in dangerous activity.
In Daytona Beach, this is an offense for which no warnings will be given. Williams said. He said officers were instructed to give warnings and ask open container offenders to pour out their drinks.
Sleeping on a beach or in a park is illegal in Florida,but both
See BREAK, p. 12, col. 1
Photo illustration by Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
ARE YOU 21?
IT IS A CRIME FOR ALL
HISTORY UNLEFT
TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OLD
TO POSHESS
ALCOHOLIC BRIVETAGE
AND
POSSESSION OR USE OF
FALSE OR FRETTIOUS
GENTLE CARNIVAL BIG LINK
Failure of qualified admissions bill surprises few
By Iill less
House defeated plan by 2-1 margin Monday
Kansan staff writer
University administrators said yesterday that they weren't surprised that a qualified admissions bill failed in the Kansas House of Representatives Monday.
The bill, which had been introduced by House Education Committee chairman Denise Apt, R-Iola, failed by a vote of 43-80.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor of
the University of Kansas, said yesterday that although she was disappointed that the bill failed, she was not surprised.
"My sense has been for some weeks that there was not a strong line (of support) on selective admissions," she said.
Ramaley said the bill would have given high school students an idea of what would be expected of them in college.
"The signal that would have been sent would have been very helpful," she said.
Ramaley said that one intent of the bill was to better prepare high school students for college.
The bill would have required high school students entering a Board of Regents school to pass with a least a C average a curriculum set by the Regents. The recommended curriculum was four years of English; three years of math,
He said he did not want to say what he thought about the failure of the bill.
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said he thought a qualified admissions policy would cause high school students to take classes more seriously.
"If the classes are required, instead of just recommended, instead of just passing the course they might actually try for a good grade," he said.
science and social studies; and two years of a foreign language. The language requirement would have gone into effect in 1994, with the others taking effect in 1992.
Jane Hutchinson, director of Associated Students of Kansas, said she was not upset about the failure of the bill.
"Frankly, I'm not really disappointed," she said.
ASK had supported an admissions policy with slightly more stringent requirements.
She said she had not been surprised about the failure of the bill because there had been so much controversy about qualified admissions.
"I don't think anyone takes middle ground on admissions," she said.
The bill remains on the House of Representatives calendar and could be brought up for debate again today.
2
Wednesdav. March 9. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Pleasant
HIGH: 50°
LOW: 35°
Decreasing cloudiness this afternoon with a high around 50. Mostly clear tonight with a low in the mid 30's.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte 55/31 Sunny Omaha 50/33 Partly cloudy
Goodland 60/30 Sunny Hays 50/31 Partly cloudy Salina 53/33 Partly cloudy Topoka 50/35 Partly cloudy Kansas City 49/34 Partly cloudy Columbia 47/33 Cloud St. Louis 47/33 Spinnaker
Dodge City 61/33 Sunny Wichita 58/33 Partly cloudy Chanute 55/34 Partly cloudy Springfield 51/32 Partly cloudy
Forecast by Alice Maas and Kevin Darmofal. Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
Tulsa 60/39 Partly cloudy
5-DAY
THU
Partly cloudy
62 / 39
HIGH LOW
FRI
Showers 55 / 35
SAT
Partly cloudy
50 / 32
SUN
Sunny
52 / 33
MON
Partly cloudy
52 / 33
SPRING BREAK WEATHER HOTLINE
864-4329
SPRING BREAK WEATHER HOTLINE 864-4329 Thursday, 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
Dean hunt continues
By a Kansan reporter
James Muyskens, acting provost and professor of philosophy at Hunter College-City University of New York and George Woodyard, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs at KU and professor of Spanish, will talk about their goals and objectives for the University at meetings open to faculty and students, said Carole Dickey, secretary in the office of academic affairs.
The names of the final two of five candidates for the liberal arts dean position at the University of Kansas were announced yesterday.
The meeting for Musykens will be at 7:30 p.m. March 21 in the Kansas Union's Centennial Room. Woodyard will give his address at 7:30 p.m. March 23 in the same room.
Previously announced candidates are John Taylor, professor of biological sciences at Wayne State University in Detroit; Clyde Hendrick, dean of the graduate school and professor of psychology at Texas Tech University in Lubbock; and John J. Kozak, associate dean of science and professor of chemistry at the University of Notre Dame.
Kozak will meet with faculty and students at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union's Centennial Room.
KSU satellite link may aid KU
Some University of Kansas professional schools might be able to teach courses by satellite next fall by hooking up with a satellite communications center to be built at Kansas State University.
"The center will be a host for whatever Regents community member wants to take advantage of the facility," Garvin said. "We will be helping people develop programs
Kansan staff writer
The $6 million communications center, a two-story, 28,000-square-foot building to be built near the center of the K-State campus, will contain educational programming facilities and will be able to transmit signals to a satellite, which will then deliver signals to receiving stations throughout the state, said Lawrence Garvin, director of facilities planning at K-State.
Senecal said that equipment in Strong Hall was capable of live television programming and could be hooked up to the K-State satellite uplink either by fiber optics or by land-based micwaves.
1. Bickell Lund, Leawood junior, won the Panasonic microwave oven and the jar of jelly beans with a guess of 4,122. The actual number was 4,155.
However appealing the project sounds, Senecal said the project was in the primary stages of development.
Senecal said a $1 million federal grant to be split between KU and KState was a possibility. Many states
The winner's list is as follows:
are competing for the grant, called the STAR program.
2. Scott Frazier, Topeka junior, won the book of SUA movie passes.
The money, if granted to the two universities, wouldn't be available until October, Senecal said.
Although programming facilities will exist at K-State for all Regents schools to use, television programming facilities already exist at KU. KU could be linked to the K-State satellite uplink and transmit to receiving stations throughout the state, said Robert Senecal, dean of continuing education at KU.
"It would also be a real opportunity for the University to provide instruction to schools at secondary levels," he said.
4. Mike Peters, Henderson, Nebraska graduate student, won the free donuts.
3. Kurt Limesand, Riverbend, Alaska senior, won the $40 meal ticket.
Edward Meyen, dean of education,
said the link to the K-State center
could provide in-service training for
teachers throughout the state.
Edith Black, assistant dean of social welfare, said many KU alumni of the School of Social Welfare who live in Western Kansas would like to earn a master's degree in social welfare. KU is the only university in the state that offers a master's program in social welfare.
By Michael Carolan
that they want disseminated throughout the state."
Now, people in Western Kansas have to relocate to earn the degree, she said.
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On Campus
A political reporter for the Washington Post and author of "Eyes on the Prize."
Student Senate Presents:
JUAN WILLIAMS
Speaking On: CIVIL RIGHTS IN AMERICA
A seminar featuring a review of University accounting procedures is scheduled all day today beginning at 8:30
The department of personnel services is sponsoring a staff training and development session titled "Writing Position Descriptions" at 9 a.m. today in 102 Carruth-O'Leary Hall. Call 864-4944 to register.
Thursday, March 10 8:00 p.m.
■ A retirees club coffee is scheduled for 10 a.m. today in the Adam Lounge of the Adams Alumni Center.
■ A University Forum titled "The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence" with Bruce Twarog, professor of physics and astronomy, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
A Campus Christians meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Burge Union's Daisy Hill Room.
A Student Senate meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Kansas Room.
The KU Medieval Society is sponsoring a lecture titled "Boccaccio as editor of Dante" with Susan Noakes, associate professor of French and Italian, at 8 p.m. today in Watson Library's conference rooms A and B.
Kansas Union Ballroom
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
March is National Nutrition Month
Eat recommended daily amounts from all four food groups
Meat Fruit/Vegetable
Milk Grain
The next Adult Children of Alcoholics support meeting:
March 22, 1988
7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m.
2nd floor Conference Room
Watkins Memorial Hospital
Call for more information or to register!
WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
Main Hospital number: 864-9500
Health Education number: 864-9570
THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
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The finest accommodations on camps are found at the foot of Mount Oread in Naismith Hall. Naismith Hall is just minutes from classes and features front door bus service. But that's just the beginning. One tour of Naismith Hall will show you accommodations that surpass any other student housing. Consider a semi-private suite with weekly maid service, or a fitness center and private pool. And if that's not enough, then consider great menus, a computer center, cable TV lounges on every floor, private parking and even payment options. Now is the time to arrange for the best accommodations at KU, as waiting lists are now forming for the fall semester. The accommodations of Naismith Hall -- you'll love the difference.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 9, 1988
Campus/Area
3
KU recruits professors anticipating relief funds
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has begun hiring new professors to help alleviate overcrowding in areas that have experienced rapid growth in the last year.
As many as 25 new faculty positions could be created in the college if the University of Kansas receives a $1.7 million faculty funding increase recommended to the Legislature by Gov. Mike Hayden.
But even as legislators debate the merits of such an allocation, the college has begun screening and hiring some job applicants.
"Of the 16 departments that showed an increase of 100 students or more, we have faculty search going on in 14 departments," Robert Lineberry, dean of the college, said yesterday.
He said that most of the new faculty would fill junior- and senior-level classes because that was where
help was needed most.
Lindy Eakin, assistant to the dean of liberal arts and sciences, said that upper division faculty would help the college's resources by providing it with scholars interested in research and graduate programs.
The philosophy department has just added a new assistant professor to its staff.
to its start.
Anthony Genova, philosophy chairman, said the new position should alleviate some of the strain that had resulted from a dramatic enrollment increase.
increase. "In the last three years, the overall head count has increased 51 percent." Genova said. "Our graduate student population has increased by 30 percent."
He said that salaries should not be a problem in hiring new faculty.
"Lineberry has been very demanding that we hire only the best applicants," Genova said. "Salaries for new applicants are very competitive."
We won't lose a professor because of salary."
re said that of 90 applicants, the department was able to hire one of its top choices.
"We're hoping next year to make another faculty appointment," Kozma-Southall said. "We're always hoping the college will have the commitment to continue our increases, they just don't have the money now."
top choices
Jan Kozma-Southall, chairman of the French and Italian department, said the department had just hired an assistant professor to teach upper-level French courses.
The Spanish department hired two new faculty members. One is a replacement, but the other position is new.
Robert Spires, Spanish and Portuguese department chairman, said that the addition was a response to the 30 percent enrollment increase from last semester.
Vets talk to class studying '60s
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
Students gazed at slides of young American soldiers in Vietnam. Pictures of a peaceful countryside contrasted with ones of wounded soldiers.
By viewing such pictures and meeting the people who actually served in Vietnam, students can supplement their classroom readings with a personal sense of history, said Tolene Smith, lecturer in English.
"I think when you come closer to history, you feel more involved," Smith said.
Three Vietnam veterans visited Smith's Literature of the '60s class yesterday. They showed slides and then answered students' questions.
answer to state demands.
Tom Berger, a research assistant for the executive vice chancellor, and Jeff Cocayne and Virginia Hicks, Kansas City, Mo., residents, responded to questions ranging from how they felt about war protesters to how they adjusted when they returned to the United States.
"By the time I got over there, I was seeing things I had heard on the evening news." Hicks said.
Cocayne said it was difficult to adjust to life in the United States after serving in Vietnam. He talked about the sense of isolation many soldiers developed and how difficult it was to explain those feelings to family or friends.
"I was in Vietnam; and then three days later, I was eating dinner at my parents' house," he said.
Berger discussed the war's relationship to current events. He said he saw parallels between Vietnam and conflicts taking place in the Middle East and Central
America.
ART.
"We've got to make the hard, fast decisions before we put lives on the line," Berger said. "If we're not careful, and your generation will have to make the decisions, we're going to be in a lot of trouble."
Hicks, who worked in military intelligence during the Vietnam War, said after the class that she was surprised that many students weren't familiar with facts about Vietnam but that she liked helping them learn more.
"It made me feel like I was a part of history," she said. Cocayne said, "I enjoy being around the young people and saying 'Yes, I'm a Vietnam veteran' and feeling good about it."
Shana Pearlmutter, St. Louis freshman, said she thought talking to veterans would help prevent future wars like Vietnam.
Jennifer Dole, Los Angeles freshman, said that the veterans' visit had been educational.
"It really gives you a better sense of what it was all about," she said.
about This is the second semester Smith has taught the literature class.
literature class.
In addition to Vietnam issues, students discuss subjects such as civil rights, women's rights and the environmental movement.
Many students feel a nostalgia for the '60s, Smith said. They are often eager to participate in protests and express their views but sometimes feel challenged by peers who don't feel the same, he said.
poisoned.
"I try to change that nostalgia into an awareness that you can do things now," she said.
The image shows a person working with a screen print setup. The individual appears to be engaged in the process of printing, likely handling materials such as fabric or paper that are being placed onto a mesh screen. The background is dark, which helps to highlight the subject and the screen printing equipment. There is no text visible in the image to provide context or additional information about the activity being performed.
Forrest MacDonald/KANSAN
Screen scene
Pamela Kaulfuss, Northbrook, Ill., junior, works on her silkscreening project for a screenprinting textiles class. Kaulfuss was doing the screening on her project last night in the Art and Design building.
March is start of severe weather season
By Donna Stoke
Kansas staff writer
Be forewarned
Rv Donna Stokes
Committee are part of Gov. Mike Hayden's "Severe Weather Awareness Week," March 6-12
If the sirens signaling severe weather go off today, it probably won't be necessary to dive under the nearest chair. The 12th annual tornado drill for Kansas is scheduled to take place between 10 a.m. and 11 a.m. today to test the state communication lines.
State to test warning systems today; awareness clinic set for March 17 to teach identification of tornadoes
During severe weather season, the number of siren tests in Douglas County increases from one to two a month. From March to August, tests of the county's 23 sirens will be held on the first and third Mondays of each month, said Dale Creed, Douglas County emergency preparedness coordinator.
March marks only the beginning of the severe weather season, in which tornadoes and thunderstorms can spring up unexpectedly while you sit, without an umbrella.
through a lecture class.
But local and regional weather services offer students a chance to learn how to avoid surprises.
The National Weather Service and the Douglas County emergency preparedness division will sponsor a meeting at 6:30 p.m. March 17 in the Apollo Room at Nichols Hall. William Barlow, warning and preparedness meteorologist from the National Weather Service in Topeka, will conduct a training session on how to spot tornadoes and watch for developing severe-weather patterns.
"It is ited to help any private individual identify cloud features that are associated with or may lead to tornado development, as opposed to clouds that shouldn't be taken as a threat," Barlow said.
Creed said it was important for everyone to know what to do or how to prepare for bad weather.
"It's obvious that when the weather turns severe, the likelihood for tornadoes increases," Creed said. "Students should listen to local radio and TV stations for special weather reports.
"It's also important to know the difference between watches and warnings, for both tornadoes and severe thunderstorms."
severe thunder, a severe thunderstorm watch encompassed a large area, of 150 to 200 miles, where conditions exist that create the possibility of bad weather.
A severe thunderstorm warning is issued when weather radar indicates that large hail or winds in excess of 60 mph are likely.
if excess of 60 bpm are the
a tornado watch means that the
Creed said that people should take cover in a basement or go to a small room in the interior of a building, such as a closet or a bathroom on the lowest floor, during tornado warnings.
"The average life of a tornado is less than five minutes." Creed said. "You should try to take cover as soon as possible."
It is not a good idea for motorists to try to outrun a tornado, he said.
It is not a good idea to try to outrun a tornado, he said. "Tornadoes have been clocked at up to 70 mph." Creed said. "Even though they average only about 35 mph, they don't have to turn corners like we do. They travel cross-country."
Other precautions students need to take might depend on where they live.
"Students in multiple-floor residence halls should get as low as possible as quick as possible and should watch out for elevators and avoid windows," Creed said.
City OKs taxi service; drivers to begin today
The Lawrence City Commission last night unanimously voted to grant a Lawrence resident a license to run a 24-hour taxi service in the city.
Kansan staff writer
By Christine Martin
The resident, Paul Shackelford,
said at last night's city commission
meeting that he would start his
service at 2 p.m. today.
Shackelford's service will operate three vehicles and will have a dispatch system.
Fares will be $3.50 a person one way and 50 cents for each additional person, Shackeford said. Senior citizens will pay $3.10 a person one way and 50 cents for each additional person.
Shackelford said he was working with city agencies to consider hiring senior citizens as drivers and dispatchers. Also, he said he was working with agencies to train drivers to help handicapped passengers.
In other action, the commission unanimously approved, with conditions, a site plan for the Phi Delta Theta fraternity, 1621 Edgehill Road. The plan calls for removing the present building and replacing it with a 27,300-square-foot building that would house 90 men.
The conditions to the plan were decided in part by Stan Steats, the architect representing the fraternity, and residents who live near the fraternity. The conditions are:
1. Replacing a sanitary sewer.
- Replacing a summary box
- Putting bumper guards at the south end of the fraternity's parking lot to protect a fence there.
Planting a hedge at the west end of the lot.
Building a catch basin to carry
runoff water on the street.
Copr sent paper open during
construction.
■ Making the contractor pay for any damages to Court Street during construction.
Construction will begin in mid-May and will be done by August 1969. Staats said.
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4
Wednesday, March 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Watkins Hospital programs help students stay healthy
For many students, the only knowledge of Watkins Hopital's health awareness efforts are the Beak Healthy pamphlets that are mailed twice a semester.
are mailed twice a semester. But the hospital's efforts go far beyond a few mailings. Besides the Beak Healthy pamphlets, which address pertinent health issues such as sexually transmittable diseases, the hospital sponsors a number of health awareness programs.
From sponsors a number of health awareness For the past three years, for example, Watkins has sponsored its Health Officer program. Under this program, student representatives from organized KU living groups attend lectures every two weeks to learn about health-related issues. They are provided with information on common health problems that students have. Those representatives then serve as liaisons between the hospital and students.
students another effort to promote health, the hospital began advertising in the Kansan the availability of cholesterol tests. More than 100 students came in to be tested within the first two weeks, far exceeding the hospital's predictions.
weeks, far exceeding the number of Students who had problems with their cholesterol levels were referred to a dietician or the hospital clinic. Candyce Watley, nurse health educator, said the tests helped diagnose cholesterol problems while students were young and better able to correct them. Without such tests, people probably would not realize that they had cholesterol problems until they were middle-aged, she said.
middle-aged, she said.
Watkins also sponsors two support groups: one called Adult Children of Alcoholics and another called Anorexia and Bulimia Support Group. In addition, the hospital provides smoking cessation seminars. And for a $4 book fee, hospital personnel will teach students CPR and first aid.
Watkins also is helping to provide dental examinations for KU students. Dentists from the community volunteer to come to the hospital to check students' teeth. The dentists do not provide actual dental services at the hospital, but they do refer students to area dentists if they need further care.
Watkins Hospital should be commended for encouraging students to think about their health all the time and not just when they become ill or injured.
Alan Player for the editorial board
The University of Kansas might join nine regional universities in sharing periodicals to lessen the effects of rising subscription costs and the devaluation of the U.S. dollar abroad.
KU should share periodicals
Doing so would be a positive step toward alleviating a widespread problem.
widespread problem. Under the plan, the universities would join together to ensure that each important periodical would be kept by at least one university library in the region.
The KU libraries were forced to cancel $200,000 in periodicals and subscriptions last year, according to officials. Book acquisitions also were pared. And despite the cuts, the library still has gone $200,000 over budget.
still has gone $200,000 over budget. Although sharing periodicals with other universities would not solve budget problems at KU, it would provide students with access to these periodicals until the money could be found to purchase them.
to purchase them.
Research resources are an integral part of the University.
Every possible step needs to be taken to ensure that those resources somehow are maintained at an optimal level.
resources somehow are maintained Outside forces, such as the dollar devaluation and rising subscription costs, cannot be controlled. But the University could control access to these periodicals through the sharing plan.
pu KU should move ahead with its plans to share periodicals with other universities that already share its products. The editorial board
lody Dickson for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Editorial decisions are made by the editorial board at meetings twice a week. At these meetings, issues are discussed, and an editorial stance is voted upon. The members of the editorial board are Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Van Jenerette and Russell Gray.
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 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 Messersmith...Production manager
Greg Knipp...National manager
Kris Schoino...Traffic manager
Kimberly Coleman...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 homeetown, or faculty or staff position.
ta:c3a9b
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
writer will be pfft@mail.net the kansas team has the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
The Kansan can be accessed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. You can guests 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 650-040) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Shuart Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, including Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
Capations are required. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Ken. 60454.
MOXELY Chicago Tribune
NORIEGA
BANAMA
REPUBLIC
English students want guidance
Professors do not give constructive criticism to aspiring student writers
I agree with Jay Frank (March 1) that we are not likely to see any great writers coming out of the English department. Great writing is not encouraged by the department. However, despite Frank's claims otherwise, "creativity" is encouraged to an obscene extreme.
Frank writes, "Students commonly experience genuine creativity stifled as faculty members busily try to conform those in their classes to a particular style or segment of literature." It seems obvious that it is the duty of faculty members to direct students to write about the subject being taught in a style that is clear and concise and that conveys the students' understanding of the material presented in class. If the class is designed to teach a particular writing skill, then students should conform to the basic guidelines set forth by the instructor.
If a student at the University of Kansas wants to write with absolute freedom, he may take a "creative writing" class. I have taken two such classes at the University (in 1985 and 1987), and I certainly did not feel stifled. Rather, I learned for direction. I yearned to be taught something by my knowledgeable professors. Much to my displacement, my classmates and I were coddled rather than taught, given a free hand rather than direction. The majority of my classmates in Fiction Writing I and Fiction Writing II wrote their lengthy stories a few hours before they were due, thus producing pages and pages of indiscriminately written, uninteresting trash. Yet when these pages of unenlightening garbage were read
Catherine Weed
Guest Columnist
Sue
to the class, the professor would, without fail, find something nice to say about the work, such as "Your title is fascinating. How did you think of it?" or "I enjoyed the first sentence on page five. Very nice." I actually remember times when students would apologize in class for careless writing, and the professor would try to justify the careless writing to the writers themselves. In class, constructive criticism was kept to a minimum. Students, following the professor's lead, gave sugary praise to the author and saved their true feelings about the work for gossiping with their neighbors. The "open forum" atmosphere my professors intended to give to my classmates and myself became a farce. Unmotivated students were given the mistaken idea that they could be Great Artists without even trying.
I must pause here to mention that my Fiction Writing II professor had an admirable policy of helping students in scheduled, private sessions in which he would discuss our works with us. Still, I think we students would have benefited from a classroom atmosphere of similar honesty. An example of the lack of instruction is Frank's own description of a student whose work is degraded
by his classmates. The "leader of the class" returns the work to the student with the comment, "This story works well!" Perhaps the instructor saw something in the story the writer's classmates missed. Still, it is difficult to believe that a story rejected by a varied audience of the author's peers "works well." After what I have experienced, I think it is more likely that the professor couldn't think of anything more concrete to tell the student than "This story works well!" As the author of the work found, it is one thing to give a story to a teacher who doesn't want to "stifle creativity" and quite another to enter the story in a literary contest in hopes of winning public recognition and prize money.
It seems to me that if a student wants to write purely for his own personal satisfaction, he can do that quite well on his own without receiving credit hours for his indulgences. If a student wants to learn to communicate his ideas effectively and in a way that is interesting to others, then he should be able to find a professor to teach him such skills.
The students in the first group will be disappointed by the creative writing program here. The students in the second group will be rewarded.
Students at KU take creative writing classes for two reasons. First, they want to learn to write well. Or second, they want an easy A.
KU tradition carries on
Catherine Weed is a Lawrence resident and former KU student.
I want to fully congratulate Elaine Sung and Keith Stroker for bringing back the great and illustrious tradition of Kansas basketball. I believe it is important that people realize what a special place KU has carved in basketball history, as such legends as James Naismith, Phog Allen, Wilt Chamberlain and Lynette Woodard all have had a significant impact in not only KU basketball annals, but also in the basketball world itself. It is a great thrill to think what Larry Brown and Marian Washington have accomplished with their programs in recent years. Brown has put Kansas basketball back on the basketball map, and Washington has maintained a class program and winning tradition, which will prosper with the continuing infux of promising talent. In supporting and celebrating these fine programs, we also must remember that the recent success of KU men's and women's basketball is a continuing chapter in this illuminous and magnificent winning history, as Kansas truly has had some great players and teams over the years.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
One of these great teams was the 1978 men's edition, which Sung reported about. While many people do not mention this team as being one of the best ever in Kansas basketball history, I believe it deserves claim to such a prestigious honor. If it was not for a first-round
draw in the NCAA tournament against a powerhouse UCLA team. Kansas might have gone a long way. One of the greatest assets about the team was its unselfish play, as everyone gave of themselves to make the other players better. Another strength of this team was the fact that four KU players were eventually NBA draft picks, and players Darril Valentine and Paul Mokesi made the pros and still are playing basketball in the NBA. Still another great feature of this squad was the brilliant play of Valentine. As Mark Turggeon took over the reins at point guard his freshman year, so too did Valentine assume charge his first year in 1978, as his majestic presence and leadership led the way to one of the most successful and entertaining seasons in Kansas basketball history.
basketball has it. Now, as KU fans watch Danny Manning finish up anticipating and stupendous basketball games, it becomes clear that another great era in Kansas basketball has come to an end, for Manning is the living embodiment of what a Larry Brown-type unselfish player should be, as he will go down as possibly the greatest KU player to ever live. However, as Manning heads off to greener pastures in the NBA, the basketball tradition at Kansas will continue, as Brown keeps creating his own coaching magic and bringing in some thoroughbred talent who quickly learn how to play an unselfish brand of basketball. As immortals like Chamberlain, Clyde Lovelette, JoJo White, Valentine and Woodard have paved the way for success such recent graduates as Carl Henry, Greg Drreling, Ron Kellogg, Angie Snider and Vickie Adkins, the tradition of Kansas basketball has endured. Now, the great accomplishments that
Manning has achieved, and will still attain, again set the foundation for succeeding years of winning and exciting basketball at Mount Oread, as Manning passes his torch to future AllAmericans and special, unselfish players who will continue the rich and glorious heritage of Kansas basketball.
David Garfield
Now DROP IT! Walk away! Is nothing else going on in the world? Don't some of these people writing letters to the Kansan have homework to do? Or homework to grade? Or anything better to do at recess?
Some members of the Ku Klux Klan were invited to KU to speak a few weeks ago. But before they could come, the University uninvited them. The Klan is a horrible, evil group, but freedom of speech is one of our most precious rights. We've heard both sides. We've probably decided which side we most agree with. It was an important question. We shouldn't forget what happened.
Drop the KKK issue
anything else. Notice how dark it is on campus at ARM. How are Manning's grades? I haven't seen Nelson Mandela around lately, have you? How's that old elm tree doing? Did Parking Services finally get to Santa's sleigh on top of that crane? Where did that smokestack go? And most importantly, how come there's not room for the Far Side by the editors anymore? I've got some make-up work to go do, but let the dogs sleep. Please!
Mark von Schlemmer Leavenworth graduate student
BLOOM COUNTY
STEVE'S
BEEN
NABBED
BY ALIENS!
SWOOOPED
UP INTO THE JAWS
OF ALIEN DEATH!
IT WAS
HORRIBLE!!
by Berke Breathed
WE'VE GOT TO NOTIFY THE AUTHORITIES! OPUS IS DOING THAT RIGHT NOW!!
PHILIP DICKENS
HELLO?!
911 ?!
CLICK!
Hall residents want better-quality food
5
By Barbara A. Rycken
Special to the Kansan
Residence hall cafeterias have never appeared on the top 10 list of fine restaurants, and their food, which has a reputation for being starchy and fattening, has never been given a four-star rating.
But residents at Ellsworth Hall have successfully formed a committee this semester with the goal of improving the quality of the food that is served in their cafeteria. Lee Collard, president of Ellsworth during the 1986-87 academic year, said that residents tried to form a food committee last year but that the committee disbanded shortly after it was formed.
This semester's committee was established after residents complained about the quality of the food, the repetition of some food items and the bland taste of others.
"The food could be improved by using some spices," Chris Posch, Olathe sophomore and Ellsworth resident, said. "They could also serve a broader range of food besides rice and potatoes every day."
A list of 20 suggestions was compiled by the food committee headed by Meaghan McDermott, Evanston, Ill., sophomore. The list included suggestions such as new salad dressings, fresher produce and cheese on the salad bar more often.
"We want to try to better the quality of the food," McDermott said. "I have noticed an improvement. I think that it has gotten better this semester."
The suggestions were submitted by McDermott to Cheryl Wiley, unit dietitian for Ellsworth. Wiley said she appreciated the suggestions but that many times there were obstacles beyond her control that affected the food served to residents.
For example, the cafeteria orders its meat in mass quantities three months before it is served. This process is known to be used on meat dishes prepared, Wiley said.
Staffing can also play a big role in the availability of food items, Wiley said. Many of the well liked food items, such as home-baked bread and cakes, require a longer preparation time and, therefore, are not served as often as the residents would like.
"Sometimes, employees are out and we do not have the manpower." Wiley said. "We try to do the best that we can with that we have."
"I like the fact that they now have grapefruit available at every meal and that they have vegetarian meals too. I love the Tope, Wichita mongoose, said Wichita.
Several students said they were pleased with the improvements in Ellsworth cafeteria that the committee helped bring about.
Courtney Westlake, St. Louis sophomore, said, "I really like the food this semester. The sandwiches have gotten better, and the desserts are great."
The University of Kansas Printing Service Announces MEDIA CONVERSION SERVICES The Missing Link for more than 700 systems!
TIME ESTIMATION COMPLICATION
Main Processing Unit
Fault Detecting System
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. March 9. 1988
Have you recently changed personal computers or
Has your department changed word processors?
If so, our comprehensive disk conversion system may have the solutions to your conversion needs.
If you wish to eliminate costly re-keyboarding or eliminate the resulting errors that can occur in re-keyboarding documents, we can offer you an alternative service.
Please Call Our Customer Service Coordinators
KU Printing Service
864-4341 2425 West 15th
843-4266
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Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
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- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
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Friday & Saturday, March 11-12, 1988
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Saturday, March 12, 1988
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The University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS
COHAN/SUZEAU DUET COMPANY
OF NEW YORK CITY (Friday Only)
8:00 p.m.
Friday & Saturday, March 11-12, 1988
2:00 p.m
Saturday, March 12, 1988
Crafton–Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
The University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reservations. call 913/864-3982
VISA/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations
Public $6; KU and K-12 Students $5 Friday, $4 Saturday
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M
1985
Nancy Elias of San Antonio, TX, is majoring in Broadcast Management.
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"That's the practical side of the Mac. It's the fun side that I'm going to master next. I've just started using MacPaint® and MacDraw®. To be honest, they're two programs I play with when I'm in the mood to get away from doing homework. I've already designed a cover for a mailer.
"I've used an IBM® compatible and believe me, it's no contest. Macintosh is simple to learn and simple to use. And it's much more fun."
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
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Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union. Stop by and place your order before March 11. Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE, that you want. ($50 deposit required)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
KUBookstores
Burge Union
6
Wednesday, March 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Alumni can escape to KU for vacation
Camp offers classes for adults, children
By Jeff Suggs Kensan staff writer
There's a new camp in town that offers an alternative to the typical family vacation.
From July 5 to 9, the University of Kansas Alumni Association and the division of continuing education are sponsoring a camp for alumni and their families.
"Mike Davis, organizer of the "Jayhawk Great Escape," said the weeklong camp would offer activities and classes that should be educational as well as fun.
Davis, coordinator of membership development at the Alumni Association, said the camp offered an alternative to the traditional family vacation.
"We're trying to provide a stimulating vacation for adults and kids," Davis said. "People are looking for something more substantial in their vacation."
Other universities have had similar programs.
The University of Michigan alumni association has sponsored an alumni camp in the woods of northern Michigan for 27 years.
Greg Fleming, director of Camp Michigania, said the camp ran 11 one-week sessions from June to August, averaging about 280-300 people a week. Fleming said camps for Michigan alumni were also in upstate New York and in Sequoia National Forest in California.
"It's been a very popular program." Fleming said.
The University of North Carolina wasn't as successful. Bo Dunlap, assistant director of alumni affairs, said the university had to discontinue
its alumni camp. Lack of interest and personnel changes were reasons Dunlap gave for the camp's demise.
"We didn't get the needed response that enabled us to continue it," Dunlap said.
lap said. Davis, who expects about 75 people to attend KU's camp, said he wasn't worried about it not being successful.
"We have a good staff, and we feel we can handle the situations the camp will present," Davis said. "If we have 50 or 350 people, we know it's going to be a success."
The camp costs $325 for each adult who attends and $200 for each child. The camp fee covers housing at Naismith Hall, meals and transportation to and from activities.
Davis said adults would attend classes to further their education. He said classes ranging from law ethics to jazz to modern art would be offered. He also said that the camp was a good way for alumni to see the quality of education at the University.
"It will show parents that KU is a great place," Davis said.
For children, Davis said, the camp offers an opportunity for them to learn more about the University. Davis said children would spend mornings at the Adams Outdoor Center near Clinton Lake. In the afternoon, they will take classes at the Spencer Museum of Art and the Museum of Natural History. Also planned are tours of KU sports facilities. Davis said some older children would be able to attend classes with their parents if they wanted.
CASTLE TEA ROOM
1307 MASSACHUSETTS
843-1151
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24 HOURS IN ADVANCE
Ideas for
KANSAN
MAGAZINE
Kjersti Moen
editor
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843-4344
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Purchase above items and much more at 1/3 of retail prices
Special Student and Youth Fares to EUROPE
from New York on Scheduled Airlines!
DESTINATIONS OW RT
LONDON $185 $370
PARIS 206 412
FRANKFURT 220 440
ROME/MILAN 238 476
VIENNA 245 490
ZURICH/GENEVA 225 450
COPENHAGEN 255 475
OSLO 225 450
STOCKHOLM 230 460
HELSINKI 238 476
Above fares also apply from Washington, D.C. to London, Paris and Frankfurt on non-stop service. Add-on fares from Boston, Chicago, San Diego and New York will not be charged. CALL OR WRITE FOR OUR SPECIAL FARES TO THE SO. BARCELONA AUSTRALIA. SO. AMERICA
Applications available for Eurail Youth Pass and International Student I.D. Card.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 9, 1988
NationWorld
7
Families of 3 Challenger dead to receive nothing from U.S.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The U.S. government contributed 40 percent to settlements for two Challenge astronauts who worked for the government, but it now stands to provide nothing to settle with the families of three colleagues who also were federal employees.
The reasons for the disparities are the Justice Department's determination to use the same financial yardsticks for survivors of all seven astronauts who died on the space shuttle and a legal strategy designed to protect the government's immunity from being sued directly by the
relatives of federal military or civilian employees who die on the job.
Relatives of all seven astronauts were free to sue Morton Thiokol Inc., whose booster rocket has been blamed for the explosion, for damages, but only the families of the two non-government employees, high school teacher Christa McAuliffe and Hughes Aircraft employee Gregory Jarvis, were allowed to sue the federal government.
Federal law and a 35-year-old Supreme Court ruling reaffirmed last May prohibit the survivors of federal civilian or military workers killed on the job from suing the government for damages.
High school murder blamed on drug
The Associated Press
DEHAM, Mass. — Rod Matthews killed, his attorney said, because a prescription drug he took for school stoked the fires of madness in his adolescent mind.
In testimony last week, Matthews' mother, Janice, said that her son's behavior had become a problem in the third grade and that he was placed on Ritalin after a brief visit to his pediatrician. Matthews is 15.
The boy's doctor, Theodore Goodman, testified that he relied only on what the mother told him. There was
no test or follow-up for the drug's effects
On Monday, psychiatrist Bernard Yudwitz testified that if a child with mental illness was misdiagnosed and given Ritalin, "impulsivity and fear" are their ability to act appropriately in a given setting decreases."
Capitol Hill double standard decried
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A Justice Department official said yesterday that he favored raising congressional pay to as much as $175,000 in exchange for ending a double standard exempting senators and representatives from federal ethics laws.
Assistant Attorney General
William old said that it wasn't fair
to punish him.
job-related activities was a crime for executive branch officials but not for congressmen.
Weld also said that Congress should apply to itself the federal conflict-of-interest laws under which former White House political director Lyn Nofziger was convicted of illegal lobbying. Congress has exempted itself from those laws.
FAA to review commuter airlines
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Commuter airlines, which carried almost 30 million people last year, have been targeted for stepped-up inspections by the Federal Aviation Administration after seven fatal accidents and 56 deaths since November.
carriers were expected to be singled out for particularly close scrutiny.
An agency official announced the special inspections of commuters, which normally fly aircraft of 30 or fewer seats, at a news conference yesterday. The official said that about 20 percent of the 17 commuter
FAA officials would not give the names of airlines to be investigated or details about how the airlines would be selected for special attention.
FAA Administrator Allan McArtor told reporters that the agency was concerned because of the rash of commuter accidents in late 1987 and early this year. The industry had its safest year in 1986.
The seven accidents over a four-
month period appear to have nothing in common in terms of cause, McArtor said.
The worst of the accidents, involving Ryan Air Service, killed 18 people Nov. 23 near Homer, Alaska. The latest was the crash of an Avair commuter craft during takeoff Feb. 19 near Morrisville, N.C., killing 12 people. Fatal commuter crashes have also occurred recently in Nebraska, Alaska, Hawaii, Illinois and Colorado.
McArtor cited the rapid growth of the commuter industry and said measures must be taken to more closely monitor these airlines.
The inspections, which will begin within 60 days, will focus on the airlines' management practices, flight crew training, record keeping and maintenance of aircraft. McArtor said that FAA officials already were reviewing information about the accidents to pinpoint possible problem areas.
Nicaraguan truce negotiations canceled
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — President Daniel Ortega canceled truce tails with contrast yesterday after the rebels said they would not attend a planned meeting in southern Nicaragua.
Ortega accused the rebels of sabotaging the talks by demanding preliminary discussions.
"This signifies the killing of the possibility of a meeting," he said on Voice of Nicaragua radio. But he suggested that new talks take place no later than the third week in March.
Three days of talks had been scheduled at Sapoa, 90 miles south of Managua on the Costa Rican border.
They would have been the first talks held on Nicaraguan territory and without a mediator. Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo mediated previous talks.
"The Sandinista government spoke with the Nicaraguan Resistance at the last minute (Monday), informing us that they were ready for the meeting in Sapoa," Calero said in a telephone interview from Miami. "We are not willing to take part in a unilateral meeting mounted by the Sandinistas."
Contra leader Adolfo Calero said earlier yesterday that the U.S.supported rebels would not attend the meeting scheduled by the leftist Sandistas.
News Roundup
TWO PALESTINIANKS KILLED: Arabs stabbed a man accused of aiding Israel and dumped the corpse at his mother's door, and Israeli gunfire killed another Palestinian yesterday, hospitals and witnesses reported. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir indicated yesterday on Israel Television that he intended to debate U.S. peace proposals and to present his own plan during his visit to Washington next week.
EXPERTS CALLED IRRESPONSIBLE: The World Health Organization's chief AIDS investigator said yesterday at the First International Conference on the Global Impact of AIDS that sex experts William Masters and Virginia Johnson were irresponsible for suggesting AIDS can be transmitted by casual social contact.
TWO HOSTAGES FREED: The Abu Nidal Palestinian terrorist group yesterday freed Peter Coleridge, 44, Middle East coordinator of the British relief agency Oxfam, and Omar Traboulis, 31, his Syrian aide, five days after seizing them for taking pictures in a Palestinian refugee camp in Sidon, a Sunni Moslem leader reported.
WITNESS HAD MOTIVE: The judge presiding over Arizona Gov. Evan Mecham's impeachment trial yesterday told Mecham's lawyer that he had shown that Ralph Milstead, director of the department of public safety, had a motive to testify against the governor and ordered him to move on to other topics.
Feb. 28 rioting in the city of Sumgait in the republic of Azerbaijan, U.S.S.R., were related by Armenians from Sumgait who gathered yesterday in a Moscow cemetery. Soviet officials have refused to elaborate on what happened in Azerbaijan, and Moscow-based journalists have been barred from traveling to the Caucasus region.
BRUTALITY IN U.S.S.R.: Tales of brutal beatings and deaths that have occurred since the
GM FINDING UPHELD: Three federal appellate judges yesterday uphold a lower court's finding that there was no evidence that General Motors Corp. knowingly sold 1.1 million 1980 X-cars with alleged brake defects. The judges rejected government claims that the cars had an inherent defect that caused rear brakes to lock prematurely and spin out of control under certain circumstances.
WE'LL BE HERE WHEN THE TRUCK LEAVES!
JOE'S
RENTALS
KU
SAVE $351.00 AND GET THE SERVICE AND SUPPORT THAT YOU DESERVE AND EXPECT FROM COMPUTER PROFESSIONALS.
We know that your first computer purchase can be kind of frightening. Don't worry, it really isn't. Never-the-less, when you buy a personal computer from us we don't just drop it off the back of a truck and leave you to struggle on your own. With every purchase of the Leading Edge Model "D" (or any other product) we make sure you get the orientation and support that you want and expect. It is just part of our service. And, with our 30 day price guaranty you know that you are getting the lowest price around.
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8
wednesday, March 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Graduate enrollment declines
School trying to boost sagging number of minority students
By Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
Despite growing enrollment in the University of Kansas' undergraduate programs, enrollment in the graduate school has not kept pace.
From 1980 to 1967, undergraduate enrollment increased by more than 22,200 students, and graduate school enrollment declined 145 students, according to statistics released by the division of student affairs. Those statistics indicate that minority enrollment in the graduate school suffered the most, declining by 16 percent.
the decrease mirrors a national trend, said Robert Sanders, associate
Mark's Jewlers
dean for minority graduate recruitment
"If nobody does anything, the number of minorities that are educated individuals will decline, while the number in the population will increase," Sanders said.
fine jewelry and repair
843-4266
817 Massachusetts
He said that in the year 2020, the percentage of minorities in the United States would be about 35 percent. Currently, about 21 percent of the population consists of minorities, be said.
ties, he said.
Sanders said that the KU office of research, graduate studies and public service mailed about 5,000 informational fliers to minorities this year. He said that the response
"It's harder for these students to find funds for education," Sanders said. "There is a general decline in the number of fellowships and scholarships offered to minority graduate students.
usually was small
"Most students are looking for a financial aid program to evaluate and decide where to go to school. On the basis of a financial pay package, KU is on the low side. We don't compete well on the basis of the number of fellowships and assistantships, and economic value."
The University's graduate program has several strategies for the recruitment of minorities at the
Photo Idea?
Call 864-4810
"We're setting up networks around the country at other universities to recruit students for our program. Offices around campus are also helping us to identify appropriate students for us to recruit." Sanders said.
undergraduate level, Sanders said.
TOPEKA — The Kansas Senate unanimously passed yesterday a watered-down version of a bill that would require the state to inspect commercial cat and dog kennels.
The Endowment Merit Scholars Program and an outreach program in Kansas City, Kan., that offers a summer science program for high school minorities also are part of the recruitment strategy.
The bill would provide for state inspection of commercial kennels not licensed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It was amended during Monday's floor debate to eliminate a provision that allows federal agencies to kennels that already come under federal regulation and inspection.
Pier 1 imports
Inspection bill passed by Senate
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said that different types of loans were available to minority students and that the loans offered a low interest rate and a longer period for repayment.
A Place To Discover.
The bill would require officials from the state Livestock Commission to inspect all unlicensed kennels twice a year if its owners sell 30 or more animals.
738 Massachusetts
7/36 Massachusetts
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1-5
MEMORIENTS
CASTLE TEA ROOM
1307 MASSACHUSETTS
843-1151
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SUBSTUDENT UNION ACTIVIES
SUAX
FIVE YEAR ANNIVERSARY
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SUSENET UNION ACTIVITIES
FIFTY YEAR ANNIVERSARY
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SUA
FILMS
March 9, 10
Wednesday
7:00
Thursday
7:00
Humphrey Ingrid Paul
BOGART BERGMAN HENREID
A HAL B. WALLIS PRODUCTION
Casablanca
CLAREN CAMMANN STANLEY PETTICK RAYKS VEEDT GREENSTREET LORRE
Directed by MICHAEL CHATTU
Ray Ban and the Beach Sunglasses on
Woodruff Auditorium/KS Union
SUN TAN
SALE 20% OFF March8-11
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806 Massachusetts 841-7421
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Onions
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Jalapenos
Anchovies
Pineapple
extra cheese
extra cheese extra sauce
cheese 4.00 7.00
1 topping 4.50 7.95
2 toppings 5.00 8.90
3 toppings 5.50 9.85
4 toppings 6.00 10.80
5 toppings 6.50 11.75
Papa's Big "O" 6.50 12.50
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Sugar 7.00 13.00
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9
Democrats
Continued from p. 1
He added: "We're the underdog with the biggest bite."
All were vying for a share of the 1,307 Democratic presidential nominating delegates at stake in 20 states.
In the crucial delegate battle Dukakis won 297 delegates out of Super Tuesday. Gore won 523, Jackson won 89 and Gerchamp won 89.
Gore said he would be among the three candidates going to the convention — suggesting Gephardt wouldn't be able to.
"I think that three of us are going to go all the way to the convention." Gore said. "It will be a choice between the politics of the past and the politics of the future."
Republicans Continued from p.1
Bush's national campaign chairman, Lee Atwater, predicted that Bush would pick up more than 600 delegates. A gain of that magnitude would give him a nearly unassailable lead toward winning the GOP presidential nomination.
"I would certainly hate to be in Sen. Dole's shoes after tonight and especially if he loses in Illinois," Alwater said.
The Dole campaign had sought to keep Bush from picking up more than 500 delegates.
Supporters respond Locals discuss Super Tuesday results
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
Local observers didn't seem concerned with Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole's poor showing in yesterday's Super Tuesday results.
Vice President George Bush and Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis were the big winners on Super Tuesday, and Pat Robertson and Rep. Richard Gephardt were the losers.
Super Tuesday refers to yesterday's whirlwind round of four state caucuses and 16 state primaries. As of yesterday, one third of the Democratic and Republican delegates for the presidential nominating conventions were chosen.
Bret Frazier, president of Jayhawks for Dole, said it was too early to count Dole out of the race.
"Analysts have said that of all the presidential contenders, both Republican and Democratic, Bob Dole was the only candidate who could afford to lose Super Tuesday and still capture the nomination," he said.
But Allan Cigler, associate professor of political science, said he was surprised at how Dole fared among the voters.
"I think it will take a major miracle for Dole to recover. If he doesn't
turn it around, it will be difficult for him to defeat Bush," he said.
Brenda Eisele, president of KU College Republicans and a Dole supporter, disagreed. She said Bush's victories were anticipated and that Dole was still in the running for the nomination.
"I don't think it will take a major miracle for him to win the nomination," she said. "It's not discouraging at all."
Frazier said the Republican race could possibly be decided at the convention, especially since Robertson has fallen to the back of the Republican pack.
"If it does come down to the convention, Dole may be established as the only alternative to Bush," he said.
Frazier said that Dole needed to win in Illinois and make a fair showing in New York and California in order to win the Republican nomination.
In the Democratic race, Cigler said he was surprised by Gephardt's lone victory in Missouri and Sen. Albert Gore's victory in Oklahoma.
"We'll see if Gore can do well in Illinois. But a little bit still depends on if Gephardt is still in the race, which would splinter the vote,"
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 9, 1988
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The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Division of Orchestra Presents the
UNIVERSITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
1
Zhilian Xu, Conductor
Program
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Violin Concerto, Op. 8, No. 3 "Autumn"
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Columbia Pictures Presents A Clement/La Frenais Production
Starring Judge Reinhold "Vice Versa" Fred Savage Swosie Kurtz
Music by David Shire Director of Photography King Baggot Executive Producer Alan Ladd, Jr.
Written and Produced by Dick Clement & Ian La Frenais Directed by Brian Gilbert
O
STARTS FRIDAY AT SELECT THEATRES.
---
10
Wednesday, March 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KKK on campus
THE KU KLUX KLAN
IS
DANGEROUS
O YOUR HEALTH
1984
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Police officials estimated that 2,000 people attended the forum Monday night.
ALEXANDER LEVIN
I feel very relieved that this is over. I put myself on the line. People said it would never happen.' — Michael Foubert director, Slightly Older Americans for Freedom
PETER HUNTLEY
The reason we were here today was to help the students secure free speech at this University. That was served here tonight. There was a virtual orgy of free speech — on the stage, outside in the protest, and in the audience.' — J. Allen Moran exalted cyclons, Missouri Knights
B. J. K. Bose
We had people in front of the building trying to break in, literally climbing all over the building trying to get in second-floor windows.'
Ralph Oliver assistant director, KU police
PENNEDY DAVIS
We will continue to learn more about the needs of faculty and students on campus. I am confident that we will respond effectively to the questions that had been raised and we will move ahead to make the campus a better place.
— Judith Ramaley executive vice chancellor
[Image of a man with dark hair and a suit]
'On the night of the Klan appearance, we will sponsor a prayer vigil, and may the grace of God guide us all.'
The Rev. William Dulin pastor, Calvary Church of God in Christ
PETER BALDWIN
We are not going to sit down and hide. We will make sure we will not be afraid. Bring the Klan to our face and we will not sit back.'
— The Rev. Calvin Jackson pastor, First Regular Missionary Baptist Church
Kiss Jackson
MARRIED SIDE
Above, protesters interrupt the forum by singing hymns and other songs, including "We Shall Overcome." The disruption lasted for more than an hour. Right, about 2,500 people gathered outside Hoch Auditorium. Observers climbed trees to get a better view.
Ioe Wilkins III/KANSAN
I will go to the beach and I will swim in the sea.
Above, although there were a few skirmishes between police and protesters, things remained generally peaceful.
I want to say how proud I am of students, faculty and staff at the University. They recognized the rights of others to free expression. We will continue to strengthen our commitment to eradicate racism from the campus climate.'
— David Ambler vice chancellor for student affairs
'We as free men have a right to listen and to learn. Only out of hatred and bigotry are you not willing to hear what we say.'
— Thom Robb national chaplain, Ku Klux Klan
THE CHIEF
OF THE UNITED
STATES
S. M. COOPER
The University is a unique institution. Its function primarily is to be an open forum where people can learn; and people can teach; and they can read; and they can study and they can be exposed to various points of view views representing all the current ideological trends.'
Right, the Klansmen brought their own bodyguards, and even their own photographer.
Laird Wilcox founder, Wilcox Collection of Contemporary Political Movements
PRESIDENT
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
If our society does not allow the Klan to speak, then we do not live in a free society. We have the most problems with racial violence when we can't talk about the issues. I think we'd be better off, including the people singing, if we could hear and talk about this calmly.'
— Ted Frederickson associate professor of journalism
P. BURTON MUNSON
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Cristo Sande/WANA
Klansmen said before the forum that they would bring in Skinheads to provide Klan security. That prompted John F. Noonan, Webster
Groves, Mo., freshman, to attend the forum, in hopes of educating people that all skinheads were not hired thugs for the Klan.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 9. 1988
!
11
Forum activities avoided precedents of violence
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
The city of Lawrence on Monday night might have seen that history does not always repeat itself.
Although activities surrounding Monday's controversial free-speech forum were reminiscent of days when race was a dividing line in Lawrence, many of the elements of past racial tensions, such as violence and a clear separation between whites and blacks, were missing from the action.
Those elements were readily apparent when black students and white students
Shouting between white and black students, starting in Veterans Park across the street, led to a riot inside the school. In all, 28 students were injured, and five were taken to the hospital.
Rioting continued the next day, with police lining the school and threatening to use tear gas. The unrest was caused in part by students agitating for fair elections of cheerleaders and homecoming royalty.
squared off at Lawrence High School on April 15, 1970.
The unrest continued into the summer. On July 16, Lawrence police shot and killed a 19-
year-old black student after a car chase. The student, Donald Rick Dowdell, had been a freshman at the University of Kansas the year before. His death prompted a funeral march of 400 people down Massachusetts Street and sparked violence in the city, including bombings, sniper attacks, and several fires.
Five years before the riots at Lawrence High School, 110 students, both white and black, were arrested on March 9, 1965, for refusing to leave Chancellor Clarke Wescoe's office at closing time.
racism on campus, including racism in the fraternity system. It included a march by 500 students across campus to the Chancellor's house.
The demonstration was a response to
The 32-hour demonstration ended when Wescoe signed a bill promising an end to racial discrimination.
A speech by a professor from Stanford University prompted on-campus demonstrations Nov. 13, 1975. The professor, William Shockley, was invited to speak to graduate students and faculty at KU on his theory that blacks were genetically less intelligent than whites.
His speech was interrupted by about 50 protesters. Shockley was unable to continue and was eventually escorted off campus by police. No property damage occurred, and no one was arrested.
Secure
Continued from p. 1
four hours. KU officers were at the forum for about four and a half hours.
The costs for officers from other agencies and for manpower and equipment from facilities operations also would be added to that cost, he said. 2
The 33-person KU police force was assisted by about 23 Lawrence police officers; five Douglas County Sheriff's officers; 50 Kansas Highway Patrol troopers; two bomb disposal experts from the Overland Park police department; and seven Kansas Bureau of Investigation agents, said Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman.
Oliver gave much credit for what he called, a peaceful, meaningful demonstration to the efforts of Students and Community Against Oppression and Racism, the group that organized the demonstration outside the auditorium.
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ATTENTION
The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Agnes Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Alderson Award, Class of 1913 Award and the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms describing the Award are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 105 Burge Union. Strickland, Alderson, and Class of 1913 Awards are presented to graduating seniors; students of any status may be nominated for the Leffel Award. The nominations for these Awards must be received by the Student Awards Committee, c/o The Organizations & Activities Center, 105 Burge Union, 864-4861, by Wednesday, March 23, 1988
5 p.m.
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1020 Mass.
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LAST EMPEROR
(PG-13) 5:00, 8:00
A NIGHT IN THE LIFE OF JIMMY REARDON
(R) 5:15, 7:30, 9:15
ATTENTION
The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Agnes Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Alderson Award, Class of 1913 Award and the Rusty Leffel Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms describing the Award are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 105 Burge Union. Strickland, Alderson, and Class of 1913 Awards are presented to graduating seniors; students of any status may be nominated for the Leffel Award. The nominations for these Awards must be received by the Student Awards Committee, c/o The Organizations & Activities Center, 105 Burge Union, 864-4861, by Wednesday, March 23, 1988 5 p.m.
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12
Wednesday, March 9. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Break
Continued from p.1
2+
Williams and Cekin said this usually wasn't a problem in their cities.
"People who come into town without plans for accommodations can always find somebody who will let them stay in their room," Williams said.
Aspen
Police in Aspen will be tough on drunken drivers.
Sgt. Gary Kalkman of the Aspen police department called the Colorado drinking laws strict and said that most people stopped for DUI were charged.
Kalkman said Aspen's tipty taxi service left no excuse for anyone to drive drunk.
Colorado's drinking age is 21. Kalkman said officers enforce the law by walking through the bars, spending about a half an hour in each.
"We've made it tough enough on the bars so that they'll usually demand a picture identification and at least one other ID," Kalkman said.
Other offenses that Kalkman said might get students in trouble were fighting and thefts of street signs. He said that the town was so accustomed to having guests that spring break was no different than any other weekend. For that reason, he said, no additional law enforcement officers would be added for the period.
South Padre Island
Public drinking is legal in South Padre Island, but public drunkenness isn't.
Be careful on spring break
"Most of the trouble we have is with them getting drunk in public, then they get out in the street, create a disturbance or start fighting," said Ed Sanders, South Padre Island chief of police.
and chief of police.
The drinking age in Texas is 21, but Sanders said some bars admitted those under 21. But if an underage person was caught drinking, Sanders said, a $50 fine would be assessed.
People caught giving alcohol to a minor would be charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor and fined $200, he said.
Sanders said those charged with DUI would go to jail unless they could post a $1,000 bond. A court date is mandatory for DUI, he said.
sato.
Sanders also said Mexican authorities had told him that enforcement there would be stricter this year than last year.
"If they put you in jail in Mexico, they can leave you there until you can pay the fine," Sanders said. "They don't have to put you in front of a judge."
By James Buckman
Spring break fun can lead to post-spring break agility if students aren't careful to avoid a few common holiday injuries, health experts at Watkins Hospital said.
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence Magee, sports medicine specialist at Watkins, said the hospital always saw an increase in knee injuries caused by skiing after spring break.
little spring he
He said skiing injuries had changed because skiing equipment, most notably the boots and bindings, had gotten better.
"When the boots weren't quite so supportive, the skiing injuries were mainly in the ankle and lower leg," he said. "Newer boots do a better job of protecting the ankle and lower leg, but because of that, we are seeing a lot more knee injuries."
He said that tears in the cartilage or ligaments were the most common knee injuries and that he also saw some shoulder dislocations from skiing accidents.
Fatigue and overcumslusion of alcohol are the most common causes of skiing accidents, Magee said. He said that although a four- to six-week exercise program would best prevent injuries, skiers could use other
1.
- Lawrence Magee
I'm not saying that you shouldn't ski all day, but you should probably lower your intensity and the difficulty of your skiing later on in the afternoon.
Watkins sports medicine specialist methods to stay safe on the slopes.
"I'm not saying that you shouldn't ski all day, but you should probably lower your intensity and the difficulty of your skiing later on in the afternoon."
"Be careful to get warmed up and stretch before you ski." Magee said. "You need to stay within your ability and not push yourself up to a level you are not ready for."
Sunburn, another common ailment or spring break, is most common in the warmer climates but also can be suffered while skiing.
Candye Waitley, a health educator at Watkins, said that some students thought they wouldn't get sunburned while skiing because the temperature usually was cool.
"They have a false sense of security," she said.
She said that after spring break, Watkins treated both second- and third-degree burns, which could result in permanent scarring of the skin.
"Students go to Texas or Florida and they are on the beach all day, and their skin has probably been covered since September," she said.
she said.
She said sunscreens with a protection factor of at least 15 would help prevent serious sunburn, along with moderation of exposure to the sun. Tanning beds also can help prevent sunburn, she said, but students should be careful because the beds use dangerous ultraviolet rays.
Waitley said Watkins examined an increased number of patients after spring break for pregnancy tests and sexually transmitted diseases.
She said that many women using birth control pills incorrectly thought that the pill protected them against sexually transmitted diseases.
diseases. "Even if they are on the birth control pill they should use nonoxynol-9, the spermicide and the guy should use a condom," she said
Macintosh It’s never cost less. But you need to order now.
TM
Make sure your Mac is here by March 31 or April 1. Place your order at the Burge Union by Friday, March 11!
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1, 2, 3!
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union.
Stop by and place your order before March 11.
Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want.
($50 deposit required)
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 9, 1988
Sports
13
KU wins game on three-run homer
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Kansas right fielder Dan Benninghoff considers himself an RBI man, and that made yesterday's sixth inning three-run home run especially pleasing to him.
The Newton junior broke an 8-8 tie with Missouri Baptist with the home run that sailed out of Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
"That was my best hit all season. I hadn't had a hit since Arkansas, so I just wanted to cut loose. I was just looking for one pitch, a fastball."
"I knew I was in an RBI situation," Benninghof said. "I just needed to put the ball in play and give us a chance.
Benninghoff entered yesterday's game two for 12, but he doubled his offensive output by going two for four against Missouri Baptist.
28
Kansas went on to win the game
19-9, making its record even at 3-3.
Second baseman Rich Allota led Missouri Baptist with two bases-empty home runs, one coming on the game's second pitch.
The Jayhays jumped to an early 8-4 lead, scoring all eight in the second inning. Junior Mike Byrn's three-run home run was the big blow in that inning. Kansas also scored a two-base error during the second.
Bynn finished the game two for five with five RBI and one run. He added a double in the eighth that scored two.
Bryn said he had hoped to play well his first start of the season.
Kansas pitcher Craig Houfue pitched three innings and got the save as Kansas beat Missouri Baptist 19-9 yesterday.
"I swing the bat pretty well every day," Byrn said. "Coach has been stressed to get on top of the ball."
"As a team, we are definitely going to score runs this year. We need to come together defensively because we have guys that can do everything intensely. We need to concentrate more throughout the entire game. We
don't need to slack off."
The three errors led to only one unearned run.
Kansas committed three errors during the game, down from four in Monday's game against Central Missouri State. Coach Dave Bingham said the Jayhawks' goal was to continue to improve defensively and to improve its pitching.
"We are offensively strong," Bingham said. "Right now, we are basing our success on that. But we just don't care." Mr. Tubin said that will win against good clubs.
Juniorste Steve Dowling and Pete Simmerson also had big offensive days for Kansas. Dowling went four for six with a home run and two RBI, and Simmerson went two for four with one RBI.
Bingham praised the effort of freshman pitcher Derek Chatterton. Chatterton allowed no runs in pitching one and two-third innings. He recorded his first collegiate victory with the relief performance.
Junior Craig Houfek collected a
snowboard and skiing inings in
relief and allowing only one
Sophomore Steve Renko started the game for the Jayhawks but was removed after allowing nine hits and seven earned runs in four and one-third innings.
"I wanted Renko to have some success," Bingham said. "We need him to get some confidence, but he just didn't have good stuff today."
KANSAS 19, Missouri Bantist 6
102 230 100—9 15 4
Home team 080 003 26=19 17 3
Missouri Baptist: Holins, Juergens (2)
Jockish Schieh (2) and Lavin; Kansers (2)
Chatterson (5) Baptist: Chatterton (5)
Boeschen W-Chatterton (1-1) J-Luergens (0-1)
S Houkel (2-2) B-Missouri Baptist: Young,
Callahan and Thayer, Kansas: Boeschen, Byrn
and Dowling. 3B-Missouri Baptist: Kimberlin.
HRS-Missouri Baptist: Alotta (2), Kansas: Byrn
(1), Benninghoch (1) and Dowling (1).
"Basketball is a game of rhythm. To play a lot of teams this week will be good for us. This will test our team, and I like that."
today against Northwest Missouri State and a double header tomorrow against Missouri Southern. The games are scheduled for 1 p.m. at Hotland-Mauin Stadium.
Kansas plays a double header
Women's second title was twice the battle
By Keith Stroker
kansan sports writer
2 Injuries plagued Kansas all season long.
Senior forward Jackie Martin had
injuries twice this season.
The second straight women's Big Eight Conference Tournament championship did not come easy for the Kansas, Jawhawk.
von Dec. 30, Martin injured her shoulder in the San Diego State Tournament, causing her to miss three games. The Jahayhaws lost 76-63 to the San Diego State Aztecs in the championship game.
Mart returned to the lineup on Jan 13 in the Big Eight opening game against Missouri. She played two more games before rupturing her Achilles' tendon in her right leg on Jan. 20, against Colorado.
That injury ended Martin's playing career at Kansas.
After Martin's injury, Kansas lost
us next game 80-64 to the Nebraska Cornhuskers. In the game, the Jayhawks also played without junior center Deborah Richardson. Richardson injured her knee in practice after the Missouri game and missed the next three games.
Kansas lost twice during that three-game stretch and barely won the third. Nebraska and Iowa State defeated the Jayhawks. In the third game, Kansas beat Colorado, 72-71.
Richardson returned to the lineup against Oklahoma State on Jan. 27, and the Jayhawks won 72-70 in overtime. Kansas won the next two games and seemed to be on a roll.
On Feb. 6, in Lawrence, the Jayhawks played Colorado. Frustration is in again when Kansas senior forward Lisa Bainaker injured her knee in the first half, causing her to miss two games, and the Jayhawks winning streak ended at three with a 56-5 loss to the Buffaloes.
The Jayhawks lost its next game to Oklahoma State 90-73 and once again were in need of regrouping.
After trailing Iowa State by 16 points at halftime in their next game, the Jayhawks made a comeback in the second half to defeat the Cyclones 74-72. From that point on, Kansas won six of its last seven games, with the only loss against Nebraska. 76-72
Kansas guard Lisa Braddy said the team's senior leadership was what he called "the best in football."
"We have had to deal with injuries this season, and it is a credit to our team to be able to win the championship." Braddy said. "I think the game at Nebraska was the turning point in our season. We played a great game there, and even though we lost, we knew things were starting to get better."
Baker played tentatively when she returned to the lineup at the Nebraska game.
"I was hesitant at first because I didn't know what to expect," Baker said. "I think mentally, I had to overcome the hesitancy to play, and once I tried to rebound and play hard defense again, I didn't think about it anymore."
Jayhawks forward Mesho Strouther agreed. She said a big factor in the team's success this season was the enthusiasm displayed by Martin from the bench.
"Jackie is like fire and thunder during a ball game," Stroughter said. "She is a big part of our team's success. She sees a lot of things on the court we don't, and she helps us make adjustments."
"Coach Washington always has a positive outlook on things, which also helped us. I think Coach was great this season, especially considering all the problems the team had to face."
Livingston ordered out of team practice
By a Kansan reporter
Kansas guard Otis Livingston's future with the team is uncertain after a confrontation yesterday afternoon between him and Coach Larry Brown in practice.
In the middle of practice, Brown ordered Livingston to leave the court and clean out his locker. Brown then instructed an assistant to follow Livingston and make sure he followed Brown's instructions.
Livingston left the court with his head down and his hands clenched to
This is the second major confrontation between the two. In December, when Kansas played Appalachian State in Allen Field House, Brown banished Livingston to the locker room about four minutes before half-time. Livingston was told to dress and did not return for the second half.
Brown would not comment on yesterday's situation after practice, other than saying, "I don't know."
"wish it wasn't this serious, but it is," Livingston said. He would not add anything further.
Livingston removed his belongings from his locker and went home. He said that he attended study hall last night.
2 All-America teams name Manning center
By a Kansan reporter
With the men's regular basketball season finished, writers are starting to concentrate on who should make the numerous All-America teams selected each year.
Manning, who was selected as a center, is the all-time Big Eight career scoring leader and is 10th on the career scoring list with 2,758 points.
Joining him on both teams:
Arizona junior Sean Elliott, a 6-8 forward, who is averaging 18.5 points a game; North Carolina sophomore J.R. Reid, a 6-9 forward, who is averaging 18.2 points a game.
Also selected: Bradley guard Hersey Hawkins, currently the nation's leading scorer. Hawkins, a 6-3 guard, is now fifth on the NCAA career scoring list with 2,935 points.
Michigan's Gary Grant was selected as the other guard. Grant, who averages 22.7 points a game, linked to the second team last season
Kansas coach Larry Brown was told of the selections at his press conference yesterday, and although he praised the individual selections, he questioned the team as a whole.
"I can't fault any of these selections, but it's not a great basketball team." Brown said. "To me, you should vote for the two best forwards, two best guards and the best center. I can't fault the team for their players because they're all outstanding. But I think we've lost sight of the positions."
Fort Hays beats Washburn
The Associated Press
The victory sends Fort Hays, 27-4,
to the NAIA national tournament in
Kansas City for the fourth time in six
years. The Tigers won national titles in 1984 and 1985.
TOPEKA — Mark Harris hit a three-point shot from 30 feet out at the buzer, lifting Fort Hays State to an 89-86 victory over Washburn in the NAIA District 10 championship game last night.
Harris, a 6-foot-2 senior guard, finished with 40 points. Brett Buller added 17 points, and Ronnie Thompson had 14.
Fort Hays took 46-39 at halftime. Washburn took its first lead of the second half at 77-76 on a free throw by Romy Anderson with 5:20 left.
Sports Briefs
SOCCER CLUB WINS GAME: In its season opener, the Kansas men's soccer club defeated Kansas State in Manhattan this weekend.
Bled by senior Ed Nelson's three goals, the Jayhawks shut out the Wildcats 7- 0. Dave Stoneburner added one goal and two assists, and Dan Stoke had one goal in the game. Both are playing their first season
with the team.
"It it was a really nice game," coach Glenn Shirtliff said. "It came together much better than I thought it would, given the practice last week and the snow. It took about 10 minutes to settle down; and then in a space of 4 minutes, we just blew them out of the game."
Jayhawk bowlers await tournament
Bv David Boyce
Associate sports editor
BOWLING TEAM
The glare is just a little more intense now for these 11 bowlers.
Every day for the past three weeks, they have stared at the lanes at the Kansas University Jaybow. Sixty feet away appear 10 pins that they would love to knock down on a first try.
Over and over again, they roll the bowling ball, hoping for a strike. Some days, they get many strikes. Other days, they can't buy a strike.
Getting strikes matters now because these bowlers have a mission. The 11 bowlers constitute the Jayhawk bowling team, and the 9 bowlers constitute the weekend in a sectional tournament in Amarillo, Texas.
The KU bowling team, Front row from the left: Judy Flester, Chicago freshman; Amy Dillon, Topeka senior; Amy Gentz, Topeka freshman; Debbie Wilker, Gardner senior; Debbie Wolf, Overland Park sophomore. Back row from the left: John Percival, Overland
During these weeks of grueling practices, the bowling teams have readied themselves for what coach Mike Fine has described as the most important tournament for Kansas in five years.
"We are in training," said Mark Geris, Leavenworth freshman. "Mike told us to concentrate on two things: bowling and school. He said this would be the most important tournament in our lives."
Tomorrow, the two teams depart to carry out their mission. Kansas will bowl its first frame at 8 a.m. Friday. Part of the travel costs are being paid by Jaybay, the team's sponsor.
Although the men's team was invited to sectionals two years ago, it did not go because two members
If either the men's or women's team finishes first or second, that team will get the opportunity to go on national April 18 and 19 in Denver.
became sick.
"Making sectionals has been a goal for us since the beginning of the season," Fine said. "The teams are looking real good, and the women have really put it together the past week."
To make sectionals, a team either gets an automatic bid by winning a prestigious tournament or gets an at-large bid based on tournament finishes. Fine said. Thirteen men's teams and six women's teams will compete.
Fine said that the teams were eager to compete and that they should do well based on their performance last week.
Both Kansas teams received an at-large bid.
Debbie Wilkier, Gardner senior,
is competing for a third year. She
said this season was by far her
best.
During her freshman season, Wilkier's average was 135. Since then, her average has risen to 169, and she likes to claim a 70 average.
Wilkiser's improvement gives her the distinction of being the anchor bowler. As the anchor bowler, she sometimes feels the same pressure as a basketball player to hit a free throw to win a game.
"I fear choking," Wilker said.
"I have worked on it a lot, but I have choked before and I haven't forgotten it. It happened in a game where I bowled 197, but I needed to bit the 10 pin and I missed."
"We've worked so hard for it," Wilker said.
And like a basketball player, the anchor sometimes chokes.
Wilker said she always thought
about her bowling style. She added that picking up spares was important to her.
Park junior; Chris Sham, Hong Kong graduate student; Mark Geris, Leavenworth freshman; Morris Ross, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Tim DeMars, Overland Park senior. Not pictured: Angie Mever, Topeka sophomore.
"But practicing all the time gets boring and frustrating." she said.
The anchor bowler for the men's team is John Percival, Overland Park park. He said it was difficult not to think about the importance of needing a strike.
"The key, though, is developing a rhythm," Percival said. "It usually takes me awhile to mentally prepare."
Another aspect of bowling that is important is knowing the conditions of the lanes. The olliness or dryness determines how the bowl
ers will hook their balls.
we will join us.
For Debbie Wolf, Overland Park
junior, it's that part of the game
that intrigues her.
"Bowling is challenging," she said. "I do have control of what I'm doing, but the lane has its effects also, so I'm not in total control."
This year, 32 men came out and the team was cut to 12. The women's team kept all 12 bowlers.
Besides being funded by Jaybowl, the team also has fund raisers for trips. Fine said the bowling team did not get any money from the athletic department.
---
14
Wednesday, March 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Residents must submit housing contracts, fee to avoid hassles in fall
Bv Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Students who fail to return their housing contracts for next year and a $200 payment by Friday might have to face undesirable living conditions for several weeks next fall.
Students who don't return their contracts by deadline might be placed in temporary housing. Often, that housing consists of a small room shared by several roommates.
James Whiteside, Evanston Ill. freshman, lived in an ironing room in Hashinger Hall for a few weeks.
"At first, I was disturbed," he said. "It was this crummy little room, but it turned to be kind of nice. I made friends with my roommate."
Fred McElhenein, director of residential programs, said yesterday that many students might have to be placed in temporary housing again next fall, although this year, 700 fewer students have turned in intent-to-return cards, which reserve a space in the system.
Fewer students returned the cards because the deadline for the intent-to-return cards was moved up to Feb. 18 from March 26, McElhenei said.
lons tull, 176 students were placed in study rooms and the end rooms on each floor of McCollum and Oliver balls.
Students who failed to return the cards can still turn them in but will lose their priority status in getting a room. McElhene said.
He estimated that so far, about 8,000 contracts had been sent out this year for the 4,740 spaces available. Last year, a total of 11,000 contracts were sent out.
I've been in this business 20 years, and I haven't been able to tell whether there's going to be overcrowding this early.'
- Fred McElhenie director of residential programs
unavoidable.
He said that he wouldn't know how many people would be placed in temporary housing until the middle of July.
"There's some deceptiveness in the numbers," he said. "I've been in this business 20 years, and I haven't been able to tell whether there's going to be overcrowding this early."
"We don't want to turn anyone away," he said. "We have an obligation to house as many people as we can without inconvenience."
McElhenie said that the spaces were overbooked to compensate for students who didn't show up or moved out. Other spaces become available when students leave to join fraternities and sororities after fall rush.
He said that students could minimize their chances of being placed in temporary housing by turning in their contracts and the $200 payment as early as possible.
Kathy Sheldon, Shawnee freshman, lived in an end room on the sixth floor of McCollum for 10 weeks last fall.
last year, I got my contract in late," she said. "I have already sent my stuff back this year.
my skin back by the door.
"I heard some horror stories. Seven people in one room would have been a nightmare."
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with star printer. Software - Appleworks.
Applewriter, Print Shop, MultiScribe, Flim Simulator. John 942-4780.
Classical guitar f7 '74 Dodge dart 200, Marshmallow
f6 '85 Dodge dart 100, Deville devile 50, Black leather jacket 100, 841-926-3000
841-926-3000
Collection of Playboy magazines from 1968 to 1984. Good starter set call Hugh 845-2562.
Factory samples sale. Dineette chairs $11,88, ddr
c餐$39, Bookcase Waterkamp $149, comforters
$29, desk$59, bookcase $39, sofa, & chair $39,
chair $19, bench $29, upholstered $19,
upholstered $19 daily, Match & Quain Purchase
Warehouse, 1601 Burlington, NKC and 738 New
Hampshire, Lawrence.
FOR SALE - Roundtrip airline ticket to Albuquerque, QC. Price $175. Very cheap. If interested, call 49-226-7100.
Going to Copper Mtn for Spring Break? I have one ticket for sale. *$1 price call Mark B41-8244-HEAD* Head skis, boots, poles, bindings 120; JVC tape deck 25; TECHNICIQUE receives 25.00 Call
*MOTHIBAL GOOD USED FURNITURE.*
512 E 90h. 749-4961
MUST SELL Fuji Royale 129 Speed Great Condition,
pregreat price $601 Joy 843-7404.
Nordica Ski Boots ~ size 61/2, used once. Worth $290 * best offer takes* Kiley 843-3118.
One way ticket to Denver for sale. $100. Leave
Friday, March 11. If interested, call Jenny
Kaye.
Obsorbine PC and IBM printer. $425 or best offer Call Done evenings at 814-4793.
Quietest bed 75' FUTON rocker 70' Hitachi
cardette dock 75' Dodge Dart 841-867
841-867
Rock n-rel. a to m. to p. every Saturday and Sunday
a to m. to p. every Saturday and Sunday
**spread break!** Miami – For sale roundtrip ticket
$199 call 841-6526
Students/Rommages/Married • Beautiful.
Separate Execute Room. Ample Storage. Heals
Homes/Kitchen/Garden.
TWA飞航 to Tampa/SM / Pet. Leaves March 10
WFA飞航 to Boston/MA / Ask for Brent
8446-8448 Davon Jane
8446-8449 Dawn Jane
AUTO SALES
1972 Plymouth Gold Duster 7000 miles AM/FM
Hurly well. Very good condition. $50; Tel
19.022 Nissan Stanza, Red 5-Spd, 4-Dr, hatchback,
a/c, am/fm Fly, Clean, New Chest Must sell
1925 Nissan Datum 310G5 X-5, SF-2, hatchback,
AM/FM, Metallic, Brown, Clean, BG-4221-124a
www.nissan.com
7350 km
Erie SE, 6 City, 4 Sp. Silver, Top of line
2100 km
Philadelphia, 8 City, 4 Sp. 2495 km
Firebird, Red, T-10p, V6 automatic, 18,900 watts, tilt cruise, loaded $2,800. Call before 10 a.m.
1985 SUBARU GL 4 door sedan Blue Dark with sun moon, roof camper. Dash Load, 41,000 lb
Lost gold-denied lijns watch Jan. 25 between Robben
Bobbin and Fliant-Flint. Sentimental.
Call 749-6480.
83 Saab 900 Turbo 6100 miles auto 3 dr. electric
sunroof / windows/ 6000 - 843-6955
LOST-FOUND
Hax Restaurants are now hiring responsible, mature, hard-working individuals to fill part-time day, evening and weekends openings. Wages start 3 per hour and up to 5 per hour, apply at www.haxrestaurants.com or ww.hax721.st/748-4059.
1988 Mini-Vans Astro $5,523 Caravan $6,943
Aerostar 4,924 4x 2S Blazer $3,821 Bronce II
$10,546 5型 Trucks Stel SI El $4,940 5M
Road Trucks SI El $7,940 5M Cheyenne C150 $810 Dakotas $6,150 F 15
$3,865 Warranties, Bailouts, Financing. You choose options, package colors, you want
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
plates, men's repalced 'drugs' area. Buyers'
must have a prescription for the drug.
GREENBORO S.A. SELECTED from new w483-2004.
A $2,300 . O.B.O. at 6:00 p.m w483-2004.
Car won it first? Mobile service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 814-6429.
Must sell Ford Lynds 1984 s/5 speed AM/FM air con-
ditions d,24,700 m very clean d,300 m
HELP WANTED
RESORT HOTELS. Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications for admission. For information & application; write National Collegiate Recreation, P.O. Box 80714 Houston
BE ON TTV. *N needed for commercials*
Toxing can impact (1) 805-687-0007
TV-9787
travel Agence HILTON, flight Athermant,
travel Agent HILTON, flight Athermant,
salaries to £800, level entry positions.
Aerobic Instructor Needed. Experience necessary, call for apt. 842-1983 10-M-F.
POSTAL JOBS! $29.04 Start! Prev Now!
JOB #105 864-444-0441 Exam 13a
Job #106 864-444-0441 Exam 13b
On March 3 near auotiumir at Hawtown to reading glasses. Brown in brown case. If found, then please call Ted 843-9532. Small but sincere reward.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseline, Airlines & Amusement Parks NEW accepting applications. For information & application; write national Collegiate Recruitment, P. O. Box 8024.
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Transportation required. Call 842-6284
NEEDED: KU on Wheels Coordinator
- Starts May 1,1988 through May 31,1989
- 20 hours per week
- — Must be available for 3 hour time blocks each day
- Must be KU student and enrolled in at least 6 hours Fall 88 & Spring 89
Application deadline:
March 28, 1988 4:30 p.m.
CAMP COUNSELERS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, water sports; swim lessons; campfire events; sports, patents, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary 800 or more plR 8 and Mar. Secrecy 176, Male Nid, Mild.
- Details and application procedures available at Student Senate Offices 105 Burge Union No calls please
GRADUATE ASSISTANT half-time position. The office of Residential Program announces a half-time graduates assistance position starting from May 12, 2015, for housing applications & contracts, contacts with prospective students and parents. Office of Administration, application, resume, and names of 3 references: Frö McEldheen, Office of Residential programs, 128 Strong Hall. Application deadline: March 11.
GOVERNMENT JOB. $10,459.00/$459.250/yr. Now
available. $879.000/497.000 ext. K. 97958
for current Federal List.
NO CALL FOR QUOTES.
HELP WANTED: Looking for an energetic,
friendly person to work on office space at night
1-800-642-7222 Call 843-759-2222
Immediate openings to update Lawrence/Kansas City 1880 Directory. Conduct brief door to door interviews. No selling. No experience needed. We need a relocation or relocation increase. Hours flexible. Apply in person only after 9 a.m. Monday-Friday, RL Pol & Co, 901 Kentucky, Suite 204, EOE MF
Kansas Union Food Service is hiring part-time cashiers $4 per hour. 3 shifts: 10:00 to 10:30 a.m - 5:30 p.m, Saturday - 4:00 p.m - 10:00 p.M - F.3:00 p.m. Maintenance is required per experience and be able to give verifiable references. Apply in person at the Kansas Union Personnel Office, Level 5 EOE.
Be a NANNY
- Seaside Connecticut towns
- near New York City
- Great salary & benefits.
- Choose from warm, loving
Debby. Macy has the happiest of days! Happy 19
weeks. Bobby is happy and healthy.
KUM and DAVE-ID: 15 about time!
- families pre-screened by u
- Year round positions only
The girl who sat in seat Ftion Thursday night, March rd. I would like to talk with you again. If you are interested call 844-6746. The guy in seat F109.
working with children
Wanted: Full-time or Part-time morning worker
For more information call 841-7306 for Mike.
*Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekend hours available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to use Word, Excel, Contact Audio-Linked Network, 804-6460
Normal Guy – Would you settle for a gail not quite good enough to evoke Elohon John? If so, reply here. “Blue Eyes.”
A girl with long brown hair and very fair skin:
Jan. 14 you permitted me to share your table in the crowded Union cafeteria. Your beauty and patience will be important to word to you. I want not to impose on your good graces. Instead I found a copy of the Times and pretended to peruse it. As but Iose to leave you here, I hope you will accept my give me hope. Since then I have not seen you, but I have not been able to forget you. If perhance you should see this, would you consent to share a table? You promise to be more communicative: "Athens."
Summer Jobs!* Two of Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to work as counsellors. Employment is from June 15th through July 27th and interview call Jeff I at 411-851-5200 Extr. 310
BUS.PERSONAL
To Blue Eyes, Honest Senior, Avid Reader, & P.R. Great responses: Iglu'd you're out there. Want more details? I'm a person who cares. I am $10^4$ and blond, in graduate school. Societyally, I am a white, student, writing, why don't we meet? We've something in common, this should be a treat. Write my post, we'll up a time. You choose the place, I'll bring some wine. An additional thing you can do is write.
Summer interns, out of state $1600/month, great work experience for more info, call 842-1776.
Tori Carr, Saira, Ang, and Pip Dickes "You
Postcard" *Postcard* "You Postcard"
*Troll* "Leave and kiss from Kritika*
CAR WORKS
O. Box 27, Rowanton, CT 06853 203-852-8111
World Sport Schwinn Bike For Sale. Good Condition.
call 840.7559
MISCELLANEOUS
BEACH WRAPS
PERSONAL
THE BEACH HOUSE
Did you get your sunglasses for Spring Break?
New styles in the AT ECT, SHOP, 732 Mass.
**PROGRAM INSTRUCTORS (4)** teach high school students in summer session. Degree, teaching engchinese, foreign语, or foreign youth is required. DORMITORY SUPERVISOR(1) coordinate dorm staff and live in dorm. Degree and experience with culturally diverse students is required. (2) live in dorm, tutor, counsel and supervise high school students. At least junior level in college representation (3) serve as tutor, counsel and supervise instructor/(Counselor)(1) design and implement individual educational programs for KU freshman. Serve as instructor and Counselor. Repeat application, experience, and familiarity with KU required. DEADLINE: March 23, 1988. 5:00 P.M. Complete resume and names of references to: Mrs. Nettie C. Hart, Director, Upward Bound, 848 Hallway, Laureus, Lawrence, KS 69038 (848) 69345 (848) EEO AA.
New styles in at the ECT. SHOP, 732 Mass.
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. No dues or fees. Overaters Anonymous, Mondays 7-4:30 Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maliue. For confidential contact person. Write PO Box 3842 Laurence 6096
A.B.C.: "For me, the single word 'God' suggests
protection." For her family, 'squalif,' squail,
and grotesque. — Adrian Breen.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, D.I. line portrait
BARRETTES/BARRETTES New selection james
for Spring Break the BEACH
HOUSE 821
Pregnant and need help? Call Birkbirght at Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
B. W. I more than like you and I'm sorry you're not going bladder with us over spring break. I'll be on my way to the beach.
749-0334
SENSUAL LINGERIE $ &WMWEAR. Get your full color catalog today. Send $ 4 includes postage and handling to: SATIN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 15701819, LINEXEA KS 66215
SUNDAY CHICAGO TRIBULE: New on sale at the following locations: Convenience Store 6 & Indiana, Kwik Shop 9 & Miss, Kansas Union, Sun Home Dealer 841-7037.
C- You know me, but I don't know you. Interested in meeting. Blue Eyes.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-238.
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head
of the Art Department, dancers, dancers, etc.
10 years experience 841-0224
European Spring Break.
8 Beds — No Waiting
Open 7 Days!
Unlimited use: Packages:
$15/mo. 2@visit 3 visits/10
$45/mo. 2no visit fee 7 visits/20
$2mo. minimum 10 visits/25
since 1980 25th & Iowa
EUROPEAN
SUNTANWING 841-6232
FROM SOFA TO SLEEPER
WITH COMFORT AND
EASE!
BLUE HERON
COVER UPS &
937. Massachusetts ★ 841-9443
BEACH WRAPS
BEACH HOUSE GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
HARPER
sandals
LAWYER
Do you want
It begins with a quality resume
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
QUALITY TUTORING, Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics all levels. Call Dennis
849 1056
$30,000 / year?
749-0123
The Comic Corner
N.E. Corner of 23rd & Iowa
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
TUTORING TUTORING B.9.90 hr, MATH
SOLID SOLID M.S., statistics 8 years experience
M.S. Math. statistics, 8 years experience
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ace
wordprocessing, 847-395 IAS, 847-391 IAS, 847-391
IAS.
841 - 4254
Bloom Company & books
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more!
SERVICES OFFERED
1-Ali Belale Typeper System. Tern papers.
2-Ali Belale Typeper system, typed IBM
Electronic Typewriter 842.3426
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor
2-der Woman Word processing. Former editor
and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of
a word processor.
**850 Value when presented toward new patient service**
**Spinal Exam** Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birright at 843-1821. Confidential, help/free pregnancy
Pregnant? We can help. Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City provides confidential outpatient abortions. Don't be afraid to ask for the help you need. Call (816) 756-2277.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park ... (413) 691-8687
1 plus Typing: Letters, resumes, thesis, law typ-
ers, tax forms, business forms, bursary 847-4749 or
843-2671 weeks and weekends.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7799
Job-willing resume, cover letters, 12 years exp.
experience. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Use of GRAPHIC SERIES. Ekchance
processing. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $60.00. Art & Design Building.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in
accurately correcting a corrected Select-
ting spelled correction. 843-6045
MATH RUTOR since 1976, M.A., 48/hour, 843-9032
(n.m.)
AAA TYPING Word processing, spellcheck,
AT&T. After a p. t.-F. t.
anyweekend days. 842-1942
Call R.I. sI service for all of your typing needs.
819-250-7838 9.0.m, please.
CAMP DIRECTOR --- Girl Scout Camp
Wiedemann is seeking a seasonal director. Send resume to or contact: Outdoor Program Director Wiedemann 909-268-9000 N. Woodbury, Wichita KS 67083 EOE
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE, Letter
quoter print spec, spec listen, spell spec
check spec, spec write
DISSERTATIONS, THIESES, LAW PAPERS
Mommy's Typing & Graphics One day service
Paper Writing 10% off
Call me for your typing needs. Reasonable rates
812-486 before 10 p.m.
THE FAR SIDE
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Proessing.
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter
printing. Spelled correct. 842-2747.
For professional typing/word processing, call
form 041-4800. Special spring $120/page, double
spacing.
Professional typat w/ 15 years experience. Close to
campus. Pagell 942-8996
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, grammar, punctuation, editing. Fast, reliable service. Same day shipping.
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at 843-011
---
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
mammary sampling research, these;
dissertation writing and application,
resumes. M have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARAHARA at
THE WORDDOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have a desk, library, law review. Since 1983. 843-3147
WANTED
BabySitter needed Mon-Thur late afternoon
842-4737. Must provide own transportation.
Rent 175.00 + $2 utilities. Call Lilly 749-1234.
Male roommate (s) wanted for summer 88 Spring
89. Large, tdy, non-smoking 3 bedroom
apartment in Meadowbrook, near campus. Call
761-334-0000.
Nice fun roommate looking for 2 roommates to share 3 bedroom apartment for 88-89 school year. Swimming pool, BB/Tennis Courts available. 842-6252 Meadowbrook.
Female needed to care for our 2 children this summer. We are an active, outgoing family in search of someone with similar qualities. We are located 1 hour from NYC and Phi and Iris and a 3 hour drive from New York to send letter of interest with phone a ASAP to Mrs. Herman, 6 Carriage Ct., Marlboro, NJ 07476
Female Christian roommate, non-smoker, on bare route, bedroom. Summertime or Fall vacation.
Put your used books and magazines to work! Donate to Friends of the Lawrence Public Library. Bring to collection box at the library 707 Vermont.
Subpart apartment for summer. Near campus
Low utilities, $162 monthly. AE. Beginning
with a 70% off credit. Bk 811-486-9757
Rooomate needed to house twelfths $22.00 + $1 utilities. Call 842.1983 10-M-F. Subpart apartment for summer. Near campus. Low utilities, $163/month. Central Air. Beginning
Wanted. Student to exchange practice in Spanish
conventional conversation in English (all)
79-3208
By GARY LARSON
©1988 Universal Press Syndicate
3.9
"Hold it right there, Henry! ... You ain't plannin' on takin' that wrinkled house into town, are you?"
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Wednesday, March 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Thursday March 10, 1988
Vol. 98, No.114 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansai
Bid to revive admissions bill fails in House
Kansan staff writer
By Elaine Woodford
Although there was hope yesterday that the defeated qualified admissions bill would be revived in the state House of Representatives, the bill was stricken from the calendar, effectively killing it for the rest of the session.
Branson said that this week was a turning point in the legislative session, because all bills originating in the House must be passed on to the Senate and all Senate bills must be passed on to the House. Bills that are in the House Appropriations, Taxation or Federal and State Affairs committees are immune to that regulation.
"This makes me believe even more than before that the bill will not be introduced again this session," said State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence.
But, Branson said, "It's never over until it's over."
somehow reappear in one of the three immune committees.
State Rep John Solbach, D-Lawrence, agreed that the bill would not be an issue during the 1988 session.
seemed. Soibach said that the issue had more far-reaching implications for legislators this session because it was an election year.
"It will take time before the issue of qualified admissions becomes politically acceptable," he said.
Solbach said that the idea of qualified admissions had not been debated in the Kansas Legislature since 1915.
Branson said that the topic was a sensitive one because Kansans felt strongly about Kansas traditions such as oen admissions.
Stanley Kopilik, executive director of the Board of Regents, said he wouldn't pursue the qualified admissions issue this session but would push for another bill next year.
"I haven't really put much thought into the actual bill, but we intend to visit more people and step up our educational program during the next session," he said.
Lake Tahoe casino beckons to students Harrah's looks to KU for summer help
Harrah's looks to KU for summer help
By Jeff Suggs Kansan staff writer
Students often dream of walking away from a casino with lots of money in their pockets.
Yesterday, a Lake Tahoe, Nev., casino offered students the chance to do just that.
But there's a catch: They have to earn it.
Harrah's Hotel and Casino was on campus interviewing students for summer jobs.
Merle Lyons, personnel representative for Harrah's, said he and other company representatives were visiting colleges to fill about 400 summer positions. Available jobs range from cocktail waitresses and maids to cashiers and slot change persons. Wages range from $3.50 to $5.50 an hour.
Lyons, a 1980 journalism graduate from the University of Kansas, said this was Harrah's first visit to campus. The company had recruited by mail in the past and had been successful in finding KU students to work in the casino.
Lyons said the busiest time of the year for the casino was in the summer months, just when college students are looking for jobs.
"It's like a marriage. We're made for each other." Lyons said.
Many of the applicants were interested in living in the busy nightlife
and beautiful scenery of Lake Tahoe.
"It's kind of a big-time spring break where they can earn money," he said.
Marti Slusher, Overland Park junior, who spent last summer working as a cashier and hostess, agreed that working at Harrah's was a fun experience.
"It was a lot of fun," she said. "I encourage anyone to do it and go out there."
Yesterday's visit by Harrah's attracted about 40 people for interviews.
"It's nice." Davis said. "I'm afraid that the cost of living is out of sight, but it's a nice area."
John Delgado, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said he wouldn't mind leaving the Midwest to work elsewhere.
"It's just the location," he said, adding that he wanted "to get away for different scenery."
Alan Ptacek, Lawrence resident and a 1984 geology graduate of KU, hoped to become a pit boss in the casino.
casino.
"I've worked three years off shore as an engineer," Ptacek said. "I'm ready to have a little fun and relax."
Waste clean-up nears completion
By Ric Brack
The cleanup of a chemical spill that occurred when a tractor-trailer truck overturned near Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike last week should be completed today.
Kansan staff writer
Marvin Glotzbach, an environmental geologist with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said yesterday that about 6,000 gallons of contaminated water had been pumped out of a creek near the accident site.
creek bear the Kansas City, Mo., company contracted to clean up the spill. Environmental Specialists, Inc., would probably finish removing dirt from the contaminated creek bed today.
$38,000, but he predicted that it could double when the contaminated materials had been disposed. The owner of the truck, F & S Truck Lines of Kansas City, Kan., will be billed for the clean-up costs.
He said the cost of the cleanup was already about
Glotzbach said only dirt that was in contact with the chemical Sonolan, also known as Ethalfuralin, an agricultural herbicide, would be removed.
He said that the final step in the clean-up process was to find a landfill willing to store the waste material.
matter.
"That's been our biggest hangup." Glotzbach said. "Everybody's afraid of this material, even though it's past the point of being hazardous."
through it a pass the polymer Glotzbach said the chemical's toxicity level had decreased because it had been exposed to air and sunlight.
He said damaged plastic chemical bottles and other shipping materials that had been saturated with Sonolan had been stored in a truck in Kansas City, Kan., until a disposal site could be found.
Gotbach said that the Johnson County landfill had refused to accept the contaminated material, and that the Wyandotte County landfill had not decided whether to accept it.
About 125 gallons of Sonolan spilled onto the ground and into Pony Creek after the truck overturned on the night of March 2. Turnipke authorities said the driver of the truck, Michael W. Shannon, 32, of Olathe, apparently had fallen asleep.
Officials didn't realize until about 14 hours after the accident that Sonolan was leaking from the truck.
CONCLUSION
(WEAK)
WE ARE ALONE
N=1
Are we alone?
Bruce Twarog, associate professor of physics and astronomy, discusses several theories about the existence of extra-terrestrial intelligence in our galaxy and beyond. During the weekly luncheon forum at Ecumenical Christian Ministries yesterday, Twarog said
that the Drake equation, which was proposed by Frank Drake to determine how many technologically advanced civilizations exist in the galaxy, was basically worthless. Twarog said he thought that the chances of finding other life forms were very slim.
Congressmen call on Meese to step down
The Associated Press
independent counsel James McKay since May 11. McKay has been examining Mees's involvement with scandal-plagied Wedtech Corp. and with a $1 billion Iraqi oil pipeline project.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Eleven Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee yesterday asked Attorney General Edwin Meese III to step down temporarily until independent counsel investigations into his conduct are completed.
officer," the Democrats said in the letter.
Mackay also has been examining the attorney general's involvement with the regional Bell telephone companies at a time when he owned $14,000 in phone stock.
Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, one of the signers, denied that the signers had a political motive. "Ed Meese is the best thing to happen to the Democratic Party," he said.
In addition, Independent Counsel Lawrence E. Walsh, investigating the Iran-contra arms and money affair, has called Meese before a grand jury numerous times.
Meese spokesman Terry Eastland said the attorney general would not comply because "no one should be urged to step down from a government position simply because that person is under investigation."
Meese has been under criminal investigation by
"We strongly believe that your increasing inability to spend time on the day-to-day demands of your job, the deteriorating morale at the Department of Justice and the continuing cloud over your office are undermining your ability to act effectively as the nation's chief law enforcement
The letter said the pending investigations "detract from the time required to properly administer the Department of Justice."
Eastland responded, "This is an old idea, a politically partisan idea and a thoroughly bad idea."
He said Meese "has every intention of serving to the end of this term. He has spent some time with his lawyers on the investigation, but there has been no serious subtraction of his time or effort from leadership of the Department of Justice."1
The letter was signed by Reps. Dian Glickman, Kansas; Edward Feighan, Ohio; Berman; Frank; Morrison; Lawrence Smith, Florida; Harley Staggers Jr., West Virginia; John Conyers, Michigan; George Crockett Jr., Michigan; Mike Synar, Oklahoma; and Patricia Schroeder, Colorado.
Collision of two Army helicopters kills 17 near Fort Campbell, Ky.
Blackhawks involved were among newest of Army's fleet
The Associated Press
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. — Army crews yesterday retrieved the last eight bodies of 17 soldiers killed when two helicopters on a night training mission collided, plunging 250 feet to the ground and catching fire.
The UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters from Fort Campbell sweep wreckage for hundreds of yards and charred the partially wooded, gently rolling site six miles from the choppers' air field Tuesday night.
"One aircraft is located in the trees; one aircraft is right on the edge of a clearing," said Maj. Randy Schcel, Fort Campbell spokesman.
The Blackhawk, one of the newer helicopters used by the Army, Air Force and Marine Corps, has been grounded four times in three years. Last summer, officials said about 40 people had been killed in crashes of the helicopter since 1978.
It was the worst Army aviation disaster since 248 soldiers based at Fort Campbell were killed in the 1985 crash of a chartered plane in Gander, Newfoundland, School said.
'One aircraft is located in the trees; one aircraft is right on the edge of a clearing.'
Maj. Randy Schoel spokesman, Fort Campbell
"I would say now there is no indication of any mechanical factor" in the crash, said Chief Warrant Officer Joe Adams of the investigation team from the Army Safety Center at Fort Rucker, Ala. "We are looking at human and environmental factors. The human factors might include some restriction of vision."
The helicopters were flying about 250 feet from the ground at 92 mph air speed when they collided, School said. One of three helicopters flying in formation was hit by a fourth, said William Harralson, deputy public affairs officer at the fort.
School said the crash occurred on the western Kentucky-Tennessee border during a routine night mission. No one survived.
Army copters collide Black Hawk helicopter
ILLINOIS INDIANA OHIO
Helicopters collide six miles from Fort Campbell.
Franklort Lexington KENTUCKY
TENNESSEE 0 MILES
The solo helicopter carried four servicemen; the 13 others were in the second aircraft.
Adams said the weather was good, which in military terms means visibility of more than a mile and a cloud ceiling of at least 500 feet.
The Blackhawk is designed primarily as a utility and assault aircraft and is used in air assault, air cavalry and medical evacuation, said Maj. Phil Soucy, an Army spokesman in Washington.
Tenants Association preparing directory to area's apartments
Rv Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Kansas State Writer
Students who are hunting apartments may soon have some help if the Student Senate approves the Lawrence Tenants Association's request for funding.
Gregg Stauffer, Lawrence sophomore and association president, said he asked for $5,226 from Senate this year. The Senate finance committee will consider the allocation this week.
the allocation this week.
The association began in April by Stauffer and other people who were concerned that tenants' interests weren't being represented in the State Legislature.
weren't being represented. Stauffer said that the group's purpose was to be an advocate for tenants and not a mediator. Groups such as the Consumer Affairs Association, 819 Vermont St., and Legal Services on level one of the Burge Union perform as mediators.
One of the big projects the group has been working on is a listing of rental properties' histories, including any complaints filed with Consumer Affairs Association by tenants against management since 1890.
ing on the issuing company. He initially wanted to use tenant complaints to review Lawrence rental properties by using a ranking system on tenants issues.
But Fargo said it wasn't possible to rate the properties fairly by using the complaints because neither tenants nor landlords gave fair evaluations of problems.
Michael Fargo, Lawrence resident, has been working on the listing since April.
"By the time it gets to a written complaint, the situation is usually pretty volatile," he said.
Fargo decided that the only way to do the listing was just to list the complaint and the case's outcome and let the reader decide whether to rent property from an owner.
Camille Dalager, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, said she had looked over the listings and thought they were presented fairly.
Fargo plans to have the listing done by the end of the semester after he follows through on the complaints that have been taken to court.
He also had plans to include in the listing apartments that are accessible to people with disabilities.
Stauffer said he hoped to get money from the Senate so the list could be published and distributed to students.
The money also would go for printing advertisements and pamphlets to let students know about the organization and to educate them about their housing rights.
RIPPLES:
To see that said students also needed to know what they could and did not do. For instance, many students will not pay their rent in an effort to get their landlords to take care of problems.
"Most of them don't know that they can't do that," he said. "They can be evicted for that."
he said. They can
The 32-member association has been operating on
$300 the Senate allocated to it last year and $96 in
membership fees.
---
Students do not need to pay the $3 membership fee to get help from the association, Stauffer said.
2
Thursday, March 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Awesome!
Today will be mostly sunny with the high climbing to the upper 60s. Tonight expect a few clouds and a mild low of 44.
HIGH: 68°
LOW: 44°
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte
56/33
Partly cloudy
Omaha
67/36
Mostly sunny
Goodland
56/31
Partly cloudy
Hays
60/33
Mostly cloudy
Salina
66/40
Mostly sunny
Topeka
68/43
Sunny
Kansas City
65/43
Sunny
Columbia
84/40
Sunny
St. Louis
164/40
Sunny
Dodge City
69/37
Partly cloudy
Wichita
71/45
Mostly sunny
Chanute
70/48
Sunny
Springfield
68/42
Sunny
Forecast by Scott E. Dergan.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's overnight low.
FRI
Showers
52 / 36
HIGH LOW
SAT
clearing
44 / 27
SUN
Sunny
48 / 28
MON
Sunny
50 / 34
TUE
Sunny
55 / 35
FRI
Showers
52 / 36
HIGH LOW
SAT
clearing
44 / 27
SUN
Sunny
48 / 28
MON
Sunny
50 / 34
TUE
Sunny
55 / 35
SPRING BREAK WEATHER HOTLINE 864-4329 Thursday, 9 a.m.- 9 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
The Associated Press
State to remain in disposal plan
TOPEKA - Legislative opponents of the state's membership in a regional compact for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste lost another battle yesterday.
The House turned down a proposal to require Kansas to pull out of the Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact if the state is selected as the host site for a regional waste disposal site.
The compact comprises Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Nebraska. In December, the compact's commission chose Nebraska as the host state, a decision that has spurred a petition drive to put Nebraska's compact membership up for a public vote.
Supporters of the legislative proposal said Kansas was the second choice of the compact commission to be the host state, which would make it the host state if Nebraska withdrew.
■ Because of a reporter's error, Gloria Brooks was incorrectly identified as Clarice Brooks in a story in Monday's Kansan.
Correction
An affirmative action workshop titled "Search, Screening and Selection" is scheduled for 10 a.m. today in the Kansas Union's Governor's Room.
A Brown Bag lunch titled "The Pope's Visit to Latin America" with J. Laurence Day, professor of journalism, is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. today in 109 Lippincott Hall.
A KU Bar Association forum with Max Geiman, FBI agent, is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. today in 104 Green Hall
On Campus
- The department of microbiology has scheduled a lecture titled "Expression of Class I Histocompatibility Antigens and mRNAs by Trophoblast Cells" with Joan Hunt, University of Kansas Medical Center, at 12:30 p.m. today in 6031 Haworth Hall.
The center for East Asian studies has scheduled a panel discussion titled "The Inauguration of Rho Tae Woo - Korea's New President" for
2:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's
Jayhawk Room.
■ A geography colloquium titled "Research in Golfoft and the Brunca Region, Costa Rica" with Donna Luckey, assistant professor of architecture, is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in 317 Lindley Hall.
As part of the East German lecture series, Michael Strube will speak at 4 p.m. today in Miller Scholarship Hall.
A general meeting for the Society of East Asian Studies is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Parlor A.
As part of the Michener Lectures on Social Biology, Martin Linderau will speak on "The Honeybee Community - Old and New Problems in Communication and Orientation" at 4 p.m. today in 1005 Haworth Hall.
The department of computer science is sponsoring a colloquium titled "Intelligent Logical Design of Robust Relational Databases" with Frederick N. Springsteel, University of Missouri-Columbia, for 4:30 p.m. today in 300 Strong Hall.
A Campus Crusade for Christ meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union's Jayhawk Room.
Student Senate is sponsoring a lecture titled "Civil Rights in America" with Juan Williams, reporter for the Washington Post, at 8 p.m. today in the Kansas Union ballroom.
A premier concert with the University Chamber Orchestra is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Murphy Hall's Swaworth Recital Hall.
A KU fencing club meeting is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 10, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Professor encourages salary study
By Rebecca I. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas needs to do a comprehensive study of faculty salary compression to show faculty that it is serious about combatting the problem, an associate professor of religious studies said yesterday.
The professor, Sandra Zimdars-Swartz, said faculty needed to be confident that the administration understood the areas of salary compression and was trying to solve the problem.
Salary compression occurs when new faculty are hired at salaries closer to or greater than the salaries of current faculty.
Zimdars-Swartz did a study last week to show salary compression in the humanities, interdisciplinary studies and social sciences in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The study showed the number of salaries being made by assistant professors, associate professors and professors and the overlap in salaries among the ranks.
For example, her chart showed that five associate professors earned the same amount as four assistant professors with less experience. The professors, in humanities and interdisciplinary
studies, made between $25,000 and $26,000 this
school year.
Zimdars-Swartz said salaries were particularly low for associate professors who came to KU about 10 years ago. These faculty members have suffered from a period of low salary increases from the Legislature while salaries for new faculty have increased
Administrators need to do a similar study on a University-wide scale, she said.
She said that some KU departments were becoming "salary ghetto's" in which the faculty salaries were very low in comparison to other departments.
Ghettos are caused by a depressed market for those faculty, little turnover in the department and the perception that the department is not bringing much national recognition to the University, she said.
Zimardz-Swartz said she didn't favor across-the-board raises, which wouldn't take into account the unrewarded merit of some departments. That would make compression worse.
Instead, administrators must make wise decisions, especially if money from the Margin of
Excellence becomes available, to raise salaries that are particularly depressed, she said.
Carl Lande, professor of political science and East Asian studies, agreed with Zimdars-Swartz that compression was a problem but favored some type of across-the-board increase for faculty.
Lande said faculty should receive both cost-ofliving increases and merit increases to keep up with other universities. Faculty members receive raises only on a merit basis determined by each department.
"Raises are not available except through the battle for merit increases," he said.
Lande said that the main reason for salary compression was that the state of Kansas continued to fund faculty salaries at levels lower than at other universities.
"The people who have been here the longest have fallen behind the most," he said.
But Lande said that without competitive salaries for new faculty, the situation at the state universities would be even worse because the quality of the new faculty would be lowered.
Six will receive '88 Hilltopper awards
By Stacy Foster
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Six seniors who have excelled in their academics and campus involvement have been recognized for their efforts by the Jayhawk Yearbook with the Hiltonter award.
the recipients will be guests of honor at a reception at 6 p.m. tonight at the Adams Alumni Center, said Pat McCarthy, business manager for the Jayhawk.
Seniors recognized for involvement
The award was established in the 1930s.
The 1988 Hilltopters were selected by a committee composed of faculty, students from campus organizations and keyboarder editor and business manager.
This year's recipients include:
Residents' signs call for lower speed limit
20
MPH
Kansan staff writer
Bv Christine Martin
"The signs show our entire neighborhood is strongly in favor of changing the speed limit," Entrikin said.
The signs, which read "UP supports 20 mph," were put up Sunday by members of the University Place Neighborhood Association to show their support for lowering the speed limit from 30 to 20 mph, said Neva Enterrik, a member of the association, on Monday.
Temporary speed signs set out Sunday by residents of the University Place neighborhood.
At least 60 small white paper signed lined Indiana, Illinois, Louisiana and Mississippi streets between the University of Kansas and Lawrence High School on Monday morning.
Tim Miller, chairman of the Lawrence Traffic Safety Commission, said yesterday that he didn't sign the signs the association had put up.
Entrikin said that police took the signs down Monday afternoon.
The University Place neighborhood is bordered on the north by Sunyside Avenue, on the south by 19th Street, on the east by Louisiana Street and on the west by Naismith Drive.
"That's called grassroots action, I guess," Miller said.
Not enough commission members were present Monday night to take action, but the commission
will make recommendations on the requests at the April 4 meeting
Enterkin said yesterday that the association might put up more signs before that meeting.
Entrikin said the association had requested at the commission meeting Monday night that the Traffic Safety Commission reduce the speed limit and install traffic lights at the intersection of 18th and Illinois streets.
Entrikin said that because the neighborhood was between KU and Lawrence High School, which
are both on 20-mph routes, motorists tended to speed through the neighborhood.
"The quality of our neighborhood is deteriorating. It's become a speedway." Entrikin said.
Hopefully we'll get something done before something happens."
"People just go too fast. There have been so many close calls.
There are no signs in the neighborhood that post the 30 mph speed limit.
Miller said that if a speed limit wasn't posted, it was 30 mph.
education is not reflected in GPA alone,but the other things you've been involved in.'
- Carla Dechant
F.
Hays senior and Hilltopper
Morris Chang
Chang, Wichita senior, said that he tried to be involved with as many campus activities as he could.
"It's a good way to open your eyes to what is going on out there," Chang said. "You can't be absorbed in your studies all the time."
Chang is a member of Alpha Chi Sigma, a chemistry fraternity. He has received research grants for his work with organic photochemistry. He has also volunteered at Wesley Hospital in Wichita and has been a member of the sophomore, junior and senior honor societies.
Chang is majoring in microbiology and is planning to go to medical school.
Carla Dechant
Dechant, Hays senior, said there was more to her academic life than just books. She wanted to be remembered by the impact she had on others, not just because she was a Hilltopper.
"I'm not strictly academic," Dechant said. "Education is not reflected in GPA alone, but the other things you've been involved in."
ans concert last year.
Dechant said that being involved in extra-curricular activities and working her way through school had made her more appreciative of her education.
Dechant is double-majoring in Spanish and business.
Dechant is vice president of Mortar Board, the senior honor society, and helped organize the Vietnam veter-
Johnson, Leavenworth senior, has been involved in several campus musical activities. He has been in the band and the jazz band for three years.
Carl Johnson
Johnson is also president of Mortar Board, the senior honor society.
Johnson wrote the music for his fraternity, Sigma Nu, in this year's Rock Chalk Revue.
Johnson is majoring in music theory.
Stephanie Quincy
Quincy, Iola senior, has been involved in Student Senate since her freshman year. She has served on the student body and recently certify the student body vice president.
Quincy said that being involved in the student government has given her a better understanding of how the education and students work together.
Quincy is majoring in political science and is planning on going to law school.
Christina Shannon
Shannon, Golden, Colo., senior, said that her main college goal was to be actively involved in her education.
"It's kind of a give and take relation," Shannon. "I think what you give to your university you get more than the more you give the more you get."
Shannon has been involved in Student Senate and College Assembly. She is a member of Mortar Board. She is also the program director and business manager of the KU honor student association.
Shannon is double-majoring in mathematics and economics.
Angela Mever
"Being involved gives you a different perspective on your major and makes you an all-around better person." Meyer said.
Meyer, Kensington senior, said that being involved in the study abroad program has given her insight to the way other cultures live. She is going to Kiel, West Germany, where her graduate study in microbiology.
Meyer has been involved in Alpha Chi Sigma and the German Club. She was selected Phi Kappa Phi, which is approximately 10 percent of the 1988 graduating class.
Meyer is majoring in microbiology and is planning to go to medical school.
New hours on campus during the spring break
For those not vacationing in the spring-break hot spots across the country, here is a list of service hours for campus facilities.
Residence halls will close at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 12 and will open at noon Sunday, March 20.
Robinson Center will be open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. during spring break. On Fridays, the center will close at 5 p.m. on weekends, the center will be closed. Regular hours will resume Sunday, March 20.
**Watson Library** spring break hours will be: March 13 — noon to 5 p.m.; March 14-18 — a.m. to 5 p.m.; March 19 — 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
March 20 — noon to midnight.
■ The Kansas Union will be open 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and will be closed on the weekends. Union Square will be open 7 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The bookstore will be open 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Jaybow will be closed during spring break.
■ The Burge Union will be closed during spring break. The information counter, candy counter and building will be open 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, March 15 and Friday, March 18 to accommodate conferences.
GLSOK receives $1,550 to promote GALA festivities
Gay awareness week gets Senate funds
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Student Senate allocated funds last night that will allow Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas to hold its 15th annual Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week next month.
GALA Week, which was designed to increase awareness of gay and lesbian issues on campus, will be held from April 10 to 15.
event. Some senators wanted to limit the advertising budget for GALA week because they thought the event was so controversial that it would publicize itself.
The Senate deliberated for more than an hour over how much money to allocate to GLSOK to publicize the
The Senate finally decided to give $1.550 to the organization.
GALA Week will begin with a noon march originating from Lawrence City Hall on April 10. The march will conclude at South Park, located in Jefferson Park, between 11th and 13th streets, where a rally will be held.
Liz Lobert, director of GLSKO,
said that GALA Week was designed
to show people that gays and lesbians
do exist in society.
"It is to show that gay and lesbian people are everywhere in all walks of life." Tolbert said.
Other events highlighting the week will be a candeliight vigil at the campanile, a "Wear Blue Jeans if You're Gay Day," and a performance by Hilary Harris, a lesbian comedian.
Carolyn Speer, Nunemaker senator, said that GALA week helped to clear up misconceptions about gays and lesbians.
"The whole homophobia issue is in style again with AIDS going around," Speer said. "It is important to have it because there is an incredible amount of ignorance on campus.
Michael Diggs, off-campus senator, said that when he first arrived at KU he knew nothing of gay and lesbian issues and that he even avoided wearing blue jeans during a past GALA Week because he thought
it was a day for the gay community to solidify.
"I now know that the purpose behind it is that it is ridiculous to chastise people for their sexual beliefs," Diggs said.
In other action, the Senate agreed to play a basketball game against the student senate at Kansas State University. The game, billed as the last game at Ahearn Field House, will be at noon on March 27.
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Thursday, March 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
AIDS bill in Kansas Senate would help reduce hysteria
Faster than the spread of AIDS itself, the AIDS scare has swept the country for the past several years. In a blind panic to control a poorly understood syndrome, parents have boycotted schools that allowed children with AIDS to attend; companies have fired employees with the virus; people have called for quarantines, for mandatory testing, for anything they thought would keep them out of harm's way.
but in traditional conservative Kansas, a Senate committee is taking a stand against the AIDS scare.
is taking a stand against the abuse of Early this month, the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee endorsed a bill marked by its mature approach to the problem. Its most notable feature is its definition of acquired immune deficiency syndrome as a noncommunicable syndrome. That definition would prevent school districts from excluding students with the AIDS virus from the classroom. It could also help fight discrimination in the work place and help reduce the public's unfounded fear of contracting AIDS through casual, non-sexual contact. It would
casual, non-sexual contact. The bill takes further measures against alarmism. It would not require mandatory AIDS testing. It would not require clinics to report names and addresses of people who tested positive for the virus to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, although KDHE had requested mandatory reporting.
reporting. Physicians now must report names of those with AIDS but not of those who only have tested positive for the virus.
First would have defeated its witchcraft. The bill does not close its eyes to the fact that AIDS can be spread. It includes clauses to help protect health-care workers and funeral directors by requiring that they be notified when dealing with AIDS. It also would help victims of sex crimes find out whether their attackers carried the virus.
KDHE officials thought that their request would help them keep track of the spread of AIDS. But, as the authors of the bill recognized, knowledge that their names would be reported if they tested positive would discourage people, especially high-risk people, from voluntarily taking AIDS tests. Thus KDHE's request would have defeated its own purpose.
The Senate committee endorsed a rational response to a problem that will be around for years. The full Senate should embrace the effort to move past the days of panic into a new age in which the problem of AIDS can be faced and overcome.
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Finding ways to pay for college for the young people of Kansas is everyone's business. The bottom line for any society's future lies in the education of its children. That includes college for not only those on the extremes of the financial spectrum, but also for those caught in the category of "can't qualify for a grant and don't make enough for tuition."
Help parents save for college
can't qualify for a gibraltar. The Kansas Educational Savings Plan Trust, KESPT, is a sensible idea whose time has come. A bill that would establish the trust was introduced by two state legislators and is designed to assist those citizens who fall in the lower-middle-class income bracket.
The bill's authors want the fund to be tax-free, but as usual, there are concerns about the Internal Revenue Service.
Under the proposal, the fund would work like a savings account at a bank. The money could be withdrawn for tuition and other expenses when the child is ready to enter college.
there are concerns about the tax-free aspects of the fund so that parents will see some incentive to make the investment in the KEPST. Education always pays dividends in the end.
The bill should, however, allow parents who have invested in the trust and whose children decide to attend an out-of-state school to remain eligible for full benefits of the program. Given the mobile character of today's society, how many residents can say with any certainty fifteen years from now where they will reside or send their children to school?
Any legislation that helps families to provide for the educational future of their children should be supported by all Kansans.
Van Jenerette for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jenerette.
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Vietnam 1975
TELL ME:
HOW IS THIS SUPPOSED TO WORK AGAIN?
Afghanistan 1988
Don't stereotype fundamentalists
Opposing methods of teaching children does not call for padded rooms
Attention, all fundamentalists. The Kansas edutorial board wants us to stop trying to turn our schools into a religious training ground. Okay? Oh, and by the way, we are not allowed to complain about our children being taught secret humanism, evolution, feminism and all those other "isms" we disagree with. Absolutely no speaking against these any-more cool? Great. Oh yeah, and by the way, we are supposed to go sit quietly in a corner. Don't ever speak another word about what we believe; we cannot do that. Oh, one other thing: That corner we are supposed to sit in, well, it has to be in a padded cell because we all must be wacky to believe in what we believe in. So, let's all go join the John Hinkley Jr. of the world in our padded cells and keep our ideas to ourselves, okay? Great. This will make the editorial board happy. Plus, I would not want the downfall of society to be attributed to us fundamentalists.
be attributed. Now let me take my tongue out of my cheek and explain myself. This scenario seems to reflect the editorial board is saying in their edited title "Fundamentalists lose again." One claim the writer makes is that we are trying to return religion to the classroom. Does asking the school to allow their children to read alternative assignments constitute trying to bring religion into the classroom again? I doubt it. In fact, it would be an awful thing to do, to teach (gasp) the Bible in the classroom. I mean, think of how society would decay if school children were
Steve
Gantz
Guest Columnist
taught to love their neighbors as themselves, or that one should turn the other cheek or, humanists forbid, the Ten Commandments. Surely, teaching such ideas would harm us all. **In the**
I am not advocating teaching religion in the classroom; this would be contradictory because if they did teach it, then all of the non-partisans of that religion would be upset about their children learning something they were opposed to. So this leads to a question: Why do so many people criticize parents concerned about what their children are being taught? Would not these same critics try to stop whatever it is that is being taught to their children if it were contrary to their beliefs? Of course they would, so let's try to be consistent.
consistent.
Among the philosophies fundamentalists oppose, as mentioned in the editorial, are evolution, feminism and secular humanism. You all know about evolution versus creation and that whole mess, so enough said. But what about this secular humanism? What's wrong with it? Is it a religion, as many assert? Take a look at the
Humanist Manifestos I and II. When reading these, you sure get the idea that it is a religion in which everything you do is focused on yourself. This is the reason fundamentalists are opposed to the teaching of humanism in the schools.
the teaching of humanities, we don't have to worry about this anmother because we all should lock ourselves in a padded room. What is the editorial board trying to say? That we are all a bunch of loony tunes? This is a popular belief about fundamentalists, probably due to the people that blow up abortion clinics, or Brother Jed and Sister Cindy types who come across campus telling people that they will wind up in hell. It would be safe to say that the large majority of fundamentalists would in no way condone such behavior and, in fact, most fundamentalists do not condone the money-grabbing techniques of so many of the televangelists either. It is risky to characterize a group by the actions of extremists in that group. Why not focus instead on such notable fundamentalists as Billy Graham, Charles Colson or this year's Super Bowl coaches — Dan Reeves and Joe Gibbs?
Dan Reeves and Joe Growen.
So, did you find a corner. Billy Graham? How about you, Coach? OK, great. Get comfortable because we'll be 'here be while because of this harsh sentence put on us by the editorial board.
Good night.
Steve Gantz is a Downers Grove, Ill., senior majoring in geography.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Music shows heritage
Monday's goings-on at Hoch auditorium inspired some thoughts about music and heritage.
tage.
I arrived late, but I was proud to join the "street pulver" outside in a few rounds of hymns. When I got home and listened to the broadcast of the forum on KJHK, I was able to hear the panelists quite clearly, "Entertainment Committee" or no. I assume that the original broadcast served free speech just as well.
A speaker for the KKK went on at some length about racial heritage and the importance of preserving it. As a part-time musician, I have found Celtic music an important link to my heritage. However, this is only the tip of the iceberg.
teering. It's substantial genetic evidence that all of us from Inuit to European to Australian Aborigine, share a common ancestor in Africa. The successful collaborations of artists such as Peter Gabriel and Paul Simon and the growing acceptance of artists such as Fela, King Sunny Ade and Ladysmith Black Mombazo in their own right are encouraging signs that we are getting in touch with our human racial heritage.
David Hull Lawrence resident
Spill handled carelessly
A more haunting and much larger question is why does our society think it's OK to use poisonous such as Ethallfuralin in growing our food? Just spread it out, and it won't hurt us too much? Despite what the chemical companies lead us to believe, pesticides and fertilizers are not completely absorbed by the soil and are slowly making their way into our groundwater supplies. Iowa residents already are facing the problem of groundwater poisoned by pesticides and nitrates, and Kansans are close behind with nitrates as the primary concern.
In Friday's Kansan, it was reported that a tractor-trailer truck carrying the herbicide Ethalfuralin overturned at about 11:15 p.m. March 2. Officials did not discover that the hazardous chemical was leaking until 14 hours later, after it had already made its way into Pony Creek.
It is very tragic that the environmental threat this particular accident caused was not minimized by prompt action. I assume that the highway patrolmen were the first officials to arrive at the scene. There are a few obvious questions that ought to be asked at an accident involving a tractor-trailer. For example, "What was the truck carrying?" "Is it hazardous?" "Do we seem to have any leaks?" Somebody should feel embarrassed about not thinking of these questions until a turnipoff official investigating the accident became dizzy.
We really shouldn't continue to abuse the soil and water that give us life.
Rich Niebaum Lawrence resident
"They shall not be heard," a group of protesters sang at Monday night's forum on free speech.
free speech.
Well, thank you for taking it upon yourselves to decide what I should and should not be allowed to hear. If you had stopped singing, clapping, and stomping for one minute, you would have realized that you were, at the beginning, drowning out the words of a KU professor, not a Ku Klux Klan member. This professor was reciting the sordid, violent history of the Klan. But I guess you thought I shouldn't hear my own teacher tell 2,000 people about the atrocities of the Klan.
Maybe you also would have realized that the audience was doing a fine job on its own of making the Klan feel quite unwelcome at the University of Kansas.
And yes, it admit it, I wanted to hear what the Klan members had to say. Maybe then, I thought, I could better understand how demented minds worked. But I was forced to leave the forum early. You denied me the right to hear, not only the bad, but the good.
And to the KU students who began to cheer when these protesters began to sing, what was going through your heads? Were you only there for the show? You cheered wildly when they began to sing, but when you got bored with that you southered at them to be quiet. Boy, aren't controversial issues fun?
Monica Hayde Prairie Village junior
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 10, 1988
5
Diverse KU orchestra to give premier concert
Bv Kevin Dilmore
The University of Kansas Chamber Orchestra will make its opening performance tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall with a program as diverse as its members.
The free performance, which begins at 8 p.m., includes "Fingal's Cave Overture," by Felix Mendelssohn; "Autumn," by Antonio Vivaldi; "Sinfonia Concertante for Obeo, Clarinet, Bassoon, Horn and Orchestra," by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; and "Symphony No. 4 in B flat major," by Ludwig van Beethoven.
Zhilian Xu, Lawrence doctoral student, will conduct the 46-piece orchestra, which is composed mostly of students who play in the University Symphony Orchestra.
Xu said the chamber orchestra was an outlet for KU students to expand their musical repertoire, an outlet not restricted to music majors.
"We have a few performance
majors, but we have some music education majors and even some business and chemistry majors," he said.
Bradley Hake, Lawrence senior and an architectural engineering major, said he had been with the University Symphony for about five years.
Hake, who will be a featured violist in the Vivaldi concerto, said the new chamber orchestra would provide new arrangements, especially for student soloists.
"It gives an opportunity for students who really love to play, and from that point of view, it is a good experience," he said.
Xu said the chamber orchestra would give KU audiences a chance to hear a lighter form of music.
"Chamber pieces were traditionally written for a private audience, such as a royal family," he said. "The music is more precise and played on a more intimate level."
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6
Thursday, March 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Women's role across history being celebrated this month
By Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
Sacajawa was a Shoshone Indian woman who was guide and interpreter to the Lewis and Clark expedition. She carried her infant son on her back across thousands of miles of rugged frontier.
Harriet Tubman, known as the "Moses of Her People", led hundreds of slaves to freedom on the underground railroad.
Clara Barton nursed wounded soldiers near the front lines during the Civil War and organized the Red Cross in 1881.
Their exploits and those of others like them have not been adequately represented in the history books, said Mr. Jenkins. The study at Studies at the University of Kansas.
In an effort to draw attention to the rule women have played in history and the opportunities we have today, this month is celebrated as Women's History Month.
Barbara Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said that the celebration of women's history began in California in 1977. By 1980 the idea had spread across the country, and last year Congress proclaimed March to be Women's History Month.
"In many ways, women have been invisible," Ballard said. "There are a lot of lost women in our past."
In celebration of women's history, Noakes and Phillip Paludan, professor of history, will present women's constitutional issues March 22 in the Kansas Union's Centennial Room from 7 to 9 p.m.
On March 29, a women's film festival will be in the Kansas Union's Jawhack Room from 7 to 9 p.m.
Noakes said that although women have made significant contributions in history, she thought they had made progress since winning the right to vote in 1920.
Equal Rights Amendment and the increasing feminization of poverty reflect a national policy that does not support women and children, Noakes said.
In the last decade, the defeat of the
said. Lacking adequate policies for child care and maternal leave, the United States is behind most other industrialized countries in this area, she said.
said. Noakes said women needed to be more active participants in the political process.
Ballard agreed. She said that statistics showed that more women vote in the United States than any other group but that that was not reflected in policy-making positions.
Women hold only two seats out of 50 in the U.S. Senate and only 23 seats out of 435 in the House of Representatives.
"One month is not enough time to cover everything, but it is time to focus on some of the most important things," Ballard said.
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NOTICE To All Student Organizations
Any group interested in working a polling place for the April 13 and 14 elections must come to the Student Senate Office in 105 Burge Union to sign up for an interview with the Senate Elections Committee on March 22.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 10, 1988
7
NationWorld
Soviet hijack attempt foiled, but several deaths reported
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Soviet authorities foiled an attempt to commandeer an Aeroflot passenger jet, but a flight attendant, three passengers and most of the armed hijackers were killed. Tass reported yesterday.
"Measures were taken to render the criminals harmless," Tass, the official Soviet news agency, reported. "Most of the criminals were killed; the others were captured and will face trial.
"As a result of the act of terrorism, an air hostess and three passengers were arrested."
It was not clear how many hijackers were involved nor how Soviet authorities stopped the hijacking attempt.
An unspecified number of passengers on board the TUJ-154 were injured and given medical assistance on the spot, according to Tass.
According to Tass, the attempted hijacking occurred Tuesday, which was a national holiday in the Soviet era. The prevalence of International Women's Day.
It was not clear from the Tass reports whether the hijackers tried to seize the plane on the ground or after it was in the air. Tass reported only that the plane was en route from Irkutsk to Leningrad.
HART MAY QUIT RACE: A broadcast report says Gary Hart, who has put travel plans on hold and scheduled a news conference for tomorrow, is ready to quit the Democratic presidential campaign. The report followed a Federal Election Commission announcement that he had not received enough support to continue to be eligible for federal campaign funds.
GUMMAN SLAIN IN COURT: A "violently crazy" man bent on revenge after being convicted of reckless driving and weapons violations returned to the courtroom in Los Angeles yesterday and opened fire, wounding a bailiff before being slain, officials said.
MANITOBA LEADER DEFEATED: Manitoba Premier Howard Pawley, head of the only socialist government in North America, resigned as leader of his party and called a
provincial election yesterday after losing a vote of confidence. Pawley had ruied with a one-seat majority.
News Roundup
MALAYSIA DISSIDENT ARRESTED: Karpal Singh, a leading opposition politician who won release yesterday after more than four months imprisonment without trial, was arrested hours later under Malaysia's Internal Security Act.
CLEAN AIR BILL: A bill revising the Clean Air act most likely would cost the economy $32 billion and up to 600,000 manufacturing jobs, a business group told Congress yesterday. The bill would require tighter pollution controls in several areas, including new controls on the precursors of acid rain from old power plants, and stricter requirements for motor vehicles.
PLAIN ENGLISH URGED: Britain's army of civil servants got new marching orders yesterday; use plain English. Citing such authorities as Confucius and Winnie the Pooh, a Cabinet Office pamphlet appealed to the bureaucrats to be clear and concise in talking to the public and to each other. Britain's 500,000-member civil service has never been known for using a word when three would do, as the pamphlet notes.
BUSH, DUKAKI RICHEST George Bush and Michael Dakikis emerged from Super Tuesday with the most delegates and the most cash in hand. Bush's Republican presidential campaign remains the best-heeled, with several million dollars in the bank. Dakikis has $2 million in the bank and another $1 million on the way in matching funds, campaign officials say.
TIBETAN CAPITAL PATROLLED: Truckloads of police and cars with waiting sirens patrolled the Tibetan capital of Lhasa through the night in an apparent show of force after nAnti-Chinese uprising by thousands of Tibetans, a Western source said yesterday.
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Mar. 13: No worship (spring break)
SUPERIOR UNION ACTIVITIES
FIFTH YEAR ANNIVERSARY
1938-1988
SUA FILMS
March 9,10
Wednesday 7:00 Thursday 7:00
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BACCHUS
Concerning the Health of University Students BACCHUS invites you to:
Woodruff Auditorium/KS Union
- attack myths about college drinking that portray excessive use and drunkenness as norms;
- Feature real fun and socializing in combination with messages of responsibility;
- Significantly influence student drinking as it relates to driving an automobile;
- help students to maximize the quality of their college relationships and to develop positive skills and habits relating to alcohol.
Organizational Meeting Tuesday, March 22 7:00 p.m. Walnut Room / Kansas Union
Speakers: Tom Hanna, Director of the Kansas Alcoholic Beverage Control Division John Lamb, former ABC Director
Topics of Discussion:
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- server liability
- 21 drinking age
- drinking and driving
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8
Thursday, March 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
Leisure
Take a break at the lake!
TOPEKA
CLINTON STATE PARK & MARINA
TO LAWRENCE
CLINTON PARKWAY
WOODRIDGE
BLOOMINGTON
ROCKHAVEN
Clinton Lake and surrounding parks offer outdoor fun
By Stacy Foster Kansan staff writer
It may be a little cool right now to be hanging out at Clinton Lake and testing the water with that new windsurfer, but by the time students return from spring break, it should be warm enough to at least play a little catch near the shore.
Mark Retonde, owner of the Clinton Marina, said he was concerned about people being on the lake this time of year because the water was so cold.
"The weather is starting to turn really nice, but the lake is still in winter conditions," Retonde said. "The water is about 40 degrees, and if someone should fall in the lake, the survivability is not very long, even with a life jacket."
Plenty of good fishing and boating
I remember aid fisherman doesn't mind the cold. Bob Wallace, park manager at Clinton Lake, said that the coves on Clinton Lake were usually good spots to fish for cranbite.
About 7,000 acres of water provide plenty of room for warm-weather activities such as water skiing, sailing and windsurfing. The lake also provides plenty of good fishing right now, Wallace said.
"Crappie is best in the spring when they are spawning," Wallace said. "Catfish can be caught about anytime, and the lake also has bass and walleye."
The marina will open later this month as the weather and lake conditions improve. Retonde said. A small restaurant and grocery store also will be open during
the regular season.
There are numerous boat ramps located at the marina. And for those who don't have boats of their own, the marina even rents boats.
The marina rents pontoons, fishing boats, sailboats canoes and windsurfers.
Retonde said that the lake could be used year-round. Lake use is not restricted, but state regulations are enforced. Fishing requires a license, and there is a limit to the number of lines an angler can use.
A resident fishing license costs $13 for one year. A lifetime fishing license can be purchased for $200. Licenses are available at various places in town, such as K mart Discount Stores, Gibson's Discount Center, and J L's Grocery.
Onshore recreation available, too
But a person doesn't have to be a fisherman to enjoy Clinton Lake. The lake and surrounding parks and campsites provide outdoor recreation for almost anyone.
Campgrounds, hiking trails and beaches on the lake provide diverse resources for activities.
The beach at Clinton State Park has poles for volleyball and plenty of sand for people who enjoy lying on the beach.
The United States Army Corps of Engineers manages the area surrounding the lake. The Corps leases the Clinton State Park land to the State of Kansas Wildlife and Parks.
State money is used to maintain the marina and
The weather is starting to turn really nice, but the lake is still in winter conditions. The water is about 40 degrees, and if someone should fall in the lake, the survivability is not very long, even with a life jacket.'
Mark Retonde owner, Clinton Marina
T
beach in Clinton State Park, and federal money is used to maintain the dam and parks in the other areas.
The federal park includes Bloomington Park, Rockhaven and Woodridge trails.
Entering the state park costs $3 a vehicle or $20 a year. Camping in the state park is an additional $2 to $5, depending on the use of electricity or water.
In the federal parks, entrance is free, camping at Woodridge or Rockhaven is free, and camping at Bloomington costs $6 to $10 depending on use of electrical or water hookups.
The overlook just north of the dam is part of a federal park and is a popular place to study, play games or just relax and camp out.
Between the state and federal parks, more than 30 miles of trail provide diverse hiking terrain for outdoor enthusiasts.
Trails abound for hikers, riders
Woodridge has eight miles of rugged terrain and is ideal for people who want to backpack in the wilderness, said Sherri Richardson, manager of the federal parks.
Rockhaven has more than 30 miles of trails for horseback riding and camping. The main trail at Rockhaven is eight miles long and leads to the dam. It separates into upper and lower trails near the dam.
Bloomington is one of the most developed Corps parks, Richardson said. Campers can choose from more than 600 camping sites. Some have electrical hookups.
"The trails are most used in the spring and fall when the weather is best for riding horses," Richardson said.
The hiking trails are open year-round, but other areas of the park won't open until April 1. The outlet park, which provides group picnic shelters and camping areas, will open April 1.
SUA rents camping equipment
Students and faculty who don't have camping equipment but who want to take advantage of the park's facilities can rent camping packages at the Student Union Activities office at the University of Kansas.
Gene Wee, SUA adviser, said that people could rent almost everything needed to camp. Sleeping bags, tents, frying pans and lanterns are all available through SUA's Wilderness Discovery packages.
For $20 a week, a person can rent a two-person tent, backpack, cooking kit and a store.
"Rentals usually pick up for spring break. It's still not too late to rent equipment this year." Wee said
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 10, 1988
Sports
9
Doubleheader split yields hot offense, chilly defense
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas baseball team played its best game of the season in game one of yesterday's doubleheader against Northwest Missouri State, winning 18-5.
The Jayhawks exploded offensively for 13 hats, and they committed no defensive errors for the first time this season.
But their concentration lapsed as the afternoon turned to evening.
Kansas committed four errors in the second game, the last one allowing Northwest Missouri State to score in the seventh win and win 7-6.
"I didn't think we sustained our concentration," said coach Dave Bingham. "We went from our best game of the season to our worst. We had the chance to win the second game, but we didn't execute in the seventh."
With the bases loaded and the score 5-5, sophomore Craig Stoppel's wild pitch let one run score. The ensuing throw at home plate was mishandled, allowing another run.
"In the end, we have to pitch and play defense." Bingham said. "They were very aggressive."
Northwest Missouri State led 7-5 going into the bottom of the seventh.
and we gave up two runs. We've got inexperience on the mound, but I'm getting sick of saying that."
After junior Steve Dowling's one-run home run with two outs, senior Rocky Helm singled and junior Dan Benninghoff walked. The stage was set for sophomore Jeff Spencer.
But Spencer struck out swinging on a fastball for the game's final out.
Stopper was the losing pitcher. He relieved freshman Darrin Harris in the top of the sixth after Harris pitched five and one-third innings.
"Harris pitched a good game, and I didn't come in and do the job I should have." Stoplad said. "I felt fine in the office, but I used this as a learning experience."
pitchers. Harris recorded eight strikeouts and allowed five earned runs. The winning pitcher, Monte Johnson, pitched a complete game for Northwest Missouri State.
Junior Tom Buchanan led the Jayhawk offense in the second game, hitting two home runs and collected five RBI.
"We just weren't getting base runners on late in the game," Buchanan
said. "We were hitting his pitches early, but we didn't get the pitches we wanted late. We weren't too disciplined at the plate."
Power hitting highlighted yesterday's first game, when Kansas hit four home runs and scored 15 earned runs.
KANSAS 18 NW Missouri State 5
NWSUM 202 100 0-5 7
MUSCAL 202 100 0-5 7
Kansas 115 1010 x-18 13 0 NW Missouri State: Kregel, Wolters (4), Nagano (6) and Goeken; Kansas: McLeod, Shaw (7) and Menter. W-Lecord (2-0), L-Kregel (1-1). SV-None. 2Bs-Kansas: Dowling, Helm, Bengoffen and Menter; 3Bs-NW Missouri State: Segel. HFS-NW Missouri State: Spurgeon (1) and Wilkofsk (2); Kansas: Benghouth (2), Ruelas (1), Mentzer (1) and Simmerson (2)
KANAS 6, NW Missouri State 7
NMWSU
100 001 2-7 5
NWUW
100 001 2-7 5
NW Missouri State; Johnson and Spurgeon;
Kansas; Harper, Stoppe (6) and Boesen, W-
Johnson (10), L-Stoppel (0-1), SV-None, 2Bs-
NW Missouri State; Czanski-Kansas; Kansas;
Heim, 3Bs-Bone; HRs-Kansas; Buchanan 2
(2), Dowling (9)
GALENA
Janine Swiatkowski/KANSAN
Kansas center fielder Rocky Helm dives safely into home plate as Northwest Missouri State catcher Kevin Goeken prepares to apply a late tag.
Violence disrupts N.J. prep basketball
The Associated Press
WOODBURY, N.J. - Officials blamed gang members and non-students yesterday for violence at high school basketball games in New Jersey, where a 16-year-old boy was fatally shot after one contest and another match was played in secret to avoid threatened trouble.
"Parents shouldn't have to worry about their kids being beaten up or stabbed or shot at a basketball game," said Richard Luttrell, former president of the state athletic directors association.
On Tuesday, a former student at
Patterson's Kennedy High School was fatally shot after a regional championship game at Hackensack High School between Kennedy and Passaic County Technical and Vocational High School of Wayne.
A 19-year-old Hacksens man was charged with the killing, police said.
The shooting followed a disagreement in the school parking lot between boys from Paterson and Hacksacken about a girl, said Hacksacken Police Lt. Anthony Leggieri.
Robert Lindsey of Paterson, who was stranded with three other youths after the game without a ride back to Paterson, was killed by a shot in his
face from a .22-caliber gun as he walked along the street five blocks from the school, Leggieri said.
Also on Tuesday, the threat of gang violence forced officials to move a game between longtime rivals Atlantic City High School and Camden High School to a location 30 miles away.
Lutrell, who also is athletic director for Willingboro schools, said authorities moved the game from Willingboro High School after receiving word that non-students from Atlantic City and Camden planned a fight with automatic weapons about a shooting several months ago.
The game was played under police guard at Overbrook High School. Coaches learned of the location only when they boarded team buses and were handed envelopes with directions to the school.
On Dec. 27, a woman was shot and four men were slashed or stabbed during a fight in the crowd at a tournament in Absecon, disrupting a game and forcing the last two days of the tournament to be canceled.
17 compete for spots on KU football team; participate in off-season workout program
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Myrick, Chicago freshman, said he was excited at the thought of playing college football. He is one of 17 KU men selected to participate in the Kansas football off-season workout program.
When Byron Myrick watched members of the Kansas football team last week during its workouts, he pictured himself out there with them.
"I get pumped up watching the team work out, and I hope to be out there with them soon," Myrick said. "I get a little nervous seeing what they have to do and how big they are, but it is something that eventually will go away."
Myrick said he wanted to be a wide receiver. Before the open tryouts Feb. 26 at Anschutz Sports Pavilion, he was on a very physical workout program was in good condition for the tryouts. He likes to jog, lift weights and swim to keep in shape.
Myrick said a big reason why he decided to try out was his sister's influence.
"my sister Rhonda has been encouraging me to try out ever since I came to KU," Myrick said. "She is a dance major at KU and is very athletic. I respect her ideas a lot, and I think with her encouragement, I have a good chance of making it."
The 17 men have been on the
workout program, which continues until tomorrow, since Feb. 29. The program includes running and agility drills, but not weightlifting.
During the workout, the men sprint from one drill to another, with the coaching staff enthusiastically shouting at them.
KANSAS
"I am real impressed with the new coaching staff," Myrick said. "I think they are well organized and very energetic. I am confident things are going to work out for me."
Myrick said that although the 17 men each were trying to secure a spot on the football team, there was a spirit of friendship developing among them.
"We all want to be out there with them, representing this school," Myrick said. "We have pep talks in the locker room to try to get each other fired up. There is a good rivalry developing among us, and we are pushing each other to do our best."
Kansas offensive coordinator Pat Ruel said that after spring break the team would begin spring practices and that if the men could make it through the off-season program, they would have a chance of making the team.
Myrick, out of breath after a workout, said the toughest thing he would have to deal with during spring break was trying not to relax too much.
Byron Myrick works out with other KU students competing for positions on the Kansas football team.
"I'm going home for spring break, and I have to be careful not to forget about my big challenge
when I come back. I really want to do well, and I am confident that I will."
Lady Broncos, 0-26, upbeat despite losses
The Associated Press
EDINBURG, Texas — This team must really love basketball.
It has been more than a year since Pan American's Lady Broncs won a game, and their reputation as the worst team in the nation follows them everywhere.
Players say some teams don't even bother to warm up before playing the Lady Broncs, who ended their regular season at 0-26 and 0-9 in American South Conference play.
Despite their six-place ranking in a field of six, they get a shot at the conference title tonight against third place Southwestern Louisiana, 17-10 and 5-4. Louisiana Tech hosts the tournament in Ruston, La.
the outstretched
Statistically, it should be the Lady
Broncs' last gasp of the year. Yet
something other than the thrill of
victory kept them picking themselves up.
"If they weren't so feisty, we probably would have folded a long time ago," said Becky De Los Santos, a volleyball coach who inherited the team last summer after the coach quit. "They're a proud group."
One of their most humiliating losses came Feb. 22 at Louisiana Tech. Without ever playing their five starters, the Lady Techsters defeated Pan Am 98-21.
Lady Techsters coach Leon Barmore's decision not to use his starters moved Pan American Sports Information Director Jim McKone to write a letter to Barmore thanking him for the act of mercy.
"You could have run up 200 points on us," McKone wrote. "You could have gained a national record. You could have netted a lot of ink nationally. Instead, you did the absolutely right thing.
"I have written sports for daily papers since 1949, and we have the worst team I have ever covered, in any sport, at any level. But they are human beings, trapped by unfair circumstances."
The Lady Broncs were not prepared for what awaited them this season, when Pan American joined the newly formed ASC in NCAA Division I.
Suddenly the Lady Broncs contended not only with nationally ranked teams in the conference but also faced four Southwest Conference
schools with six-figure budgets backing their women's basketball programs.
Pan American, with a women's basketball budget of $52,118, just couldn't compete in the new conference, particularly in the area of scholarships.
When De Los Santos took over, she learned that no one had been recruited. By the time De Los Santos was able to call high schools around the state, all of the potential players had signed with other teams.
"i opened the equipment room, and he didn't have any equipment, no shoes, no shorts, no tops, no socks," she said.
An extra $15,000 added to the scholarship budget last summer was too
The team also lacks height. The tallest player is 6 feet and the shortest player is 5-3.
Players say that on the road they ignore the snide remarks and condescending attitudes of schools they face.
"A lot of times we'll look down at the other team, and they'll be laughing and stuff like, 'Pan Am. Big deal,' said junior forward and center Cheryl Boyle, the top scorer and one of five players who has been out with injuries lately on the 12-woman team.
Player Sharon Wiley said, "We've even seen players sitting in chairs during warm-ups. It takes a lot of guts to lose 26 games and still come back."
De Los Santos said spectators at Arkansas State in Jonesboro. Ark. started whistling "La Cucaracha," referring to the short, predominantly Hispanic Lady Broncs.
"There was a crowd telling us, 'Why don't you go back to Mexico where you came from?' De Los Santos said. "The kids were saying, 'Don't they know where Texas is?'?"
Wiley said she keeps playing because she knows that someday the team will win a game.
"I have fun," she said. "If I didn't have fun, I wouldn't be out here."
Gueldner, Newton made most of chances to salvage season
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Kansas was holding on to a 64-63 lead with just seconds left in the game. When the final buzzer sounded, it was guard Jeff Guelder who prevented the Wildcats from scoring a last-second desperation shot. He stood in the middle of the court, clutching the ball to his chest after stealing it from Kansas State forward Fred McCoy.
It was a triumphant scene for the Jayhawks last month on the floor of Ahearn Field House.
KU coach Larry Brown had been juggling lineups all season, trying to find the combination that would work consistently. When he inserted Guelden into the lineup, moving sophomore Kevin Pritchard to the point guard position, it was the 10th different combination for the team.
It was only Gueldener's fifth start ever for Kansas, and already he was making an impact.
This one worked. "I 'always had confidence in Jeff,' Brown
This one worked.
said. "I never anticipated him stepping forward and being a starter now. But he always does exactly what you want him to do. The more kids you like that, the stronger your team will be."
Gueldner, a 6-foot-5-inch sophomore out of Charleston, Ill., was labeled the "sleeper" of his recruiting class. But as it turns out, he is becoming much more than the back-up guard he was last season.
"He never told me that I was going to start," Gueldner said of Brown. "Coming in, I was planning on being a back-up player and a role player. When he recruited me, that's more or less what I was going to be.
"The chance arose for me to play more, and I got a good opportunity against Okla
One primary role for Gueldner has been to make team leader Chris Piper's job a little easier.
"He tries to get people where they need to be, and I try to keep myself in a position where he doesn't have to yell at me and people don't have to worry about my position," Gueldner said
forward Milt Newton said, "Jeff is a big part of the team. He calms us down, and he's always in the right place at the right time."
Gueudner missed only one start out of the last nine games. He sat out the game against Oklahoma after he sprained his left ankle during practice the day before. It was his first injury ever, but after sitting out for only two practices, he was back in the lineup three days later for the game against Duke.
Out of the eight games he started, Kansas won seven. The chemistry is there, but Gueldner does not believe he is the reason why the Jayhawks finished so well at the end of the regular season.
"A lot of it is coincidence, you know, because a lot of things started happening well for us," Gueldner said. "Some of the players started gaining confidence in the way they were playing. When you add that to the way Danny's been playing, coincidentally we've been winning some games.
"I don't think I'm a major factor. I'd like to match Coach Brown can put me out there,"
and it won't hurt the team any, and I can play my position consistently so he doesn't have to worry about me."
Junior forward Milt Newton is the other current starter who played a lot off the bench last year. Before this season, he had started only three games in his career. After senior captain Jake Dugan out for the season in the last week of December, Newton got his chance to prove himself.
"When he got hurt, I just did the same things I did all season long." Newton said. "Every chance I got to go into a game, I'd come out with something positive. When Archie got hurt, I knew someone had to step forward."
Newton has weathered through most of the lineup changes, but there were tough times made tougher when K-State broke the 55-game home court winning streak which he had been so much a part of. Then the Jayhawks had to deal with a four-game losing streak.
"It was hard to adjust, not because of the lineau. but because the confidence was
lacking," Newton said. "I don't care how many lineups you have, having Danny on there counts for a lot.
"When we lost to K-State, even though we played pretty hard, the Streak was broken and that meant a lot to the guys. When we went through the losing streak, we didn't know how to deal with it.
"Before the Streak was broken, I wasn't really thinking much about it. I thought it would be no big deal. But when the Streak was broken, I wouldn't know what kind of an effect it would have on me."
Newton has turned out to be one of the team's best three-point shooters, launching crucial baskets that helped win some games toward the end of the season.
"When I started, I felt really comfortable," Newton said. "I felt like I belonged out there. I knew I had it in me all the time. It was just a case of going out in games and proving to Coach Brown that I could do what he wanted."
---
Editor's note: this is the third of a four-part series examining the 1987-88 Kansas men's basketball team.
10
Thursday, March 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Herzog rejects chance to buy Clark's home
The Associated Press
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Whitey Herzog was sorry to see Jack Clark but. Not sorry enough to buy his ex-first baseman's house.
According to the St. Louis Cardinals manager, Clark asked him if he would like to make an offer on his estate in suburban St. Louis soon after spurning the National League champions and signing a free-agent deal with the New York Yankees in January.
"You know what he does?" Herzog said from the Cardinals' spring training complex. "Calls me up after he
signs with the Yankees and wants me to buy his home in St. Louis. Here he is, my best player, and he leaves me, he breaks my heart, and now he wants me to buy his house.
"First of all, I couldn't afford his house," Herzog added. "And with Jack gone, I will not be able to afford the one I've already got."
Clark's query, though badly tired,
wasn't totally out of line from a
business standpoint. Herzog, who
lives in Independence, Moe, near
Kansas City, is in the market for a
second home, and is contemplating
building in south St. Louis County.
joked that his ideal home would have one bedroom and five garages.
Herzog, an avid fisherman, has
"I need a place." Herzog said, "where I can put everything away at the same time."
In any case, Clark's house, which carried an estimated $500,000 price tag, didn't fit the bill.
"I went and looked at it," Herzog said Tuesday. "It was a helluq house. It had everything you want and a beautiful pool. But when you're looking at a house that costs that
much, you'd better get what you want."
Herzog was openly bitter towards the Cardinals' management after losing Clark, who hit 35 home runs and drove in 106 runs in an otherwise light-hitting lineup. Herzog said that Clark wasn't all business when the two talked.
"He told me he enjoyed the years he spent in St. Louis and told me how much he enjoyed playing for me," Herzog said.
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The
The University of Kansas Department of Theatre and Film Presents
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with a special introduction and commentary by the director
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
**'avilights in "America"', a speech by Jua-
llen Williams, author of Eyes on the Prize, will be
given March 10, 8 p.m. Kansas University Ballroom.
Math. Engineering and Physical Sciences Majors
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Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop.
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Wesite, March 21, 7 p.m. 4:38,
Wesite, Free, Student Assistant Center,
81-804, 464-64)
"the right to shelter, the place we call home, is one of the most highly valued principles of our society." - Jane Rowe
Liz Gowdy, spokesperson, speaks on *CORPORATION AND SEXUAL ORIENTATION* Wed. April 16 at the Lawrence Tenants Association. Sponsored by the Lawrence Tenants Association.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Maas.
We're always open.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 10, 1988
11
TOP PRIORITY
HAVE A GREAT SPRING BREAK!!
Paid for by TOP PRIORITY
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
Light for any Occasion. 841-1493
"EXCELLENT. A PIECE OF PERFECT GLASS ENGINISHED ONLY."
MUSIC ************** MUSIC ************** MUSIC
Red House Audio - D.J. SERVICE, 8-track studio.
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizardry. Call
Brad 749 1275.
ENSHRINED ON FILM." - Jami Bernard, NEW YORK POST
"TWO THUMBS UP!"
- SISKEL & EBERT AND THE MOVIES
TENNESSEE WILLIAMS THE GLASS MENAGERIE
PG A CINEMAS LOS ANGELES FILM STUDIO
STARTS TOMORROW!
LIBERTY HALL 749 1912
LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATRE
心
S
my name is Alice
A
March 3,4,5 ... 8 pm
6 ... 2:30 pm
10,11,12 ... 8 pm
13 ... 2:30 pm
RESERVATIONS 843-7469 Contains Adult Material
FOR RENT
Attic room available. Nice house next to campus.
Share kitchen, bath. $235 plus deposit. 824-6579.
AVAILABLE MDIMETAIELY. Bedroom for rent
very close to campus; on bus route. Off street
parking. $125-$190 + PW4-512 after 6:00 PM.
Avail Apl 1.2 bdram p 414 wkdb. yard pets $15
Available immediately - Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Call 741-307-9128
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
contract
* Swimming pool
swimming pool Free basic cable
- 10 or 12 month
- Exercise Weightroom
- Energy efficient
- Laundry room
* Fire place
- On-Site Management
841-5444
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
EDDINGHAM
PLACE
Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming house on 1344 Kentucky share kitchens & laundry $120 + depaul. $149 - Leave messages
*Got a Group.* Common Goals: Spacious well-maintained house on quiet block near town & campus. 9 bedrooms w/ multiple kitchens & baths. D included, available 6-18$ 1,250
Looking to Rent?
We have: apartments rooms houses
Lynch Real Estate
call Marie at 843-601 or 841-3323
P.O. Box 90072
1711 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS
Completely Furnished Studio. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 505-2852, or 749-2845. Mastercraft Management
Roody studio apartment in farm style home with large kitchen WD hookup. Nice yard. Old West Lawrence. Easy bus to campus. $285 heat paid. 811-4144
*Excellent location, 2 bedroom apt in fourplex carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low utilities, available April 1, $10.00 at 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4242.
Female grade. student seeking roommate to share
2 bedroom 2 bath apt. Summer/Fall #196/month
plus electricity. Call Melody 864-4174 daytime.
862-931 weekends, evenings.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall
81-9248 88 I smoke, call Sarah evening
81-9248
One bedroom West Meadow condo - carpet, pool,
microwave, fireplace, room - no room!
$1850!
MASTERCHARTS offer beautifully furnished classrooms. Students are designed with the K.U. student in mind. Call 408-653-2001 or visit www.mastercharts.org.
One bedroom duplex within walking distance of
one bedroom air low, utilities $25 a month.
Availability $75.
One bedroom kit. Close to campus available
at Mark 749-1404, after 5 o'clock p.m.
Mark 749-1404, after 5 o'clock p.m.
One room available now! Share kitchen and
bathroom space necessary 842-3844
distance toward KU.
Reserve your room for summer or fall at all locations. Call 749-6871 or use the forerunner. Call 749-6871 or use the forerunner.
Room for rent in nice clean O.W. L.p. apt., prive-
room and bath & 875 inc. fee. Female
occupancy. Valid from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31.
For female in great house. Clean big rooms. celli, fume, free use of bathroom. KU $1,500. KU $7,395. 78% repayment. For Rent: 38' l/12 bathroom duplex w/vaulted celli, dishwasher, Dishwasher, AC disposal, espacial. BK $4,879.
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts.
furn. or unfurn.
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
SUNRISE APARTMENT
- Studios
- Studios
- 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom Apartments and Townhouses
- Garages
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 11-5
SUNDANCE
BRAND NEW! Sundance II
Coming to you this fall!
MASTERCRAFT
NUMMER SUBLET: Affordable, new one-
room apartment, near campus,
lushbear,洗衣箱, 84-10773.
Super energy efficient
* On KW
Sublease 2BD, 1H. Apt. at Eddingham Place
$25 per month, sublease until May 31.
Can today to re-
your unit for next fall!
Offered by:
Campus Needed to share 23D House. Close to Campus 12/month. Available Now/Summer.
- Completely furnished
- Located on the old
841-5255 * 841-1212
three bedrooms to avail. April; Carpenter,
replaces, 3 pools, some pets, cable
connection, carpet, fridge, dishwasher.
FOR SALE
Sanctuary site
- Completely furnished
* Located on the old
On RU bus route Call today to reserve
640K XT clone w/drive. Hercules, comm board
& amber monitor 850. 941-2657.
App. $10.00 per person if a 2 bedroom hikery plate
April $10.00 per person If interested, contact 749-8912
or call (314) 567-1200.
Stereo 5 channel kit £22, remote TV converter £30,
stereo fm/casette walkman £5, interested?
Classic packs for #75, *74 Dodge dart* 200, *Marshall*
$25, *Mercury Marey pad* 75, *Cadillac Deville* 300, *black leather jacket* 100, 841-267
evenings.
Apple iPad Computer System, 128K, bcol card.
Apple iPhone Computer System, 128K, bcol card.
printwriter. Print Mailer. MultiSync. Flight
system.
75 Crestline Home .. 12' x 20' sk. 28C Extra inside panels .. 36" x 36" sk. 29C Extra inside panels .. 316" x 36" after 318 prn, or inquire 343" x 36" after 360 prn
FOR SALE - Roundtrip airline ticket to Albuquerque, NM - For Spring recess Very cheap.
Going to Copper Min for Spring Break? I have one ticket for sale, $19 price call Mark B41-84240. Head skis, boots, poles, bindings 120, JCVP tape deck 25. Techniques receive 25. Call
****MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
512 E. 91, 749-4961
Obsborne power PC and IBM printer. #425 or best offer. Call Done evenings at 814-4793.
MUST SELL Foy Rulie 12 Speed Great Condition.
Great gift price $79.95 $49.95
Nagel - Neon - Feiner Mountain Bike - Electronics waterbars - Everything must be safe
One way ticket to Denver for sale. $100. Leaves
Friday. March 11. If interested, please call Jenny
Rock-n-tell - Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday.
Quarantil Flick Market, 811 New Hampshire.
Spring Break! Miami! For sale roundtrip ticket
1922 Nissan Stanza, Red 5-Spd, 4-Dr, Hatch-back,
a/c-jam-fm, Clean New, Clearn Must sell.
Students/Rommates/Married: Beautiful,
spacious, mobile home. Quiet Area, Privacy.
Separate Exercise Room, Ample Storage, Resale Value, Many Extras. 749-3823
YAMAHA CD PLAYER – Must sell before Spring
1984. 600 CD player $100 vareer f 748-3687 or
844-600 Bill Gulf
18.022 Nissan Datum 310GX, SDF, 2-hr, Hatchback,
5:30 p.m.
3:40 p.m.
AUTO SALES
1952 Fiero SE, 6 Cly. 4, Sp. Silver, Top of
l stereo, 35.0 miles, 749.0, 841-3465.
vans - Astro $3,552. Caravan $9,681.
Tahoe $2,700. Tahoe $4,299.
$10,566. Mid-size Ships SIU 6,140. Ram $40,
$8,126. Ranger $6,446. Full-size Chevys Chev
Cheyenne C10 $8160. Dakota $5,125. F 150 $
$8,365. Warranties, Botes, Financing You
options,包购 package, colors, you want
843-849
Firebird, Red. 1 to 4, 6v automatic, 18,000
a.m. after 10 p.m. 1-611-9344
a.m. after 10 p.m. 1-611-9344
83 Saab 900 Turbo 6100 miles auto 3 dr. electric
/windows/roofs $50, 843-655-685
Graduate Sale, 83 Escort, new tires, good Cond.
AC $2.300 B. O. after 6:00 mw 843-2394
cars. Call Aaron at 841-4629
Great Deal Sale $99.00 Per item Good Deal
Car can't start? Mobile service on foreign cars. Call Aaron at 811-262-9300.
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
plans, repel d' summers. Your area. Buyers'
homes, vehicles, rentals.
HELP WANTED
Must sell Ford Lyme 1984 5-speed AM-FM air
car 24,740 m/year well clean. 300 am-
848-9765
Aerobic Instructor Needed Experience
necessary for appl for 849.1881 M.4.M.F.
AIRLINES NOW HIRING Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service
Listings. Salaries to $50k. Entry level positions.
Call 805-687-6000 A-7938
BE ON T.V. Many needed for commercials
Children toto. Casting info (1) 805-887-6000 Extn
POSTAL HOBJS: $2,964 Start! Prepare Now!
Workshop HOBJS: 105318 Prepared Exam
Workshop (91) 944-444 Ext 153
chickigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canning, sailing, waterkisting, gymnastics, camping, efforts, tennis, golf, sports, campers, camping, efforts, dramas, OR riding, maintenance, maintenance, $ salary $ more or plus R B. Mar & Careman, 1768 Midge, NIFL, 61003, 312-444-244.
Female student wanted for house sitter and older child care. During 1st and 3rd weeks of April.
Easy hours. Salary plus expenses. References required. Call 842 1376, 10 am - 5 pm.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16.00-$49.25/jr. You
Hire Your Hour (865) 878-0000 or 1. Rf798 for
the day.
Graphic Design temporary unclassified position. March 18 June 17, 1988, 50-80% $850 - 100 prepare artwork for publications; handle all details of design process and work with little supervision; work with a publications team. Evaluate visual communications curriculum or a related discipline or equivalent professional experience; design experiences in university visual communications experience designs in University Publications and
experience designing University Publications and working with printers; experience with Mactin-printing and printing equipment, Letter, Office of University Relations, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, 60648, 913-844-6115
Immediate openings to update Lawrence/Kansas City 1888 Directory. Conduct brief door to door interviews. No selling. No experience needed. We need a Bachelor's degree in an area of increase. Hours flexible. Apply in person only after 9 a.m. Monday-Friday. RL, Polk & Co., 90 Kenton Suite, 204A. EOE MF
Wanted kitchen utility help, flexible hours. Call
Frank. Lawrence Country Club 843-286-3981
Kansas Union Food Service is hiring part-time cashiers $4.10 per hour, 3 a.m.; Sunday 10:30 am - 6:30 pm; Saturday 4pm - 10pm. M.F. 3:30pm - 10:30pm. Must have previous cashing experience. Must have verifiable references. Apply in person at the Kansas Union Personnel Office, Level 5. EOE.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amendment Park NOW accepting applications for Resort Management. For information & application, write national Recreation Cooperation, P.O. Box 8074 Hilton New Orleans.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Investment Parks New acceptance applications for the resorts. For information & application. write National Recreation, P. O. Box 8071.
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy working with children in your talents, Transportation is interested in your talents. Transporta-
Resorts Employment Newsletter - All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, California, Nevada/Arizona. Montana Tahoe, SKI, Golf, Vacation Resort Cities. Minnesota Tahoe, Lake Superior, No. Lake Tahoe. Calif. 9167 9164-574-7526
mer youth campers, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15-August 21. For an application and interview call Jeff at 800-451-2070. Ext 310
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekend hours available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to operate broadcast equipment. Contact Audio-
Summer interns, out of state $1600/month, great
experience for more info, call 842-1776.
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred but not essential. Stability, dependability, and resume to PO Box 1285, Lawrence KS 60044
World Sport Schwimk Bike For Sale. Good Condition call 859-5599
PERSONAL
Wanted: Full-time or Part-time morning worker with 1 hour of job experience. For more info: www.morningwork.com
L. F朗德. A woman with a slow hand, a warm heart, a cruel wrist and cool head. Safety wayne to B Field and back. Be good or be quiet. Thanks for 28 great days. Love, Redpath.
C: You know me, but I don't know you. Interested in meeting. Blue Eyes.
A.B.C.: "For me, the single song 'God suggests'
that we slippery, shady, squall, foul
and grotesque."
*erris: Happy Birthday! Yell at me and I beat you up. You hit the beach and don't forget the towel. Hawaii tropic, fine jewelry, goodear. We love you. P.S. P.S. we should have won. Love You Glenn
The girl who sat in seat F Thursday night, the girl who sat in seat G Friday night, the girl who sat in seat H Thursday night, you are interested call 844-767-6468. The gin in seat I is at 200 W. 15th St., Room A.
To my Beta Buddies: Thank tans for all of the laughts! You guys are great! Love, Gerte. Trish, Laura, (roomies) Court, Cindy, Shell, Remember a-m-a-j! I miss you. Kim. Remember a-m-a-j! I miss you. Kim.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
JOHN McGRATH
BUS. PERSONAL
BARRETTES/BARRETTES New selection just
House E 8, F 12, Spring Break BEACH
BEACH HOUSE E 8, F 12, Spring Break BEACH
Did you get your sunglasses for Spring Break?
New styles in at the ECT, SHOP, 732 Mass.
... until un snared experience and mutual support so that you can do or fees. Overwatches Anonymous, Moncton, ND. **Mission Hospital, 325 Maine.** For confidential information contact person. Writa PO Box 3424 Lawrence 64093
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-821. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Important passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
Identification card. ID. Dine portraits.
Swell Studio. 749-161-8
SENSUAL LINGERIE & $ SWIMWEAR. Get your full color catalog today. Send $ 5 includes postage and handling to: SATIN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 17501-180, LENEXA, KS 66215
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
career and career completion
success. Transportation provided
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY
(formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd
March 9 - March 15
Lowenbrau 6-pack $3.24
Bud 12-pack $5.74
Coors Light 12-pack $5.74
Old Style case $5.65
Old Style Light case $6.99
Old Mill case $6.99
Old Mill Light case $7.36
MeisterBrau case $5.99
Wiedemann case $5.79
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
Bloom City Comics & books
Role-playing, game games
and miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more!
Do you want
Do you want
$30,000 / year
It begins with a quality resume
We can also print from your IBM™ or Meintosh™ disk.
See us
Kingston Printing
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
Don't steal 'em from Uncle Ed!
Vintage Sunglasses are Choice!
Assorted colors frames and lenses
Assorted color frames and lenses.
TT
Find your style at
The Etc. Shop
Shop 732
Massachusetts
843-0611
TUTORING TUTORING *65.50/hr*, MATI STATISTICS and PHYSICS, B.S. Physics, M.A Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience cal 81-3064
FROM SOFA TO SLEEPER
WITH COMFORT AND
EASE!
BLUE HERON
Immortal Sleep Designs
957 Massachusetts 841-9445
You'll try it you love it, become glamorous with a beautiful 'Boudour Portrait' from Photo's Picture Book. Build your own Photography Painting Assistance, Creative Photography Technique and produce alarming results. 749-706. SCOTLAND
SERVICES OFFERED
**$50 Value when presented toward patient new patient experience.**
**Spinal Exempt.** Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park 1111-801-6787
MATH TUOK since 1976, M.A. $/hour, 843-9032
(n.m.)
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwinter Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
Overland Pa. Call 843-821-6500
843-821-6500 Confidential help/free pregnancy
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All Levels. Call Dennis
842-1055
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Pregnant? We can help. Planned Parenthood or Greater Kansas City provides confidential outpatient abortions. Don't be afraid to ask for the help you need. Call (818) 756-2277.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome
processed within 24 hours. Complete B/W services,
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206.84-4707
Job-writing resumes, cover letters. 12 years experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call 749-6446.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or two large. Accom-
panies and affords typing and wordprocessing.
Uses a basic text editor.
1. Reliable Typing Service Term papers,
2. Reliable Typing Service term papers, iBD.
3. Electronic Typewriter 842-3246.
Word processing. Former editor transforms your word processing. Former editor punctuates and grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type: 843-263, days or evenings AAA TYPING: Word processing, spellcheck.
AAA TYPING: Word processing, spellcheck,
AAA TYPEING: After 5 p. m. T-FMP.
weekend nights, 842-1924.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in termine
accurately; meticulous correcting Selectric
spelling correction. 845 9564
CAMP COUNSELORS - Positions Available:
Assistant Director, Wrangler, Waterfront Staff,
General Counselors, Contact Outdoor Program
and Food Services.
Wichita, Ks. 67280, (318) 645-8353 EOE
Wichita, Ks. 67280, (318) 645-8353 EOE
CAMP DIRECTOR -- Girl Scout Camp Wiedemann is seeking a seasonal director. Send resume to or contact "Outdoor Program Director" 614-578-6200, 2699 N. Woodlaw, Wichita, Ks. 6208E, EOE
For professional typing/word processing, call
professional j414-1000. Special spring special 12/page doubled,
space, padded, or customizable.
Call R.J.'s typing service for all of your typing
requests before 9 p.m. please
Call me for your typing needs. Reasonable rates
842-4686 before 10 p.m.
Quality typing. Includes excellent spelling, gram-
marly punctuation and appropriate service
up pick delivery - 843-976-0177
www.delivery.com - 843-976-0177
Professional typist w/ 15 years experience. Close to
campus. Peggy 842-8998.
rING PLUS assistance with composition,
piring, dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
dissertations.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Proding.
Term papers, tapes, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists, Letter qualification.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE. Letter quality printer, special student rate, spell check
TOP-NOT SERVICES 843-5062
RESUME SERVICES – professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover business cards, and typesetting and graphics for your resume. Pay the hours, and at the $t cost of Kinko's Call 842-3867. If no answer leave message on machine.
THE FAR SIDE
Typing at a reasonable rete. CALY, BARBARA at 845-0117
the WORDOCTORS. Why pay for typing when they are doing it? A review of 1983, 493-317, locates resume, law review. Since 1983, 493-317.
Babysitter needed Mon-Thur late afternoon 842-4735. Must provide own transportation. Female Christian roommate, non-smoker, on call in bedroom. Summer and or Fall. Call 843-1105.
Male roommate wanted for summer 88. Spring
88. Large tidy, non-smoking 3 bedroom
apartment in Meadowbrook, near campus.
Call 851-041.
Female needed to care for our 2 children this summer. We are an active, outgoing family in search of a new location. We have located 1 hour from NVC and 5 hours with o.hr. We are willing to answer questions and send letter of interest with phone & ASAP to Mrs.
Nice fun roommate looking for 2 roommates to share 3 bedroom apartment for 88-89 school year. Swimming pool, BB/Tennis Courts available. 842-6252 Meadowbrook
ages Kindergarten through Jr. High HPER credit available
Kaw Valley Soccer Association is looking for Volunteer Soccer Coaches
if interested call Mary Loveland at 842-9333/842-7251
Put your used books and magazines to work
with the library's digital collection.
Bring to collection box at the library 707
Roommate needed to share townhouse $22.50 plus ½ utilities. Call 842 1983 10-4 M-P.
Bv GARY LARSON
©1986 Universal Press Syndicate
"Listen, Mom ... I just wanted you to know I'm OK and the stampede seems 'bout over — although everyone's still a little spooked. Yeah, I know ... I miss the corral."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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12
Thursday, March 10. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Author to speak on 'Eyes on the Prize'
By a Kansan reporter
The author of the companion book to the Public Broadcasting Service series "Eyes on the Prize," which chronicles the civil rights struggle, will speak at the University of Kansas tonight.
Juan Williams, political reporter for the Washington Post since 1976, will give a lecture and video presentation about "Civil Rights in America" at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The event is sponsored by Student Senate.
Stephanie Quinny, student body vice president, said she had seen the PBS series last year and was excited to learn that the author was available to speak.
"I think that civil rights have been put on the back burner for too long." Quinay said.
The book, the title of which was taken from a traditional civil rights song, covers the black struggle for civil rights from 1954, when the landmark Supreme Court case Brown v. the Topeka Board of Education made school segregation illegal, to the march for black voting rights from Selma, Ala. to Montgomery, Ala. in 1965, led by Martin Luther King Jr.
The event is free and open to the public.
KU professor to testify at Senate subcommittee
By Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
A KU distinguished professor of aerospace engineering will testify today in front of a U.S. Senate subcommittee about the state of aerospace engineering in this country.
The professor, Jan Roskam, said he would address specific questions put to him by Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., in a letter he received four weeks ago.
The Senate Science, Technology and Space Subcommittee's meeting on the campus of Wichita State University is one of many such meetings taking place across the country.
"I will assess the overall quality of the science, engineering and technology infrastructure of universities in the United States and make specific comments about these universities' abilities to produce the next generation of scientists, engineers and technologists." Roskam said.
Roskam said he did not think the nation's universities could be expected to deliver world-class engineers, scientists and technologists with existing budget constraints.
He said he was worried about the quality of students produced through the aerospace program
and about where the money to finance better programs would come from.
Roskam said the Senate needed to allocate more money for the industry.
"I challenge them to do it right," Roskam said. "We have to be realistic, but I fervently hope they do. I have my doubts, which are based on the past performance of the Senate."
Roskam said the Senate heard testimonies in states that have aerospace industries. As a result of those testimonies, the Senate will decide how it will finance new projects.
Roskam said he testified about airplane technology for Kassebaum about six years ago.
Vince Muirhead, professor and chairman of the department of aerospace engineering, said Roskam was an expert in specific areas of aerospace engineering.
"He is furnishing expert testimony and basically just making general policy suggestions," Muirhead said.
The United States was a leader in aerospace engineering until World War II, Muirhead said, but now other countries are extremely competitive in the industry.
I. G. ROSS
Why not fill your wallet while you're filling your brain.
Don't just get smarter. Get a little richer at the same time. We have some interesting and well paying temporary clerical and light industrial positions for students. Learn more about the business
world this summer. Don't just study about business; be in business. Call today and ask about our great variety of temporary positions. We want to help you get ahead. It could be a smart idea.
Rossler Hix
PERSONNEL SERVICE
491-0944
1915 Mercantile Overland Park, KS 62602
1-800-355-7898
Bossler Hix PERF
Macintosh It's never cost less. But you need to order now.
Make sure your Mac is here by March 31 or April 1. Place your order at the Burge Union by Friday, March 11!
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 on the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1, 2, 3!
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union.
Stop by and place your order before March 11.
Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want.
($50 deposit required)
Macintosh SE
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Included in these special prices are: the computer keyboard, mouse, hypercard and multifinder. These special prices are also available to KU faculty and staff.
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm {TM}} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Friday March 11, 1988
Vol. 98, No. 115 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Dole scales back campaign Senator lavs off much of staff, pulls TV ads in Illinois
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole pulled television commercials off the air in Illinois and laid off more than half his staff yesterday, and a source said his campaign advisers were discussing whether he should drop out of the presidential race.
Dole's campaign was reeling from its dismal showing on Super Tuesday. However, national campaign spokesman Dale Tate said that Dole intended to remain a candidate and would continue campaigning for Tuesday's Illinois primary.
"We're not pulling the plug on the campaign," he said. The senator is going to be the one.
But a Dole campaign aide, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that campaign officials were discussing whether Dole
should continue to pursue his campaign through Illinois, recognizing that his prospects for winning the nomination were growing increasingly remote.
Tate said that more than half of the campaign's 300 staffers were being laid off. Many were still getting the word yesterday evening.
Word of the cutbacks came as Dole continued to campaign in Illinois, a state he said on Wednesday that he had to win.
He appeared yesterday to back away from that contention, and said instead that he hoped to "do very well" in the state. He dismissed questions from reporters on whether he was scaling down his expectations in the state.
At one point, he addressed the possibility of dropping out, saying, "I've been in this
business long enough to know that there comes a time you have to say, 'Well, maybe it would happen.'
As Dole campaigned in Illinois, the television ads that he began airing in the state last weekend were halted. Tate said the move was made to give the campaign time to reassess its television plans in Illinois.
She said money was not the problem because the ads already had been paid for. The campaign might use the money to buy one or more large blocks of airtime.
Tate declined to say who among the national staff was being let go.
"It is significant," she said of the layoffs.
"It ranges from the top to the bottom."
Some of the layoffs had been planned for the period following Super Tuesday regarding 500 positions.
Kemp withdraws from race; Hart to follow, sources say
The Associated Press
Jack Kemp ended his Republican presidential campaign yesterday at a Capitol Hill news conference, and Gary Hart has scheduled a news conference for today during which sources say he also will drop out of the race.
Kemp, whose campaign as the true conservative heir to Ronald Reagan never caught on with voters, endorsed no candidate.
said.
However, Kemp did hint that he would welcome the No. 2 spot on the presidential ticket.
"They're all Reagan conservatives," he said.
Kemp entered the race in April 1987 after years of positioning himself as the candidate of the Republican right wing.
Kemp said Bush had won Reagan's Republic constitency.
"We were competing for the Reagan wing of the Republican Party, and he won." Kemp said.
Hart, a former Colorado senator,
attracted no more than 5 percent of the vote in the Super Tuesday primaries and won no convention delegates. The Federal Election Commission announced Wednesday that he was eligible for federal match funds.
His departure from the race, expected to be announced at a news conference this morning in Denver, will mark his second departure from the 1988 Democratic race.
Forum planners to pay one-fifth of security costs
Sources speaking only on condition of anonymity said Hart would not endorse any of the remaining contenders.
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
Even though the cost of security for Monday's free speech forum was more than $15,000, the organizers of the event will pay only about one-fifth of that total, KU police officials said.
"We'll stick with the original agreement," said Jim Denney, director of KU police. That original agreement was for a maximum security cost of $450 an hour, overtime wages for the entire 33-person KU police force. Denney said state, local and county taxpayers would pay the balance of the cost for the additional law enforcement officers.
Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, the group that organized the forum, will be billed for about five hours of security at a rate of $450 an hour. The total bill of $2,927 also will include the costs of buses and drivers, food for the officers, film and other equipment, Denney said.
"I think you could very easily approach $19,000," Denney said.
but, when the cost of the 87 officers from other agencies are added to the cost of about 250 hours of planning time, the total is $15.757. Denney said that the total would be even higher if it had included costs for other items, such as gasoline that Kansas Highway Patrol troopers used to get to Lawrence, wear and tear on equipment, and repair of damaged equipment.
Additional costs usually are absorbed by the taxpayers of the cities that provide additional officers, Denney said, but because security costs had been an issue during the event's planning, other law enforcement agencies might bill either the forum organizers or the University of Kansas.
Michael Foubert, who organized the forum, said he would not comment on security costs until he had received a copy of the bill. But he said that his organization would
honor its commitment to pay its share of security costs. He said he might try to raise funds through donations or request that Student Senate help pay the bill.
From a security standpoint, Denney said, the event was the largest since former President Gerald Ford visited the campus in 1978. The security force for that event numbered 130.
About five people began planning security Feb. 29, as soon as KU police heard that the forum was going to take place. Denney said.
"We didn't know it was going to happen until we read about it in the Kansan 9:30 Monday morning," Dennev said.
He said that demonstrations and protests added an element of uncertainty to planning because police couldn't predict whether the protesters would remain peaceful or whether groups other than those announced in advance would join in the protests.
"It's hard to plan in an evolving situation," Denney said.
"I try to estimate what it's going to require in stages, then make an estimate of how many (officers) we'd need," Denney said. After that estimation was made, he began negotiations for officers from area law enforcement agencies.
Also during planning, the site of the forum was moved from Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union to a new location for the security problems with the Union.
Denney said that the planning was done in stages as the requirements continued to change.
Denney said that negotiation process occurred five times.
The result was that officers from the Lawrence Police Department, Douglas County Sheriff's office, Kansas Highway Patrol and the Overland Park Park Department also were included in the security force.
Governor's letter helps end protest
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence man ended his hunger strike after receiving a letter from Gov. Mike Hayden yesterday.
Paula Clevenger, a spokesman for Markham, said Hayden had expressed interest in Markham's concern about the SRS but couldn't guarantee solutions to the problem. Markham was pleased with the governor's message.
The man, Fred Markham, began eating at 2:30 p.m. yesterday after being on a hunger strike since March 4. Markham, who has cerebral palsy, was protesting what he said was inadequate care by the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services.
Markham went on the hunger strike because the SRS had stopped a local woman's health care services, Cleverman said. The woman, Dana Wray, a quadriplegic, her services had been cut off March 3 and 4.
"He is very happy," Clevenger said. "This is just one battle won. The war is not over."
This is just one battle won. The war is not over.'
Jan Allen, commissioner of adult services for SRS, said the services to Wray were cut off because of a misunderstanding. Wray had been in the hospital and SRS didn't know when to start care for her when she returned home.
Allen said Wray's services were not cut off intentionally and she currently was receiving care.
Paula Clevenger spokesman for Fred Markham
Wray, whose roommate cared for her the two days SRS didn't come out, said she was upset about the problem.
"That's a pretty severe lack of communication when it includes your ability to even get out of bed." Wray said.
Wray said she was supportive of Markham's hunger strike.
"It concerned me a little bit, because the flu has been going around," she said. "But I was very supportive."
USA
Find the way
Geology 101 students practice using a brunton compass. Chris Jump, second from left, a teaching assistant, decided to take advantage of the good weather yesterday to teach her students how
to use the instrument. From left: Becky Swanson, Overland Park senior; Jump; Greg Kamen, Highland Park, Ill., sophomore; and Lisa Hockenberry, Kansas City, Kan., freshman.
FBI agent explains investigations Library inquiry different from alleged CISPES surveillance
By Donna Stokes and Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writers
An FBI agent spoke to about 50 people yesterday at Green Hall to clarify the agency's purpose and some misconceptions he thought were voiced by a protest during a recruitment campaign last week.
"I'd like to address some issues that have been hot and heavy over here, such as the FBI's visit to the library in this building," said Special Agent Max Geiman.
He said the January investigation of a KU library patron was separate from the FBI's interest in the Compton case, and the People of El Salvador (CISPEs).
reasonable indication at the very least, that someone is planning to or has violated a statute," he said.
The library patron was under investigation for a threat to human life Geiman said.
"In order to investigate an individual, we have to have a basis, a
He said that many of the cases of concern to the audience were still under investigation or involved classified information that he could not disclose.
Geiman said he wanted the audience to understand the FBI's purpose, which had changed in the past 20 years.
He said the FBI had moved into investigating white-collar crimes and public corruption such as the misuse of government funds.
Geiman's talk received mixed reactions from the audience.
Dave Hansen, first-year law student, said he didn't think the library investigation was unethical.
"I think it was a clever investigative tactic to go to the library to find if the individual had read a certain
document. There is nothing wrong in asking, " he said.
Geiman said that it wasn't illegal to ask questions and that the librarians were not required to answer.
But Dwaine Hemphill, third-year law student, disagreed.
"They have to be aware of the chilling effect of flashing an FBI badge to a librarian," Hemphill said. "They're taking an intimidating stance, and this illustrates their insensitivity."
Hemphill also said he thought Geiman's talk was superficial.
"He spent a half hour talking about things we didn't want to know about," Hemphill said. "I was outraged by his flippant attitude and his complete insensitivity to the issues.
"I wanted to ask him if you have to give up all conscientiousness and ideals to become an FBI agent," he said.
Geiman spoke for 30 minutes of the one-hour lecture, limiting the amount of time available for questions.
He said that there was not adequate time to cover all issues but that he would be willing to return if asked.
Some audience members associated with Latin American Solidarity expressed concern about the illiteracy surveillance of members of CISPS.
"We did not interview students or put any students under surveillance on this campus concerning that matter." Geiman said.
Other audience members were pleased that Geiman made the effort to come to Lawrence.
"I thought it was very gracious of the FBI to have someone available to answer our questions. He wouldn't have come if he didn't realize how important it was to the campus community." Hansen said.
Parties split on raising minimum wage
House Democrats want greater hike
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - An increase in the federal minimum wage from $3.35 to $5.05 an hour was tentatively approved yesterday by the House Education and Labor Committee.
The original bill before the committee called for an increase of 50 cents in 1989, 40 cents in 1990 and 40 cents in 1991 to $4.65.
The committee voted 18-14 to adopt an amendment by Rep. Carl C. Perkins, D-Ky., which would add a charge in the fourth year, on Dec. 31, 2019.
The full committee was unable to take action on all the pending amendments and will continue debate on the bill next week.
The Senate has a companion bill, sponsored by Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass, chairman of the Labor and Human Resources Committee, which would raise the minimum wage to $4.65 over a three-year period.
The Perkins amendment was approved essentially along party lines except that two Democrats, Reps. Austin J. Murphy of Pennsylvania and Timothy J. Penny of Minnesota, joined the Republicans in opposing the proposal.
Murphy is chairman of the House labor standards subcommittee, which had approved an increase to $4.65. He said that legislation was "crafted so that it will be accepted by the full House and the executive branch. If we accept this (Perkins) proposal, it will not be accepted."
Rep. Stephen J. Solarz, D.N.Y.
read from a letter written by Labor
"So it doesn't matter what we do; the executive will be against it," Solarz said.
Secretary Ann McLaughlin, who said senior White House advisers would recommend to President Reagan that he veto any legislation increasing the minimum wage.
The House committee also voted 20-13 on an amendment by Rep. Tommy F. Robinson, D-Dark., to increase the "tip credit" for restaurant workers.
Current law allows employers of workers who regularly receive tips, such as waiters and waitresses, to count the tips as earned wages equivalent to 40 percent of the minimum wage. Thus, a restaurant owner could pay a worker $2.01 an hour, with the remaining $1.34 — 40 percent of today's $3.35-an-hour minimum wage — coming from tips.
Under the Robinson amendment, the tip minimum would be raised to 50 percent of the minimum. Thus, if the minimum wage were increased to $5.05 an hour, an employer could pay a $2.52 hourly wage, with the other $2.52 coming from tips.
The biggest argument of the session came over the amendment by Perkins, who said his proposal "does not go far enough, but it is a start."
"It gives the American worker some level of decency," Perkins said.
The Kansan will not publish during Spring Break. The Kansan will resume publication on March 21.
---
2
Friday, March 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
图
LAWRENCE
Clouds and gusty winds
HIGH: 56°
LOW: 30°
The sky will become mostly cloudy with gusty south winds. The high will reach a high of 56, and there is a chance for afternoon showers continuing into the night. The low will be 30.
REGIONAL
North Platte
31/19 Snow
Grandland
34/19 Snow
Hayes
53/24 Showers
Salina
55/27 Cloudy
Topeka
57/30 Mostly cloudy
Kansas City
56/30 Mostly cloudy
Columbia
63/38 Mostly sunny
St. Louis
68/40 Sunny
Dodge City
45/23 Showers
Wishita
56/27 Partly sunny
Chanute
60/37 Showers
Springfield
64/36 Showers
Forecast by William Hibbert.
Temperatures are today* high and tonight's overnight low.
SAT
Light rain
38 / 24
HIGH LOW
SUN
Cloudy
36 / 22
MON
Mostly sunny
38 / 22
TUE
Sunny
42 / 25
WED
Mostly sunny
52 / 33
SPRING BREAK THER HOTLINE
864-4329
Friday m.- 5 p.m.
雨
---
Sun
Arts and Entertainment Every Friday
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
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Haircuts .. $6.50
For appointments call 842-3699
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ENTERTEL
Pop singer Andy Gibb dead at 30
LONDON — Andy Gibb, who followed his brothers, the Bee Gees, to pop stardom but saw his career falter after he became heavily involved with drugs, died yesterday at the age of 30.
Mr. Gibb, born in Australia, died at John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, 50 miles northwest of London, at 8:45 a.m., a hospital statement said. The cause of death was not given, according to a spokesman for Island Records Ltd, who asked not to be identified.
The Associated Press
Press Association, the domestic British news agency, said Mr. Gibb was admitted to the hospital on Monday, discharged, and readmitted Wednesday night after complaining of stomach pains.
Mr. Gibb had a string of hits in the late 1970s and early 1980s and twice was nominated for Grammy Awards. His hits included "I Just Want To Be Your Everything," "Love Is Thicker Than Water," "Shadow Dancing," "Everlasting Love," and "Our Love (Don't Throw It All Away)."
In 1882, Mr. Gibb acknowledged that he had become heavily involved in drugs and dropped his career after a highly publicized relationship with television star Victoria Principal.
Obituaries
He was a reporter for the Kansas City Star for 37 years. He covered the Kansas Legislature and wrote political and economic analyses. He also was a war correspondent in Okinawa and Iwo Jima.
ALVIN S. MCCOY: Alvin S. McCoy, a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer for the Kansas City Star and a KU graduate, died Tuesday. He was 84.
In 1964, Mr. McCoy received a Pulitzer Prize for excellence in local reporting. He wrote a series on C. Wesley Roberts, the appointed chairman for the Republican Party under President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
By a Kansan reporter
Mr. McCoy discovered that Wesley had sold a vacant tuberculosis hospital to the state and kept part of the proceeds.
Morgan said that Mr. McCoy was a hard worker and a dedicated reporter. He was served a subpoena for his information in the Wesley affair but refused to release it. "He was a very accurate reporter, very intense."
Mr. McCoy was born July 14, 1903, in Cheney. He graduated from the University of Kansas a Phi Beta Kappa in 1925 with a degree in chemistry.
Morgan said.
in 1962, he was awarded a Distinguished Service Citation by the KU Alumni Association for his contributions to the state.
Survivors include his wife, Marion Grey McCoy,
Montrose, Colo.; two daughters Mary McCoy, Lawrence,
and Marion Wright, Seattle.
GEORGE M. BEAL: George M. Beal, 88, a former University of Kansas professor, died Tuesday.
From 1945 to 1962, Mr. Beal was the chairman of the architecture department. From 1962 to 1967, he was the director of architectural services. He retired in 1970.
Mr. Beal was a professor emeritus of architecture. He received a bachelor of science degree and a master's degree from KU in the 1920s. He was an architecture instructor at KU for more than 40 years.
Mr. Beal was born Sept. 15, 1899, in Topeka. He married Helen Rutledge in 1926. She died in 1973.
Clarification
Corrections
Information in a story on child behavior in the March 7 issue of the Kansan might have been misleading. By understanding some behavioral patterns and environmental factors in the first two years of life, it might be possible to make predictions of child behavior. Also, genetics is only one of several factors that influence the way the infant's behavior and the environment interact.
■ Because of a reporter's error, Michael Basin and Bill Rich were not identified in Monday's paper as helping put "Quest for Vinyl" together. Also, Ramona Studios and the Music Shack recorded "Quest for Vinyl" and Stage Pro supplied the sound system.
- Because of a reporter's error,
Terry Tribble's name was misspelled in a story in Tuesday's Kansan.
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Because of a reporter's error, a curriculum requirement in the Regents qualified admissions bill was incorrect in a story in Wednesday's Kansan. Under the bill, Kansas high school graduates need only to pass a proposed Regents curriculum to be admitted into a Regents institution.
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The JCPenney Catalog OUTLET STORE
of course. It's something else
"Name As Priced, Available Only At The Outlet Store. Sorry No Mail, Phone, C.O.D. Order, Quotations Limited.
Merchandise May Vary From Illustrations. Shop Mon.-Fri. 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Sunday 11:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Intermediate Merchandise May Have Been Taken. Ad Merchandise Will Be Sold Until Stock is Depleted. Sorry, No Rain Checks."
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 11, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Condoms spur letters to KU administrators
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
Ten thousand condoms are worth about 100 letters to the KU administration.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday that his office and Chancellor Gene A. Budig's office had received about 100 letters concerning the safer-sex packets that were distributed to students earlier this semester.
The packets, distributed by the Student Senate Task Force on AIDS, were handed out at the Kansas Union during fee payment in January.
The packets contained a condom and three
informational pamphelis on acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
"The letters have tapered off, but one did come in the morning." Ambler said. "Most people just don't understand that the condom was just an attention-getter."
Ambler said he had received about one letter a week concerning the issue after the initial rush in late January. Most of the letters were negative, but some were positive.
Ambler said he responded to all the letters he received. Most of the letters were from parents of students.
“Most of the letters were from people who had a misunderstanding of the intent of the project,” Ambler said. “Some people thought the University was giving students a packet!
of devices to enjoy safer sex and did not understand it was just an education project."
"In my letter, I just explained to them that the money used for the packets was from student fees and not from tax money," Amber said.
Ambler said he also explained the rights of Student Senate in the letter.
Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, said most of letters she had received were from students.
"I know I did the right thing," she said.
"My concerns are with the student population and not so much the community."
Jason Krakow, student body president, said he had read the letters and was concerned about some of the negative feelings expressed.
"People outside the University community want the university to be a certain way," he said. "But the University community has to deal with the University environment. That what we did."
However, Krakow said the most important point of the letters was that people thought about the situation and issues involved.
Ambler said, "This is probably the largest
number of letters on any issue since the 1960s and the Vietnam War period."
Ambler attributed a majority of the response to a letter writing campaign started by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
Father Vince Krische of the Catholic center said he was surprised that letters were still being sent but acknowledged the importance of the issue.
"The concern of the parents is a very good sign," Krische said. "They are not only concerned, but also are making an effort to have their voice be heard."
Add policy votes sought Lobbving letters to be sent with mail ballots
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
The battle of the add-drop proposal has gone to a mail ballot, but two members of the University Council haven't finished lobbying vet.
Both Dave Shulenburger, associate dean of business, and Amy Randles, Olate junior and student senator, have submitted letters of their views on the proposed add legislation to be included with the mail ballot.
The proposal, which was passed by University Council and sent to a mail ballot by a special session of the University Senate, requires that all schools have a drop period of three weeks and an add period of three weeks and two days. Currently, the add period is four weeks and the drop period is five weeks, but schools can set shorter add periods.
This year, most schools set a two-week add period.
Shulenburger opposes the proposal because schools cannot shorten their add periods.
This year, most schools set a two-week ad period: Sandra Wick, administrative assistant to the Senate Education Committee, said that the ballots probably would be moved Monday and that the deadline for returns was April.
He said that in the first week of a course, instructors often covered material on which the rest of the semester is based. In some science courses, students do lab work that is hard to repeat later. Also, student teams sometimes are formed in the first week to begin working on semester projects.
Shulenburger said he opposed the longer add period particularly because many courses were filled to the maximum. Shopping for classes by adding and dropping is wasteful and prevents serious students from getting the classes they need, he said.
He compared shopping for classes to shopping for a car.
"The dealer will let you test drive it, but he won't let you keep it for three weeks and two days," he said.
Shulenburger said schools needed to provide good information about courses so students would not have to shop for courses.
Randles supports the proposal because it is what she calls the perfect compromise.
She said bringing the add and drop periods closer together would help solve the problems of wasted classroom space that occurred this year with a Universal add period of four weeks and a drop period of five weeks.
Randles said the proposal would establish a general policy for all the schools to follow.
"There is no point in having a University-wide policy if no one has to follow it." she said.
Allowing schools to set different add periods creates confusion for students, she said. Students have to check the school policy for the class they are enrolled in and not the policy of the school they have been accepted into for their majors.
Students need three weeks to decide whether a class is right for them, and they have the right to take that long after having paid for their education, she said.
Randles said that a serious student who added a class three weeks and two days into the semester would be able to catch up on work missed.
She also said that schools had other ways of controlling their enrollment besides shortening the add period.
Schools can set smaller class sizes and establish waiting lists for classes to monitor the students who are getting in.
"Just because schools have the right to lower the add period doesn't mean that it's the best way to control attendance."
Author speaks of civil rights
Kansan staff writer
Bv Kathleen Faddis
It was not just Martin Luther King Jr. who created the civil rights movement but average people and young students, said the author of a book that chronicled the movement.
Juan Williams, author of the companion book to the six-part Public Broadcasting Service series "Eyes on the Prize," spoke to about 400 people last night in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. The PBS series was a history of the civil rights movement from 1954 to 1965.
Young people today also have the power to change society, said Williams, a political reporter for the Washington Post since 1976.
More than half the population was born after the civil rights movement, Williams said. Young people have little understanding of what took place during those years.
Williams showed a segment from the video that depicted scenes from the integration of Little Rock High School in 1957, the Freedom Riders in 1961, and the march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., in 1965.
Working on the book was a personal and revealing experience, Williams said.
"We need to be sensitive to the psychological damage that was done not only to blacks but also to whites in this society by racism," Williams
said. "That kind of deep human damage affects society throughout time."
Williams told the audience that they also had the power to change the world. Early civil rights leaders had less money, were less educated and lived under worse conditions than young blacks today. Their power came from determination and moral strength, he said.
Many blacks have become complacent, Williams said, but there are racial issues that need to be dealt with. Blacks are the nation's copency is an understanding of history.
THE ROBERT L. BURTON COURT
Williams said there was a rising resentment over racial issues and increasing resentment among young white people. He cited examples of racial incidents in Howard Beach, N.Y., at the university of Massachusetts and at the Catelad, a military academy in Charleston, S.C.
Half of all black children are born into poverty, he said. And more black students are dropping out of high school. There are fewer blacks in college.
"There's a larger and larger underclass of black Americans in this society, and we need to deal with it." he said.
"We're getting comfortable again
in our country with re-segregation
in his country."
Juan Williams
needed to keep the struggle for civil rights alive but that it wasn't as easy today because there were no easy targets.
Williams said that young people
He said that at least the recent visit to campus by the Ku Klux Klan prompted action. It reminded people that the civil rights movement still was needed.
The critical issues today are raising black enrollment in colleges, integrating the fraternities and sororities and getting more black faculty members, he said.
Spring break is good and bad; KU students and faculty have either motivation or lack of it
Bv Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
Some students and faculty members use spring break to kick back, research or write a term paper or two, and others pack it up, close out the bank account, and drive 2,000 miles to get away from it all.
Either way, a week away from classes has its benefits — and its problems.
"It depends on what you decide to do that makes your break a positive or negative experience," said Jan Dean, lecturer in English.
"If you drive to Padre, your car runs out of gas, you drink too much, get a blistering sunburn and Montezuma's revenge, then I would say there could be some negative aspects of spring break," she said.
One of the biggest problems that occurs after spring break is a lack of motivation, sometimes referred to as spring fever, which becomes more pronounced after a week of freedom.
TUNNEL TANLIGHTS
Mike Priddy, Lawrence senior,
said that in the past three years,
he had gone to Illinois to visit
forts, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and
South Padre Island during spring
break.
"You come back physically, financially and mentally exhausted," he said. "I couldn't study for two weeks.
"You live off the high of the vacation for a couple of weeks. You keep thinking about what you did on break. You just don't feel like studying."
Photo Illustration by Ruth Jac Robinson/KANSAN
Richard Eversole, associate professor of English, said, "Usually after break, there is a temporary absence in stride. It also happens to me."
Kent Houston, professor of psychology, also said it was difficult for students to get back into studying after a vacation.
Dwight Kiel, assistant professor of political science, said, "I've learned just to have discussions on the day before break. Basically, we've turned spring break into a 10-day holiday."
"It is a hassle in some respects, but it is also beneficial," Houston said. "It gives students an oppor-
"Cars built on Monday are more likely to be defective than those built during the rest of the week," he said. "It's just hard to get back into the swing of things after time off."
"Some students also like to leave early for break. With fewer students in the classes, it's difficult for the remaining students to keep going. It's hard to have tests with only one-third of the people there."
ranning salons have been booked solid this week as students prepare their bodies for spring break beaches.
Spring Break
You come back physically, financially and mentally exhausted. I couldn't study for two weeks.'
-Mike Priddy Lawrence senior
tunity to catch up on work, and it also gives them the chance to take time off from what they are doing."
Dean said a break could give students and faculty members a fresh start when they return.
"I look forward to it as much as any of my students," she said. "I
feel as though I deserve it."
Eversole said, "Having a change of scenery definitely can help. Anyone who doesn't think that way should remember how it was."
Thomas Reilly, assistant professor of psychology, said spring break had a positive effect.
"Students who go off to Florida and California get the benefit of the added sunshine and a tan," he said. "That can give psychological benefits to some students."
If students decide to get away from it all, they probably won't take books. Even if a book does get thrown into the suitcase, it will probably stay there.
Darren Newkirk, Parsons junior, took books to California last spring break.
"I only got about an hour of homework done in the entire week," he said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Avoid spring break tragedy by displaying responsibility
Spring break. It's the great body binge, the time when thousands of college students do their best to forget they have brains and concentrate instead on the pleasures of drinking, sunbathing and whatever else they really dig doing.
Ah, the pleasures of the flesh.
All the pleasures But practice the time-honored rule of "Everything in excess, nothing in moderation" this year and the fiesta may come to a screeching halt. College students increasingly are having to deal with the fact that the bouncers at this party mean business.
Police in most of the country's spring-break hot spots are far from lenient in dealing with underage drinkers, drunken drivers and over-21 partiers who buy alcohol for their under-21 friends. Excessive public rowdiness is frowned upon, too. This kind of behavior might seem to be a natural part of spring break, but any of these offenses can lead to fines, time in jail, court appearances and, yes, criminal records. And it doesn't happen just to the other guy, no matter how invincible many students feel.
Then there's balcony climbing. It's illegal in Florida for the very good reasons that it's deceptively dangerous and has led to tragedy. By one report, in the past four years alone, six people have died and 25 have been injured in Daytona Beach in falls from balconies. It's not worth the risk just to save a few steps or impress friends.
It all boils down to this: Spring break is a good time to have a good time, but it's not the time to get arrested or get killed.
Bye, kids! Have fun! Don't forget to write toothbrush? Razor? Condoms? Be good! Don't get too much sun! Be careful when you walk around at night! Don't take rides from strangers! Did you remember to pack clean underwear? Don't drink too much! Wear your seat belt! Call when you get there! We love you!
And don't die.
Opinion
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jenerette.
Other Voices
Tea-and-crumpset standards of polite behavior and spirited, supportive crowds at college athletic events usually are radically contradictory. So, although Wichita State University's Low Brass Cheer would be wildly inappropriate at the symphony, there is nothing wrong with it at a basketball game.
WSU won't beat 'the hell outta you'
Complaints regarding the poor sportsmanship displayed by partisan crowds are probably well-founded, but that's the nature of the beast in college athletics. Watching the Shockers smash hapless opponents is a potent intoxicant, and a thunderous, enthusiastic cheer is a natural response to an exciting game.
Blaming President Armstrong's banning of the cheer for the alleged apathy at basketball games, however, is absurd. The apathy is in part attributable to the same malaise that seems to infect many other aspects of campus life at WSU.
Another reason for the spiritual doldrums at the basketball games is the small percentage of student seating in Henry Levitt Arena and the location of that seating. Students hold a fraction of the season tickets and student seating is practically in the rafters, so it's tough to generate lots of spirit under those strictures.
If the response the Sunflower has received to the Low Brass Cheer ban is anything to go by, both students and alumni overwhelmingly favor the return of the cheer.
It might be tasteless, it might be taunting or intimidating, but it's not as if, say, Creighton fans subjected to the cheer in Wichita don't have a chance for revenge when the Shockers play in Omaha.
The cheer should be reinstated. It makes a lot more sense than pretending we're at Henry Levitt Arena for an opera.
Wichita State University
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Cohen Todd...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alan Pligler...Editorial editor
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Anne Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
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BREMAN CINCINNATI SQUIRTER
1960
READY!
THE SOUTH
GORE
Some speech must be restricted
Racial slanderers such as the KKK harm society and should be restrained
The Ku Klux Klan issue has gripped our interest with all the intensity of a morality play. It tests the premises of the Western civil libertarian tradition, premises basic to our University. The drama is fraught with irony.
Take Michael Foubert, creator of the Freedom of Expression forum that featured the KKK. Foubert is, I'm informed by one of his academic mentors, "one of the finest products of the Western Civilization program." A defender of the concept of democratic governance, Foubert nonetheless holds all three governance positions in his organization; president, treasurer and faculty adviser. (Neither faculty nor staff, Foubert is apparently an adviser to himself.) Through his three identities he embodies, by my guess, one-third to one-half of his organization's membership. Like the Klan, he keeps the size of his organization a secret. As one who espouses unrestricted debate, Foubert had for several days seriously considered limiting public entry into the "free speech" forum. As a proponent of truth, he has misrepresented the nature of the forum to faculty participants, causing several to cancel their appearances.
Projecting himself as a fervent anti-acit, Foubert gave an outrageously crude and racially slanderous statement to the local press. Relying on his "feelings" and suggesting but not revealing evidence, Foubert accused Lawrence's black ministerial leadership of conspiring to commit felonies by threatening and creating violence in order to run up security costs and thereby force a cancellation of the forum. Actually, prior to Foubert's statement, Lawrence's black ministers, the Ecumenical Fellowship, believing their point had been effectively made through the earlier cancellation of the Klan's appearance, had elected to protest the forum. Apparently, Foubert's Western Civilization background has taught him to fathom the mentality of the "darker populations." a long-standing justification of Western societies for their enslavement of the "darker continents."
Despite his inconsistencies, I accept Foubert's claim of his sincere commitment to free speech. However, sincerity is irrelevant to questions of principle. After all, no one ever doubted the sincerity of Hiller's commitment to Nazism.
Norman Forer
Guest Columnist
Principles are best judged in terms of their outcomes.
The liberal concept of free speech, stemming from the Kantian belief in the inherent moral autonomy of the individual, seeks to protect the individual from external interference. In practice, however, not all individuals are equally afforded such protection. Like most U.S. institutions, the University of Kansas, despite its ethos of good will, maintains a double standard of free speech.
In the past 19 years, I can recall only four instances in which outrage swept the campus community concerning an alleged violation of free speech. In all cases, gross misinformation was beneath the accusations. How ironic that blacks and Jews become the targets of such slander despite their historic role in advocating civil rights and free speech for all U.S. citizens.
Indeed, there have been many free speech and academic freedom violations at KU, but the violators usually were central and lower-level administrators, at times responding to the pressure of powerful non-University interests. (Decent, kindly Chancellor Gene A. Budg always has been true to his professional conscience despite the consequences). Although many of these violations involved blatant censorship and intimidation, they were met with minimal interest or indifference by those who are at once vocal about free speech in an abstract sense, while protecting KU's and their own images. Ironically, many at KU appear more concerned with the free speech rights of a Klansman than a social reform-minded student or professor.
The Klan is not simply an ideological organization but rather, like the past German Nazi party, plans and executes a policy of racial extermination. Like the Nazis, the Klan never publicly admits to its murderous intent. Consequently
there are laws throughout Western Europe and in thirty U.S. states prohibiting "group libel." As opposed to the "liberal" free speech tradition that focuses on the individual, "group libel" or the "communitarian" approach, is derived from the Aristotelian concept of the political nature of man. Accordingly, racial slandersers and inciters like the Klan are held harmful to both society and the individual and should be restrained. In the 1952 Beauhairstain case, the U.S. Supreme Court did just that. In the 1978 Collins (Skokie) case, the Court reversed itself, ironically using some of the same legal logic employed in the Beauharness decision. This issue is a central theme among political and legal theorists. It has yet to arrive at KU in any meaningful sense. Perhaps now it will. If you are unaware of the side on which you
If you are unsure of the side on which you belong on this issue, I suggest the following test.
Alongside extermination camp Treblinka, the run-off of the crematoria has pooled into a huge swamp still oozing with human fat and ash and rich with grass. (Life is tenacious.)
seniors, I bid you approach that place without trepidation. After all, you are trained to subdue feeling in the interest of knowledge. Look objectively upon this distillation of millions: lynched, clubbed, strangled, starved, crushed, hung, poisoned, bashed, broken, gassed, burned. (Research reveals variety.) Assure yourself that these acts were a product of one of the most cultured and scientifically advanced nations on earth — true sciences of Western civilization.
Prepare then a forum in the interest of free speech. Invite Nazi death camp personnel and Jewish survivors. Moderate the discussion. Perhaps a deal could emerge in case of future disagreement. Instead of murdering six million, split the difference, three million. Jews would be happier and the Nazis would save transportation costs, proving once again that free discussion, reason and moderation are the key to human progress. By now, scholars, you should know where you stand on free speech.
Bless you, students, faculty and townfolk, wearers of red ribbons the color of bleeding hearts who came forward by the thousands in affirmation of life.
Norman Forer is an associate professor of social welfare.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Column was fiction
As a graduate student in English and as a poet, I find Jay Frank's contention that English departments don't foster great writers misleading and ridiculous. Frank assumes that because a certain student's story didn't win with a fiction writing award and didn't meet with the approval of class members, the entire English department is guilty of ignoring creative genius. However, Frank tells us that the teacher of the class (for which the student had written the story) praised the work and encouraged the student. Already we see a flaw in Frank's logic. Moreover, since when are great
writers created by awards?
No department creates a great writer; a great writer creates himself or herself. Writing is a solitary act and, at best, an English department can encourage a writer and provide access to other influences. Through literature classes and writing workshops I've taken here, I have found many literary sources to draw upon as well as a supportive community that encourages me in my writing. Perhaps this is why so many of contemporary and fiction writers can be found in university settings. Rarely have I found a faculty member stifling "genuine creativity" for the sake of presenting a limited view of literature. Rather, in creative writing workshops, I've seen faculty members bend over backward to accommodate experimentation.
An English department is not a jeweler to mold and set the diamond (using Frank's analogy) of student creative genius; instead, it is the task of any serious writer to continually
mine his or her own imagination and experience and, from the coal, craft something valuable and endurable and brilliant. Frank states that the student story in the contest was judged "an interesting article" by an English department, though it reinforces a boring myth, is fiction but certainly not quality fiction.
Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg Lawrence graduate student
Clarification
A letter from Tedra Wilensky that appeared in the Kansan last week referred to a call she said was made by Stephanie Quincy to a KJHK radio program. The call was made anonymously.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 11, 1988
5
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Chaos distressing
I was present at the so-called "Free Speech Forum" at Hoch Auditorium on Monday night. I must say that I came away disillusioned with the actions of the students and others attending the event. I was embarrassed and distressed when the forum dissolved into chaos before the first question could be asked. The vulgar gestures and immature taunting displayed
by many students revealed their lack of decorum as well as their absolute refusal to hear the ideas presented. Not only was this rude to the Klan members, but also it was rude to the student and community representatives on the panel.
I think that most of the audience had made up its mind long before setting foot in the auditorium. The basic issue to be discussed was freedom of speech. Much of the crowd mentality was exhibited by one woman seated behind me, who repeatedly implored the extremist representatives to "shut up." The singing and obscene outbursts did not alter the thinking of the Klansmen, it simply prevented them from being heard, and that is a circumvention of the right to free speech. If the roles had
been reversed, the students, community members and religious leaders would have been outraged at the disturbance.
Eric Angevine Lawrence freshman
KKK's true colors
I would like to thank several organizations for their participation in Monday night's forum at Hoch Auditorium:
The KU Police, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Lawrence Police Department for their security services during the forum.
- The Slightly Older Americans for Freedom for sponsoring the event.
- The University of Kansas for allowing the forum to take place.
■ KJHK for rebroadcasting the forum late Monday night and enabling me to hear what was impossible to hear amidst the singing protestors and shouts from the audience.
■ And thank you, Ku Klux Klan, for doing a job others have been trying to do for years, exposing just how warped and malicious your ideas and actions are.
Insensitivity plagued KKK issue
Patrick Malecek
St. Louis sophomore
Sadly, as a result of this detached mood, what should have been a serious show of opposition to the Klan, was turned into a carnival of laughter, joking and camera posing. A sober protest was turned into the social event of the season. Insensitivity, pure and simple.
Perhaps Michael Foubert, the Kansan and other self-righteous, free-speech purists here on campus could benefit from both a lesson in sensitivity and the correct application of the word hypocrisy.
Those individuals who rallied around Foubert were so emotionally detached from the Klan forum that they probably couldn't relate to the fear and revulsion that the Klan's presence inspired to blacks, Jews and other minorities. Those individuals neither tried to relate nor even attempted to understand the feelings of the protesting minorities.
Finally, after having their cause belled by social butterflies, minorities at the protest and elsewhere suffered still another indignity: the realization that although minority enrollment at
Until the recent Ku Klux Klan issue, there hasn't been a concrete manifestation of the insensitivity of the University of Kansas toward minority students. But finally, a mask of conen has been stripped off, and with the approval of the Klan's appearance, the University, faculty, staff and students have finally shown their stance on race relations.
Foubert, the antagonistic president of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, invited the Klan to the forum, not out of concern for the First Amendment, but out of naked insensitivity. Foubert revived a dying Klan issue, subjected everyone on this campus to a potentially uncontrollable outburst of violence, then retreated to his soapbox and held up the First Amendment in justification. Maybe if Foubert directed some of his energy toward soothing racial relations rather than inflaming them, we'd all be better off.
McCollum
Black Caucus
Cuest Column
But let's talk about the Kansan's own double standards. What Young failed to mention was that the Kansan Editorial Board (that she is a part of), which took a stance similar to hers, has no blacks and yet felt wholly comfortable in making a decision in which input from minorities would be crucial.
Apparently, blacks have failed to meet the Kansan's standards of newsworthiness because they rarely appear outside the confines of the sports pages. When blacks do appear in the paper.
Guest Column
The Kansan, in Editor Alison Young's Feb. 22 column entitled "Double standards damage KU" said, "Tolerance of repugnant views and a willingness to defend free speech and educational forums is limited to those who aren't offended." This particular statement was an implication of the hypocrisy of the black community in regard to a 1985 visit by Louis Farakhan, the leader of the Nation of Islam. The parallels drawn between Farakhan and the Klan were so off-balance that they merely reflected her own ignorance of the history surrounding both entities. Further, how could she even begin to suggest that the message of the Klan is an "educational" forum, deserving and worthy of any academic value or recognition?
KU slips every year, there are still individuals who have found a way to justify extending an invitation to the Klan to appear on this campus. The University claims to actively recruit minority students, yet allows the Klan to appear with little concern as to the damage that has probably already been done to the incoming class of minority freshman in terms of the number of students who plan to attend the University.
it is usually in the context of controversy (such as the current Klan controversy and the fight/shooting at the party held by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity last semester).
With that in mind, we'd like to address the hypocrisy of the shouting students who called the singing protesters hypocrites and in their next breath shouted down Klansman. In essence, the students' message was that it was not the protesters' place to silence the Klan by song but rather, it was their own duty to shout down both groups with boos and profanity. The students probably thought they were doing the minority community a favor, but the real help must begin with a consistent application of First Amendment philosophy.
The Kansean, with its wobbly stance and insufficient minority coverage, seems more a part of the problems than part of the solutions that it offers in its pages. Maybe Young and her all-white editorial staff should examine their own practices before participating in First Amendment flag waving and accusing others of hovocrisy.
One of the Klansmen said "You honor me with your hatred" because deep down, he knew that the students who cursed him would soon forget or want to forget the true issues that had been addressed. We must not lose sight of the real issues that this forum has stirred. There is a problem here at KU which begins with ignorance and insensitivity and ends with apathy and misunderstanding. The problem will persist as long as Foubert, the Kansan, and the student body remain perched on of self-righteous soapboxes preaching First Amendment rights while blindfolded to minority concerns. The McColm River Board everyone to use this very ugly but revealing statement in building better race relations on this campus.
This column was written by Cory S. Anderson, Omaha, Neb, freshman, and Mark E. McCormick, Wichita sophomore, for the McClumn Black Caucus.
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6
Fridav. March 11. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
Literary journal honors founder in its 40th issue
By Kevin Dilmore Kansan staff writer
In 1965, Edgar Wolfe and a group of graduate students in the department of English began Cottonwood, a campus literary magazine. After 23 years and 40 issues, the magazine has published a tribute to its founder.
Cottonwood 40, which went on sale this week at the Oread Book Shop, contains several poems by Wolfe himself, who is now a professor eremitus of English and living in Kansas City, and some of his former students, including Robert Day, author of "The Last Cattle Drive."
George Wedge, associate professor of English and editor of Cottonwood, said Wolfe was revered as the senior creative writing instructor during his tenure.
"He was, for many years, the fiction and poetry teacher in the department," Wedge said. "Sometimes, he was the only one."
Wedge said the magazine contained three writings in tribute to Wolfe, along with the new fiction and poetry that Cottonwood has become known for.
The magazine contains Day's tribute "I Look Out For Ed Wolfe," which he presented last year at the River City Reunion. It also contains a poem by Tom Avril, a former student of Wolfe's and host of public television station KTWU's program "Kansas Literature."
The tribute concludes with a review of Wolfe's 1968 book of short stories, "To All The Islands Now," written by Carroll Edwards, professor emeritus of English. Edwards is a longtime associate of Wolfe, and the two wrote an English textbook for freshmen, Wedge said.
Wolfe said he was very pleased with the Cottonwood tribute. Although Wolfe has been battling cancer for the last six years, he
still finds time to write.
"I mostly write letters nowadays, or a poem now and then when it comes to me." he said.
Cottonwood 40 is also illustrated with drawings of Lawrence scenes by Zi Li He, Nanning, China, graduate student.
Wedge said the Wolfe tribute followed one of the most successful issues of Cottonwood, a double-size issue celebrating 125 years of contemporary black writers that was published in June.
Wedge said that Cottonwood usually did not follow a theme but that he and other staff members wanted to tie the magazine in with the 12th anniversary of Kansas' statehood. The black history theme was suggested by Wedge's son Philip, a lecturer in English and the magazine's poetry editor.
The issue worked not only to increase awareness of Cottonwood, but it also brought an increase of submissions.
"We've had a lot more minority writers send things in, and not just black writers either," Wedge said. "We've received pieces from people whose names suggest they are Asian or Latin, and that pleases me a great deal."
But Cottonwood is not just a magazine. It is also a press that publishes books occasionally. Although the press recently printed a portfolio of poems on broadside sheets, the press has not published a book in the three years that Wedge has been head of the staff. That situation will soon change.
"Star Water," a collection of poetry by Denise Low, will be released April 4 from Cottonwood Press. Low is a KU alumna and now teaches at Haskell Indian Junior College.
Wedge said that he was currently seeking funds to publish two other works, including a collection of short fiction by Day.
Minnesota Home
D. H. C.
COTTONWOOD 40 EDGAR WOLFE
The next issue of Cottonwood magazine, which features Edgar Wolfe, costs $5 and can be purchased at the Oread Bookstore.
"With those, the press would be back in full operation," he said.
Wedge said the press operated with funds separate from the magazine, which generates its money from sales and grants from the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts. Cottonwood costs $5 an issue or $12 for a three-issue subscription. A press run of Cottonwood is about 500 issues, and there are about 150 subscribers.
Wedge said that the next three issues of Cottonwood were already being planned. Cottonwood 41, which Wedge said would probably appear in July, and 42, which might appear in November, will both feature works by writers who attended the River City Reunion.
Reunion will be invited to contribute," Wedge said. "We want to feature established alumni写稿, along with young writers."
Wedge said an interview with Lawrence "Beat Generation" author William Burroughs was likely to appear in Cottonwood 41, along with photographs of the event.
Those who participated in the
Cottonwood 43 should appear in early 1989 and will return the magazine to a format with no theme, Wedge said.
tweed. Wedge said that the variety of fiction and poetry in Cottonwood gave the magazine an appeal that stretched beyond campus and even Kansas.
"We are carried in a book store in Chicago, and we even have a subscriber in Russia," he said.
Father-son shift gets few laughs 'Vice Versa' revisits old plot
By Kevin Dilmore Kansan staff writer
"Vice Versa," which opens today at the Cinema Twin Theaters, is a slightly funny retread that fails to entertain despite good chemistry between the two stars.
Judge Reinhold and 11-year-old Fred Savage play a father and son which switch bodies, thanks to a skull-shaped Tibetan "transmogrifier," a term more closely identified with the comic strip "Calvin and Hobbes" than a religious ritual. The two must then go to work and school in Chicago and act the ages they appear to be, making sure Reinhold does not lose his job as an executive of a large department store in the process.
Reinhold has no problem behaving as a seventh-grader, and he is sometimes amusing. But the real charmer of the film is Savage. Either finishing a math test in minutes or walking
ing. She shows none of the flair for a small comic bit that she does in "The World According to Garp" and "True Stories."
The saddest thing about "Vice Versa" is its overused premise of parents switching places with their kids. Not only was it done before in the Disney film "Freaky Friday," but it was just rehashed last year for "Like Father, Like Son."
As hard as Reinhold and Savage might try, they still can't make "Vice Versa" a good film. Most of the jokes are predictable, and director Brian Gilbert tries for a slam-bang ending that is unimpaired.
This week on ABC's "Disney Sunday Movie," the first half of the made-for-television "14 Going on 30" was broadcast. It tells the tale of a ninth-grader who uses an age accelerator so he can date one of his teachers. And if that isn't enough
Film Review
around the apartment with martini in hand, he is believable as an adult trapped in a prepubescent body. His work earns the big few laughs in "Vice Versa," and it seems a shame that the film spends more time on Reinhold than on him.
When the two are on screen together, they interact well, especially during one scene in which Savage, as the father, catches his girlfriend kissing Reinhold, who is actually his son. Savage has a tendency to steal scenes, but Reinhold allows him to without a fight.
Some supporting performances in "Vice Versa" are good, and some are bad. Corinne Bohrer, of the short-lived sitem "E/R," knows just when to be cheerful and sympathetic as Reinhold's girlfriend and co-worker, Sam. She shows a sense of timing that transcends the script.
But Swoosie Kurtz as a smuggle trying to get the skull back from Reinhold and Savage is disappoint-
Tom Hanks' newest film "Big"
comes out this summer. It is about a
boy who wishes to be — you guessed
it — big.
Hollywood producers never have been accused of originality, but this trend has no excuse. The trend would not be laughable if the movies were.
And why is a humorous gimmick necessary for any movie that explores a father-son relationship? Even 1986's "Nothing in Common" kept the closeness of Tom Hanks and Jackie Gleason shrouded in comedy. Whenever the relationship between Reinhold and Savage shows signs of development, the film cuts away to a quick laugh. This lack of control robs a viewer of any chance to get involved and makes "Vice Versa" stale.
state.
Fans of Judge Reinhold might like "Vice Versa," but otherwise, it is a forgettable film.
"Vice Versa" is rated PG for strong language.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 11, 1988
7
KU set for third game with OSU
Jayhawks hope Big Eight just beginning for Kansas in post-season tourneys
By Elaine Sung Kansan sports writer
The Jayhawks men's basketball team's plan this year has been to take the season on a game-to-game basis.
So far, the plan has gotten the Jenkins message response. Now, copy the postscript.
The Big Eight tournament starts today at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas is hoping that its postseason schedule will be extended further with an invitation to the NCAA tournament.
The first step is beating the No. 6 seed, Oklahoma State, in the first round at 8:10 tonight. The Jayhawks defeated the Cowboys on Saturday in Allen Field House 75-57 and beat them earlier in the season at Stillwater 78-68.
Kansas fifth-year senior forward Chris Piper does not consider it a disadvantage to have to play back-to-back games against Oklahoma State in such a short time.
"We'll know what to expect, and we'll be ready for them," Piper said last week. "We've set our goals for the Big Eight tournament. We've approached it on a game-to-game basis."
Oklahoma State enters the postseason with a 14-15 overall record and a 4-10 record in the Big Eight. The Cowboys freshman forward Richard Dumas is one of the leading candidates for the conference Newcomer-of-the Year award. Dumas is averaging more than 17 points a game, and he scored 21 points in the last game against Kansas.
"They'll be going into the tournment with nothing to lose. I hope our kids approach it the same way,"
T.
They'll be going into the tournament with nothing to lose. I hope our kids approach it the same way.'
Larry Brown Kansas basketball coach
Brown said. "No one expected us to be the third seed."
Some didn't expect Kansas to finish in the top half of the Big Eight after the Jayhawks started the conference season with a 1-4 record.
But Kansas finished the Big Eight with a 9-5 record, winning eight out the last nine conference games.
"I don't think we we're really worried about it," guard Jeff Gelfordner said. "They know what we do, and we know what they do. It's just a matter of going out and executing. We know if we play well and if everything goes the way we want to, we'll win the game. We don't want to look past them; but at the same time, we know we can beat them."
The tournament starts at 12:10 p.m.
p.m. then No. 4 Massachusetts plays
Oklahoma is the No.1 seed in the tournament and will play No.8 seed Colorado. The Sooners are 27-3 overall and 12-2 in the conference and are this year's regular-season conference winner. They are ranked fourth nationally.
If the Jayhawks defeat Oklahoma State, they will advance to the semi-finals at 3:10 p.m. tomorrow and will play against the Nebraska-Kansas State game.
KU
Kansas State, seeded No. 2, will play No. 7 seed Nebraska at 6:10 tonight.
Big Eight Tournament
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 10-9(5)
WILLOW BEAR
Oklahoma State Cowboys
COACH: Leonard Hamilton
Record: 14-15(4-10)
PROBABLE STARTERS
F-24 Chris Piper 6*8" PPG
C-21 Milt Newton 6*10" 10.4
C-25 Danny Manning 6*10" 25.0
G-33 Guelder 6*5" 4.2
G-14 Kevin Pritchard 6*3" 10.9
F-21 Richard Dumas 6'7" 17.2
F-23 William Woods 6'5" 5.2
C-42 Sylvester Kincion 6'10" 9.2
G-32 John Starks 6'3" 15.7
G-31 Derrick Davis 6'10" 5.6
COVERAGE: Game Time 8:08 tonight, March 11, at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo. The contest will be televised on the Raycom TV network, KSNT-TV channel 27. The game will be broadcast on the Jayhawk Sports Network, KLZR 106 FM.
Big Eight Basketball Tournament Kemper Arena-Kansas City, Mo.
Friday, March 11
4 MISSOURI
12:10 p.m.
5 IOWA STATE
Saturday, March 12
1:10 p.m.
Sunday, March 13
1 OKLAHOMA
2:10 p.m.*
8 COLORADO
3:10 p.m.
2 KANSAS STATE
6:10 p.m.*
7 NEBRASKA
3:10 p.m.*
3 KANSAS
8:10 p.m.*
6 OKLAHOMA STATE
* Or 30 minutes following first game
BASKETBALL
TOURNAMENT
KANSAN Graphic
The championship game at 3:10 p.m.
Sunday will be nationally televised on ABC-TV. Also on Sunday afternoon, the NCAA men's basketball committee will announce the selections and pairings for the national tournament, which starts March 17th.
The teams arrived in Kansas City yesterday to practice in Kemper. Brown has not commented on the status of guard Otis Livingston, who was ordered out of practice Tuesday afternoon. No official statement has been released regarding Livingston's status with the team.
Annual rumors haunt Brown as he recruits
Kansan sports writer
April is a key month for Kansas coach Larry Brown and the men's basketball program.
By Elaine Sung
It is the month when the now-annual speculations about Brown's intent to leave or stay at the University of Kansas reach their peak.
The second national letter of-intent signing period begins April 13th, and Brown and his staff will find out then whether those speculations have hurt the recruiting harvest.
Kansas did not sign any recruits in the fall signing period, and Brown blamed part of it on the rumors circulating that he would leave.
Now, with the second signing period drawing near, Kansas assistant coaches Ed Manning and Alvin Gentry have been traveling around the country on recruiting trips. Brown himself is recruiting when he is not at practice with the team.
"I think it's going well," Brown said. "We're going just about everywhere. We are looking at what our needs are, and then we're looking at what kids are available."
Brown is looking in both high schools and junior colleges but would prefer to sign high school talent.
"We don't have young guards in our program," he said. "Kevin (Pritchard) will be a junior, and I like to bring in some kids where they can grow without any pressure on them."
The fifth-year Kansas coach also is hoping for some young big men and all-around athletes like senior forward Archie Marshall who can play more than one position.
"I was thinking of bringing in maybe five or six kids in, and I'd like three, hopefully four of them to us," he said. "I anticipate us doing very well."
The players Brown visits ask him whether he is staying at Kansas or leaving. Brown does not say how he responds to them, but he does say that so far, the process has been
positive and that the rumors are not hurting.
Speculation over Brown's intentions started before the regular season ended. Newspapers and magazines around the country have suggested several places where UCLA could be included in UCLA and North Carolina.
It is also no secret that Carl Scheer, general manager for the NBA expansion team Charlotte Hornets, has said Brown is his first choice as the Hornets' coach.
Brown said, "I don't even think about leaving. If it was just one place, people could put a lot of substance into it, but with so many rumors, it gets silly after a while. What really bothers me is that some of those places already have coaches, and all this makes me look like I'm trying to get their job. It's embarrassing."
Brown never says definitely whether he is staying or leaving. For five years people have speculated. For five years Brown has stayed in place, the longest period of time he has staved with one team.
"A coach does not have to have another press conference every day and say he's staying," he said. "Why don't they ask every coach whether he's staying?" Well, I've been here five years, you would think eventually it would get old.
"If you just look at this year, why would I have redshirted (Mark) Randall and (Sean) Alvarado? Why would we be out working as hard as we are in recruiting?"
"The only way people are going to understand is if I start next season, and I have every intention of starting next season. Until Danny graduates and they see me back here again, maybe they won't ask me again."
I want to be the best coach I can
hate. I hope to continue the way I am
this week.
Editor's note: This is the fourth of the four part series examining the 1987-88 men's basketball season.
Associate sports editor
Bv David Boyce
Spencer hit two home runs and three triples in leading the Jayhawks to a doubleheader sweep against Missouri Southern 9-5 and 10-3.
Yesterday against Missouri Southern, Jeff Spencer proved he could come back from a disappointing game, and it was that baseball trait that pleased coach Dave Bingham.
Just 24 hours before yesterday's game, Spencer struck out in the bottom of the seventh with the tying run on second base against Northwest Missouri State.
"He is the guy we wanted to come to the plate in that situation, but he didn't perform," Bingham said. "He was really upset about his play, but today, he showed a lot of character and did really well."
"Of course it feels good." Spencer said of his performance.
He said the pitching both days were about the same but the team today was more disciplined at the plate.
"Yesterday, we weren't patient and we were swinging at the pitcher's pitch, but today, we were waiting for good pitches," Spencer said.
In the first game, Kansas fell behind 2-1 after the first inning. But by the third inning, the Jayhawks were ahead 5-3 and never relinquished the lead in the nine-inning contest.
Mulcahy had 11 strikeouts.
Craig Mulcahy pitched six innings for his first victory of the season.
"He threw 129 pitches in six innings, and we always like to strive for one pitch per out."
Bingham said that although he didn't like the pitcher's wildness, he did like the way Mulcahy made good decision pitches.
In the second game, starter Tom Bilyeu went five innings and gave up three runs but he had a lot of 3-2 counts. Kansas scored in all but the sixth inning, and the team committed the worst error. The game went seven innings.
"We played well today." Bingham said. "I never like to say you learn from your losses, but I am glad to see how we came back. It is a step in the right direction."
Divers confident as nationals approach
Kansas went 6-1 on the home stand and raised its record to 6-4. Bingham said the home games should help the Jayhawks in the Pan American Citrus Tournament in spring break at Edinburg, Texas.
"Anytime you are on the road, you would like to play at least. 500 baseball, and I would certainly be happy with a 4- record," Bingham said. "I won't be pleased if we go 3-5 or 2-6."
Kansas tennis teams ready for spring-break road trip
Last year, the Jayhawks were 2-6 in the tournament, but Bingham doesn't think this year's results will be the same.
"We set a goal at the beginning of the season to get better every day, and we have become more polished with each game," Bingham said. "Now, we will face tougher competition, but we are more prepared."
With stops scheduled in nine cities and three states in 11 days, the Kansas men's and women's tennis teams' spring break sounds more like a concert tour.
And although they will be on the West Coast, the two teams' coaches consider the vacation a business trip. "If we're not playing we'll be
Kansan sports writer
By Tom Stinson
"We are going to be traveling every day," women's coach Eric Hayes said. "And we'll be working out every day. There'll be tough situations, but it will be good for us."
in some ways, this is like professional tennis. We're on the road 11 days playing some of the best teams in the country. We've got to be able to control our emotions. This is the final stage for the Big Eight season."
'If we're not playing we'll be
traveling,' men say in cereal
ware. 'Men is totally business.'
The men's team begins competing tomorrow against San Jose State. During the week it will play California-Berkeley, California-Irvine, Pepperdine and Princeton.
Brigham Young is 17th in the Volvo rankings.
Making the trip for the Jayhawk men will be seniors Larry Pascal and Reggie Hodges, junior Jim Secrest, sophomores Chris Walker and Craig Wildey and freshmen John Falbo and Jeff Gross.
Pepperdine is ranked fifth and
The women play in the University of Pacific Invitational today, tomorrow and Sunday. During the week they will play California-Davis, Fresno State, San Jose State and Brigham Young.
The Jayhawks will end their break in the Rice Invitational in Houston next weekend.
California-Irvine seventh in the Volvo Tennis/Collegiate national tennis rankings.
By Tom Stinson
The Kansas divers are ready for the Zone C Diving Nationals this weekend inAusin, Texas, but are the Zone C diving judges ready for the Kansas divers?
Kansan sports writer
The top three performers in each of the five zones across the country can qualify for the NCAA Championships. But, Kansas diving coach Barry Susterka said that politics sometimes weighed on the meet's scores.
"It gets political when you get down to this competition," said Susterka, who was named Big Eight Conference women's diving coach of the year for the second consecutive year. "The zone wants to send its best divers to nationals, so sometimes, the big names bring in the big scores.
But we're breaking through that barrier. Kelley (Kauzlarich) setting the (Big Eight one-meter) record will be heading in the right direction."
Kauzlarich, a Liberty, Mo., freshman, will lead three Jayhawk women divers to the meet. Senior Lori Spurney will make her fourth appearance at the zone meet, and sophomore Julie Pierce will make her second appearance.
Last weekend at the Big Eight Championships, Kaulairl broke the conference one-meter record with a score of 469.1. Spurney finished third and Pierce finished fourth in that event.
In the three-meter, Spurney placed fifth and Kaularich placed sixth.
Both Kauzlarich and Spurney will compete in the one- and three-meter competition. Pierce will compete in the three-meter.
Sophomore Andy Flower will compete in the men's three-meter for the second year.
Flower said that his goals for the meet were to set a personal record and possibly break the school record.
Flower finished sixth in both the one-meter and three-meter competition.
"Sometimes, the names pull in the big score." Flower said. "So I want
Smith will be competing in the 500-yard and 1,650-yard freestyles and the 400-yard individual medley. The Mequon, Wise., junior qualified for the 1,650-yard freestyle when she
to make a name for myself for the future."
The Zone C meet is probably the toughest qualifying meet because of the powerful Southwest Conference, Susterka said.
"If we get in there, concentrate and dive tough, we can compete against anyone in the country." Sutten said. "Especially in the one overheard."
"I think we're ready mentally and physically, it's just if we can go in and have a good meet. We've got kids who believe in themselves and, when you get on a board, that's all that matters."
If any Jayhawk women place in the top three, they will join teammates Barbara Ann Smith, Sue Spry, Susan Bloomfield, Erin Easton and Gina Brown at the Women's NCAA Championships March 17-19 in Austin.
"I'm excited to see the caliber of competition that will be there." Smith said. "I'd like to swim in the top heat (top six) at night. But I'd be excited to finish top 20."
Smith, who was named the Big Eight's Outstanding Female Performer, also won the 400-yard individual medley and the 500-yard freestyle.
broke the conference record last weekend with a time of 16:34.45.
Smith is ranked fourth nationally but has not seen all of the results from around the nation.
"They all have to click at the same time in a (sprint) relay like that," coach Gary Kempf said. "I hope to hell they swim fast. Anybody that goes (to the NCAA meet) and anybody that qualifies has a bona fide chance to be an All-American."
Orioles' Lynn hopes to stay healthy for a change
weekends when every performer who qualifies individually for the championships is allowed to swim three events.
Kansas' other four participants qualified in the 200-yard freestyle relay with a time of 1:34.97.
The Associated Press
In an attempt to keep Lynn healthy this year, Manager Cal
MIAMI — Fred Lymn keeps hearing questions about his health. Interviewers go beyond the usual, "How are you feeling?"
tusal. How are you feeling?
It's more like, "How's your health, really?"
The reason is that the Baltimore Orioles outfielder, who has turned 36, missed 128 games because of injuries over the last three seasons.
Ripken is planning to play him some in right field.
"I'm still going to play center field, but for the benefit of the club and myself, I'll play some right field," Lynn said. "It could help us a couple of ways. It could help me play some more games, and it could help our defense. (Ken) Gerhard feels more comfortable playing center than he does play right or left. So you shore up two positions by me going to
In 111 games last year, Lynn hit
23 home runs and drove in 60 runs.
His .253 average was 36 points below his career average. Only once has he hit lower.
In an attempt to stay healthy, Lynn altered his offseason training program.
"I really worked on my legs, whereas in the past, I’ve tried to work on my upper body strength," he said. "I really worked my legs hard. I cut down on the long-distance running and played a little bit more tennis for quickness. My legs feel really good this year.
That's where I've had the majority of my problems, pulls and sprained ankles, things like that."
Those kinds of nagging injuries "are harder to live with than if you get hit by a pitch and break a band," Lymn said. "I've never had what you'd call the obvious injuries."
Last year, back spasms and a sore quadricorp kept him out of 43 games. In 1986, a sprained right ankle and strained right wrist forced him out of 49 games.
Ex-Met is eager to prove himself with Dodgers
The Associated Press
VERO BEACH, Fla. — Jesse Orosco enjoyed four exceptional seasons with the New York Met, but last year wasn't so hot for him. As far as he's concerned, it was time to move on.
"It's a new life for me," Orosco said of being traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers in December. "I was overly excited when I heard about the trade.
Now, he says, he has something to prove.
"The opportunity wasn't there for me (in New York) anymore," he said. "The work wasn't quite there. It was just time for me to go forward. If I can pitch well here, I can get consistent work.
"I have no bitterness over what happened last year. I had a great
time in New York. It's just time to go on.'
Orosco was 4-10 with a 2.72 earned run average and four saves in 1982, his first full season with the Mets.
The left-handed reliever blossomed the next year, going 13-7 with a 1.62 ERA and 17 saves.
Last year was different. Orosco went 3-9 with a 4.44 ERA and 16 saves. It was a year he would rather forget.
In 1894, Orosco was 10-6 with a 2.59 ERA and 31 saves. The following year, he was 8-6 with a 2.73 ERA and 17 saves. And in 1898, when the Mets won the World Series, he was 8-6 with a 2.33 ERA and 21 saves.
"I want to prove to the Dodgers that I can be the man to overcome the problems they've had for a long time," Orosco said, referring to difficulties the club has had with left-
"I wanted to go back home, play on the West Coast," he said. "The trade was the best thing that could happen to me."
Orosco, who turns 31 next month,
grew up in Santa Barbara, 100 miles
north of Los Angeles.
In the Dodgers' first six exhibition games this spring, all of which were victories, Orosco pitched three times. After a shaky first outing, he was effective in the next two.
handed relievers since Steve Howe first began having drug problems in 1983. "I'm going to go out there and pitch the way I'm capable of pitching.
working now.
Orosco said reports that he had a sore arm last year were false.
over ... I didn't have any arm problems," he said. "Nobody asked me about it, but everybody reads about it, and I had to make some calls to tell people it wasn't true.
"It never bothered me. I just wanted to pitch."
---
He refused to discuss reports that he and Mets Manager Davey Johnson had problems. But he did say, "I have nothing against Davey. I'm on a new team now. I just want to move forward."
8
Fridav, March 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU track star during 1930s, Glenn Cunningham, 78, dies
The Associated Press
CONWAY, Ark. — Glenn Cunningham, who overcame a life-threatening injury as a child to become one of the world's greatest middle distance runners, died of an apparent heart attack yesterday. He was 78.
Mr. Cunningham starred at the University of Kansas from 1934 to 1938, twice winning the mile run in the NCAA outdoor track championship. He was an original inductee into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1974.
Mr. Cunningham and former Jayhawk track star Wes Santee are honored each year at the Kansas Relays with the running of the Glenn Cunningham-Wes Santee 1,500-meter run.
The Conway County Coroner Robert Mitchell said Mr. Cunningham was found dead in his pickup truck near his farm for exotic animals at Menelee, Ark. He apparently had
been feeding the animals at the time of his death.
Mr. Cunningham, who won a silver medal in the 1,500 meters in the 1936 Olympics, was a five-time U.S. champion in the 1,500 meters and one of the first great indoor runners. He set numerous world records in the '30s, highlighted by a 4-minute, 6-7 second outdoor mile in 1938 at Princeton, N.J.
In his day, he was the best, winning the Sullivan Award as America's top amateur athlete in 1933 and winning the Wanamaker Mile at New York's Milrose Games six times, more than anyone else in history until Eannom Coghlan of Ireland won the event for the seventh time in 1987. Between 1933 and 1939, Mr. Cunningham lost only in 1936, the year he won his Olympic silver medal.
In 1979, he was named the best athlete in the 100-year history of Madison Square Garden, and he was brought back to run a leg in $P
commemorative event at the Milrose Games there last month.
But Mr. Cunningham's boyhood hardly prepared him for those glories.
At the age of seven, he was burned in an explosion and fire at the small school he attended in Elkhart. A brother was killed in the explosion. Glenn was burned so badly that his life was in danger and it was thought he would never walk again.
Moreover, as he recalled several years ago, his family was opposed to sports.
"The first track meet I saw was the first one I ran in, and the first football and basketball games I saw were the ones I played in," he said. "Up until I ran my last race, my family thought I was foolish."
Mr. Cunningham was a good high school miler, but he became a star only after he entered Kansas.
House of HuPEI
Where good fortune
fortune awaits you.
Jane
ALL YOU CAN EAT SUNDAY BUFFET Regular Price $5.25 Now $4.25***
If you're hungry or just like Chinese food, try the House of Hupei and find out how good we are. Our buffet features 14 tempting items from soup to crab rangoon-We also have beef, chicken, and shrimp dishes. At House of Hupei we concentrate on Good Quality at a Good Price!
2907 W 6th St.
Next to Econo Lodge
843-8070
Every Sunday
Noon to 9 p.m.
***Bring in this coupon and receive $1 OFF our Sunday Buffet (regularly $5.25)
Offer expires April 15, 1988
STARTS TODAY!
Selected KU
Sweat-Shirts
$10.00
STARTS TODAY!
Selected KU
T-Shirts
$1.25
Thru
$5.00
STARTS TODAY!
While Supplies Last!
STARTS TODAY!
Park Inn
INTERNATIONAL
Park Inn INTERNATIONAL
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
XPRSS-VIDEO
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Dally
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
"A SUPERB MOVIE.
Paul Newman
has done it."
- Gene Shaheen, THE TODAY SHOW-NBC TV
"★★★½
The cast is exceptional!"
Kathleen Carroll
NEW YORK NEWS
TENNESSEE
WILLIAMS
THE GLASS
MENAGERIE
RAVE BOONDY, MAKE MEDIA, RAVE HALL
Fri. 7:00 Sat. 4:30 Sun. 4:30
9:30 7:00 7:00
9:30
LIBERTY
HALL
642
Mass
749
1912
BURGUNDY
Come watch the tournament games with us. Your Big Blue Headquarters. Drink specials nightly.
Fuzzy's Westport 4113 Penn.
Fuzzy's South 1127 W. 103rd Watts Mill
M.
I HAVE A GREAT IDEA!
LET'S GO TO CHASERS!
THEY HAVE $1.50 WELL
DRINKS ALL SPRING
BREAK. THEY ALSO HAVE
A BIG DANCE PLOOR!
OH,NO! WHAT AM I
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LET'S GO TO CHASERS!
THEY HAVE $1.50 WELL
DRINKS ALL SPRING
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Snap
Chasers A PRIVATE CLUB 623 VERMONT OPEN 7PM-2AM
Chasers
WE'LL BE HERE WHEN THE TRUCK LEAVES!
JOE'S
RENTALS
JOE'S RENTALS KU
SAVE $351.00 AND GET THE SERVICE AND SUPPORT THAT YOU DESERVE AND EXPECT FROM COMPUTER PROFESSIONALS.
We know that your first computer purchase can be kind of frightening. Don't worry,it really isn't. Never-the-less, when you buy a personal computer from us we don't just drop it off the back of a truck and leave you to struggle on your own. With every purchase of the Leading Edge Model "D" (or any other product) we make sure you get the orientation and support that you want and expect. It is just part of our service. And, with our 30 day price guaranty you know that you are getting the lowest price around.
DON'T SELL YOURSELF SHORT...
JUST COMPARE THE VALUE
Leading Edge
Orientation:
Warranty:
Service Center
KU Financing:
Dual Disk System:
Truck Load Special
Always
20 Months
Lawrence
Yes
Yes
Sometimes
90 Days
Topeka
Yes
No
Price:
$790.00
thru 3/12/88
$1200.00
ConnectingPoint 333
"Where Computers Finally Make Sense"
804 New Hampshire St
Downtown Lawrence 843-7584
Formerly COMPUTER OUTLET
University Daily Kansan / Friday. March 11, 1988
9
Marks
JEWELERS
'jine jewelry &
repair'
843-4266
817 Massachusetts
4 Grammy Nominations.
Hailed by Rolling Stone,
People, Billboard, and
The New York Times
Island Recording Artist
BUCKWHEAT
ZYDECO
Wednesday,
March 23, 1988
Tickets on sale at
all CATS Outlets
Liberty Hall in Lawrence
and The Bottleneck
$9 advance • $11 at the door
Bottleneck
New Hampshire • Lawrence • (913)843-9723
THE NEW YORK TIMES
$9 advance • $11 at the door
Liberty Hall in Lawrence
and The Bottleneck
727 New Hampshire Laundry, Kansas
Bottleneck
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop
(Time Management, Reviewing,
Strategies) Wednesday, March 27, 9:48 p.m.
Student Assistance Center,
121 North, 804-644.
"the right to shelter, the place we call home, is one of the most highly valued principles of our society."[1]
Liz Gowdy, spokesperson, Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DISCRIMINATION AND SEXUAL ORIENTATION Wed April 23 at 10 a.m., Lawrence Chapel sponsored by the Lawyer's Trends Association.
You Are Invited To A Contest REWARD For Designing Our New Look
FREEBREET or $2,100.00 in COLD CASH
Create either a Name & Logo,
or Landing包 & Color Scheme, or
all participants must enter in person.
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
Music for Lighting and Music for
Occasion. 841-1405
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot spots Maximum Party Thrush. 841-7033
MUSIC *********** MUSIC *********** D.J. Servie, 8-track studio,
Rud Red House - Audible DJ.
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry, Call
Brad 749 1275
LIBERTY HALL
VIDEO LIBRARY
Check Us Out First!
Mon.-Thurs., tapes $1.50.
646 MASS. • 913/749-1972
FOR RENT
Attic room available. Nice house next to campus.
Share kitchen, bath $23 plus deposit. 842-6579.
AVAILABLE HIMMEDITELY. Bedrooms for free.
Washroom. Bathrooms with parking.
$125/mo. 341-542-6 for 6:00 PM
Avr Apr 1, 2 1dbm 4pleet D/w bk,yard pets $315
near. growth 6th bk. 842-0699
Available immediately -- Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities. Call 841-1207.
Available immediately! 1 bedroom apartment. Rent $75 + low utility. Lift 749-2702 after 10 pm. Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 825-225, or 749-2493. Mastercraft Management
841-1212, 841-3255, or 749-2415, Mastercraft
Management
Rosmy studio apartment in farm style home with large office space, Wi-Fi, Lawrence easy to campus $26 paid rent
Excellent location, 2 bedroom apt in fourplex,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
utilities, available April 1, $130.00 at 1341 Ohio.
Buffalo 842-4242
Female grade. student seeking roommate to
2 bedroom 2 bath apt. Summer / Fall $195/month
plus electricity. Call Melly 864-4176 daytime,
842-0831 evenings, weekends.
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, ceilers, free utilities, phone, cable, W/D use. Two blocks from KU $175 - $195, 841-3698 $7 deposit. For Rent. 3 btw. 1½ bathroom duplex w/ vaulted ceiling, carpart. Dishwasher. CA disposal, ect. $75/mo. 161-6789
Furnished, private rooms now & summer, room,
garage, balcony, kitchen & laundry.
Room bills $120 + deposit 79-149 Allow
24hrs of use.
Get a Group? Common Goals? Spacious well-maintained house on quiet block rear earn & campus. 8-9 bedrooms w/ multiple kitchens & baths. WO include: available 1-888-1264 $150
I need a roommate and apartment for fall
188 98 I smoke. call Sarah evening
181-9245
MASTERCHAFT offers beautiful furnished apartments, various sizes, all great locations! Designed with the KU. student in mind. Call *1-1212, 841-355 or 784-4236*
One bedroom West Meadow condo - carpet, pet wet bar, microwave, fireplace, sun room No. 8
One bedroom duplex within walking distance of
Central air, low utilities; $25 a month
Availability.
One bedroom apt Close to campus available
Call Mark 2891464, after 9:00 p.m.
Mark 2891464, after 9:00 p.m.
the room available now! Share kitchen and
bathroom $125 no deposit necessary 842.3841
Inserve your room for summer or fall at the following addresses. Call 749-0871 and ask for the rentler.
Roommate Needed to share 21D House. Close to Campus 175/math. Available Now/Summer.
Room for rent in nice clean O.W.I. lt. apt., prtv.
Room for rent $175 ins. female.
Female preferred tender.
SUMMER SUBLET Affordable, new one-
bedroom fully furnished, near campus.
Sublease 2BD, 1 Bath. Apt. at Eddingham Place.
250 per month, sub lease until May 31
Call (618) 447-7942
five bedroom townhall to avail. 1) Carpent,
replace, 3 pools, some pets. 2) Wahook, cable
room.
Three bedroom townhouse avail. April. Carport, fireplace, 3 pools, some pets, WD hookup, cable room, knookup for 34 students. 843-7333. Why Wait? - Sublease a 2 bedroom bberl frys to person and low utilities. Just one stock from person. If interested, call 749-4912. Ask for Bob).
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
T AN AEFORDABLE PRIC
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
- Free basic cable
- Free basic cable
- Exercise Weightroom
- 1. Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by
---
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emery Rd.
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts. furn. or unfurn.
Now leasing for June or August
Great Location near campus
TORONTO
BANK
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
We have: apartments rooms houses
No appointment Needed
Looking to Rent?
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
- Free Cable TV
Lynch Real Estate
Call Marie at 843-1601 or 841-3323
Dial At 843-9021
- Pools
- 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom
1711 Massachusetts Lawrence, KS.
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 11-5
- Tennis Court
- Garages
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
BRAND NEW!
Sundance II
SUNDANCE
Lynch Real Estate
- Close to Campus
- Located on the old
- Basements
Coming to you this fall!
- Fireplaces
- Super energy efficient
Sanctuary site
- Microwaves
- On KU bus route
Call today to reserve your unit for next fall! Offered by:
FOR SALE
841-5255 * 841-1212
Sterio 5 channel mixer 252, remote TV converter
Sterio 5 channel mixer 252, walkmaster walkmaster 141-7534
141-7534
640K XT clone w/2 drives, Hercules, comm board
& amber monitor; $650. 841-367 269
73 Cressline Home. 12 • 50 • 28 FB Extra manual
56 • 120 • 28 FB Extra manual
818 • 425 • 452 after 30 p.m, or inquiries
418 • 392 • 452
Apple iite Computer System, 128K, 80col card,
with star printer, Software - Appleworks.
Applewriter, Print Shop, MultiScrib, Flight
Simulator. John 842-4790
Big Sale. Fr. Sal. Mountain Bike, Crystals,
Made in Colorado. $199.00. Look for signs
on E tapes on Teppee Rd. (34140) Look for signs
Classical guitar $75, 74 Dodge dart $200, Marshall
amp $75, Morsley Wah pedal $75, 69 Cadillac
Deville $30, Black leather jacket $100. 841-2657
evenings.
ARLINES NOW HIRING Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $0k. Entry level positions.
Call 855-687-4000 Ext. A-9738.
FOR SALE - Roundtrip airline ticket to Albany.
Very reasonable. If interested call 791-282-5630.
****MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
512 E. 789-749-4961
Nagels — Neer - Fisher Mountain Bike — Elec-
trics — everything — Beeds must be sold.
**NOT Bike**
Osborne support PC and IBM printer. $425 or best offer. Call Done evenings at 814-4738.
Students/Rommates/Married: Beautiful,
spacious, mobile home. Quiet Area, Privacy.
Separate Exercise Room, Ample Storage, Resale
Value. Many Extras. 749-3523
Observation point: Call Doe's evening at 184-4725 or
Rock-n-tell. Thousands of used and rare books
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
Dinner and dessert from 6:30 p.m.
Surea Reef Hotel Miami - For sale round-the-ticket
AMN Datsun 316GX, S-2P, dr.hatch,
AMFN, Metallic, Brown, Clean, 842-1214 ff
AMZN, Metal, Brown, Clean, 842-1214 ff
CARLEN CD PLAYER - Must sell before Spring
1000 $100 www.fortunetobill.com 749-5267 or
843-6440 Bill Griffin
Stereo SE, 6 Cly, 4 Sp., Silver, Top of line
stereo, 35.0 miles, $7.000, 814.365.
AUTO SALES
19.022 Nissan Stanza, Red 5-Spd, 4-Dr, back-hatch.
m-fm. Fsm. Clean. New. Must sell.
Must sell.
1988 mini-Vans Astro $5.52 Caravani $6.98
Aerostar $4.48 4.25 x 10 Blazer $18.90
Bruno 18 ICON $3.79 BLAZE $12.80
Ranger S $6.44 Full Size trucks Chev-
chev Cienne 15 K Dakota $6.15 F $2.50
S $3.65 Warranties, Rentals, Financing. You
choose options, option packages, colors you want
POSTAL JOBS: $2.004 Start! Prepare Now!
WORKSHOP (108) 91-444-444 Ext. 153
EXAM WORKSHOP (91) 94-444-444 Ext. 153
RED HOT Bargain! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
repair, dome D. Your area. Buyers'
cars, boats
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amendment Towers, accepting applications and information for information. For information & application, write National College Recreation, P. O. Box 8074 Hilton
83 Saab 900 Turbo 6100 miles auto 3 dr. electric
windows/android 850, 845-855
Red 1979 Maxa KX-7. Body and interior in clean clothes. Need repair. Best off Lille Dich 5368. Need repair. Best off Lille Dich 5368.
HELP WANTED
Graduate Sale, 83 Escarot, nine tires, good Conn.
Used for sale only. Must sell Ford Lynx 1994
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseline Airlines &
careers for summer job, internships and career
positions. For information & application, write
national Goldegan Recreation, P. O. Box 8047.
Summer Jobs! Two of Minnesota's finest summer youth camps, seek college age students to work as counselors. Employment is from June 15 through July 24. Visit www.interview.jcf.edu/jefl-1601-851-5280. Etxt. 310
Teachers aide for child care program needed 7:45 a.m. to 2:0 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 5 yrs or 2 yr. olds and two references required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 313 Main, Seattle.
*MP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: basketball, field hockey, nastics, riffery, archery, tennis, golf, sports, camping, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary or $80 per hour. Training, 1765 Milek ND, Milek ID, 60093, 312-466-2444.
Counselors wanted – Camp Mishawaka,
Grand Rapids, Mn. June 15–August 14. Must be
able to sail or follow along to girls
biking 8-16; sailing, archery, canoeing,
archery, arts/crafts. Contact Bobie
Olgentee. PO Box 368 Grand Rapids, Mn., 55744.
Female student wanted for house sitting and
old child care. During tat and 3rd weeks of April
through May. Send resume to Kate's
References Call. 842-1376, 10 am - pm 5.
Resorts Employed Newsletter - All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif., Nevada/Arizona More! Tennis, ski, Golf, Vacation/Restrict Cities 86270, 86700, Lake Tahoe 86193, 8741-7582
Wanted: Full-time or part-morning worker with a hour photo lab experience. For more information, visit www.lifejob.com.
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Stability, dependability, and resume to: PO Box 1285, Lawrence KS 60049.
BE ON T V. Many needed for commercials.
TV Casting. Information (1) 905-867-4000 Ext. 905-
7978.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,040/320 yr./wk.
Hiring Your Area (85) 687-6000 or R755 for
the job.
Immediate openings to update Lawrence / Kansas City 1888 Directory. Conduct brief door to door interviews. No selling. No experience needed. We will train. Salary plus incentive bonus plus merit increase. Hours flexible. Apply in person only. Refundable. Job location: Paola & Co. 50 Knute, Kentucky, Suite 204. EOAE MF
Wanted kitchen utility help, flexible hours. Call Frank 1-843-526-0707, www.frankfrank.com
Graphic Design temporary unclassified position, March 30 - June 10, 1988, $500/$850 - 1100 per month. Duties: conceptualize designs and prepare artwork for publications; handle all communication and support for a supervision, work with a publications team. Required qualifications: at least 3 years of a college degree or equivalent in design discipline or equivalent professional experience; evidence of abilities to handle duties. Preferred: experience working with printers; experience with Macintosh layout system. Application deadline: March 25, p. 5m. Carol Lettter, Office of University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 64053, 6045, 81145-EEA. IOI Kansas,
Kansas Union Food Service is hiring part-time cashiers $4.10 per hour, 5 shifts, Sunday 10:30 am - 6:30 pm, Saturday 4:10 pm, M-F 3:20 am-10:30 pm. Must have previous cashiering experience and be able to give veritable reference documents. Kansas Union Personnel Office. Level 5, FOE
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Transportation required. Call 842-6284.
PERSONAL
A. B.C. "For me, the single word 'God' suggests that you are in a slippery, shady, squallful and foot-tight environment."
Alpha Chi Sha - Have a safe Spring Break and have Love, the jelly bean committee COMMILER
"Hit the Slopes. Crash in the Club." Spring break includes a variety of activities, such as Saturday, or Sunday, up to four people per room, includes: "Full cooked to order breakfast," Discounts lift coupons for Keystone, North Peak, and other nearby locations; "Late night snacks. All within an hour drive of major sports areas and ten minutes to night life!"
C. You know me, but I don't know you. Interested in meeting. Blue Eyes.
In the image: blue eyes.
In the image: number one novice. Good luck in ANN.COM.
Festly – Since the beginning you were always the one, but I couldn't see it. I was just having fun, not worrying about it. I didn't care everything I wanted. How much You Love! Thank you for one year of friendship followed by six years of being friends.
Ferris: Happy birthday! *Yell at me and I beat you up. Let me hit the beach and don't forget the towel. a Hawaiian trip, fine jewelry, goodwear. We'll be here all day. P.S. we should have won. Love You Glenn.
Hans: Slumber parties, hate ee. EBA- "Abba-Aba"
Dr. Bath, Babytak 10, moe. Love, Dr.
Baby, Babytak 18, moe. Love, Dr.
Kris Kleiner (not mom) Laurie Potatoebc and
Jessica Potatoebc (not mom) for taking me
to padrel? Love, Lylebeth.
Kwik shop Sat 13:0 A.M. I had a Redescert, next to me, same time, same place. March 26th.
Legal and lovin' it! ! Happy 21st Anita. L & L, K.
Musain, Sucy, Stana. Flow here we come!
McGeey - I miss you already! I wish there was something I could do to make up for all these last few weeks. I can't wait until I get back and care, drive carefully, care drive carefully, call me sometimes I'll be
Michael, Happy 20th Birthday! I wish I could with you for it. I promise a celebration you won't forget when we get back from Spring Break. I'll miss you. Love, Angela.
Michelle H. Happy soon to be birthday March 18.
Love, John.
Thumper, think about me over Spring Break, I'll be thinking of you. Prosty.
To Michelle... After two years you're still in heart shape. You're the one to smile. You'll smoothly. See you upon my return with a tradition of love.
Play thang skibe roses Me mait est corubica
He and I love you, tu no puceu blasto auto.
I and I love you, tu no puceu blasto auto.
Tom, Jerry and Sussy: I would like to see you over break. Anxious Ralph.
BUS. PERSONAL
New styles in at the ECT SHOP, 732 Nassau
Discover recovery thru shared experience and
mutual support. No dues or fees. Overerates
Anonymous, Mondays 7-8:30. Lawrence
Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine. For confidential
workship. Write P.O. Box 3421.
Lawrence 66046.
Important passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
Certificate of identity (D, I) fine portrait.
Swedish Studio. 749-1811.
BARRETTES/BARRETTES New selection just
HOUSE E 12 in street Breath THE BEACH
HOUSE E 12 in street Breath
Did you get your sunlamps for Spring Break?
New styles in at the ECT, SHOP, 732 Mass.
Do you want $30,000 / year?
The Comic Corner
N E Center of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
Bloom Community t&t's & books
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more!
Pregnant and need help? call Birtight birth at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
It begins with a quality resume
We can also print from your IBM™ or Mcintosh™ disk.
SERVICES OFFERED
Kingstone Printing
See us Kingston Printing
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
SENIUAL LINGERIE & $MNWEAR. Get your full color catalog today. Send $5 ($includes postage and handling) to: SATIN 'N' LACE, P.O. BOX 527149, LENEXA, KS 66215
TRUE TO LIGHT portrait photography. Head shoots to companies, actors, dancers, etc.
$50 Value when presented toward new patient ser-
cialization. $35 Value when presented toward Spinal Exa-
nima Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
Try it you'll love it, become glamorous with a beautiful "Bouordor Portrait," curtain draped over a wooden table. Full Foiling Assistance, Creative Photography Technique to produce alarming results. 748-396. Mike
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
Job-winning resumes, cover letters, 12 years college experience. KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service. Send resume to KU Design & Build Room 206. 844-4767
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwrestling Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $8/hour, 843-9032 (p.m.)
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
840-1053.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Jgny and Abortion Services. Overland Park (913) 491-6878.
Pregnant and need help? Call Biright at
Confidential help/free pregnancy
treatment
TUTORING TUTORING B 59/hour, MATH
TUTORING TUTORING B 60/hour, MATH
M.S.Statistics, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
TYPING
1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accept
many formats, including word processing.
842-7945-m3a L81-1815
842-7945-m3b L81-1815
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in termite testing, correcting or correcting Selective, snelling corrected. 843-9054
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your screensets into叙情ably spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct images of letter-quality type. 843-2083, days or evenings. spellcheck, spellcheck, spellcheck, $1/pg, doublespace/pica. After a 5's t. P.-T. antivine weeks. 842-1942
CAMP COUNSELORS Positions Available:
Assistant Director, Wrangler, Waterfront Staff,
General Counselors. Contact Outdoor Program
Director Wichita Area G. Woodward,
dowland.
430-815-6343, FORE.
THE FAR SIDE
CAMP DIRECTOR --- Girl Scout Camp
Wiedemann is a seasonal师务.
resume to or contact: Outdoor Program Director,
Wisconsin Area, Inc. 209 N. Woodland,
CHEEK CENTER, COOK
Call R.J.'s typing service for all of your typing needs. 814-942-943 for 9 p.m. please.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS.
MOMMY'S, BABY'S, DAYSERVICE day service
MONDAYS; SUNS; WEDNESSES; 8 a.m., 9 p.m.
Call me for your typing needs. Reasonable rates
842-486 before 10 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Prolessing
Term papers, papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings lists. Letter quality
printing. Spelled correcting. 842-2747.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE, Letter
from parent(s) for student rate, spell check,
TOP-3 PUPIL STUDENT SERVICE
*professional typist w/ 15 years experience. Close*
*campus. Peggy 832-8998.*
For professional typing/word processing, call
their website: 1909. Spring special $120/page, double
spaces, pica,
THE WORDCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can write it yourself? "our nurses, law review." From 1983. 443-314.
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RESUME SERVICES - professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letter drafting, proofreading, graphic for any uses. All services back in 24 hours, and at $t_0 the cost of Kine's Call 842-2897. If no answer leave message on machine.
Female needed to care for our 2 children this summer. We are an active, outgoing family in search of someone with similar qualities. We are an experienced traveler who comes from some NJ beaches. Good benefits. Please send letter of interest with phone as AMPT to Mrs. Wagner at 718-6779.
Final four tickets will beheld at 8:44 a.m.
Male roommate (a) wanted for summer 88. Spring
89. Large, tidy, non-smoking 3 bedroom,
apartment in Meadowbrook, near campus. Call
835-0541.
Put your used books and magazines to work.
Donate to Friends of the Lawrence Public Library. Bring to collection box at the library 707 Vermont.
Roammate needed to share townhouse £252.00
plus 1₄ utilities. Call 642-1983 10-M-F
By GARY LARSON
© 1988 Universal Press Syndicate
311
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Friday, March 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Dance company to offer spring concert
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Waiting and waltzing will take on a different meaning when the University Dance Company presents its spring concert tonight and tomorrow.
Brenda Hotard, Bryan, Texas,
graduate student, choreographed
two pieces in the concert. Her first
piece is "Waiting." is a modern
abstract.
She said the piece, which is an interplay between music and silence, proved that a dance can be complete by itself, with or without music.
Another of the 12 different works featured in the concert is called
"Waltzing," which shows the waltz in many manifestations, Hotard said.
Another piece, "Paquita," is a classical ballet with 10 dancers performing excerpts from the Spanish ballet of the same name.
The concert, which will be the dance company's last performance of the semester, also will feature tonight the Cohan/Suzau Duet Company from New York.
Muriel Cohan and Patrick Suezau have performed throughout the United States, Mexico, and Puerto Rico and will perform "Portrait," which will convey the contradictions and fantasies of an average person in
a normal day, said Janet Hamburg, artistic director of the University Dance Company.
Hamburg said that this spring's dance concert was the strongest the company had ever had and that it was unfortunate that it was scheduled the weekend that spring break started.
But this weekend was the only time that the dance company would be able to have Crafton-Preyer Theatre because it is heavily used by the theater and music departments the rest of the year, she said.
Hamburg said that the concert could be enjoyed by anyone, even
those who have never attended a dance concert before.
Ballet, jazz and modern dance will be performed, Hamburg said. With the exception of the Cohan/Suzau duet, all the dances are performed by KU students or faculty.
Tonight's performance is at 8 p.m. and tomorrow's performances begin at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. in Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
Tickets are $6 for the public. For KU students, faculty and staff, tickets are $5 for tonight's performance and $4 for tomorrow's performance.
You could be reading your name right now! Call the Kansan and find out how.
(913) 864-4358
Vandals accuse university of history of elitism
room, said Eric Widmur, the dean of student life. Widmur said it would cost more than $15,000 to restore the portraits, which are more than a century old.
--school.
The group's letter, sent to the campus newspaper and distributed around campus, contended that incidents from Brown's history showed that the school was racist, sexist and biased against certain religions.
LENTEN SPECIAL Now Through April 3rd
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Vandals protesting alleged elitism at Brown University last month damaged 10 oil portraits of early school supporters.
The Associated Press
1000 The vandals spray-painted the message "Elite? Who us?" across the paintings in the Manning Chapel, Broudy said.
A group calling itself "the Coalition for Creative Subversion" claimed responsibility and called on the school to "diversity itself." Broudy said.
Fish Sandwiches $1.09 with coupon
"It appears to be a protest against the white elitist male orientation of the founders of the university," said Eric Broudy, spokesman for the
The vandalism occurred Feb. 17, one day before a seminar on class and elitism took place in the
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With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
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Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
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Mondav
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
March 21,1988
Vol. 98, No. 116 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
U.S. says troops won't fight
The Associated Press
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — U.S. soldiers practiced military maneuvers yesterday on a Honduran airstrip 21 miles from the Nicaraguan border, but U.S. officials said the threat from Sandinista troops had subsided and combat appeared unlikely.
"These guys are not going to get involved in any sort of conflict," said Maj. Gary Hovatter, spokesman for U.S. troops here.
Nicaragua formally protested a Honduran bombing raid on Sandinista positions Saturday as an unwarranted act of aggression. It denied that its troops crossed the jungle-choked border dividing the nations.
U. S. officials in Washington said the Sandinistas appeared to be drawing back from the Honduran border and predicted that the training exercises involving 3,200 U.S. troops soon would end.
A U.S. House of Representatives delegation viewed a military exercise involving U.S. infantrymen and Honduran soldiers at Jamastran, a dirt airstrip about 55 miles southeast of here and about 20 miles from the border.
The exercise was held about 80 miles south of the Bocay border region, where Honduran fighters on Saturday dropped bombs on Sandinista positions.
Honduran officials said the raid was carried out because about 600 Sandinistas troops were moving too slowly from the disputed Bocac, Nicaragua, area, which Honduras considers its territory. Two Honduran jet fighters carried out a similar raid Thursday'.
No one was hurt in either raid and no damage was reported in Satur-
Nicaraguan Foreign Minister
Miguel D'Escoto sent a protest note to Honduran Foreign Minister Carlos Lopez, saying his government energetically and formally protested Saturday's attack, which it called aggression against Nicaraguan territory.
The 600 Sandinistas were part of a force estimated at 2,000 that was believed to have entered Honduran territory last week in pursuit of the U.S.-backed contras.
The action prompted President Reagan to send in U.S. troops to noncombat areas for military exercises in a show of force to the Marxist regime.
In Washington, national security adviser Lt. Gen. Colin Powell said that the fighting between Nicaragua and Honduras was essentially over.
Powell who appeared on ABC's "Tribune" said the U.S. military exercises
should be completed shortly and the troops will return to the United States.
"The Sandinistas have withdrawn. They're apparently on their side of the border again. They appear to be drawing or having withdrawn," he said.
Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has denied that the Sandinistas were in Honduran territory.
Yesterday, Deputy Foreign Minister Victor Hugo Tinoco said that reports that Sandinista troops remained inside Honduras territory was a ruse by the Reagan administration to obtain more money for the contras.
Tincoo also said that today's firstever direct talks with contrasts inside Nicaragua would focus on the mechanics of a cease-fire. The contras want the talks to include political issues.
Cease-fire planned in Nicaraguaun war
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — The Sandinista government yesterday protested attacks on Sandinista targets by Honduran forces and prepared for its first direct ceasefire talks with contras.
Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo, the mediator in previous talks and an observer to today's discussions, expressed a hint of pessimism about their outcome.
"I see the situation as quite complicated," he said during his homily yesterday. "It is very difficult to find all the things that are completely opposite."
The negotiations were scheduled for the southern border post of Sapoa, 90 miles south of the capital near the Costa Rican border.
The Honduran bombings Thursday and Saturday along the isolated northern border were meant to retaliate for an alleged Sandinista troop incursion last week into Honduras to chase contras, officials said. They reported no casualties in the air attacks.
The rebels have been fighting the government since November 1981 in a conflict that has killed more than 40,000 people. The cease-fire talks are part of a regional peace plan signed in August by the presidents of Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Costa Rica. The pact calls for amnesty, democratic reforms and an end to support for insurgencies.
Protesters plan to oust Noriega Leaders urge strikes today
The Associated Press
PANAMA CITY, Panama — Opposition leaders urged Panamanians to observe a nationwide strike today in hopes of paralyzing the country and providing the final push to oust Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega.
The indefinite work stoppage was called after Noriega rejected a U.S. plan for his removal as "unacceptable, illogical and anti-Panamanian." Noriega is the commander of the Defense Forces and controls the civilian government.
Norigia reportedly told William Walker, a U.S. deputy assistant secretary of state, that he wanted to remain in Panama and take part in the formation of a transitional government.
Secretary of State George P. Shultz, appearing yesterday on NBC's "Meet the Press," said Noriega "can't expect to have any say in the transition."
Aurelio Barria, leader of an opposition coalition that called for today's strike, also opposed Noriega's desire to unblocking in role in Panama's government.
Shrutz added, "He can't expect any indictments to be quashed," referring to drug trafficking in Mexico against Nortega. "It's out of the question."
ate with him except his departure, the day and the flight number," Barria said.
"We don't have anything to negoti-
Shultz also said Noriega "should settle quickly before the opportunity that's there before him to go to Spain should disappear."
Referring to that comment, Barria said he understood the U.S. proposal encouraging Noriega to leave had a time limit of only a few days.
Barria, who is president of the Panamanian Chamber of Commerce, said he had heard of meetings within the Defense Forces to discuss Noriage's future. He predicted reaction this week, although he said he did not know at what level those meetings were being conducted.
But Maj. Augusto Villalaz, who had been one of Noriage's personal pilots before defecting last week, said Norrie's assault and Cuban arms to keep him in power.
Villalazar yesterday said on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley" that he had flown three shipments of arms to Panama from Cuba and that Noriage planned to import 500,000 pounds of weapons.
Spain's prime minister, Felipe Gonzalez, reiterated Saturday his country's willingness to offer Noriega asylum.
FIRE DETERMINATION
Controlled burn
Louie McElhaney, Lawrence resident, works to control the burning of his field on Leary Road. He took advantage of yesterday's warm weather to clear the land of sage brome grass. Although McElhaney
Language helps professor learn culture
Kansan staff writer
Bv Brenda Finnell
Growing up in Richmond, Va., Bryant Freeman focused his mind's eye on the world through miniature travel posters.
He collected stamps.
He remembers the exotic ones his uncle sent him from Africa, Asia and India.
And for Freeman, a professor of French and Haitian Creole at at the University of Kansas, this understanding was enhanced by knowing foreign languages. He learned to speak French and English enough German and Spanish to order a meal or get a hotel room when he was traveling.
"It itt because you want to become a fake Frenchman, or a fake Haitian, or a fake German or a fake Spaniard that you study these various languages," he said. "It's to have another way of looking at life and the
As he grew older, Freeman began to travel. His passport became not just a permit to enter other countries but also a ticket to understanding the world.
Teacher says he feels bond with Haiti, uses writing abilities to help its people
was conducting a controlled burn, Lawrence Fire Chief Jim McSwain discouraged others from burning. "Any time it is this dry, it is best, if at all possible, to eliminate outside burning." he said.
world, another way of looking at reality."
It was this fascination with languages that inspired him establish the Haitian Creole program at KU. Through teaching, writing and lecturing, Freeman has been able to demonstrate his vision of the world and his love for exploring other cultures.
Freeman's view of the world has been influenced by years of travel. He has visited more than 60 countries. He has spent 25 summers in France and was a Fulbright Scholar from 1959 to 1961.
But of all the places Freeman has been, he feels a special closeness to HER.
from Miami. At a recent University Forum lecture, he said he never felt more alive than when he was in Haiti
The lure of Haiti
"Haiti is as though you put France and Africa together on a raft and set them adrift for over a century with no outside influence," he said. "The result is something which is certainly not good and it has made it too important. It is totally unique. This is one of the reasons Haiti captivates so many people."
Although Freeman has been visiting there since 1958, about two or three times a year the past 10 years, the country still surprises him.
His office door is covered with postcards from Haiti. His eyes light up when he speaks of the country that is one hour and 40 minutes by plane
"If you go to the Caribbean and simply want a beautiful beach and a palm tree and a nice Howard John Place, it's not your place" he said smiling.
A desire to visit the French-speaking areas on this side of the Atlantic Ocean first led Freeman to visit Haiti 30 years ago. What attracts Freeman
to the country now is its generous, open people.
"They just ask for a chance to lead a successful life," said Freeman. "But the conditions of the country have always been awful."
Freeman has made his own efforts to improve those conditions.
While his teaching colleagues were grading tests or lecturing to students last year, Freeman spent three months studying Haitian medical practices. He left Haiti with plans to write a medical manual to help U.S. doctors who work in Haiti.
The book contains a glossary of medical terms, common doctor-patient questions and answers, and an anthropological section dealing with medical beliefs of Haitian peasants.
Problems often develop when American doctors and their Haitian patients try to discuss medical problems, Freeman said. Medical terms don't always have direct translations.
"How do you say morning sickness?" Freeman said. "How do you say ingrown toenail?"
See FREEMAN, p. 6, col. 1
Kansas House approves $1 million fee-release bill
By lill less
Kansan staff writer
The Kansas House of Representatives approved a fee-release bill Friday that would return about $1 million to four Regents schools because of enrollment increases.
House passes Regents budget p. 3.
About half of that money would go to the University of Kansas.
State universities give all the money they receive from tuition fees to the state, and the Legislature then determines the budgets for the universities.
This year, KU, Kansas State University, Emporia State University and Wichita State University told the Legislature that they had had higher enrollments than had been expected. Because of this, they said, the needed the money generated by additional tuition to pay for added expenses.
KU's official spring enrollment was 24.817 at the Lawrence campus,
an increase of 472 from spring 1987. That figure includes students attending classes at Lawrence and in off-campus locations, such as the Regents Center in Overland Park.
The bill represented the 75 percent recommended by Gov Mike Harden.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said the release would increase the total base budgets of the universities about $1 million.
The bill will now go to the state Senate. This will be the first time this session that the Senate has discussed the Regents budgets.
Under the bill, the universities would receive:
KU: $406,382.
K State: $304,910.
Emporia State. $123,205.
Wichita State. $109,098.
In addition, Fort Hays State University would receive an extra $65,330 because it had a lower enrollment than expected and thus collected fewer fees.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Kansans chose Dukakis; Jackson wins Douglas County
Bv lill less
Kansan staff writer
Two KU students were chosen as a delegate and an alternate to the Democratic state convention at the Douglas County caucus Saturday which were won by John Dabbs (Jhiel Dabbs) with 65%
January Layman, Shawne sophomore, will represent Dukakis as a delegate, and Joe Orrick, Prairie Village sophomore and president of the KU Democrats, will serve as an alternate delegate for Dukakis in Topeka April 23.
Orrick said yesterday that not many students participated in the caucus because of
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis won the most delegates statewide.
spring break. KU Democrats had done a little work to get students to participate, Orrick said, including a session by state Democratic party leaders who explained the caucus process.
m Douglas County, Jackson captured 17 of the 26 delegates and alternates while DukeAkins received nine. Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of Tennessee, Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri and Sen. Paul Simon of Illinois all failed to encourage enough supporters to get any delegates.
Of the 525 registered voters who participated in the first grouping at the caucus, 314 supported Jackson and 114 supported Dukakis. In addition, 42 favored Simon, 28 favored
Gore, 26 were uncommitted and 1 was for Gephardt.
After regrouping, Jackson had 335 supporters and Dukakis had 166. The remaining 24 voters chose not to participate in the second grooming.
The caucus began at noon Saturday in the Lawrence High School auditorium with voter registration and campaigning. Supporters of Jackson, Dukakis and Gore filtered through the crowd, waving signs and passing out campaign filters. As the 2 p.m. deadline for choosing a candidate section approached, supporters lined the entrances, urging late-night voters.
orders to join the group. The auditorium was divided by candidate
Orrick said that that Jackson supporters' large turnout probably was the result of
Supporters in each section were counted, and a candidate had to have at least 15 percent of the supporters in his section to receive delegates. After the first count, supporters in sections lacking 15 percent of the crowd were allowed to regroup and join another candidate's supporters.
and supporters were to sit in the areas designated for their candidate. About 1:30 p.m., the south side of the auditorium was full of Jackson supporters and about another six rows in the center section of the auditorium had to be redesignated as Jackson seats.
better organization than the Dukakis group.
But Barry Shalinsky, head of the Douglas County Jackson campaign, said that his group was not necessarily better organized, but that its members were just excited about winning.
"I see it as a reaction against the same old business-as-usual politics," he said.
---
Jackson, Dukakis and Gore all campaigned in Kansas last week. Across the state Saturday, Dukakis came in first, followed by Jackson second and Gore third.
Democrats held 117 local caucuses in the state Saturday, electing 768 delegates to congressional district conventions April 23
2
Monday, March 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
LAWRENCE
Padre of the central plains
HIGH: 76
LOW: 43
Sunny, windy and unseasonably warm this afternoon with a high in the mid-70's. Clear and mild overnight with a low in the lower 40's.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Plate 71/35 Mostly sunny Omaha 74/38 Mostly sunny
Goodland 74/35 Mostly sunny Haya 79/40 Sunny Balina 77/39 Sunny Topeka 76/41 Sunny Kansas City 75/40 Sunny Columbia 72/40 Sunny St. Louis 67/37 Mostly sunny
Dodge City 80/41 Sunny Wichita 78/45 Sunny Chanute 76/45 Sunny Springfield 76/46 Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darmot Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
Tulsa 82/50 Sunny
5-DAY
TUE
Sunny 75/40
HIGH LOW
WED
Showers 65/34
THU
Sunny 60/32
FRI
Mostly sunny 63/35
SAT
Partly ch. 65/36
You could be reading your name right now! Call the Kansan and find out how.
(913) 864-4358
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Skeleton unearthed in chief's yard Father's deathbed tale led to discovery of wife's ex-husband
The Associated Press
MARLOW, N.H. - Two days after the police chief father died, authorities began digging in the chief's front yard. Twenty feet down they found a skeleton that turned out to be the first husband of the chief's wife.
No charges have been filed, and authorities have released few details of their investigation.
They only have confirmed, from dental records, that the skeleton was the remains of Russell Bean and that he had been beaten on the head and chest with an unidentified object.
Bean was 25 when he last was seen in 1978. He and police chief Robert Chambers, who became the parttime police chief three years ago,
After Bean disappeared, Chambers divorced his first wife and married Bean's wife, Sylvia. 35.
apparently met while working
in the kitchen Keene and
barnes drinking beverages
Chambers was part-time police chief in Marlow and nearby Gilsum; he has resigned the Marlow job and taken indefinite leave from the Gilsum post. He also has been suspended from the police force in Winchester.
Chambers, 36, and other members of the family have said nothing publicly.
His wife has left her job as a school bus driver and their four children from former marriages have been
taken out of school.
Chambers' former wife, Deborah, living in Jaffrey, was hospitalized while authorities were digging in Chambers' yard; authorities would not say why or disclose her condition.
The mystery began unfolding Mackenzie, the members' father, Clifton Chambers. 61
The Keene Sentinel reported that sources with detailed knowledge of the investigation said the dying Chambers told his daughter Melissa that Bean died accidentally in a first fight when he fell and hit his head on a rock and that the elder Chambers had helped bury him.
Melissa Chambers reportedly told authorities the deathbed tale the next
day, and the digging began March 11.
day, and the digging began March 11. On March 14, Clifton Chambers was buried. Hours later, when the hole in Robert Chambers' yard was 20 feet deep and 25 feet in diameter, Bean's skeleton was found.
Chambers' lawyer, Mark Sisti of the public defender's office, said he could not answer questions about how the body came to be buried there or whether Chambers knew. But he said, "My client had nothing to do with causing the death of Mr. Bean."
On Thursday, March 17, it was determined Bean had been beaten with a blunt object.
Police Reports
Obituaries
A bicycle valued at $219 was taken from the 1800 block of Massachusetts Street yesterday, Lawrence police reported.
- A bicycle valued at $491 was taken from a business in the 1000 block of Vermont Street on Saturday, Lawrence police reported. The business received $200 damage.
A bicycle and jewelry valued together at $845 were taken from an apartment in the 800 block of Michigan Street between March 11 and Saturday, Lawrence police reported.
PROFESSOR EMENTUS DEME' Muriel H. Johnson, associate professor emeritus of home economics and development and family life, died Tuppea of natural causes at Stormont-Vail Hospital in Topeka. She was 69.
Services were Saturday at Newcomer-Diffenderfer Funeral Home in Topeka.
Miss Johnson was born June 25, 1918, in Topeka. She received a bachelor's degree from the University of Kansas in 1940, a master's degree from Cornell University in 1956 and a doctor of philosophy degree in anthropology from the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis in 1968.
She was an instructor in home economics at KU
from 1951 to 1957. She became an assistant professor in the department of home economics and the department of human development and family life in 1957 and became an associate professor in 1961.
She was named into the Women's Hall of Fame in April 1886 by the Commission on the Status of Women at KU.
Miss Johnson was a member of many civic and University organizations.
The family suggested memorial contributions to the Potwin Presbyterian Church, Brookwood Covenant Church and the human development department at KU.
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SUICIDE PREVENTION TIPS
Too frequently college students take their own lives before anyone notices that anything is bothering them. Be alert to the warning signs of suicide: suicidal threats; sudden changes in behavior such as changes in weight; academic performance; sleeping problems; depression and withdrawal from others. And be aware of the real possibility that even the most apparently secure friend can have serious interruption.
DON'T assume that a person isn't the suicidal type
DON'T leave the person alone if you believe an attempt is imminent. And get help for yourself in this crisis.
DON'T argue with the person over whether suicide is right or not. This may make the person feel even more guilty and more depressed.
TALK frankly with the person. Ask direct questions like, "Are you thinking about taking your life?" Determine if the person has a suicide plan. The more detailed the plan is, the more serious the threat.
DEMONSTRATE your concern by really listening to the person.
REMOVE knives, razor blades, ropes, guns, alcohol, drugs, poisones
URGE/INSIST that the person get professional counseling immediately
Suicidal individuals need
Suicidal individuals need:
A person who will talk with them openly and frankly about what they are feeling.
in their life who are willing to urge them to get professional help.
For more information or assistance contact:
University Counseling Center, 116 Bailey Hall, 864-3931
Medical Health Clinic, Watkins Hospital, 864-9580
Mental Health Clinic, Watkins Hospital, 864-9580 Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, 864-4064 Information Center, 864-3506 (24 hours) Sponsored by Stuart Affiliates
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 21, 1988
Campus/Area
3
KU to increase parking space
Regents approve plan for multi-level garage
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
The Board of Regents Thursday unanimously approved preliminary plans for a multi-level parking garage to be built just north of Allen Field House.
The garage, estimated to cost about $5 million, is expected to contain about 650 parking spaces. The garage would be built over two current parking lots.
Allen Wiechert, University of Kansas director of facilities planning, said the location was chosen because of the growth on the southern part of campus.
"This facility will help the daytime needs during classes and the nighttime parking needs for the activities in the area. With Allen Field House, the activities at Murphy Hall and the law building, there became a deficit of parking." Wiechert said.
Wiechtert said that the distribution of the parking spaces between parking passes and visitor passes hadn't been decided. The new parking garage will be paid for through state bonds.
The plans for the garage will now be sent to the state architect's office for review. The process should take two to three months.
The architectural firm of Kiene and Bradley Design Group in Topeka will prepare construction blueprints and documents for the building, Wiechert said.
Wiechert said that bids probably would be accepted this summer. The project is expected to take a year to complete.
A KU evaluation report was presented to the Regents. The Regents
asked for evaluations from all Regents institutions after accepting mission, role and scope statements from them in the fall of 1986.
According to the report, KU has continued to maintain its mission as the state's primary learning institution.
KU's primary mission, the preservation and enhancement of research and graduate programs, includes closer coordination between the office of academic affairs and the office of research, graduate studies and public service in allocating faculty positions.
The report states that closer cooperation between the academic and research areas would strengthen the University.
The report also states that the increase in graduate teaching stipends and target investments in certain graduate programs were essential in the enhancement of KU graduate programs.
The report mentions several areas that should be emphasized to strengthen KU's graduate program. Those areas include gerontology, biological sciences, geohydrology, pharmacology and toxicology.
The Regents also approved a policy change in the teacher education program. Applicants for teacher education programs at Regents institutions now must have a 2.5 grade point average in 50 credit hours of liberal arts education. Under the old policy, applicants were required to have a 2.5 GPA specifically in their first 50 credit hours.
Martine Hammond, Regents director of academic affairs, said that the policy change would provide flexibility in admission to the program.
RAIL CROSSING ROAD
Luck of the Irish
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
About 1,500 people turned out last week for the "First Ever Lawrence Saint Patrick's Day Parade" despite cold weather and snow. About 500 people participated in the parade, said Mike Wilson, chairman of the Lawrence Saint Patrick's Day parade committee. The parade, which had 54 entries, started at the Flamingo Club, 501 N. Ninth St., and traveled across the river to the Jet Lag Lounge, 610 Florida St. Funds left from parade entry fees will be donated to a charity chosen by the local chapter of the
Fraternal Order of Police.
An upper level low pressure system dumped about three inches of snow on Thursday. The system kept high temperatures in the upper 30s and lower 40s last week. As the low moves to the East Coast, it is giving way to mild Pacific air that will keep high temperatures in the mid- to upper-Pacific through Wednesday. There is a chance of thunderstorms near the end of the week as temperatures move back into the 50s, which is normal for this time of the year.
Regents budget is sent to Senate
By lill less
Kansan staff writer
The Board of Regents budget is on its way to the state Senate Ways and Means Committee after the House of Representatives approved Thursday a $788 million budget for fiscal 1989.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said yesterday that the money the House had allotted included the faculty salary portion of the Margin of Excellence plan, but
Solbach, a member of the House Appropriations Committee, said he was disappointed but not surprised that the mission enhancements were not added to the bill passed by the House.
not $4.5 million for mission-related enhancements.
"I did not expect the House of Representatives to put more Margin money in" he said.
added an amendment presented by Gov. Mike Hayden to the Regents budget earlier this year, giving $1.7 million more to the Regents schools for non-taught faculty salaries.
However, Solbach said there were plenty of other opportunities for the mission enhancements money to be added as the bill moved along its legislative path.
The appropriations committee had
The bill will go to the Ways and Means Committee and then to the
senate floor. If changes are made in the Senate, the bill would return to the House floor or a House conference committee.
"We will know more about what expenditures have been made and what has happened with the tax windfall." he said.
Hayden said, "I said that I didn't expect the House to add more money. That doesn't mean I don't expect the Senate to."
Landscape crews repair damage from crowd at free-speech forum
Kansan staff writer
By Donna Stokes
Spring and the attention of KU landscape crews are putting some life into a bed of 1,600 tulips that was damaged during the Ku Klux Klan's visit to campus.
The tulips were damaged by people who gathered outside a free speech forum at Hoch which was attended by the Klan.
Landscape crews have been sprucing up campus recently by reseeding grass, repairing damaged hedges and flowers in a tulip bed outside Hoch Auditorium and transplanting trees from the site of a planned parking garage.
attended by the Kani David Leach, grounds maintenance supervisor; said that it was doubtful whether the tulips would bloom again.
"The ground was really compacted," he said.
Mike Richardson, associate director of landscape and vehicle maintenance, said, "We're not sure about the extent of the damage to them yet. I hope we still have a good bloom.
"There was quite a bit of damage outside of Hoch Auditorium. We had to replace 40 feet of hedge, and there was damage to the corners of the tulip bed," he said.
To match plant material, the hedge was replaced with a plant from another place on campus, and that hedge was replaced with plants from north of Allen Field House, Richardson said.
Leach said that two evergreen shrubs from inside the planter box also had to be replaced and that a sprinkler head in the planter was broken.
"We had everything in stock, so I couldn't state an amount of damage," Richardson said. "We're pretty
lucky actually. With the number of people that were out front, the damage could have been a lot worse."
Crews are also trying to save plants at the proposed site of a University of Kansas parking garage.
of a driveway.
Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape maintenance, said, "The biggest effort we're working on is moving some of the larger plants from the area north of Allen Field House, since it will most likely be the site for the parking garage."
Mathes said the sycamores, redbuds and pines would be dispersed throughout the campus to save them from being uprooted during construction.
"If there is any chance of them surviving, we'll move them," Mathes said. "We lose very few by transferring them, especially if they are moved at this time of year, when they are supposed to be moved."
of year, when they are up to it.
"It won't cost near as much to move them as it would to buy more trees. Especially since these have six to nine years of growth on them."
male year or gourd. A lot of time and money each year also is spent on the reseeding of grass and the maintenance flowers on campus.
Mathes said that about $600 a year was spent on flower bulbs and perennials, and that $1500 a year was spent on annuals.
"Any place that has a lot of student activity needs reseeding, sometimes even twice a year," Mathes said. "The areas in front of the field house and the patches in front of Fraser and Strong Hall get a lot of play."
Maintenance crews also have been working on reseeding grass on campus. The University spends about $3,500 a year on grass seed.
RAs struggle with disputes Solving roommate troubles not always easy
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Although resident assistants at the eight KU residence halls receive a week of training and are required to take a counseling course, acting as a mediator in roommate disputes isn't always easy.
None of the halls have formalized procedures for dealing with roommate conflicts, but most Ras safe schools do not offer them by trying to open up communications.
RAs agree that they are often put in uncomfortable positions.
"It's always uncomfortable to be the outsider," said Caryl Triola, an RA at Oliver Hall. "I am just here to listen. I can't solve the problem for them."
Triola said she tried to hear both sides of the argument and tried to give objective advice.
Ben Custer, an RA at McCollium Hall, said that sometimes he too was uncomfortable handling disputes.
Custer said that it was hard to be objective when he knew one of the roommates better than the other.
George Robinson, an RA at Templin Hall, said that he felt prepared to handle disputes because of role-playing exercises he participated in his counseling class.
None of the halls have formalized procedures for dealing with roommate conflicts, but most RAs say they try to deal with disputes by attempting to open up communications.
"They give you as much help as they can," he said. "It's a short period of time to cover a broad range of problems. They can't cover every problem."
Sonya Clark, Ellsworth Hall director, said, "They're as prepared as they can be. Obviously, they will get better with experience."
Clark said that she had been uncomfortable dealing with disputes when she was an RA at Indiana University in 1982 but that the problems became less difficult to handle.
Lori Reesor, Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall director, said that there was no set policy for handling disputes but that in most situations the RAs would try to talk to both roommates and then get them to discuss their problems.
In many halles, if disputes continue after the RA discusses the problems, each roommate will be asked to fill in an agreement form that sets rules both agree to abide by.
The agreement covers such things as when guests are allowed in the room, when the television can be used, and what items can be borrowed.
"The RAs know the residents much better than I do." Reeser said. "They usually have the best perspective on how to handle it."
Randi Schneider, Lewis Hall director, said that the RAs were trained to handle most situations and to know when to go to someone else for help.
Schneider said that the hall directors met on a regular basis with the RAS, and they discussed any conflicts and what action should be taken.
Schneider said that the meetings not only gave RAs guidance but also were a safeguard to keep a problem from escalating.
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4
Monday, March 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
If state toughens penalties it must review prison plan
The state's prisons are dangerously overcrowded. No one seriously has disputed that fact for the past several years.
The Legislature will be forced to work under the threat of a possible federal court order that would reduce the population at the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing. Corrections Secretary Roger Endell has proposed a $100 million plan for adding more than 2,500 beds to the system by 1991.
Yet, in this election year, the Legislature is considering several bills that would increase the penalties for crimes involving drugs, and in the past several years it has created new crime after new crime.
That's part of where the problem lies. The Legislature is responding to what it thinks is the public's desire for the state to get tough on crime, often without thinking of the long-term consequences.
Endell's plan may not be a bad one, but it is an expensive one. Even he has said the state must get its prison population growth to zero; that is, as many people must leave the system as enter it...
And that means politicians will have to stop posturing on crime; they will have to start telling their constituents that getting ultra-tough means more building.
They must consider making it easier to parole low-risk inmates and resist the urge to create new crimes or increase the penalties for existing ones. A comprehensive review of sentencing laws and parole policies is needed.
And legislators must start talking about those issues now. If the prison population continues to grow, the state's troubling crisis will become a permanent condition.
Opinion
The Legislature may soon make it more difficult for convicted drunken drivers to be repeat offenders. In fact, legislators may force drunks to go to all the trouble of having someone else breathe into their cars.
Man,can you spare a breath?
A bill in the Legislature now would allow judges to require that "ignition interlock systems" be installed in the cars of convicted drunk drivers. The device would require the car's driver to pass a breath test each time he attempted to start his car.
The on-board, computerized breath analyzer would be connected to the car's ignition system. The driver would have to blow into a tube connected to the computer; if his blood alcohol content were deemed excessive, the car wouldn't start.
The system sounds futuristic enough, but it would be easy to circumvent. There is no way that the machine would know who was blowing into it, so the car's owner could ask a sober friend to blow into the tube. Or he could pay someone a couple of bucks to loan him a breath.
Designers of such systems say they have installed safeguards to prevent abuses. For instance, some systems will cause the car's horn to start blowing if the test is not retaken every half hour, but a drunk driver can do a lot of damage in a half hour. And some have special codes that must be punched in before the system will activate, but who is to keep a drunk from punching in the code and then asking someone to blow in the tube?
The bill would include, of course, penalties for those who were caught tampering with the devices and for those guilty of helping a drunk to start his car. Tampering might be easy to detect, but it would be almost impossible to catch someone blowing into someone else's breath analyzer.
Also, who will know which car the drunken driver will be driving? The device could be installed in one car, and then another could be driven to the bars.
Ignition-locking gadgets will not help alleviate the problem of drunken drivers. Forcing drunks to find someone to blow in their cars will only annoy them.
Alan Player for the editorial board
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jenerette.
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...New editor
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 Messersmith...Production manager
Greg Knipp...National market
Kik Scherma...Traffic manager
Kimberly Coleman...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.
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 Fint Hall.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The water will be photographed.
Letters, guest columns and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Dairy Kansan. Editorials are the opinions of other authors.
The University Daily Kanane (USPS 650-840) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Fitt-Hall Law, Kanae, KAm. 60445, 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 Lawrence, KAm. 60444. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. 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. 68045.
JIMBROGMAN CINCINNATIENGNIER@YORK
ELECTORAL PROCESS
"WELL, IT AINT YOUR PRIMARY SYSTEM."
"WELL,ITAINT YOUR PRIMARY SYSTEM..."
Ninja training won't help U.S. trade
Japan, Western Europe get ahead because they get free bodyguard service
It was another of those TV shows explaining why the Japanese are out-producing and out-selling us. I think I've seen a hundred shows like it, and they're always the same.
We see the young Japanese managerial trainees standing outside at attention. A corporate drill master shouts something at them, and they respond by screaming slogans about their love of hard work, efficiency and devotion to the company and its bottom line.
The drill master shouts some more, and the trainees scream some more; then they all run madly into the building to infuse the workers with their frenzy to produce.
Then we see the workers outside on their frezy break. They, too, are being shouted at and are screaming back something about how hard work is the greatest thing since sushi.
So it's that simple. If we are to make better cars, TV sets and VCRs, what we must do is gather everyone in the company parking lot for what looks like a Ninja training session.
And anybody who believes that is just as dumb as the people who out those TV shows together.
We then see a U.S. TV commentator who shakes his head in wonderment and says something to the effect that, wow, this is the way we should do it if we're going to avoid being economically buried by the Japanese. Our workers and managers must develop that rah-rah spirit, that love of job, love of work, love of company.
The biggest reason Japan has become an international business superpower, while we have been slumping, has little or nothing to do with brainwashing programs for managers and workers.
M. A. BALDWIN
Syndicated Columnist
Mike Royko
It has to do with how Japan uses its money as a
nation and now the multimillion dollar spent on $20 billion and $30 billion on its military.
That might sound like a lot. But in the same year, this nation spent almost $300 billion on its military.
Japan puts about 1 percent of its gross national product into its military. About 7 percent of ours
That means Japan can use far more of its resources to develop its industries, new technologies and so on.
It puts more money into research and development, which is why it stays ahead of us in making prettier TV pictures.
We put a lot of money into research and development, too. But about half of what we spend is for the development of new military gadgets.
Now, we don't have to spend that much just to defend ourselves. A big chunk of our military spending is for the purpose of defending Japan and Western Europe, which also has been cutting our throat in world trade.
About 16 percent of our military spending goes to protect Javan and other Asian countries.
We do this because after we defeated Japan in World War II, we gave it a modern government and a constitution that forbids it from ever becoming a military power.
It turned out to be a great deal for Japan. We assumed the job of protecting it because we said it couldn't become a military power. Japan then could concentrate on developing new high-tech industries while we had to get along with old steel mills and factories.
Well, the war has been over for 43 years. And it's about time we stopped providing free bodyguard service for Japan and Western Europe.
If a city wants a police department, the citizens have to pay taxes. If a factory wants night watchmen, it has to hire and pay them.
And if we're going to act as Japan's international bodyguards, we ought to be paid for it.
If Japan had to foot its share of the bill for its own protection, we would have more money for education and economic development. And it would mean Japan would have less. There's nothing unfair about it. When I pay my taxes for a police and fire department, I have less, too.
The same goes for Western Europe. They're big boys and should be able to look out for themselves, or pay up if they want us to do it.
U.S. workers to get them to work. All you have to do is give them a job and the right tools.
And the presidential candidate who says he's going to start sending Japan a bill, payable by the president.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Allocations confusing
For reference.
Earlier this year, Student Senate spent about $1,600 for the distribution of AIDS packets (complete with sample condoms) to promote an awareness of the AIDS crisis in the University of Kansas community.
Two days ago Student Senate allocated $1,550 to Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week, an event that promotes the very lifestyle that is a direct attribute, if not cause, of the current AIDS crisis.
Any explanations (other than platidutious allegations of my "homophobia")?
Randy Kitchens Lawrence graduate student
Everything's not heaven
John Holtke's letter in the Feb. 23 Kansan titled "View wars realistically" shows how important some articles, such as the one he is responding to, are. Reading through Holtkue's letter, I was amused at how little he really knew about the situation in the Middle East and at how involved the United States is in that situation.
Israel in its fight for survival. I would like to mention a few: the killing of children, which has been a semi-daily occurrence in the past few months, and the unlawful eviction of people from their rightfully owned land, which results in the destruction of homes and lives. The list goes on.
I would also like to disagree firmly with the limitations Holtke puts on the First Amendment. First Amendment rights are granted to everyone, even foreign students who happen to have a right to express their views even though they may prove uncomfortable to Holtke. What's happening in Palestine is wrong by all standards. This is a fact, that is, if you believe that the taking of innocent human lives is wrong! U.S. citizens have a right, if not a responsibility, to know what is going on in the rest of the world, especially when the foreign policy of this country protects a government such as Israel and helps it further its own interests in the region. Furthermore, a college newspaper such as the Kansan is a forum for all students from all countries to voice their ideas.
All of these things are done in the name of Israel's struggle for survival even when this struggle puts no value on human life and dignity. I'm sorry Holkke feels one-sided. It seems to me that he wants the world to tell him that everything is heaven beyond this "fortress of freedom." Well, it's not, and to use Holkke's phrase, "let the children who are dying every day in Palestine tell us who is right and who is wrong."
In reference to the unpopular things done by
Finally, I'd like to say that it's a wonderful
thing for one to be proud of his or her country.
This doesn't mean that country is beyond making mistakes. Remember that not every criticism is a "put down," and if you keep an open mind you can use some of what you learn to help resolve differences and "make peace under which you and we prosper."
Aida Dabbas Lawrence graduate student
Lawrence graduate student Column was misleading
Steve Gantz's March 10 column about fundamentalism was a bit misleading. He wants us to believe that the only goal of fundamentalists is to teach children to "love their neighbors." He neglects to explain why this love should not be extended to feminists, scientists and anyone else who thinks independently. A possible reason is that freedom of thought endangers the authority and wealth of fundamentalists such as Pat Robertson, Joseph Coors and Ronald Reagan, all of whom would stand to lose if great numbers of people decided to better their lots on earth instead of in heaven. For this reason, fundamentalist lobbies seek to take over our educational system and indoctrinate students so that they will use the reasoning displayed in Gantz's column. I agree that fundamentalist beliefs should not be censored by our school system, but students should still be able to choose alternatives such as democracy.
Springfield, Mo., senior
BLOOM COUNTY
STEVE DALLAS HAD PASSED ON
WITHOUT A WILL. A MEMBER
OF HIS WAKE WAS THUS
DISPATCHED TO FETCH HI5
EARTHLY BOOTY.
STYLES
STUFF
bv Berke Breathed
IT INCLUDED : LAW BOOKS,
A FRAT PIN, LOOSE CHANCE
AND A BOTTLE OF 'OLD SPICE',
WHICH PORTION ACCIDENTALLY
DRANK, CAUSING HIM TO RUN
AROUND THINKING HE WAS
"A NUN BEE."
A BOX OF TROJANS WAS ALSO
FOUND AND AFTER MUCH
DEBATE, FINALLY IDENTIFIED
AS POSSIBLY BEING MICRO-
WAVE JEEL-O MOLDS.
ANDY?
OPIE?
BUT HE HATED COOKING!
HMM!
STENNY STUFF
THE LATTER WERE FILLED
WITH WATER AND DELIVERED
AIRBORNE UNTO MRS. PAULA
PENHISTELE'S PASSING
PONTIAC.. WHICH PREtty WELL
WRAPPED THINGS THE HECK
UP FOR THE NIGHT.
BLAM!
1
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 21, 1988
5
Future of historic town at stake
By Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA- The Senate Ways and Means Committee is considering a bill that will allow the state to acquire the historic area of Quindaro in Kansas City, Kan.. as a state historical site.
The 80-acre parcel of land on which the pre-Civil War town sat was leased to be made a landfill by Browning-Ferris Industries of Kansas City, Mo., in connection with African Methodist Church and Kansas City, Kan.
A bill sponsored by State Sen. William Mulich, D-Kansas City, State Sen. Eugene Anderson, D-Wichita, and State Sen. John Strick Jr., D-Kansas City, would allow the state historical society to acquire the area by gift, purchase, condemnation proceedings or through the power of eminent domain, which is the power of the government to take private property for public use upon payment of compensation.
The committee began considering the bill Tuesday after about 60 supporters of the proposal packed into the committee hearing room.
John Peterson, a lawyer representing Browning- Ferries Industries, said that the company had
already spent more than $2 million in preparation of the site and would expect to be repaid.
as part of the original lease agreement, it company also hired a private firm, Environmental Systems Analysis, Inc. to complete an archeological survey of the site. Last summer, excavations exposed the foundations of the old town and a community effort to save the site began.
Peterson said the company already had taken many artifacts from the site that had been preserved and donated to the African Methodist Church.
Quindaro, established in 1857, by white abolitionists, freed slaves and the leaders of the Wandot Indian who owned the land, was the only safe port of entry for abolitionists on the Missouri River. The town also was known as a "station" on the underground railroad for escaping slaves.
In late January, the Quindaro Town Preservation Society took petitions with about 3,000 signatures to the Kansas State Historical Society and asked them to acquire the land as a historical site. The society authorized a site appraisal of the land that will be forwarded to the Legislature.
Fred Whitehead. secretary of the preservation
society, testified before the committee. "Quindaro is deeply linked to the great figures who made this state," he said.
He said that Charles Robinson, later the first governor of the state, was the town treasurer, and that Samuel Simpson, who later helped establish the University of Kansas, was the secretary.
"We cannot allow Quindaro and her proud traditions to disappear under thousands of tons of garbage." Whitehead said.
The proposed landfill would be only a short distance downstream from the main water intake facility for Kansas City, Kan.
Lee said that pollution of that water supply could occur from leaching of poisonous and cancer-causing chemicals that are the end result of much industrial and household waste.
Gerald Lee, a physician practicing in Kansas City, Kan., told legislators that he opposed the landfill because of the threat of contamination of the public water supply.
The manager of the water department for the Board of Public Utilities, Ervin Sims Jr., agreed.
No matter how well constructed, no one can guarantee a landfill won't leak. "Sims said."
Police charge suspect in grocery bomb case
By a Kansan reporter
A 28-year-old Lawrence man, accused of planting a bomb on a shelf of a Lawrence grocery story Wednesday, is being held in Douglas County Jail on a charge of attempted aggravated arson.
Bradley D. Tate, 1614 W. Sixth Terrace, was booked into the jail Friday morning and accused of planting a bomb at JL's Westridge grocery store, Sixth Street and Kasold Drive.
The bomb, which a store employee found Wednesday morning, was defused by Lawrence police in the store, police said.
The store's manager, James Karasek, said that Tate had worked at the store for about six weeks but was suspended from the
job about two weeks ago. He did not give a reason for the suspension.
Police said they began to suspect Tate after interviews with store employees and a search of Tate's residence, which turned up materials similar to the components of the bomb.
In their investigation police said they also found evidence that linked Tate to an arson attempt and burglary on Aug. 14 at the O'Connell Ranch, Rt. 2. Felony counts of attempted arson, burglary and theft were filed in relation to that incident.
Tate was being held in lieu of a $90,000 bond in the Douglas County tail.
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS CALENDAR
A preliminary hearing is scheduled for Thursday.
7 p.m. — Water Safety Instruction Class, last of nine classes. Lawrence High School.
21
8 p.m. — Lecture, "Caxton, Filippo Strozii and Charles the Bold: The Arrival of the Printed Text in Yorkist England." Martin Lowry, University of Warwick in England, Kenneth Spencer Research Library Auditorium.
8 p.m. — Recital, with Daniel Pyle,
harpischord; Catherine Burl, barque
flute. St. Lawrence Catholic Center, 1631
Crescent Road.
TUESDAY
22
4 p.m. — Dance film series, "Mary Wigman: Four Solos" and "Ruth St. Denis by Baribault." 155 Robinson Center. Sponsored by the department of music and dance and the School of Fine Arts.
an Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center workshop. Centennial Room, Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "Women's Constitutional Issues: Perspectives for the Future,"
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. — Linguistics colloquy,
"Voice Acquisition in Quiche Mayan."
Clifton Fry, 207 Black Hall.
8:30 p.m. - KU Fencing Club meeting. 130 Robinson Center.
6:30 p.m. - Campus Christians meeting. Daisy Hill Room, Burge Union.
■ 9:30 a.m. — Master classes with
Claude Frank, piano. Also at 1:30 p.m.
Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
■ 11:40 a.m. — University Forum,
"Zarbe as the Cultural Center of the
Socialist Republic of Croatia." Naima
Bali. Call by noon, March 22 for luncheon
reservation.
THURSDAY
7 p.m. — Study Skills Workshop,
"Preparing for Exams." 4034 Wescoe Hall.
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
7 p.m. — Public Relations Student Society of America and Women in Communication meeting, Speaker Barbara Barickman, promotional director at the J.C. Nichols Co. in Kansas City. 100 Stauffer-Flint.
24
4 p.m. — Dance film series, "The Men Who Danced." 155 Robinson Center. Sponsored by the department of music and dance and the School of Fine Arts.
7 p.m. — Campus Crusade for
Christ meeting, Jayhawk Room, Kansas
Union.
7 p.m. — Fair Housing Seminar with a presentation by the Human Relations/ Human Resources Department of Lawrence, Gallery East, Kansas Union. Sponsored by the legal services for students and the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.
FRIDAY
7:30 p.m. — James Gunn Science Fiction Presentation featuring the screening of the pilot show to James Gunn's television series, "The Immortal," complete with the TV adds from that era. Gunn will speak about the field of science fiction following the screening. 300 Strong Auditorium. Sponsored by the department of English.
8 p.m. — Humanities Lecture Series, "Perceptions of American Culture: Ecological Concerns". Wendell Berry, poet, literary critic, teacher-scholar, ecologist and farmer. Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union.
Noon — Brown Bag Series With an International Flair, "Austria's Contributions — An Attempt at Contemporary Evaluation." Mechtild Fritz, visiting professor of law from the University of Vienna, Austria. Alcove C. Kansas Union.
25
6:30 p.m. — Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meeting, Pioneer Room.
Burge Union.
7:30 p.m. — Greek Archaeological
7:30 p.m. — New Archaeological Work in
Thebes; New Evidence for the City's
Archaic Past.; Vassilis Aaravantinos,
member of the Greek Archaeological
Service, Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
For more information call the department
of classics, 864-3153.
SATURDAY
9:15 a.m. — YMCA Fit For Five
$K Run. Race begins at 10 a.m. YMCA.
$21 Van Buren, Topeka. Entry fee $8
received by March 12, $9 late registration
26
tion fee. Each participant will receive a T-shirt. Awards given to top three winners.
2 p.m. — Innovators of American Illustration lecture, Milton Glaser, illustrator-designer, Spencer Museum Auditorium. Reception following in the Central Court.
Archeologists continuing Kansas mammoth search
27
SUNDAY
Tom witty, state archeologist with the Kansas Historical Society, said he hoped the Lane County site east of Dighton will become the first in the state where a mammoth — a genus of elephants killed by pre-historic humans — can be documented.
The Associated Press
DIGHTON, Kan. — A hill on a Lane County farm has revealed some tantalizing clues, but not the answers sought by archeologists hoping to find evidence of extinct elephants.
The hill, which includes farmland owned by by Vance Ehmek and his father, A.W., has been a favorite spot for the family to search for arrowheads and spear points.
Last summer the family found a mammoth's molar. The Ehmkes contacted Witty, who brought four other
The five men worked three days combing the hill for clues. Although Witty said evidence is inconclusive, it suggested he could help him from abandoning his search.
The hilltop site is about 14 acres, and Witty said the campsite the men were searching for probably was no longer than 30 square yards in diameter.
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Monday, March 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Freeman
Continued from p.1
Reflecting on his work on the book, Freeman smiled and said, "It was one of the greatest experiences of my life, working with these people — not just the Haitians, but with the Americans who were doing this."
Cathy McGowan, a 1982 KU graduate, worked in Haiti with Freeman on the medical manual and saw clinic patients in primary care.
McGowan, a resident in internal medicine at the University of Arizona, studied with Freeman for two semesters and taught English in Haiti in 1983. She said her experiences in Haiti made her want to return and to visit other third-world countries.
In addition to the medical manual, Freeman has written a Haitian conversation manual, an elementary reader, critical editions of two works of literature in Haitian Creole and editions of two Haitian-Creole to Dutch dictionaries.
He is also working in collaboration with a University of Haiti professor on an U.S. Agency for International Development project to create a spelling dictionary to be used in Haitian schools.
Although Freeman has focused his attention on Haitian medicine recently, his interest in the tiny country's climate made him an area expert on yvonne.
Freeman has been allowed to attended about 40 voodoo services, which are by invitation only.
Because of his understanding of voodoo, Freeman was asked several years ago to testify in an El Dorado trial for a man who killed a state trooper. The man claimed he was in a
voodoo trance when he sped through Kansas at 90 miles per hour. He shot the trooper who stopped him.
"I was called as an expert witness to testify, to try to explain to the jury of 12 good Kansas farmers, what Haitian voodoo was all about and what was perhaps going through the mind of a man who killed a state trooper." he said.
He said the key question he was asked was whether the defendant's actions would have been permitted in Haiti. His answer was no.
The man was sentenced to life
More than a language
A. R.
Combining language instruction with personal experiences, Freeman passes on his knowledge of the Haitian culture to KU students.
Freeman came to the University in 1971 as a full professor. He became chairman of the French and Italian department from 1971 to 1976.
In 1978, he created and become the sole instructor of KU's Haitian-Creole program. The University of Indiana is the only other university with a similar program.
He said he usually had about 12 students in beginning Haitian Creole and six in the courses after that.
Freeman is teaching six students in intermediate Haitian Creole. He teaches a beginning Haitian-Creole course, giving him semester and year-end courses French.
Freeman teaches in small room which creates a personal atmosphere that matches his teaching style. He and his students sit around a table on the second floor of Wescoe Hall — maps of Hati and posters of France and Italy decorate the walls.
Freeman comments about Haitian history and Haitian current events as his students read Haitian dialogues.
Bryant Freeman
Margarete Dorsch, a graduate student in Freeman's class this semester, said that the class had been an eye-opener for her, and that she had been inspired by Freeman to visit
"He teaches the people that stand behind the language," she said.
Haiti someday.
That teaching technique has inspired several of Freeman's students to pursue careers where they can use Haitian Creole.
Eight to 10 of his students have went to Haiti after taking classes from him.
Since his graduation in 1983, Eric Hausler has worked in Florida as a Haitian interpreter both in a Haitian refugee detention center and also in a hospital emergency room.
Freeman challenged his students, Hausler said.
"He was very interested in giving students something they would be able to use, if not as a professional, something that would set them apart from the rest of the graduates," he said.
Hausler said he wanted to be an ordained minister and help train pastors in Haiti. He also said he might like to teach school in Haiti or work with Haitians in southern Florida again.
Freeman did his own undergraduate work at the University of Virginia at Richmond and then got his master's and doctor's degrees at Yale University where he taught for four years after graduation.
Freeman then spent 10 years teaching at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville.
A love for music
Although traveling and teaching take a lot of his time, Freeman does find time for other things.
The word "CLUMBER" on his license plate indicates one important part of his life: his dogs.
Freeman has been raising Clumber Spaniels for 20 years. He has three of the dogs, which he described as all-white, all-wild version of a St. Bernard.
Music is another of Freeman's hobbies; one that he shares with his
wife, Stephanie, and their 17-year-old son, Timothy.
Throughout high school, college and graduate school, Freeman played the oboe semi-professionally. He plays the contrabassoon for the Lawrence symphony orchestra.
His wife is a violinist and his son plays the bassoon.
Freeman also likes to swim and bicycle. In addition, he enjoys reading history, especially Haitian history.
Freeman plans to continue his Haitian studies. He would like to write a series of literary studies on major Haitian Creole authors. Few copies of Haitian literature are available in Haiti, forcing Haitians to read primarily foreign authors.
"They need to have a sense of their own culture," he said.
Freeman said his own sense of culture had been enhanced by travel and learning foreign languages.
"It's enriched our way of looking at our culture and our life when you have something you can compare it with." he said. "The more cultures that you've studied, and the more you can compare it with, the richer you can become."
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Interview Deadline 5:00 p.m. March 22
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NationWorld
7
First Israeli soldier killed in four-month occupation
The Associated Press
BETHLEHEM. Occupied West Bank — a gunman yesterday opened fire at close standing on a reserve soldier guarding near a Palestinian refugee camp, marking the first Israeli army fatality in four months of unrest in the occupied lands.
The army's chief of staff, St. Gen. Dan Shomron, said the shooting could foretell greater use of guns by Palestinian activists. He stopped short of saying that it signaled a major change in the tactics of protesters, who mainly had hurled stones and bottles at Israel's occupation forces.
"I don't think we can yet see this as a shift to an armed struggle," he said.
But Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin indicated stronger action would be taken to suppress Palestinian uprisings.
The Israeli army identified the
Israeli forces that the Katz 28,
from the northern port,
"To the extent that extremist Palestinian terrorist elements try to combine terrorist acts with the civilian disturbances, we will have to adjust our operations and take harsh measures to cope with both," he said.
He was shot two or three times in the head at close range while guarding a government building facing the small Bait Jibrin Palestinian refugee camp in this biblical city, the military said.
Anti-apartheid protesters plan strike
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Anti-apartheid activists pledged to defy authorities today in the first nationwide protest since the government banned black opposition groups last month.
Pamphlets urging a general strike were circulating through black townships in defiance of government regulations. Police have threatened action against strike organizers and have promised to protect blacks who wish to work.
Organizers called for the one-day strike to commemorate the 28th anniversary of the Sharpeville massacre and to protest the ban on the United Democratic Front and other groups.
The Front, which is the country's largest anti-aparthael coalition, coordinated nationwide protests during 21-month-old state of emergency
Sixty-nine blacks were killed in the 1960 massacre in Sharpeville, a township south of Johannesburg, when police fired on thousands of demonstrators protesting pass laws, which were repealed in 1866. Those laws authorized an open-ended part of the national apartheid system of racial segregation.
Salvadorans vote despite explosions
The Associated Press
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Salvadorans defied guerrilla threats and voted yesterday in legislative and municipal elections after explosions ripped through the capital and sabotage knocked out power to much of the nation.
Early turnout was moderate. There were no long lines at polling places in the capital.
At stake were all 60 seats in the National Assembly, the unicameral
legislature. Voters also elected mayors and municipal councils in the country's 262 cities and towns. All terms are for three years.
Official results are not expected until tomorrow.
Pre-election surveys indicated that President Jose Napoleon Duarte's Christian Democrats would lose their majority in the National Assembly and that the right wing Republican Nationalist Alliance, or Arena, would make the biggest gains.
Two British soldiers killed by mob Victims ignored army orders to stay away from IRA funeral
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Two British soldiers who ignored orders to stay away from an Irish Republican Army funeral procession, were killed in a brutal attack by an angry mob, the British army said yesterday.
The Associated Press
An soldiers in the British-rules province were told that the funeral was taking place on Saturday and had been warned to steer clear, an army spokesman said. He said the army had begun an investigation.
been where they were, and we are interested in examining how that came about," said the spokesman, speaking anonymously in accordance with British custom.
"The two corporals should not have
"They would have been briefed about the route of the funeral procession, and the two corporals were not expected to be there and had no requirement to be there." he said.
Cpl. Derek Wood, 24, and Cpl. David Howes, 23 were shot to death in Belfast Saturday after funeral mourners dragged them from their unmarked car, beat them unconscious and stripped them.
The outlawed IRA claimed responsibility for the deaths and the Royal Ulster Constabulary, Northern Ireland's police force, said it was questioning three people.
The army spokesman said the two had been traveling in civilian clothes between the Belfast Battleon's headquarters and near Falls Road and the British army's Northern Ireland headquarters.
The soldiers were killed when they encountered the procession following the coffin of Kevin Brady, an IRA
Witnesses said the soldiers were thrown into a taxi and driven to a nearby vacant lot where shots were heard and where their naked, bullet-riddled and battered bodies were found a short time later.
member and one of three people killed Wednesday at Milltown Catholic cemetery.
Witnesses to the attack Saturday said that the soldiers' car was engulfed by angry mourners who apparently assumed the soldiers were undercover agents spying on the crowd.
Aquino says she won't pursue re-election
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — President Corazon Aquino said yesterday that she did not plan to re-election in 1982 and told a radio audience that she lacked political ambition.
Aquino also announced on her weekly radio show that four Manila policemen would answer charges before the Human Rights Commission that they tortured captured communist rebels.
said earlier that I had no political ambitions, and I feel I really was meant for one term.'
Asked by a caller about her plans to seek a second six-year term, Aquino responded, "I said earlier that I had no political ambitions, and I feel I really was meant for one term.
- Corazon Aquino
Philippines president
that ended President Ferdinand Marcos' 20-year authoritarian rule. Both she and Marcos claimed to have won the fraud-tainted presidential election earlier that month.
"I was only meant for transition. Even now I consider this the transition period from dictatorship to full democracy," she said.
Aquino said in response to another question that four Western District police officers would testify before the government Human Rights Commission but did not specify when this would be.
Aquino was swept to power in February 1986 by a popular revolt
News Roundup
PUERTO RICANS PICK BUSH, JACKSON: Vice President George Bush won Puerto Rico's Republican primary yesterday and added another 14 national convention delegates to his tally, while Jesse Jackson won the Democrats' non-binding "beauty contest" balloting. With a third of the precincts reporting, Bush had 97 percent of the vote, while Sen. Bob Dole had 3 percent. On the Democratic side, Jackson led with 35 percent, followed by Gov. Michael Dukakis, 23 percent; Sen. Paul Simon, 20 percent; Sen. Albert Gore, 18 percent; and U.S. Ben Richard Conchard, 4 percent.
BRAZILIAN CRASH KILLS 65 A truck taking 11 pilgrims to a Roman Catholic shrine in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, crashed through a highway guardrail yesterday and tumbled 300 feet down a cliff, killing 65 people, police reported. Police said the driver was among those killed, and the seven other people aboard the truck were seriously injured.
SHEVARDNADZE ARRIVES FOR TALKS: Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze arrived yesterday for three days of talks with Reagan administration officials. The talks are expected to be dominated by the wars in Nicaragua and Afghanistan.
BEEFALO CAUSE 5 ACCIDENTS: A herd of beafalo, a relative of the buffalo, roamed onto the Florida Turnpike early yesterday, causing five accidents and killing seven of the huge animals, police said. One motorist was slightly injured.
PLO FACES SUIT: The Justice Department is planning to file suit in a federal court in New York forcing the PLO observer mission at the United Nations to close, a department spokesman said yesterday.
Iraq's two largest cities with 13 missiles. Iraq reported its gunners fired a long-range missile into Tehran, the Iranian capital, late yesterday.
IRAQ-IRAN EWSCALATES: Iran claimed yesterday that Iraq killed 5,000 Ikurds in poison gas attacks while trying to blunt an Iranian offensive. Iran claimed that it blasted
RESCUE OPERATION DROPPED: A London newspaper reported yesterday that Dr Muhlie militia members in Lebanon considered trying to rescue Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite from his abductors but dropped the idea because they thought it lacked U.S. support. The yesterday Telegraph said Waite is alive and being held by an Iranian-backed radical group blamed for other kidnappings in Lebanon.
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8
Monday, March 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU gains new art teacher Smithsonian director to be Hall professor
By Stacy Foster Kansan staff writer
The director of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American Art will return to campus next fall as the University's Hall distinguished professor of American art history.
Charles Eldredge, who also was director of the Spencer Museum of Art from 1971 to 1982, will become the first recipient of the Hall professorship in American art, which was established in 1985. The position was provided by a $3 million gift from the Hall Family Foundations of Kansas City, Mo.
Officials in the department of art history said last week that Eldredge would bring national attention to the art history department.
"He will have the most impact on
one graduate level," said Timothy Mitchell, chairman of the art history department. "He will help build our program as he gets the graduate students involved in his research."
Eldredge said that his experience at the Smithsonian Institution would help him add to the American art program at the University of Kansas. He said that his familiarity with art collections and the resources available to him in Washington had enriched his knowledge and would help him teach at KU.
Eldredge was on campus earlier this spring for the 10th anniversary of the art museum.
"I was pleased to notice the continuing vitality of arts on campus." Eldredge said. "The situation of the humanities is a good one, and I hope to contribute to it."
Mitchell said that the art history department needed a professor with an American art emphasis.
"The department hasn't had a specialist in American art," he said. "This is the one place we wanted to conduct a faculty search."
Eldredge said that he looked forward to returning to Lawrence.
"My wife and I have a deep affection for Lawrence," he said. "Of course there are things I will miss about Washington. The best of all worlds would be to move the Smithsonian to Kansas City, but I don't think that's on the agenda."
Hall's three other distinguished professorships will be in the areas of American history, American literature and 19th century comparative literature.
Beach partygoers smash car, riot after driver tries to flee accident
The Associated Press
PORT ARANASS, Texas — Hundreds of partying young people rioted on a Gulf Coast beach Saturday night before police moved in with tear gas and helicopters early yesterday. And a car that speed off a nearby ferry dock was pulled out of the ocean with two bodies inside.
"What you have down there is a tremendous amount of intoxication going on," said Jim Kaelin, an officer with the Texas Department of Public Safety. "All it takes sometimes is for someone to bump into someone else. The crowd just turned into a riot."
Coast Guard spokesman Anthony E. Floyd in Corpus Christi said, "One thing led to
another, and it became a riot out there."
Lloyd said most of the students appeared to be high-school age. About 30,000 students were staying in this island resort for spring break, he said.
The mayhem began when a motorist hit a girl on the beach at this Gulf Coast vacation spot on Mustang Island, offshore from Corpus Christi, and tried to leave the scene, said DPS Officer A.G. Michniak in Corpus Christi. Police said the girl suffered a broken arm.
"They stomped the car, broke all the glass out of it and flipped it over," said Tom Frazier, 22, a student at the University of Texas.
It took more than 100 police officers to break up the mob with the help of tear gas and hovering Coast Guard helicopters with searchlights.
The DPS estimated the crowd at about 3.000
Michiinak said the DPS received the first call at 11:35 p.m. Saturday and the disturbance wasn't declared under control until three hours later.
In an unrelated incident several hours later, a speeding car crashed through a barrier at a ferry landing and sank in water from 20 to 25 feet deep. Lloyd said.
The identities of the two young men found in the car were not immediately available, he said.
---
...
S
Avalon Apartments
- One or two bedroom apartments.
- Extra storage space available.
PARKING
- Gas and water paid.
- Applianced kitchen.
- Off-street parking.
- On KU bus route
Low Utilities!
9th & AVALON RD 749-2922
X Avalon Rd. 9th Street
- Laundry facilities.
4 blocks east of Iowa on 9th to Avalon Rd. Leasing office located 111 W.8th, #101
- Close to KU and Hillcrest Shopping Center.
- Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley.
Display Apt. Open M-Sat. 1:00-4:30
PMS
Professionally Managed by:
property management
services
111 W. 8th, #101
Lawrence, KS 68044
Coke, Diet Coke, Cherry Coke Classic Coke
Sprite cherry Coke diet Coke Coca-Cola CLASSIC Coke
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$299
Prices good through 3-27-88
YOU GET THE BEST FOR LESS EVERYDAY AT GIBSON'S
KU
We Feature EVERYDAY LOW PRICES on:
- Film
- Automotive Supplies
- Health and Beauty Aids
- Photo Supplies
- Clothing
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GIBSON'S
A Chaffin, Inc. Store
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DISCOUNT CENTER
2525 Iowa (on the 24th & Ridgecourt bus route)
9:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.Daily 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.Sundays
842-7810
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES (CLAS)
UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT PROCEDURES
FALL 1988
1. Enrollment Card Handout March 23 and 24 9:00-4:30 Kansas Union Ballroom-Picture I.D. Required
2. Advising-2 Weeks Only March 28 through April 8 Check the letter you received in the mail for more information.
3. Dean's Stamp
March 28 through April 8
8:30-12:00 and 1:00-5:00
Strong Hall Rotunda
CLAS Freshmen and Sophomores March 21 through 25
Special advising workshops will be presented by the CLAS Advising Support Center in the Residence Halls.
Take advantage of this opportunity to complete your fall 1988 schedule, get an advisor's signature and Dean's stamp all without leaving your residence hall. Check with your RA for more information.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 21, 1988
Sports
9
Jayhawks defeat Murray State, await Vanderbilt
Bv Anne Luscombe
Kansan sports editor
LINCOLN, Neb — The Kansas Jayhawks have taken their first step toward Kansas City with a three-point victory over upset-minded Murray State.
After defeating Xavier, 85-72, in the first round of the sub-regionals and a narrow 61-58 victory over Murray State yesterday in Lincoln, Neb. Kansas advances to the NCAA MidWest Region in Pontiac, Mich.
The Jayhawks breezed to a 12-point advantage over Murray State, 25-13, with 5:18 left in the first half. Kansas went on an 11-point unanswered streak before the Racers jumped back into the game.
with the combined talents of 6-foot-6 forward Jeff Martin and 5-8 guard Don Mann, the Racers drew nine points at the close of the half. 28:23.
Murray State did not relent any in the second half.
Kansas forward Danny Manning opened the half for the Jayhawks with a 10-foot baseline jump shot, but Mann retaliated with a 24-foot jumper. He then was fouled by Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard and completed the four-point play by sinking the free throw.
Mann then assisted Martin with a 26-foot jump shot with 16:12 left, narrowing the game to 30-29.
The Jayhawks' first half lead had been nullified.
"I don't know why we do that," Pritichard said of the Jayhawks' tendency to build leads and then blow them. "We come out so intense. We concentrate so much on defense in the beginning. I don't know if we let
up, maybe the other team gets used to it (the defense). But every team is going to make a run at it."
With the comfort of the lead gone, the game became a see-saw, with the Jayhawks and the Racers constantly closing in and overtaking each other.
"We stayed with our zone and played a 1-2-2 matchup," said Murray State coach Steve Newton. "We used a one-man chaser on Manning. We were able to keep Kansas offbalance a lot. In the second half, we didn't give up easy shots."
Eight consecutive points by Pritchard, consisting of back-to-back three-pointers and two free-throws gave Kansas a six-point lead.
But with 7:57 left in the game, Kansas was up by one, 48-47. Manning was fouled by Racer center Carl Sias, but he failed to connect on either of his free-throws. Racer guard Paul King and Pritchard exchanged three-pointers, giving Pritchard his fourth of the afternoon.
"After I missed the two free-throws, I wanted to do something to help my team out," Manning said. "I wanted to make up for my mistakes."
He hof e nman
the Jawhaws left, the Jayhawas trailed, 38-57. A six-foot hook by Manning put the 'Hawks up by one. The Racers then tried to run the clock down to the final seconds, but it proved to be to their disadvantage.
He more than compensated.
Mann, with three seconds remaining, drove in for a four-foot shot and missed. Manning grabbed the rebound and was fouled by Sias.
Manning then gave the Jayhawks a little breathing room by sinking both sides of the one-and-one.
The Racers tried to set up a last second shot when they threw the ball inbounds, but it was Kansas that
Danny Manning and Kevin Pritchard celebrate after Kansas defeated Murray State, 61-58. Yesterday's victory advanced the Jayhawks to the NCAA Midwest Regionals in Pontiac, Mich.
Kansas 61 Murray State 58
Kansas
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | C | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Newton | 29 | 5-10 | 1-2 | R | 3 | A | 1 | 11 |
| Paper | 29 | 1-13 | 1-2 | S | 5 | 3 | 2 | 25 |
| Mminger | 35 | 10-19 | 0-2 | S | 5 | 1 | 2 | 25 |
| Gueldner | 23 | 1-4 | 0-0 | A | 4 | 2 | 0 | 3 |
| Prichard | 38 | 4-9 | 0-4 | A | 4 | 2 | 1 | 16 |
| Harris | 22 | 2-3 | 0-0 | B | 3 | 3 | 1 | 4 |
| Maddox | 12 | 0-1 | 0-0 | D | 3 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| Normore | 2 | 0-0 | 0-0 | D | 3 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
| Barry | 17 | 0-0 | 0-0 | D | 4 | 2 | 0 | 4 |
| Barry | 17 | 0-0 | 0-0 | D | 4 | 2 | 0 | 4 |
| Team | 0 | 0-0 | 0-0 | D | 2 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
| Total | 200 | 23-49 | 10-15 | 34 | 17 | 16 | 61 | 11 |
Percentages: FG, 469; FT, 667. Three-point goals: 5-11 (Pitcherhand), 5-10 (Moundbacker). Turnovers: 15 (Piper, Manning, Harris 3). Steals: 12 (Harris 3). Techniques: None.
Murray State
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | T | P |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Martin | 40 | 7-16 | 7-7 | F | 7 | A | 22 |
| Ogden | 31 | 1-4 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| Sias | 26 | 1-3 | 0-0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
| Mann | 39 | 4-15 | 6-7 | 4 | 6 | 1 | 16 |
| King | 32 | 3-17 | 6-7 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
| McClatchney | 14 | 1-7 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Foster | 9 | 1-0 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Brooks | 9 | 2-5 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
| Team | 0 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
| Totals | 200 | 19-51 | 13-16 | 28 | 10 | 12 | 58 |
Percentages: FG; 373, FT; 813. Three-point goals: 7-18 (King 3-6) Bound Shots: 10 (McClatchy). Turnovers: 13 (Martin, Ogden, Mann, McClatchy, Foster 2), Stacks: 5 (Mann
MURPHYS
Half: Kansas 28-23. Officials: Higgins,
Armstrong, Tackett, Mingle replaced Arm-
strong with 13-32 remaining in second half.
14,453
claimed the victory 61-58.
"This was a great game," Kansas coach Larry Brown said. "I'm really proud of these kids. Look at the last minute, it typifies our season. Danny gets the shot to make us go ahead, gets the key rebounds and sinks the free-throws. The great thing about it
is, Danny got the big rebounds and I've been on his back all year, and this was the biggest one of all."
The top rebounder for the Jayhawks, however, was forward Keith Harris who grabbed eight rebounds. Harris also led the team with three steals.
"Harris ruins a shirt of mine every game," Brown said. "But everytime I say something nice about him, he breaks my heart. But he was sensational guarding Martin and post-people when Pipe got in foul trouble. We just need to get Harris consistent."
Brown also complimented the performance by Pritchard, calling it sensational. Pritchard had 16 points. All of his field goals were three-pointers. He grabbed four rebounds, handed off two assists and didn't commit a single turnover - all with an injured knee.
Pritchard injured his right knee playing against Oklahoma State in the opening game of the Big Eight conference tournament. He did not play in the Jayhawks' 69-54 loss to Kansas State in the tournament semifinal.
He gave Brown another scare yesterday when he came down after a missed lauv and lav on the floor.
to pop up.
However, this time it was his left ankle.
"Everyone makes fun of me because I'm on the floor all the time. I think that's where I spend half my time." Pritchard said.
The Jayhawks will play the Vanderbilt Commodores in Pontiac later this week. The Commodores, seeded seventh in the Midwest Regional, upset No. 2 seed Pittsburgh yesterday 80-74 in overtime.
East
Midwest
Mar. 17, 18 ROUND 1 South Bend, Ind., and Lincoln, Neb.
Purdue (27-3)
F. Dickinson (23-6)
Mar. 19, 20 ROUND 2 South Bend, Ind., and Lincoln, Neb.
Purdue
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL Pontiac Silverdome, Pontiac, Mich.
NCAA TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE
To Final Four April 2, 4 Kemper Arena Kansas City, Mo.
To Final Four April 2, 4 Kemper Arena Kansas City, Mo.
Mar. 24, 26 REGIONAL Meadowlands Arena East Rutherford, N.J.
To Final Four April 2, 4 Kemper Arena Kansas City, Mo.
Mar. 19, 20 ROUND 2 Chapel Hill, N.C., and Hartford, Conn.
Duke
Southern Methodist
Rhode Island
Syracuse
Temple
Georgetown
Georgia Tech
Richmond
Mar. 17, 18 ROUND 1 Chapel Hill, N.C., and Hartford, Conn.
Duke (24-6)
Boston Univ. (23-7)
Southern Methodist (27-6)
Notre Dame (20-8)
Missouri (19-10)
Rhode Island (26-6)
Syracuse (25-8)
N.Carolina A & T. (26-2)
Temple (29-1)
Lehigh (21-9)
Georgetown (19-9)
Louisiana State (18-13)
Georgia Tech (21-9)
Iowa State (20-11)
Indiana (19-9)
Richmond (24-6)
West
Mar. 17, 18 ROUND 1 Salt Lake City and Los Angeles
North Carolina (24-6)
N. Texas State (17-12)
Mar. 19, 20 ROUND 2 Salt Lake City and Los Angeles
North Carolina
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL The Kingdome, Seattle
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center Birmingham, Ala.
Mar. 19, 20 ROUND 2 Atlanta and Cincinnati
Oklahoma
Auburn (18-10)
Bradley (26-4)
Louisville
Louisville (22-10)
Oregon State (20-10)
Brigham Young
Kentucky (25-5)
Southern Univ. (24-6)
Maryland (17-12)
Calif.-Santa Barb. (22-6)
Villanova
Villanova (21-12)
Arkansas (21-8)
Illinois (22-9)
Texas-San Antonio (22-8)
Southeast
Mar. 17, 18 ROUND 1 Salt Lake City and Los Angeles
North Carolina (24-6)
N. Texas State (17-12)
Mar. 19, 20 ROUND 2 Salt Lake City and Los Angeles
North Carolina
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL The Kingdome, Seattle
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center Birmingham, Ala.
Mar. 19, 20 ROUND 2 Atlanta and Cincinnati
Oklahoma
Auburn (18-10)
Bradley (26-4)
Louisville
Louisville (22-10)
Oregon State (20-10)
Brigham Young
Kentucky (25-5)
Southern Univ. (24-6)
Maryland (17-12)
Calif.-Santa Barb. (22-6)
Villanova
Villanova (21-12)
Arkansas (21-8)
Illinois (22-9)
Texas-San Antonio (22-8)
Tech beats KU women
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Louisiana Tech jumped out to a 23-4 lead in the first 9 minutes of the game and never looked back, defeating the Kansas Jayhawks 89-50 on Saturday in the second round of the NCAA tournament.
The Techsters were led by first team All-American guard Teresa Weatherspoon, who had 10 points and 13 assists. Kansas coach Marian Washington said Weatherspoon was a great competitor.
"Our only chance we had to win tonight was to stop Weatherspoon," Washington said. "Tech has a very fine ball club, but we just didn't shoot the ball the way we are capable of shooting it. You're not going to win when you can't get it to fall."
The Jayhawks finished their season 22-9, and for the second year in a row, they lost in the second round of the 40-tournament. Last season, Kansas lost 82-10 to Georgia.
The Jayhawks went on a 9-1 scoring streak and trailed 24-13 with 8:29 left. But the Techsters outscored Kansas 18-10 in the remainder of the half for a 42-23 half time lead.
Louisiana Tech, 28-2, has defeated Kansas in each of the two teams 10 previous meetings. The last game
was Nov. 29, 1986, in Lawrence, and the Techsters won 56-40.
Washington said that despite the loss, the team can be proud of its accomplishments this season.
"I think it is incredible for us to be able to get back into the national tournament for a second straight year," Washington said. "It is tough to play on the road, especially against a team the caliber of Louisiana Tech. We can definitely hold our heads high."
Louisiana Tech 89 Kansas 50
Kansas was led by Lisa Baker with 12 points, Deborah Richardson with 12 rebounds and Lynn Page with 10 points and 11 rebounds.
3 2-4 6, 8, Westbrook 6 4-6 16, Lacy 5 5-6 15,
Lewis 7 3-17, Weatherford 17 8-10, Eidring 1 8-
6 4 7, Stall 0-1 2-1, Brown 4-2 10, Chambers 0-2 2-2,
Woolf 0-0 0, Meyer 0-0 1-9, Hairy 1-1 3, Totals 1
saltline: Louisiana Tech 42-23. Total Louisiana
Techs 16, Kansas 25. Assistants Rebounds, Louisian
Tech 9, Kentucky 8. Three point goals. Assistances Louisiana Tech 20
Techs 7, Tennessee 14. (Brady 3). attendance: 2,615.
Jackson 0-0-0, Browder 0-2-4, Richardson 1-4-3,
Jackson 2-2-6, Bradley 1-2-3, Doughty 4-2-8, Arnold 0-0-0, Nelson 0-0-0, Page 4-2-10, Baker 4-12, Morgan 0-0-0, Totals 19-20-50.
Despite injuries, lost player KU wins two NCAA games
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Kansas went in paired against No. 11 seed Xavier, the Midwestern College Conference tournament winner from Ohio that finished 18th in the final Associated Press poll.
March Madness began last week with the 64 teams beginning NCAA tournament play.
Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard used the time before the opening round to rest up his knee. He sprained his knee playing against Oklahoma State, and missed the Big Eight tournament semifinals against Kansas State. Pritchard was fitted for a knee brace Tuesday. He said was determined to play against Xavier.
The NCAA kept the Jayhawks close to home with a berth in the Midwest Regional and a No. 6 seed, dessele being unranked.
the jayhawks also went into the opening round without freshman forward Mike Masucci. Kansas coach Larry Brown dismissed
"You can't miss practice, and you can't be irresponsible in school. Unless something unexpected happens, I doubt if he'll be back at Kansas," Brown said last week.
Masucci after he missed last Sunday's team meeting and then was late for Monday's.
Meanwhile, the Jayhawks had to deal with Xavier, and they knew not to underestimate the Musketeers, who eliminated Missouri 70-69 in the opening round of last year's national tournament.
the game.
Kansas pulled away again, completing six of nine free throws in the last minute and a half. The 85-72 victory sent the Jayhawks into the second round of the sub-regions against Murray State, the Ohio Valley Conference champion.
year's The Jayhawks had leads as big as 25 points, but the Mukateers refused to give up, chipping away at the gap during the second half and reducing the lead to just eight points with less than 3 minutes in the game.
Kansas 74
Kansas 74
Oklahoma State 58
Before the NCAA Tournament, the Jayhawks had mixed results in the Big Eight Tournament.
Kansas State took the opportunity in Kemper for revenge for last month's loss to Kansas in Ahearn Field House.
City...Forward Milk Newton helped the team out with a season-high 29 points. He also grabbed nine rebounds and had three assists.
Kansas State 69
The Jayhawks overpowered the Cowbys for the third time this season and advanced to the seminal round of the Big Eight tournament at Kemper Arena in Kansas City. Mo.
In that game, the Jayhawks held on in the closing seconds to win 64-63, but this time, the Wildcats stopped the Jayhawks from the very start of the game.
Kansas 54
The Associated Press
Tyson rips Tubbs in 2
TOKYO — Mike Tyson softened Tony Tubbs with body punches then knocked him down with a left to the head in the second round and retained the world heavyweight championship early today at the Tokyo Dome.
After the left hook landed, Tubbs reeled into a neutral corner and collapsed as Tyson tried to hit him once again. One of Tubbs' cornmere immediately jumped into the ring and referee Arthur Mercante stopped the fight.
The end came at 2:54.
The earl
Tubus held his own in the first round with a left jab. But in the second round, Tyson began landing degaharmer blows to the body which hurt Tubus. Tyson also got in some good right uppercuts and a couple of left hooks to the head.
But it was the body shots that spelled the end for the 238¹⁰-pound Tubus. He was badly hurt before the left hook crashed into the side of his head. There appeared to be blood on a yellow towel that was used to prop up his head while he was still on the canvas.
---
10
Monday, March 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
SportsMonday
Football program is biggest challenge for athletic director
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
It is a lot of weight on one man's shoulders. It definitely weighs more than a ton of bricks. It rarely even escapes a conversation concerning the Kansas athletic department.
Kansas Athletic Director Bob Frederick wants and needs to sell Kansas football.
referencest wants no one left out and no tickets unsold to alumni, students, faculty and the community.
"I knew coming in from my experience at the University of Kansas that football was the biggest challenge for the athletic director," said Frederick, who was named to the position last June, "and it continues to be the biggest challenge.
Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick says he hopes he can help resurrect the Jayhawk football program.
With Kansas' record of 41-71 the last two seasons, the attendance of Memorial Stadium has dropped to an average of 29,617. There were only 18,500 spectators at the Jayhawks' final home game against Oklahoma State last fall. The stadium seats 51,500.
"We have to put people in the seats," Frederick said. "That gives our other sports a chance to be successful. We have to be successful at the gate."
Developing a marketing strategy that will regain lost enthusiasm in the football program is Frederick's most recent challenge.
He hopes to promote Glen Mason, the new football coach, and other appealing aspects of the program to the public. Frederick hopes to start the campaign at the end of the basketball season.
"I'm enthused about this challenge now with the new feeling about the future of the program," Frederick said. "The football coaching job requires someone with great enthusiasm and a high energy level, and Glen has that.
Glen has that:
"I feel like we need to do something everyday to try to make our football program successful. Some people might say we're putting too much emphasis on it but, in reality, you have to be economically successful in football to fund other sports."
With his record as Executive Director of the Williams Fund and
Assistant Athletic Director from 1981 to 1985, Frederick knows how to bring in the money. The fund eclipsed the $2 million mark in annual fundraising during his tenure.
ng dugling his education. Frederick also completed his doctorate in educational administration during that time.
But relating to people has always been Frederick's strong point, he said. Frederick's career as a basketball player, coach and administrator has placed him in numerous positions dealing with all kinds of people.
He said the only way to handle so many different constituents was to not exclude any interested groups.
Frederick hopes everyone involved will consider that it is their athletic program. He also wants to draw fans with no university affiliation from across the state and the country to support Kansas athletics.
"Except for men's basketball the last couple of years, we don't enjoy the broad-based support that Nebraska does," Frederick said. "We need to draw just the average person with no affiliation to the University of Kansas. We really need to work on this."
"I think it is good that we're training athletic administrators in college programs, but I still think it is important that an athletic director has a good feel for the coaching process. I think I understand the problems that our coaches face. I wouldn't trade that experience."
would trade that experience.
Frederick walked on to the KU basketball team in 1958. He played under coach Dick Harp until he earned a bachelor of science degree in education with a major in chemistry in 1962. He then served as a graduate assistant until 1964 when he earned a master of science in education.
1971.
After one season as golf coach and as an assistant basketball coach under Ted Owens, he moved to Brigham Young where he was an assistant coach until 1975. He was "
assistant coach at Stanford from 1975 to 1977.
Frederick then taught and coached at Rich Central High School in Olympia Fields, Ill., Russell (Kan.) High School and Coffeyville Community College before returning to Kansas in 1971.
Frederick returned to Lawrence again to coach at Lawrence High School until 1981.
He readily admits that his family's love for KU draws them back to Lawrence. He and his wife, Margye, were married in Danforth Chapel on Mount Oread, and two of his four sons were born in Lawrence.
"Lawrence is a great, quality place. We left before for professional advancement reasons. Fortunately we could come back."
Lisa Leinacker
Frederick left Kansas in 1985 to serve as Athletic Director at Illinois State University for two years. While he was there, he administered a 20-sport program that won the Missouri Valley Conference all-sports championship in 1986.
"This is a much more difficult job," Frederick said. "The financial pressure and the alumni involvement is greater. It is a higher profile job with the stronger conference."
with the strong Associate Athletic Director Gary Hunter said the transition between Frederick and former athletic director Monte Johnson went well. Frederick's belief in creating a strong all-around program helped the transition.
"He was able to hit the ground running since he had only been gone two years," Hunter said. "The transition between Monte and Bob went smoother than if the selection committee had named someone without prior experience in the Kansas athletic program or without ties to the University."
With his background in fund raising and coaching and his doctorate, Frederick thought he had the tools to be a successful athletic director. He also said the support of Chancellor A. Budig was very significant in acquiring both his first directory and his current position.
ship and his curent boss,
"Bob Frederick is an athletic director for the 1900's." Budig said.
"We need more individuals like Bob Frederick. I am committed to Bob and his career.
"I believe leaders in intercollegiate athletics need a strong appreciation for the academic side of the
University, and he is committed to the student-athlete. He did an excellent job at Illinois State University, and I know they hated to see him leave."
Budig was president of Illinois State University from 1972 to 1977.
State university
Staying close to younger people
was what prompted Frederick to
pursue his administrative career,
which he said he never considered a
career option until 1980. He
missed coaching because of the student contacts a coach made.
myself from athletics.
"I'd be dishonest if I said I didn't miss coaching. I don't miss the recruiting or the physical toll of the games. But, I enjoyed practice. I wanted to stay close to young people. It keeps me younger."
But for now, Frederick said his commitment was filling Memorial Stadium in the fall and establishing the best possible sports program for all of Kansas' 18 sports.
"I'm excited about the athletic program," Frederick said. "Our tennis program has obviously started to achieve national recognition. I think
our new baseball coach (Dave Bingham) is going to be a great one. We have the tradition to hire an excellent track coach. And we continue to be strong in both men's and women's basketball and men's and women's swimming.
"If we can just get some people in Memorial Stadium, we've got a great opportunity here."
there's the football aspect again
It just won't leave. But, Bob Frederick enjoys a challenge. It's a big challenge, but also a big opportunity. Bob Frederic is ready to take on both.
Broken nose and 5 tough matches tell story of tennis team's Break
Kansan sports writer
By Tom Stinson
The Kansas men's tennis team had a long, grueling spring break. The Jayhawks played five matches, three against top ranked teams, competed in the Rice Invitational tournament and were involved in a car accident.
in California, Kansas defeated San Jose State 6-3 and Princeton 6-3, but it lost to California at Berkley 5-4, to the University of California at Irvine 7-2 and to Perpendice 7-2.
epperdine 1-2.
Pepperdine is ranked fifth
nationally, Cal-Irvine is ranked seventh and Cal-Berkley is ranked 11th.
"I'm pleased with the week," coach Scott Perelman said. "We played three top teams and we were in all three matches. It was very competitive.
"Everybody is hitting the ball better now than 10 days ago when we left Lawrence. We overscheduled because of possible bad weather, but we ended up playing all the matches. It was a grueling trip. We're going to take a couple days off before we hit it again."
Sophomore Chris Walker won his only singles match of the trip while playing with his nose broken. He was injured in a car accident. Walker was in the front seat when Perelman hit a pole in the team's car.
Perelman said they thought it was just a bloody nose, so Walker went ahead and played.
For the week in singles, freshman John Falbo falbro 2-4; seahorse more Craig Wildey 6-3; junior Jim Secrent 2-4; senior Jay Larsap Cal 4-5; freshman Jeff Gross 4-3; and senior Reggie Hodges 0-3.
Baseball team wins 2, loses 4
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Before traveling to Edinburg, Texas, to compete in the Pan American Citrus Tournament, Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham set a goal of winning four and losing four.
The Jayhawks lost four games in the tournament and won only two during the week. The other three games were rained out. An additional game was played on Saturday. Last year the Jayhawks went 2-6 in the same tournament.
1 set a goal of going four and four." Bingham said. "I would have been satisfied with that. But I wasn't as satisfied as I would have liked to have been. We had good days and we had bad days."
Kansas opened the week losing two
against Miami of Ohio 10-7 and 5-0, respectively. The Jayhawks won their first game on Tuesday against Michigan, 5-4.
Then the rain came. Kansas was leading St. Johns 5-2 in the fourth inning before the game was washed out. The Wednesday afternoon game against Pan American and the Thursday game against Texas Southern also were rained out.
The Jayhawks then lost to St. Johns 15-6, beat Miami 6-4 and lost to Michigan 4-1 in the added game that concluded the tournament.
"I was concerned with our inconsistency and our quality of play." Bingham said of the 8-8 Jayhawks. "We played great games and real bad games, and that wasn't just a few individuals, that was everyone."
The return of sophomore pitcher Brad Hinkle was one of the highlights for Kansas, Bingham said. Hinkle won both games for the Jayhawks as he went 2-1 during the week.
Bingham was pleased with the pitching of sophomores Craig Stoppel and Tom Bilyeu and from junior Scott Tavlor.
Playing well offensively for the Jayhawks were junior Steve Dowling, Jeff Mentel and Pete Simmerson, Bingham said.
"We found positive things." "Bingham said. 'We took a step up in the quality of pitching, so our offensive wasn't as strong as at home. But overall it was OK."
"Experience against Big Eightcaliber competition is something we need badly.
Jayhawk women take victory in first round
Rv Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas Jayhawks needed a career game from Lisa Baker to defeat a psky Middle Tennessee State team Wednesday at Allen Field House in first-round action of the Women's NCAA Tournament.
Baker, a 5-foot-10 Oklahoma City senior, scored a career high 28 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to lead the Jayhawks to an 81-75 victory over Middle Tennessee State. The victory
The Middle Tennessee State Raiders were paced by junior guard Sandy Brown with 23 points, including five of 10 shooting from three-point range. She said the three-point shot was a set part of the team's offense.
"Their defense was not as tough as we have faced in the Big Eight this season," Baker said. "The crowd seemed to pump us up a whole lot tonight. We needed it. They were a very good offensive team."
'Our supporters were great tonight, and they helped us to pull out a victory. We went out and did our best and it seemed to work at the right times this evening.'
Last season, Kansas defeated Northeast Louisiana 78-72, before losing 82-51 to Georgia in the second round of the NCAA tournament.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said that the 1,059 Kansas fans who attended were a big factor in the outcome of the game.
"Our supporters were great tonight, and they helped us to pull out a victory," Washington said. "We went out and did our best and it seemed to work at the right times this evening."
Wednesdays' victory moved the Jayhawks into the second round to face Louisiana Tech on Saturday at Ruston, La.
marked the second year in a row the Jayhawks have won a first-round game.
Kansas led 39-38 at halftime on a shot by Baker as the buzzer sounded. Baker made eight of 10 field goal attempts in that half for 16 points.
Marian Washington
Women's basketball coach
"We try to work hard at getting the ball inside to Tawanya (Mucker) as our first option," Brown said. "If they are concentrating on her, it is easier for me to get an open shot. I am very confident from the three-point range."
Middle Tennessee State finished its season 20-8, including an Ohio Valley Conference regular season championship and post-season tournament championship.
Raiders guard Stephanie Capley scored 15 points and added eight rebounds. Capley, a freshman, said that the fact that the team had been sick have played a factor in the outcome of the game.
"They were more aggressive than we were tonight, because we haven't been feeling well lately." Capley said. "It was going to take a perfect game from our team tonight to pull out a win, but we couldn't quite do it."
42
Cheryl Jackson and Lisa Baker of Kansas battle for the ball against Middle Tennessee State's Stephanie Capley. KU won 81-75.
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop.
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Strategies) March 28, 7:54 p.m. in
Room 106, Free Student Assistant Center
121, 844-4064
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOPS. Wednesday, March 30.
April 6 and 13 from 8 a.m., fee $9 for the 11. Register
at center by center at 11 a.m., on or off the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strang.
Research Paper Workshop. Examine tope selection, taking notes, organization, writing style. Tuesday, March 29 - 7 p.m. @ 4034 Wesco Free. Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 5600 N. 8th St.
会
Fair Housing Seminar
=
Learn what fair housing really means!
=
This seminar will provide information about tenants' rights and responsibilities.
=
You are invited to listen and learn, ask questions, and receive free material on housing law.
THURSDAY
MARCH 24th
7:00-8:30 p.m.
1:00.00.30 p.m.
Gallery East, Kansas Union
4th floor-Main Level
Officials from the Lawrence Human Relations/Human Resources Department will present the seminar.
Sponsored by Legal Services for Students and The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural Historv
Wildlife Management
Hop to the Shop
Baskets of Eggs and Rabbit
Mon.-Sat. 10-5/Sun.1-5 864-4450
TEXAS
Women's Constitutional Issues:
Perspectives For The Future
THE EXCLUSION OF WOMEN FROM THE TEXT OF THE CONSTITUTION, REFLECTS THE HISTORICAL SOCIAL AND CULTURAL VIEWS RECORDING THE PLACE OF WOMEN IN AMERICAN LIFE.
THIS WORKSHOP WILL FOCUS ON THE CONSTITUTION AND ITS IMPACT ON WOMEN.
Tuesday, March 22, 1986
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Centennial Room
Kansas Union
FACILITATORS:
DR. SUSAN NOAKES
CHARI PERSON, WOMEN'S STUDIES
PHILLIP PALIDAN
DR. PHILLIP PALUDAN PROFESSOR OF HISTORY
SPONSORED BY THE EMILY TAYLOR
COMMUNICATION RESOURCE
(BE THE BIM TAYLOR
WOMEN'S RESOURCE
CENTER, 210
STREET FOR
MORE
INFORMATION
CONTACT
TAYLOR WOMAN
PAM LATHROP AT 864-3552
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 21, 1988
11
Math. Engineering and Physical Sciences Majors
Bachelor's and senior years plus 400 upon entry.
Find out more about the Navy's Engineer Officer candidate program, call Navy Management
"the right to shelter, the place we call home, our society" - Human Relations principles of our society.
Liz Gowdy, spokesperson, for Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DISCRIMINA-7 Wednesday, Wed. 4, 8 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Alderson Auditorium. Sponsored by the Lawrence Tenants Association.
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
Most Valued Music. 414-865-3900 for
Occasion. 414-865-3900
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Poplar Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot spins Maximum Party Thrust. 841-7083.
FOR RENT
MUSIC ****** MUSIC ******* MUSIC
Red House Audio D.J. Service, 2-studio,
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry. Call
Brad 749-1275.
Attic room available. Nice house next to campus.
Share kitchen, bath. $235 plus deposit. 842-6579.
Avail Apr. 1, 2, 3dbm a plex W ID bk, yard pets $115
or $120 bk. @ 842-6579.
Available immediately -- Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Call 841-1207.
Available immediately! 1 bedroom apartment. Rent $875 + low utility. Lift 748-720-12 after 10 pm.
Completely Furnished Studio, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 6235, or 749-2415. Mastercraft Management
Nashville grade student workroom to sharemate to 2 bedroom 2 bath apt. Summer/Fall $195/month plus electricity. Call Melody 864-4176 daytime 842-0831 evenings, weekends.
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, celli
and bedrooms. Req. Master's deg or equiv. from KU, UM,
KPU, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM, UM,
Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming house on 1344 Kentucky share kitchens & bathrooms. $120 + deposit. 749-1439. Leave messages.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester. I 1 smoke, call Sarah evenings
One bedroom West Meadow condo: pool, pool,
wet bar, microwave, fireplace, room. No
breakfast.
One bedroom duplex within walking distance of
one of the major utilities, $27 a month.
Available on 848-5876
*cont rent for in nice clean O W.I. apt, priv. suite*
*female amen preferred. 841-8355*
*Female amen preferred. 841-8355*
Reserve your room for summer or fall at
the building's conference center,
Call 749-0871 and ask for the answer.
Roommate Needed to share 25D House. Close to
Comms 172 m/sm area. New Sunset.
New Bedford, MA 02321-6421
SUMMER SUBLET Affordable, new one-bedroom (fully furnished), near campus.
HILLVIEW APTS.
Sign a lease with us before April 15th and SAVE $$$
1733 WEST 24th
841-5797
- & 2 bedroom units
* laundry facilities
* on bus route - near
shopping
* water paid
* ample off street
parking
* rental furniture avail.
by Thompson-Crawley
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
learning 1 & 2 bd. apts.
furn. or unfurn.
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
Southridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING for fall
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases water & cable paid
Sublease Summer; Luxurious 2 Br, 2 bath apt;
Fireplace, wet microwave, microwave tennis court.
For two or three people. Available May through July
31. May paid 475/mo + usl 841-848 after 3 pm.
Summer Sublease; Spacious Village. Spacious
three bedroom, $2/bath, washer/dryer, pool, ten-
tle.
reduced summer rates
1704 Wear 24th
Lawrence, Konsa 66044
842-1160
five courses
Summer Subjects: Nice 42B, 2BR, 1 b block from
Suburban School: Call Nancy J. Bail. 841-6078
Three bedroom townhouse avail. April. Carpartment, back room for 3 students. 84-733
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
Open the doors to apartment with:
an apartment with:
Two Bedroom
Furnished or (Infurnished
- Pursued or unpursued
- Large Jacuzzi
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Satellite TV
- Private balcony or porches
- Laundry Facilities
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Ousdahl
841-1815
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Ousdahl
841-1815
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
- Free basic cable
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
- Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
--evenings
*****NOTBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
COASTAL SUNSHINE
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments and
- Garages
- Pools
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
ATTENTION ADVERTISING/JOURNALISM
for sale
Validated and profitable 843-1811-10
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Computer
- Close to Campus
On Bus Route
Classical guitar $75, 74 Dodge dart $200, Marshall amp $255, Murley Wah pedal $75, 69 Cadillac Deville $300, Black leather jacket $100, 841-2657 evenings.
On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri.11-5
BRAND NEW!
Sundance II
SUNDANCE
- Super energy efficient
- Coming to you this fall!
- Super energy efficient
* On KU bus route
cagels — Neon — Fiddler Mountain Bike — Eberle
cagels — Fisher — Everything must be sold!
841 2321 841 2321
FOR SALE
MASTERCRAFT
Oakere portable FC and IBM printer. $425 or
buy Call Oceane evening at 841-4738.
Sanctuary site
841-5255 * 841-1212
- Located on the old
- Completely furnished
AUTO SALES
Quarantin a Flood Market
Students/Mommates/Married Beautiful
spacious, mobile, Quiet Area, Privacy,
Serenity Room, Room, Ample Storage, Resale
Room, 799-3233.
On KU bus route
your unit for next fall!
Offered by:
aufer. Call Dione eventum on
Rock-n-tell - Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to p.m. by every Saturday in the
Hampshire University Library at Hampstead.
Students/Bonnies/Married: Beautiful.
19.025 Nissan Stanza, Red, 3-Bpd, 4-Dr, back-hatch,
4-cd/am.fm, Clean, New, Must set.
3.000 Nissan Stanza, Red, 3-Bpd, 4-Dr, back-hatch,
4-cd/am.fm, Clean, New, Must set.
YAMARA C PLAYER - Must sell before Spring
2018. Price $100; vce for 749-606 or
630-600 bibl
*Note: All prices are excl. taxes.
19.22 Nissan Datum 310GX X-SP, 2. Dr, hatchback
2. Dr, hatchback, Brown, Clean, BQ42, 8242 12:49
5. 30 p.m
73 Crestline House 12' x 20' 6BR. Extra insulation, new plumbing, completely reconditioned 116-237-4522 after 5:30 pm, or inquire 420 north St. #. 1 Lawrence.
Mini-vans - Astro $9.523 Caravan $9.818
Aerostar 4 x 8 24 Blower $11.821 Bronson
$12.821 Rang R $6.128 Ranger S $6.128 Pulkus Truck Chev-
chey C1500 $46.810 Dakota $6.425 F 15
$8.365 Warranties, Packages, Financing. You
options, option packages, colors, you
$94.849
Sierra 5 channel mixer 230, remote TV converter 610, stereo F/cassette walkman 50, Interested 320.
1985 Firre SE, 6 City, 4 Sp., Silver, Top of line store,
35 miles. $7.00, 841-3465.
HELP WANTED
80K XT clone w / drives, Hercules, comm board
cam monitor, $650. 841-3677
Graduate Sale, 83 Escort, good tire, good Cord
AC $2.300 B.O. after 6:00 pm 843-2394
HOT Bargain! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
guards (ED HOT Burger! 675 drug dealers'
buyers. GUIDE 875-600-6776 ext. 9/758)
lited 179 Maeda RX 7. Body and interior in clean condition. Needs repair. Best off Leslie Ditchie 250-468.
ARLINES NOW HIRING HRF Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $0k. Entry level positions.
Call 857-469-6001 Ext. A-9738
Bakery Sale - Cleaning approximately 21 hours per week a.m. to m.o. on weekdays and late afternoons and vacation after one year. Interviews Tues. 1 p.m. and Thurs. at 10 a.m. by appointment. Apply Munchers Bakery.
Bakery Sale - Cleaning Sat, 6 p.m. 1 am, Sun, 6 pm
1 am. $4 an hour after trained. 3 weeks paid
vacation after one year. Interviews Tues. in
Friday. Appointment. Apply
Munchers Bakery. 749-4328
CAMP COUNSELOR wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, water sports, gymnastics, riffle, archery, canoeing, diving, swimming, drama, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $100 or more R & B M. B. Mar Siege, 1765 Mcleod, NID.
BE ON T V (Canting) Many needed for commercials.
Children (casting Info 11) 805-687-6000 EMT
Camp counselors wanted = Camp Mushawaka,
Grand Rapids, MI. One of the one of the following girls
aged 8-16: sailing, swimming, riding, terrain
canoeing, water skiing. Box P.O. Box 380 Grand Rapids, MH. 55744
Female student wanted for house sitting and older child care. During 1st and 3rd weeks of April.
Easy hours. Salary plus expenses. References required. CALL 842-1756, 10 am - 5 pm.
College "Student" to 10c kids through Mid IAU and our home. Some activities meet or have car. Some flexibility for a summer class. Salary negotiable. References required. Call evelems 749-1870.
AVERTMENT JOURS. $10,440-$25,290. yr. Unknown.
federal Funds. 867 600 unsecured. #H-918 for Federal Last.
Be a NANNY
- Seaside Connecticut towns
new York City
- near New York City Great salary & benefits.
- Great salary & benefits, airfare provided
- Year round positions only
- Choose from warm, loving families pre-screened by us
Care
O. Box 27, Rowanton, CT 06853 203-852-8111
Immediate openings to apply *Lawrence/Kansas City 1880 Directory*. Conduct brief door to door interviews. No selling. Need experienced. We will train. Salary plus incentive bonus plus merit increase. Hours flexible. Apply in person only after suit. N244, EOE MF, Co & Ko. Wed., Sept 24th 9:30am
teerange Haven has positions open for full and part time career assistants assistant $4.20 an hour (1080 W, 2712 N) 1080 W, 2712 N
- Must enjoy working with children
POSTAL JOBS! $28,064 Start! Prepare Now!
Clerks-Carriers! Call for Guaranteed Exams
Workshop (916) 344-4041 Ext. 13
Graphic Design temporary unclassified position. March 30 June 1988, 10:58% $550 - 100 per month. Duties: conceptualize designs and develop a detailed design process and work with little supervision, work with a publications team. Required qualifications: at least 7 years of professional experience or equivalent professional experience; evidence of abilities to handle duties. Preferred: experience designing University architecture with Macintosh touch system. Application deadline: March 25, p. 5m. Carol Lettter, of University Relations, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan.
PROGRAM INSTRUCTORS (4) teach high school students in summer session. Degree, teaching exerted over 10 years of experience. youth is required. DORMITORY SUPERIOR or co-educational team status. Degree required. Attend diverse youth required. PEER COUNSELORS/TUTORS (3) live in dorm. Requires prior college education. Allow at least junior level in college required. RESAARCH ASSISTANT (Bridge Student) requires at least undergraduate individual educational programs for KU students.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications for summer job interviews and application & application; write national Collegiate Recreation. P.O. Box 8074 Hillton
r ant tume house清洗ers wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Transportation required. Call 842-6264.
NEEDED: KU on Wheels Coordinator
- Starts May 1, 1988 through May 31, 1989
Resorts Employment Newsletter—All occupations. Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif., Arizona; More! Tennis, Golf, Vacation/C resorts. Free info! Hours 6:24700. So Lake Tahoe.
KU SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SEEKS:
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks NWV) accepting applications for positions. For information & application; write national College Recreation, P.-G. HOU 8044.
ment individual educational programs for KU freshman. Serve as Instructor and Counselor in Marine Management and familiarity with KU required DEADLINE; March 23, 1986, 5:00 P.M. Complete job description available at Uward Bound, 484 Bailey Hall. Send letter of application to KU, University of Kansas, Nettie H. Cart, Director, Upward Bound, 484 Bailey Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60453 (913) 742-5222
Teachers aide for child care program needed 7:45 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 5-4 yrs or 2 yr. olds and two references required. Apply at children's Learning Center, 311 Main Street,
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Demand of security, dependability, and authority. Send resume to PO Box 190, Lawrence, KS 60044.
- Must be available this summer
- Must be available for 3 hour time blocks each day
- 20 hours per week
- Must be KU student and enrolled in at least 6 hours Fall 88 & Spring 89
- Application deadline:
March 28, 1988 4:30 p.m.
Details and application procedures available at Student Senate Offices 105 Burge Union No calls please
PERSONAL
A B. C : "So far as I can remember, there is not one word in the Gospels in praise of intelligence."
B C: Want KU sweatshirt 4 April Fools Day, I love you, Kimmy.
*oner* ~or the best yer and a half of my life! Hap
*Love* ~her, *Happy Birthday 2014*. Love Xa
*Bama* ~Amin
McGeoy. I can't wait to see you. Just a few
You are loved.
Tim - How about lunch Friday? Noon is good. Let me know where. You know who.
BUS. PERSONAL
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. No dues or fees. Overcaterers Among the Best Medical Hospitals, 325 Main. For confidential information/contact person. Write P.O Box 4042
Do you want $30,000 / year?
It begins with a quality resume
See us
Kingston Printing
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
Instant passport, portfolio resume, naturalization, immigration, visa I.D. fine portraits
Pregnant and need help? Call *Birightbird* at 843-8621. Confidential help/free pregnancy
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316
LAWYER
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shots to complements dancers, dancers, etc. 841-0024
Try it if you love it, because glamorous with a beautiful 'bouillon Portrait': from Photo's Pica (Nicole), to Pics by Mikael Posing Assistance, Creative Photography Technique to produce alarming results. 754-876. Mikeh
SERVICES OFFERED
$90 Value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Free Spinal Exam Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
845-3978.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-779
Your Connection to the REAL Business World! Get Involved!
ACE
**ow-winning resumes, cover letters, 12 years exp**
**PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES:** Ekphrode processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service for Photographer $80.00. Art & Design Buildroom 206. 804-356-7600.
Speaker: Sam Campbell
Subject: Venture Capital
Date: March 24, 1988
Time: 7 p.m.
Place: Pioneer Room
Level 3, Burge Union
For more information,
contact Bill Cardell
at 843-3277
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hour, #43-9032
(p.m.)
PRIVATE OFFICE Park… (813) 401-6878
Services. Overland Park
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
802-105-6
Pregnant and need help? Call *BrigentRH*
843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy
TUTORING TUTURING $6.50/br. MATH STATISTICS and PHYSICS, B.S. Physics, M.A. Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 814-304-6634
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Lawrence. 841-9716 ___
Want to improve your French and have fun on the campuses? Try course accommodations with families. 78-214-54
TYPING
RUG·O·RAMA
Floor Covering Membrane Dust
Factory + Direct Discount Outlet
SAVE 75% off retail
30th and loo ita $41-3838
AAA TYPING Word processing, spellcheck.
TYPING After 5 s. p.t. TFF.
TYPING Hours:36:42, 82-194-392
DISCOVER
THE FUTON
BLUE HERON
Immature Sleep Dangers
937 Massachusetts # 841-9443
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in termi-
sures, theses, mice, correcting Selectric,
Selectric.
1. der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-writing. 843-263, days or evening.
pelling composing
penning DEFINELY. Position Available:
INVESTIGATOR, Wrangler, Waterfront Staff,
ieneral Counselors. Contact Outdoor Program
Wichita, Ariz. G.S.C. 3000 Woodland.
Wichita, KS. 761-455-8280.
SAMP DIRECTOR -- Girl Scout Camp
Middieman is seeking a seasonal director. Send
esume to or contact: Outdoor Program Director,
Wichita Falls C., Cc. 2009 N. Woodsland,
Wichita Falls, TX 76378.
THE FAR SIDE
1-A I-Reliable Typing Service - Tern paper,
Resumes, Letters, etc. professionally (IBM,
Hewlett-Packard).
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing,
Call R.J.R.'s typing service for all of your typing needs. R.J.R.'s before 9 p.m. please.
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
Mommy's Typing & Graphics. One day service available. 842.3378, before 9 p.m. please.
Dona's Quality Tynne and Word Prodigies.
Donna s. quality,
theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes applications, mailing lists. Letter
quality printing. Spelling corrected. 842-2747.
EAST ACQUISITOR DEPENDABLE. Letter
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE. Letter quality printer, special student rate, spell test
For professional typing/word processing, call Myra 844-4000. Spring special $129/page double spacers.
is WORDCOTORS. Why pay for typing when you can use a word processor to resume, law review. Since 1963, 843-3147.
WANTED
Four final tickets call Shelly @ 894-6491.
Put your used books and magazines to work!
Denate to Friends of the Lawrence Public Library. Bring to collection box at the library 707
RESUME SERVICES – professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letter, business cards, and typesetting and graphics for any uses. In 24 hours from the date of Kinsk's Call # 942-8878, it answer leave message on machine.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
Kaw Valley Soccer Association is looking for Volunteer Soccer Coaches ages Kindergarten through Jr. High KINDERGARTEN through JR. High HPER credit available if interested call Mary Loveland at 842-9333/842-7251 or Tina Ulbrick at 841-7175
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
3-21
"Ernie! Look what you're doing — take those shoes off!"
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Make cheeky payable to:
Davis Daily Kansas
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12
Monday, March 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
City Commission delays vote on downtown benefit district
Improvement committee will survey property owners first
By Christine Martin Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission will wait to take action on the creation of a benefit district that would help finance a downtown mall until it receives reactions from downtown property owners.
Last week, the commission decided to wait until March 29 to vote on the proposed benefit district, which would pay for $8.8 million of the estimated $44.5 million mall project.
During the next week, members of the Downtown Improvement Committee will talk to property owners about their feelings toward the plan.
If approved, the benefit district annually would charge downtown property owners assessments ranging from 7 cents to $1.97 per square foot of property, depending on how close the property is to the three parking garages included in the mall
The proposed benefit district would pay for $8.8 million of the estimated $44.5 million downtown mall project.
plan.
The plan calls for construction of three department stores, 60 small shops and three parking garages in the 700, 800 and 900 blocks of Massachusetts Street.
closest Ernie Cummings, chairman of the task force that planned the benefit district, said Monday that the businesses closest to the mall project would benefit the most.
City Commissioner Mike Rundle said yesterday that the improvement committee's report was a final draft.
"There's never been anything to
react to," Rundle said. "I think the Mayor thought it would be good to get an overwhelming request for change before the City Commission acts."
Rundle said that he wasn't sure how many property owners were for or against the benefit district.
The 16-member improvement committee has been working since June on the benefit district plan.
City Commissioner Dennis Constance, who is a member of the committee, said Monday, "We've spent a lot of time looking at a lot of layouts and scenarios. This is probably our best shot at figuring it out."
The rest of the financing for the mall would come from the developer, who will contribute $23.2 million; a $5 million federal Urban Development Action Grant; bonds worth $2.9 million, based on the federal grant; and tax increment bonds worth $4.5 million.
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Macintosh Its not too late to get your key to success. Order now. FREE MACWRITE® am with Macintosh purchase
TM
The deadline has been extended! If you pay your $50 down payment at the Burge Union by March 30, you can still have your Mac on your desk by March 31 or April 1. (This extension even applies to students whose approved financing has been delayed!)
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1,2,3!
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union.
Stop by and place your order by March 30.
Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want.
($50 deposit required)
KUBookstores
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Macintosh Plus or SE? 2-disk or hard disk drive? You choose. The computer that will help you work faster, smarter and more creatively has never cost less!
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
Macintosh Plus...$1200
Macintosh SE with 2 disk drives...$1979
Macintosh SE, 20 meg hard disk drive...$2399
Included in these special prices are: the computer keyboard, mouse, hypercard and multifinder. All of these prices apply to full-time KU students, faculty and staff.
Macintosh™ Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Tuesday March 22,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.117 (USPS 650-640)
Margin gets Senate support Committee opts to fully finance plan's first year
By lill less
Kansan staff writer
Complete funding for the first year of the Margin of Excellence plan was added to the Regents budget in the state Senate Ways and Means Committee yesterday.
The state House of Representatives last week had passed a version of the budget that included money for faculty salaries but not for the mission-related enhancements.
However, the Senate committee gave the Regents the requested $8,961,679 for mission-related enhancements, to fully fund the $15,274,679 for the first year of the plan.
The University of Kansas would receive about $1.9 million for fiscal 1889 for mission-related enhancements.
means.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, a member of the committee, said that debate on the budget had been tense before he and State Sen. Merrill Werts, R-Junction City, convinced the committee to fund the plan.
Winter said that the bill should reach the Senate floor next week and that he expected it to pass in that chamber.
The bill would then go to a conference committee of Senate and House members before returning to the
Winter said he thought the bill would pass the Legislature with the plan fully funded.
House floor.
"It think it may be the year for the university," he said yesterday.
Executive vice chancellor Judith Ramaley said yesterday that she had not yet heard of the committee's report, but that she was pleased by the news.
Ramaley said that the money would allow KU to spend money on
"That is very welcome news because about half of our Margin of Excellence requests is in the form of mission-related enhancements," she said.
libraries, new faculty positions, research and research equipment.
"The reaction is 'hooray,'" she said.
The Regents Margin of Excellence plan would allot $6.3 million for faculty salary parity, $4.5 million for mission-related enhancements at the six Regents universities and $4.4 million for enhancements at other Regents institutions, such as the University of Kansas Medical Center, the Kansas State University Veterinary Medical Center and Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
In January, Gov. Mike Hayden
Recommended increases for the Regents Margin of Excellence plan Mission-related enhancements Faculty salary $5 mill. $6.3 mill. $4.5 mill. Governor Hayden's recommendation The House of Representatives recommendation Regents request & Senate Ways and Means committee recommendation Source: Board of Regents, Kansas legislators
---
Faculty salary $4.5 mill.
$5 mill. $6.3 mill. $6.3 mill.
recommended funding $5 million of the $6.3 million the Regents had requested for faculty salaries. However, the only mission-related enhancement funding that Hayden recommended was $1.7 million for the Med Center.
Richard Stewart/KANSAN
mittee and fully funded the salary request in February but did not address mission-related enhancements.
The House Appropriations Com-
All figures are for fiscal 1989, the first year of the three-year funding plan for Margin of Excellence.
JONES
Sue Schellie/KANSAN
KU senior Veronda O'Hara works on an exercise called the leg toss during the afternoon track practice at Memorial Stadium. She runs the 400 meter and the mile relay on the KU track team. The team travels to Alabama on April 2 to compete.
Noriega makes offer to step down
Leg toss
The Associated Press
PANAMA CITY, Panama — Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega has offered to resign before the May 1989 presidential election if opponents agree to talks with his regime.
The political opposition, whose general strike yesterday paralyzed the nation, and the United States, which has kept up steady pressure to force Noriega's resignation, were unlikely to accept the general's terms.
Manuel Solis Palma, installed last month as the minister in charge of
Opposition unlikely to agree to conditions set by general
the presidency, made the announcement yesterday in a nationally broadcast speech.
Solis Palma said Noriega had given his word to step down if his conditions were met.
In Washington, State Department
spokesman Anita Stockman said yesterday that there was no immediate reaction from the administration. White House spokesman Mark Weinberg also had no immediate response.
Noriegia is under indictment or
several drug charges in Florida. The United States has dried up the flow of money to Panama, which uses the U.S. dollar as its currency, in the effort to force him out. The Panamanian economy is near collapse.
The general put down a coup attempt by dissident officers last week and rejected a U.S. plan for him to leave Panama and live in Spain.
In Washington, White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said there were no plans for further talks with Noriega after the return of two administration officials from Panama City.
Nicaraguan soldiers leave border area
The Associated Press
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — Nicaragua withdrew its soldiers from the Honduran border yesterday and declared an end to fighting while it holds truce talks with the contras, according to reports from all sides.
■ See related story p. 7.
The border region remained tense, with Honduran patrols on the lookout for any booby traps left behind by the Sandinistas.
President Jose Azcona Hoyo said the 3,200 U.S. troops sent to Honduras
last week, after the Nicaraguan army was accused of sending 2,000 men across the border in pursuit of contras, might not be needed any longer.
"The worst is over, and there is peace now in the border region." Col. Reynald Andino Flores, commander of the Honduran army's 101st Infantry Brigade, said from his headquarters in southern Honduras.
"We are remaining on a state of alert to be ready for anything that may happen." Flores added.
Flores and other officers, some of
whom insisted on anonymity for
security reasons, said the Sandinista penetrated an area of about 20 square miles inside Olancho province while chasing the U.S.supported rebels in a two-week offensive to evict the contrasts from Nicaragua.
About 200 border incidents have been reported in Olancho since the contras began fighting the leftist Sandinista government in 1981.
President Daniel Ortega and the Nicaraguan government have denied Sandinista soldiers crossed the border.
The contras maintain camps in an area called Bocay, which includes
territory on both sides of the border. Nicaragua claims that the camps, which the contrasts use to store supplies and to stage raids inside Nicaragua, are in Nicaraguan land. The contras say the camps are in Honduras.
At Nicaragua's request, a U.N. fact-finding team will leave for Nicaragua today to investigate the border violence, the United Nations announced in a statement. It said observations will be limited to the Nicaraguan side, since no permission was received from Honduras to go there.
Sponsor of forum faced with large security bill
Kansan staff writer
By Ric Brack
police that totalled more than $3,200.
Even though the bill for security at the March 7 free-speech forum at Hoch Auditorium is higher than had been estimated, the organizer of the event said his group would honor its commitment to pay the bill.
Michael Foubert, Lawrence graduate student and president of Slightly Older Americans for Freedom, the group that organized the event, said he received a security bill from KU
Since that "Obviously, we're seeking sources of funding," Foubert said. He said that he would ask Student Senate for funds and that if necessary, private donations would be solicited.
KU police originally had estimated a cost of about $2,000 for the event, based on a security force made up of the entire KU police force to be employed for a period of four and a half hours. The maximum cost an hour was estimated before the forum at $450.
KU police director Jim Denney said yesterday that although the maximum cost an hour had been adhered to, the final cost was different from the estimate because security for the event had been employed longer than four and a half hours.
Denney said the bill was due immediately but that he understood that the group could have trouble paying the bill.
"Sometimes, people get in over their heads, and this is a classic
case," Denney said. "We'll work with him any way we can."
Denney said after the forum that the total cost of security for the event could have been as much as $19,000.
The 33-person KU police force was assisted by about 23 Lawrence police officers, five Douglas County Sheriff's officers, 50 Kansas Highway Patrol troopers, two bomb disposal experts from the Overland Park police department and seven Kansas Bureau of Investigation agents.
Task force rejects AIDS study
Group suggests that University not participate in program
Bv leff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Because of a lack of information, the Student Senate's Task Force on AIDS will recommend to Senate tomorrow night that KU not participate in a nationwide study that would try to discover the percentage of college students who test positive for AIDS.
The study calls for the 20 participating universities each to send 1,000 blood samples by January 1899 to the CDC in Atlanta for analysis. Blood samples would be chosen randomly from students who have blood tests at student health centers. Only demographic information, including race, sex and age, would be linked to the samples. To further assure the anonymity of the samples, every tenth sample would be discarded.
After its meeting in the Kansas Union last night, the task force decided that it did not receive enough information about the five-year study, which will be conducted by the American College Health Association and the Centers for Disease Control.
sample In nine to 12 months, the study's results would be released in regional and national percentages only. In its proposal, the ACHA said regions that showed a high percentage of students testing positive could be scrutinized to find out why.
Despite assurances from Charles
Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins
If they wanted us to make an informed decision, they did not give us enough time.'
Student Senate AIDS task force
1.
Hospital, that the University of Kansas could back out of the study at any time, the task force said that KU might not be able to control how the study would be conducted after the first year because not enough information was provided about years two through five of the study.
— Ruth Lichtwardt
The proposal for entering the study was brought before Senate on March 9, but the Senate decided to send the resolution to the task force and the Minority Affairs and Student Rights committees for examination. Those two committees will not meet before Senate's meeting tomorrow night.
Although Senate's approval is not needed, Yockey said that a proposal such as this should be decided by the Senate.
"Until a long-term framework is provided, Student Senate should not open the door to this type of study," said Michael Foubert, director of the task force.
some members of the task force resented the lack of time they were given to discuss the proposal. KU must inform the ACHA by Friday if it wants to take part in the study.
"We want to totally inform the
senate and the student body of this proposal, and if there is not an overwhelming majority in favor of it then we'll inform the CDC that the University of Kansas is not interested," Yockey said.
"If they wanted us to make an informed decision, they did not give us enough time," said task force member Ruth Lichtwardt.
roubert and Yockey also discussed the issue on JKHJ's JayTalk 91 last night, along with Kathryn Anderson and Steve Kidwell, both members of the task force.
Foubert said on the program that KU should not participate in the study because 1,000 samples would not accurately reflect infection rates of the whole student body and that high risk groups would not be identified.
But Yockey disagreed because no real information existed about the percentages of students who tested positive.
"I think this study is important because it would give us a better estimation than we have now," he said.
Second of three shopping mall sites rejected by planning commissioners
Bv Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission last night voted unanimously to recommend denial of the second of three suburban mall rezoning requests.
The commission denied the Jacobs, V viscison and Jacobs (JVJ) proposal, which would be a 61-acre site at Iowa Street and Armstrong Road in south Lawrence.
The Planning Commission first voted unanimously Feb. 22 to recommend denial of the Collister proposal, which was submitted by Ed Collister, a Lawrence attorney. The Collister proposal would be a 55-acre site at Highway 40 and Wakarusa Drive in west Lawrence.
the planning staff first recommended denying approval of the three proposals in September. The report on the proposals, submitted to the planning commissioners last month, backed up their conclusion with testimony from several public hearings.
The third proposal, the Warmack proposal, will go before the Planning Commission April 13. The proposal was submitted by Warmack and Co., a Fort Smith, Ark., developer, and would be a 10-acre site at Clinton Parkway and Wakarusa Drive in southwest Lawrence.
Planning commissioners spent nearly three hours amending 11 pages of a 22-page report on the JVJ proposal, which was prepared by the planning staff. The commission had amended the first 11
The commissioners amended the report because they did not agree totally on what was fact and what was opinion in the report.
pages of the report at the Feb. 22 meeting.
The commissioners discussed how the rezoning would affect wildlife in the area, the increased traffic and whether spinoff commercial development would interfere with downtown Lawrence.
"I can't believe putting a 400,000 square-foot mall anywhere would not have some kind of negative effect on a neighborhood," planning commissioner Mark Buhler said.
Planning commissioner David Evans that a mail would not necessarily have a negative affect on downtown Lawrence.
'Just because you have a commercial center doesn't mean you'll have commercial things all around it," he said.
But the commissioners did agree that the city would need major traffic improvements, such as widening lanes and adding turn lanes because of increased traffic from the proposed mall.
The planning staff first recommended denying approval of the three proposals in September. The report on the proposals, submitted to the planning commissioners in February, backed up their conclusion with information from public hearings, which took place from October to November.
For final action, the JVJ proposal will now go before the City Commission, and the Collister and Warmack proposals will go before the County Commission.
---
2
Tuesday. March 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
AWRENCE
LAWRENCE
One more time!
HIGH: 80°
LOW: 45°
Once again, it will be sunny, windy and very warm this afternoon with a high around 80. A chance for a shower overnight with a low in the mid-40's.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Plate 66/28
Partly Cloudy
Omaha 75/39
Mostly Sunny
Goodland 72/32
Partly Sunny
Hays 77/38
Partly Cloudy
Salina 79/41
Mostly Sunny
Topeka 81/44
Sunny
Kansas City 80/45
Sunny
Columbia 78/45
Sunny
St. Louis 77/45
Sunny
Dodge City 77/38
Partly Cloudy
Wichita 82/45
Sunny
Charlotte 83/47
Sunny
Springfield 83/50
Sunny
Tulsa 86/53
Sunny
Forecast by Kevin Darmola:
Temperatures are today's. High and tonight's overnight low.
5-DAY
WED
A.M. Showers
62 / 35
HIGH LOW
THU
P.M. Showers
69 / 37
FRI
Sunny
58 / 33
SAT
Sunny
55 / 31
SUN
Sunny
60 / 35
On Campus
An Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center workshop titled "Women's Constitutional Issues: Perspectives for the Future" is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union.
A Linguistics Colloquy titled "Voice Acquisition in Quich Mayan" with Clifton Pye is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in 207 Blake Hall.
A KU Fencing Club meeting is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
Three Mile Island operator buys water cleanup system
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The operator of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant said yesterday that he was spending $800,000 for a system to boil away 2.3 million gallons of water contaminated in the 1979 accident, even though the method has yet to be approved, and that public hearings were months away.
"We expect the NRC (Nuclear Regulatory Commission) to approve the evaporation eventually, but it's possible that that wouldn't happen," GPU Nuclear spokesman Gordon Tomb said in a telephone interview.
GPU Nuclear, operator of the plant, near Harrisburg, Pa., said that the contract with Pacific Nuclear Systems Inc. of Federal Way, Wash., for the evaporator was a calculated risk.
NRC spokeswoman Sue Gagner said it was common for utilities to make major expenditures for equipment before the commission granted permission for its use.
But Kay Pickering, spokeswoman for Three Mile Island Alert, a citizen's group, said she was alarmed when GPU Nuclear told the NRC at a meeting last week that the company had authorized the contractor to design, install and begin testing the evaporation system.
Most of the water is left over from the 1979 accident. The remainder has been used to decontaminate the plant. GPU Nuclear said the average additional radiation exposure from the evaporation would be about the same as the exposure from one to two hours of natural background radiation in the Harrisburg area.
Campus Briefs
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said that about 38,000 fall timetables and 14,000 summer timetables were printed.
TIMETABLES AVAILABLE: The 1988 fall and summer timetables are now available in 111 Strong Hall. Timetables will also be available during enrollment card distribution March 23-24 and through the individual schools
Thompson said students would be limited to one timetable this year to safeguard against a shortage. The restriction would ensure that the timetables would be free to students next year, he said.
Thompson said that in previous years, students had taken more than one timetable. He said that if the problem continued, the students could be charged for the timetables.
"We are just trying to hold the line," he said. "It might seem stingy, but this way we won't have to charge in the future."
Enrollment appointments begin April 1 and end April 21.
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS NEEDED: The Student Senate Elections Committee needs seven student organizations to run polling stations
during Senate elections April 13-14.
during school. The organizations will receive $100 for their participation, said Stephen Dixon, elections committee chairman. The committee would like a different student group at each of the seven polling stations.
Polling stations will be at Carruthro'Leary Hall, Strong Hall, Wescoe Hall, Summerfield Hall, the Kansas Union, Learned Hall and Watson Library. Some voting booths might be moved outside if weather permits.
The deadline for student organizations interested in working at elections is 5 p.m. today. Applications may be filed at the Senate office in the Burge Union.
AUTHOR TO SPEAK: Elizabeth Tallent, author of two collections of short stories and a novel, will speak about and read from her work at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Spencer Museum of Art Auditorium.
Tallent's most recent book, "Time With Children," is a collection of 13 short stories about the state of the family today.
Tailent's other work includes "In Constant Flight," a collection of short stories, and "Museum Pieces," a novel.
Story Idea for Arts & Entertainment?
Call 864-4810
Jacque Janssen arts/features editor
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Haircuts $6.50
For appointments call 842-3699
2923 Rideau Court
Events of the Week
Tuesday, March 22
"Wednesday" Lunch on Tuesday
11:30 a.m. 1:00 p.m.
Alcove B, Kansas Union
Friday, March 25
Alumni Shabbat Dinner
6:00 p.m.
Hillel House
RSVP By Wednesday, March 23
For Reservations/More Info:
Call Hillel, 749-4242
Glass Onion undergoing changes
1980
Owners make coffeehouse a restaurant
Price Banks, Lawrence city planning director, discusses renovation plans for the Glass Onion, 12th and Indiana, with co-owner Jeff Morrow.
By Wendy J. Rosenthal
Special to the Kansan
Renovations of the Glass Onion Coffeehouse at 12th and Indiana streets should be completed by Friday, the owners of the property said Supday.
Jeff and Kathy Morrow, the owners, said that the Glass Onion was closed during spring break for building renovations. Those renovations and a new menu will transform the coffeehouse into a restaurant, called the Glass Onion Grill. The restaurant should be open by Friday. they said.
"The Glass Onion as a commercial venture has been a poor performer," Jeff Morrow said. "When the Glass onion started in September of 1986, it was well received. It performed better than it does now in terms of gross volume."
Morrow said that the Yellow Sub restaurant, directly below the Glass Onion, had been subsidizing the Glass Onion. When he separated them in October and November to evaluate the Glass Onion's financial performance, he found that "if the Glass Onion was required to stand on its own, it would be dead."
Renovation plans call for "phased construction." Morrow said. The first phase was the removal of the shed roof, which was done over spring break. The shed roof was the area over Kinko's Copies. The area is now a deck. The second phase, to be carried out in the fall, calls for a glass enclosure of the deck, which would allow the area to be heated during the winter, he said.
Morrow said the renovation cost would be approximately $15,000.
The current dining room will be doubled in size by the 450-square-foot addition. He said that the dining room would accommodate 75 people or more instead of the 50 people it previously accommodated. Changes also include new paint and a new counter.
Morrow said that the Glass Onion was trying to steer away from the
The Glass Onion was an attempt to find a niche in the market for college kids, and it didn't really work without beer.'
Jeff Morrow co-owner, the Glass Onion
Jeff Morrow
concept and format of a coffeehouse and redefine itself as a restaurant.
"Restaurants and coffeehouses have different personalities," he said. "A coffeehouse is typified by low-cost menu items, low turnover and low volume sales. Restaurants aim for a higher ticket price and type of clientele that is interested in a meal, rather than a social experience."
The Grill will offer 13 types of hamburgers, including a tofu burger, and spiced hash browns. Because of the popularity of shakes, Kathy Morrow said, the Grill will have softserve machines.
"For desserts, we are going to emphasize pies and ice cream," she said. She also said that the Grill would not serve deep-fried or frozen foods.
The Morrows are applying for a cereal malt beverage license to allow the restaurant to sell 3.2 beer, Jeff Morrow said.
"The Glass Onion was an attempt to find a niche in the market for college kids, and it didn't really work without beer." he said.
He said that he thought he could get the cereal malt beverage license to allow the Grill to sell beer to go.
Mark McHugh, Webster Groves junior, said, "Lawrence could use
another place that serves both beer and good food. I think it's a great idea. Instead of walking downstairs to go to the Crossing to get a beer, people could stay upstairs."
Tom Conroy, who owns the Crossing, said, "Jeff Morrow is a friend of mine. Whatever he does will affect me probably, but there is no competition. Of course, I would like to be the only person here selling beer, but there's nothing I can do about that."
The Morrows added that they didn't want to slack in their responsibility to provide a social atmosphere. When the Glass Onion first opened, it offered a number of musical events and poetry readings.
"We personally enjoyed them," Morrow said. "We hope we will be able to continue some of those events, and we think the physical alterations to the building will enhance those events."
Disorientation Handbook's fourth issue readv
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
date of November 1987.
Feeling a strange sense of confusion, or maybe a wave of vertigo? Don't be alarmed. It could only be a touch of Disorientation.
The latest issue of the Diorisonert Handbook will be distributed on campus this week and soon should be available free at the Oread Book Shop and at Lawrence businesses. The magazine is partially financed by Student Senate.
The issue is the fourth to appear since the magazine's inception in the summer of 1985, but it is numbered 3.2 to reflect its intended publication
Disorientation 3.2 contains articles and illustrations that run a gamut of topics, from information on AIDS and fallout shelters in Lawrence to a history of beer in Lawrence. The 32-page issue is the publication's largest.
But Disorientation has gained a reputation with some readers as a
"It's hard to sum up the issue," he said. "It's kind of a pot luck of information."
Mike Mader, Great Bend graduate student and one of Disorientation's co-editors, said he thought the magazine's variety made it more attractive to students.
magazine loaded with liberal views
Mader said that was inaccurate.
STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD.
EXAM CLASSES START
Kaplan's LAST prep course helps more students score 'over 40' than any other test prep firm any-
"We're not in the business of editorializing," he said. "The spirit of the magazine is for students to get together and share ideas with other people. We don't ask that they embrace them."
When discussing Disorientation, Mader said, "The phrase we use is 'alternative resource guide.' "
EXAM
6/13
The Associated Press
Many attend L.A. funeral for Andy Gibb
KAPLAN
LOS ANGELES — Singer Andy Gibb, the former pop and disco star who died of a heart ailment at age 30, was interred yesterday in the Hollywood Hills after a service attended by 100 people, including his three singing brothers, the Bee Gees.
The British-born Gibb, who died March 10 in Oxford, England, was eulogized during a private service at a Forest Lawn Memorial Park chapel by a *Mystodist* minister, the Rev. Stephen Stewart.
BE OVER 40 AND LOVE IT!
3/24 & 5/17
Dennis "Boog" Highberger, Lawrence resident and founder of Disorientation, said he got the inspiration for the magazine from a booklet published at the University of California-Berkley.
Gibb died of myocarditis, which was described as a rare viral infection of the heart muscle, after he was hospitalized for stomach pains. Doctors reported no evidence that drugs or alcohol were involved in his death.
LSAT
3/24 & 5/17
CALL 842-5424
1012 Mass St
(Above Morris Sports)
"When we started, we felt the need
to give information to incoming freshmen that they weren't getting from other sources," he said. "We intended to show a side of Lawrence that isn't so apparent."
"We don't want to tell people how to think or what to think, but just to think."
Highberger, who is listed as the "vanishing editor" in the issue, said that Disorientation 3.2 was not as strident as the first issue but that he was pleased nonetheless.
Shelle Rosenfeld, Lawrence graduate student and co-editor of Disorientation, she hoped that readers would pick up the editors' intentions.
Actors striking against ad agencies
Television and radio commercial stars demand more money
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — The entertainment industry was hit yesterday by a second strike, when television and radio commercial actors struck advertising agencies over cable television residuals and cost-of-living payments.
The strike is the second by Hollywood talent unions in less than a month. The Writers Guild of America yesterday entered the third week of its strike against motion picture and television producers.
The 100,000 joint members of the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Radio and Television Artists called their strike against the BMG for the sale of a movie of Advertising Agencies and the Association of National Advertisers.
The strike affects only radio and television commercials.
The union rejected a management offer of immediate fee increases in exchange for eliminating a cost of living schedule that has been in the last three contracts. Advertisers refused to accept a proposed tiered payment system for commercials shown on cable television.
The striking actors picketed offices of the Ogilvy and Mather agency in Los Angeles and Honolulu. In New York city, strikers set up picket lines at General Motors Plaza during a GM board meeting.
"This is a matter of pride," said Alec Murdock, who appears in television ads for Coast Savings and Apple Macintosh computers and who joined hundreds of people on a picket line in Los Angeles. "You spend years trying to get work and going to casting calls and callbacks, and when you finally get a commercial, you want to be treated equally."
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 22, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Local group lobbying for rights of disabled
By Jeff Suggs
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
A Lawrence woman's plight with the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services has led some Lawrence residents to form a group to support her.
The Lawrence Coalition for Citizens with Disabilities was formed recently to support Dana Wray, a quadriplegic. SRS told her recently that her services would end by April 10. Wray said.
Jan Allen, commissioner of adult services at SRS, would not comment on Wray's situation because of confidential laws.
In Topeka on Friday, five members of the group held a candelight vigil at the Statehouse and Wray met with SRS officials to try to get her services reinstated.
State Sen. Wint Winter, Jr., R-Lawrence, plans to introduce a bill this week that could improve Wray's situation.
Winter said he planned to introduce a bill that would make some changes in the Kansas Nurse Practices Act. He said the bill would allow non-medical attendants to care for certain medical needs, like Wray's. He said the present act was too inflexible.
"We just need to bring a little sanity to the situation." Winter said.
Paula Clevenger, a member of the group, said the main purpose of the coalition was to change the Kansas Nurse Practices Act. Clevenger said
'We would certainly live
Jan Allen
within the law.'
commissioner of adult services,
Social and Rehabilitation Services the act, which governs medical care for the disabled, now was strictly interpreted by the SRS.
Cleveren said Wray was a victim of the act. Wray recently had pneumonia and had a tracheostomy to help her breathe. The act says that only nurses can provide medical care, which includes one or two ventilators. In reality Cleveren said, non-medical attendants would be sufficient.
Wray said SRS told her March 10 that her services would be cut. The main reason SRS was ending her services was that her care was medical, which was something she said it couldn't provide, she said.
Wray said her SRS care had been non-medical. She said that presently, SRS home health aids and nurses cared for her but that her roommates care for the tracheostomy. Wray said it was odd that the nurses wouldn't care for the tracheostomy, even when they were allowed to do so.
Allen, from SRS, said she didn't know whether nurses administered medical care to Wray. But she said nurses couldn't administer medical care without a doctor's order.
Allen said she would have no problems with a law change.
"We would certainly live within the law," she said.
Wray had her services cut before. Earlier this month, Wray did not receive care from SRS for two days. The cutting of services, which was called a misunderstanding by SRS officials, led Fred Markham to go on a hunger strike in protest of what he called SRS mistreatment.
Markham, who has cerebral palsy and is president of the newly formed coalition, went on a hunger strike for six days. He ended his strike on March 10 after receiving a letter from Gov. Mike Hayden, who promised to look into the matter. Later that same day, Wray was informed that her services would be cut.
Clevenger said Markham was angry with the SRS' decision. Clevenger is a spokesman for Markham.
"I think he was feeling, 'Why did I trust these people, why did I believe these people?' " Clevenger said.
Cleverenger said that Markham was not on a hunger strike now but that it could be an option in the future. She said Markham and the rest of the coalition were going to continue to fight to resume Wray's services.
"We are determined to see this through." Clevenger said. "We are not going to give up."
KU crime up by 4 percent
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
A 4 percent increase in the 1987 University of Kansas crime rate, as reported by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, ended a downward trend in the KU crime rate that had continued since 1983.
"Basically, we're following a state and city-wide trend toward more property crimes," Sgt. John Brothers of the KU police department said yesterday.
According to a study that Brothers recently completed, KU's crime rate went down from 1983 to 1986, even though Lawrence's crime rate increased during the same period. During that period, the KBI reported a 12.2 percent increase in crime statewide.
According to Brothers' study, the rate of crime at KU decreased 27.1 percent for the 10-year period from
1977 to 1986. According to the U.S.
Department of Education, KU enrollment increased by 10.1 percent during that period.
"The combination of decreasing crime in the face of increasing enrollment has brought a substantial increase in the crime rate." Brothers said.
For the years 1978 through 1984, increases and decreases in both the KU and city of Lawrence crime rates ran roughly parallel. In 1985, the rate for the city of Lawrence began to increase again, but the KU crime rate continued to decline.
Though the KBI does compile crime statistics for the University separately from those for the city, those numbers are included in the city of Lawrence statistics when the KBI publishes annual statistics.
While KU experienced a 4 percent crime rate increase in 1987, the 1987
Lawrence crime rate increased 5 percent from 1986, according to KBI statistics released March 1. During 1987, the overall crime rate for the state of Kansas rose 2.3 percent but the number of violent crimes dropped 1.7 percent.
The reduction in statewide violent crime reflected decreases in the number of rapes and aggravated assaults but increases in the number of murders and robberies.
The number of burglaries in 1987 was up 4.4 percent, but the KBI said that some of that increase could be attributed to a change in the way auto burglaries were counted. Burglary to an auto previously was reported as a theft. It is now counted as a burglary.
The number of property crimes, though, increased 2.6 percent. Property crimes include burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft.
TOSHIBA
Mike Clune, Lawrence senior, works on a computer in a Learned Hall aerospace lab. The computer allows students to study plane designs.
Students designing jet fighter
Rv Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
Most jet fighters that fly at the speed of sound can be detected by radar. But the airplane that seven aerospace engineering students are designing will evade detection.
The advanced superiority fighter design team headed by Saeed Farokhi, associate professor of aerospace engineering, is designing an aircraft to win a competition sponsored by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics and the Pratt and Whitney Corn.
Farokhi, whose team has been working on the project since the middle of January, said that the design would use advanced aircraft technologies. The plane is intended to combat enemy fighters.
"In light of new developments like the Stealth fighter, the fighter of the 1990s should incorporate all advanced technology in an aircraft that will be superior to the enemy." Farokhi said. "That technology, which is being developed or will be developed, is what we are using."
Many of the technologies that the team will incorporate into the design are already characteristics of the Stealth fighter, one of the United States Air Force's most advanced fighter planes, Farahki who
Dion Lies, Kansas City, Mo, senior and a member of the design team, said, "Most of the technologies we use today are still developing." Some that haven't been developed yet we are using and assuming they will be used by the late 1990s. *
Norman Ng, director of student programs at the AIAA in Washington, D.C., said that about 10 to 15 universities would enter the "Air Breathing Propulsion Team Design Competition" by the June 15 deadline to win the $1000 first place prize and national recognition.
He said that many different factors of the design
proposals would be judged, including aircraft fuel efficiency, endurance without refueling, maneuverability, speed and the integration of the engine into the plane.
"The students will have to come up with the right compromise of the different factors to give overall optimum performance," he said. "They will use engine and aerodynamic data to come up with an overall aircraft design and then measure the performance."
One of the performance objectives for the aircraft is that the plane be virtually invisible to radar, Farokhi said.
"An ideal fighter would be a non-emitting one, no radio signals, no microwave signals." Farakhi said. "But it would be a receiver, capable of receiving information from internal computer banks or from a high flying radar platform."
A high-flying platform, which is a high-flying satellite or aircraft, would transmit such information as the fighter's location, its target and an enemy plane's location.
Most of the seven students in Farokhi's team have been working on different parts of the engine throughout the semester but will combine efforts when the engine is integrated into the aircraft frame, Farokhi said.
For instance, Lies has been writing computer, programs for the stress analysis and thermo-dynamics of turbine fan blades and Charlie Buffkin, Overland Park park is working on the frame of the aircraft.
Farokhi said that because the team paid strenuous attention to detail, they had a good chance of taking the prize.
"Our system integration approach to the advanced aircraft design is what I believe is going to distinguish us from our competitors," he said.
Regents pleased with expansion effort
Kansan staff writer
By Joel Zeff
Despite money crunch, KU exploring possible new grad programs for KC
The Board of Regents is pleased with the effort by the University of Kansas to expand graduate programs at the Regents Center in Overland Park, the Regents director of academic affairs said yesterday.
The director, Martine Hammond,
said that the Regents had made a
request in 1986 for KU to pursue more
programs in the Kansas
city area.
"They are trying to respond to the board's request, but because of the enrollment increases, money has been tight," Hammond said. "The board is very pleased with KU's progress. It is hard to do more than what they are doing with the money available."
Money for the expansion and addition of graduate programs in Kansas
City would be included in the mission-related enhancements of the Margin of Excellence package. The Regents budget is now in the Legislature
According to the 1986 mission statement, KU's primary mission is the preservation and enhancement of research and graduate programs. The statement also said that expansion in the Kansas City area graduate programs would be explored.
Hammond said that the Kansas City area had a large demand for graduate programs. New programs would not be limited to the University of Kansas Medical Center, she said, but also would be offered in the Regents Center.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that a task force on the graduate program situation completed its study in December.
Hamaley said that the task force explored new possibilities for graduate programs in the Kansas City area. Possibilities include expansion of the business administration program and the possible addition of programs in engineering management, journalism, architecture and urban design.
"Right now, we are waiting to see how much funding we get," Ramaley said. "If we receive a significant amount, then we should expand."
Ramaley said that the number of programs added would depend on the
money granted to KU.
"If we don't get the funding, we won't be able to expand, which would be too bad. Kansas City has a great hunger for graduate programs and would provide many opportunities," Ramaley said.
Money from the Margin of Excellence would provide additional faculty positions for the Lawrence campus, thus allowing KU faculty to spend more time on graduate programs in Kansas City, she said.
Ramaley said that KU's first priority was to the students and programs on the Lawrence campus but that the University would maintain a strong level of commitment to the Kansas City area.
Costa Ricans to speak here; legislators are KU graduates
By a Kansan reporter
Two legislators from Costa Rica who are also KU graduates will be on campus tomorrow and Thursday to present their views of the Central American peace process.
Mario Carvajal earned a doctorate degree in political science at the University of Kansas in 1972. Rodolfo Mendez Mata earned a bachelor's degree in civil engineering at KU in 1960.
the legislators are from the two largest political groups in Costa Rica. Carvajal is a member of the National Liberation Party, and Mendez Mata is a member of the Social Christian Unity Party. They will present "Two Costa Rican Views of the Central American Peace Process" at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the
Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The two leaders will speak Thursday at a luncon seminar on current economic and political situations in Costa Rica. The seminar will be at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove of the Union. The talk will be in Spanish.
Carvajal and Mendez Mata are also members of the Gofitz advisory committee and will speak to members of KU's Gofitz Committee.
Golfito, a research facility, is part of a joint research center for KU and the University of Costa Rica.
Oscar Quiros, administrative assistant to the Latin American Studies department, said the two leaders would speak with professors who had done research at Golfito. They also will speak to those interested in starting new projects at Golfito.
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Tuesday, March 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students must ask questions to avoid apartment problems
Let the buyer, or leaser, beware.
That's the best advice for students searching for off-campus housing for the next school year.
housing for the next school year. Students need to know what they are renting, not what they think they are renting. This means asking questions, lots of questions.
Prospective tenants should decide what type of housing best suits them, and they should know what they want before they start looking.
if economy is important, students should research the apartment's past utility bills. If they have cars, they should ask about how much parking is provided. Guest parking also might be an important consideration. Often in student complexes, just having the number of spaces the city requires is not enough, especially if each apartment has three or four cars.
The type of residents a complex attracts also might be important. The studious apartment hunter not want upstairs neighbors who blare Whitesnake at all hours.
This may all seem like common sense. But too often, students overlook the most basic of questions in their search.
By questioning now, students will avoid problems later. Alison Young for the editorial board
Alison Young for the editorial board
Regents owe thanks to House
The Kansas House of Representatives last week took a big step toward enhancing education at Board of Regents schools by approving the Regents $788 million budget.
The University of Kansas stands to benefit greatly from the House's version of the budget. KU would get $207.2 million and an additional $17.27 million in capital improvements.
The House followed Gov. Mike Hayden's recommendation and approved a 4 percent salary increase for classified employees and student employees and a 5 percent increase for faculty. The legislators did not stop there. They also voted to give salary increases to faculty who do research or work in various University programs and services.
ine House did not, however, pass an amendment to put an additional $4.5 million into the budget for the Margin of Excellence program. KU would have received about $2 million of that money for "mission enhancements" that would have improved the quality of education at KU.
The Senate should follow the House's lead and approve the Regents budget. But state senators should reinstate the $4.5-million chunk that the House left out before giving the budget final approval.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
Other Voices
Indiana shouldn't legislate morality
The Indiana House of Representatives voted recently for a bill that would require public schools to teach that abstinence from sex is the "expected standard."
This goes beyond practical classroom advice and allows schools to teach moral standards, a job better left to families.
schools to teach moral studies, a practical advice given anywhere is helpful. But fear of the disease must not be exploited by the government in order to impose or legislate morality.
The proviso in the House bill that abstinence should be taught as the "expected standard" seems a result of AIDS hysteria.
AIDS is a legitimate concern. Thousands have died since the disease was first identified, and fear is certainly understandable. But when fear is exploited instead of understood, it is a perfect opportunity for some in government to impose morality.
When a crisis arises, like AIDS, it's easy to think that teaching what only seems like common sense — abstinence from sex to avoid the disease — is the right thing to do.
But to teach anything as an expected standard is not right. The schools should concentrate on educating students fully about AIDS, about teen pregnancy and its consequences, and about all options involved.
Presenting options and how to make the correct choice on their own is more valuable than telling students that what is expected of them is what the government wants.
Richard J. Nagy
The Indiana Daily Student
Bloomington, Ind.
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Welfare 'reform' adds to problems
Poverty workers benefit most from legislation designed to help the poor
When Dr. Samuel Johnson defined patriotism as the last refuge of a scoundrel, he may have overlooked the rich possibilities of the word "reform." The $4.3 billion bill that got past the House of Representatives, for example, was supposed to reform the welfare system, even though it raised costs. It's supposed to save money eventually just like the War on Poverty was. We all know how that turned out.
Whatever this approach does for poverty, it's going to be a boon to poverty workers, the one class that benefits most from anti-poverty programs. They'll be the ones running the classrooms, job training sessions, work programs and child-care centers authorized by this bill — all in the name of making the poor independent. Some early studies have shown that any training beyond the most basic seldom gets people off the dole. But the "reformers" have pushed ahead with this new, $4.3 billion expansion of the poverty industry, which is anything but poor.
Back when government actually put millions to work — through the Works Progress Administration, the Civilian Conservation Corps and a spate of other New Deal programs — job preparation might consist of showing up and being handed a shovel. Yet the country is still rich in libraries built, roads paved and lands reforested that way. One presidential candidate this year, Paul Simon of Illinois, wants to resurrect the Works Progress Administration — though the idea is considered unbeabyquilt quaint by today's sophisticates. Sen. Simon would have an even better idea if he were to suggest not just adding a WPA but having it replace much of the current hodgepodge of anti-poverty programs.
Paul Greenberg Syndicated Columnist
It could even be argued that many anti-poverty programs have done more to perpetuate poverty than eliminate it. The outstanding example is Aid to Families with Dependent Children, which started in 1935 as a program to help widows keep their families together; it now has spawned a whole subculture of illegitimacy. According to a
recent study, "almost 90 percent of AFDC children have able-bodied but absent fathers."
The approach endorsed by the House would require parents of children who are three or older to work, attend school or be trained for a job while the state takes responsibility for child care. The day-care centers aren't in place and neither are the jobs, but why bother about details? Pay now and learn later, which is how AFDC grew into a monster.
John Paul Hammerschmidt, the congressman from Arkansas' 3rd District, was one of the minority that opposed this bill. "It's far too expensive," he said. "Eighty percent of the funding goes to benefit increases and expanded eligibility." A congressman from Colorado, Hank Brown, called the bill "a grand slam" because it "increases costs, restricts job referrals, increases bureaucracy and increases taxes." The bill hijacks what was left of a good idea — requiring those who get government aid to work for it — by limiting enrollment in local workforce programs to six months.
Whether or not this new approach will do much for the poor, it's bound to do a lot for the poverty industry, which is already thriving. Although anti-poverty programs do some good (Head Start is an outstanding example), they also encourage a culture of dependency that is changing American life, and not for the better. Here are some figures compiled by Stuart Butler and Anna Kondratas, who have been studying poverty in America so long it's a wonder that they both haven't been done in by terminal frustration.
According to their calculations:
"If the United States took all the money spent each year on anti-poverty programs — about $130 billion — and divided it by the number of Americans categorized by government as poor — about 32 million — each poor person would receive over $4000; each family of four over $16,000. Even if we subtracted a reasonable amount for administrative costs, there would still be more than enough to lift all welfare families above the poverty-income threshold: $11,203 for a family of four in 1986."
Instead, most of this money goes to army of bureaucrats "fighting" poverty. This latest bill may only exacerbate that trend. The country hasn't been able to eliminate poverty but we've found a way to professionalize it. Poverty seems to have increased in lockstep with anti-poverty programs, at least as poverty is vaguely defined by shifting government statistics. When the War on Poverty began under the Johnson Administration, the country was warned that, without it, the poverty rate could climb as high as 13 percent. That's where it stood when Jimmy Carter left office some years after the War on Poverty had been waged and lost.
Something is very wrong with this country's approach to helping the poor, and this latest bill does not significantly differ from the same old, tried-and-failed remedies. Typically, the bill provides more job-training for the poor but not necessarily more jobs, more burrows, or more workfare. We have here is another approach for poverty workers, not necessarily for the poor.
Here and there a genuine reform may be tucked into this bill — like an attempt to track down absent fathers and make them pay child support — but for the most part this is not a reform but an aggravation of old mistakes.
Those who support this $4.3 billion complexity might do better to invest in a copy of "Out of the Poverty Trap" by Stuart Butler and Anna Kondrasa. It's only $7.91 list.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Writing instructors lead
I did not find anything enlightening in Catherine Weed's column (Mar. 9). What I did find was a disgruntled student taking a swing at an entire department: students and teachers alike.
I am seeking an English degree in creative writing and am insulted by Weed's column. I, too, have taken Fiction Writing I and II. I also enjoyed Poetry I and II, as well as a directed study in novel writing. I have not found that my classmates write "uninteresting trash," and I do not consider my own work to be in that category. Her comments concerning the people who teach these classes were nonsense. Many talented educators who are also writers and scholars "lead" the students in furthering their
development as writers. The list of these people includes James Gunn, Alan Lichter, Margaret Arnold and Victor Contoski; a complete list would be far too long to be printed here.
If Weed truly thinks she can learn nothing from these classes, she should stay home. I am sure that there are students who would enjoy these types of classes and appreciate the labor they demand of students and professors.
Linda Noll Fairway senior
Sharing has barriers
I was pleased to see your story on the possibility of the sharing of periodical subscriptions by midwestern libraries (Kansan, March 2) and your editorial endorsing this concept (Kansan March 9). We are actively discussing this idea with other libraries, but I would like to point out that there are a number of practical difficulties in implementing it.
The most serious of these is that high-cost periodicals, which are the most logical choices for sharing, generally also are the periodicals that are of central importance to their subject area and are most heavily used by faculty and students. Although we might save acquisitions money by canceling high-priced journals, the cost to library users in terms of inconvenience and lack of access to needed materials could be very high.
Also, it is helpful to understand that most high-cost journals are sold by commercial publishers who are trying to make a profit. These publishers have, for obvious economic reasons, taken steps to ensure demand for their product. One of the most effective of these is the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976. Under the terms of this act, libraries are forbidden to borrow more than six articles a year from the last five years of any single journal title. This restriction constitutes a highly effective barrier to certain kinds of resource sharing by libraries.
Clinton Howard Assistant Dean For Technical Services
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 22, 1988
5
TuesdayForum
Democrats offer alternative to Reagan era
At times it may seem as if there is really no difference between the Democrats and Republicans running for president. The rhetoric of both parties calls for a strong defense, peace and democracy in Central America, deficit reduction and better education.
Where do the differences lie? What are the differences between the individual candidates running for their party's nomination?
A close (though brief) look at the policies of the two parties reveals a deep chasm between. It can be seen in the way the two parties view and approach problems.
The issue of defense serves as a prime example. The past seven years have revealed the Republican philosophy on defense; greatly increase spending, build up every aspect of conventional, nuclear and chemical defense, and develop new weapons systems.
On the other hand, Democrats see much waste and bureaucracy in the Pentagon. Popular examples of this waste have been the $300 toilet seat and the $150 hammer. However, most Democrats realize that the
real waste lies in the military procurement system which prevents true competition for government contracts. Democrats can easily point to defense contractors who have continually overcharged the government during the past seven years.
What is the Democratic solution? Although Gary Hart is now out of the presidential race, he was one of the first Democratic candidates to call for military reform. The Democratic party is now calling for change in the Pentagon that will in the long run provide for a more effective and less expensive national
JMB
Douglas Johnston Mike Lowry Guest Columnists
JMB
defense. The last seven years have shown that such change is not a priority for the Republican Party.
The issue of peace and democracy in Central America reveals another great difference between Democratic and Republican policy. All the Democrats running for the nomination oppose contra aid and support the Oscar Arias peace plan for Central America. The Republicans, however, favor contra aid and a substantial United States military presence to keep the peace and promote democracy. The Democrats tend to view the Republics' method as unnecessarily risky and even counterproductive. They view the instability in Central America as an economic and social problem to which there can be no singularly military solution.
On the subject of the deficit, both parties tend to blame each other. President Reagan consistently blames the Congress for "pork-barrel" spending while the Democrats point to Reagan's large military build-up as the source of the deficit problem. Of course, neither side is totally right or wrong, and debate could go on forever.
The more important issue is how each party proposes to reduce the deficit. No clear policy for either party can be drawn until the nominees have been chosen. However, tendencies can be seen. Republicans tend to
seek cuts in domestic programs and shy away from trimming defense. Democrats tend to feel that the domestic programs have been cut enough already and that the Pentagon budget could be trimmed without hurting defense.
Several Democrats also are proposing better enforcement of current tax laws as part of the solution. Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis stated for a tax amnesty plan allowing citizens to pay back taxes without fear of prosecution. Under the Dukakis plan, the amnesty would be followed up by greater enforcement. Similar plans have worked in New York and Massachusetts. Jesse Jackson has focused his attention on a number of large corporations that are not currently paying taxes.
JMB
The Republicans continually emphasize the need for the teaching of "traditional values" and "moral development" in our schools. Yet, they ignore the more immediate problem of the need to increase the quality of teachers at the primary and secondary levels and the inadequacy of federal funding for potentially college-bound students.
The issue of education remains a high priority for all presidential candidates. Our educational system has continually deteriorated under seven years of the Reagan administration. The president's budgets have continually allotted fewer and fewer dollars to education, despite evidence that indicates the need for increased funding in order to provide an adequate education for all U.S. citizens.
JHB
Democrats, on the other hand, are not afraid to put their money where their mouths are. For example, Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore seeks incentives to lure more qualified teachers into the profession. These would include a higher pay scale for teachers and less crowded classrooms. Federal aid for college-bound students would also receive a boost from the Democrats. Jackson favors an expansion of grants and loans to those students seeking a college education.
The difference between Democratic and Republican policies can be seen clearly. The next question is: What are the differences between the individual candidates running for their party's nomination?
There are five Democrats in the race for the presidency. Although a thorough examination of each cannot be made here, important characteristics and themes can be noted.
Dukakis stresses his experience as an executive and is credited with his state's economic turnaround. Dukakis, unlike Reagan, can boast of submitting a balanced budget to his legislature for nine consecutive years.
Missouri Rep. Richard Gephardt has emphasized his role in the fight against the unfair trade practices of competing nations. Gephardt is serving his sixth term in the U.S. House of Representatives and is regarded as a strong party leader by many of his colleagues.
At 39, Sen. Albert Gore is the youngest of the Democratic candidates. Gore served four terms as a congressman and was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1964. Noting the golden opportunity for Democrats to win the White
House in 1988, Gore has promoted himself as the most electable of the candidates.
Jackson's strength lies in his ability to garner active support from a wide range of Americans. None can argue with his goal to create a drug-free America. Jackson's plan goes further than the mere rhetoric of the present administration. He has proposed an expansion of drug enforcement by beeping up border patrols and the Coast Guard. Jackson can also claim to have the most experience among the candidates in dealing with foreign officials.
Paul Simon's background is the most diverse of any of the candidates. He has been an author, publisher, college professor, military officer and state and national legislator. Simon declares himself to be a Democrat cut from the same cloth as Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman.
Clearly, the Democrats are not all alike. Each offers valuable ideas for the progress of the nation. The Republicans simply promise more of the same Reagan-era policies; the Democrats offer a progressive agenda that will realistically address the needs and concerns of the American people.
Douglas Johnston is a Wichita junior and is secretary of the KU Democrat. Mice Lowy is a Hastings, Neb., sophomore and is publicity chairman of the KU Democrat.
JMB
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES (CLAS)
UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT PROCEDURES
FALL 1988
1. Enrollment Card Handout March 23 and 24 9:00-4:30 Kansas Union Ballroom-Picture I.D. Required
2. Advising-2 Weeks Only March 28 through April 8 Check the letter you received in the mail for more information.
3. Dean's Stamp March 28 through April 8 8:30-12:00 and 1:00-5:00 Strong Hall Rotunda
CLAS Freshmen and Sophomores March 21 through 25
Special advising workshops will be presented by the CLAS Advising Support Center in the Residence Halls.
Take advantage of this opportunity to complete your fall 1988 schedule, get an advisor's signature and Dean's stamp all without leaving your residence hall. Check with your RA for more information.
ADVANTAGES
KANSAS
FITMESS IS UNIVERSAL
O
Once you've toured Naismith Hall you'll recognize the advantages of a private lifestyle offered by no other residence hall. Take the comfortable semi-prIVATE suites, for example. You'll find a luxurious cable tv lounge. And if you're in the mood for a workout, just head down to the main-floor fitness center. Or take a relaxing dip in the private pool. The list of advantages of Naismith Hall just goes on and on. So if you're ready to "move up" to the Naismith Hall lifestyle — arrange a tour today while space remains. Applications are now being taken for the fall semester, and payment options are available.
Applications now available for fall'88
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE • LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044 • 913-843-8559
6
Tuesday, March 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
S. African strikers defy ban on groups
Protests commemorate 1960 massacre
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Hundreds of thousands of blacks yesterday defied emergency regulations and joined a national protest strike commemorating the 28th anniversary of the Sharpeville massacre.
The strike occurred despite a ban on major opposition groups that usually coordinate such action.
The demonstration was widespread in the Johannesburg-Pretoria area, in Durban, and around the eastern Cape province of Port Elizabeth. But there was a Cape Town area, and major mining companies reported little or no disruption of their operations.
Police estimated that 40 percent of the black work force around Johannesburg stayed away from their jobs. Labor experts say that about 800,000
full-time black workers are in the
area.
area.
A South African court, meanwhile,
denied an appeal by one of the
country's most outspoken anti-apart-
heid newspapers, clearing the way
for the government to shut it down.
home Affairs Minister Stoffel Botha had intended to close the New Nation in January, but delayed the move while the newspaper sought temporary protection from government action. Botha's office declined to reveal when it would shut down the newspaper.
The Port Elizabeth Evening Post, after carrying reports of the strike in its early editions, received a telephone call from a police officer who said that emergency regulations prohibited news reports about the impact of illegal strikes.
The newspaper dropped the strike stories from its late edition.
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A representative will be on campus
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 22, 1988
7
NationWorld
Iranian gunboats attack two ships in Persian Gulf
The Associated Press
MANAMA, Bahrain — Iranian gunboats attacked and set ablaze a Spanish freighter and a Liberian tanker in the Persian Gulf yesterday, two days after an Iraqi attack on a Norweigan vessel left 54 seamen missing and presumed dead.
There have been six maritime attacks since Friday when Iran, in apparent reprisal for the resumption of Iraqi strikes against its oil lifeline, ended a five-week hiatus in assaults on commercial shipping in the oil-rich waterway.
Redesigned poison kills cancer cells
There was no word on casualties aboard the 10,168-ton Spanish refrigerator ship Iberian Reefer, which was still on fire at dusk, hours after it was attacked in the Straits of Hormuz, maritime salvage experts said. Salvage tugboats went to the scene.
Earlier, shipping executives said at least one Iranian gunboat fired rocket-propelled grenades at the 61,762 ton Liberian-registered Fumi, setting its engine room ablaze and blasting holes in one of its tanks.
The Associated Press
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Scientists have redesigned a potent natural poison so that it seeks out and kills cancer cells in the test tube, signaling a possible new route for fighting some tumors, a scientist said yesterday.
ing breast cancers that have spread elsewhere in the body and some lung and brain tumors, said Ira Pastan of the National Cancer Institute.
The strategy takes advantage of the fact that some cancer cells display on their surface certain kinds of protein structures called receptors. Specific substances bind to each kind of receptor before they enter the cell.
Crash injures soldiers in Honduras
The poison, so strong that a dose the size of a salt grain can kill a person, might be harnessed for fight-
The Associated Press
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — A U.S. military helicopter crashed yesterday during a training exercise near the Honduran town of Juticalpa, and all 10 U.S. soldiers aboard were injured, U.S. officials reported.
Maj. Gary Hovatter, spokesman for the U.S. forces sent to Honduras last week, said the UH-1 Huey helicopter went down at about 1 p.m. EST. He called the crash an accident.
In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Mel Sundin said that
10 people were aboard the helicopter, not nine, as previously thought. Their injuries did not appear to be serious, he said.
"All are in good to excellent condition," Sundin said. He added that those aboard the chopper were U.S. soldiers but did not have further details.
Capt. Nancy LaLumas, a pentagon spokesman, said earlier that no fatalities were reported. She said that other helicopters evacuated the victims for medical treatment but that it
was not clear where they were taken.
One Pentagon official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the cause of the crash appeared to be mechanical.
Hovatter said the helicopter was taking part in an exercise called "Golden Pheasant," in which 3,200 U.S. soldiers arrived in Honduras last week.
Honduras to attack base camps of U.S.-backed Nicaraguan rebels.
President Reagan sent the troops as a warning to Nicaragua after U.S. and Honduran officials said that Nicaraguan soldiers crossed into
Neither Hovatter nor LaLuntas gave further information on the injured soldiers because the victims' relatives had not yet been notified.
The officers said the helicopter crashed about six miles south of Juticalpa. The area is 35 miles north of the Honduras-Nicaragua border and about 60 miles west of the region where Nicaraguan troops battled the rebels last week.
SVOIET TALKS BEGIN: Secretary of State George P. Shultz opened wide-ranging talks
VOTE WEAKENS DUARTE: In San Salvador, El Salvador, rightists stunned the Christian Democrat yesterday with a landslide victory in legislative and municipal elections, weakening President Jose Napoleon Duarte in his last year in office. Mario Samaya, president of the Central Elections Council, said that more than 50 percent of the votes cast went to the Republican Nationalist Alliance.
News Roundup
yesterday in which he intends to confront visiting Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze about massive Soviet arms shipments to Central America. They met for 90 minutes to set their agenda for the next two days.
NORTH PENSION PENDING: Lt. Col. Oliver North, the fired national security aide now facing criminal charges for his role in the Iran-contra affair, went on leave yesterday in preparation for retirement from the Marine Corps
May 1. On that day, he will have completed 20 years of active duty and will be eligible to retire with a military pension.
MARROW TRANSPLANT IMPOSSIBLE: A leukemia patient in Indianapolis learned yesterday that his bone marrow did not match that of his brother, a homeless Florida man who had refused to undergo testing until an anonymous donor offered him $1,000. Stephen L. Chapman, 38, will continue to undergo chemotherapy treatments.
NOTICE To All Student Organizations
STORY or PHOTO IDEA?
Call 864-4810
Any group interested in working a polling place for the April 13 and 14 elections must come to the Student Senate Office in 105 Burge Union to sign up for an interview with the Senate Elections Committee on March 22.
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Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal c
* Metarization of legal documents
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Notarization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5655
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
Film Developing Double Prints
only
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SALE
Any exposure
STANDARD SIZE PRINTS IN BEAUTIFUL GLOSSY FINISH
Applies to color print film processed C-41 only.
(Values to $987)
one to keep one to share
Valid: March 22-29
10th ANNIVERSARY SALE
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.
Your book professionals at the top of Naismith Hill.
Hrs: 8-5 M-F 9-5 Sat. 12:30-3:30 Sun.
PARTY FAVORS
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KU
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
Football Hostess Program
pating in the Kansas University Football Hostess Program for the 1988-89 school year, report to room 135 in Parrott Athletic Center on
All freshman, sophomore, and junior students interested in partici-
Thursday, April 7 at 5:00 p.m.
At the informational meeting, the program will be explained and appointments for interviews will be made. Parrott Athletic Center is next to Allen Field House.
KU
NO NO NO
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K. U. Sweat Sale
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K. U. Novelty Sweatshirts Reg.$30
Sport Shoes...30%off
Save 30% on our entire stock of athletic shoes for basketball, tennis, and aerobics by Avia, Reebok & Brooks.
itwin's
itwin's Down Under
830 Mass • 843-8155 M-S 9-6 Th. 9-9 Sun. 12:30-5:30
8
Tuesday, March 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
IRA gunmen kill policeman Shooting death is 10th casualty in two weeks
The Associated Press
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — IRA gunmen killed a policeman yesterday at a checkpoint in Londonderry, the 10th victim in two weeks of heightening tension and sectarian violence.
Britain announced a massive manhunt in West Belfast's Roman Catholic ghetto for the killers of two British soldiers caught in an IRA funeral procession.
maternal procession
Northern Ireland Secretary Tom
King said in London that the Royal Ulster Constabulary had launched an immediate review of its new policy of keeping a low profile at Irish Republican Army funerals. The policy was aimed at avoiding clashes between police and supporters of the outlawed IRA.
The policeman who was killed yesterday, Clive Graham. 25, was shot in the head in a jeep while at a checkpoint in the Roman Catholic Creggan district of Londonderry,
Northern Ireland's second-largest city. He died later in the hospital.
The IRA claimed responsibility for Graham's killing in a clandestine message to Belfast media.
ing in Gibraltar. The funeral policy was started Wednesday at services for the guerrillas killed in Gibraltar.
He was the 10th person to die since March 6, when British commandos fatally shot three IRA guerrillas who allegedly were plotting a car bombing in Gibraltar.
Northern Ireland violence growing after many years of relative peace
The Associated Press
LONDON — The murderer rampages that left five people dead at two Bellast funerals last week have aroused fears that Northern Ireland is sliding into a new cycle of violence after several years of relative calm.
In the past month, 15 people have died — twice the 1987 monthly average. The dead include three Irish Republican Army guerrillas gunned down in Gibraltar on March 6 in the incident that touched off the latest mavhem in Belfast.
"A firm grip will be required to halt the slide of the province toward still further bloodshed and anarchy," the News Letter, a Belfast newspaper, said yesterday.
"There won't be anarchy, and there won't even be a return to the level of violence in the early 1970s,
when 700 people died in a year," Paul Bew, a political science professor at Queen's University in Belfast, said in an interview.
"But the graph is starting to go up,
up, up."
With police talking of about 30 suspects in Saturday's violence, Roman Catholic areas of Belfast are bracing for a wave of arrests that could provoke further clashes.
cold p. p. cold Ever since the Irish Republican Army's struggle to drive Britain out of Northern Ireland climaxed with the death of 10 hunger striking prisoners in 1881, the province seemed to be lapsing into relative calm. The death toll was dropping steadily.
The IRA, having narrowly failed in 1984 to assassinate Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher with a bomb, was suffering repeated military and politi-
ical setbacks. The Hillsborough agreement of November 1985, which gave Dubin a say in the running of Northern Ireland, was boistering Catholic moderates against IRA radicals.
The killing of the three guerrillas, allegedly as they were plotting a car bombing in Gibraltar, was portrayed by Britain as a triumph for its antiterrorism strategy.
As the three were being buried, Protestant Michael Stone emerged from behind a tombstone, lobbing grenades and firing into the mourners. Three died, and 68 were wounded.
Three days later, at the funeral of one of the cemetery victims, two British soldiers were dragged from their car, beaten and finally shot by IRA gunmen.
HAVE YOU EVER THOUGHT YOU'D LIKE TO BE A PROFESSOR SOME DAY? WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE A CAREER IN RESEARCH OR TEACHING AT A COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY?
The Graduate School of the University of Kansas would like you to attend a special informative meeting on March 23,1988 from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. in the Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Refreshments will be served.
COME WITH YOUR QUESTIONS AND CURIOSITY... Wednesday, March 23, 1988 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
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MAIN ENROLLMENT FOR UNDERGRADUATES SUMMER AND FALL 1988
CAUTIONS
- Advising and Dean's Approval Stamp Periods END EARLY. Make an appointment soon to see your advisor.
- Plan your schedule well! List a good selection of alternate courses.
- Bring signed yellow Special Permission/Approval cards for courses coded I or P!
KEY DATES
Enrollment Card Pickup:
- Enrollment Card Pickup:
March 23-April 1: School of Social Welfare;
Applied English Center
March 23 & 24: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences;
School of Business
March 28-April 1: All other schools
clip and save
- Advising Period:
March 28-April 1: Schools of Journalism and Pharmacy
March 28-April 8: All other schools
Pre-professional School Co-advising: See Timetable
- Dean's Approval Stamp:
March 28-April 1: School of Journalism
March 28-April 20: School of Education
March 28-April 8: All other schools
Appointments start Friday, April 1. Check your enrollment card for your preassigned appointment time.
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---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 22, 1988
9
Sports
A
The KU Crew men's varsity heavyweight eight wins first place in their heat in the Heart of Texas Regatta in Austin, Texas. The boat went on to win in the final race against Tulane with a time of 3:13.36
Crew team wins Texas Regatta title, credits experience
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
With new equipment, some relatively experienced rowers and a whole winter's worth of training, the Kansas crew team captured the Heart of Texas Regatta title last weekend in Austin, Texas.
It was the Jayhawks' fourth consecutive title, and they won it with a score of 289.5. Texas came in second with 234, and Tulane finished a distant third with 83.
or the 40 races, Kansas won 10, took second place in five and finished third in two. The final race of the competition was the varsity men's heavyweight eights, in which the Jayhawks topped off the weekend with a decisive 3:13.36 victory. Tulane finished second with a time of 3:17.52.
The regatta was the Jayhawks' first major competition of the season. More than 120 rowers participated, and both the men's and women's coaches were pleased with the showing.
"I'm not surprised," said men's crew coach Cliff Elliott. "For us to have a performance like that doesn't happen overnight. We've been working all year for this. I was happy to see us able to perform at this level.
"What made me happiest was not winning the races but the way we were racing while winning them. Their fundamentals were sound. I saw big improvement, and we held together in the tight parts of the races."
The addition of two new shells and three assistant coaches has helped the team
train for the season. The two eight-man shells were purchased this year with Student Senate funds.
Assistant coaches Dan Jewett, Rob Catloth and Dawn Rouse joined the staff this year to help out Elliott and his wife, Libby, who is coach of the women's crew team
"The biggest credit has to go the rowers," Cliff Elliott said. "We asked them to work harder this season, and they've responded."
Experience is a key for the crew team. While both the men's lightweight and heavyweight rowers finished strongly in their races, the lightweights have more experience with six members returning from last year's regatta championship.
The women's crew team, led by many of the third-year rowers and with the advantage of depth, was impressive in taking seven of Kansas' ten first place finishes
"Everyone came along really well, but the third-year rowers set a good example for the rest of the team. We have a lot more depth on the women's team this year. There are so many good rowers to choose from. I think we were confident that we trained really hard. This year, they were more willing to row with whoever's in the boat. Everybody's pushing each other."
I noped our training was leading up to this." Libby Elliott said. "Right after spring break is the hardest part. We're getting into the nitty-gritty.
The Jayhawks will meet several teams from the regatta again in future competitions. Texas, which both coaches thought
made a surprisingly strong showing in the regatta, will be in the Midwest Regionals in late May.
In late May,
"You never know what kind of improvement different schools will make over a period of time," Libby Elliott said. "You have to always be prepared to meet really difficult competition."
Curt Elliott said that he was encouraged by the Jayhawks' early strength but that they have yet to race in the President's Regatta on April 16th in Topeka and the Midwest regionals in late May in Madison, Wis.
Smith's performance at NCAA qualifies her for Olympic trials
"We haven't peaked yet," he said. "We still have a long way to go on improvement. This is an encouraging step."
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Kansas distance swimmer Barbara Ann Smith thought she had used everything at the Big Eight Championships earlier this month.
there. The Mequon, Wis., junior won three individual events and was on a winning relay team. She also was named the meet's Outstanding Female Performer and set a conference record in the 1,650-yard freestyle.
But Smith had another fine performance March 13-15 at the Women's NCAA Championships in Austin, Texas.
Smith earned All-American honors in the 400-yard individual medley by placing 14th with a career best time of 4.22:22. She also finished 18th in the 1,650-yard freestyle and set a career best of 4:53.8 in the 500-yard
freestyle, finishing 26th.
"My performance was a big surprise," Smith said. "I thought I'd choke because it was my first national. I thought I'd put everything to bank in the Big Eight meet. I just thought I'd swim the same.
"My sprinting was there this time, but my mile was better at the Big Eight's. But I made the (Olympic) trials cut in the IM, so I'm pretty happy."
This summer's trials will be the second for Smith. She competed in 1984 in the 100-yard breaststroke.
Smith's time of 16:34:45 in the 1,650-yard race at the conference meet also qualified her for the Olympic trials. The trials begin August 8 in Austin.
"The first one I just swam through because I didn't really have a chance to quality," she said. "This time, I'll
be ready.
Smith was joined at the NCAA meet by senior teammate Lori Spurney in the one-meter diving and the Jayhawks' 200-yard freestyle relay team. Juniors Erin Easton and Sue Spry, sophomore Susan Bloomfield and freshman Kiley Seavall comprised the sprint relay team that finished 22nd.
Spurney qualified for the championships by placing third at the NCAA Zone C Diving meet last week in Austin. Her appearance at the NCAA Championships was the first for any Kansas diver. She finished 32nd.
"I'm really proud of the ladies," Coach Gary Kemp said. "It was a rocky and frustrating year, but they came around. This was a good finishing touch. We just need to take this and use it to improve next year."
Coach proud of strong performances by pole vaulters at indoor track meet
Kansan sports writer
Bv Keith Stroker
Having four pole vaulters in the NCAA Indoor Track Championships was quite an honor for the University of Kansas.
The championships were March 10-12 in Oklahoma City. Kansas pole vault coach Rick Attig said it was unusual for any team to have three men qualify, let alone four.
"I was very proud of the way our guys performed this season, considering the workout program they endured," Attig said. "We trained very hard, sacrificing our indoor season somewhat so that we could be at our best for the outdoor season."
Senior Scott Huffman led the Jayhawk vaulters with a second-place finish, clearing 17.9% $^4$. The top five finishes all cleared that height, but Huffman took second because of only
one missed attempt.
Kansas sophomore Pat Manson also cleared 17-9%, but because of his five missed attempts, he finished in fifth.
"Scott and Pat had a tremendous meet, and I was very proud of their efforts," said Attig, the United States Olympic pole vault coach. "I feel that the two of them had the best attempts out of the five guys that competed at 18-2. They both had cleared that height by at least a foot, but the pole knocked over the bar on its way down. They did a tremendous job."
Kansas junior Chris Bohanan finished seventh with a vault of 17.6. Atttig said Bohanan had placed higher many times but the workout program could have affected him more than it did the others.
Kansas senior Lance Adams also competed in the championships.
Attig said that Adams, despite not making the first jump at 17-134, did a tremendous job of qualifying for the meet.
Because of a limited budget, Kansas has a strict policy of taking no more than three qualifiers to a meet. Because Huffman, Manson and Bohan are All-Americanes, Adams had to work hard to join them in Oklahoma City.
Adams, on his own initiative, asked Attig if he could attempt to qualify at a meet at Central Missouri State. Attig said yes, and Adams accomplished what he set out to do.
KU football practice is set to begin
"Lance has a very interesting story," Attig said. "He had to clear 17-3 to qualify, and he set a Central Missouri State indoor record by clearing 17-6. I think it was neat that he did it all on his own, and I am very proud of his efforts."
Today, the offensive coaches will begin incorporating a five-running-play and three-passing-play offensive attack, using several different situations. Ruel said the team would work on becoming more disciplined on both offense and defense.
"We will be looking for specific talents that each player possesses," Ruel said. "We will place each player at a position that corresponds to his talents. It is a searching-out process for the coaching staff because we still don't know our team real well."
The Jayhawks' four-week practice session will culminate with the annual spring practice game on April 16. Ruel said the team would work out in pads for 15 days and would have five non-contact practices.
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Kansas coach Glen Mason was hired from Kent State in December after former coach Bob Valesente was fired after two seasons without winning a Big Eight Conference game.
The Kansas Jayhawks at 3:30 p.m today hope to begin something they haven't enjoyed for several years: a winning football season.
or Leagues trying new strike zone to aid pitchers
The Jayhawks' last winning season came in 1981, when they had an 8-4 record. That season, Kansas went to the Hall of Fame Bowl and lost 10-0 to Mississippi State.
Kansas offensive coordinator Pat Riel said that the task would not be easy but that the attitude of the team was positive.
"After the off-season workout program, the guys seemed to be really enthusiastic about the challenge ahead," Ruel said. "We are trying to stress team unity, and the guys seem to be really responding well."
The problem is clear. Hitters are getting too far ahead of pitchers.
If it sounds confusing, it is. No one is sure what the effect will be, not even the umpires, who are trying to enforce the change in spring training.
The solution is strange. Shrink the strike zone in the rule book, call higher strikes in the games.
Raising the actual strike zone by a few inches could be the biggest batter-pitch adjustment in baseball since the mound was lowered after 1968.
Here's what happened. The old rule defined the strike zone as between the batter's armpits and the top of his knees. But in reality, anything above the belt was a ball, particularly in the low-ball National League.
"It's second nature to us what a strike is," said Joe Brinkman, an American League umpire for 16 seasons. "Now, we'll have to constantly think about it."
Here's what's happening:
The new rule brings back the letter-high strike. The upper limit will be the midpoint between the top of the shoulders and the top of the uniform pants; the lower limit remains at the knees.
Technically, that is smaller than before. But the idea is that umpires will call those high strikes.
The players' union and owners have agreed to the change, along with tighter balk rules, for a one-year test period. After the season, both sides will review the results. Yet, even if players don't want to continue the alterations, management can implement them in 1989.
"All our lives, we've been taught to lay off that high pitch. It's a ball," Wade Boggs carped. "Now, do we have to swing at it?"
Hitters, who have seen home run totals go up to record rates, are not thrilled at seeing the strike zone go up, too.
Pitches are excited about the strike zone becoming a twilight zone up top. Their strikeouts are at an all-time high, but they are giving
This season. Boggs and other batters do.
up runs at an alarming pace.
Last year, 62 pitchers in the AL had earned run averages of over 6.00. Baltimore and Cleveland became the first AL teams with ERAs over 5.00 since 1956.
The NL, where scoring is about a half-run less because there is no designated hitter, is
With higher strikes, those imbalanced numbers could come down.
"I heard about it in the off-season, and I liked it," said Dwight Gooden, who has always enjoyed success with rising, chest-high fastballs. "So I thought this spring that if I got ahead in the count, I'd go up there, but I haven't noticed any difference."
I haven't noticed any
That's because sometimes there isn't any.
in a because sometimes there isn't at all.
"I have not changed my strike zone at all," said Bruce Froemming, an NLA player for 18 years. "I've always been aware of having a high strike zone, but I failed, as a group, we weren't calling the higher strike."
"I'm calling it about a ball higher," he said.
"It doesn't sound like much, but it is. This will
"The first game I had behind the plate this spring, I called about seven or eight strikes that I would've called balls last year," Brinkman said. "There were about nine or 10 the next time."
be a major adjustment.
Few batters have argued about high strikes in the exhibition season, in contrast to the protests pitchers and managers have lodged about increased balks.
That might change on opening day.
"It's still early in the spring," Brinkman said. "No one is saying much right now. Once the games count, it may not be that way."
No one is sure, and no one knows whether the change will more closely align the strike zones in the two leagues.
AL umpires have a reputation as high-ballers; NL umpires like low strikes.
The umpires, however, say there is little discrepancy.
"I don't think you can differentiate between the two teams anymore." Froemming said.
Royals beat Cardinals for 8th straight victory
The Associated Press
ST. PETERSSBURG, Fla. — Thad Bosley had three hits and drove in three runs, leading Kansas City to a 5-3 victory yesterday over the St. Louis Cardinals that stretched the Royals' exhibition winning streak to eight games.
eight games.
Bossey's third hit, an eighth-inning single, drove in two runs to snap a 3-3 tie. It gave the victory to relief pitcher Bud Black. The hit off loser Randy O'Neal followed singles by Frank White and Bo Jackson and a sacrifice bunt.
Bosley also doubled in the fifth inning and had an RBI single in the sixth. Jackson had three hits for Kansas City and scored twice in
helping the Royals overcome a 3-0 deficit.
St. Louis took the 3-10 lead in the first off Kansas City start Bret Saberhagen on Mike Laga's RBI single and a two-run homer by Tommy Herr, his first of the spring. The Cardinals were limited to two hits in the final eight innings by Saberhagen, Black and Gene Garber.
The loss dropped St. Louis' spring record to 8-8 and improved the Royals' to 13-6. Cardinals reserve Tom Pognozi fouled a ball off his left foot during batting practice, but X-ray's proved negative.
Tennis team wins 5
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Kansas women's tennis coach Eric Hayes was surprised with his team's spring break performances.
The Jayhawk women went 5-2 last week in California. Hayes was pleasantly surprised at the beginning of the week but then was unpleasantly surprised when Kansas "broke down" against 17thranked Brigham Young.
The Jayhawks opened the trip with a 9-0 win over St. Mary's of California. Kansas then lost to Pacific 6-3. During the week, Kansas defeated Santa Clara, California-Davis, Fresno State and San Jose State 8-1, 9-0, 8-1 and 9-0, respectively.
But then Kansas lost to Brigham
Young 6-3 to bring its season record to 13-3. Three of the matches were lost in three sets.
The Jayhawks won two matches when a Brigham Young player was injured, and junior Susie Berglund won at the No. 5 singles position.
"I was excited about how we played during the week. But when we broke down against BYU, I was surprised because I thought we were there."
"We had a great opportunity to knock them off," Hayes said of Brigham Young. "We had a chance to kick their butts. We just broke down. We matched shot for fight against them, but we just broke down and let them slip away.
Sports Briefs
KU PLAYS TARKIO: The Kansas baseball team will play Tarkio College at 1 p.m. tomorrow in a doubleheader at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
GOLF TEAM FINISHES SECOND:
The Kansas men's golf team came away with a second-place finish Sunday at the University of South Florida Invitational in Tampa, Fla.
In their third tournament of the season, the Jayhawks placed second in a field of 14 teams with a score of 901. Virginia won the tournament with a score of 891, and Tampa placed third with 903.
Junior John Sinovic was the top finisher for Kansas with a score of 224 for seventh place overall. Clay Devers, Lake Quivira sophomore, finished at 225 for 10th place.
The Jayhawks' next tournament will be the All-American Intercollegiate Tournament March 31 at Houston.
10
Tuesday, March 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Cubans approved for release Students who aided at hearings receive news from detainees
By Dayana Yochim Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Hearings for the Cuban detainees held in the Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary ended Wednesday, and already, representatives have been notified of approved releases.
Dwaine Hemphill, third year law student and KU organizer of Project Due Process, said that every Cuban at the Leavenworth prison had representation at his release hearing. The hearings began Feb. 8.
"We've already received three postcards from detainees that were approved for release," he said.
Hemphill estimated that the releases of about half of the detainees at Leavenworth would be approved.
The hearings, which were conducted by the Immigration and Naturalization Services, determined which detainees would be eligible for release.
Hemphill said that the Cubans who were denied release would remain in detention until their deportation
hearings.
hearings.
He said the tone of the INS hearings changed after the first few weeks.
"The INS started digging for the positive things the Cubans were involved with," Hemphill said. "They started asking about their families and job skills instead of past criminal violations."
Hemphill said the volunteers also would work on the appeals process, which involves writing a letter to the Department of Justice that summarizes reasons a detainee should be released.
Project Due Process was coordinated by the Atlanta Coalition to Support Cuban Detainees. About 3,800 Cubans were transferred to federal prisons across the nation after rioting occurred at prisons in Oakdale, La., and Atlanta.
Jeff Duncan, executive assistant to the warden at Leavenworth, said the Leavenworth prison had 388 detainees. That is the largest number of
Cubans in any federal penitentiary.
Duncan said that about half of the Cubans originally sent to Leavenworth were transferred to other prisons. He said the prison did not handle the release of the Cubans.
The Leavenworth prison has not yet received information about the release of any Cub detainee, Duncan said. If the detainees who are denied release are kept at Leavenworth, their confinement status will remain the same, he said.
Carla Dudeck, coordinator of the Atlanta-based Coalition to Support Cuban Detainees, said the release of 160 detainees had been approved since February. She said that about 600 detainees had been represented.
Dudeck said that the hearings would continue through April and that the Cubans who had been denied release before the Atlanta and Oakdale riots would be given another hearing.
Story Idea?
Call 864-4810
Ask for
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planning editor
Joseph Rebello
campus editor
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Macintosh Its not too late to get FREE your key to success. MACWRITE® Order now.
The deadline has been extended! If you pay your $50 down payment at the Burge Union by March 30, you can still have your Mac on your desk by March 31 or April 1. (This extension even applies to students whose approved financing has been delayed!)
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1,2,3!
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union. Stop by and place your order by March 30. Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want. ($50 deposit required)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
Macintosh SE
KU Bookstores
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Macintosh Plus or SE? 2-disk or hard disk drive? You choose. The computer that will help you work faster, smarter and more creatively has never cost less!
Macintosh SE with 2 disk drives...$1979
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Included in these special prices are: the computer keyboard, mouse, hypercard and multifinder All of these prices apply to full-time KU students, faculty and staff.
Macintosh $ ^{TM} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 22, 1988
11
Students hard to count state census takers say
By Elaine Woodford
Ice and snow stalled state census workers' data collection efforts for two weeks in February, but nasty weather wasn't the only obstacle for census workers in the Lawrence area.
an staff writer
Brad Bryant, an administrative coordinator with the state census department, said trying to contact college students was difficult.
"College students are the hardest to catch at home," he said.
to catch at home. the student Bryant said that snow and spring break made it frustrating trying to track down college students.
According to state law, college
Classified Ads
After lists were received from state colleges and universities, census workers deleted out-of-state students. Next, each in-state student's address was checked against a census response card completed by the student's parents to see whether the parents correctly recorded the student as a member of their household
"We had to request lists of college students and their home addresses from the colleges and start from there," he said.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
students must be counted at their permanent legal address, which can make the counting process difficult for the census department.
Math, Engineering and Physical Sciences Majors with 3.5 or greater years of post-graduate and senior years plus 4 years Find out more about the Navy's Engineer Officer candidate program, call Navy Management
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP, Wednesdays, March 30. April & 13. 7-9 p.m. Material fee $15. Register at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong.
Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Strategies). Wednesday, March 23, 7:48 p.m.
864-5492. Student Assistant Center,
121 Boulder 844-4044
Research Paper Workshop. Examine topiice selection, taking notes, organization, writing style. Tuesday 38, 7 - 9 p.m. 404 Wescoe Free. Student Assistance Center, 121. Strong, 68th Street.
"the right to shelter, the place we call home, is our life. The right to security" = Human Relational Dept. booklet
Liz Gowdy, spokesperson,衬衫 For Human Rights in Lawrence, spears at the *MASSIVE INVENTION WED.* April 6, 8 p.m. Alderson Auditorium. Sponsored by the Lawrenz Tenants Association.
Use our software demonstration packages at no cost and see how they can improve your applications.
business. Some of the packages we offer are:
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Demonstration packages are free of charge with no obligation to buy if returned within 14 days.
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AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's 'Best and
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Rent $175 + low utility. Call 749-7209 after 10 pm.
Completely Furnished Studio, 1-3-3 & a bedroom.
Applications. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you. Call: 841-122, 841-6258, or 749-2413. Mastercraft
Available immediately -- Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities. Call 841-1207.
Female grad student seeking roommate to share 2 bed apt. Bath, Summer/Fall $195/month plus electricity. Call Melody 864-1476 daytime, 864-2311 weekends.
for female in great house. Clean big rooms. celli,
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For Rent: 3 br., 1/2 bathroom duplex w/vaulted
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Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming house on 1344 Kentucky share kitchen & bathrooms. $120 + deposit. 749-1439. Leave messages.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester. 81. I smoke. call Sarah evenings
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Room for rent in nice clean O.W. l.t. apt, priv.
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Roommate Needed to share 2B House. Close to
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SUMMER SUBLET: Affordable, new one-bedroom room, near campus.近视 41-0797-8
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Classical guitar set $75, 74 Dedge dart $200, Marshall
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Obsorbine板PC和IBM打印机. $425 or best offer. Call Dione evenings at 814-4793.
Rock-n-tell - Thousands of used and rare albums to 10 p.m., 5 e.m., Saturday and Sunday.
Rock-n-reel - Thousands of used and rare albums
Reckon Records, Inc. Rock-n-reel's Pink Market, 19th New Hampshire.
www.reckonrecords.com
Bakery Sale - Cleaning approximately 21 hours per week. A.m. to noon, to pick up cookies and prepare for paid vacation after one year. Interviews Tues. 1 p.m. and Thurs. 10 a.m. by appointment. Apply Munchers Bakery $75.
NEEDED: KU on Wheels Coordinator
AUTO SALES
1922 Nissan Datsun 310GX, 214. hatchback.
1922 Nissan Datsun 310GX, Brown, Clean. 824-212-94
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vairroat $ 952.53 Caravan
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Graduate Sale, 83 Escort, good, good Corn,
AC $2.360. B O. after B. on 9 am @ 83-2394.
Bakery Sale - Cleaning Sat. 6 p.m - 1 am, Sun 6 pm
1 am, $4 am after trained. 3 weeks paid
vacation after one year. Interviews Tue. 1 p.m.
and Thurs 10 a.m., or by appointment. Apply
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
bicycles, motorcycles. Buyers' bags.
(1) 867-670-1600. (2) 867-670-1601.
**CAMP COUNSELORS** forgot for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, tennis, golf, sports, campings, camping, crafts, dramatics, or Riding. Also kitchen office maintenance. Salary on rent 625. Camping 1763. Heights, 1763 Maple, NB. 60063. 312-464-2444
BE ON T V. Many needed for commercials
Cavity Toner (信息 1) 805-687-6000 Ext.
TX-91234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
- Starts May 1, 1988 through May 31, 1989
Graphic Design temporary unclassified position. March 30 - June 30, 1988. 50-169 $500 - 110 per month. Duties: conceptualize design and layout of design process and work with little supervision; work with a publications team. Required qualifications: at least 4 years of experience in detail of design process and work with little discipline; work with a publications team. Required qualifications: at least 4 years of experience in detail of design process and work with little discipline; work with a publications team. Application deadline: March 25, p. 5.m. Carol Letter, Office of University of Minnesota. Application number: 6045. 6014s. 8114s. EIE/A employer.
GOVMENT JOB'S. $10,450-$49,020/jr. Your Hiring Area (03) 878-6007. u!H-97854
*
Camp counselors wanted — Camp Mishawaka,
Camp Rapids, Mar. 1 June
of the following girls to join the girls aged 8-16: sailing, swimming, riding, tennis,
canoeing, surfing.
Of the 208 camp Grand Rapids, Mn. 59744.
www.campgrandrapids.org
— Must be available for 3 hour time blocks each day
— Must be available this summer
- 20 hours per week
Heritage Manage has positions open for full and part time roles in assistant, 4.20 an hour at 1000 W 8th Street, 1000 W 8th Street.
— Must be KU student and enrolled in at least 6 hours Fall 88 & Spring 89
- Application deadline:
March 28,1988 4:30 p.m.
Female student wanted for house sitter and older child care. During 1st and 3rd weeks of April.
Easy hours. Salary plus expenses. References:
Call 841-827-1368 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
College Student to care for her
through Mid-August in her home.
Some activities
scheduled in her room. Some flexibility for a summer class. Salary negotiable. References required. Call numbers 789-1607
- Details and application procedures available at Student Senate Offices 105 Burge Union No calls please
Part time house cleaners wanted. You if enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Transportation required. Call 842-6284.
RESOFT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications for the ReSOFT hotel. For information & application; write National Collegiate Recreation, P.O. Box 8407 Milton Bay.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiserships, Airlines &
Amusement Parks
Workshops, internships and career positions. For information & application; write national Collegiate Recreation, P. G. Box 8074.
Resorts Employment Newsletter - All occupations, Tabo, Hawaii, Calif., Nevada/Arizona. Morel Tennis, Skif Golf, Resort Rescue Teams, Diving, 624700, Lake Satellite. 87619 3164-7502. 87619 3164-7502.
Teachers aide for child care program needed 7:45 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 5 yr. olds or 2 yr. olds and two references required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 31 Main Avenue, Boca Raton, FL 33428.
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Stability, dependability, and resume to: PO Box 126, Lapeyne KS 60049
PERSONAL
A B. C : "So far as I can remember, there is not one word in the Gospel in praisal of intelligence"
B.C: Want KU sweatshirt 4 April Fools Day
I love you. Kimmy.
Tim - How about lunch Friday? Noon is good. Let me know where. You know who.
BUS. PERSONAL
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. In our office, Overersaters Monday - 7-8 PM Memorial Hospital, 325 Mainte For confidential information contact person. Write PO Box 3402
Impart passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration visa, I.D. fine portrait
custodian document
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 443-821-7 Confidential help? free pregnancy
custinng
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
license without patrol testing upon
successful completion. Transportation provided.
841-216
TRUST TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shots to comp伪像者, dancers, dancers, etc. 341-9032 www.lightphotography.com
Try it if you love it, become glamorous with a beautiful touch. Photographs of the Photo's Flat Film (glamourized) and Glamourized Mice full Posing Assistance, Creative Photography to produce alarming alerts. 749-760. Mike
Do you want
$30,000 / year
It begins with a quality resume
THE PRESIDENT
We can also print from your IBM™ or Mcintosh™ disk.
See us
HP
Kingston Printing
SERVICES OFFERED
you look like a
Noble ballerina!
Balloon N-More is
a fantastic selection of
gifts guaranteed to warm the hearts
$84 Value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Free Spinal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor, 941-3079.
snooner
the people
you love with
gifts that make smiles.
Balloons-N-Moire has a
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds) 841-6320
guarantee to blame the hearts of the people who warm yours. Soft stuffed animals, balloon bouquet.
warm-ups, balloons,
mugs, singing telegrams, and many
more ways of showing your love are
at Ballrooms N-More for you to share
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest School, serving KU, students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Balloons·N·More
749-0148 609 Vermont
PRIVATE OFFICE Park ... (913) 491-6878
Service, Overland Park Obj.
Job-willing resumes, cover letters, 12 years exp in winning Satisfaction, Satellite TV & Internet Services; Ekchrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services; NASPORT 60.00; Art & Design Building.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hour, 843-9032
(p.m.)
Vice Overiana
508-214-2111 need help? Call 813-Birthday at 843-821-2811 support/help free pregnancy
ACE
Your Connection to the REAL Business World! Get Involved!
♠
Dosage:
Prepared contraception and abortion services in Lawnview, 811-5716.
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
and Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
Speaker: Sam Campell
Subject: Venture Capital
Date: March 24, 1988
Time: 7 p.m.
Want to improve your French and have fun on the beach? Try our 7-week course accommodation with families. 7-week courses
TUTORING TUTORING *8.50/br*. MATH STATISTICS and PHYSICS. B.S. Physics, M.A. Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 814-304.
rspace: Pioneer Room Level 3, Burge Union For more information, contact Bill Cardell at 843-327-6
TYPING
Job No.: 3197
Call N.J.'s typical service for all of your typing
questions to 9.9.q.m. please.
1:1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing, Judy, 842-7945 or Lisa, 841-1915.
THE FAR SIDE
1) Reliable Typing Service. Term papers.
Resume requests. Typewriter 842-3360.
Typewriter 942-3360.
i-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your serribles into accurately spelled and punctuated grammatical words of various typed types, days or evenings AAA TYPING Word processing.
AAA TYPING: Word processing, spellcheck.
AAAA TYPING: After 5 p.m. - FIX-
date weeks 842-1943. wkidtime 842-1943.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in paper-based correcting or correcting Selective correction. 843-505-6971
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
available. 843257 before p.m. please
available. 843258 after p.m. please
Jona's quality typing and writing skills, themes, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailing lists. Letter quality printing. Spelled correcting 842-2747
For professional typing/writing processing, call Myra 414-800. Spring special $12.99/paper bundle.
FAST. ACCURATE. DEPENDABLE. Letter quality printer, special student spell, spell check
WANTED
RESUME SERVICES - professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letters, business cards, and typesetting and design materials. Mail to Renee Campbell, bdg, and it's the cost of Kinde's Call 842-2887. If no answer leave machine on message
the WORDOCTORS. Why pay for typhurt when you hire a tutor? Review, pay review. Since 1983, 86:31-47
1087
Kaw Valley Soccer Association is looking for Volunteer Soccer Coaches ages Kindergarten through Jr. High HPER credit available if interested call Mary Loveland at 842-9333/842-7251 or Tina Ulbrick at 841-7175
Final four tickets call Shelly at 864-6491
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
typing, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications
women. Have M.S., Degree 841-6254
©1988 Universal Press Syndicate
And in the next panel the other cat says, "Oh boy!
Here we go again!"
Cartoon readings
- Policy
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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*Policy* Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect
insertion of any advertisement
Insertion by any adult
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Less than $4.00 service charge.
Tearshirts are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
Found ads are free for three days. no more than 15 words.
- Prenaid Order Form Ads
- Prepaid Order Form * Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
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Classifications
001 announcements
100 entertainment
200 for rent
Classifications
300 for sale 500 help wanted
310 auto sales 700 personal
400 text/found 710 bus personal
Name
800 services offered
900 typing
990 wanted
Classified Mail Order Form
Phone no.
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LULOW kkwks:
Make cheek pads payable to:
Dallas Kansan
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence. KS 66045
12
Tuesday. March 22, 1988 / University Dailv Kansan
C
COUPONS
O
--with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
Cornucopia
1801 MASSACHUSETTS MONDAY-FRIIDAY 11 A.M.-10 P.M.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M.-10 P.M.
EXTRAORDINARY FRUIT, SOUP & SALAD BAR
FRUIT, SOUP & SALAD BAR $3.25 WITH COUPON
6 weeks of Aerobics for Only $30 dollars
THE Fitness Factory
AEROBIC STUDIO
23rd & Louisiana
In The Mallts
Shopping Center
Good Through 303/188
CHECKERS PIZZA
2 12 " 2-topping pizza + 2 soft drinks
$7.75 + tax
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
--with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
---
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 4-4-88
1/2 PRICE MOVIE RENTAL
expires 4-4-88
not to be used with any other promotion
VIDEO BIZ
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence, KS 66044
(913) 749-3507
VIDEO BIZ
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA BUCK!
$1 OFF
PIZZA Shoppe
Dine-in or Delivery
(King & Custom Made)
--with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
BUCK!
CHECKERS
PIZZA
2 16 " 2-topping pizza + 4 soft drinks
$12.99 + tax
CHECKERS PIZZA
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
--with the purchase of any sub 1618 W.23rd St.
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
PIZZA
Shoppe
FREE MEDIUM SOFT DRINK
842-0600
1 Pound King Size
SPAGHETTI PIZZA
Garlic Toast single topping
32 oz Pepsi
32 oz Pepsi
CHECKERS
$4.95
$8.95
Free Delivery
with this coupon only, valid with other offers, expires 4/9/06
CHECKERS
PIZZA
12" 2-topping pizza + 1 soft drink
$3.99 + tax
841-8010
1 Quarter-Pound Hamburger
2214 YALE RD. 841-8010
1 Quarter Pound
1 Original Runge
1 Original Runza
1 Order of French Fries
1 Order of Onion Rings
1 Original Runza
italian cheese, délice & mushroom extra
*Not good with any other offer.
One coupon per person per visit.
Coupon expires April 5, 1988
RUNZA
DRIVE-INN
RESTAURANT
INCH $10.00 OFF WITH PURCHASE
842 2890 OF ANY PACKAGE
2 Medium Drinks
CHECKERS
No Membership — YOU DECIDE
1st SESSION FREE
2619 w. 6th near Becerros, on KU Bus Route
16 " 2-topping pizza + 2 soft drinks
G S Z E W
2214 YALE RD.
2214 YALE RD. 841-6010
--a Salon Choice
BUY ONE GET ONE FREE
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
749. 4244 544 W.23RD
SPRING SPECIAL
MUSIC ON THE GO
CASSETTE SPECIAL
15% OFF*
Full Strength Conditioner 6 month supply
All pre-recorded cassettes
2 bottles for only 96¢ (limit 4 bottles)
Valentino's
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Waterbed Works
Ristorante
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO / VIDEO
710 W. 6th
Expires 3/27/88
--a Salon Choice
Standing Ovation
Ask for Kathy and receive 1/3 off
Silver Clipper
Purchase any 8 ounce shampoo and receive
"you deserve the best'
1/3 off
FREE
any salon service for men & women
HEADMASTERS
2201 P W. 25th St.
Behind Gibsons
Styling Brush
15% off Highlights
842-1822 exp. May 5, 1988
809 Vermont 843-8808 Brush
Furniture April 1, 1989
749-0771 14 East 8th expires 5/1/88
Expires April 5.1988
---
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any 3 or more pizzas
Mane Tamers
842-1212
Mane Tamers
Exp.
4/22/88
Perm & Cut
$10 OFF
Highlight
$5 OFF
BASKIN-ROBBINS ICE CREAM STORE 31
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
BASKIN-ROBBINS
ICE CREAM STORE
2 Dip Hot Fudge Sundae
$139 + tax
Reg. $1.82
Two Locations To Service You
\2338 Alabama 841-5499
Two Locations To Serve You
1524 West 23rd Bd 947-973
925 Iowa 749-9711
---
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any 2 or more pizzas
25¢ BOWLING
This coupon
entitles bearer
to one 25¢ game
during open bowling
(weekday afternoons)
842-1212
Let It Roll!
For The Jambourn
$2.00 OFF
Any Large Pizza
With 2 or more toppings
PYRAMID PIZZA
The delivery is Fast,
Friendly, and
FREE.
"We Pile It On"
842-3232
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Level 1
Call B64-3545
THE KANSAS UNION
JAYBOWL
expires 4/05/88
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
---
SPORTS
UNLIMITED
---
20% OFF:
• LA Gear Shoes • Reebok Shoes
• New Balance Shoes
20% OFF:
• Selected Crazy T-Shirts
15% OFF:
• Brand New Tights
$100 OFF
Any Pizza Ordered
11 a.m. -4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Use It or Lose It.
TANNING
WEIGHTS
10 visits/$25 Unlimited Use $15/mo:
7 visits/$20 $2/visit
$15/month
(Includes Sauna and Hot Tub.)
25th & IOWA
841-6232
Expires 4/4/88
EUROPEAN
TAN, HEALTH, & BEAUTY
20% OFF:
• Selected Crazy T-Shirts
15% OFF:
• Brand New Tights
40% OFF:
• Rugby Shirts
1012 Mass. 843-0412
Expres 5/31/88 1012 Messages 8430412
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
50¢ OFF
Any 1 pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 5/31/88
THE BUM STEER
Admit One:
$399
BBQ Buffet
All You Can Eat!
2554 Iowa
Tonight 5-9 p.m.
Reg. $550
2554 lowa Tonight 5-9 p.m.
81-砂mok“e” 9:39 a.m.
One Hour Photo Finishing
841-7205 1610 W. 23rd.
Spring Break Special
2 FOR 1
Get two sets of quality prints for the price of one when you bring any size film for one hour developing and printing.
11 in. x 9 in. Foil Prints 3/29/BB
3-22-88
Wednesday March 23,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 118 (USPS 650-640)
(1)
Holding on tight
Holding on tight
Pictures from Saint John's School, 1298 Kentucky St. learn the difference between playing with a parachute in the school gymnasium and playing with it outside on a windy day.
Congress upholds rights bill Both chambers reject Reagan's veto, Supreme Court ruling
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Congress overrode President Reagan's veto of a major civil rights bill yesterday, ending a four-year battle to restore broad protection for women, minorities, the elderly and the handicapped.
A 73-24 vote in the Senate, followed by a 292-133 vote in the House, handed Reagan a severe political defeat and reversed a 1984 Supreme Court decision that sharply restricted the reach of four anti-discrimination statutes
The votes in both chambers exceeded the two-thirds majority needed to enact a law over a presidential veto. It was the ninth time Congress had reelected a Reagan veto.
the White House pledged to enforce the new law.
Reagan had called it a federal "power grab."
"We presented an alternative civil rights act which stated the president's strong views against discrimination in this country," a White House statement said. "The Congress chose to override the president's veto. We will work to implement the new law."
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., said, "People who voluntarily take federal funds have an obligation to treat everybody else fairly." He supported the rationale of lawmakers who have been pressing for the Civil Rights Restoration Act since the high court ruling.
court ruling. The court said only specific programs or activities receiving federal aid had to comply with four major civil rights laws.
The restoration act bars discrimination by institutions, government agencies and some corporations that receive any federal aid. That means if a college physics department, for example, receives federal assistance, the entire college would fall under the civil rights laws.
would that Reagan and his congressional allies supported a less sweeping alternative, arguing that the act went far beyond simple restoration. They said it would curtail religious liberty and expand federal control over the private sector.
"it's a blank check to the bureaucats and the litigators," said Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis.
But House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, said in a statement that Reagan's veto was "wholly unnecessary and it provoked an unnecessary confrontation. The new law will not end illegal discrimination. But it does represent a step forward in making America truly a land of equal opportunity for all."
opportunity for it.
Supporters in the House erupted into cheers and applause when the two-thirds mark was reached.
In the Senate, the mood was more subdued.
in the Senate, the most important Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who was chief Senate sponsor of the bill, said the Senate had demonstrated that "this country does not want to retreat on protections of rights for the American people."
The opposition leader, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Uah,
said, "Sometimes you win some, and sometimes
you lose some. That's the nature of our process."
Ralph Neas, executive director of the 185-group Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, called the votes "a bipartisan reaffirmation of civil rights and a bipartisan repudiation of the civil rights extremism of the Reagan-Bush administration."
Shultz, Shevardnadze talk again
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze had a session yesterday on nuclear arms control and human rights and opened a satellite link with Moscow to reduce the risk of accidental war.
The Associated Press
Assistant Secretary of State Rozanne L. Ridgway said Monday that there were "blanks" in the information both sides submitted.
She said many disagreements remained.
Shultz and Sheardnadze intended to continue their preparations for the next superpower summit meeting. A date — speculation centers on late May — might be set after Sheerdnadze calls on President Reagan today at the White House.
During the day, Shultz and Shevardnadze received brief reports from U.S. and Soviet arms control experts. Discussion of the conflicts in Afghanistan and Nicaragua, wars in
which the two superpowers have armed rival forces, were deferred until today.
Shultz has been pressing the Soviets to relax their emigration restrictions and liberalize cultural and religious practices. The Soviets, on the other hand, have made a point of the homeless problem in the United States and what they describe as a poor civil rights record.
In a brief exchange with reporters, Shevardnadze backed away from a Soviet pledge to withdraw the Red
Taking a break from their daylong talks, Shultz and Shevardnadze presided at the opening of a new communications center designed to reduce the risk of nuclear war.
Army from Afghanistan even if negotiators failed to agree on conditions for ending the war there.
The center is linked by satellite to Moscow for the rapid transmission of text and graphics. The aim is to prevent nuclear war by miscalculation or accident.
Researchers study premature babies
By Susan L. Feightner
lobby's mother searched desperately for information about premature babies. She found none.
Toby Jennings weighed only two pounds, six ounces when he was born. He was four months premature, and his parents were warned that he might not have a brain and that he might not survive.
Special to the Kansan
Toby did survive, and his recovery has helped researchers at the University of Kansas learn more about developmental problems that can affect premature babies.
"I was told by Toby's doctors to expect the worst and hope for the best," Toby's mother, Debra, said. "After 18 months of involvement with the Infant Study Center at KU, my fears about Toby have subsided tremendously."
Toby, now 21 months old, is one of more than 350 infants participating in the Kansas Infant Development Project at the KU Infant Study Centers. One of the centers is on the Lawrence campus; the others are at the Regents Center in Overland Park and the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
The KID project, a five-year research project, is financed by the National Institute of Health. It began in October 1985 and is halfway complete.
"The goal of the project is to study the developmental patterns of the premature baby," Marion O'Brien, project coordinator. said. "We're looking for behavioral differences between full-term infants and premature ones."
Premature infants and their parents are recruited at area hospitals. Once the infant's condition has stabilized, testing begins and continues in three- to four-month intervals until the infant reaches 18 months of age. Parents are allowed to choose the study center site that is most convenient for them.
The infants are evaluated through various forms of testing, O'Brien said. Some of the specific levels that are measured are behavioral organization, visual and auditory skills, motivation levels, communication and fine motor skills.
and he had told me.
O'Brien said it was still too early to draw any conclusions about the data collected at this time.
She said that her assistants could recognize and monitor whether an infant was performing below normal standards for its age.
"If we see a child isn't performing at normal standards, we discuss it with the parents," O'Brien said. "We may make suggestions, but we don't intervene. We are only doing research. We usually will suggest that they talk with their pediatrician."
Toby Jennings's parents hope that their involvement in the project will help others with premature babies, what can be expected of their infant.
"Our involvement in the project has been very educational for us, but more importantly, it has given us a wonderful peace of mind about our son," Jennings said. "We feel very fortunate."
Students will pay more for KU all-sports tickets Admission to baseball games added to package
Bv Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Next year's all-sports tickets will cost University of Kansas students $65, an increase of five dollars from this year's ticket price, officials in the KU ticket office said.
The baseball tickets are an addition to the package. This year, KU students with a KUID will be admitted at no charge to the home games. Starting next season, however, admission will be charged at the gate.
The package will include tickets for all Kansas home football, basketball and baseball games, as well as the Kansas Relays, said Diane Wehmever, ticket manager.
Applications for the 7,500 all-sports tickets will be available May 1 at the ticket office in Allen Field House. The forms also will be mailed to students' homes during the summer.
Although the moving of the Sept. 17 Kansas-Auburn football game from Lawrence to Auburn, Ala., had no effect on the price of the tickets, it decreased the cost of a football season ticket by $13. A season ticket will cost $76 next year.
All of this year's tickets were sold by the middle of the August enrollment period, Weehymeer said. There was no change in the number of available tickets.
Hob Frederick, KU athletic director, said officials at the Auburn University athletic department contacted him six weeks ago and said they wanted to switch the site of the game. The game was to have been played in Lawrence, creating a seven-game home schedule. Usually, the Jayhawks play only six games at home.
Auburn wanted another home game for its schedule and was willing to pay for it. The
original contract between KU and Auburn stated that the home team would pay the visiting team $100,000. The Auburn Tigers offered $400,000 for the Jayhawks to play in Jordan-Hare Stadium.
Applications for the 7,500 all sports tickets will be available May 1 at the ticket office in Allen Field House.
But with the home schedule that the Jayhawks have for the fall, it was mutually beneficial for the two schools to switch the site of the games. Konzem said.
Frederick consulted Glen Mason, KU football coach, and other administrators within the department before agreeing to the switch.
Richard Konzem, assistant KU athletic director, said the University was concerned that increased prices for tickets might have driven away some season ticket buyers.
“Finances being what they are, it was an opportunity we couldn't lose,” Frederick said. “With our schedule of seven home games, that would put us at $89 per ticket. We felt that $76 was a little more reasonable and would be much easier to sell the tickets at that price.”
"Sometimes you can price yourself out of some sales," he said. "We want to sell as many season game tickets as we can. They were willing to pay us, and we still have an attractive schedule."
The Jayhawks have home games against Baylor, New Mexico State, Nebraska, Colorado. Kansas State and Missouri.
Konzem said that Kansas was still talking to Auburn about scheduling a game in Lawrence between the two teams sometime in the 1990s.
FILM
Alan Lehman/Special to the KANSAP
A higher calling
Bob Duvall, of the Maranatha Campus Ministries, speaks on Wesco Beach about music. The ministries presents a lecture tonight in Smith Hall on singer Steve Winwood, whom Duvall called a "secular prophet." Winwood's song, "Higher Love," expressed feelings that young people understood but were unable to express, Duval said.
Russ Piacek, Wichita junior and host of KJHK's JayTalk 91, said Monday that he decided not to broadcast the show that began a controversy on campus in mid-February.
"The issues involved have been covered enough through the newspapers and through the free speech forum." Ptacek said. "Everything that we would cover in our thirty-minute show has been covered ten times over."
Pitcke said that a taped interview with two Klan members from the Missouri Knights had already been done but that because of the free speech forum two weeks ago he would not broadcast the show.
Pitacek's show, which involved bringing members of the Klan to campus, was moved off campus in late February by the faculty involved after protests by the black community.
Radio host says KJHK will cancel KKK show
By a Kansan reporter
A radio program dealing with free speech and the Ku Klux Klan has been canceled because the issue has already been covered, the host of the program said Monday.
Ptaeke said that his decision was not made under pressure.
John Broholm, KJHK faculty news adviser, said that the decision had been made by Piacek.
2
Wednesday, March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Partly cloudy
HIGH: 72°
LOW: 45°
High today in the lower 70's. Showers possible in the morning, clearing by afternoon. Tonight's low will be in the mid-40's.
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platee 63/39
Partly cloudy
Omaha 64/41
Partly cloudy
Goodland 67/41
Sunny
Hays 67/42
Partly cloudy
Salina 70/48
Partly cloudy
Topeka 72/48
Partly cloudy
Kansas City 71/45
Partly cloudy
Columbia 70/48
Showers
St. Louis 70/49
Showers
Dodge City 73/47
Sunny
Wichite 73/49
Partly cloudy
Chanute 74/49
Partly cloudy
Springfield 73/49
Thunderstorm
Forecast by: Alice V. Meas
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
Tulsa 76/51
Partly cloudy
5-DAY
THU
Mostly sunny
66 / 41
HIGH LOW
FRI
Partly cloudy
62 / 39
SAT
Showers
61 / 39
SUN
Partly cloudy
63 / 40
MON
Partly cloudy
65 / 40
THU FRI SAT SUN MON
Mostly sunny Partly cloudy Showers Partly cloudy Partly cloudy
66 / 41 62 / 39 61 / 39 63 / 40 65 / 40
HIGH LOW
On Campus is on page 8 today
Girl's kite is a ticket to air travel
The Associated Press
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Little DeAndra Anrig was flying her kite when it suddenly started to fly her, her parents said. It was just a short hop but one the 8-year-old isn't likely to forget.
A twin-engine plane caught the 200-pound nylon test line of DeAndra's kite and carried her about 100 feet — over her daddy's head and almost into a tree, she said yesterday.
She let go but said she was still sore after two days' rest. The plane, meanwhile, is grounded because of damage apparently caused by getting tangled in the kite string.
DeAndra and her parents were picnicking with friends at the Shoreline park about 30 miles south of San Francisco on Sunday and taking turns flying a glider-type kite with a 12-foot wingspan.
While it was DeAndra's turn, a plane descending for the airport snagged the line, her parents said.
The pilot, Jake Uranga of Reno, who was flying a patient destined for Stanford University Hospital, said he tried to avoid it but couldn't. He landed safely.
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HAVE YOU EVER THOUGHT YOU'D LIKE TO BE A PROFESSOR SOME DAY? WOULD YOU LIKE TO HAVE A CAREER IN RESEARCH OR TEACHING AT A COLLEGE OR UNIVERSITY?
The Graduate School of the University of Kansas would like you to attend a special informative meeting on March 23,1988 from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. in the Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. Refreshments will be served.
signed Steve Strom Maranatha Campus Ministries
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 23, 1988
3
Campus/Area
Preparation for advising should save hassles
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Enrollment advising starts next week, and students need to be prepared to make the most of their advising appointments, officials in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences said.
Edwyna Gilbert, associate dean of liberal arts, listed three things that students should do to prepare for their advising appointments.
Students in liberal arts and sciences should pay close attention to the letter they should have received in the mail, she said. It has information about appointment times for
advising and basic requirements they still need to fulfill.
Gilbert said students should also make an advising appointment as early as possible and should have an idea of what they want to take.
"The student who gets things together this week will be way ahead of anyone else," she said.
Gilbert said that advising appointment sheets were posted already and that students who waited to sign up might not get appointments.
Students should also write down questions to take into their advising meetings to let
advisers know what concerns students have, she said.
Students who do not have advisers or who need information about the enrollment process should contact their department or school.
Enrollment-card pickup for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will be today and tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Advising for students in the college begins Monday and runs through April 8. Those students can get a dean's stamp in the Strong Hall rotunda during the same period.
The advising support center will hold advising workshops in the residence halls
through Friday for freshmen and sophomores in liberal arts.
Seniors in liberal arts should schedule a graduation check in 108 Strong Hall to certify that they have met their department's major requirements.
Students in other schools should check with those schools for specific advising procedures. In some schools, such as the School of Business, meeting with an adviser is not required.
Sue Schumock, secretary in the advising support center, said that some departments insisted that students have some idea of the classes they want to take.
"It always helps the adviser if the student has some ideas," she said. "Advisers can fill in the blank spots."
Schumock distinguished between enrollment advising and academic advising.
then advising enrollment advising involves deciding what courses are needed and having the adviser sign the enrollment card, she said.
Schumock said that academic advising was what advisers didn't have time for in the two-week pre-enrollment period because everything was too rushed. During academic advising, students would talk with faculty members who knew the students well enough to be familiar with their career plans.
Historic buildings focus of ordinance
By Christine Martin Kansan staff writer
The Historic Preservation Task Force has completed a preliminary draft of an ordinance that would protect 22 registered historic buildings in Lawrence from demolition or from being significantly altered.
Ronald Schneider, chairman of the task force, said the committee would hold a public hearing at City Hall on March 31 to get comments and suggestions from Lawrence residents.
The task force will hold as many hearings as necessary before the ordinance goes before the Lawrence City Commission for final approval, Schneider said. The number of hearings will depend on the commission. The commission probably will go before the commission 30 days after the last public hearing.
Schneider said buildings registered as historic landmarks on the Lawrence Register, the National Register of Historic Places or the Kansas State Register would be protected under the ordinance.
But being on the national or state register doesn't mean that a property is protected from demolition or alteration. Schneider said.
The ordinance would require that an application be made to the city if an owner of a historic property requested demolition or significant alterations to the property. If the
owner demolished or altered the property without a permit, he could be issued a citation and possibly fined.
"I think it would benefit everyone I'm the community of Lawrence economically, socially and historically," Schneider said. "I'm pretty proud of it."
Schneider said that a public hearing would allow the task force to hear opposing and supporting sides. He said that some people were opposed to the ordinance because they thought it was an infringement on the rights of property owners.
Barbara Anderson, a preservation architect from the Historic Preservation Department of the Kansas Historical Society, said that buildings designated in the ordinance included houses in the Old West Lawrence Historic District, in the 600 to 800 blocks of Tennessee and Indiana streets. The Douglas County Courthouse, the Eldridge Hotel and buildings at Haskell Indian Junior College, which are all nationally registered landmarks, also would be included.
On campus, Dyche Hall and Spooner Hall would be included under the ordinance. Both are nationally registered landmarks. The Chi Omega sorority house, a state-registered landmark, also would be included.
Dental advice offered
Watkins helps out with professionals
Kansan staff writer
By James Buckman
Dental advice, for the first time, is available at Watkins Hospital.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins, said that dentists would examine students' teeth and advise them on whether they needed dental work. But he said that the new program did not include actual dental repairs.
"This is a unique service in the form of advice from a specialist," he said. "It does not mean the student will receive definitive health care. We can't do X-rays, fillings or surgery."
The new service is included in student health fees and does not cost any additional money. Yockey said the program would help students who weren't sure whether they needed to see a dentist and were afraid of the cost of a dental checkup.
James Otten, one of four Lawrence dentists who have donated their time for the consultations, said the service would help students decide whether they should have their teeth worked on.
"If one has a particular problem or concern with oral health, then we will see the student to determine whether or not they should seek care in the private sector," he said. "It is purely diagnostic."
The service is offered one half day each week, with each dentist working once every four weeks on different days.
Otten said he donated his time partly because he was interested in the special dental needs that students have. He said students had more wisdom-tooth problems and tended to have a higher-than-normal tooth decay rate because they often neglected their teeth when they came to college.
"We wanted to provide an avenue for the patient who normally would not otherwise seek dental care," he said. "We want to be preventatively oriented so that students are aware they should be seeking regular care to ward off more potentially serious problems."
The service could help those who seldom see a dentist, Otten said.
Yockey said the program had been inexpensive to initiate at Watkins because both the dental chair and the examination light were donated. In addition, each dentist brings his own tools on the day he works.
After 24 years, Gerken still spends long hours caring for KU's carillon
By Jill M. John
Special to the Kansan
Dong . . . dong . . . dong. Three long, strong gongs interrupt the caretaker in mid-sentence. He yields, knowing that he'll never be heard over the deep bass of the seven-ton bell hanging directly overhead.
Albert Gerken, professor of music, is accustomed to the powerful ringing of the carillon. He has been responsible for playing and caring for the bells of the Campanile since he came to the University of Kansas in 1963.
"This is a part-time position, although it really should be a full-time one," Gerken said. "I spend every morning and afternoons here."
Gerken's time at the 100-foot war memorial is divided between practicing from one to four hours each day, transcribing music for the
instrument and doing general upkeep, like lubricating the playing mechanism.
Gerken sits on a wooden bench facing the carillon in a small enclosed room beneath the bells. The room is warm; its floor is covered by rose-colored carpeting. A small radiator sits along the far wall beneath a plain black and white clock. Its ticking is clearly audible when the bells are silent.
The clock is important because it is part of the automatic timing system that controls the hourly, quarter hourly and half hourly chimes that can be heard across campus.
In the middle of the small room stands the carillon, Gerken's instrument. It is one of only 180 carillons in the United States.
Long wooden parts give it a loom-like appearance. The 53 keys are wooden handles that are about six inches in length and spaced three
inches apart. The instrument is played by firmly striking the tops of the wooden keys with a clenched fist.
Connected to the keys are wires that extend up through the ceiling of the playing room to the bells. The wires activate the clappers, which move from an inch to an inch and a half to ring the bells. The bells remain stationary, Gerken said.
A row of foot pedals extends from the bottom of the instrument, much like the pedals of an organ. Gerken demonstrated that only one key could be played at a time because the keys were spaced so far apart. The pedals, which represent the same 53 notes, are needed to play chords.
Years of use have left the carillon in a state of direpair.
MISSION CIRCLE
"The carillon was built in 1951; and unfortunately, the upkeep hasn't kept up with the wear and tear of those 37 years," he said.
"It it needs a $300,000 overhaul," he said. "The responsibility has been laid in the hands of the Endowment Association. They haven't done anything, but I think it's because they're looking for one donor instead of gathering nickels and dimes here and there."
Insulation, the playing mechanism and the bolts that hold the bells in place all need to be replaced, Gerken said. Rust on the frame holding the bells is a problem. Also, some moving parts and critical joints have never been cleaned.
As a professor of music theory, Gerken also teaches a class called Carillon, and his students eventually play the carillon themselves.
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
Gerken gives 45-minute recitals on Sundays at 3 p.m. and on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. when weather permits. The public is welcome, and tours of the tower are given at those times
A few of the larger bells in the Campanile bell tower.
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
Albert Gerken, professor of music, transcribes music to be played on the carillon.
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4
Wednesday, March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Success in advising process relies on students, advisers
Enrolling at the University of Kansas these days can be a waking nightmare.
waking nightmare.
Lines can last forever. Graduation and admission requirements both can be elusive. And who knows what the add-drop policy is these days or will be in the fall?
prevention for entitlement problems. The solution to those problems is simple.
But that's why there is an advising period, which runs from Monday until April 8. And the advising period is the primary prevention for enrollment problems.
The solution to those problems Students need to do their homework before they meet with their advisers. Know the graduation requirements. Know what's needed for admission into a professional school. Develop a long-range course plan. Talk to an adviser before April 8.
The same rules of preparation apply to advisers. If they want to avoid hassles the next semester, they should take the time during the advising process to do a good job.
during the advising process to do a good job. Advisers too must know what their students need, even if the students belong in different departments or schools. Proper advising now by all faculty can ease the pain of tomorrow's add-drop hassle.
add-drop hassle.
And if students find that their advisers can't cut it, the staff at the Academic Advising Support Center in Wescoe Hall is not only knowledgeable but also willing to help.
The enrollment process can become at least tolerable students and advisers want it to be. Do the homework. Use the available resources. Plan. Enroll. Pray.
Russell Gray for the editorial board
Drug testing only will harass
Douglas County officials say there is no problem, but they have created a solution, nonetheless.
have created a solution, nonetheless. The county commissioners passed a regulation last week that would allow officials to test employees for drugs if they had "reasonable suspicion" that controlled substances were being used on the job.
used on the job. Officials say that the regulation is an extra measure of protection to co-workers, property and the public. If executed in a careful and reasonable manner, it would indeed be a measure of protection.
County workers in safety-sensitive jobs, such as transportation workers and heavy machinery operators, need to be in full control of their mental capacity.
However, this regulation can turn into a harassment measure that simply will cost the county more than it bargains for. Success relies entirely on county officials' ability to find "reasonable suspicion" for drug use. They have to know what they are looking for.
The difficulty of doing just that makes this regulation somewhat unreasonable.
If the county officials have committed an unreasonable act at the onset, who is to trust that they can exercise "reason" when deciding whether a county employee is using drugs on the job?
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
Other Voices
High standards should be for everyone
The University is raising admissions standards in an effort to decrease the size of upcoming freshmen classes and increase the quality of its students.
quality of its students.
However, the standards still have a flaw that pertains to the much-debated requirement quotas. Minorities still won't have to meet minimum admissions standards if the University needs a greater number of them to meet expected goals.
Henlin lies a fundamental problem. The University does need to recruit more minorities, especially blacks.
recruit more minorities, especially biles. By the same token, waiving admissions standards to meet quotas is inappropriate.
Allowing below-average students into the University, regardless of race, dilutes the student quality and instead of encouraging high school students to study harder and improve themselves so they can get into college, it allows them to stagnate.
college, it allows them to stagger admissions. In fact, that these University officials would address waiving admissions only for blacks is a deplorable statement that they themselves only expect lower quality from black applicants.
themselves only expect lower levels of
As for the University, raising admissions standards across the board
is the only way to improve quality here. Exceptions only hurt the good
students and the University as a whole.
The Red and Black University of Georgia
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Todd Cohen...Managing editor
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Alan Piver...Editorial editor
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Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
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Seance reveals historic parallels
Being far, far too dedicated to my studies to waste time, brain cells and bodily fluid in the flesh spots of Padre, yet feeling that Spring Break required at least a mild attempt at diversion. I attended a seance.
They were having a special, "Quit Chats with Dead Writers," and of course I couldn't resist. I went in and paid my money and went into the dark booth, settled down on the couch, and almost immediately found myself sharing an astral plane with Hans Christian Anderson. We chatted for awhile, pleasant, largely innocuous conversation, until by some chance the word "editor" crossed my lips. It seemed to touch a sore spot.
张立峰
I said that I knew exactly what he meant. He looked skeptical, so I told him about King Ronald and the Threat to National Security. I whipped out my handy inflatable globe and pointed first at the United States, then at Nicaragua, then at the Soviet Union; then I told him about nuclear weapons and submarines and
I included.
"Too much of a dower," they said. You know where the king is starkers and marching down main street, and the little brat hollers, "But he hasn't got anything on? and everybody says, 'Oh,ow, the kid's right,' and learn a great lesson? No way. I don't remember exactly, but the gist of MY ending was that the brat says, 'Hey, the old tyrant' naked,' and everybody turns and stares at the kid, and his mother smacks him one and says, 'What are you trying to do, use us killed?' And his father says quietly. 'Yes, son, we know he's naked, but doesn't he look good for his age?'?"
("Extremely vehement, interesting, and obscene expletives deleted") diots") he said.
"Did you know," he told me, "they completely changed the ending of one of my stories? You know 'The Emperor's New Clothes'?"
I nodded.
Jay A.
Cohen
Staff Columnist
King Ronald did this because King Ronald calls himself a Capitalist, but he actually believes Communism works better, and he was afraid that everyone in Nicaragua would be richer and happier with the Communists than with the Tyrants-called Democrats who were kind to corporations and were the kind of Capitalists that King Ronald likes.
First, I said, there were some Tyrants in Nicaragua who called themselves Democrats while killing lots of people and stealing money from the poor and sharing it with U.S. corporations. These are the kind of people King Ronald likes. Then there were some poor people who called themselves Communists because those Tyrants were Democrats and gave democracy a bad name in that country. Anyway, the Communists kicked out the Tyrant-Democrats and took over the country and stopped helping the U.S. companies, so King Ronald called those remaining Tyrants "Freedom Fighters" and gave them money and guns.
So, instead of the Communists having to prove to the people that they were actually going to make them richer and happier with a system that has proven over and over to be a complete economic failure, the Communists could blame all their problems on the "Freedom Fighters" and the War against the Imperialist Giant. And because they were fighting the Imperialist Giant.
ICBMs and so on, and then we discussed the possible effects of radiation on ectoplasm for awhile. Then I got back to my story.
the Communists were becoming Tyrants because being a Tyrant is easy when there is a nationalist war to justify it. And they became totally dependent on the Soviet Union for guns and money. Therefore, the Soviet Union had much more influence in Nicaragua than they would have had if King Ronald had never given money and guns to the Tyrant's Freedom fighters because he was afraid that the Soviet Union would have influence in Nicaragua.
Then, at least partly because the people of Nicaragua did not like them, the Tyrants-Freedom Fighters were losing the war. And when the people in the U.S., who didn't want King Ronald to send money and guns in the first place, made it so that King Ronald couldn't send any more guns, then the Communists-turned Tyrants, who now need the Tyrants-Freedom Fighters to blame for all their problems, invaded a little ways into Honduras so that the people in the U.S. would let King Ronald send more guns and money to the Tyrant-Freedom Fighters because after all, the only alternative is to bring the Tyrants-Freedom Fighters to the U.S. and nobody, not even King Ronald, wants that because they're Hispane, and foreigners, and all they have been trained to do is kill people.
kill people."
And King Ronald has justified all this by saying that if the Soviet Union, who has the ICBMs and the submarines and so on and couldn't even control Afghanistan on their own border, would endanger the National Security if the Soviet Union had friends in Nicaragua, which is patently ridiculous. And king Ronald is very popular because no one blames him for anything because we all know he's completely incompetent.
"that's absurd."
Hans said, "But that's adroit.
"Precisely," I said. And Hans said he knew.
"Precisely, I still exactly what I meant.
Jay A. Cohen is an Alta Vista senior majoring in journalism.
Big mouths increase classroom stress
Sure, students need a decent amount of time to shop for classes. And with over-enrolment problems, students need every break they can get to get into needed courses.
The University Senate is voting on shortening the length of the add-drop period. I really hope they don't, but not for the reasons most people might expect.
But the most important reason for having a lengthy drop period is to give that mouth geek who keeps showing up in my classes all the time in the world to get out.
Although his looks might change, he always distinguishes himself once he opens his mouth. Anytime a professor calls on him, watch for giveaway openings such as, "Well, I think . . ." followed by a lengthy testimonial on his or her personal beliefs about an issue that might have
He'll probably follow you from semester to semester, too. One semester he'll be the deep intellectual in your English class, dressed in an old cloth trenchcoat and his grandfather's wire sunglasses, like a member of the Salvation Army's spy corps. The next semester, he'll be the bright yuppie-to-be, looking like a page out of "Dress for Success," sitting in your political science class.
You know the guy I'm talking about. He's probably in one of your classes right now, where you, like me, cringe every time he raises his hand to speak.
He might even be a she, dressed in any way you can think, in any class in the University, or any other university, I hear.
N. S. H.
Michael
Merschel
Staff Columnist
something to do with what he's supposed to be talking about; "But Professor, don't you think
... followed by a lengthy rhetorical question on his or her personal beliefs about an issue that barely relates to the subject; or my favorite, "This doesn't have anything to do with what we're talking about, but ..." followed by a lengthy lecture on his or her personal beliefs about something not even related to the subject matter
inese people can be nice enough individuals. Occasionally, they'll even make an interesting statement, just as now and then almost any student can say something really inane that they think is brilliant. I've been guilty of that myself.
But I'm not talking about the occasional rambler. I'm talking about the hard-core supermouth, the one who geyers for mindless, egotistical drivel every class session he attends.
During one rambling in an English class, where the professor just couldn't silence the mouth—that would-not-die, (even the best professors can't stop a really good talker once he gets going), I figured out how much the time he wasting was costing me. Dividing my tuition by
the hours I spend in class, I came up with about 14 cents a minute.
It's one thing when I choose to daydream through class on my own. It's another when someone else decides to steal it from me. Losing the equivalent of a Coke and a candy bar because somebody wanted to express a ridiculous subpoint that nobody but he cared about is enough to rile even a calm person.
It took nearly five minutes for the professor to shush the mouth and get back to the point she had been trying to make. The series of useless, pointless questions had cost me 70 cents.
Someday, when I see the mouth's hand go up in class, maybe I'll leap up, something like "Stop! Shut up! Nobody cares!" and wedge a sock between his parted lips before he can steal more of my time. It might be violent, but at least my sanity would be saved. The class and professor would probably give me a standing ovation.
but until I get up the courage to do so (probably never), or until this pathetic person realizes that the rest of us don't care about every little thought he has (also probably never). I guess I'm doomed to keep wishing for the chance that maybe, just maybe, today will be the day he drops.
Please, University Senate, keep the drop period as long as it can be. Give us silent sufferers some hope by giving the never-say-listen types an easy way out.
Michael Merschel is a Lakewood, Colo., junior majoring in journalism.
BLOOM COUNTY
bv Berke Breathed
I HEARD THE
ALIENS GAVE
STEVE BACK!
LEMME
SEE HIM !!
HE'S...HE'S
RESTING.
HE'S NOT
EXACTLY.
HIMSELF AT
THE MOMENT..
NO, NO! I'M UP.
FELLA5! SAY. WHAT
A BEAUTIFUL, BEAUTIFUL
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44
Universit Dailv Kansan / Wednesdav March 23.1988
5
Post offices trim hours because of budget cuts
By a Kansan reporter
The mail might be arriving a little later than usual for some offices on campus because of a new schedule of hours at the Strong Hall postal station.
Cuts in the U.S. Postal Service's budget have decreased window service hours at all Lawrence post offices, including the Strong Hall station.
The station now opens two hours later, at 11 a.m., and closes at 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Lareeda Hickey, U.S. postal service worker at Strong Hall, said full-time workers still will work eight hours a day.
"We just work the mail longer and open later," she said. "We're cutting back on part-time help about 12 or 13 hours a week."
Bill Lawrence, superintendent of Lawrence postal operations, said that other Lawrence offices had cut costs by closing for an hour in the
The Jawhawk Station post office, 1519 W. 23rd St. is now open from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. It is also open from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
afternoon.
The post office at 645 Vermont St. now is open from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. weekdays and from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
The cuts save the postal service about 25-30 labor hours a week, which amounts to about 5500 a week. Lawrence said. He said that government-mandated federal budget cuts forced the service to trim its budget.
Cuts in Lawrence amount to a decrease in labor costs, but nationwide, the cuts may mean no provisions for new buildings and other major projects. Lawrence said.
Lawrence also said that mail collection runs on Sunday were canceled because of federal budget cuts.
April 3 is day for new stamps
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Higher postage letters, including a 25-cent charge for first-class letters, will take effect April 3, the Postal Service announced yesterday.
Rates for mail going overseas will also rise to 45 cents for the first half-ounce.
Users of first-class postage face a 14.7 percent hike, compared with jumps of 18.1 percent for newspapers and magazines and 24.9 percent for mailers of advertising material.
Postal officials have said the increases were needed to avoid deficits for the agency that could reach $5 billion in 1989. The Postal Service lost more than $220 million last year.
The new rates do include a cut in the price paid by industry for business-reply envelopes that consumers can send without paying any postage. The lowest rate will drop from 7 cents to 5 cents, a move aimed at encouraging more businesses to offer these envelopes.
Anthropologists gather for conference
Bv Brenda Finnell
An international group of physical anthropologists will travel to Kansas City this week to discuss topics ranging from research in brain evolution and skeletal biology to studies of primate behavior and genetics.
The University of Kansas department of anthropology will be host to the 57th annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, which begins tomorrow and runs through Saturday at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Kansas City,
Mo.
More than 700 people are expected to attend the meeting, which will feature more than 250 presentations in 33 sessions. Speakers will be from institutions across the United States and also from Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Israel, Italy, Korea, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland and Tanzania.
This is the second time that KU has been host to the association's meeting. The last time was in 1972, when the organization had its annual meeting in Lawrence.
Kansan staff writer
Jim Mielke, professor of anthropology, and David Frayer, associate professor of anthropology, organized the meeting and said KU's role in the meeting would bring the University national attention.
"It brings a lot of attention focused on the department of anthropology and our University and on our programs." Frayer said.
Several current and former KU faculty members and graduate students will present papers and attend the sessions, Mielke said.
A special session titled, "The Fate of the Neanderthals" will be tomorrow evening. During the session, human evolutionists from around the world will discuss Neanderthra;&and their role in the origin of modern Euroneans.
At an association-sponsored luncheon on Friday, Alexander Marshack, a specialist in冰 Age art, will speak about how symbolic capacities originated in Europeans between 10,000 and 100,000 years ago.
The American Association of Physical Anthropologists was founded in 1918.
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At the informational meeting, the program will be explained and appointments for interviews will be made. Parrott Athletic Center is next to Allen Field House.
Thursday, April 7 at 5:00 p.m.
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6
Wednesdav. March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
113 dead,20,000 homeless in fire,Burma radio says
The Associated Press
RANGOON, Burma — A blaze ignited in a kitchen Sunday afternoon and swept through more than 2,000 buildings in a northern Nurnbese city, killing 113 people and leaving 20,000 homeless, government radio reported yesterday.
In a separate development, insurgents attacked a famous hilltop pagoda and killed five pilgrims and a government soldier, the state radio said yesterday.
The radio said that the fire burned two primary schools as it engulfed 2,096 buildings within two hours in Lashio, a city of 200,000 in the northern Shan states.
Efforts to communicate by telephone or telex with the Associated Press office in Burma early today to obtain more details were unsuccessful. It is often difficult to get phone or telex connections to the country.
The report said the fire began in the kitchen of a Chinese resident, Chao Wai Lin.
In addition to the dead, 64 people suffered serious burns, the radio said. The casualty toll was the largest ever reported in a fire in Burma.
the largest ever reported in the world. More than 3,000 families lost their homes and damages were estimated at about $10 million, the radio said.
Lashio, 450 miles northeast of Rangoon, is the largest city and business center in the northern Shan states and the seat of the northeast military command.
command.
In the pagoda attack, the radio said that insurgents in the Karen National Union attacked the Kyaiktiyo Pagoda in Mon state Monday with mortars and then looted pagoda donation boxes and shops, robbed pilgrims and set fire to 13 shops and a fire station. Sixteen pilgrims and eight government soldiers were wounded before the rebels were driven off in a four-hour firefire.
U.S. officials say ouster of Noriega is expected soon
WASHINGTON — Senior administration officials think that Panamanian Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega will be forced from office soon.
The Associated Press
The officials said Norigea's efforts to overcome the crisis probably were not helped by his conditional offer Monday night to resign before the May 1989 presidential elections.
State Department spokesman Charles Redman said that Panamanians regarded the offer as a "plov to buy time."
At the White House, spokesman Marlin Finitz water said any proposal that called for Noriega's resignation as defense chief but did not include his actual departure from Panama was "like getting the fox out of the hen house, then giving him quarters next door."
SUA FILMS
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 23, 1988
7
News Roundup
SOVIETS PRESSURE ARMENIA: The Soviet Union yesterday increased official pressure on Armenia and Azerbaijan to halt ethnic unrest that has left at least 32 people dead. The moves came amid increasingly negative coverage in the official press of Armenian demands to annex the predominantly Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh region, which is part of neighboring Azerbaijan.
MITTERRAND SEEKS RE-ELECTION: President Francois Mitterrand of France announced yesterday that he would seek a second term. The first round of the elections will be April 24, and a run-off between the top two candidates is scheduled for May 8. Opinion poll had put the 71-year-old Socialist in the lead for the two-stage election, although he was not formally in the race.
REAGAN ENDORSES AID: President Reagan asked Republican House members yesterday to unite behind a new effort to push through Congress some kind of
help for the contras, whose last U.S. aid ran out Feb.
29. Reagan also said that the blame will lie with the Democrats if the contras are wiped out.
ISRAELIS CHEER SHAMIR: Thousands of Israelis yesterday cheered Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir for his firm opposition to a U.S. peace plan when he returned from talks in Washington with President Reagan and Secretary of State George Shultz.
TROOPS STAY IN HONDURAS: U.S. troops sent to Tegucigalpa for emergency training exercises will stay on to complete the maneuvers, a U.S. military spokesman said yesterday, although Honduran President Jose Azcuna Hooy said the border crisis with Nicaragua was over.
MIXON PRESSURED FED: The Nixon White House kept heavy pressure on Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns to do its bidding but gently
turned aside complaints from one Fed critic, then California Gov. Ronald Reagan, documents made public yesterday show. Among records released by the National Archives is a Sept. 17, 1973, letter from Reagan to Nixon complaining about the impact of a Fed decision on California mortgage loans.
MECHAM TRIAL CONINUES: A prosecutor told the Arizona Senate yesterday that Gov. Evan Mecham's $80,000 loan from a protocol fund to his car dealership was an intentional and wrongful act, and the defense acknowledged that it was not politically smart. The statements came as the Senate turned to Mecham's misuse of state funds, the second of three charges lodged against Mecham at his impeachment trial.
REGULATORS IGONNING LAW: Community representatives told Congress yesterday that federal regulators were failing to enforce the 11-year-old law requiring banks to lend in their depositors' neighborhoods and prohibiting "redling," the practice of denying loans to an entire neighborhood based on the race or economic class of its residents.
SHULTZ MIGHT VISIT MIDEAST? Secretary of State George Zultze will probably travel to the Middle East within two weeks if Israel agrees to further discussions on his regional peace plan, Asher Naim, the information minister at the Israeli Embassy, said yesterday. He also said he expected that Israel's cabinet would vote to keep alive the Shultz peace initiative when the issue was debated.
CBS EXPECTS POOR FINISH: CBS expects to finish last in the Nielsen ratings for the first time in 35 years of record-keeping. Although CBS' regularly scheduled prime-time programs are getting better ratings than those of ABC, special sports programs including the Winter Olympics and the Super Bowl carried ABC into the lead.
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SUA Forums Presents:
HITLERISM And The HOLOCAUST
Featuring:
Helen Waterford An Auschwitz Survivor And
Alfons Heck A Former Nazi Youth Leader
Monday, March 28 8:00 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
FIFTY YEAR ANNIVERSARY
1938-1988
HEROS
mon.
HEROS
Where Have They Gone?
mon.
HEROS
Where Have They Gone?
Rock'n Roll
tues.
SEARCH FOR GOD
McCollum Lobby
mon.
HEROS
Where Have They Gone?
Rock 'n Roll
tues.
A SEARCH FOR GOD
7:30 pm, McCollum Lobby
Tuesday, March 22
I Need That
Higher Love
weds.
from STEVE WINWOOD'S
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thurs. & fri.
the OCCULT
DEVILS & DEMONS
pt.1&2
Tarot?
ouija?
Necromancy?
Dungeons and Dragons?
Witchcraft?
JOHN LENNON sat.
A Legacy On Campus
Nightly (!)
SMITH HALL rm.100 7:30 pm
COME ON OVER TO
March 21, *, 23, 24, 25, 26
Rock'n Roll
tues.
A SEARCH FOR GOD
7:30 pm, McCollum Lobby
Tuesday, March 22
A SEARCH FOR GOD
thurs. & fri.
the OCCULT
DEVILS & DEMONS
pt.1&2
Tarot?
ouija?
Necromancy?
Dungeons and
Dragons?
Witchcraft?
Maranatha Campus Ministries
JOHN LENNON sat.
A Legacy On Campus
8
Wednesday, March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
- Folder distribution for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Kansas University ballroom. Students can pick up folders in 102 Strong Hall, after March 34.
On Campus
- A staff training and development session titled "Performance Evaluation" is scheduled for 9 a.m. today and tomorrow in 102 Carruth-H'Oleary Hall. The training session is sponsored by the department of personnel Services. Call 864-4944 to register.
Master classes with Claude Frank, pianist, scheduled for 9:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
A Retirees Club coffee is scheduled for 10 a.m. today in
the Adam Lounge of the Adams Alumni Center.
A University Forum titled "Zagreb Today, as the Cultural Center of the School of Art with"with a schedule for the scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Excumens Christian Ministries, 2104 Eadre Ave.
A Latin American Studies lecture titled "Two Costa Rican Views On the Central American Peace Process" is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
A graduate school informational meeting for students interested in attending graduate school is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
Recreation services is holding a meeting for managers of Screwball teams at 6:30 p.m. today in 202 Robinson Center.
A math department lecture titled "Continuity of the Conjugate Operator" with Gerald Beer from California State University-Los Angeles is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in the Arenszajn Room, 119 Strong Hall.
A study skills workshop titled "Preparing for Exams" is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in 4034 Wescoe Hall. The workshop is free, and no registration is required.
A Campus Christians meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room of the Burge Union.
A Public Relations Student Society of America and Women in Communications, Inc., meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in 100 Stauffer-Flint. The meeting will feature speaker Barbara Barickman, promotional director at the J.C. Nichols Co. in Kansas City.
A study skills workshop titled "Preparing for Exams" is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in 4034 Wesco Hall. The workshop is free, and no registration is required.
A Student Senate meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
A dean candidate open meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union George Woodyard, professor of Spanish and Portuguese will talk about "My Vision for the Development of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences" and will answer questions.
A student recital with Sean Beckett, tenor, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
■ A Student Senate meeting is scheduled for *p* y m. today in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
A dean candidate open meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union George Woodyard, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, will talk about "My Vision for the Development of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences" and will answer questions.
A student recital with Sean Beckett, tenor, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
U.S.S.R. book fans to receive new works
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The shortage of good books in the Soviet Union is being assaulted in a two-front war, with 3,500 previously banned titles being published and a new law in the works that will allow a vanity press.
For years, Soviet citizens have been hard pressed to lay their hands on the best writing of Soviet, Russian and foreign authors. But two newspapers announced programs aimed at expanding the pool of quality literature available at bookshops or public libraries.
The Communist Party daily Pravda said that authors willing to risk their own money would be able to publish their works, sharing in earnings from government sales or absorbing the loss if the material fails to draw a following.
In addition to the vanity press venture, state presses soon will be turning out new editions of highly popular works by Mihail Bulakov, author of "The Master and Margarita," and Boris Pasternak, who won the 1958 Nobel Literature Prize for his novel "Doctor Zhivago." It has not yet been published in book form in his homeland.
The newspapers did not say whether foreign literature was included among the books to be made available.
Most of the fiction and non-fiction titles were banned during the 29-year dictatorship of Joseph Stalin and removed from library shelves and book kiosks because their authors were deemed to have espoused politically hazardous ideas.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT $300 per week!
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For more information, come to:
Kansas Union
Gallery West — 11:30, 1:30 or 3:30
Parlor C - 6:30
WEEK #4 March 22-29
TODAY!
Film Developing & Double Prints
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1420 Crescent Rd.
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Hrs: 8-5 M-F 9-5 Sat. 12:30:3:30 Sun.
COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES (CLAS)
UNDERGRADUATE ENROLLMENT PROCEDURES
FALL 1988
1. Enrollment Card Handout March 23 and 24 9:00-4:30 Kansas Union Ballroom-Picture I.D. Required
2. Advising-2 Weeks Only March 28 through April 8 Check the letter you received in the mail for more information.
March 28 through April 8
8:30-12:00 and 1:00-5:00
Strong Hall Rotunda
3. Dean's Stamp
CLAS Freshmen and Sophomores: March 21 through 25
Special advising workshops will be presented by the CLAS Advising Support Center in the Residence Halls.
Take advantage of this opportunity to complete your fall 1988 schedule, get an advisor's signature and Dean's stamp all without leaving your residence hall. Check with your RA for more information.
SPRING BREAK'S OVER BUT THE PARTY CONTINUES AT GAMMONS
WEDNESDAY NIGHT, March 23
CASH PRIZES for the Best Tan
Male and Female categories, with prizes being awarded to the three tannest in each category.
ALSO prizes from WARNER BROS. In connection with their new release POLICE ACADEMY 5 ASSIGNMENT: MIAMI BEACH
Prizes will also be awarded from Electric Beach, Funtime Movie Rentals, and Body by Schliebe.
$1.00 Well Drinks $1.00 Domestic Bottled Beer 50c Draws All Imports specially priced.
It's also Asparagus in the Pink night which means new music all night!!
4
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 23, 1988
9
Group to study prison crisis
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A special legislative committee has been appointed to study ways to alleviate the state's prison overcrowding crisis, including a $100 million proposal from the director of the penal system, legislative leaders announced yesterday.
The 11-member Special Committee on Corrections is faced with developing recommendations for easing overcrowding before the Legislature finishes its session in less than six weeks. Most of its members are on one of the legislative budget committees, and the top Democratic and Republican leaders will serve on the panel.
Senate President Robert Talkington, R-Iola, will be the committee's chairman, and House Speaker Jim Clay Center, will be vice chairman.
"We hope this committee will be able to do something this year." Talkington said. "It'll be difficult to get it done, but not saying it's completely impossible."
Gov. Mike Hayden's press secretary, Mike Peterson, said that the governor was encouraged by the
formation of the committee.
"I think you can safely say anytime you have a bipartisan group in the Legislature working on the situation, it puts the Legislature in a good position," Peterson said.
The state will face a possible federal court order to reduce the inmate population at the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing as the result of a reopened lawsuit brought by prisoners there. The state prison system houses more than 5,800 inmates in buildings designed to hold a maximum of 5,015.
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10
Wednesday, March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Video features schol hall life
Students produce promotional tape
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Members of the All Scholarship Hall Council and the makers of "KU Scholarship Halls: A Great Way to Stay Involved" hope their new promotional video will make the grade with high school students.
The six-minute video uses popular music and scenes showing the kinds of activities and responsibilities of students who live in the halls, said the video's maker, Tim Savage, Lawrence senior. For example, some scenes show hall residents on telephone duty or attending hall parties, he said.
The council's public relations committee decided at the beginning of the fall semester that they needed a new presentation to replace the slide show usually shown to recruit high
school students. Helen Svoboda, Chapman freshman and a member of the committee, said the committee wanted a more exciting way to present the information.
"The slide show was put together many years ago," she said. "It was kind of dull."
Svoboda and Megan Crawford, Wichita freshman and committee member, decided to contact students in the division of communications and theatre to see if they would shoot the video. The committee wanted to use students to produce the video to keep the costs down.
Dave Mills, Topeka senior, and Savage said they shot the video during the first two weeks of March as a project for their film classes.
The video probably will cost the committee $120 to $200, Savage said. The cost might increase because of licensing fees for the music used in the video. It would have cost about $4,000 for a professional film company to produce the video, he said.
Savage worked with Crawford and with members of the offices of residential programs and university relations to get ideas for the video's script.
Frank Barthell, electronic media coordinator for university relations, said he looked over the script to make sure it presented the University's image accurately.
Deb Stafford, assistant director of residential programs, said the video probably would be shown to high school students who attend orientation on campus during the summer. The video also might be sent to Kansas high schools next year, she said.
Students who want to live in a scholarship hall must fill out a special application and have high scores on the Stolastic Aptitude Test or American College Test. They also must write two short essays and submit two references. Stafford said the students' high school ranking also was considered.
Students, professors meet via mail through independent study program
The program has three main elements : a student, an instructor and a mail carrier.
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
These components are part of independent study, a program in the division of continuing education that offers students more than 100 correspondence courses.
in this course, to the textbook writing assignments.
Students are given writing assignments, which they send to an instructor, who critiques and then returns the work.
When students enroll in an independent study course, they are given a complete course study guide, which includes study questions, course objectives and an introduction to the textbook reading assignments.
"Independent study is based on the premise there is going to be some dialogue and exchange of ideas between instructors and students," said Jo Lutz, coordinator of student services for independent study.
The independent study program recently introduced new correspondence courses in biology, religion, education, psychology, and speech and language
development.
Lutz said that students took about 2,500 courses this fiscal year. Students enrolled in the program are from all over Kansas and out of state, too, she said. Most of the students enrolled are 18 to 35 years old.
Students enroll in correspondence courses for a variety of reasons, Lutz said.
Some are people who work in an office and want to advance professionally, she said. Others have never attended college and want to experience a college course. Gifted high school students sometimes enroll in independent study to earn college credit.
Students might use independent study to earn the few hours necessary to finish a degree, Lutz said. Some students also study by correspondence while working in their hometown during the summer.
Nancy Colyer, director of independent study, said student evaluations generally showed that students were happy with the program.
Let's Ride! The 1988 Biking Season is rollin' and Midwest Cyclery celebrates the arrival of Spring with a STOREWIDE SALE, MARCH 23rd THRU 27th! Our stores are sporting a new look, and our showrooms are packed with all the hottest new bikes and accessories.
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KUBookstores 12:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
KU
MAIN ENROLLMENT FOR UNDERGRADUATES SUMMER AND FALL 1988
(Graduate Students see page 2 of the Timetable)
CAUTIONS
- Plan your schedule well! List a good selection of alternate courses.
- Bring signed yellow Special Permission/Approval cards for courses coded I or P!
- Advising and Dean's Approval Stamp Periods END EARLY. Make an appointment soon to see your advisor.
KEY DATES
March 23-April 1: School of Social Welfare;
Applied English Center
March 23 & 24: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences;
School of Business
March 28-April 1: All other schools
- Enrollment Card Pickup:
- Advising Period:
- Advising Period:
March 28-April 1: Schools of Journalism and Pharmacy
March 28-April 8: All other schools
Pre-professional School Co-advising: See Timetable
- Dean's Approval Stamp:
March 28-April 1: School of Journalism
March 28-April 20: School of Education
March 28-April 8: All other schools
clip and save
- Enrollment:
Appointments start Friday, April 1. Check your enrollment card for your preassigned appointment time.
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---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 23, 1988
Kansas foods culled for NY promotion
By Elaine Woodford
Owners of two Lawrence companies hope their products can make the big time in the Big Apple this May.
Kansan staff writer
Central Soyfoods, 11 W. 14th St. and Heart of the Prairie Ice Company were among 52 Kansas companies selected by Bloomingdale's Department Stores for a Kansas promotion this May.
Frank Carey and Jayni Neas, Lawrence residents, are developing Heart of the Prarie Golden Wheat ice cream, a wheat-flavored ice cream with crunchy bits of wheat, a flavor which will be included in the promotion.
Last week. Bloomingdale's officials released a list of the companies selected for the promotion in the New York department store and its 15 nationwide stores. More than 120 Kansas companies competed for a place in the promotion.
Carey and Naas presented three ideas to Bloomingdale's selection committee: a self-published cookbook, "The Easiest You Make It. The Better it Tastes," a recipe pamphlet
that would feature recipes made from products involved in the Kansas promotion; and the wheat ice cream.
Carey said that the partners were excited about having their product sold in Bloomingdale's stores.
"We view this as quite an honor, and we are thrilled with the opportunity to include our product in the promotion," Carey said.
hickory-smoked tofu was the winner for Central Soyfoods owner Jim Cooley. The company has been producing traditional and hickory smoked tofu for the past nine years.
"We have been increasing production of the hickory-smoked tofu, and we are experimenting with other flavors." Cooley said.
The tofu market has been expanding for Cooley's company to include Dillons Supermarkets in Kansas and possibly Safeway and Food Barn supermarkets in the Kansas City area. But this might increase production problems, Cooley said.
If New York shoppers find the tofu tasty, Cooley said, the company might not be able to keep up with the demand and the cost of shipping the product to New York.
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
* Notification of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
I will do the rest of the text, but it is very blurry and hard to read.
The instructions say "recognize only the text that is clearly visible".
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Funded by student activity fee.
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Denim miniskirts starting at $9^{99}$ Jordace Jeans $24^{99}$ reg $42^{00}$
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The University of Kansas Printing Service Announces
MEDIA CONVERSION SERVICES The Missing Link... for more than 700 systems!
TYPESETTING CONFIGURATION
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If so, our comprehensive disk conversion system may have the solutions to your conversion needs.
If you wish to eliminate costly re-keyboarding or eliminate the resulting errors that can occur in re-keyboarding documents, we can offer you an alternative service.
Please Call Our Customer Service Coordinators
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KU Printing Service
864-4341 2425 West 15th
**
Wrestling Tournamen March 29 & 30
Entry deadline: Friday, Mar. 25 — 5:00 p.m.
Entry fees: $20.00/team — $2.00/person
**sponsored by KU Recreation Services
208 Robinson 864-3546
CHEVROLET
WATKINS AWARENESS Did You Know...?
Sponsored by Student Health Advisory Board Funded by Student Senate
- The use of a computer is provided to monitor drug interactions in order to prevent the issuance of drugs that may conflict with previous prescribed medications.
- That The Pharmacy At Watkins Health Center...
- Obtains their pharmaceuticals on contractual (reduced cost) basis, and as result can pass these prescription savings on to you as students.
- Also fills prescriptions (often at a reduced cost) for students seeing physicians outside the health center.
Latin American Studies announces a lecture by
Mario Carvajal Rodolfo Mendez Mata Costa Rican Legislators
"Two Costa Rican Views on the Central American Peace Process"
Wednesday, March 23,1988
Jayhawk Room, Union
4:00 p.m.
Macintosh Delivery!
It's time for you, the KU student, faculty or staff member, to pick up your key to success! You can pick up your computer on:
or
Thursday, March 31 12 p.m.-6 p.m.
Friday, April 1
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Where to park: West lot Where to pick up your computer: the Burge Union, level 3 There will be people there to help load your computer and answer any questions you may have.
Training sessions:
March 31:2 p.m.-4 p.m.
April 1:10 a.m.-12 p.m.
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12
Wednesday, March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
New gay archives at Cornell to increase sexuality studies
The Associated Press
ITHACA, N.Y. — Cornell University is cataloging books, personal papers, videotapes and periodicals with names like "Mom Guess What!" and "Fag Rag," hoping its new gay archives will help bring the study of human sexuality out of the academic closet.
The materials, making up one of the nation's most extensive collections on homosexuality, are nearly all gifts from the Mariposa Education and Research Foundation, founded in 1979 by physiologist Bruce Voeller, who thought that universities were neglecting human sexuality.
the basic endowment for maintenance of the archives, $224,000, came from the estate of David Goodstein, a Cornell alumnus who became wealthy on Wall Street and later published the national gay magazine, "The Advocate," until his death in 1985.
The first materials arrived last month, and they are being stored in 103 acid-free cardboard boxes in the basement of Cornell's Olin Library. The collection, available for research this fall, eventually will include hundreds of items of dates to
World War II. University archivist H. Thomas Hickerson said that the school also intended to collect materials that dealt with other aspects of human sexuality.
The Mariiposa collection includes material from Anita Bryant's bruising battle with gay activists in 1978 over a proposed gay rights constitutional amendment in Florida.
"The militant homosexuals are at it again!" read one of Bryant's mailed appeals. It warned that passage of the amendment would help homosexuals legitimize their perversion and recruit children.
Greek Endeavor '88
"Let's get it together!"
March 26th and 27th
A Greek Leadership Retreat
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WATKINS
Welcome back from Spring Break
We are here to help...
Start Spring With a Smile
Make your appointment now! (Call 864-9500).
Dental consultants and screening examinations are available at Watkins. This service is prepaid by the health fee for enrolled KU students.
THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
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Just think of it as a 4x4 tanning booth.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 23, 1988
13
Sports
KANSAS P7 FOOTBALL 56 44 98 KANSAS FOOTBALL
New coach Glen Mason runs the Jayhawks through a defensive drill on the practice field behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion.
KU football team out of shape, coach says
All starting positions are open; quarterback position narrowed to two candid
By Keith Stroker Kansan sports writer
For Kansas football coach Glen Mason, the first day of practice was less than successful.
The off-season conditioning program was supposed to get the players in shape for spring practices, but it did not. The conditioning exercises will continue during the next month of practices.
"The players did not show that they were in condition today," Mason said. "A lot of conditioning is mental. There is a mental wall being put up by some players, and we as coaches have to break down those walls."
The team practiced football for three hours, but Mason said that only the first half of that time was profitable.
promisable.
"We are really going to earn our money as coaches," said offensive coordinator Pat Ruel. "We have a long way to go, but the guys are working hard at it."
If the players lacked enthusiasm, the coaches made up for it. Throughout yesterday's practice, the coaches were constantly correcting players' performances, trying to instill discipline into a program that has been less than successful in recent years.
"Today's practice was far less than what I expected," Mason said. "We didn't compete like an Ecklens should. We will impruce, though."
Mason said that each position was open now and that everyone has a chance to start. The quarterback has been narrowed to two players.
Kelly Donohoe, 6-foot Harrisonville, Mo., sophomore, started in six of Kansas' 11 games last season. He will be pitted against 6-5 Pittsburg freshman Kevin Verdugo, who started four games last season.
"I felt that the two quarterbacks did a fine job this afternoon," Mason said. "I think it was encouraging to see them throw the ball so
well, especially because of the strong wind."
The coaches had expected a third player to compete for the quarterback job, but Lawrence redshirt freshman Lance Flash-barth opted to play defense.
Flaxtsharb, a 6-5, 210-pounder, who led Lawrence High School as a quarterback to the 1868 state championship, would prefer to play outside linebacker this season.
"Lance is a big guy, one who is quick enough to play backlayer," Mason said. "He is young and still growing and has a chance to compete for that position."
Seventy-five men practiced yesterday, and only 50 of them were on scholarship. Mason said that the numbers were down but that he was not concerned.
"If we have to, we'll take just 10 guys and make them the best players they could possibly be,"
During the next month of spring practices, the team will focus each day on a certain situation that it will face in a game. Yesterday, it was a first-and-10 situation.
Mason said. "I want the men to give all that they can to helping this program become a success."
Mason said the key to a successful offense was getting four or more vards on a first down.
"Second-and-six or second-and-five downs are what we want as a team." Mason said. "If we can maintain a 60 percent first-down ratio, we will have a chance to win a lot of ball games. Anything less than 50 percent and our defense doesn't stand a chance."
Mason said the coaches would do everything it took to make this program work and they would be able to get the job done. Tomorrow, the players will have to go through a 6 a.m. workout, in addition to their normal afternoon practice.
Kansas sweeps Tarkio and Bingham's gamble with Mulcahy pays off
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Kansas junior Craig Mulcahy was just standing on a mound of dirt throwing a ball yesterday. But, for Mulcahy, the afternoon could not have been more pleasing.
The Jayhawks baseball player did not get to pitch last fall. Or during the summer either.
After injuring the ulnar nerve of his elbow last spring while playing for Meramec Community College in St. Louis, Mulcahy thought his baseball career was over.
"I thought the injury was the end of my career," he said. "At the time, I was being recruited by ranked schools. But when I got injured, they stopped talking to me. Coach Bingham stuck with me though, and I'm glad I'm here."
Mulcahy increased his record to 2-0 yesterday against Tarkio College by pitching five innings and allowing only three earned runs in the Jayhawks' '9-4 victory.
Kansas swept the doubleheader at
the midday afternoon after win-
ning the first game of the
"Considering last fall's injury," Mulcahy said, "I threw all right. I'm just pleased that I'm out. I've lost about three or four miles on my fastball, but I'm just glad to be here."
Mulcahy's fastest pitch was recorded at 86 mph. He said he was surprised that it clocked about the same as last season.
"When we recruited him, he was kind of a gamble." Bingham said. "He was a quality pitcher, but he had the injury. But we needed pitchers with experience, so I thought it was a worthwhile gamble."
Bingham said he had seen successful recoveries from the elbow injury. He credited Mulcahy's dedication to the prescribed rehabilitation program. Mulcahy credited the program.
"He still has days of question," Bingham said. "But he's getting better, and his confidence is growing. That's the key — if he is confident that his arm is solid."
The Jayhawks used consistent pitching and efficient base running to sweep the Missouri college. Sophomore Tom Bilye, 21, collected the victory in the first game by lasting seven innings and allowing four earned runs.
freshman Curtis Shaw relieved Bilyeu until the game was called in the eighth inning because of the 10-run rule.
Sophomore Craig Stoppel pitched the final two innings of the second contest, allowing no earned runs and recording two strikeouts.
The Jayhawks were able to apply, for the first time, Bingham's multifaceted offense of bunting and stealing, Bingham said. Kansas stole seven bases in the two games, led by junior Steve Dowling's four steals in the second game.
"The steals were just there," Bingham said. "If the pitcher-catcher combo is right, we should be able to run. But today was the first time we united well and stole a lot of bases."
Bingham said the games were important for the 10-8 Jayhawks to start playing positive after going 2-4 during spring break. Kansas came from behind in the second game, following Tarkio's three-run first inning.
"The kids did a good job battling and getting two runs back with two outs," Bingham said about the first game. "That set the tempo for the second game. We still have trouble putting people away. One of the keys to the season is if we play nine innings. We did a good job today; we just needed to close out the game."
The Jayhawks next play Missouri Western tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Hogland-Maupin Stadium.
KANSAS 14, TARKIO 4
Tarkio 012 100 00-4 9
Kansas 043 000 50
Tarkio 012 100-4⁹ 4-9
Kansas 043 00-9 4-9
Steuhr, Daeher 039 00+
Soka, Kanaas, Bilyan, Shaw (B) and Schmidt, Wiliy (B-21), L-Leuste (1-1) 2-B-28, Acosta, Alvarado, Kansas, Mentel 3-B-28, Zweierk, HRKS-Kansas; Menter (4), Ruidas (2)
KANSAS 9, T
Tarki 300 100 - 6 - 4 2
Kansas 232 200 - X 8
--over Waynesburg, Pa., was unstopp able all night and was named the tournament's most valuable player.
KANSAS 9, TARKIO 4
Kansas 232 200 X-9 8-O Tarki: Whipple, Garza (3) and Sofa; Kansas: Mulachy, Stoll (6) and Boeschen W-Mulachy (2), Stoll, L-Whiphe. B2-Ksana: Buchanan. 3Bs-Tarki: Gaibovis, Zweerink HR-Tarki: Acosta.
Sports Briefs
BOWLERS PERFORM WELL: The Kansas women's and men's bowling teams didn't finish in the top two at sectionals, but KU bowling coach Mike Fine said that the teams had their best tournaments of the year.
The women's team finished third behind Wichita State and West Texas State in the six-town team. The men finished fourth behind Wichita State, Arizona State and Houston in the 13-team field.
The top women's bowler was Judy Fiester, who had a 195 average for the tournament, and the top men's bowler was Morris Ross, who averaged 198.
Grand Canyon clinches NAIA title in overtime
Fine said that everyone bowled over his season average.
"This was easily our best tournament of the season," he said. "I can't wait until next year to start. We are only losing one bowler from each squad."
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Rodney Johns scored 41 points and drilled a 15-footer with three seconds left in overtime last night, carrying Grand Canyon to an 88-6 victory over Auburn-Montgomery in the title game of the NAIA Tournament.
After a time out, Auburn-Montgomery tried a cross-court pass but it was intercepted by Johns.
Alphonso Bell committed his fifth foul with 1:08 left, sending Grand Canyon's Craig Johnson to the free kick. He made one foul shot to tie it at 86.
Seconds later, Bobby Harris stole a Grand Canyon pass and drove in for a lay-up. Johnson blocked the shot, and Grand Canyon called time out with 13 seconds to play to set up Johns' title-winning shot.
Johns, who had 39 points and the winning tip-in at the buzzer in Grand Canyon's 108-106 semifinal victory
He hit high jumpers, long jumps and a variety of driving lay-ups in helping the Antelopes win their third NAIA title since 1975. They finished their season 37-6.
Auburn-Montgomery finished 32-3 and was led by Orlando Graham's 17 points and Sandy Anderson's 14.
Johns canned two free throws to give the Antelopees an 82-79 lead, then Bobby Harris drilled a 3-point bucket to make an 82-82 tie with 41 seconds to play in regulation. Grand Canyon's Mike Ledbetter missed a long jumper at the buzzer, and the game went into overtime.
Auburn-Montgomery, making its first appearance in the NAIA title game, leaped to a 12-point lead in the first half behind the strong inside play of Graham, Anderson and Bell.
Women's basketball team proud of season despite tourney defeat
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
The Kansas women's basketball team's loss to Louisiana Tech was a tough end to an otherwise gratifying season.
But despite the 89-50 defeat, the Jayhawks felt good about their accomplishments this season.
"I think people around the nation are beginning to appreciate the Big Eight Conference," said Kansas coach Marian Washington. "We placed three teams in the tournaments and we made it to the second round. I only expect better things to come from our conference."
For the second year in a row, the Jayhawks won the Big Eight postseason tournament and received the conference's automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament. Because of this year's victory, Washington was disappointed with the tournament position that Kansas received.
The Jayhawks played a preliminary round game against Middle Tennessee State in Allen Field House.
"After our victory, we had to play Louisiana Tech, the fifth-ranked team in the nation in the second round, despite winning our conference tournament," Washington said. "It is kind of confusing, because Nebraska and Colorado seemed to have easier teams to face. I think there are some changes that need to be made in the tournament format."
Colorado and Nebraska did not fare any better. The Buffalooes won their first-round game but lost 103-64 to Long Beach. The Cornhuskers, after a first round bye, lost 100-82 to Southern California.
Washington said that the Lady Techsters were a fine team but that
Kansas did not play well in the game
Sandy Shaw, the Jayhawks' leading scorer this season, did not score a point, missing all 12 of her goal field attempts. Washington said Kansas was intimidated by Louisiana Tech.
"They have tremendous fan support at their games, and because of Tech's reputation in women's basketball, it affected our team somewhat," Washington said. "They play a tremendous defensive game — one we had a hard time coping with."
Washington said she hoped that the NCAA would eventually schedule women's games on neutral court sites, the way men's games are scheduled.
The present format has teams playing on opposing team's home courts because of a limited budget. Washington said that this gave the better teams an unfair advantage of being able to play at home.
MAD HATTER
THE HOTTEST SPECIALS THE MAD HATTER'S SPECIALS
Mon. - $1.00 Bottles
Tues. - $1.25 Well Drinks
Thurs. - "The Usual"
Fri. - 75 $ ^c $ Well Shots
Wed. - $1.00 Margaritas
CATCH THE NCAA TOURNAMENT ACTION THIS WEEK AT THE MAD HATTER!
Sat. - 50 $ ^{\circ} $ Draws
Hatter Hours— Mon.-Sat. 8 p.m.-2 a.m.
MAD HATTER
AT THE BEST PLACES IN TOWN!
THE BULLWINKLE'S SPECIALS
THE BULLWINKLE'S SPECIAL
Mon. - $200 Pitchers
Tues. - 90 Cans
Wed. - 50 Draws
Thurs. - 16 oz. Budweisers
Fri. - Free Hot Dogs
BULLWINKLE'S WILL
BULLWINKLE'S
BULLWINKLE'S WILL BE SERVING FREE HOT DOGS EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON!
The Bull's Hours— Mon.-Thurs. 3 p.m.-Midnight Fri.-Sat.1 p.m.-Midnight
14
Wednesday, March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Regents schools create consortium for study abroad
Kansan staff writer
By Brenda Finnell
As increasing numbers of students are studying abroad, six Regents institutions are cooperating to create even more study abroad opportunities for Kansas college students.
Representatives of the University of Kansas, Emporia State University, Wichita State University and Fort Hays State University met March 9 at the Adams Alumni Center to discuss forming a consortium to sponsor study abroad programs.
Pittsburgh State University and Kansas
State University are also planning to join the consortium, which is an association designed to sponsor joint programs.
to Mary Elizabeth Gwin Debicki, director of KU's study abroad office, said that Kansas had never had a study-bread consortium and that it would be beneficial for KU, where many students are interested in studying abroad.
abroad. "It shows our willingness to put the interests of the state institutions above merely KU interests," she said.
James Harder, director of international student affairs at Emporia State University.
said he was pleased with the consortium idea.
"It adds credibility to study abroad, not just at our institution, but at all the schools, at a time when we need to internationalize and offer international experiences," he said.
said.
The Council of Chief Academic Officers has approved the consortium idea. The proposal will now be considered by the Council of Presidents and the Board of Regents, Debicki said.
The first project that the universities would jointly sponsor is a semester-long humanities program in Great Britain. It would begin in spring 1989 and involve about 30 students. University officials hope the program will cost about $4,000 for each student.
project.
The humanities curriculum would allow students to use the many museums, theaters, galleries, concert halls and historical places in London, according to the consortium proposal.
cations for the program, selection of faculty to teach the program and the handling of class credits.
"We're delighted to serve as the coordinator for the major aspects of the program," Debicki said at the meeting.
Kendall Blanchard, dean of liberal arts and sciences at Emporia State, said a consortium would create many opportunities for the universities.
we're trying to internationalize as much as possible, and this is one of the possibilities to do that," he said.
MUD
VOLLEYBALL
TOURNAMENT
April 8 and 9, 1988
To Raise Money for the K.C.
Ronald McDonald House
TO GET INVOLVED — CALL
ΔΔΠ — 843-7874 or
TKE — 843-3310
(Attn.: Philanthropy Chairperson)
ENTRY FEE • PRIZES • TROPHIES
FREE T-SHIRT • MUD
Bump Set! Spray!
Water Polo
**BOATING DUCKS**
Men's & Co-Rec Leagues begin play on March 28
Entry Fee: 815/team (12 team limit)
**sponsored by KU Recreation Services 208 Robinson 864-3546
Entry Deadline:
TODAY
5:00 p.m.
Deluxe Screwball
BETWEEN BATS
baseball in a racquetball court!
Men's & Co-Rec Leagues begin play March 28
MANDATORY Managers Meeting TONIGHT, 6:30 p.m.
203 Robinson
202 Robinson
Entry Fee: $15/team
(30 team limit)
**sponsored by KU Rec Services
208 Robinson 864-3546
JAYHAWK Pawn & Jewelry "Money to Loan"
Buy • Sell • Trade
Cameras • Typewriters
Stereo Equipment • Jewelry
Guitars • Amplifiers
1804 W. 6th
749-1919
NEED MONEY?
Here's the Solution!
Part-Time Positions Available $6-$8 per Hour We Offer:
Paid Training
Flexible Hours
Call for an appointment or apply in person today.
- Paid Training
- Advancement Opportunities
- Guaranteed hourly wage plus incentives
- Pleasant working conditions
- Flexible Hours
841-1200
ENTERTEL
E. O.E. m/1/h
ON THE GO.
NIKE
If you like to add variety to your workout schedule, add the NIKE Cross Trainer to your equipment. Supple leather, multi-pattern rubber outsole and Workout Last give you the comfort and support you need. Running, court sports, aerobics - Cross Trainers take it all in stride.
NIKE
825 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence 843-3470
!
ARENSBERG'S SHOES
Quality Footwear for the whole family since 1958
Open Sunday 1-5
RESUMES
Kingston KP Printing
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds)
841-6320
Also:
For an,
A+
Let us print your term paper
Kingston KP Printing
804 W 24 St (Behind McDonalds)
841-6320
A+
$30,000 / year ?
Do you want
It begins with a quality resume
$17.00/page Ready in 2 days
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Quality Paper & Envelopes
- Easy Changes & Reprints
- Variety of Typestyles N Helvetica Narrow Times Helvetica
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Monaco
arde
Only 5 days left to submit nominations for Women's Recognition. Stop by 218 Strong.
Preparing for Exams Study Skills Workshop (Time Management, Reviewing, Testing Strategies). Wednesday, March 23, 7 p.m. @ 408. Wesco. Freec. Student Assistant Center, 121
These are only a few of our available typestyles:
Avant Gal
Palatino
Zapf Chancery
$ \Sigma\psi\mu\beta o\lambda $
We can even print these from your IBM® or Macintosh® Disk
Classified Ads
New Century Schoolbook
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOPS. Wednesday, March 30, April 6 & 13. 7 p.m. Material (issue #1, $5 Register at the Student Center, 121 Strong. Assistance Center, 121 Strong.
Kansan Classified (913) 864-4358
Research Paper Workshop. Examine topic selection, taking notes, organization, writing style. Tuesday, March 29, 7 p.m. @ 4034 Wesley Free. Student Assistance Center, 121强. 864-6544 "the right to shelter, the place we call home, is one of the most highly valued property in the world" — booklet
Lia Gowdy, spokesperson, Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DISCRIMINATION and SEXUAL ORIENTATION Wed. April 6, 8 o'p at the Lawrence Public Library sponsored by Lawrence Trends Association
Vemeni, "Land of the Queen of Sabae," rilies and presentation by Sumaya Raja 794 of the exhibition
Park Inn
INTERNATIONAL
Pulliam's Music House
THEATER
Sound Accessories • Amps • Guitars
Keyboards • Accessories
2601 Iowa 843-3008
Hillel
לְפּוֹן
Events of the Week
Friday, March 25
Friday, March 23
Alumni Shabbat Dinner
6:00 p.m.
Hillel House
RSVP by
Wednesday, March 23
For Reservations/More Info:
Call Hillel, 749-4242
WOMEN'S
FILM
FESTIVAL
Under This Sky
THE STORIES OF ELIZABETH CASTAN
AND SUSAN B. ANTOVICH AT THE HOME
BURGESSA WAS A TEMPLE OF SUFFERING
SURGERY WAS IN THE STATE
One Fine Day
One First Day
MAYET'S WEEKEND STORING STARRING FILM A IN A GLOBOBACK BIM MEMOISES THAT I WAS WRITTEN FOR AND HOSPITALIZE TO YOUR HEART.
JAME FINAL STATE A MODEL IN
THE 1910S EDITION OF THIS
CERTIFICATE
PERFORMANCE PLATES AT NATIONAL
CLASSIFIED PLATES AT NATIONAL
FILM COMPETITION
FILM COMPETITION HOLDS PLATES
TO AN AWARD WITHIN
A MODELING PLASTER CENTER.
film
Breaking Out of the Doll's House
Tuesday, March 29, 1988
7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Juukkun Room, Kansas Union
Tayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Appeared by the Emory Sigma Delta Kappa Center
218 Wing Hall. All in association.
Individual肋软骨 at 64-352-123
Use our software demonstration packages at no cost and see how they can improve your business. Some of the packages
- video store management
- accounting
- restuarant management
- real estate
- and many more!
Demonstration packages are free of charge with no obligation to buy if returned within 14 days.
Call Lawrence Software today at 749-5196 or drop by at 711 West 23rd St. #18
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
Music and Lighting for any Occasion.
841-1405
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot spots Maximum Party Thrust. 841-7083.
Attn. fun seekers - Keep spring break alive and show you on your tour at the Police Academy 5 (Assignment Miami beach) party at Gammon 8; Wed, March 21. Show up dressed for taming contest. Give students a dressed tourist contest. prize and a great time.
SET INTO THE MOVIE Mobile Metropolis
MUSIC******* MUSIC******* MUSIC
Red House Audio - D.J. Servien, 8-track track
p.S.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry. Call
Brad 749-1275
FOR RENT
Available immediately - Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities. Call 841-1207.
FANTASTIC ROOM available immediately.
Hardwood floors, lots of windows and light in house close to campus and downtown. $145 mo +
u. utilities. Call 841-747-747.
Female grad, student seeking roommate to share
birthday, summer. *Bath/Fall* $196/月末*
electricity. *Call Melody* 864-417 daytime,
842-0631 evening, weekends
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-3-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you. Call 841-1212, 841-5255, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, celli-
ans, free utilities, phone, internet.
Room A: 815-349-2000; 815-349-6381; 815-349-7570
For Rent: 3 br., 1½ bathroom duplex / waisted
carport, carpark. Dishwasher, CDA, disposal
unit.
Furnished private rooms now & summer, room-
house on 1443 Kentucky share kitchens &
bathrooms. $120 + deposit. 749-1439 Leave
messages.
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester. 88 I smoke. call Sarah evenings
New remodeled one bedroom near campus
May 16. $300 month. May rent payable
48-2063
KOINIFONIA COMMUNITY has a few spaces in the Christian Living Center for summer '88 and/or academic year 88-89. Apply immediately at ECM Center, 1244 Oread.
Non-smoking Female Roommate wanted. 2 BD, we are starting in May. Furniture is welcome, I will also consider moving. 749-5673 after 5:00.
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 WEST 24th
841-5797
One bedroom duplex within walking distance of
the nearest amenities; utilities $75 a month.
Available now. 844-679-6700
One or two bedroom, apts. low utilities, gas,
water, electricity 4-3-10
Avalon Apts. 6 & Avalon 789-2922
Sign a lease with us before April 15th and SAVE $$$
- & 2 bedroom units
• laundry facilities
• on bus route - near
shopping
water paid
parking on street
parking
* rental furniture avail.
by Thompson-Crawley
Suburban a house on my 3 m² 2½ bath - on the golf course - covered parking - w/pool & clubhouse Townhouse for the summer, and if you like, stay next year! 155 m² + utilities + $3 deposit
Summer Sublease *Surprise Village* Spaciosi
three rooms 282 bath, wash/ dryer/pool, ten
beds. 150 sq ft. $349.00
Summer Sublease. Nice BBR, 214, 1 block from campus. Call Nancy or Jill. 841-6078
Summer Sublet New apartment cheap rent,
microwave, super nice call C姬 749-3082
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt at West Hills.
Close to campus locations. Available
Call 749-3090. Call 749-3090.
Three bedroom townhouse avail. April, Carpert,
Sunday, for 2 students. 843-733-3333
booking. room for 3 students. 843-733-3333
Two bedroom Sunrise Place. $75, cable paid, bid route, next to pool. Summer w/opertion. $80.
school year. 841-3664
WANTED: 2 male roommates. Summer
to renew. Wash/Dryer,
$190.00 at + ½ utilities. Call Tony at
745-397 month 3 p.m.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills & trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus & area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious & comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
Reserve Your Unit Now...For Summer or Fall!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 23, 1988
15
Reserve your room for summer or fall at Sunflower House, an experience in cooperative living. Call 749-6871 and ask for the center.
Room for rent in clean O.W.L apt. lpr, entrance and bath. $175 inc.util Female vegetarian preferred. 841-8335. Clean Inside.
Roommate Needed to share 2BD House. Close to Campus 175 miles. Available New/Summit
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts. furn. or unfurn.
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
Great Location near campus
Roommate needed NOW. own bedroom at Berkley Flats. Cheap rent. 749-812-943 or 843-8495.
SUMMER SUBLET. Affordable, new one-bedroom fully furnished, near campus.
SUMMER SUBLET = 3 BR, 2 bathroom
townhouse, 3 blocks from campus. Low utilities.
AC, furnished. 163 person. Available May 1.
841-6671
Greentree
C·O·N·D·O·M·I·N·I·U·M·S
1726 Ohio
- 1 Bedroom
- Low utilities
- Washer and dryer in each unit
- Less than 3 years old
- Private parking
- Available J or August
- $350 per month
Call 842-2532
Sublease Summer, Luxurious 2 Br, 2 bath apt;
Fireplace wet, microwave, tennis court. For two or three people. Available May through July 31. May paid 75/mo + 0ui 841-846-0 after 3 pm.
Sublease, 2 bedroom/2 bath apartment, at Pepper Tree Park. $475 monthly for now or sum
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AEFORDABLE PRI
- 10 or 12 month contract
- Free basic cable
- Swimming pool
- Swimming pool
- Exercise Weightroom
- Energy efficient
- Laundry room
- Laundry room
* Fire place
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
--offered by
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1,2,3, & 4 Bedroom
Apartments and Townhouses
Garages
- Pools
Townhouse Garages
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 11-5
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
NAISMITH PLACE OUSDAHL & 25th CL.
Open the doors to an apartment with:
- Two Bedroom
- Furnished furnished
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Large lacuzzi
- Private balcony or porches
* Laundry Facilities
and much more!
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Oudahl
841-1815
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
Reserve your home for next semester!
Completely furnished studio, 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedroom apartments.. all close to KU or on bus route
go to:
CAMPUS PBCE * 841-1429
Hanover Place * 841-1212
14th & Massachusetts
Orchard Corners * 749-4226
15th St. Knoll
SUNDINCE * 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood * 749-2415
10th S. Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company 842-4455
FOR SALE
Stero 0.5 channel mixer 220, remote TV converter
Stero 1.0 frm/camette walkman 360, interested?
Stero 1.5
640K XT clone w 2 drives, Hercules, comm board
& amber monitor $650.814-2657
73 Crestine Home : 12. 2' 40. 8 hr. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 pm; or inquire 420 North St. #6, Lawrence.
73 Crestine Home: 12' 50" 2. BHR. Extra insulation throughout, new plug, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 p.m., or inquire 429 North St. 6, Lawrence.
ATTENTION ADVERTISING/JOURNALISM
for sale
Established and profitable. 843-1911
Coke machine: in good shape, holds fourteen feet
long and includes long greckets.
242-756 face massage.
comic books, Publicity, Penthouse, etc.
Comics c., 811 New Hamphire, Open Sat & Sun
Commodore Computer for sale C-441 1541
Drive Monitor. Excellent condition.
Computer software call (861) 237-0900.
For Sale. 1863 Liberty Mobile Home - 14 '70 3
bedrooms, 1½ bathrooms, Window bay, sidet
and tied down. Great condition $13,000 FIRM.
Gaslight Village I-16 or 749-5413.
For Sale - motobecan钱 $75.00 and 12 inch mon-
puter Computer monitor Zenth $0.00 Call
842-7088
For Sale, Stereo, complete system, CD ready,
must heat to 80 degrees, call O37-8403-400
or mail to B2-8009
LEAVING TOWN Qn Sq. Hib bed - 22, Hide-a
Bed-Couch, 75, Cushi/Dresser/17, Chair-o
tumor-125, endailses 18-each, barstools 20-
each, and also 2 color tv's. b4 = 2896 Scott.
Leave message
Maroon 70 Veza Scooter P200E — All metal, windshield, chrome low miles, run great! Only $1,999.
****MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE*
512 E. 799. 749-4961
on (OVLN) 56 miles | Centurion, 25 | Frames A
Rock-n-roll. Thousands of used and rare albums
AUTO SALES
QuantiT's FoS Market in 2013 had Highlights:
Students/Homemakers/Married: Beautiful,
spacious, mobile home. Quiet Area, Privacy.
Separate Exercise Room, Ample Storage, Resale Value, Many Exercises. 749-3333
188 min-wavs, Astro $9.523 Caravan $9.681.
Aerostat 4.948, 4.9x2 S180, Bronco 182
Bronco 4.948, 4.9x2 S180, Bronco 182
$12.18 Ranger S 12.18 Pulsar Trucks Chev-
cheyne C150 $1610. Dakota S $425. F 158
$38.35 Warrants, Bailments, Financing. You
options, option packages, colors, you want
$83-849
19.62 Nishan Stanza, Red S-5pd, 4-Dr, back-hatch;
a/c, am/fm. Clean. New. Must set.
19.63 Nishan Stanza, Red S-5pd, 4-Dr, back-hatch;
a/c, am/fm. Clean. New. Must set.
1976 Corvette. Auto, air, am-fm stereo, cassette,
ps. pb. New black lacquer and Tops. Cail
Tops.
1979 Cavalier, Auto air, pb, amf in stereo,
cassette, excellent condition. 34 800 miles /60
wattant. Call 842-8993 between 7:10 pm. Ask for
Punta
1952 Fiero SE, 6 Cyl. 4 Sp., Silver, Top of line,
35,000 miles; 7,000 miles; 81,435 km.
85 WV Golf, Silver, 4 door, air, low miles, 5 speed sun, rooftack, carpet, Michael, 749-0794
AUTO repair service on foreign cars at your home. Tune up only only $25. Ten years exp.
RED HOT Bargains! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
beds, and more. Area buyers. Guides.
(1) 687-600-4700
Bakery Sale - Cleaning Sat. 6 p.m. 1 am, Sun 6 p.m.
1 am. $4 an hour after training. 3 weeks paid
vacation after one year. Interview Tues. 5 p.m.
Thurs. 10 p.m. Your appointment. Apply
https://www.bakerysale.com/49-8238
LOST-FOUND
LOST: opal ring. Watson. First floor lindae '11.
Please call 862-819-1629. Reuse. Please call 862-819-1629. Reuse.
Found: 3/98. White cat on campus. 841 0732 to
identify!
HELP WANTED
ARLINES NOW HIRING Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $50k. Entry level positions.
*Call 895-247-6000 Ext A-9738
Loc. Purple glasses in Blake hall rm. 199, on
Motr. 9. I found, call 841-5637.
BE ON T V. Many needed for commercials.
Children to do, Casting仪 (1) 083-569-6007 Ext.
CAMP COUNSELOR wanted for private Michigan boys/b girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, watersports, gymnastics, summer camp programs, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $800 or more. Courses: 1765 Shepherd, 1765 Mildle, NID. 101. 60083. 312-444-244
Bakery Sale - Cleaning approximately 21 hours
after training. A 4 hour course was
after trained. 3 weeks paid vacation
year. Interviews Tues. 1 p.m. and Thurs. 10 a.m.
or by appointment. Apply Munchers Baker
College student to care for two boys June 1 through Mid-August in our home. Some activities schedule, mums, Salary negotiation, Some flexibility for a duration, Salary negotiation. Reference Calls. Ealloween 749-1870.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$23,250.yr Hiring. Your Area (895) 877-6000 k-7958 for
any position.
Graphic Design temporary unclassified position, March 30 - June 19, 2008. $150 / hour. 150 per month. Work for publications and work for design process and work with little supervision, with a publications team, or with publication qualifications. Requires a college visual communications curriculum or a related discipline or equivalent professional experience. Preferred: experience designing University Publications and working with printers; experience designing University Publications; deadline: March 25, 5 p.m., Carlett Letter, Office of University
working with printers; experience with Macintosh layout system. Application deadline: March 15th. Send resume to: Rachel Baird, Relations, University of Kansas, Kansas, Kansas, 6605, 934-841-615, EE/A, employer.
KLWN/KLRZD KAIRO is accepting applications for future full- or part-time announcer/operator positions. Prior radio announcing, production exe-
sions, and scheduling will be required in writing and production, producing an airshift, and familiarity with FCC Rules is required. Send airche-
ter and letter resume to Kibby P. Kirch, Office 365.
Kansas Union needs catcaterers - 3.45 per hour
Thursday, March 24 8 a.m.- 2:30 p.m.; Saturday,
March 26 9 p.m.- 9 p.m. Apply in person Kansas
Union Personnel Office.
**WANTED TRAVEL from Texas to Montana on a wheat harvesting crew.** Call 913-507-4649.
Heritage Managements provide full and partial nursing assistants. $4.20 an hour, apply at 1800 W. 27th.
LOOKING for your own business? Mintbogglig profit potential! Make money part-time now, this summer, forever, and anywhere. For exciting MLM skin care product opportunity, informa-
Mast Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokebase now hiring part-time table service employees. Must have a year experience and summer experience at Mast Street Deli or at 719 Mass above Buffalo Bob's Smokebase.
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Transportation required. Call 842-6284
Needed ASAP BASF baby in my mother Mol. 1086,
thursday, 2:00 to 5:00 for two-year-old boy
and girl.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks NOT accepting applications
for summer jobs. NO ADMITTING.
Recreation & application; write
national Collegiate Recreation. P.O. Box 867 8140
PROGRAM COORDINATING
The University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education is seeking 1-5, part-time (less than 50%), hourly program coordinators. The incumbent provides coordinated instruction in the area of site coordination of seminars. Positions based in Kansas City or Lawrence. Extended travel may be required to participate with suitable work experience from an accredited college or university in an appropriate discipline (education, business, journalism, etc.) and with a family or professional m.p. march. March 19, 2008. Starting date. April 18, 1988. For position description, contact Mary J. Crawford at kcrawford@ku.edu, resume and three references. The University of Kansas, Division of Continuing Education, Continuing Education Building, Lawrence, Ks
PROGRAM COORDINATORS
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications for summer programs in our information & application; write national Collegiate Recreation, P. O. Box 8074
Resorts Employment Newsletter - All occupations, Taboe, Hawaii, Calif., Arizona/Nebraska, Tennis, Hawaii, Vacation Resorts City. More! California, 62790, Lake Sabine, Calif.
98716 9181-645-7502
Taking applications for dishwasher. Flexible hours. Applicance Lawrence Club. 843-286-966.
Teachers aide for child care program needed 7:45 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 5 yr and 2 yr olds and two references required. Appliance Children's Learning Center, 315 Main Avenue, EOE.
SUMMER JOBS, possi- continue into Fall. Spring. Personal care attendants for disabled individuals. Must have $45 per hour. Must train before May 15. Must have reliable transportation, KU students prefer.
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Stability, dependability and responsibility, and resume to: PO Bain 125, Lawrence, KS 60044
PERSONAL
BUS. PERSONAL
B. C.: WANT KU sweatshirt 4 April Fools Day. 1 love you, Kimmy.
A. B.C.: "So far as I can remember, there is not one word in the Gospel in praise intelligence."
G.W.M. Let's see if we got anything in common with
T. Rex, Inc., Lawrence, N. 6009
T. Rex, Inc., Lawrence, N. 6009
Sheriff Morris: We have an ATTRACTIVE friendship. Look forward to the good times ahead. HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Shooby. Your personal invitation.
Schmoeknow. Thank you for coming into my life; I didn't realize how many mistakes were missing until I realized it was a mistake.
jennifer, Jennifer, Christie - great time in Palm Beach • Joey's, *Heartbreakers* - GUIOD • yuck! - lazy days - 824 - lawyers - sunsets - snake - gummy bears - Thanks, Lisa
Happy Birthday Maria, you're the best roommate you could ever ask for, love you, Maria.
Bloom City 3 t-shirts & books Role-playing, war games and miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese Comics and more!
Fort Wallon Beach Gang - 15 hour car ride', the Flashlight, the beach map, the brenda - Breed's "B'B" and the grouper, getting ready, Fuducker'sjoe, the chickens, Y'all, Scamp's, The Window, the Green Frog (Joaw wood) the Staghorn, the STAwards, the Stars, the boys from SMU - buoys. Cuban SHOWners, Spinning a beer, Mugging, the family truck, the theatre, Argubla, a great time. Thanks for the Argubla, a great time.
Shuggie, the lady doing the mastashews, had a great time. Thanks for the arguably a great time. Thanks for the
To Tokyo, Aunt B. The sleeper, Jerry & Ally HELLO LADIES! Are we all here? Circle the wagons! Dear Mrs. Smith, Point 'em & smile! Pal' Oal'm Ladies., — Congratulations on mastering the art of Downhill. You were all poetry in motion! Dave, B.R.C. P, Taco and his飞奔 Bell
HOLA SIG EPS-`Acapella was much great!`
Looking forward to more DOE equix, pics, and LAmbal `Adj Amigens. Love. G Ph Seniorites.
Jane, Jennifer. Christie - great time in Paim
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
2016
BEACH - Joey's - Heartbreakers - GUIO-
beach - Joey's - sunna - snama - snama -
gummy bears. Thanks, Lisa.
From Leo, jimbo, Jr. CoChy, Boy Dove,
B.R. C, T. Face, and his Flying Bell brother.
Hand Wristband.
March 23-March 29
(formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd
Lowenbrau 6-pack $3.24
Bud 12-pack $5.74
Bud Light 12-pack $5.74
Coors Light 12-pack $5.65
Old Style case $6.99
Old Mill case $7.36
Old Mill Light case $7.36
Meisterbrau case $5.99
Wiedemann case $5.79
Tri Dell Skip Buddies, Thanks for a great break and memories of: waking up at 9:00 am, taking Lizza's close, eating soggy sandwiches, dining with her husband at 10 and 2 stop, driving at 10 and 2 stop, using forsale chairs, candlelight in front of the fire, 2 run for a whole day, begging Liza to turn, Amy's ill D.I.G. green dress, being on the mountain as the she screamed the whole way down, her head over heals fail, mid-wait, the mountain as she screamed the pasta, 4 bites of dinner and three hours of laughing, Lisa's getting up at 7:00, Amy's party in the park, LillyLLL living it all. And most of all here is the Yankees and Sleepy Eyes." With "Love, White Yankees and Sleepy Eyes."
DISCOVER
THE FUTON
BLUE HERO
IMAGERIE
ACE
Your Connection to the REAL Business World! Get Involved!
Speaker: Sam Campell
Subject: Venture Capital
Date: March 24, 1988
Time: 7 p.m.
Place: Pioneer Room Level 3, Burge Union For more information, contact Bill Cardell at 843-3277
LAWYER
HARPER
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. No dues or fees. Overcash availability. Free phone service at Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine. For confidential information contact person. Write P.O Box 4042
Impatient passport, portfolios, resume, naturalizations 10 D. I. fine portraits. Swelli Studio. 749-161-10.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birhtrush at 843-8212. Confidential help? free pregnancy
testing
SUNFLOWER DRIVING school Get your
parent license without parental testing upon au-
sure
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography Head shots to composites and actors, dancers, etc.
749-0123
Try it you'll love it, become glamorous with a beautiful 'Boudot' floor lamp. The Mirrored Glow Mini-Pillow Posing Assistance, Creative Photography Makes to produce alarming results. 749-306. Mike
THINK SPRING!
Special $79.95
SERVICES OFFERED
Graphic Ideas, Inc. 9271/2 Massachusetts (Downtown)
For your motorcycle needs; tires, tubes, tune-ups, & accessories.
Autotut of Lawrence offering Professional ins
plained Auto window intt. Optional lifetime nati
nal warranty. Call Kaw Specialties 842-2866 6
East.7h
$83 Value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Free Spinal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor, 843-3097
Come to
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU, students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
For the Plus or SE. 100% UDP PontCord Nylon, water resistant. Lined with 1/2 inch hdensity foam for great protection. Navy Blue, Burgundy, Charcoal Gray
t edit term papers, theses, dissertations, applications and resumes. you can email. Very easy to use.
Reg. $89.95
Mac Pacs
Job-willing resumes, cover letters, 12 years experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. Ektra resume processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $60.00. Art & Design Builders.
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj Gyn & 'Abortion Services, Overland Park. (913) 451-6878
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M A, 88/hour, 843-9032
(p.m.)
Vice. Overland Park... (913) 491-6078
Vices and need help? Call Birthright at
843-8621. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Bob's Cycle Shop at our new location. 701 East 22nd Street off Haskell 843-8882
Graphic Design • Macintosh Tutoring
QUALITY TUTORING Statistics, Economics
Mathematics. All levels. Call Demand:
842-1065
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
V
TUTORING TUTORING $6.90/$hr. MATH STATISTICS and PHYSICS. B.S. Physics, M.A. Math. M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 413-304
Want to improve your French and have fun on the Biviera this summer? a week courses accommodation in one of our five resorts.
Quality Typing include accurate spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing, and vocabulary applications.
THINK SPRING! For your motorcycle needs, tubes, ture, tape, and accessories. Come to Bob's Cycle店 at our new location. 701 East 22nd Street - Off Haskell, 843-8822
TYPING
1.Reliable Typing Service. Term papers.
2.IRL Reliable Typing Service, typed IRM
Electronic Typewriter. P84-3246.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate
information typing and wordprocessing,
retrieval of bibliographic references
2-3,795 or 45,185 lines.
WORDSMITHIS We go beyond tying. Let professionals, papers, grandes. Rates fast. Carry Carolyn.
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scrishes into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-form type. 843-2632, days or evenings.
AAA TYPING Word processing, spellcheck
WWW After 5 p.m. T-F
any weekend hours, 842-1943
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in terminally ill patients and correcting selective, spelling corrected. 843-5054
Call R.J.'s training service for all of your typing needs. 814 9424 before 9 p.m. please.
THE FAR SIDE
needs. 841-5492 before 9 p.m. please.
DISCERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS.
Mommy's typing & Graphics. One day service
available. 842-3378, before 3 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Prodressing.
Term papers, thesas, dissertation letters,
resumes, applications mailing addresses. 842-7474
printing. CRAZEK, DEPENDABLE Letter
FAST. ACCURATE. DEPENDABLE. Letter.
TOP-NETTLE SERVICES 812-364-0500. spell check
2 roommates for downstairs apt. 165/month incl.
984,415 individuals
THE WORLD DOCTORS. Why pay for when typing when the world is not your domain, recenses, law review. Since 1965, 843-311.
For professional typing/word processing, call
Myra. 941-890. Spring special $20/pound double
discount.
Final four tickets call Shelly at 664-6491
WANTED
Kaw Valley Soccer Association is looking for Volunteer Soccer Coaches
RESUME SERVICES - professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letters, business cards, and typesetting and graphics for any job position in 24 languages. Send resume of Kirkhae $Call: 838-7587. If no answer leave message on machine.
TYPING PLUS, assistance with competition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254
RUSH tickets wanted - 2 lower level or balcony
ext. to stage. Call Steve B14-9000
Four final tickets call sleep@ 849-6491
Roommate wanted to share 2-bdrm apartment near KU Med Center. Next Fall. Non-smoker. 843-5458.
Pages Kindergarten through Jr.
HPER credit available
if interested call
Mary Loveland at
842-9333/842-7251
or
Tina Ulbrick at
841-7175
By GARY LARSON
MANURE
3-23
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
in ALL CARDS. BOLD FACE
- Policy
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Blind bid ads please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Prepaid Order Form No. 17
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
CLASSIFIED RATES
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 days | 15 days | 1 month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.85 | 4.20 | 6.00 | 10.00 | 14.95 | 18.90 |
| 16-20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
| 26-30 | 4.40 | 6.55 | 9.15 | 13.90 | 19.70 | 24.40 |
| 31-35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
Classifications
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted --
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 90
200 for rent 400 lost/found 710 bus personal $^9$
Address
Classified Mail Order Form
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins. Make checks payable to:
Total days in paper. University, Delaware
Amount paid. 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
16
Wednesday, March 23, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Shop Here For The Hot Ones!
Ralf Mans
Crispi
Potato Chips
Ralf Mans
Potato Chips
Ralf Mans
Brilla Chip
Traditional Chile
Ralf Mans
Roundi
Bonus Special
Buy One
Limit: Buy 2
At Regular Retail;
Get 2 Free
16 oz. Plain or Rippled
Dillon Potato Chips
At The Regular Retail $1.59
Get One Free
Free
Pillons
Hardwood
Charcoal
Briquets
WARNING:
HARMFUL IF EAGGED.
DO NOT USE IN KIDS OR WETNESS AREA.
NET WT. 14.25 LB (625 g)
-Bonus Special-
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10 Lb. Bag
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Limit: Buy 1 A1 The Regular Retail - 17.9 Get 1 Free
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Food Club
PORK & BEANS
WITH COARSTO DAIRY
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Limit: Buy 2
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At The Regular Retail 26c
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ICE FISH Chocolate Chip Ice Cream
strawberry swirl ice cream
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Gallent Vanilla, Chocolate, Neapolitan, Black Wawl,
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Limit Buy 1 At Regular Retail 19.9, Get 1 Free
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Grain Fed
Beef
图1-2 岩石表面风化特征
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Regular or Thick Cut
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Buy A 5 Lb. Bag Of Sunkist Navel Oranges And Get A
--Bonus Special--
"Dillon's Fresh"
Honey
Buns 3 Pk.---- 89¢
-Bonus Special-
Buttercrust
Wheat Bread
20 oz. Loaf
2/$1
5 Lb. Bag Of Sunkist Grapefruit
Hey Kids
Enter Dillons Easter
Coloring Contest!
Winners In 3
Different Age Groups
5 And Under, 6 To 8,
9 And Up
Entry Deadline: April 1
Pick Up Your Official Coloring
Sheet at Checkstands
or Cashier's Cage.
* All entries will be displayed.
* Entries will be judged.
Winners announced Mon. April 4, 1986
NUTRI88 GUIDE
Helping you shop for your health
Hey Kids Enter Dillons Easter Coloring Contest!
1234567890
Winners announced Mon. April 4, 1988.
Colo
FREE!
**Shopping Service for Special Duties**
Gregory shopping with you is a special duty, so it's not easy to do. You'll need to be proficient in English, accurately "actually" your shopping list and have some experience. "Accurately" your shopping list has been done.
It is a little more difficult to perform this job by itself. For the specific specialty categories, Cotton & Linen will require you to know how to select the appropriate dress, pattern, content, care, and wash instructions. Please use our help desk if you have trouble with this task.
Shop Healthy With Nutri Guide
5 Lb. Bag Of Sunkist Gr FREE!
Shopping Service for Special Diets
MEGA is made for the shopper who demands a quality product and is no stranger to the MEGA products company. Our MEGA products are designed to save you money, saving you can count on. These are not one time specials or gifts but you can buy them every day. see how MEGA produce from Dillons can save you money. we have the MEGA label and find the savings you've been looking for. we sell the MEGA products at Dillons. we show on the shelf.
MEGA
IS HERE!
Salad Bar
SALAD BAR HOURS
Salad Bar
March Is Taco
Salad Month
At Dillon's
Salad Bar!
DILLON COUPON—
25¢ OFF
Any Soup or Salad of your choice
From Our Salad Bar
Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Mar. 16-22, 1988
Coupon Included In Double Coupon Program.
DEAD
Video
Look For The New Shopper's Guide
Your guide to extra values on our shelves every week!
This week, and every week, you'll find your own hawk to store newspaper, magazines, cookbooks, books, games, toys, and more at the Manufacturer's Spares for you. These are temporary price reductions from the manufacturer. You'll also find a list of new items that are clearly identified on our shelves. Look for your copy of the new Shopper's Guide.
An exclusive publication for Dellons for its customers.
Look For The New Shoppers Guide
Video CBS FOX Now Available... "Living Daylights"
Now Available...
"Living Daylights"
There's a New James Bale, Timothy Dalton, As Agent 007, Picks His Way through A Maze of Death, Decill and Trechery. Armed With Q's Arsenal of Lifesaving Gadgets, Bond is On A Complex Mission That Will Thrill The Living Dailies Out Of You!
THELIVING
DAYLIGHTS
Could your child be
disabled by Autism?
For more
information
contact:
Autism
Society
of Kansas
(310) 262-0226.
Let the Good Times Roll
at Dillons Photo Center
Dilions guarantees a minimum of 10% Discount on all new movie purchases.
Let the Good Times Roll
at Dillons Photo Center
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12 STANDARD ONE
$2.39
15 STANDARD ONE
$2.99
24 STANDARD ONE
$4.29
36 STANDARD ONE
$6.19
Good on 1 set of standard size prints from 30mm, One, 118 or 128
color print film (c. 41 grease proof jets)
ON TIME OR
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Trust Your Good Times To Us.
Prices Effective Mar.23-29. 1988 Limit Rights Reserved.
12 WEEKS
$239
15 WEEKS
$299
24 WEEKS
$429
36 WEEKS
$619
Good on 1st test at standard appraisal base fee. On Oct. 1-10 or 12-18
dates must be paid before the price applies.
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L
Kansas Lottery
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Dillon's
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1-800-362-2183
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Thursday March 24,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.119 (USPS 650-640)
Inspectors cite fire safety violations
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
State fire marshal's inspectors found that at least 25 campus buildings were in violation of the state fire code last December, but it will be years before all the violations are corrected.
Kansas adopted the National Fire Prevention Association's life safety code 15 years ago, Markley said. All buildings that have been built since 1973 must meet standards set by that code.
"They have a reasonable length of time to bring things into compliance," said Paul Markley, chief of the fire prevention division of the state fire marshal's department. "The question is what a reasonable length of time is."
by the code.
The problem with KU buildings is that many were built before 1973. Of 25 buildings in violation of codes, two, the Spencer Museum of Art and Wescoe Hall, were built after the life safety code took effect. Another five have had additions or renovations since then.
According to Kansas statute, the state fire marshal can grant a variance from the requirements of the code if an investigation shows that non-compliance doesn't pose a life safety hazard.
But Markley said, "You could always go back and say every violation of the code is life threatening."
Violations
A complete list of campus buildings and the safety-code violations that inspectors found is not included. But according to records from the fire marshal's December inspection, 10 buildings on campus do not have required fire detection and alarm systems, not including residence halls. Among those buildings are Allen Field House, Snow Hall, Jolliffe Hall, Baehr Audio-Reader Center, and Sudler House and annex, the building that houses radio station KJHK.
Markley said that fire doors, which don't meet the codes in eight buildings, also concerned him. Inspectors found deficiencies in Learned and Stauffer-Flint halls, Sudler House and annex, Baehr Audio-Reader Center, the Facilities Operations main building, Allen Field House and two apartment of human development buildings at 14th and Louisiana streets.
Twelve buildings that reportedly lack required emergency lighting are Allen Field House, Snow Hall, Spooner Hall, Hoch Auditorium, Learned Hall, Mallott Hall, Robinson
Center, Spencer Museum of Art, Spencer Research Library, Wescoe Hall, Foley Hall and Blake Hall.
Markley said that he expected most of the violations found during the December inspection to be corrected by the time of the next inspection, which will be later this year.
Funds scarce
money for improvements and repairs is allocated to the University by the Board of Regents based on a list of needs submitted by University officials. But according to Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, there is little hope that enough money will be allocated to bring all buildings up to code.
Facilities Operations workers have begun implementing some of the improvements and repairs suggested by the state fire marshal's office, said James Modig, campus director of facilities planning, but most must wait until funds are available.
"We are facing the problem that we have very little money on this campus for those kinds of projects." Ramaley said.
A cost estimate for all the repairs will be ready late next week. Modig said.
University officials are beginni to make a list of all repairs that need to be made. After
the list is complete, it will be submitted to the Regents.
Funds from that process will be available after July 1. But Modig said that Regents money was usually scarcity for repairs, let alone upgrading to meet the fire codes.
"I'm not sure the Regents money can cover the fire marshal's list alone." Modig said. He said that many other areas could become safety problems if neglected.
"A roof problem can become a structural problem and that's a safety hazard too," he said.
Residence halls
Markley said that major improvements in pre-1973 buildings were being made under a variance, according to a schedule agreed to by University and state officials.
For example, the office of student housing began installing smoke detectors in residence halls during the summer of 1986. But now only Joseph R. Pearson, Gertrude Selards Pearson-Corbin, and Oliver halls have permanent smoke detectors.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing,
said that smoke detectors would be installed
in Lewis and Templin lalls this summer, at a cost of about $73,000 for each hall.
According to the schedule, alarm systems at Hashinger and Ellsworth halls will be installed during summer 1989 for about $40,000 each. McColm Hall will be upgraded during summer 1990, at a slightly higher cost.
Stoner said that alarm systems already installed install requirements, as will the tool kit.
"That's why they granted us more time." Stoner said.
Markley said the fire marshal's office considered both the quality and the amount of money spent on improvements in working out an acceptable timetable.
Lawrence fire chief Jim McSwain said that a standpipe system was installed in the residence halls during summer 1986 at the request of his department. A standpipe is a permanent system that provides firefighters with water on all levels of a building, eliminating the need for hoses to reach throughout the building.
Med students' futures revealed at match day
But Markley said water distribution to many campus buildings was marginal at best. Major improvements to KU's water system have not been made since 1965, according to a 1966 study that showed that the capacity of the existing system may be inadequate to provide the required fire flows to many areas of campus.
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
KANSAS CITY. Kan - Nervous laughter filled Reike Auditorium at the University of Kansas Medical Center yesterday as 116 medical students awaited their destinies.
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
The fourth-year medical students were participating in a nerve-racking yearly ritual called "match day." They gathered to receive envelopes revealing the hospital at which they will serve their residencies for the next three to five years.
Peter McLeary, from Omaha, Neb., said before envelopes were drawn from a box, "I've been wondering for three months solid where I'm going to be for the next three years. I just want to get it off my mind.
To say the least, some of the students were a little nervous as the list of names was read.
Match day is the end of a lengthy process in which the students decide where they want to do their residencies. They submitted their top choices in February, and a computer in Evanston, Ill., matched them and about 20,000 other medical students across the nation with available resident jobs. The computer tries to grant the highest choice possible to the student.
"Sick to my stomach is probably a good description," said an ecstatic Anne Schloesser, from Topeka, who received her first choice and was glad the wait finally was over.
Claude Warner, from Salt Lake City, said, "There is certainly a lot
Fourth-year medical students gathered to receive envelopes revealing the hospital at which they will serve their residencies for the next three to five years.
JANUARY 27, 1980
Jerilee Lehman waits anxiously to find out where her husband, Karl, Portland, Ore., fourth-year medical student, will be assigned to for his residency. The couple were happy to find out they would be going to Oregon, which was his first choice.
of stress to it. My wife is probably going nuts."
The process moves quickly, with some students ripping open their envelopes and screaming. Others stare at their envelope for a while before getting up enough nerve to see what's inside.
Before the drawing begins,
every student pays $1 to a pool.
The last person called, the one who
has to endure the wait while every
one else finds out their assignments,
wins the pot.
Some weren't sure whether the stress of the wait would be worth winning the cash.
The end of the ceremony provided a twist to the tension-filled day.
"It would be nice to have the money, but I don't want to wait that long," said Cindy Spiller, from Kansas City, Kan.
But Andy Tsen, from Manhattan, said he would not mind the wait if he was last and won the cash, even if it was only a little more than $100.
"We're money-hungry doctors," he said.
While Tsen, his name apparently the last to be called, walked up to receive his envelope and the
money, Tim Peters, from Mount Angel, Ore., sat in the crowd knowing something was wrong.
"I was panicking," he said. "I thought, 'Wait a second, I didn't get called.'"
But a closer examination of the box revealed that Peters' envelope had stuck in a crack inside the box, making him the last recipient.
An obviously relieved Peters, the missing envelope in hand, wasn't too worried about the technicality of who the money actually belonged to.
Laura Zeiger, coordinator of student affairs in the School of Medicine, said the students were relieved because the day was the culmination of their years in school.
"I'm going to split it with Andy," he said. "It's only fair because he had his own set on it."
"Most of the students are finished with medical school, or they will be by the end of next month," she said. "Now is just a time for relaxing, and they will start their residency position on July first."
AIDS decision left to students
Delay for referendum result could leave KU out of study
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
After more than three hours of debate, Student Senate voted last night to let the student body decide if the University of Kansas should participate in a nationwide study to determine the percentage of college students who test positive for AIDS.
The study is being conducted by the American College Health Association and the Centers for Disease Control.
The ACHA gave KU until April 1 to enter the study, but if it still needs universities to participate by April 12 the matter would be decided by referendum during next month's Senate elections.
Senate elections.
Jason Krakow, student body president, said the debate was one of the best Senate ever had.
Arakow said that he thought Watkins Hospital officials would be pleased that, if necessary, the issue would be decided by the student body.
"Watkins was concerned that Senate did not come to a clear decision on this, and I think they will appreciate what we did," Krakow said.
At first, Senate voted 22-20 that KU should enter the study and disregard the recommendations against the proposal by Senate's AIDS Task Force.
But after a brief recess, Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, motioned that the resolution be put to
a referendum. Templin said he felt that because the Senate was not clear-cut on the decision, the student body should decide.
"All this would take is another sheet of paper at the election," he said.
The study calls for the 20 participating universities each to send 1,000 blood samples by January to the CDC in Atlanta for analysis. Blood samples would be chosen randomly from students who had blood tests at student health centers. Only demographic information, including race, sex and age would be linked to the samples. To further assure the anonymity of the samples, every 10th one would be discarded. At KU, a student would have less than a 10 percent chance of having a part of his blood sample sent in for AIDS testing.
In about nine months, the study's results would be released in regional and national percentages only. Watkins would receive $5,000 for participating in the study. Charles Yockey, the hospital's chief of staff, said the money would cover the costs of drawing and shipping blood samples.
After the resolution passed narrowly, Yockey said it was exactly what the hospital had not wanted to happen, because it did not want any bad public coming from the issue
What we wanted was an over
KU to start bidding process in April for building of development center
See SENATE, p. 6, col. 1
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
The center, a 270,000-square-foot building, designed in a stair-step configuration by the Topeka architectural firm Kiene and Bradley, has long been in the planning. And it should be ready for business by the fall semester of 1990, a facilities planning official said.
A model of a four-story Human Development Center sits inside the east doors of Haworth Hall, where within two years a walkway may link Haworth to the new $12 million building.
A $9 million federal grant was allotted for the building in fall 1984, but $3 million in matching funds had to be raised before definite plans were made.
Alen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said bidding for construction on the center would begin in late April.
Ed Meyen, building committee chairman and dean of education, said that a variety of sources, including alumni and friends of the University, made the contributions needed to match the federal grant.
HDFL, other departments plan move into new building
Sidney Roedel, administrative assistant for human development, said the center would house the departments of human development and family life, special education, and speech-language-hearing: sciences and disorders, as well as the Bureau of Child Research and the Gerontology Center. The radio-television program also will be housed in the center but will not be paid for by federal funds.
The center will include a comprehensive research and training facility for the handicapped, along with research suites, clinics, lecture halls and seminar classrooms.
Meyen said a private source provided money for the radio-television
Most HDFL offices are now in Haworth, although some departments, such as the Bureau of Child Research and the department of special education, are scattered
"When everything is said and done, we will have about the same amount of space that we do now," Roedel said. "But it will be nice to have a new building where all of the departments can be grouped together."
throughout main campus and West Campus.
James Sherman, chairman of human development, said it was inefficient for faculty to run back and forth between an office in Haworth and a separate research area.
"What the new building will do is bring everything back home," he said.
The center also will include the Institute for Lifespan Studies, which is a reorganization of existing units with an emphasis on the process of human development throughout the lifespan, Sherman said.
"In the past 20 to 25 years the emphasis has been on child development," he said. "There hasn't been
as much emphasis beyond adolescence. The institute will provide a focus for increased efforts in studying development beyond childhood."
The east wing of the first floor of Haworth Hall will continue to house the infant and preschool laboratories. Roedel said.
Biological sciences will move to the area in the center of Haworth that HDFL offices and classrooms now occupy.
"The plans have not been finalized," he said. "There is no funding vet for the project."
"The construction drawing should be finished between now and June, and we will start taking bids for construction in July," he said.
Computer Center
Wiechert also said the multi-level parking garage, recently approved by the Board of Regents, definitely would be built directly north of Allen Field House.
If plans become final, the building will be on the south side of campus between Robinson Center and the Computer Center.
The Associated Press
Nicaragua, contras agree to cease-fire
SAPOA, Nicaragua — The leftist Sandinista government and U.S. supported contra rebels signed an agreement yesterday for a 60-day cease-fire to start April 1, both sides announced in a joint communique.
It was the first concrete step toward ending a six-year-old war that has killed more than 40,000 people.
"I think, I hope and I believe that we have made a start, a firm start to end this war that is killing
... sons of the same country, sons of the same mothers," said contra leader Adonn Calero.
President Daniel Ortega arrived at the meeting site for the announcement.
Both sides scheduled a meeting in Managua, the capital, for April 6 to start negotiations on a definitive truce.
The contras agreed to accept
Within the first 15 days of the 60-day truce, the rebels agreed to move into specified zones in Nicaragua. Delegations from both sides scheduled a meeting in Sapo on Monday to work out those zones
only humanitarian aid from a neutral organization, meaning the United States could not provide military assistance.
Joao Baena Soares, secretary-general of the OAS, read the details of the agreement after Cardinal Miguel Obando y bavo, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Managua, offered a brief prayer asking that Nicaragua be blessed for "all it has suffered."
In the agreement, the Sandinistas agreed to release 100 contra prisoners on Sunday. The rest of the 1,500狱禁狼 would be released at a date to be worked out at the April 6 meeting.
The 1,800 former National Guardsmen in prison will be released after a final truce agreement is reached.
The government also said it would guarantee freedom of expression without restrictions, in accordance with a peace plan signed last August by five president of Central America.
The Nicaraguan government said it would grant gradual amnesty and allow all political exiles to return to the country without fear of persecution.
2
Thursday, March 24, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
REGIONAL
North Platte
52/130
Partly cloudy
Omah Lake
56/138
Mostly cloudy
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
Goodland
53/132
Partly cloudy
Hays
57/136
Mostly cloudy
Saline
60/138
Thunderstorms
Topeka
83/143
Thunderstorms
Kansas City
65/143
Thunderstorms
Columbia
70/146
Showers
St. Louis
71/146
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
65/134
Partly cloudy
Wichita
64/137
Thunderstorms
Chattah
70/139
Thunderstorms
Springfield
71/146
Showers
Forecast by Scott E. Derman
Temperatures are today's
high and tonight's low.
Tulsa
74/146
Thunderstorm
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Thunderstorms
Expect showers early in the day with a good chance of thunderstorms this afternoon. The high will reach the mid = 80s. Tonight expect clearing skies and a low of 40.
HIGH: 65°
LOW: 40°
REGIONAL
North Platte
51/30
Partly cloudy
Omaha
56/38
Mostly cloudy
Goodland
51/32
Partly cloudy
Hays
51/38
Mostly cloudy
Salina
60/38
Mostly cloudy
Topoka
63/40
Thunderstorms
Kansas City
64/40
Thunderstorms
Columbia
70/46
Showers
St. Louis
71/46
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
62/34
Partly cloudy
Wichita
60/38
Thunderstorms
Chanute
70/38
Thunderstorm
Springfield
71/46
Showers
Forecast by Scott E. Deryan
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
MON
Clearing
65 / 39
HIGH LOW
THU
Sunny
63 / 34
FRI
Sunny
69 / 43
SAT
Windy
72 / 46
SUN
Showers
62 / 40
MON
Clearing
65 / 39
HIGH LOW
THU
Sunny
63 / 34
FRI
Sunny
69 / 43
SAT
Windy
72 / 46
SUN
Showers
62 / 40
On Campus
Master classes in piano with Claude Frank are scheduled for 8:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. today in the Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
A computer security seminar offered by the KU police is scheduled for 10 a.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Call Mike Flair at 864-5572 for information.
A Brown Bag Lunch-Merienda with Mario Carvalaj and Rodolfo Mendez Mata, both of the Costa Rican Legislature, is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. today in Alcove A of the Kansas Union. They will speak about "Current Economics and Politics in Costa Rica."
As part of the geography department colloquium series, author Lyle Alan White will speak about "Adventures Off the Beaten Path: Words and Photography of the Backroads of the Central Plains" at 3:30 p.m. today in 317 Lindley Hall.
As part of the dance film series sponsored by the department of music and dance and the School of Fine Arts, "The Men Who Danced" will be shown at 4 p.m. today in 155 Robinson Center.
A Rice and Beans Dinner program panel discussion on humanitarian aid to Nicaragua is scheduled for 6 p.m.
today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
A Campus Crusade for Christ meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
A Fair Housing Seminar sponsored by the Legal Services for Students and the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in Gallery East of the Kansas Union.
A humanities lecture titled "Perceptions of American Culture: Ecological Concerns" with Wendell Berry, poet, literary critic, teacherscholar, ecologist and farmer, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
The Nehru Exhibition, featuring a pictorial biography of the first prime minister of India, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, will be shown from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday and 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday in Gallery East of the Kansas Union.
A James Gunn science fiction presentation featuring the pilot show of Gunn's television series, "The Immortal," and a presentation by Gunn about the field of science fiction is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in 300 Hall.
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Four hubcaps valued together at $400 were taken Tuesday from a car in the 1100 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported.
Police Reports
■ An alarm button valued at $20 was burned Tuesday in the north elevator of Fraser Hall, KU police reported
■ A sun screen valued at $160 was taken Tuesday from a student's car in the parking lot of Smith Hall, KU
Power tools valued at $425 were taken Feb. 24 from a business in the 1000 block of Pennsylvania Street, Lawrence police reported.
About $180 in cash was taken Tuesday from a business in the 2100 block of West 27th Street, Lawrence police reported.
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Local Briefs
The executive, Bob Wormington, will receive the Radio-TV Alumni Honor Citation at 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Introduction to Radio and Television class.
Wormington is general manager of KSHB-TV, an independent station in Kansas City, Mo., and is vice president of Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co.
JOURNALISM ALUM HONORED: A cable television executive will accept an award tomorrow from the School of Journalism for his contributions to the broadcast journalism department.
BUDIG IN KOREA: Cancellor Gene A. Budig is in Korea this week to meet with a newly formed alumni group.
"Alumni groups in other countries are a wonderful way to contribute to the KU network," Ruedlinger said.
beginning in Costa Rica.
ROYAL PRESTIGE MUST SUPPLEMENT ITS SUMMER WORK FORCE IN THE FOLLOWING CITIES:
group.
Jim Scally, assistant to the chancellor, said that Budig left earlier this week and that he would be back in the office Monday.
Rueding Juelderling, a member of the University of Kansas Alumni Association's membership development staff, said there were also alumni chapters in Hong Kong, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, the Philippines, Thailand, Japan, Malaysia, Venezuela and the Federal Republic of Germany. A new chapter is
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT $300 per week!
HOUSING HARASSMENT FORUM: Arvilla Vickers, a human relations specialist and manager of the Fair Housing Assistance Program, will speak at a forum on sexual harassment in housing at 7 p.m. today in Gallery East of the Kansas Union.
The alumi chapter was started this fall in Seoul and has 25 to 30 members. The group is headed by Jong-Woo Han, president and publisher of the Korea Herald, and Yung Kim, president of Jindo Industries in Korea16.
Specially the visit was an opportunity for Budu to meet with the alumni group and to raise funds for the project.
Atchison Hutchinson Overland Parc
Chanute Independence Paola
Colby Kansas City Parsons
Concordia Lawrence Pittsburg
Dodge City Leavenworth Pratt
Emporia Liberal St. Joseph
Ft. Scott Manhattan Salina
Garden City Marysville Topeka
Great Bend McPherson Wichita
Hays Olathe Winfield
For more information, come to:
Kansas Union
Gallery West — 11:00,12:30 or 2:00
Parlor C-6:30
TODAY!
9
KU Men's Soccer Tryouts will take place at 23rd and Iowa Tuesday, March 22 & Thursday, March 24 4:00-6:00 p.m.
SUA Forums Presents:
HITLERISM And The HOLOCAUST
Featuring:
Helen Waterford An Auschwitz Survivor And
Alfons Heck A Former Nazi Youth Leader
Woodruff Auditorium
Monday, March 28 8:00 p.m.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
FIFTY YEAR ANNIVERSARY
1938-1988
or
Macintosh Delivery!
It's time for you, the KU student, faculty or staff member, to pick up your key to success! You can pick up your computer on:
Thursday, March 31 12 p.m.-6 p.m.
Friday, April 1 9 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Where to park: West lot Where to pick up your computer: the Burge Union, level 3 There will be people there to help load your computer and answer any questions you may have.
Training sessions:
March 31:2 p.m.-4 p.m.
April 1:10 a.m.-12 p.m.
INFIN STAGE
WEST LOT,
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ANSCHUTZ PARKING LOT
ANSCHUTZ
Sports Pavilion
Allen Field House
Quigley Field
MAISSMITH DRIVE
DON'T FORGET YOUR FREE MACWRITE® PROGRAM!
KUBookstores
Burge Union
Macintosh ™
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 24, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Steve Stone, Louisville, Ky. senior, hands out helium balloons to students on Wescoe Beach to release in protest of the Strategic Defense Initiative.
Balloons launched to protest 'Star Wars'defense proposal
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Their voices did not rise above the crowd, but their views did.
About 50 people sporadically released helium balloons at noon yesterday in front of Wescoe Hall in silent protest of the Reagan administration's Strategic Defense Initiative.
T
Steve Stone, Louisville, Ky., senior, planned the protest, which coincided with the fifth anniversary of President Reagan's announcement of the initiative, better known as SDI or the "Star Wars" program.
The initiative is a plan for a multilayered defense system based in space and on earth consisting of lasers and more conventional weapons capable of destroying missiles launched against the United States.
Stone passed balloons attached to bright green slips of paper to the
The protest coincided with the fifth anniversary of President Reagan's announcement of the Strategic Defense Initiative, better known as the "Star Wars" program.
crowd, which had gathered more to watch a group of Maranatha ministers than to protest the plan. Stone said the green papers represented money that the government had wasted on the plan.
"This is in protest of a plan that thousands of scientists have said is not going to work and will only cause an increased nuclear build-up," he said.
"Rather than building a wall around ourselves, we should talk to our enemies and build a respect for each other," Stone said.
Nuclear Times magazine that said SDI protests were planned for yesterday on more than 200 campuses across the country.
"Some of the other protesters were using balloons," Stone said. "Others were taking umbrellas and making it easy to symbolize the defense shield."
Stone said most of the students he gave balloons to were unaware of the protest but cooperated nonetheless.
Stone said he got the idea for the protest from an article he read in
protest but launched a balloon anyway.
"Only about four or five people came up to me and asked if this was the case."
Joe Hayes, St. Louis senior, said he did not come on campus for the
"I'm not in favor of it, so I'll protest," Hayes said. "It's a pretty ridiculous plan."
Scott Berk, Leawood freshman,
joined the crowd while walking from
class and released a balloon after
talking briefly with Stone.
"he handed it to me, so what can I do?" Berk said.
"I think I reminded people of SDI, so that maybe the next time they read in the paper about the government pumping money into the system they will be motivated to do something about it," he said.
Stone said that although he wished his protest had not been overshadowed by the religious speakers, he was pleased with its outcome.
Oread rezoning debated at second public meeting
By Christine Martin
Lawrence property owners continued debate last night at the second public hearing on a downzoning request that would limit apartment construction in the Oread neighborhood.
At least 35 Lawrence residents attended the meeting.
The request calls for rezoning 119
streets and 360 buildings in Louisiana streets and the 900 and 1000
Kansan staff writer
blocks of Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee streets...
The area would be rezoned from high-density duplex, multi-family residential and residential office zones to the lowest-density multi-family zoning.
The Oread Neighborhood Association requested the downzoning in order to maintain the character of the neighborhood. The association consists mostly of large, older homes.
Mary Lynch, who owns property on
Tennessee Street and rents to students, said the downzingon would push students out of the neighborhood.
"These students are important to us," Lynch said. "I don't think Lawrence would be as nice a place to live without the students."
Bill Gadberry, co-owner of a duplex on Mississippi Street, said he did not want restrictions placed on his property. He said the downzoning would devalue his property.
"They're trying to improve their property at the expense of investors." Gadberry said.
But Fred Sack, president of the Oread Neighborhood Association and an owner of property on Ohio Street, said that although downonzing would decrease the value of land, it would increase the value of homes.
"It would have a positive effect on saving older houses." Sack said.
Richard Zinn, a Lawrence attorney representing two property owners,
said that the character of the neighborhood was improving without the downzoning because more families were moving into the neighborhood.
Todd Thompson, another attorney representing a property owner, Pamela R.
"There is no compelling reason to downzone," Thompson said. "This neighborhood is improving and rehabilitating."
would alleviate drainage problems, traffic congestion and a parking shortage in the Oread neighborhood.
But George Schmitendorf,
Lawrence resident, said downzoning
"Development in this area has already reached beyond the saturation point," Schmitendorf said. "Land use in this area is completely out of control."
Two Costa Rican legislators discuss politics,peace accord
The city staff recommended a compromise last month to the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission that would downzone property only at the owner's request.
Communism will remain in Central America, one predicts
By Dayana Yochim
Kansan staff writer
The Central American Peace Accord is a steppingstone that shows that a democracy can survive with a communist regime in the north, a Costa Rican legislator said yesterday.
"It's about time for Costa Rica to come to the conclusion that the only way to live with a communist regime in the north is to learn to respect our neighbors." Carvali said.
Mario Carvajal, leader assembly of the National Liberation Party, said that democracy in Central America has been the exception, not the rule. He said he did not anticipate a change in the next 15 to 25 years.
Carvajal and Rodolfo Mendez Mata, assembly leader of the Social Christian Unity Party, spoke to about 50 people yesterday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
"Nicaragua has had 50 years, one half century of noocracy," he said. "Even if there was a miracle, I think that the forces of communism would be a great obstacle for them to overcome."
The parties are the two largest political groups in Costa Rica. The
The Sandinista government in Nicaragua follows a Marxist philosophy and accepts military and economic policies to immunize nations such as the $U.S.$ $S.R.$ $S$.
National Liberation Party is in power.
Both legislators are graduates of the University of Kansas. Carvalaj earned a doctorate degree in political science in 1972. Mendez Mata earned a bachelor's degree in civil engineering in 1960.
Costa Rica, which has had a democratic government since 1946, was the birthplace of a peace accord signed in August by the presidents of Costa Rica. El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua.
The accord was Costa Rican president Oscar Arias Sanchez's attempt to open up relations among those countries to establish democracy and economic development and to end hostilities in the region.
"I don't see any desire for the Nicaraguan government to change
"The Sandinistas were forced to go into negotiations with the contrasts not because they have commitments to change, but because they have economic problems," Mendez Mata said.
But the legislators said the accord and peace talks between the contras and Sandinistas were not going to change the situation in Nicaragua.
their regime," he said. "They say there can't be a political democracy if there is not an economic democracy."
Mendez Mata said Arias Sanchez needed to enforce the peace accord.
"He has the responsibility to make all other presidents in Central America comply with the signature," he said.
Mendez Mata said that his party supported Arias Sanchez's peace plan but that there was no willingness on behalf of the Sandinistas to comply with it.
Carvajal said he thought Nicaragua would stay a Marxist country regardless of the peace plan.
"The realistic role, if the peace plan is not accepted, is to accept the Nicaraguans as a neighbor," Carvajal said. "I think Costa Rica has to stay not involved in Nicaragua."
He said that U.S. aid to the contries would not change the situation in Nicaragua.
Carvajal and Mendez Mata also will speak today at a luncheon seminar at 11:30 a.m. in Alcove A of the Union. The talk will be in Spanish.
"I don't want to comment as to whether the proper reaction was to send troops or not," he said.
Mendez Mata said that the U.S. deployment of troops to Honduras was a response to provocation from the Sandinista government.
"The U.S. has always been too little too late," he said of contra aid. "I don't see a will in the United States to get the marines involved in Nicaragua."
M. K. BROWN
Costa Rican legislator Rodolfo Mendez Mata and his son, Rodolfo, a KU sophomore, talk to reporters.
Politics is in the family for KU student
Kansan staff writer
By Stacy Foster
Rodolfo Jose Mendez, San Jose, Costa Rica sophomore and son of a Costa Rican legislator, said he had aspirations of becoming involved in politics, but he did not want to be known simply as Rodolfo Mendez Mata's son.
The elder Mendez, who is the assembly leader of Costa Rica's Social Christian Unity Party, was on campus yesterday and today discussing the peace plan in Central America and the politics and economic situation in the country.
He graduated from the University of Kansas and interested his son in coming to the United States. The
elder Mendez said he was suprised by his son's interest in politics because the two of them had never discussed it.
The elder Mendez said he hoped he did not have too much influence on his work.
"I hope he doesn't feel pressure from what I do," he said. "I'll be satisfied if he follows values like the ones he has seen in his decision he makes is on his own."
The younger Mendez said he had made many decisions on his own while at KU. He said he had learned a lot about himself in the two years he had been here.
"These have been the hardest years, being so far from home," he
said. "I've had to develop a sense of responsibility really fast, but I'm glad I came. I'd do the same thing again."
The younger Mendez said that becoming a politician was not his primary goal.
"I don't want to go to work right after college," he said. "I'd like to go to graduate school and get a master's degree in economics. Eventually I would like to get into politics but not right away."
The younger Mendez said he did not feel pressure from his family to succeed, but he put a lot of pressure on himself to do so.
"I don't want to become an example of what not to do," he said.
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6
Thursday, March 24, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Opinion
Senate missed opportunity to help stop spread of AIDS
What happened to the KU Student Senate, which only two months ago carried the campus banner for AIDS education?
Last night senators had the opportunity to do more than just disseminate information about AIDS. Senators had the opportunity to contribute to that information — and they turned it down, sort of.
The Senate debated for more than three hours a proposal to have KU participate in a nationwide study that would try to gain figures on the number of college students who test positive for AIDS. Twenty participating colleges each will send 1,000 blood samples by January 1989 to the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta.
In keeping with its nature, Senate vacillated between being against and being in favor of participating in the study. After finally voting 22-20 in favor of participating, Senate nullified that action by voting to have a student referendum on the issue during student elections.
The referendum is nothing more than a parliamentary stall tactic that could effectively eliminate the University of Kansas from being considered for the study. The CDC is in the process of choosing 20 colleges. By the time Senate has its referendum April 13 and 14, the colleges already may be chosen.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Hospital, has said that little information is available about students who test positive for AIDS.
By participating in the study, KU can help contribute to the fight against AIDS. Also, KU students and health officials would have better information about the incidence of AIDS in this region, allowing students and others to make more informed decisions about their sexual practices.
Although a referendum is appropriate in some circumstances, this is not one of them. The student body elected senators to make decisions and to represent student views, and that's what Senate should have done last night.
Even though Senate's approval is not needed for KU to participate in the study, Yockey brought the issue to the group. And Yockey has said that Senate should decide the issue.
It's too bad Senate, after making the right decision, made the wrong decision.
Senators help Regents plan
It was Christmas Day for the Regents universities, and the Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee was Santa Claus.
The Committee voted to give the Regents universities complete funding for the first year of the Margin of Excellence plan — a total of $15,274,679. The budget including this money will now go on to the full Senate.
Everyone is excited. The complete financing plan includes mission-related enhancement as well as increases in faculty salaries.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said KU now would be able to spend money on the libraries, new faculty positions, research and research equipment.
However, it is too early to start counting the dollars. The Senate needs to pass the budget as recommended by the Ways and Means committee. It then would go on to a conference committee of Senate and House members before returning to the full House.
These various bodies need to pass the Margin for the future of Kansas higher education. A step in the right direction has been taken.
Thank you, Senate Ways and Means Committee for that first big step.
lody Dickson for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
The editorial board consists of Alison Young, Todd Cohen, Alan Player, Jody Dickson, Katy Monk, Russell Gray and Van Jenerette.
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 Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
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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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JIMBORGMAN
CINCINNATI
ENGUIRDEROBB
MASTERS &
JOHNSON
"HEY, WHATTAYOU CRAZY?! YOU CAN SPREAD AIDS WITH THESE THINGS!"
Ah, for a merry chase
I could hear the hounds in the background as I pulled on my custom-made calfskin boots for the last fox hunt of the season. As usual, I was running late, so I was dressing in the ladies' room of 'the' stable. The chilly morning air kept me moving at a fast clip, and I fumbled the first try of trying my stock tie.
"Right over left and under; left over right and under." I muttered.
"Pardon?" said the trim, elegant lady standing next to me. In moments like this, when speed counts, fox hunters aren't fussy about sharing a makeshift dressing room.
"Uh, nothing." I replied, while trying to fasten my stock pin without performing an impromptu tracheotomy. "Nothing, ma'am," I couldn't help adding. Sensitivity is everything in a hunt, and she had the edge on me in that respect.
After the stock tie, Lottom the canary vest and then the black wool coat with the green collar, which shows that I am a member of the Fort Leavenworth Hunt Club. I buttoned the brass buttons that were engraved with the initials of the club.
Not everybody who hunts with a club has the collar and buttons and, in the men's case, the scarlet coat. You have to earn those by being a dedicated member for a year or so.
But such things were far from my mind at the moment. I had just discovered to my dismay that I had forgotten to bring a hairnet. Horrors! A sloppy appearance, especially at closing hunt, is, in theory, enough to disgrace a hunting lady for years.
In practice, I'd bet that it would take a lot more than straggly hair to cause a scandal in our hunt club. Our scandals are more likely to go like this: Mr. A divorces Mrs. A to marry Mrs. B, and Mrs. B's husband departes for Ms. C. Such scandals only last a year or so, though; and in due time, everybody hunts more or less happily alongside, for example, dear ex-hubby's new pregnant wife. In light of this, I decided. I wouldn't worry about the hairst.
In a few minutes, I was astride my well-groomed horse and riding up to the 100 or so hunters who, at this moment, were observing the blessing of the hounds by a minister.
The minister finished blessing the hounds. I imagine he was bestowing an additional private blessing on them, because this year they had decided not to amount his robes. Last year, in deference to his status as a man of the cloth, we had restrained ourselves admirably when Arthur, one of the hounds, used the good minister's leg in lieu of a tree during the blessing. The minister, a good-natured and endlessly patient soul, had merely shaken his leg discreetly and gone on blessing the thankless creatures.
I couldn't hear the minister, who was undoubtedly calling upon St. Hubert, patron saint of fox hunts, for a merry chase, so I took the opportunity to check out the other fox hunters. Most of them I recognized; a few were new.
The huntsman blew his horn, the hounds gathered around him and we moved off as the last hunt of the season got under way.
There is a strict order followed in fox hunts concerning who gets to ride at front, back and in between. Traditionally, gentlemen with scarlet coats ride at front and are required to
Katy Monk Staff Columnist
stay behind only the field master, who is one of the masters of the fox hunt.
Behind those gentlemen ride ladies with the hunt colors on their collars, then men in black coats, followed by ladies with plain collars and finally, children.
So off we went, riding dazzling clean horses, our boots blacked and polished, our coats fresh from the dry cleaners. In pictures, it's always an impressive sight: the horses, the hounds and the scarlet and black coats on the well-turned out riders look marvelous against the background of newly budding woods and fields.
I always imagine the scene the way I think a non-fox hunter would picture it:
"Cornelia!" he cries, and kisses her on her blushing cheek. (Another real trick: synchronizing two galloping horses so the kiss intended for Cornelia's blushing cheek doesn't end up planted in her ear.)
The dashing gentleman on the fiery bay steed gallops up to the huntsman's daughter, a willow beauty who sits on a horse with the grace of an equistrian goddess. The gentleman, whose name is properly gallant, something like Bentley von Carnegie-Marsh, whips off his hunt cap and executes a deep bob, which is quite a trick from the back of a horse.
It's a good time all around. The horses really seem to enjoy getting out and galloping around in the crisismorning air.
The hounds have a ball in their own happy-go-lucky way, tongues lolling out of their endlessly smiling mouths.
And the foxes?
"Darling, you look lovely," he says. "Don't tell my wife, but I simply can't imagine anyone sitting a horse as charmingly as you. And what a lovely day for a merry chase, what? The hounds have their blood up for friend Reynard, the wily rascal. But tally ho! The fox!" And off he rides.
We really don't take ourselves too seriously. We're just a group of horse folks having a good time by enjoying a day in the country with our friends and our horses. And maybe, if we're lucky, we'll see a fox.
And the foxes.
I saw a fox once while we were hunting. He was loping along easily about a quarter mile ahead of the horse, who were baying up a storm and running full speed ahead. The fox seemed to know he was outdistancing them; and once or twice, he looked around and slowed to a trot, almost as if he knew he was giving us the excitement of the season and wanted to let us enjoy it. That fox didn't look too worried.
In reality, the only thing that rings true in this little scene is the compliment preceded by "Don't tell my wife."
I think he knew he was sarc.
Katy Monk is an Atchison junior majoring in journalism and a member of the Kansan editorial board.
PLAIN BANANAS by Tim Solinger
I'M NOT THE NIRA
©1988 Barlingwood
A lone voice in Florida
A lone voice in Florida
PI AIN BANANAS 5y Tim Solinger
© 1928 Selangor
Superconductivity scientists having power lunch
Letters to the editor should be 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, the writer's class and hometown or faculty or staff position will be included.
Guest columns should be less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
K·A·N·S·A·N
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The Kansan reserves the right to edit submissions for accuracy, libel and space. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. Not every letter or guest column must be printed.
Letters, guest columns and columns are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorialists are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
BLOOM COUNTY
by Berke Breathed
WHADDYA THE ALIENS
MEAN THEY TRANS-REVERSED
GAVE STEVE HIS BRAIN.
BACK?! WE
JUST GAVE HIM
A WAKE!
1
HE'S RIGHT
OVER
THERE.
BEG
PARDON ?
HELLO, SUN! HELLO, ROSE!
HELLO, TULIP5 'TWIXT
MY TOE5...
YA MEAN
"HEIDI OF THE
SW155 ALP5"
THERE?
GO FETCH
ME A LOADED
BAZOOKA.
THORRASM
---
5
Faculty sees no attraction in administrative positions
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Developing administrative leadership within the University of Kansas is difficult because of competing demands on the time of faculty, members of the Faculty Executive Committee said yesterday.
FacEx met in the Regents Room of Strong Hall.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, asked for suggestions to attract faculty members who might have an interest in leadership roles, including positions as chairmen of departments and deans of schools.
Ron Francisco, associate professor of political science, said administrative positions could cause problems in the careers of faculty members because the positions didn't allow enough time for teaching and research needed to gain tenure.
He said it was especially difficult to find faculty members to be department chairmen.
Jim Seaver, professor of history, agreed with Francisco. He said he was concerned with how the committee on promotion and tenure would view administrative service to the University.
Mel Dubnick, associate professor of public administration, said that many people did not want to be chairmen because there was little financial compensation for the job. He said chairmen might receive an extra two months' salary and possibly stipend, but they had to work during two summer months.
Sharon Bass, associate professor of journalism, said conflicting demands on faculty members' time prevented them from accomplishing much in leadership positions.
"We want people to do something, but we ask people to do more and more in terms of quantity and quality." she said.
To bring more faculty members into leadership positions, Ramaley
suggested part-time administrative positions, internship programs so faculty members could try out leadership positions and internal sabbaticals in administrative positions.
Bass 'said KU might consider developing leadership appreciation programs and programs to prepare quality members for leadership positions.
Gary Shapiro, professor of philosophy, said administrative positions could be made academically challenging by allowing faculty members to integrate their own research into the responsibilities of the position.
But Evelyn Swartz, FacEx chairman, said, "There has to be an attitude change about administrators."
She said that faculty members sometimes saw administrators as adversaries and looked down upon faculty members who wanted to be administrators.
Bands play to help humane society
By Michael Carolan Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 24, 1988
"Scruffy" the cat needs a home. She has lived at the Outhouse, a single-story building four miles east of Lawrence that is used for bands to perform in, for about six months. She listens to the loud music with the rush of people on weekends and cleans up the mice all by herself on weekdays.
The yellow, brown and white cat looked kind of scruffy so she is called "Scruffy," said Bill Rich, who brought her Saturday to the Lawrence Humane Society.
Although Scruffy the cat since has been bathed, groomed and cared for by the Lawrence
Humane Society, another Scruffy the Cat, a notated rockabilly-influenced band from Boston, will play Sunday night at the Outhouse, four miles east of Lawrence on 15th Street. The band is playing to raise money for the humane society and homeless cats like Scruffy.
"The ideas kind of fell together at the same time," said Rich, whose record label "Fresh Sounds," along with KJHK and others, helped produce the show. "Scruffy the Cat is a good band that's popular in town that people wanted to hear. It all happened around the same time."
The $1 raffle ticket for the show, which also features the Manhattan-based band Moving Van Goghs and the band Big Toe, from Lawrence, will be put in a drawing to win a pair of seasonal passes to the Outhouse, one season pass to the Outhouse, and one pass for April shows at the Outhouse.
There will be 20 drawings for Scruffy the Cat records and tapes and four drawings for six packs of non-alcoholic beer. The raffie ticket is good for $1 off the admission charge, and all raffie-ticket money collected will go to the Lawrence Humane Society.
Tickets for the show, which starts at 9 p.m. on March 27, are available at Pennylane Records, 844 Massachusetts St., and at the SUA box office for $5.
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11:40 a.m.: lunch
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COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now (starting March 28)
All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by visiting the concessions stand at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday until Friday, April 29, or by mailing the order form from the graduation mailing. To ensure proper fit, participants are encouraged to order caps, gowns and/or hoods at Memorial Stadium.
Thursday, March 24, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Senate
Continued from p.1
whelming majority," Yockey said. "We're back to square one with this vote. We asked the Student Senate to give us some direction. I don't think they gave us any clear direction."
Janine Swiatkowski/KANSAN
Michael Diggs, off-campus senator, said that although he did not support Senate's original decision to enter the study, he thought the decision to participate had been well-advised and felt that a referendum was unnecessary.
"If Student Senate is not qualified to make a decision for the student body, then why do we exist?" Diggs asked.
FEDERAL PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES FOR THE U.S. GOVERNMENT
Paul Leader, Law senator, said that Senate would look foolish passing a referendum because KU might be too late in notifying the ACHA of their participation.
"It'll makes us look tremendously silly, because we passed a referendum that's not going to happen," Leader said.
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Hospital, answers questions from Student Senate members about the AIDS resolution.
Pat Warren, Nunemaker senator,
said that if the CDC and the ACHA
were not willing to give KU time to
enter the study until the referendum
was decided, then KU should not
participate in the study.
"If we're willing to say this issue is important enough to put it to the student body," Warren said, "and
the CDC says, 'We already have 20 universities,' then we should tell the CDC to go to hell."
The last time the Senate referred an issue before the student body was
in November 1984. KU students voted on whether Senate money could be used to buy products firm companies that do business in South Africa.
Twice as many summer classes to be offered under new budget
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
The budget for summer classes is back to normal after budget cuts last year prompted most schools and departments to offer fewer courses.
Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and director of the summer session, said this year's budget was slightly more than $1.5 million, a 4 percent increase from last year.
"I have not done a count between this year and last year, but there are definitely more classes being offered now." Burchill said. "We did have to cut back last year because of budget cuts, but this summer will be normal."
Last year all state agencies, including the University of Kansas, were required to cut their budgets. To meet the requirement, a number of cuts were made in the summer
This year's budget was slightly more than $1.5 million, a 4 percent increase from last year.
class offerings last vea
"This summer we are fully funded and back to normal." Burchell said.
However, Burchill said he wished that more money was allocated for summer sessions so more classes could be offered.
"We're always underfunded," Burchill said. "More students, fewer resources. We would spend more if we had it, but we have allocated all the classes. If we had more money, we could allocate more classes."
Linny Eakin, assistant to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that classes offered by
the college were back to the level of two years ago.
"Last year we had our budget cut in half," Eakin said. "This year we are fully funded. So, theoretically, there are twice as many classes available."
Eakin said that the college still might not have enough classes but that issue would be evaluated during enrollment.
"If KU's budget goes up, the summer budget goes up," Burchill said. "The summer session takes care of itself. But, more money throughout the University could definitely offer more classes."
Burchill said that if KU received the budget increase through the Margin of Excellence, more summer classes could be made available.
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Quote from ARCHBISHOP OSCAR ROMERO of El Salvador, who was martyred in a chapel 24 March, 1980
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Pro Christi
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Today
The Episcopal Church Welcomes You
12:00 noon-The Holy Eucharist-Danforth Chapel
Holv Week
Palm Sunday-March 27 at 5:00 p.m.
The Holy Eucharist-dinner follows St. Anselm's Chapel-1116 Louisiana
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday of Holy Week
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
7:30 a.m. Morning Preparation and Holy Communion
9:30 a.m. Académie Chancel
St. Anselm's Chapel
Maundy Thursday-March 31
Marshes
7:30 a.m. Morning Prayer-St. Anselm's Chapel
12:00 noon-The Holy Eucharist-Danforth Chapel
Good Friday-April 1
Good Friday April
7:30 a.m. Morning Prayer-St. Anselm's Chapel
Holy Saturday-April 2
8:00 p.m. Great Vigil Of Easter
St. Angelm's Chapel
Canterbury House
The Episcopal Church at KU
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 24, 1988
7
NationWorld
Reagan, Gorbachev to meet at Moscow summit May 29
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan announced yesterday that he would go to Moscow from May 29 to June 2 for his fourth summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev. It will be his first visit to the Soviet Union.
The five-day visit also will mark the first trip to the Soviet Union by a U.S. president since Richard Nixon's 1974 meeting with Leonid Brezhnev.
The summit's intended centerpiece is the signing of a treaty to scrap 30 percent to 50 percent of the superpowers' long-range bombers, missiles and submarines. However, Reagan already has suggested that an agreement would not be ready.
Asked yesterday if a treaty would be completed, he said, "I have no way of answering that." He added that the two nations were committed to the cutback.
Visiting Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shewardnadze, asked if a treaty would be ready, said through a translator, 'It is possible. This is not an easy task. This is a very complicated task, but we are becoming convinced that it can be done.
The summit announcement capped three days of meetings between Shevardnadze and Secretary of State George P. Shultz.
"There are many difficult questions of a technical nature, mostly in verification, but in principle this can be done," the foreign minister said as he left the White House after two hours of talks and lunch with Reagan.
The president was expected to spend all of his time in the Soviet Union in the Soviet capital, just as Gorbachev spent all his time in Washington in December. Nancy Reagan is planning a day trip to Leningrad.
Rocket strikes U.S. embassy in Bogota
The Associated Press
BOGOTA, Colombia — At least two rockets were fired from a bazaook at the U.S. Embassy on yesterday night and one hit the building and exploded, police and a U.S. Embassy official said.
official said:
Steven Gangstead, a spokesman
for the embassy, said no one was
injured.
Police said two men in front of the diplomatic mission fired the rockets from a distance of about 150 feet.
Gangster told The Associated Press in a telephone interview one
missile hit the embassy roof, causing minor damage.
He said the other one missed.
The embassy is in a section of downtown Bogota known as The Bunker, for the elaborate security systems designed to protect the homes and diplomatic missions in the area.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Sondra McCarthy said the agency he press reports about the attack but she did not immediately have any information or comment.
Panama expels second U.S. diplomat
The Associated Press
PANAMA CITY, Panama — A U.S. diplomat was given 48 hours to leave Panama yesterday, the third day of a general strike that has virtually shut down the country but not loosened Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega's grip on power.
The diplomat, David Miller, an economics counselor, was the second U.S. diplomat ordered out by the CIA to force which gave no reason for his decision.
Panama is out of cash because Washington cut off the supply of U.S. dollars, the Panamanian national currency, in its effort to drive Noriega into exile. Federal grand juries in Florida indicted Noriega last month on narcotics and money laundering charges.
The U.S. State Department said yesterday that it would ignore the order because the United States considered the government that issued it illegitimate. It gave the same reason for rejecting the previous expulsion order against Terence Kanebone, head of the U.S. Information Service in Panama. Kanebone remains in the country.
A U.S. medical battalion truck returning from maneuvers with a dozen soldiers was surrounded and stopped by national police after straying onto a city highway yesterday afternoon.
A Panamanian soldier outside the military police office where the U.S. soldiers were taken would not allow reporters inside and said the incident was being handled as an administrative process. Under U.S.-Panama treaties, such military trucks are prohibited outside the former Canal Zone.
Police to resume IRA funeral patrols
The Associated Press
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Police said yesterday that they were abandoning their policy of staying away from IRA funerals. The decision came after the slayings of five people — including two British soldiers — at rites last week.
In central Belfast, police mounted heavy patrols at an emotional service, attended by 25,000 people, for the
soldiers.
The two corporals were dragged from their unmarked car, beaten, stripped and shot after they drove up to an Irish Republican Army funeral on Saturday. No police had been assigned to the funeral.
The Royal Ulster Constabulary, the province's police force, announced yesterday that security chiefs will resume their presence at the funerals of IRA members.
Food stamps limited for strikers Supreme Court says benefits can't be labor dispute weapon
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, in a decision three justices called anti-union, said yesterday the government may limit a family's eligibility for food stamps when a family member is on strike.
The court said a 1981 federal law imposing such limits didn't violate any constitutional rights. The 5-3 decision reversed a federal judge's 1986 ruling that had struck down the law.
Justice Byron R. White wrote for the court that the law represents a rational effort by Congress to remain neutral in labor disputes. But the court's three dissenters, led by Justice Thurgood Marshall, said the law "amounts to a penalty on strikers, not neutrality."
The 1981 law, amending the Food Stamp Act, generally bars a family from becoming eligible for food stamps at a time when one of its members is on strike. Families already receiving food stamps when a member goes on strike aren't dropped from the program but are barred from receiving additional food stamps despite the loss of income.
The law was challenged by the United Auto Workers, the United Mine Workers and some of their members. They said the law violated
strikers' freedom of association and speech, and denied equal protection to strikers' families.
But White said, "Exercising the right to strike inevitably risks economic hardship, but we are not inclined to hold that the right to association requires the government to minimize that result by qualifying the strikers for food stamps.
"Union strike funds should be responsible for providing support and benefits to strikers during labor-management disputes. It was no part of the purposes of the Food Stamp Act to establish a program that would serve as a weapon in labor disputes."
UAW President Owen Bieber called the decision a blow to working families throughout the United States.
He said his union would urge Congress to do away with the 1981 amendment.
Justices William J. Brennan and Harry A. Blackmun joined Marshall's dissenting opinion.
White was joined in upholding the law by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor and Antonin Scalia.
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy did not participate in the decision.
Panama tries arms deal with U.S. man
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Panamanian military is trying to buy 5,000 semiautomatic pistols immediately and an additional 25,000 over the next year from a U.S. arms dealer, Panama's ambassador disclosed yesterday.
State Department officials said the attempted purchase and recent purported shipments of military supplies to Panama by Cuba, indicate that Panama's military strong man Manuel Antonio Norigae may be intent on using force in his struggle to survive
The proposed purchase came after allegations by a Panamanian Defense Forces major that Cuba has provided Panama with 94,000 pounds of weapons, including AK-47 assault rifles.
Panamanian Ambassador Juan B. Sosa, who is loyal to opposition forces, said that a U.S. arms dealer telephoned him last Saturday unaware that Sosa had broken with
Noriega.
He said that the phone call was made by Leo Wanta, president of AmeriCina Global Management Group, based in Appleton, Wis.
Sosa provided a copy of the proposed transaction to The Associated Press. It was marked "urgent" and "confidential" and was addressed to both Noriega and Lt. Col. Eugenio Corro, identified as chief of ordance service.
Wisconsin office, Wanta asked how the AP had obtained a copy and was indignant when he was told of Sosa's role.
"You tell Sosa he will have a lot of explaining to do in about 12 minutes," Wanta said. He then hung up.
State Department officials, who asked not to be identified, said there was no legal way that the United States could block the sale because the weapons were not of U.S. origin.
When reached by telephone at his
Defendants in Iran-contra lawsuit label accusations 'legal terrorism'
WASHINGTON
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A nearly two-year-old lawsuit that accuses several Iran-contra figures of collaborating with Colombian drug lords is under attack by the defendants, who call the complaint "legal terrorism."
The lawsuit, filed in May 1986, names some of the people in the private network that marred Lt. Col. Joseph Marne to help the Nicaraguan contras.
The allegations in the civil lawsuit.
set for trial June 26 in federal court in Miami, are significantly different from and much broader than the issues raised by Lawrence Walsh, the independent counsel in the Iran-contra case.
Last week, a federal grand jury indicted four men on charges of conspiring to defraud the U.S. government in the program to sell weapons to Iran and divert the proceeds to the contrasts.
They are John M. Poindexter,
former national security adviser; North, Pointexter's one-time aide; and Richard V. Secord and Albert Hakim, arms dealers who helped North run the Iran-contra program.
Secord and Hakim are among the 29 defendants in the Miami lawsuit, which does not cite any U.S. government officials. Central to the lawsuit is the claim that the defendants conspired to traffic in drugs and to plot assassinations in Central America and elsewhere.
Northwest airline bans all smoking on domestic trips
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - In a move some analysts called risky, Northwest Airlines announced yesterday that it would become the first major U.S. airline to ban smoking on all domestic flights except those to and from Hawaii.
the ban by Northwest, the nation's fifth-largest airline, goes beyond federal regulations that take effect next month for domestic flights lasting two hours or less.
News Roundup
COLOMBIAN GUNMEN STRIKE: Colombian gunmen yesterday ambushed and killed the security chief for a newspaper that urged the government not to back down in its war on drug traffickers, police said. Jorge Alberto Stefan Gomez's 10-month-old daughter was grazed by a bullet in the attack near their home in Medellin, Colombia. Stefan and family were waiting for a taxi near their home when three men on motorcycles opened fire with pistols and a submachine gun. Stefan's wife was not hurt.
ARMENIAN DEMANDS REJECTED: The Kremlin yesterday rejected demands by Armenians who want to control an area of neighboring Azerbaijan and threatened to crack down on Armenian activists who cause further ethnic unrest. At least 32 people were killed in riots after Armenians demanded that the predominantly Azeribian section of Azerbaijan be united with Armenia. Armenians are mostly Christian, and the Azeris are mostly Muslim.
ISRAELIS ARREST HUNDREDS. The Israeli army made overnight raids throughout the occupied lands yesterday, arresting hundreds of Palestinians as part of its latest strategy for ending a rebellion in which more than 100 Arabs and an Israeli soldier have been killed. Israel warplanes flew their second raid in six days against guerrilla targets in south Lebanon. Arab reports said about 500 rounded-up hostages were defeated. Defense Minister Rabin said 3,000 had been detained since riots began Dec. 8 in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.
CALIFORNIAN WATER SHORTAGE: Officials have declared a water shortage emergency in the communities east of San Francisco and are warning that they may ration water to 1.1 million customers for the first time in a decade. If a voluntary conservation plan approved Tuesday by the East Bay Municipal Utility District fails, the agency may impose water
restrictions of up to 25 percent for homes and businesses in the burgeoning Alameda and Contra Costa counties from May through September
HONDA TO PAY UP: About 370 blacks and women who were turned down for jobs by Honda of America Manufacturing Inc. will receive a total of $6 million from the car maker in a settlement of a federal discrimination investigation, the government and Honda announced yesterday.
TEXACO PLAN APPROVED: Texaco Inc. yesterday won final bankruptcy court approval for a plan that would settle its multibillion-dollar dispute with Pennzoil Co. and bring it out of Chapter 11 protection next month. After $1½ days of closing arguments, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Howard Schwartzberg confirmed the reorganization plan, in which Texaco would pay Pennzoil Co. $3 billion to drop a $10.3 billion judgment held by Pennzoil.
WEATHER FORECAST see page 2
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Thursdav. March 24. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Bill would be tough on drunken drivers First-time offenders could face license suspension with Hayden plan
Bv Iill less
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - The Kansas Department of Revenue will be able to suspend a drunken driver's license if a bill heard yesterday in the state Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee is enacted.
The bill already has passed the state House of Representatives. It would allow the Department of Revenue to suspend the driver's license of a person who was convicted of drunken driving or who refused to take a blood-alcohol test after being stopped under suspicion of drunken driving. Under Kansas law, the blood-alcohol level for intoxication in 0.10.
Now, only a court can suspend a driver's license. The bill is part of Gov. Mike Hayden's plan for reducing the number of drunken drive incidents. Hayden pre-
Galen Davis, Hayden's special assistant for drug and alcohol abuse, told the committee that the bill would establish Kansas as a forerunner in drunken-driving enforcement.
enforcement.
"We really do stand at a crossroads that could make Kansas one of the most progressive states in the nation," Davis said.
The Rev. Richard Taylor of Kansas for Life at Its Best! a temperance lobbying group, agreed with Davis. He showed the committee a chart that ranked all the states by their drunken driving laws. Kansas had nine of the 17 laws that were listed.
Taylor said he would like to see the state listed under all 12 laws, and Hayden's plan would accomplish that.
But Gene Johnson of the Kansas Alcohol Safety Action Projects said he thought the legislation might actually reduce the time of license suspension.
The bill would allow the Department of Revenue to suspend a license for 90 days for first-offense drunken driving. The law now allows courts to suspend a license for as long as one year for first-time offenders.
"The majority of that percentage are school bus drivers or the like," Davis said.
Davis told the committee that license suspension had been proved an effective deterrent for drunken drivers. He also said studies had shown that suspension did not affect a person's employability. He said that only about 1.5 percent of people whose licenses had been suspended for drunken driving lost their jobs as a result.
State Sen. Bill Morris, R-Wichita, chairman of the committee, said he had received word from the governor's office that the wording of the bill was poor and that corrections would be addressed at yesterday's hearing. However, no corrections were suggested yesterday.
Hayden includes Margin plan in warning on budget
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden yesterday warned legislators not to overspend his budget, estimating that so far this session they have added about $2 million to appropriations bills for next fiscal year.
Hayden renewed his pledge to veto the excesses.
Hayden renewed his pledge to veto the excesses.
He cited as overspending by lawmakers:
$27 million added for elementary and secondary schools.
$5.3 million added for universities, including full funding of the Margin of Excellence program, and
$2 million for community mental health centers and Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp.
Hayden said he was particularly opposed to a House amendment to the school finance bill that gives school districts an additional $20 million in state aid next year, and the addition by the Senate Ways and Means Committee of $4.5 million for the Board of Regents'
Margin of Excellence program.
Margaret E. Barrett said he would veto the school finance money — because it overspends his budget in a big way and also would damage the equalization level Kansas has achieved — and that he continued to believe his Margin funding level was fair.
funging level was 14.8.
The state also faces the prospect of spending millions on prison expansion when a federal judge decides what must be done to reduce inmate populations, possible replacement of $1 million in federal funding for Topeka State Hospital and other contingencies.
"It is crucial that legislators not lose sight of the goal to hold the line on spending and enact a balanced budget." Hayden said in his weekly news conference. "While the legislative process is one of debate and negotiation, a balanced budget for Kansas is simply not a negotiable item."
Hayden's warning came with $2^{1 / 2}$ weeks remaining
before the Legislature takes first adjournment April 9. The lawmakers will recess for two weeks, before concluding with a wrap-up session starting April 27.
The governor called it a critical stage in the session as far as spending money.
The $25 million added to his budget so far, Hayden said,
didn't tell the whole story.
"The rest of the story is the impact these decisions have in years to come," he said. "If these initial actions were not to be altered, either by the Legislature or through vetoes, in 1990 our state's budget reserve would be cut from its present responsible level by more than two-thirds, or to an estimated $21 million."
And, the governor added, that doesn't take into account large expenditures the state is facing in education, prison expansion to alleviate overcrowding and shortages in funding for state hospitals, which have led to continuing threats of decertification for federal aid.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 24, 1988
9
Man intends to burn puppy
The Associated Press
MADISON, Wis. — A man's plan to burn a puppy in public to dramatize brutality drew hundreds of protest calls yesterday.
More than 200 calls were recorded by a radio station, and the Dane County Humane Society said it received more than 50 calls. Some people suggested the man, David Read, set himself ablaze, and others vowed to prevent the burning.
"One of my concerns is we've had a number of people call expressing such outrage at his plans that I'm concerned about it leading to violence against Mr. Read's person as well as the puppy," said Vicki Palmore, executive director at the humane society.
Hundreds object to nihilist's plan to dramatize suffering
domaine society.
Capt. Robert Hartwig at the Uni.
versity of Wisconsin-Madison, where Read said he was planning to burn the puppy Monday, said campus police were investigating and could seek a court injunction to prevent the burning. Such a burning could violate laws against cruelty to animals, arson and ordinances on the use of flammable substances.
Many callers to radio station WIBA-FM said they would be at the campus to prevent Read from burning the dog.
"Some people said they're going to bring their pit bulls" to stop him, said John "Sly" Sylvester, host of a morning program. "A lot of them said he should set himself on fire."
Read, a 26-year-old philosophy student, welcomed the controversy. He said he wanted to provoke people to think about horror but insisted he still planned to douse the dog with gasoline and ignite it.
"We wouldn't start something like this without being willing to go through it," Read said. "We want people to know what suffering is and we want to shock them."
Read said the puppy, which he described as a mutt about 10 weeks old. was being kept at an undisclosed
location.
He announced the plans Tuesday on behalf of the Nihilist Workers Party. Read formed the group in 1986 in Madison to spread the belief that existing social, political and economic institutions must be destroyed in order to make way for new institutions.
Read said there were about a dozen people who participated in the group's activities as well as other fringe supporters.
Read said the puppy burning was a protest of everything, including the U.S. presence in Central America. "It's more an exhibition of what suffering and cruelty is all about," he said.
Humane society officials recorded names of callers "in case we need bodies to protest his protest."
Douglas County Jail administrator announces plans to run for sheriff
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
Dallas Murphy, administrator of the Douglas County Jail and former undersheriff, announced his candidacy for the Douglas County sheriff's office yesterday.
Murphy, 54, is the third candidate and the second Republican to join the race. Loren Anderson, Douglas County undersheriff, is the other Republican candidate.
Gale Pinegar, a local private investigator, will seek the Democratic nomination.
Murphy said that he had wanted to run for sheriff for about 10 years but that because of his respect for Sheriff Rex Johnson he waited until Johnson
announced his retirement.
Johnson announced his retirement in February. He has been herder for 23 years.
The new sheriff will be elected in November.
Murphy began his career in law enforcement in 1956 as a highway patrol trooper. He left the highway patrol in 1970 to join the sheriff's department. He was undersherifty until 1984, when he became the jail administrator.
Murphy said his goals for the sheriff's office include strengthening
Murphy said he would focus his candidacy on his experience and training as a law enforcement officer.
communication between the sheriff's department and residents.
Murphy said that because Lawrence was in the northern part of the county, the southern parts have not received the coverage he thinks is necessary. He would expand the department to serve those areas better.
If additional officers and equipment were needed for the expansion, Murphy said he would ask county commissioners for more money.
Murphy said he envisioned a more progressive department that would take a hand in educating public school students about such issues as drug abuse. He said he hoped such a program could help curb drug abuse.
Group wants cross burning investigated
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Coordinating Committee of the Black Community asked U.S. Attorney Ben Burgess yesterday to investigate the burning of a cross last Saturday night in the yard of the executive director of the Topeka Housing Authority.
It's down 'n' dirty at the health clinic
Lana J. Balka, 46, the Topeka Housing Authority executive director, reported to police on Sunday that a 6-foot wooden cross made of 2-8 boards had been burned in her yard overnight. Also burned was a small area of grass.
ABC's 'Heartbeat' shows nitty-gritty
Associated Press
in gynocology clinic prime-time drama
Review
NEW YORK — Because shows such as "Dynasty" must tiptep around sex talk, Aaron Spelling Productions has set its new ABC show, "heartbeat," in a women's clinic, where it can be right out in the open, couched in the glow of healthy openness.
Oh, please, "St. Elsewhere," come back!
Last night's two-hour premiere featured difficult childbirths, artificial insemination and numerous gynecological exams. To start off, there was an emergency birth that required forceps and incisions.
Oh, honey, bring in the potato chips!
Kate Mulgrew plays hapless, overworked Dr. Joanne Springsteen, who founded the clinic with Dr. Eve Autry (Laura Johnson, who is married to Harry Hamlin of "L.A. Law"). Ben Masters plays Dr. Leo Rosetti, a pediatrician and object of Joanne's just.
Ray Baker is psychologist Stan Gorshall, who counsels the hospital's patients in matters psycho-sexual. In last night's episode, he confided to me that he hadn't had a child and hadn't had't had sex in nine weeks. And the cobbler's children have no shoes.
The show offers up-to-date health information, provided last night in a debate over mastectomy or, lumpectomy in cases of breast cancer. Women's fears were unlikely to be
assuaged by Gorshalk's argument that patient Wendy (Katheleen Wilhoite) should be encouraged to face the fact that she quite possibly might die. That should have 'em flocking in for mammograms.
Meanwhile, a couple who couldn't conceive were advised by the leering fertility specialist (Darrell Larson) to go for artificial insemination. After the procedure — yes, we got to be there — the nurse practitioner (Gail Strickland) gently suggested orgasm aids in successful implantation, and left the woman in a darkened examination room alone.
In between attempts at hitting the sheets with Leo, Joanne contended with a friend who was pursuing a career and couldn't be bothered with an "incompetent cervix," meaning that the baby would be born prematurely if its mother walked around too much. Joane saved the day by borrowing a newborn from the nursery to convince the expectant mom she should stay in bed at least until the baby could be safely delivered after the next commercial.
Meanwhile, Eve confronted Wendy's sexist family doctor, who thought Wendy ought to have a radical mastectomy instead of a lumpectomy. What good is a breast, anyway, said the doc. It's just a piece of fat. Huffed glamorous Eve in her spandex dress, "So are some of your body parts. Would you like to chop them off and replace them with silly putty?"
With any luck, "Heartbeat" will get swallowed up by bad ratings.
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Greek Endeavor '88
'Let's get it together!'
March 26th and 27th
A Greek Leadership Retreat
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Biology Club presents
March 25th--
Dr. Michael Gaines
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April 15th Dr. William Dentler "How Cilia Grow"
April 22nd-- Dr. Paul Burton "The Olfactory Pathway"
April 29th Dr. Birchill Brower "Sunlight and Health"
May 16th James Adams "Biology in the Tropics"
Biology Club now meets in the union cafeteria (Alcove D) at 4:00 every Friday.
Everyone is Welcomel Hope to see you there.
For more information call John 749-4970
Thursday, March 24, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
1107
Observer focuses on prairie people
Barnstormin' Charlie Blosser of Concordia stands before his 1928 Lincoln Page biplane. This photograph is one of the 120 in Lyle Alan White's book, "The Pioneer Spirit: A Prairie Portrait."
Kansan staff writer
Rv Kevin Dilmore
In 1980, Lyle Alan White took up his camera and notepad and began what would become a six-year journey through Kansas and Nebraska. Creating the resulting document, for him, was more like giving birth to a child than writing a book.
The book, called "The Pioneer Spirit: A Prairie Fortrait," is a collection of 120 photographs and 65 writings that White called a tribute to the good aspects and spirit of the heartland.
"There is a great cliche that the prairie is known as just a vast, productive land, or as fly-over country," White said. "The beauty and secret of the land is the people."
White will be on campus today to talk about his work in "Adventures Off the Beaten Path: Words and Photography of the Backroads of the Central Plains," a colloquium scheduled for 3:30 p.m. in 317 Lindley Hill. He will also be signing copies of "The Pioneer Spirit" from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Oread Book Shop on the fourth
White's visit is sponsored by the department of geography.
floor of the Kansas Union.
Tom Schneider, a teaching assistant in geography who is in charge of colloquiums, said he decided White would make a good speaker after seeing White's photo and story on an eight-man football team in Tipton.
Although a book of photographs may seem an unlikely topic for a geography collouquium, Schneider said White's work was more appropriate than one might think.
"The focus of his book is a central theme in cultural geography," Schmeidler said. "It shows the feeling people have for the place they live and their roots."
White said the book was the result of many trips around the region, which he took in his spare time while working full-time with the National Gypsum Company in Wichita. The slow process of compilation surprised many people, he said, because they assumed he was employed as a photographer.
but concern for future economic security is not unrealistic, said Dwight Kiel, assistant professor of political science at the University of Kansas.
"I do this as my passion, not my vocation," he said. "An illustrator for Hallmark Cards doesn't paint
on the weekends."
But White said the time he spent on his project was not so much behind the camera as in getting to know his subjects.
"Knowing the people gives photographs revealing character, instead of just capturing an image," White said.
The report indicates that today's students are more conservative, both in their politics and in the fields of study they choose.
"The Pioneer Spirit" began in 1864 as a travelling exhibit with the Mid-American Arts Alliance, which toured many states in the Midwest. It originally featured 70 photos with 45 writings, but more of both were added as time went on.
White said he had planned to publish the exhibit as a book independently. He researched the possibilities with a grant from the Kansas Cultural Trust, but the project came to life when Koch Industries in Wichita pre-purchased enough copies of "The Pioneer Spirit" to give him the capital he needed.
Materialism overtakes civil rights, poll shows
"The people at Koch said it would make a great gift book that says something about the positive aspects of the heartland," he said.
By Elaine Woodford
Kausan staff writer
Kiel said he had noticed two different trends on college campuses.
BMWs and starting salaries above $30,000 seem to be more important to college students in the 1980s than their more radical counterparts of the 1960s, according to information in a recent Gallup poll.
statistics show that 80 percent of college students are more concerned with material success than issues such as environmental conservation or civil rights, the same issues that 20 years ago caused students nationwide to demonstrate.
"One, students are more concerned about job security, but the economy isn't as stable as it was in the 1960s," he said. "Two,
students are disillusioned with liberalis and conservatives."
Students are in a transition period, Kiel said.
said,
"They are more skeptical of Republicans and Democrats," he said.
Kiel said campuses were more active in the 1960s because of the Vietnam War and the fact that student activism had a marked impact on critical policy issues, such as civil rights and women's rights.
right to talk
But today, Kiel said, local demonstrations don’t have the same impact as interest group lobbying.
Students aren't the only conservatives, said Walt Niedner, Overland Park senior. Society as a whole has changed.
Niedner said that although college was once seen as a place to make changes in society, it now was seen as a way to obtain the things that parents have, such as BMWs and high-paying jobs.
"I think part of the conservative trend is that there is a cynical attitude," he said.
City to dedicate week to fighting hunger
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
A week of events in Lawrence is planned next month to make people in the area more aware of hunger.
Steve Brown, president of the organization,
said that along with increasing awareness
locally, the event would try to raise money to
fight hunger at home and around the world.
KU Students Against Hunger is sponsoring KU War on Hunger week, April 4-9.
Brown said the event was unique because so few universities dedicated an entire week to fighting hunger.
to tightening range.
"It's something that's never been done in the city," Brown said. "It's going to be a pretty major event."
Brown said that Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Mayor Mike Amyx and Kansas City, Mo., Mayor Richard Berkley had endorsed the event.
"It sounded like a reasonable thing for the city to be involved with," Amyx said.
Brown said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, Tom Markhawk, D-Iowa, and Sens. John Danforth and Kit Bond, R-Mo., also had offered their support.
Activities for the event will start at noon April 4 with a balloon launch on the lawn in
KU Students Against Hunger is sponsoring KU War on Hunger Week, April 4-9, to raise money to fight hunger.
KU
front of Stauffer-Flint hall.
If Balloons will be sold for $1 each at the event, co-sponsored by Delta Sigma Pi, the business fraternity.
Brown said he hoped to sell 500 balloons for the launch. He said all the money raised by the sale of balloons would go to fight hunger in Lawrence.
Comedian-activist Dick Gregory will speak on black issues and fighting hunger at 7 p.m. April 5 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. His appearance is co-sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
A teacher in-service briefing for Lawrence area teachers and University faculty will be held at 7 p.m. April 6 in 300 Strong Hall.
speaking at the in-service will be Karen Herman, who was chairman of Major Berkley's task force on hunger when Berkley was a member of President Reagan's task force on hunger. Brown said the purpose of the in-service briefing was to show instructors how
to teach about hunger.
A panel discussion on hunger and the needy in Lawrence will be held at 7 p.m. April 7 in the Mayflower Room of the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont.
At the Bottlejne, 737 New Hampshire St., a benefit concert will be held April 8, featuring bands including the Mahoots, the Homestead Greys and Common Ground. Admission to the show will be $4, or $3 with a can of food.
Brown said that on April 9, the last day of the event, people would be sponsored to go about beautifying Lawrence. Brown said he hoped 200 people would participate in the cleanup. Half of the money raised will stay in Lawrence. he said.
Brown said information tables would be placed on and off campus. He said canned food dispensers would be placed in grocery stores throughout Lawrence.
Leslie Samuelrul, director of the National Student Campaign Against Hunger, said festivities such as the one to be held at KU were starting to become a trend at other universities. She said KU Students Against Hunger should be commended for its efforts
"It sounds fantastic," Samuelrich said. "This way you can reach out to a lot of people on campus."
Weak dollar could mean higher foreign enrollment at KU
Kansan staff writer
By David Sodamann
The dollar has taken a fall in international money markets, and that could mean a higher foreign student head count at the University.
"Foreign students ought to be able to more afford to come to the U.S.", said Jim Stinson, assistant director of foreign student admissions.
Stinson said that if the dollar's value held at current levels, KU would likely see an increase in foreign student enrollment in the spring or fall semester of 1989.
These new foreign students prob-
only will come from Europe or the Far East, Stinson said, where exchange rates are apt to be most favorable for students.
Clark Coan, director of foreign student services, said value changes in U.S. and foreign currency had not had any great effect on KU so far. The number of foreign students enrolled has remained steady at 1,700 to 1,800 in recent semesters.
However, Coan said, other monetary factors have taken their toll. Economic conditions in some countries have caused fewer of their students to come to KU. Venezuela and Nigeria are at the top of the list
of countries with declining numbers of KU students.
Today, only 20 Venezuelans attend KU, down from a peak of 160 during the mid-1970s. Coan said that the Venezuelan government offered a oil-financed scholarship program then. Also, there are only 12 Nigerians here. When Bonny Light, which is Nigerian crude oil, was selling for nearly a dollar a gallon, there were 55 here.
Stinson said inflation rates in some countries also were holding many prospective students back. In Israel and many of the Latin American
nations, annual inflation rates are running as high as 300 percent. Consequently, students from these countries need more and more money to enroll.
Economically, Japan is doing well, and 96 Japanese students are enrolled here.
"There's no indication that's going to change. It will probably go up," Coan said.
"It's too early to see what effect that will have," Coan said. "It's possible that could cause quite an increase in enrollment."
Malaysia has more students enrolled at KU than any other country. There are 178 Malaysians here this semester. But the home economy is going through great stress and
The government of Taiwan is now permitting undergraduate students who have completed high school and obligatory military service to leave the island to study abroad.
strain now. Coan said.
There are now 138 Taiwanese students enrolled at KU.
On the mainland, the People's Republic of China is showing reluctance to let students study outside the country.
"Indications are the Chinese government may make it more difficult for students to study abroad," Coan said.
Coan said the reason was partly economic. China is trying to keep money in the country, he said.
Stinson saw politics behind the policy. He said that 75 percent of the students who left Shanghai to study abroad hadn't returned. He suspected that the government was going to be more careful about who it allowed to leave.
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Health
11
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For Ann Kuey at Watkins Hospital, a with products touted as heath can be a waste of time and money.
"There is absolutely no scientific foundation for the claims that made by health food store owner managers about the products are selling," she said. "People meet their nutritional needs through a good old basic diet."
She said that many of the claims about some health foods unfounded.
"I certainly don't think any magical pro-health be-comparable pro-at the grocery store.
But for Peter Byers, a dietitian at the University of Medical Center, the foods with geous claims, especially some vitamin and mineral supplements can pose a serious threat to consumer. That danger, he said, heightened when people give advice thinking they know more about nutr-
Healthy health Foods? They may not be as good as you think
"We have had people in the clinic who looked like they have had liver disease, but it was toxic amounts of vitamins or minerals and herbal preparations that they had been taking." he said.
tion than they really do.
"They may be substances people have been taking at their own volition; but very often, they've been recommended by someone selling vitamins, minerals and various herbal and root concoctions.
"Very often, these things are done to replace legitimate therapies or in addition to prescribed therapies. And very often, there is nothing wrong with the individual."
Some people assume that they know enough about health and nutrition and give absurd advice, he said.
"I would no more tell or advis. people to treat whatever disease or condition they have without seeing them." It is idiotic, and it is dangerous."
Byers said the manner in which consumers were misled about health food was often subtle.
-Ann Kohl
I don't think there are products that have health benefits above and beyond the comparable product you would buy at the grocery store.
Dietician at Watkins Hospital
He said, for example, that it was not uncommon to see advertising in health food stores claiming how wonderful a mineral, such as selenium, was for the body. Because it is unlawful to make false claims on bottle labels, the strong advertising most likely would be found on fliers in the vicinity of the product.
in the reality of the practice. He said the information on the advertising was not necessarily false, just misleading.
"All of those claims are reasonably true, things that selenium does every day in you and me," he said. "But it did not say that most people have enough selenium and that selenium deficiency is extremely rare in this country.
"It isn't exactly fraud, but it sure is misrepresentation. The other thing they don't tell you is that there is a rather narrow margin of safety between deficiency and toxicity."
He said that everyone was susceptible to the ploys and lines that health food store nutritionists used to sell their products.
"It is not unusual that the polished-looking, very well educated individuals are sold information that may sound very sophisticated," he said. "It may have some scientific merit, but it is twisted and distorted in some way."
Because of concerns about some of the advice about health food from unqualified people, the Kansas Legislature has begun to take action that would require individuals to be before they could practice dietetics.
The bill would not prohibit the sale of health foods but would prevent individuals working in health food stores from presenting themselves as dietitians and from making dietetic assessments.
because some thought that today's consumer has relatively few protections.
Licensing would be based on minimum education requirements, successful completion of a competency examination and completion of regular continuing education.
The House has passed the bill, which is now being discussed by the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee.
The Legislature began the action
Currently in Kansas, the terms "registered dietitian" and "R.D." are legally protected trademarks. But there is little enforcement behind those credentials, according to the Topeka law firm serving as the legislative counsel for the Kansas Dietetic Association.
Moreover, anyone can legally call himself a nutritionist and give dietary advice, without meeting the qualifications of a registered dietitian. To add to the misinformation, diplomas declaring people to be anything from an assistant nutritionist on up to professional nutritionist can be purchased from national and even regional companies, even if course work is not completed.
Kohl said, "Right now, anybody could hang a shingle up and call themselves a nutritionist in this state. You would not have to show proof of any kind of any formalized training in the field. And people could come to you, and you could charge for your services and do nutritional counseling. It's happening all the time."
Byers said that because being a nutritionist required no credentials, the level of competency could vary greatly among those giving the advice.
"They may have written a paper on the subject," he said. "You could read some stuff, or you wouldn't have to read anything at all."
Dick Powers, a worker at the Community Mercantile Food Coop, a health food store at 700 Maine St., said that workers at that store sometimes advised customers about using health food products. He also said the store employed a vitamin expert, Steve Wilson.
"People have a lot of questions about our vitamins," he said. "Some people have been trained in health. We all are going through nutrition programs. Steve has been doing vitamins for years and has read lots. Mainly, we all have done a lot of reading up on it."
Linda Gwalтат, a co-manager at the store, said her interest in nutrition began several years ago when she became interested in her own personal nutrition. She said the advice she gave at the store depended largely on the knowledge she had gained since then.
"It's hard to find formal training in the kind of food that we have because lots of it is not recognized," she said. "Traditional medicines that use herbal remedies, for instance, are still not recognized by the AMA, although they've been proven for centuries."
Gwalattne said that the store, a cooperative with more than 1,500 members, did not carry a lot of food with outrageous claims but that it emphasized organically grown foods.
"For me, it's more of an idea of how it feels, but sometimes we are very important to us," she said.
Byers agreed that some health food was beneficial and that some health food store employees were dependable. He said products that were unsalted, high in fiber and with no sulfates were a few of the beneficial products in health food stores.
"If dietitians felt more comfortable with what went on in there, we would probably recommend that some people go there more often," he said.
He does, on occasion, send people to health food stores to get certain foods required by a special diet.
but we always have to warn them not to pick up more than they need or to be careful with what the clerks tell them so they don't get sold on a bunch of specialty products they can't use," he said.
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Thursday, March 24, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Women avoid engineering
Despite low enrollment, jobs plenty
By Julie Adam Kansan staff writer
The number of women enrolling in the School of Engineering is down, but those women who get degrees in engineering may find jobs quicker than their male counterparts.
Several years ago, the number of KU women enrolling in engineering was going up, but in the last five years that figure has dropped to where it was in the 1970s, according to the University provided by the School of Engineering.
Percent of women in School of Engineering on decline
1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
15.2% 14.7% 14.8% 14.3% 12.8% 12.4%
In 1982, the number of women enrolled in engineering was 15.2 percent of the total engineering enrollment. The total enrollment has declined since then, and so has the number of women enrolled. Last year, 12.4 percent of engineering students were women.
Although the number of women in engineering rose from 1978 to 1982, that number started declining in 1983 and has been decreasing ever since.
But the percentage of women receiving degrees compared with the total is at its highest point of the 1980s. A low of 11 percent was recorded in 1984; the 1987 figure is 15.6 percent.
And those women receiving engineering degrees may have a better chance of finding their first jobs, said KU engineering placement director Julie Cunningham.
Many employers of engineering majors are government-affiliated agencies, and they aggressively recruit women because of affirmative action programs, she said.
Sue Coleman, a 1968 KU graduate in electrical engineering, said she found her job at NRC, a computer company in Wichita, a few months before she graduated.
"Statistically, we do have an easier time getting a first job, but it's harder to go a long ways up," she said.
Problems
Marylee Southard, an adviser for the KU Society of Women Engineers, doesn't know whether the decrease in women enrolling in engineering is a trend or just a plateau in the field. But, she says, the national school and just a doctor at KU.
Southard said she thought one
reason enrollment was decreasing was because of misconceptions or ignorance about engineering. Some of the misconceptions she mentioned were that engineering is highly competitive, that it is only a male profession and that women generally are not good at math or science.
She said the trend also showed that women major in business instead of engineering because business is stereotyped as a glamorous career.
Women also are uninformed about the different facets of engineering that are open to them and about what an engineering job entails. Southard
"It's definitely a trend," she said,
"But politics has a lot to do with it."
Christie Dudley, president of the KU Society of Women Engineers, said she thought enrollment was declining because people were returning to traditional values and ways of thinking.
Solutions
Dudley said the Society of Women Engineers was trying to break through politics that didn't encourage women and minority advancement.
The group tries to inform women of the possibilities and achievements open to them in engineering, she said.
Dudley said her club tried to give women engineers help and serve as a center of information and encouragement. The group keeps a test file for women engineering students to use because fraternities often have similar engineering test files but sororites don't.
southard said that the awareness of engineering possibilities needed to be heightened and that women needed to be encouraged to pursue an engineering degree.
Encouragement for females in high school and grade school is needed to break down the barriers and discouragements that women face, she said.
"That barrier needs to be destroyed by guidance counselors, teachers and math teachers," she said.
Southard cited a study of college women engineering students that showed that 45 percent of the women had been discouraged from entering the engineering field by counselors, friends or parents.
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(Graduate Students see page 2 of the Timetable)
MAIN ENROLLMENT FOR UNDERGRADUATES SUMMER AND FALL 1988
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 24, 1988
Sports
13
MN2D2T2Z0KKES
Manning, Brown have meant big bucks for KU
Court success translates into more contributions
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — How much have Danny Manning and Larry Brown meant to the University of Kansas?
Impossible to say for sure, of course. In terms of emotional fulfillment, it's like asking a mother to put a price tag on her new-born.
But as far as money's concerned,
he've meant about $6 million or $7
million.
"Since Larry has been in the program, we've gone to five consecutive NCAA tournaments," said Bob Frederick, Kansas athletic director. "And two years ago we went to the Final Four. This has a tremendous impact on our contributions as well as our ticket sales."
Frederick held a meeting with his staff Tuesday morning to review plans for this week's NCA4 Midwest Regional semifinal in Pontiac, Mich. These trips are expensive. But Frederick's office has one of the Big Eight's healthiest budgets. All that luxury has flowed from the uninterrupted success of the Brown-Manning era.
USAS
25
It's a time that's seen a 55-game home court winning streak, 20-victory seasons, and happy, raucous sellouts.
It's also meant a great deal of money.
"Without doing a lot of research, it's hard to isolate the presence of just Larry Brown and Danny Manning because other things have happened, too, during this time," Frederick said. "But contributions have gone from roughly $1.1 million (annu-
any in the pre-Breary years) to $2.5 million per year."
In other words, in fan and alumn gifts alone, Larry Brown and Danny Manning have meant more than $6 million? Yes, Frederick says. Sort of.
"For accuracy's sake, you have to remember there are other things that make it hard to say basketball alone is responsible for that," he said. "When Monte Johnson took over as athletic director (just prior to firing Ted Owens to hire Brown) he asked people to double their contributions, and a lot of people did. There are other factors."
Danny Manning
This influx of basketball dollars has been especially dear to a school whose football program recently has grown to more than 2,000 eyesores on the Big Eight landscape.
"But it did happen during the time they were here, and that's a fact."
inevitable loss they try hard to accept.
But the ceaseless, undying speculation that Brown will follow his superstar out the door is something they don't want to accept.
"We're at the point where about 35-36 percent of our total revenue comes from private contributions," Frederick said. "The national average for Division I-A public universities is 11 percent. Ours is more than three times what the national average is."
"We're really dependent on this because we're not generating any revenue in football. Our basketball success has a lot of impact on contributions."
Kansans do love their basketball. They threw roses onto the floor March 5 when Manning, the Big Eight's career scoring leader, played his last home game. They know NCAA Midwest Regional semifinal against Vanderbilt on Friday could be his last as a Jayhawk. It's an
I am a very proud member of the United States Army. I have served in the armed forces for over 50 years and have been awarded numerous medals, including the Bronze Medal, the Purple Heart, and the Silver Star. I have also been a distinguished officer in the Army Reserve and have served as an instructor at the Army Military College. I am grateful to my fellow soldiers for their service and support. I will always remember the sacrifices made by them and the pride they bring to the country.
Amid this air of constant uncertainty, Frederick adopts the only stance that makes sense
Larry Brown
have raised the level of interest and have level of consciousness of our program back to the level where at some point in the future, when we don't have one or both of those people, we're going to be able to attract somebody really good, somebody to carry on with that success," he said. "Obviously, a player like Danny doesn't come along every four years.
It would be wonderful if one did."
Driven, the question seems
"Danny, and Larry's coaching,
As to Brown, the question seem,
endlessly to echo through the gym —
will he take this job, or that job, or
that job over there? Or, will he
he surprise many people and stay at
Kansas?
"I've said publicly and privately that I have every reason to believe Larry is coming back," Frederick
Vanderbilt familiar for Pritchard
said. "We talk on almost a daily basis about future scheduling and future recruiting and other aspects of our program, have nothing to believe in."
"Now, that doesn't mean that won't happen. But I don't have any reason to believe it is, so I just can't worry about it."
The Associated Press
For Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard, Vanderbilt is a familiar if for middable opponent.
Pritchard's parents live in Nashville, Tenn., home to the team the Jayhawks will face tomorrow night in the semifinals of the NCAA Midwest Regionals.
As a high school senior in Tulsa, Okla. Pritchard traveled to the Vanderbilt campus on a recruiting trip. He also spent one week last summer working at coach C.M. Newton's Vanderbilt basketball camp.
"I got to know their players pretty well, guys like Barry Booker. He's a great player. People don't realize they've played their best," Gobene is a great clutch shooter."
Gohen scored two three-pointers in the final five seconds of regulation in Sunday's overtime victory over Pitt.
will be the favorite.
Over the Christmas holiday,
over the sea, over the bandit,
Paine while visiting his opera
"I think they took something like 33 three-point shots," said Pritchard. "I don't know if I've taken that many all year."
"Who knows? Who cares?" he said. "I just want to have a great time. It'll be a great game. It'll be for bragging rights."
No matter what happens in the KU-Vanderbilt game, however, both teams already have plenty to brave after reaching the NCAA's final 16.
The Jayhawks advanced with a 61-58 victory over Murray State with the help of Pritchard's 16 points, including eight critical ones in a 50-20 stretch in the second half. Danny Manning also contributed by scoring 25, including eight of KU's final 10 points.
Still, Pritchard isn't guessing who
Vanderbilt used a three-pointer by Goheen at the end of regulation to force the overtime. Booker then made a three-pointer and Goheen hit five throws to upset second-seeded Pitt 80-74.
Manning gave KU a 59-58 lead over Murray State with 38 seconds left, and the Racers played for the final shot. Point guard Don Mann, dogged by Scooter Barry, drove the lane and Manning jumped at him, forcing
Manning rebounded, made two free throws with 1 second left, then batted down Murray State's final desperation pass to preserve the victory.
Mann to take an off-balance shot that baned off the glass.
"I told our kids you usually win on a second shoe in a last chance situation," coach Larry Brown said, "and I thought Danny got the biggest rebound of the year."
Vanderbilt was in even deeper trouble against Pitt before Goheen went to work.
First, he hit a three-pointer with 5 seconds left to cut Pitt's lead to one. Then, after Charles Smith hit two free throws to restore the lead to three at the 4-second mark, he hit a three-pointer at the buzzer to force the game into overtime.
Although 7-foot-0 star Will Perdue was on the bench after fouling out, Vanderbilt bolted to a quick six point lead in overtime and held on for the upset victory.
"This team has proven they can play without me," said Perdue, who scored 15 points. "That's the big thing. We're a basketball team of five players. This isn't a one-man show."
'Hawks shed pre-game jitters are ready for semifinal game
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
Confidence was the key word as the Jayhawks departed for Pontiac, Mich. last night.
"The team's really confident," forward Mike Maddox said. "We're playing well and we're playing together. It's going to be a challenge up in Michigan, but we're not really nervous. We're just really excited."
Kansas will play Vanderbilt tomorrow night in the semifinals of the Midwest Regional. The Jayhawks practiced for two hours yesterday, hoping it wouldn't be their last practice of the season.
"We don't want the season to end," guard Kevin Pritchard said. "Not for another two weeks, at least."
Pritchard practiced yesterday with his right knee taped. He had sprained the knee playing against the Ghosts in a round of the Big Night tournament.
He missed the semifinals against Kansas State but recovered quickly to play in the sub-regions of the NCAA tournament with a fitted knee
brace.
Pritchard shed the knee brace
that is secured without any
support for his knee.
KU trainer Mark Cairns said Pritchard's knee was stable and only needed to be taped for tomorrow's game.
"I'm still not back in shape," Pritchard said. "I sat out for a week and you can get out of shape that way."
Pritchard is more aware of Vanderbilt's style of play than most of his teammates. He had been recruited by the Commodores two years ago and had seen them play during the winter break.
"They really shoot the three-point shot, and they shoot it well. We'll have to play good perimeter defense to stop them." he said.
He said he wasn't feeling any pressure but did feel a little nervous.
Some of the players have found new confidence within themselves from tournament play, including Maddox and sophomore forward Keith Harris, whose performance Sunday against Murray State drew praise from Kansas coach Larry Brown.
"I have a tendency to get nervous before a big game," Pritchard said. "Coach said I always get hyper. I just need to get started early."
"I'm still not happy with how I'm playing," Harris said. "You always have to do better."
Maddox, who scored a career-high 12 points against Kansas State in the semifinals of the Big Eight tournament, has received more game time during the tournaments than he did during the regular season.
"I'm feel a little more comfortable on the floor," he said. "I just want to play some good defense and get some rebounds and do whatever they need done."
Despite Kansas coach Larry Brown's dislike of the zone defense, the Jayhawks practiced the zone yesterday to prepare for Will Perdue, Vanderbilt's seven-foot center.
Mason's imported ex-Kent State staff excited to be here
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
Kansas coach Glen Mason was not the only person to come here from Kent State this season.
Vic Adamle, running back coach, was an assistant coach for four years at Kent State, and he brings an experienced football background to the University of Kansas.
Mason he brought six assistant coaches with him.
"I'm excited about the opportunity to coach in the Big Eight Conference." Adamle said. "I think the University of Kansas has a lot to offer, and it is exciting to think about what could happen here."
Adamle played fullback from 1979 to 1981 at Eastern Michigan University, where he lettered three times.
After five years at Kent State, Mitch Browning will be the new secondary coach at Kansas. Browning started at linebacker from 1975 to 1978 at Capital University in Columbus, Ohio. In 1982, he was an assistant coach who coached Oshawa State, where Mason was the offensive coordinator.
Adamile said the coaching staff would do whatever it took to win, even if it meant getting the players out of bed for a 6 a.m. workout.
That season the Buckeyes were 9-3,
averaged 425.1 yards of total offense
"I was confident that I would be
asked to come and coach at Kansas,
Browning said. "I welcome the challenge to try and turn this program on its head." He said that deserves a great football team.
Browning said a player could find anything he needed in Lawrence: a beautiful campus, academics and a social life.
"After Glen was hired, the assistant coaches at Kent State knew he couldn't take everyone with him to Kansas," Warner said. "After being asked, I thought coming here would be a good move for me. I think Kansas has as good a facility as any place in the country."
Outside linebacker coach Bob Fello was at Kent State longer than the other coaches. After graduating from there in 1974, Floco coached the Golden Flashes' defensive line for nine seasons.
Dave Warner, the new quarterback coach, started at quarterback for Syracuse when it opened the Carrier Dome in 1980. In three years for the Orangemen, he passed for 2,593 yards, completing 209 of 415 passes, third on the all-time Syracuse list.
"I'm looking forward to the challenge of coaching in the Big Eight," Fello said. "The people are very
Warmer coached for four years at State. two with the running backs in the state.
See ASSISTANT, p. 14, col. 1
The shrinking strike zone
NEW RULE
NEW HULE
According to official baseball rules, the strike zone is the area lying over the field. It includes the batter's knees and the midpoint between his shoulders and the top of his uniform pants. The zone is based on the batter's stance as he prepares to swing at a pitched ball.
The strike zone is the space over home plate between the batter's wimple and the top of nines on the pitcher's hand this national stance. The umpire determines the strike zone according to the batter's usual stance when he hits.
OLD RULE
Knight-Ridder Graphi
Armpit
Midpoint
between top
of shoulder
and top of
uniform
pants
Top of the knees
OLD
NEW
NOTE: Many umplies were interpreting the strike zone barely above the waist.
Strong hitting powers Royals past Minnesota
The Associated Press
HAINES CITY, Fla. — Danny Tartaball hit a two-run home run in the fifth innning Wednesday as the Kansas City Royals defeated the Minnesota Twins 6-2.
Tartabull hit losing pitcher Joe Niekro the knuckleball over the leftfield fence, scoring Bo Jackson, who had singled
Jim Eisenreich had three hits, including a double, and scored three runs. Frank White contributed two hits and drove in the game-winning run in the fourth.
Right-hander Mark Gubica pitched six innings, his longest outing of the exhibition season, and brought his record to 3-0.
Gubicza gave up five hits, including a home run to Kent Hrbek.
Royals center fielder Wille Wilson was carried from the field on a stretcher in the fourth inning after he collided with left fielder Gary Thurman while catching Dwight Lowry's fly.
Wilson bruised his left knee and was expected to be out of action for a few days.
Cardinals 10 Blue Jays 3
DUNEDIN, Fla. — Jose Oqueno's three-run triple in the fifth inning helped the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Toronto Blue Jays 10-3 in an exhibition game Wednesday.
Vanderbilt enjoying tournament success
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Vanderbilt Commodores, who faltered badly at the end of the regular season, lost to the NCAA tournament than ever before.
About 4,000 fans showed their appreciation by greeting the team when it arrived Sunday from Lincoln, N.C., No. 8 Pittsburgh 80-74 in overtime.
"It was something," Coach C.M. Norton said. "It was really incredible."
The celebration hardly could have been more frenzed than the last few seconds of regulation play against Pittsburgh earlier Sunday.
The junior from Calvert City, Ky., was, of course, a big hit with the crowd at the Nashville airport.
Barry Goheen hit two three-pointers in the last 5 seconds, the second at the buzzer, sending the game into overtime. He scored five points in overtime and finished with 22.
One of those fans offered this explanation for the outpouring, "Vanderbilt fans don't get to do this often, but when we do, we cheer."
"This is a once-in-a-lifetime thing for anybody," Goleen said as he and his teammates shook hands and signed autographs in the crowds. "It's incredible. I knew a few people who had been here this kind of crowd this late is unbelievable. It's a credit to our fans, who are very special."
Newton, asked if the heady atmosphere might distract his players
Newton and the Commodores were in the stands Sunday in Lincoln in the Kansas Eagle murray State 85-74 in American Danny Manning's 25 points.
"I'm really not concerned about it," he said. "I think we can handle the distractions. We might make some folks mad in the process, but we'll handle them. Like today, for example, if you want to talk to the guys around campus, and they can't do that. These kids have got to go to class."
before tomorrow night's Midwest Regional semifinals against the University of Kansas, said he doubted it.
"They're an outstanding team," Newton said. "I'm really impressed with them. They've got a great player in Manning, good people to go with him and they're well-coached."
Vandy won against Pittsburgh with star center Will Perdue on the bench during overtime. Perdue fouled Pitt's Charles Smith with 5 seconds to play and kept the Panthers from running out the clock.
Smith made both free throws, giving the Panthers a 69-66 lead, but Gohen's three-pointer at the buzzer forced the extra period.
The victory the third ever for Vanderbilt in NCAA tournament play. The second came Friday after Utah State. The first was in 1965.
Vandy had not been to the NCAA tournament since 1974, when it lost its first game. The Commodores lost five of their last seven games before the NCAA tournament began.
Thursday, March 24, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Assistant
Continued from p.13
sports-minded here at Kansas, with a lot of enthusiasm and excitement. I think it will help if the student body come out to see our spring practices."
Kansas defensive coordinator and inside linebacker coach Jim Hiles has known Mason for more than a decade. The two coached together at Bull State in the early 1970s and were reunited last season at Kent State, where Hilles was hired as the Golden Flashes' defensive coordinator.
Hilles spent 10 years coaching at Wisconsin in the Big Ten Conference. He was interim head coach for one season there after the death of Badger head coach Dave McClain in 1986.
"There are quite a few football
facilities in the Big Ten." Hilles said.
"I can't understand why this school cannot produce a winning football team. We are here to change that, and I'm excited about the challenge."
Mitchell coached the wide receivers for one season. Kent State
Kansas' new tight end and tackle coach is Reggie Mitchell. Mitchell was a standout tailback at Central Michigan University. He gained more than 1,000 yards as a senior in 1981 and was named to the first team All-Mid-American Conference.
"Once Glen asked me to come here, it didn't take me long to say yes," Mitchell said. "I think recruiting went pretty well this season despite the lack of time we had. Our No. 1 goal for next season will be to get area kids to come and play football here. I think it is important to recruit close to home first, then branch out from there."
Wild about them'Cats; K-State fans attend rally
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN — More than, 1,500 people attended a pep rally on the Kansas State University campus yesterday to give the Wildcats a sendoff to Pontiac, Mich., where they will meet Purdue on Friday in the NCAA Midwest Regional.
Mitch Holthus, the voice of the Wildcats on the K-State radio network, told the crowd, "These guys have made it possible to set up some of the most exciting times you'll ever have as K-State Wildcats. Forty years from now, you can set your grandkids on your knee and say, 'I was there when Kansas State went to Pontiac. I was there when the Cats
were rolling through the NCAA Tournament,"
Noting that many students had skipped their afternoon classes, Holthus provided what he called a history lesson.
"K State has been to the NCAA 18 times, seventh best of any program
in the country," he said. K-State's
won 26 of 38 in the 1980s, K-
State's 45 in the NCAA.
"If you want to get pumped, if you want to dream, then take this fact and start to dream: The last time the Final Four was in Kansas City was 1964. The teams involved were UCLA, Michigan, Duke and Kansas State. All but UCLA are still in this year's tournament."
DUNEDIN, Fla. — American League MVP George Bell is in a much better mood after an air-clearing meeting with Toronto Blue Jays officials.
Meeting eases tension for Toronto MVP Bell
The Associated Press
Bair aired his beeps Tuesday with Toronto management for 90 minutes and agreed to a temporary truce with manager Jimy Williams. The terms of the cease-fire call for Bell to play where Williams wants him to play.
"I would say George is satisfied, maybe not happier, because he got some things off his chest that he wanted to talk about," said general manager Pat Gillick. "So I would say it was a good meeting from a therapeutic standpoint."
Bell's agent, Randy Hendricks, initiated the meeting with Gillick, club vice president Paul Beeston and Williams. Hendricks said he and Bell asked Williams to be flexible when it came to putting Bell in the lineup.
Williams came into camp saying the experiment with Rob Ducey or Silvestre Campusano in center, Lloyd Moseby in left and Bell as designated hitter was not "cast in stone." Both Ducey and Campusano have impressed Williams, who appears ready to go into the season using one of the rookies.
Hendricks said he would go involved again if they did if tha'c's bad. Luckily, he looked good.
Hendricks was concerned that Bell's highly demonstrative opposition to the designated-hitter role had backed Williams into a corner, forcing him to go with a rookie in center.
If Williams played Bell in left, where he wants to be, then "the whole world would say George Bell
got his way," Hendricks said. "Then they have to carry that burden with them for the next five years and then worry about the next player that does it.
"Therefore, we'll take our hit in the spring of 1988 even if it costs us the pennant. Now that's not a real intelligent position and that's why I'm here. In that respect, I'm a diplomat here trying to resolve some conflict between people . . ."
Bell joked with reporters after Tuesday's 5-3 exhibition victory over Philadelphia, but, under instructions from his agent and by agreement with Toronto management, would not comment on the meeting.
Hendricks said Bell felt Toronto management flouted his status as MVP during the controversy. By failing to consult with Bell about the switch to designated hitters, the Jays treated him like some utility player, Hendricks said.
"He's not a robot," Hendricks said. "You just can' t press a button and drag it down."
Bell, a 28-year-old who was ranked fourth in outfield assists last year, feels he's good enough to play left field.
"Can you imagine Ted Williams or
Hank Hein in his prime," Dr. Drikaski asked.
Jimy Williams said he believed he could improve Toronto's defense and preserve Bell's health by keeping him in the dugout when the Jays are not hitting.
"George made it clear he's not trying to tell the ball team how to make out the lineup card." Hendricks said.
ON CAMPUS...please see pg.2
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquaters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
Used Gibson Melody Maker
Used Gibson SG
Used Gibson Les Paul
HAYES HOUSE OF MUSIC
944 Mass. 842-5183
한국의바다
KOREAN
NIGHT
Saturday, March 26
7:00 p.m. McCollum Hall
KOREAN NIGHT
Saturday, March 26
7:00 p.m. McCollum Hall
Features:
Tae-Kwon Do Demonstration
Traditional Folk Dance
Music Movie
Exhibitions Food
Eldridge
Temptations
701 Massachusetts
Downtown Lawrence
After cheering the Hawks to NCAA victory,
After cheering the Hawks to NCAA victory Relax in the "Final Four" Lingerie from Temptations
Spring Break Memories
B
A. The Trip
A. The Trip Bring Your Memories to Tru-Colors for Quality and Service!
Tru-Colors 843-8004
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With this coupon receive 1/2
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COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
1301 W 24th
(one block East of Gammons)
842-5111
The apartment complex built with the STUDENT in mind!
AFTER
- one bedroom apt. ($345)
LEASING NOW!
Amenities
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with TWO FULL BATHROOMS
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MICROWAVE, DISHWASHER and ICEMAKFP
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842-5111
JAYHAWK
Pawn & Jewelry
posters FRAMES fields downtown 842-7187
Buy • Sell • Trade
Cameras • Typewriters
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"Money to Loan"
1804 W. 6th
749-1919
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
GOTTICE TO ALL PERSONS HAVING AN ENTEREST IN THE REGULATIONS GENERAL, AND STREETS, BRIDges, BOATS, STREETS, DRIVEWAYS, AND PARKING FACILITIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA.
1. GENERAL REGULATIONS. The current regulations specify who is subject to these rules and regulations; that all vehicles must have a license plate at the central campus. No amendments are proposed.
2. DEFINITIONS ... be current
the definition of a student, for compculation the definition of a faculty, staff, visitor, dormitory visitor, medical parking needs, handicap moped, parked motorcycle. The proposed amendment will delete the dormitory section, so that part of the guidelines
Notice is hereby given to all interested parties that on April 15, 1988, at 3:00 p.m. C.S.T. in the Kansas Union Building, Lawrence, Kansas, a public hearing will be held concerning the adoption by the Board of Regents of regulations governing driveways, parking facilities for driveways, and parking facilities at the University of Kansas. The following is a summary of the regulations which have been reorganized while certain sections of the regulations have been renumbered and reorganized, the only substantive changes in the regulations are noted below.
P. PARKING PERMITS The current regulations establish procedures pertaining to parking permit issuance, including a posted amendment limits courtesy permits to up to three hours, visitors are referred to section than three hours, visitors are referred to section than three hours.
3. VISTOR PARKING. The current regulations specify conditions under which visitors may legalized parking, and the amendment defines short-term parking as "up to three hours". The provision for visitors to return is defined in section 14. Le 10 is added to the metered parking available for visitors, and the dormitory visitor section 3.1.
3. STUDENT, FACULTY, AND STAFF PARKING. The current regulations establish pricing for parking spaces and may be obtained and appealed, and procedures for new employees. No amendments are required.
7. CONTROL OF PARKING LOTS AND ZONES.
8. DISTRIBUTION OF parking restrictions at the University of Kansas. The east lay of lot 2 will be faculty/facilitary lots, the west will be military lots, including JIRP will come off at 3:00 p.m.
9 PAYMENT OF FEES FOR VIOLATIONS. The current regulations specify the method and procedure for payment, what constitutes excessive violations & compliance, and what other requirements impoundment procedures. No amendments
6. PERMIT FEES. The current regulations specify the fees charged for parking permits. The proposed amendment adds a separate JHP permit, the same as previous permits or three hours or less of no charge. Section 6.2 Visitor Permit outlines the charge for visitor parking: 7:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., $1;noon to 5:00 p.m., $1;noon to 7:00 p.m., $2;noon to 5:00 p.m., $2;noon to 5:00 p.m., are restricted to long term meters only.
APPELL OF VIOLATION NOTICES. The application shall be made to the Department of Appeals from a complaint of misuse of park areas. The applicant must show that the misuse occurred at a time when
8. VIOLATIONS. The current regulations specify the penalties for misuse of parking areas. No
11. STATUTORY AUTHORIZATION. The current regulations establish the authorization of the Board of Regents to promulgate regulations for the control of parking and traffic on the University of Kansas campus and to establish museums and the regulation of the regulations. No amendments are proposed.
Interested persons will be given a reasonable opportunity at the hearing to present their views concerning the adoption of the proposed amendments in any way and may also be submitted prior to the hearing. Written comments or a request for a copy of the financial impact statement of such changes should be submitted Office 6042, University of Kansas, StronlH Room 206, Lawrence, Kansas 66045.
TED D. AYRES
TED D. AYRES
GENERAL COUNSEL
KANSAS BOARD OF REGENTS
"the right to shelter, the place we call home, is the most highly valued principle of our society."
Liz Gowdy, spokesperson, Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DISCIMINATION and SEXUAL ORIENTATION Wed. April 6 8 p.m. Alderson Auditorium. Sponsored by
We Know Your Name. Until Wednesday, April 6
ouse of Usher, $38 Mass, 842-3610, print
graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal
small. Small quantities. Call for more
information.
Hillel
Events of the Week
Friday, March 25
Alumni Shabbat Dinner
6:00 p.m.
Hillel House
For Reservations/More Info:
Call Hillel, 749-4242
HEADING FOR COMPENSATION AND SPEED WORKSHOP Wednesdays, March 30, April 14 & 15, 7 p.m. Material fee $15. Register at the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong.
Research Chair Workshop. Examine topic sets; discuss papers; discuss topics; attend Tuesday, March 29, 8 p.m. @ 434 Wesleyan University, Room 101, 612-756-1111.
New Look
FREE REMIT or $200.00 in COLD CASH.
Create a other Name, Logo, or
Landscaping & Color Scheme; or bush.
All participants must remain same person.
You Are Invited
To A Contest
REWARD
For Designing Our
New Look
Boardwalk Apartments
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444
Only 4 days left to submit nominations for Women's Recognition. Stop by 28 Strong.
1
AUTO MECHANICS FOR BEGINNERS*
Yemen, "Land of the Queen of Sheba" slides and presentation by Sumaya Haja 7; mar. 36; May 28.
00
Come explore the fundamentals of car maintenance and repair under the direction of an experienced teacher and licensed mechanic. The registration fee is just $12.50 and is due at the first session. Because of the limited enrollment, registration is required.
Wednesday, March 30, 1988
7:00-9:00 p.m.
Byron's Autohaus 906 Vermont
Session 1 is a preregistered for session 2 & 1.
运
There will be two follow up sessions,
Wednesday, April 4th at 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday, April 13th at 7:00 p.m.
Notes: No registration fee.
Sponsored by the Emilia Taylor Women's Resource Center, 218强 Hall.
For more information, call Sheryl Robinson at 864-1352.
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable D. J. Music and Lighting for any event you need.
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club. radio DJ's. Hot spins Maximum Party Thrills 841-7063
Lawrence Humane Society fund raising show featuring Servyruz The Cat and the Moving Van Gogh Gallery March 27 at the Outhouse. $1.00 available until Saturday at Pennsylvanian Records and SA Resociffice. $1.00 rattle ticket also good for an auction. It ages. no alcohol. Listen to KJHR for details.
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FORRENT
August lease, spectacular little townhouse. Two huge bedrooms, two full baths, two in-well closets, hardwood floor, garage, operer, rose carpetting. 843-1657 Hurry! Available immediately - Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Available end of May or by June 1, 1988 one nice bedroom apartment, fully equipped kitchen, walk in closet, very low utilities. Call Pam at 8741-6822.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1:2:3 & 1 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-2525, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
Excellent location, 2 bedroom apartment in 4+1 carpet, CA equipped kitchen, low utilities, available April 1, 830 at 1341 Ohio Call 642-4242 FANTASTIC ROOM is available Hardwood floors, lots of windows and light in master suite with downstairs, 843-m² rooms $u_1 utilities. Call 841-7747
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, cefilans, free utilities, phone, cable, W/D use. Two blocks from KU. KU $175 $195 $41 1088 $7 deposit. Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming on 1344 Kentucky shore kitchens & bathrooms $12 + deposit. $748 - Leave
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester **1** . 81 smoke. call Sarah evening
KOIJONIMA COMMUNITY has a few spaces in the Christian Living Center for summer '88 and or academic year '88-89. Apply immediately at ECM Center, 1294 Oread.
Need roommate, share 2 bedrooms apartments at Cedarwood, private room; $158/month plus low rent.
Newly remodeled one bedroom near campus available May 16. $900/month. May rent paid
Non-smoking Female Roommate wanted. 2 BD
10 mo. lease starting in May. Furniture
is welcome. I will also consider moving. 749-5671;
after 5.00.
Now taking leases for 2 bedroom apartments.
Close to campus, 10 and 12 month leases. Resi-
dent manager. Unfurnished. Apartments at 1828
Kentucky, 943-0629.
One or two bedroom, apts. low utilities, gas and water paid at display apt. open Mon Sat 1:00 - 5:00
1
Reserve your room on summer open weekdays for a cooperative call. Call 749-6871 and ask for the renter.
Roommate Needed to share 2ND House. Close to Downtown, Walking distance to New Summer or Dell - Call 845-6212.
1
15
Universit daliw Kansan / Thursdav. March 24. 1988
Sublace Summer: Luxurious 2 Br. 2 bath apt,
Fireplace, wet bar, microwave, tennis court.
For two or three people. Available May through July
and August; available after 3 pm.
Sublase, 2 bedroom/2 bath apartment at Peppertree Park. $475 monthly, available now or
key: 749-0794.
Rokmanne needed Now. Own bedroom at Berke-
lund, 419-825-9100 or 834-0485-96.
SUMMER MUBER! desirable, new one
bedroom fully furnished, near campus,
dishwasher, clean. 841-0778.
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 WEST 24th
841-5797
Sign a lease with us before April 15th and SAVE $$$
- & 2 bedroom units
* laundry facilities
* on bus route - near
shopping
* water paid
* ample off street
parking
* rental furniture avail.
by Thompson-Crawley
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills & trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus & area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious & comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
Reserve Your Unit Now...For Summer or Fall!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts.
furn. or unfurn.
No appointment Needed
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
Open the doors to an apartment with:
an apartment with:
- Two Bedroom
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Large Jacuzzi
- Large Jacuzzi
- Fully equipped Kitchen
- Satellite TV
- Private balcony or porches
- Private balcony or porches
- Laundry Facilities and much more
Naismith Place Apts.
25th Court & Ousdahl
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
- Exercise Weightroom
- Free basic cable
- Laundry room
- Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM
PLACE
southridge
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
Southridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING for fall
pool
reduced summer rates
1784
Lowrence Konsa 60444
42.12.16
Trees and Water
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1,2,3 & 4 Bedroom
- Apartments and Townhouses
- Garages
- Tennis Court
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri.11-5
SUNDANCE
BRAND NEW! Sundance II
Coming to you this fall!
- Completely furnis.
* Located on the old
Located on the Sanctuary site.
For Sale - motobeebank bikes £7.00 and 12 inch
monitor. Computer monitor Zenith $6.00 Call
800-555-3545
Sanctuary site
- Super energy efficient
- On KU bus route
For Sale. Stereo, complete system. CD ready.
Auction # 780-4439 obc Call 780-4439 or leave message at 842-6863.
Call today to reserve your unit for next fall!
Offered by:
Call today to reserve
MASTERCRAFT
Sublease a room in my 3 m² 2/8 br² bath – on the gold course — covered parking «wool/pool» and clubhouse. Townhouse for the summer, and if you like it, stay in the master suite with 1₃ ± $35 deposit. #149 - Scott L. Lease message.
Summer Sublease: Survie Village Spacious
Poolhouse: water,洗衣er/pool, lea-
ninage. court: 749-8497
WANTED: 2 male roommates. Summer
semester w/ option to renew. Washer/Dryer.
$140.00 + 1½ utilities. Call Tony at
749-3697 after 3 p.m.
841-5255 * 841-1212
Two bedroom Sunrise Place, $75, cash paid, bus
from campus. Summer semester w/ school year,
81-9044.
FOR SALE
Summer Sublease: Nice BSR, 2 bath, 1 block from campus. Call Nancy or Jill. 841-6078
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt at West Hills
*To lease to campus. 300/m² deposit. Available*
*Within 6 months of purchase.*
campus. Call Nancy or Jill. 841-6078.
Summer Subset: New apartment cheap rent,
$459.
*Griestine Home.* 12' x 30' 2 BR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 p.m. or inquire 420 North St. #6, Lawrence.
Sterio 5 channel mixx 2$2$, remote 4V converter
Sterio 10 channel mixx 2$2$, remote walkman 4$4$, Interested?:
Call 641.757
73 Crestview Home: 12:00 - 16:00 BK Extra insured
1435 East 47th Street: 12:00 - 16:00 BK Extra insured
bil 116-257-4253 at 9:30 p.m. or require
phone: 116-257-4253
640K XT clone w 2 drives, Hercules, comm board
& amonitor software $650 -841-3657
old and want to sell. $300.00 * 81-6068
Honda Magna 81000 miles * 951.00 conf. $2000
Honda Magna 81000 miles * 951.00 conf. $2000
For Sale 1985 Liberty Mobile Home * 14 x 70' bedroom, 1½ bathrooms, Bay window, skirted and tied down. Great condition 13190 FORM. Gaslight Village I-16 or 749-5413.
Commodore Computer for sale C-64 1541 Disk Drive, Monitor, Software. Excellent condition.
Comic books, playbooks, Penthouse, etc. *Max's*
*Comic 8.* New Hampshire Open Set & Su-
per Set
For sale 21" Bianchi Dirt Bike. 18 speeds, 1 week old and want to sell $300. 841-6068.
****MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE
512 E 9,749-4961
Coke machine: in good shape, holds fourteen feet
long, including longnecks
leave message
LEAVING TOWN Qn Sq. 120 bed - 212, Hide-a-Bed-Couch, 736, Chest/Drawers, 171, Chair-otmur-125, endtables - 19 each, barstools 25 each, wicker tablets - also 2 color tv. 811 • 289 SECH.
ATTENTION ADVERTISING/JOURNALIST
for sale
Established and profitable 943-8911
ONLY (NYL 50 miles) Centurion, *25* Frame, *27* x1 wheel, *1* wheel, 22 lb. 12 inches speed call Jim 842 433. Rock-n-tail — T thousands of user phones. Sunday and Sunday and Sunday Quillen's FI Market, 811 New Hampshire.
Maroon 70 Vegeta Scooter P20, all metal,
windshield, low miles, low rate. Great! Only
10k miles.
77 W V. Rabbit, runs great. New clutch, new C V.
W. Rabbit, R.O. B.I. Q.U., 18:00, 3:30 p.m.
BLACK 1987 YAMMA RIVA 125 Brand new scooter, easy to ride. Phillips 804-6000.
AUTO SALES
Quartier 1 Five Market, 811 New Hampshire
SAILBORD Vinta 370, 6m and 4m sails, 2
sails.
**aBOARD** With **WiFi**
842-3538 evening events
Students/Mommates/Ramade: Beautiful,
spacious, home mobile. Quiet Area, Privacy.
Separate Exercise Room, Storage House, Halle
1976 Corvette. Auto, air, am-fm stereo, cassette.
Used for 1978 and newer models. Call
865-363-8698 or ask for AkPla for Caulls.
1979 Honda Accord, second hatch, new clutch,
tires. Must sell. best offer, 841-3208.
1979 RD400 Yamaha, 12K. Good condition $400
1975 Yamaha 500 Endure. 11,800 miles. tune-up, new battery and tires. $750 OBC. Call
1965 Fiero SE. 6, Cyl. 4, Sp. Silver, Top of line
strikes 35,000 miles 72,000,841,3465
Dave at 841-1956.
1983 Honda C70 Motorcycle for sale. Very low
miles. auto, start, splashguards. 542-3384.
1863 Honda Drive 900 Miles with Extra Calls
1866 Camara Black V8 USB overdrive, T-Tops,
air P.S., P.B. am/fm cassette, tilt, perfect grey interior. Owner will sacrifice to sell $8,000
weekdays after 5 pm and weekends
9:31-9:49 AM
1975 Cavalier. Auto, air ps, bb, am-fm stereo, cassette, excellent condition. 24,800 miles 6/16 wattily. Call 842-8993 between 7:10 pm. Ask for Paula.
AUTO repair service on only $55 at your tune-up only on $25 "Ten years experience."
85 VW Gold, Silver, 4 door, low miles, 5 speed,
red insulated, Michel. 1247094.
Car: 78 Chevy Malibu, nice outfit but doesn't
train for money or large amount of beer.
Car: 139 Chevy Camaro, nice outfit but does not
train for money or large amount of beer.
d HOT Burglars? Drug dealers' cars, boats,
plants, houses area. Buyers
at 67-607-600-2000.
LOST—FOUND
Found: 2 books. Wescoe 3rd Floor woman's room. Call to identify 843-4965.
Found: 2/20. White cat on campus. 841-732 to identify
LOST. Oval ring. Watson. First floor lady in’s
3/10 MAYOR sentimental value. Please.
£5.00
Out: Purple glasses in Blake hall rm. 109, on
March 9. kfound, call Bk1-8637
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES NOW BIRRING FIGHT Attendances,
Resumes, Photos, Videos
Lettings are paid to $250. Entry fees position
available at www.missouriair.com
Bakery Sale - Cleaning approximately 21 hours
on Sunday, 3 Sun, 4 an hour
on Monday, 3 weeks paid, 3 weeks
year. Interviews Tues. 1 p.m., and Thurs. 10 a.m.
by appointment. Apply Munchers baker.
Bakery Sale - Cleaning Sat. 6 p.m. 1 am, Sun 6 p.m.
1 am. $4 am after hour trained. 3 weeks paid
vacation after one year. Interviews Tue. 1 p.m.
Wed. $10 am for appointment. Apply
Munchers Bakery. 749-4324
RE ON T V
Children cast in toy信息 (1) 853-209-6000 EML.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, caneering, sailing, water games, golfing, swimming lessons, sports patents, campers, crafts, dramas, or riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $200 or more if R1 & M4; Career Sees, 1765 Mile, NLD.
College student to care for two boys June 1 through Mid-August in our home. Some activities schedules must have car. Some flexibility for a car. Call evenings 749-1807. References
GOVMENT JOBS. $10,049-$12,598/jr. Now
Hiring. Faxed to 87-600 19758 for
research.
KLWN/KRLI20 RADIO is accepting applications for future full- or part-time announcer/operator positions. Prior radio announcing production experience is required, and will be writing and production, producing an airshift, and familiarity with FCC Rules is required. Send a certificate and letter or resume to Kobry B.P., Kirby, NJ 07531.
Kansas Union Food Service Prairie Room Restaurant waiters waitresses & 4k hr. in the food service department 3:30 - 3:30 pm. Must be able to communicate clearly and effectively in English. App in person or online.
Graphic Design temporary unclassified position. March 30-June 19, 1988. $550/$850 - 100 per month. Duties: conceptual design; create and communicate all details of design process and work with little supervision; work with a publications team. Requires qualifications at least one year experience in the curricular or a related
visual communications curriculum or a related discipline or equivalent professional experience; evidence of abiding by university policies and working with patients; expertise with Mactran-II, 25 p.m. Carol Lettler, Office of University Relations, University of Kaiserslauw, Kanada. Email: mactran@uks.edu
on a wheat harvesting crew. Call 913-567-4699
Heritage Manor has positions open for full and part time certified nursing assistants. $4.20 an hour, apply at 1800 W. 27th.
Summer Help - Johnson County. Responsible college students need for building inspection teams in Johnson County. Training provided by the University Placement Center and a license or a car are required. For more information contact the University Placement Center. Interviews will be conducted March 28th.
sa, 69455, 113-844-6811. EE-AA employer.
HELP WANTED Travel from Texas to Montana
Needed ASAP Babysitter in my home Mon, Tues,
afternoon 2:00 - 5:00 for two-year-old boy
(18 months old)
LOOKING for your own business? Mendogbiling profit potential? Make money part-time now, this summer, forever, and anywhere. For exciting MLM skin care product line opportunity, informa-
Need two friendly individuals, one to wear Easter Bunny costume and one to assist with the activity or downstairs promotion on April 8-30. The costumes must be appropriate for age 242-388 and come by to apply 123 W. Bath, Suite 103
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks New accepting applications for all positions. For information & application; write National Collegiate Recruitment, P. O. Box 8044.
Wesco Terrace Catereria helping help. $34 per hour Monday through Friday 7:00 am to 2:30 pm, $15 for lunch, busing, dishwashing and light food preparation. Call (800) 263-7911 or visit www.wescolorterace.com service mandiary. Apply in person. Kansas Union University.
SUMMER JOBS, possibly continue into Fall. Sprint team staff member, 10-18 hrs/wk, AMS & or FMRS. $44$/per hour. Must train before May 15. Must be a transportation, KU students preferred. 824-189
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselineers, Airlines & Amusement Parks, Accept applications appearing on our website for positions. For information & application; write national Reception, Recreation, P.O. Box 84710 Hilton
Taking applications for dishwasher Flexible Bathroom Products 7-15 a.m. to p.m.; Teacher Aids for child care program needed 7-45 a.m. to p.m.; weekday. Experience with s.y. furniture and appliances at Children's Learning Center, 331 Main, New York. Apply at children's Learning Center, 331 Main, New York.
Wanted immediately full time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Req's degree, dependability, and ability to Send resume to: PO Box 1285, Lawrence KS 60044
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Transportation required. Call 842-6264
Mass Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse now hire part-time table service employees. Must have a year experience and summer experience. Pay range from $129 to $179 at 719 Mass above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
Resorts Employment Newsletter - All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif., Nevada/Arizona. More! Tennis, SKI, Golf, Vacation/Restrictions 627070, 627060. So Lake Tahoe. 9719-543-7184.
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekend hours available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to use computerized Contact Audio-Label Network, 844-6900
Be a NANNY
near New York City Great salary & benefits
- Seaside Connecticut towns
- near New York City
- Great salary & benefits, airfare provided
- Choose from warm, loving families pre-screened by us.
- families pre-screened by us
• Year round positions only
• Must enjoy
- Must enjoy working with children
PERSONAL
Care for Kids, Inc.
PO Box 27 Rowanton CT 06853 203-852-8111
To my Great Dane, Monday night was incredible.
Looking forward to the bulldog. Love your howl.
B.C. Having you as my college sweetheart has been the best. Love You - always! K.B.
I wrote a letter to you. Did you write if CL.R. would write again. Send photo. phone #
D. Tox R1.盒 205, Lawrence, K6644.
Ladies... Here's a few more... it is also allot
that they are, luge chant, that Wierd, that
them... the guns.
Mary K: Great response. We have much in common.
Mary K: Again, writting. N.G.
Rosa Negra. With tender impact on the icy air,
the peach-buds burst; their silken pantic flair-
fur.
Schunkins. Thank you for coming in my life, I didn't realize how much was missing until you left. I missed you a lot.
To the guy at G!Aurel lakes 3-15. I enjoy talking to the girl at G!Aurel lakes 3-15. I enjoy talking to the girl at G!Aurel lakes 3-15. I enjoy talking to the girl at G!Aurel lakes 3-15. I enjoy talking to the girl at G!Aurel lakes 3-15. I enjoy talking to the girl at G!Aurel lakes 3-15.
Tri Del SK Buddies, thanks to the talented group at 3:00 am, taking Lisa a laceet, eating sago sandwiches, driving in to Denver, driving to our hotel for three chaise chairs, after 15 hours finally getting arriving, pizza by candlelight and desserts by Lisa to turn. Amy's and ILD, green lips, Lisa providing entertainment for the rest of the mountain as she screamed the whole way up, before they arrived for lunch, and to cheese fights, over or under cooked pasta "bites of dinner and three hours of baking" "p"-cheese, naughty thoughts, and "h"-cheese, it all. And most of all her love, "Hey hey" to it all. And we Love White Knuckles and Sleepy Head.
BUS.PERSONAL
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization.
Immediate ID, I.D. fine portraits.
Swella Studio, 749-1611.
Try it you'll love it, become glamorous with a beautiful Boudou portrait orrait from Photo's Favorite Collection. Learn the art of Poseing Assistance, Creative Photography Technique to produce alarming results. 740-396. Mike
Over $10,000 in cash awards Enter the CERTS
COLLEGE STYLE TURNS For more information
(CERTS)
AUFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL
An institution providing a successful completion. Transportation provided
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head the studio with dancers, dancers, etc. a witness 841-003. a witness 841-004.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birtbirth at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Cotton skirts, blouses, dresses,
shorts, hawaiian shirts, new net
crinolines, 50's & 60's sunglasses.
SPRING HAS ARRIVED!
841-424-292
Bloom College t-shirts & books
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Jane
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass M-Sat 10-5:30 841-2451
SERVICES OFFERED
The Comic Corner
N.E. Corner of 23rd & Iowa
Comics and more!
Your Connection to the REAL Business World! Get Involved!
Autotest of Lawrence Practice Professional insurance provider. Call KWK Specialty Insurance warranty
ACE
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
$50 Value when presented toward new patient room
$50 Exam Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
$50 Exam Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
- overwriting resumes, cover letters 12 years ex-
périence. Satisfaction guaranteed. (749-644-646
I tedit term papers, these, dissertations, applications and publications, I have experience. Proposed service. Call 842-2735.
Income Tax forms filed at low fee. Call 841-9689 for RochiD.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
(OVERY Park)...1911.6928.687
perience. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call 749-4648.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing 24 hours. Design & Build B/W service. SPOTO (501) 484-8777. Room 206. 804-4877. Art Design
♠
Pregnant and need help? Call Birtbring at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Get Involved!
Speaker: Sam Campell
Subject: Venture Capital
Date: March 24, 1988
Time: 7 p.m.
Place: Pioneer Room Level 3, Burge Union For more information, contact Bill Cardell at 843-3277
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Luxembourg. 841.6716
QUALITY TUTORING Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics All levels Call Dennis
485-1095
THINK SPIRITING! For your motorcycle meet new friends at Bike Club on our new location. 791 East Bicycle Shop, 3845 Chestnut Ridge Road
Quality T typing includes accurate spelling, punctuation and grammar.
Pickerup, pickup, available. 843-0247
Pickup, pickup, available. 843-0247
TORING TUTORING $46.50/hr, MATH STATISTICS AND PHYSICS, B.S. Physics, M.A. Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 813-3064.
Want to improve your French and have fun on the Riviera this summer? *week courses acondomina*
we know Your Name Until Wednesday, April 6 House of Usher, B38 Mass, 834-821, 360 print Graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal blue ink. Small quantities. Call for more
WORDSMITH We go beyond typing. Let professors teach you how to papers. Great rates. Call us. Call Caregiver
THE FAR SIDE
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $8/hour, 843-903
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy, 847-945 or Laurel, 841-1915.
1-Aliable Reliing Service Tern papers.
2-Already Tested Typewriter, tern typeset, IBM Electronic Typewriter. 842-3246
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurate letters spelled correctly. Former editor of quality letter type. 843-2635, days or evenings. 94 be Turing Service. Fast professional word processing.
processing with letter quality printer. 843-7643.
AAA TYPING: Word processing, spellcheck.
$1.pg, doublespace/pica. After 5 p.m. T-F,
anymonth weeks. 842-1942.
Call R.J.'s typing service for all of your typing needs. R.J.8492 before 9 p.m. please.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in terminating
colored spelling correcting and correcting Selectr
spelling corrected 843-9054
SERIESATTIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
Mommy's Typing & Graphics - One day service
Dinner with the Family
..oat1 ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letters
top-NOTCH service rate, spell check
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 894-2060
*VbaValue*, 842-3578, store y y th. p.
Donna's Domain *Quality Typing and Proofreading*
scores, applications, lettering, letters,
resumes, applications, mail listing letters
letter printing. Spelled correct. 842-2747
Typing at a reasonable rate CALL BARBARA at 845-0111
RESUME SERVICES - professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $1 package includes 20 professional finished resumes. Also do cover letters, business cards, and typesetting and graphics for any uses. All service back in 24 months. #243-8428. If no answer leave message on machine.
THE WORD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have word processors at your disposal? 843.341-374. 843.341-374.
WANTED
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254
2 roommates for downtown apt. 165/month incl
room 749-1455. Individual contracts.
Final four tickets call Shelly at 864-6491
Roommate wanted to share 2/bdm apartment near KU Med Center. Next Fall. Non-smoker. 843-5458.
RUSH tickets wanted - 2 lower level or balcony next to stage. Call 841-8909.
Bv GARY LARSON
3-24
© 1988 Universal Press Syndicate
"OK, here it is: I'm sick of your face, Ned."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
- Policy
Words set in **Bold Face** count as 3 words
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Bind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
Tearthes are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when checked. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 days | 15 days | 1 month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.85 | 4.20 | 6.00 | 10.00 | 14.95 | 18.90 |
| 16-20 | 3.35 | 5.00 | 7.05 | 11.30 | 16.55 | 20.75 |
| 21-25 | 3.90 | 5.80 | 8.10 | 12.60 | 18.10 | 22.60 |
| 26-30 | 4.40 | 6.55 | 9.15 | 13.90 | 19.70 | 24.40 |
| 31-35 | 4.95 | 7.35 | 10.20 | 15.25 | 21.25 | 26.25 |
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted 800 services offered
002 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
003 equipment 400 lawn care 800 moving 900 gardening
Classified Mail Order Form
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins ___ Make check cards
Total days in paper University Day Kansas
Amount paid ___ 119 Staunton-Flint Hall
Classification ___ Lawrence, KS 66045
---
16
Thursdav. March 24, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
State tax reform plan tops 1988 legislative agenda
By Flaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
Tax reform, windfall, federal deductibility and increased personal deductions.
Although those phrases are often thrown around during intense debates on and off the floor of the Legislature, they might leave the average taxpayer wondering, "Huh?"
State tax revision and the return of $135 million from a federal tax windfall to taxpayers have been among the most hotly debated issues in the 1988 legislative session.
Because of changes in the federal tax system, legislators needed to reform the state tax system so that
TAXE$
tax rates would remain fair. Taxpayers could find themselves confused as a result of the reform, but the changes may bring some benefits.
State Rep. Ed Rolfs, R-Junction City and chairman of the House Taxation Committee, wrote a bill that eliminates the basics of state tax reform.
The goal of tax reform, Rolfs said,
is simplification.
Anyone who has tried to figure out his personal income taxes knows just
how complicated it can be to decide which deductions can be made, how much tax is owed and what amount of personal income is actually taxable, even if he files a 1040 E2 form.
Last week, the state Senate tentatively approved an income tax revision plan, which is expected to undergo major changes in the Legislature.
The bill is designed to provide tax breaks for most taxpayers, to simplify the state income tax system so it conforms to most federal tax laws and to remove about 105,000 low-income Kansas families from the tax rolls.
The total cost to the state for all the
tax breaks is estimated at $51.1 million next year.
The tax breaks will result in a lower range of tax rates for individuals and corporations. The rates will fall between 4 percent and 9 percent.
In terms of cash, personal exemptions would be increased to $1,950 for the 1988 tax year and $2,000 for the 1989 tax year. Standard deductions would be increased to $5,000 for married taxpayers and $3,000 for single taxpayers.
The state tax reform plan would return part of the $135 million windfall to taxpayers. A total of $46 million of the windfall would be returned to
taxpayers under the plan.
The windfall is money that the state will receive from taxpayers as a result of changes in federal tax laws.
But some legislators aren't happy with the plans for returning the windfall.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said he didn't like the way the plan stands now. "People are supportive of the state retaining a large portion of the windfall," he said.
Winter and other legislators believe the windfall should be used to finance more state programs that
might not otherwise be financed.
"Education is a top priority," Winter said. "We need to have the money to fund the programs, such as the Margin of Excellence."
Winter published a survey in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World to find out what constituents thought should be done with the windfall.
"I know it isn't really scientific, but about 80 percent of the people felt the windfall should be used to fund other programs, largely educational programs," he said.
Rolfs agreed.
"I don't think we should give it back," he said.
Legal Services can reduce late tax preparation woes
Students should take W-2, other income forms to office
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Now that spring break is over, KU officials at Legal Services for Students are expecting a rush of students seeking income-tax advice.
After a two-weekull in late February, business has picked up at the Burge Union office. Eighty of the more than 200 students who have used the free service this year have received tax help during the first two weeks of March.
Kevin Wickliffe, a lawyer with Legal Services, said the tax season usually followed this trend. Legal Services' three lawyers advised the first wave in early February after students received W-2 forms. Wickliffe expected the second wave to be more hectic.
"It's going to get worse since the deadline is April 15," he said.
'W
If a return is not filed by April 15, then students can face both a penalty for filing late and interest owed on the tax.
"We make it more of a learning
When students come in for tax help, an adviser goes through all federal and state forms step by step with the student.
'We make it more of a learning experience so they can see how it is done and hopefully in the future they can do it for themselves.'
— Kevin Wickliffe
Legal Services for Students lawyer
experience so they can see how it is done and hopefully in the future they can do it for themselves," Wickliffe said.
Students wanting tax advice should bring in all W-2 forms, all interest income statements numbered 1099, and any information regarding scholarships, Pell grants, stocks or bonds that a student might have.
After a change in tax laws this year, students may no longer claim themselves as dependents if their parents have already done so. Students should check their dependent status with their parents before seeking tax help.
should bring in tax forms from every state they have worked in. Legal services can order the forms for students who don't have them, but the forms can take up to four weeks to arrive.
Student Senate pays for Legal Services with the $2$ student activity fee.
If students need to file more than one state return, Wicklife said they
The Internal Revenue Service also offers tax help through the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program. The IRS训22 volunteers from the KU Accounting Club to run the local division of its national program.
Sheryl Sacry, coordinator of the KU program, said the program was targeted at low-income families in the community. However, students also may use the free service at any of the four assistance centers until April 15.
The centers are the Indian Center of Lawrence, 1920 Moodie Road, open from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays and 2 to 5 p.m. Thursdays; Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania St., open from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. and 2 to 4 p.m. Fridays; Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St., open from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesdays; and the ECKAN Douglas County Community Center, 331 Maine St., open 8 a.m. to noon on Mondays.
New tax laws confuse scholarship recipients
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
The new tax on scholarships and Pell grants is causing serious problems for students who are trying to figure out how to complete their tax forms, a financial aid official said this week.
For the first time, students have to pay taxes on the amount of money they receive from scholarships and Pell grants that exceeds the cost of tuition, fees and books.
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said that students might have trouble getting advice on how to figure their taxes if they tried to call the Internal Revenue Service.
He said that a University of Kansas student and her two roommates had recently called the toll-free telephone number for the IRS. Each received a different answer to questions about the tax on scholarships.
Advertising works. Kansan Advertising works wonders.
Weinberg said that representatives of the office of financial aid also had tried to get an answer about the taxes but that they were unsuccessful.
"It is impossible to get anything from the source, and the source is the IBS." he said.
Weinberg said he had seen student tax returns that reported scholarships that should never have been reported. He said the data may either pay
extra taxes or get smaller refunds.
extra taxes or get smaller refunds.
"Students seem to be reporting a little bit of everything on their taxes," he said.
This causes students to either pay
The financial impact of the taxes may vary from student to student.
Weinberg said that students with modest scholarships and grants would not be affected that much.
Students with large stipends, however, will feel the crunch of the new taxes. Because no taxes are withheld from scholarships and grants, students will have to pay federal and state taxes in a lump sum when they file their returns, he said.
Despite the unclear answers that students may receive from the IRS, Legal Services for Students in Burial Union offers KU students advice on how to deal with the new tax laws.
Kevin Wickliffe, a lawyer with the service, said scholarships that could be taxed were awarded after Aug. 16, 1988. Pell grants that were awarded after January 1987 also can be taxed.
Wickliffe said that students who欠 taxes on scholarships or grants must file form 1040. Students should list the difference between the scholarship or grant amount and school costs on line 21, which asks for information about other income. Wickliffe suggested
Do you have to report your scholarship and/or Pell grant money?
Cost of tuition,
fees, books - $
Difference = +/- $
Scholarships awarded after 8/16/86 and Pell grants. awarded in 1987 or after may be subject to taxes.
If the difference is positive, you need to report the difference on line 21 of form 1040.
RichardStewart KANSAN
Amount of scholarship and/or Pell grant $
attaching an explanation about the scholarship or grant.
He said that the major change for students was the need to better record expenses. Award letters, receipts for the amount of the scholarship received and copies of checks used to pay for books are examples of the documentation students need.
"You have to keep a lot better track of things than most people are accustomed to," Wickliffe said.
unday
Four Days Only!
Thursday through Sunday EXTENDED HOURS!
BIKES Specials for EVERYONE!
ROAD Schwinn Super Sport...D.B. Cro-mo Colombus true race geometry, full 600 SIS group, 32 degree stainless Cinelli bar and stem. $59.95 $399.95
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1
Friday March 25, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 98, No.120 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
SOMETHING
Dry eyes
Tina Altendorf, Ottawa freshman, shields her eyes from the wind in front of Wescoe Beach while waiting for a ride home after class. Altendorf said the wind dried out her contact lenses and she wanted to get out of the wind. At 2:30 p.m. yesterday, a funnel cloud was sighted three and a half miles southwest of De Soto. Tornado warnings were issued yesterday for Wyandotte and Johnson counties.
Committee hears AIDS bill debate
By Elaine Woodford Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - A bill that would make it a felony to knowingly infect another person with the AIDS virus only would deter people from being tested for the virus, the president of the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas told a Senate judiciary subcommittee yesterday.
the issue was just talking.
"Children with AIDS are having babies with AIDS. And that scares me." the student. Mike Brown, said.
committee yesterday.
A KU graduate student, angered at that statement, told the subcommittee that the danger posed by disease already had passed the point where the issue was just testing.
the student, Mike Brown, said. Brown, a Lawrence graduate student in nursing, testified before the subcommittee in favor of stiffer penalties, especially for those who infect pregnant women or minors.
The bill, sponsored by the Senate Committee on Public Health, would allow a jail sentence of one to five years for those who knowingly infec others with the deadly virus.
"The bill actually encourages people to remain ignorant," Risk said. "Would the committee promote ignorance?"
State Sen. Audrey Langworthy, *Prairie Prize*, asked Risk, "Don't you think there should be some legislation that would punish those who would knowingly infect someone with AIDS?"
Gordon Risk, president of the ACLU of Kansas, said the bill would discourage people from being tested for the virus.
Risk said that legislation instead should promote AIDS education, anonymous testing and counseling for AIDS victims.
"This bill would presumably require penetration into the bedroom and serious breaches of privacy between consenting adults," he said.
But Brown asked, "How can you knowingly consent when you are three years old?"
He said that more than 650 U.S. infants and other young children who were infected with the HIV virus either during the prenatal, childbirth or breastfeeding stages, have contracted AIDS. The nation's number of young children with AIDS grew at a rate of two a day in February, Brown said. As of February 29, two of those cases were reported in Kansas.
"The bill as it is written is a weak punishment for a serious crime," Brown said.
Richard Parker, director of the bureau of epidemiology at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said the law would be difficult to enforce.
"How could you prosecute people, even though you know they were infected?" Parker asked. "How do you know they served as the source of the infection for another person?"
State Sen. Robert Frey, R-Liberal, said that the subcommittee had recommended the bill to the Judiciary Committee but that the committee might kill the bill.
"One of the major considerations of this bill isn't a health issue but a prison issue," he said.
Frey said that the overcrowding problem plaguing the state penal system should be considered before creating another law that could bring additional prisoners into the prison system.
Gephardt says he'll continue
The Associated Press
DETROIT — Pressing on with his hard-line trade stance, Richard Gephardt yesterday denied statements from aides that he would shut down his campaign for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination if he does not win tomorrow's Michigan caucuses.
tow's a chinchin. Amid turmoil over reports that Michigan was a do-or-die state for him, Gephard delivered a speech here and denounced a "dogmatic and outdated" free trade theology that he said had cost the nation jobs.
Gephardt brushed aside questions about the future of his campaign, but aides said privately that a decision hinged on the outcome of the Michigan caucus.
of the McMicken
Plans are in motion for the
Missouri congressman to file for
re-election to his House seat by the
Tuesday deadline if he does not
win in Michigan, the aides said.
His last victory was in the South
Dakota primary on Feb. 23.
"That's right. He will be out if he doesn't win in Michigan," said a campaign aide who would not be quoted by name.
But when asked whether that aide's comment was accurate, Gephardt told reporters, "No I'm running for president and I've doing very well here in Michigan. . . . I'm going to win in Michigan. I'm going to continue and do well."
Gephardt is running third in the polls in Michigan, behind Massa chusets Gov. Michael Dukakis and Jesse Jackson.
Checks decay before bouncing
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Checks treated with a chemical that causes them to disintegrate into confetti shortly after being deposited have shown up in at least two states, costing banks nearly $70,000 since January, police said yesterday.
eastday A check clearinghouse said it has
warned 142 banks to be on the lookout for the dissolving checks, which may have an unusual odor and feel oily
have an unusual owl. More.
The checks have turned up at five or six banks in the Chicago area and at one in Tennessee, said Capt. James Zurawski of the Chicago Police Department's financial crimes division. Authorities also are checking a report of a possible dissolving check in Indiaha, Zurawski said
"The one I've got in front of me looks like a handful of ashes." Zurawski said.
The checks, supposedly drawn on personal accounts at banks in California and Tennessee, have been reported in about 12 incidents in recent weeks, he said.
Slavic department feels burden
Resource, staff shortages threaten KU's prominence, officials say
Kansan staff writer
Bv Stacy Foster
KU's Slavic department has one of the top graduate programs in the country, but officials in the department fear that its national reputation might be in jeopardy if additional money is not allocated to maintain its teaching resources.
Stephen Parker, chairman of the department said that he was concerned with the status of the department because it had been plagued with budget cuts in the face of rapid enrollment increases and inability to increase staff to offset the enrollment growth.
the university of University of Kansas is the only university between the Mississippi River and the West Coast that offers a doctorate in Slavic languages. The department has placed its graduates at some of the country's major universities, including Yale, Georgetown and Middlebury College, in Vermont.
Slavic languages taught at KU are Russian, Polish, Serbo-Croatian, Slovenian, Czech, Bulgarian and Macedonian.
Because of budget cuts, the department was not able to offer any language courses last summer.
Parker said this hurt the department because it forced students to go elsewhere.
The department also has lost three faculty to retirement.
Parker said that the department had made some progress since last year. The department will offer beginning and intermediate Slavic summer school classes this summer. Also, two replacement faculty members have been hired.
Parker said that additional instructors still were needed to offset the enrollment increases. Enrollment increased by about 30 percent this year, and Parker said he expected the same in the fall.
"It's clear the numbers will increase because students are studying it in high school," Parker said. "There are 75 students studying Russian in Shawnee Mission, and Wichita wants to get it started in its school system. More students coming to KU will want to study Russian."
to teach Russian languages.
Joe Conrad, professor of Slavic linguistics and literature, said the department needed a faculty member who specialized in teaching Russian and coordinating Russian languages.
oustanding language.
He said the department did not have anyone
Officials in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences also are concerned with maintaining the national reputation of the Slavic department.
specialized enough to teach others to teach Russian.
Howard Baumgartel, associate dean of the college, said that he had talked at length with Parker about the Slavic department's concerns.
"The college is acutely aware of the problems." Baumgartel said. "They are problems every department in the college has been facing for the last four years."
Baumgartel said the problems of the Slavic department were no different from other departments in the college.
"Every major department in the college has lost faculty," he said. "We have had to use scarce resources to provide instructions at the undergraduate level."
The college's scarcity of resources would be lessened if the state Legislature passed the Margin of Excellence plan.
Sweet 16 increases appeal of university
By Anne Luscombe
Kansan sports editor
A magic number for many universities and basketball programs, the Sweet 16 guarantees national exposure, exposure surpassed only if the team is successful in the next two rounds and enters the exclusive Final Four.
PONTIAC, Mich. — For three consecutive seasons, the KU basketball team has advanced to the NCAA postseason tournament's Sweet 16.
But advancement means more than just keeping alive a basketball season. It has benefits that extend into other aspects of the university. It draws attention to the university behind the team.
"It has been shown that when a university advances in the tournament, enrollment increases," said Brad Kinsman, NCAA regional tournament director.
The road to... The Final Four
Although the Jayhawks' trip to the Final Four in 1986 alone cannot claim credit for enrollment increases, the University of Kansas' enrollment increased by 1,048 after the basketball team made its appearance in Dallas. And the following year, on the heels of KU's presence in the Sweet 16 again, enrollment increased by more than 500, said Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions.
With more and more emphasis being put on the NCAA postseason tournament by the media, universities and fans, the amount of exposure has skyrocketed in the last 10 years.
"People clearly are aware of the University through basketball," Lindvall said. "Of all non academic programs, it gets the most exposure and attention."
Kinsman estimated that the Sweet 16 today is as popular as the Final Four a decade ago. The tournament generated about $6.1 million 10 years ago, and now with television revenue included, the whole tournament generates about $65 million.
About 12 million people will watch the regional tournaments, which narrow the field from 16 to eight to the Final Four.
"The Final Four is parallel to the Super Bowl and the World Series now," Kinsman said.
"I think sports are the main service line."
instrument to expose a university," he said. "I don't think that many people would be interested in the school's programs for nuclear fission. It simply cannot compare. It is in a class by itself."
Although Lindwall said that only a small percentage of students chose a school because of its basketball team, he acknowledged that it could be an opening for some.
"This is a starting point for some people," he said. "He see that funny little bird sitting on our table when we go to senior nights, and when they get closer, they recognize it as a Jayhawk from some graphic on TV.
"Students do some crazy things. They may go to a school because it made the Final Four. But that isn't any crazier than going to a certain school because of a girlfriend."
By Ric Brack
Perennial flashers arrive with spring to menace women
Nancy Langrehr saw him first and reached behind her friend to lock the car door.
Kansan staff writer
car 000.
It was a warm evening in mid-
February, and as the man
approached, he exposed himself to
her. It was the second time she had
seen the flasher.
A year earlier, the same man exposed himself to her as she looked out through her dining room windows.
"It's just disgusting." Langreh, Wichita junior, said. "I know some girls who are scared and afraid to go out in the parking lot. It's just not fair."
Every spring, when the temperatures start to rise, flashers return in force. This spring is no exception.
force. This sprint report.
According to KU police records,
there is an average of seven reports
of indecent exposure on campus
every spring. Police have not compiled
the number of reported incidents
of indecent exposure so far this
year.
Dennis Dailey, a professor of social welfare who specializes in human sexuality, called the act a coerced, sexual invasion of privacy but said about 95 percent of flashers were all show and no go.
"The problem for women is that they don't know which kind they've got in front of them," he said.
saw him. He said yesterday that most men who exposed themselves to women were satisfied by the act of exposure alone and that it usually didn't lead to physical harm to the victim.
Flashers appear normal and are predominantly young, middle-class and reasonably well-educated men, Dailey said. Many also are married and have families. Many began exposing themselves when they were young. Very few of them fit the popular image conjured by the word "flasher."
"They have urges to do this, usually accompanied by sexual fantasies. The act of indecent exposure is usually followed by remorse and guilt. A rapist never experiences guilt."
Barbara McGreevy, Lawrence junior, said she was flashed last spring when she and a friend were walking to a downtown bar.
McGreey said she was scared and ran across the street, but her friend was so angered by the incident that she began screaming at the man and told him she had a gun and intended to shoot his private parts off.
VIOLENCE
"There can be some underlying anger at women, but it's expressed in a very passive way," said 'Tom Bates, a psychologist at the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 336 Missouri St..' "Rapists are violent; exhibitionists are not."
A psychologist who works with men convicted of lewd and lascivious behavior, the legal term for flashing, agreed that most flashers were not violent.
Dailey said women often felt that they specifically have been picked out as a flasher's victim. He said there were four things he told women who had been flashed.
wishing that he jumped out of the alley, completely naked, and started whacking off. "McGreevy said." McGreevy said.
A flasher chooses no specific victims. There is no way to keep it from happening, and there is no way to stop it when it is occurring.
- Walk away from the experience by seeking an environment that feels safe.
---
- If the experience is unusually upsetting, get counseling.
Report incidents to the police.
Dalley said police notification was the only way an exhibitionist might get identified and possibly receive professional help.
2
Friday, March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU weather Service
LAWRENCE
Cooling off
A cool and windy day with a high of 64 will be
a change from our early spring heat wave.
The sky will remain mostly clear overnight as
the low reaches 38.
HIGH: 64°
LOW: 38°
KEY
REGIONAL
North Platte
52/25
Sunny
Omaha
69/24
Party sunny
Goodland
84/40
Sunny
Hays
61/32
Sunny
Salina
65/35
Sunny
Topeka
64/38
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
64/39
Partly sunny
Columbia
60/42
Cloudy
St Louis
67/45
Showers
Dodge City
68/33
Sunny
Wichita
65/35
Sunny
Chanute
68/41
Mostly sunny
Springfield
62/40
Partly sunny
Forecast by William Hibbert
Temperatures are today's
high and tonight's low.
Tulsa
67/43
Sunny
5-DAY
SAT
Clearing
65 / 39
HIGH LOW
SUN
Sunny
63 / 34
MON
Sunny
69 / 43
TUE
Windy
72 / 46
WED
Showers
62 / 40
SAT
Clearing
65 / 39
HIGH LOW
SUN
Sunny
63 / 34
MON
Sunny
69 / 43
TUE
Windy
72 / 46
WED
Showers
62 / 40
Crowd gathers for opening of McDonald's in Yugoslavia
The Associated Press
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Yugoslavia suffered its first Big Mac attack yesterday when McDonald's opened a restaurant in Yugoslavia, and police were called in to keep customers who lined up for hours from getting too unruly under the golden arches.
first Big Mac.
"I just wanted to taste genuine American hamburgers," said Milica Nikolic, a high school student who waited for three hours to taste her
People curiously examined the renovated restaurant's plush interior and the back-lit signs depicting the hamburgers, french fries, milk shakes and other fare more familiar in the West. It also featured amber-colored tables and floors.
The restaurant, which had drawn crowds in recent days long before it opened, has 350 seats and employs 110 people capable of serving 2,500 meals an hour.
Local Briefs
office, Sixth and Massachusetts streets; Independence Inc., 1910 Haskell Ave.; and Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania St.
VOTER DEADLINE: Voters have until 5 p.m. Tuesday to register to vote in the April 19 city referendum on teacher salaries.
People who need to register to vote include those who have never voted before, those who moved or changed their names and those who registered but didn't vote in the 1984 and 1986 elections.
Places to register in Lawrence include the Douglas County clerk's office, 11th and Massachusetts streets; the Lawrence city clerk's
KANSAN POSITIONS: Applications for summer Kansan editor and summer and fall Kansan business managers are available in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due at 5 p.m. April 1 in 200 StauFFER-Flint. The Kansan Board will interview applicants and choose people to fill the positions on April 4.
A brown bag luncheon titled "Austria's Contributions: An Attempt at Contemporary Evaluation" with Mechthild Fritz, University of Vienna, is scheduled for noon today in Alcove C of the Kansas Union. The luncheon is sponsored by the center for international programs.
the department of religious studies is scheduled for 8 p.m. Sunday in 100 Smith Hall. Daniel C. Maguire, professor of ethics and theology, Marquette University, will speak about "Tradition, Authority and Dissent: Some Experiences." A reception is scheduled at 9:30 p.m. in Moore Library, 109 Smith Hall.
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An aerospace colloquium with Dwain Deets, NASA, is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in 3139 Wescoe Hall.
An Inter-Varisay Christian Fellowship meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Pioneer Room of the Burge Union.
An archaeology lecture, titled
"Recent Archaeological Work in Thebes: New Evidence for the City's Ancient Past" with Vassiliis Aravantinos Ephor, professor of archaeology, Thebes, Greece, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday March 25,1988
3
Campus/Area
Tuition prices go up for fall
Non-residents are hit hardest
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
Tuition fees for the 1988 fall semester will go up again, but KU officials say a KU education is still the best bargain around.
Non-resident graduate and law students will pay the highest tuition, which could be $2,012.50, an increase of $205 from last year. That price includes the campus-privilege fee, which is estimated at $127.50 for all students.
An exact figure for the privilege fee must be approved by the Board of Regents in May. Tuition fees will not be final until the privilege fee is approved.
Non-resident undergraduate fees could rise by $145, resident graduate and law fees could rise by $75 and resident undergraduate fees could
"By national standards, it is still a small increase and a small tuition fee," said Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor. "It is still a bargain."
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said the campus privilege fee was made up of six segments and had to be approved by the Regents. The Kansas Union renovation, student health services and the Student Senate activity fee are examples of what the privilege fee pays for. He said he expected the fee to increase modestly this year.
Ramaley said that because part of the increase would pay for the Margin of Excellence plan, students would understand the increase.
Ray Hauke, Regents director of planning and budget, said tuition fees had increased annually since 1982. He said the Legislature expected Regents institutions to pay for 25 percent of their budget through tuition
"If the institution spends more money, then the institution has to raise more money," Hauke said. "It's as simple as that. Anytime costs increase, somebody is going to complain. But there has not been a large scale of complaints."
Jason Krakaw, student body president, said he was working on a project that would affect tuition increases for the 1989 fall semester.
in a joint project with the student body presidents of the other Regents schools, Krakow has asked for 1 percent of the fee increase for the 1989 fall semester. The project would have to be approved by the Regents.
The money, which would total about $780,000, would be put into the Educational Opportunity Fund. The fund would be divided between each Regents school and be used for different financial aid programs.
Krakow said a committee would be formed later to decide where the KU money would go.
"It's a great way to insure that KU students get financial aid money," Krakow said. "It's a strange twist with all the tuition increases, but people are pretty happy about it."
Special turtle killed for KU research
By Gretchen Pippenger
special to the Kansan
The second largest Missouri River Cooter turtle reported in the state now is at the KU Museum of Natural History, after a journey from Bourbon County.
The turtle was discovered last June by two Fort Scott teen-agers, Kirby Ham and Matt Perry, near a highway south of Fort Scott.
Ham said they were driving and he saw the turtle and pointed it out to Perrv, who thought it was a tire.
and finally, I got mad and turned the car around to prove that it was a turtle." Ham said.
What Ham and Perry found was a $12.1-\mathrm{inch}$ Missouri River Cooter, a relatively new race of turtle found in southeast Kansas, south of the Kansas River and east of the Flint Hills.
They decided to put the turtle in the trunk of the car, where it stayed for a couple of days because they forgot about it, Ham said.
At the time, Ham said, they
didn't know it was a record-setting turtle and had planned to put it in someone's swimming pool or play some other, joke with it.
However, they gave the turtle to a Fort Scott High School biology teacher, John Culvahouse.
"Everybody we showed it to said. 'That's the biggest turtle I've ever seen.' " Ham said.
Culvahoun brought the turtle to the Museum of Natural History where it was killed with painless drugs to preserve it for research, said Joseph Collins, a zoologist at
Lisa Leinacker/KANSA
Putting record-setting animals to sleep is standard policy, and the museum has more than a half million specimens, including 275,000 in the amphibian and reptile collection that the turtle is a part of.
Measuring $12_{1/2}$ inches, this Missouri River Cooter turtle is the second largest caught in the state.
- Joseph Collins
the museum who took the turtle's measurements.
He said that putting record-setting animals to sleep was standard policy, and the museum had more than a half million specimens, including 275,000 in the amphibian and reptile collection that the turtle is a part of.
The policy is necessary because records must be backed up by specimens, although photographs may be used for endangered species, and because animals must be dead to study them scientifically, Collins said.
"You can't do it while they're moving." be said.
The Missouri River Cooter turtle fell short of the 1984 state record of 133/8 inches, set by a turtle from Chase County, Collins said. But it was bigger than the previous record of $11\frac{1}{2}$ inches, set by a turtle from Elk County.
The average length of Missouri River Cooters is seven to 10 inches and the turtles are cautious, shy animals. Collins said.
The turtle probably was disturbed by bridge work being done on the highway, Culvahouse said.
"They are not rare, just very difficult to catch," he said.
Study finds that men, women respond differently to lighting
Kansan staff writer
By Michael Carolan
A few weeks later, Hakey, Lawrence senior, under bright lights, entered the same room and entered another doctor. He made his decision quickly.
Bradley Hake walked into a dimly lit room in the Art and Design Building and sat down at a computer terminal and chose one of six cars displayed on his screen. His decision took some time.
Hake was one of 21 students who participated in an experiment to determine the effects of lighting on mood and decision-making.
"I probably made a slower decision under less light," Hake said. "They were two very different lighting conditions."
The study, conducted by Marc Beleher, assistant professor of architectural engineering, was presented in January to the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America.
At the society's convention in Minneapolis, Belcher said he discovered that men made faster, simpler decisions under bright lighting than under dim lighting.
The study also found that women made slower, more complex decisions under bright lighting than under dim lighting.
ALAN JOHNSON
Beleacher he found that men were in better moods under brighter lights and that women were in better moods under dimmer lights.
"We wanted to see if mood
Marc Belcher
differences caused by lighting were strong enough to see detectable changes in decision-making strategies," he said. "Almost one has looked at light and mood and decision-making and tried to determine scientifically the psycho-physical response of people to specific kinds of light."
But he also discovered that more research had to be done.
know so little about it now that anything we add to the subject at all is helpful."
Ronald Helms, professor of architectural engineering, said that only six or seven people in the country were doing research on the behavioral effects of lighting.
"I definitely want to do more work in the area," he said. "We
"I think the relationship between lighting and decision-making, if it does exist, lends credible evidence to the importance of quality lighting in designed space."
In experiments under low-intensity light, Belcher said, students chose a car for characteristics like fuel economy and roominess.
then, the students were tested several weeks later in the laboratory under lighting similar to that of a room with high-intensity fluorescent lighting. Students were asked to choose a refrigerator, and they looked for characteristics like the amount of noise it emitted and the speed with which it made ice
If Beiler receives a grant from the National Science Foundation, he plans to repeat the experiment using a more diverse sample of students. He plans to test people's response to points of light and walls of light. Also, he intends to consult a psychology professor who has done research in lighting and its effect on mood.
"The evidence is weak because more research needs to be done," Belcher said.
Gown orders begin Monday Some graduates can purchase their regalia for convenience
By Joel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
Purchasing and ordering of caps and gowns for the May 15th commencement ceremonies will begin Monday.
May 15 commencement ceremony.
Caps, gowns and hoods can be purchased at the concessions stand, gates 22-23, on the north end of Memorial Stadium. The stand will be open from 10 a.m. to $ p.m., Monday through Friday, from March 28 to April 29.
April.
Cost for a bachelor's cap, gown and tassel will be $15; a master's cap, gown and tassel will be $16; a master's hood is $14. The rental cost for doctoral and law caps, gowns and tassels is $17. Doctoral and law hoods will be rented for $15 each.
All bachelor's and master's degree recipients can purchase caps, gowns, tassels and hoods this year. The regalia will be the property of the graduate and does not negd to be returned.
Faculty, doctoral and law school regalia will be rented and returned, as in the past.
Robert Derby, concessions manager and a member of the commencement committee, said the committee
decided to sell the regalia this year to make the process easier for the student.
"We can offer the same quality gown, cap and tassel at the same price as the rental," Derby said. "It is very convenient for the graduate because they only have to make one visit."
Bachelor's and master's degree recipients will receive commencement instructions at the time of purchase of the gowns. In case of rain at commencement, admission tickets for Allen Field House will also be provided.
Faculty, doctoral and law school graduates will order their rentals at the same time and location. Faculty members will receive their regalia free of charge.
Pre-ordered rental regalia may be picked up from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 14 or from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. May 15 at the concessions stand at the north end of the stadium. Rental regalia must be returned before 10 p.m. May 15 or from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday, May 16.
A $10 late fee will be charged to graduates that do not meet the purchase-order deadline. Those graduates may receive their regalia from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 14, or from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. May 15.
Exhibit showcases women's clubs
By a Kansan reporter
The exhibit, titled "All-Sew to Zodiac: Women's Clubs in Kansas," shows pamphlets, photographs, letters and scrapbooks from various women's clubs from the late 19th and early 20th century.
An exhibit reflecting a century of the changing roles of women and women's clubs is on display in the University of Kansas Spencer Research Library.
Some of the documents were donated by the different religious, social, political and professional women's clubs in Kansas, said Rebecca Schulte, a librarian at the library.
The exhibit, titled "All-Sew to Zodiac: Women's Clubs in Kansas," features women's clubs of the late 19th and early 20th century
Snencer Library
She said some of the groups, such as the Zodiac Club, still met today.
Frances Peterson, a member of the Zodiac Club, said the group recently celebrated its 110th anniversary of activity in the Lawrence area.
Peterson said the members met on the second and fourth Tuesday of the month from September to April to discuss the chosen topic for the year.
England.
Other clubs that have records on display are the All-Sew Club of McLouth, the Lawrence Music Club and the Kansas Equal Suffrage Association.
This year's topic was Elizabethan
The exhibit, on the first floor of the library, is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday until the end of May.
College of Liberal Arts & Sciences (CLAS) wants
UNDERGRADUATE
REPRESENTATIVES
for the
COLLEGE ASSEMBLY
Interested CLAS undergraduate students should complete nomination forms available at the Undergraduate Services Office, 106 Strong Hall.
Filing deadline-5 p.m. Fri., April 8
Election will be held April 13 & 14 with Student Senate Election
All CLAS undergraduate students are encouraged to become involved in the governance of The College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
BLACK DIAMOND
AΔΠ
3-26-88
NEHRU EXHIBITION
A pictoral biography of Nehru: India's first prime minister, a dreamer, planner, and philosopher. Venue: Gallery East, Kansas Union Inauguration: Friday March 25, at 8 pm, by Dr.Shanti Gandhi M.D., followed by reception (open house) hosted by Prof.T.P.Srinivasan Timings: 9 am to 7 pm on Saturday, and Monday, March 26, and 28. 11 am to 4 pm on Sunday March 27
Sponsored by: Air India and K.U. India Club
---
2
Friday, March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
War on Hunger brings unity among Lawrence residents
Something strange is happening in Lawrence.
Democrats and Republicans are joining forces — on something that has nothing to do with politics. A University of Kansas business fraternity is involved in a project having more to do with donating money and resources than earning them. Lawrence residents are getting enthusiastic about picking up trash for a good cause.
The KU War on Hunger is bringing out generosity and good will in a lot of people.
will in a lot of people. The War on Hunger, April 4-9, is a giant effort to fight hunger at home and around the world by raising money and awareness. However, it also is doing a service for KU and Lawrence even before the events get started.
KU Students Against Hunger is sponsoring this worthwhile effort. The events will stretch over a whole school-week and will boost campus and community awareness far more than a single day's events could.
The events range from high-profile attention-getters to serious learning seminars and discussions. Among high-profile events are a balloon launch to kick off the week. Lawrence residents will participate in a city clean-up project to earn money for the drive, and several area bands will play in a benefit concert. A campus fraternity is sponsoring a comedian-activist speaker during the week.
dian-activist speaker during the week. On the educational side, Lawrence teachers and University faculty members will attend an in-service briefing about teaching students about hunger, and a panel discussion is scheduled for the end of the week.
It's a good balance between promotion of the cause and education about dealing with hunger. KU students and others who have involved themselves in the fight against hunger are to be commended. It's going to be a great week.
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Lifting ban opens channels
Russian author Boris Pasternak won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1958 for his novel "Doctor Zhivago;" and now, 30 years later, that novel will be available to the people in his home country.
home country. The Soviet Union recently ruled that 3,500 previously banned book titles would be published. The Soviets should be commended for easing their restraints on information because citizens deserve an open exchange of ideas, especially from their own writers.
their own writers.
The titles were banned under Joseph Stalin because the authors' views weren't compatible with the ideals of the Communist Party. The books were then removed from bookshops and libraries.
But now, Soviet citizens will be able to read the works of the formerly banned authors, and more book titles soon might be made available.
made available.
Also, Soviet authors soon might be able to make use of a vanity press, where they would be able to pay to have their own books published. The authors would share in any profits made and would absorb part of the loss for unsuccessful books.
The Soviet Union in the past few months has shown an increasing openness to new and different ideas, and this release of previously banned books is along that same vein. Alan Player for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
WE ABUSED IT,
WE NEGLECTED IT,
AND BY GAWD, WE'RE
GOING TO KEEP IT!
CENTRAL AMERICA
JIMBORGMAN
CINCINNATI
EN QUERÉ
Academic freedom suffers at KU
Instructors can't teach well when pressure groups are able to set agendas
The furor surrounding the proposed visit to the University of Kansas by the Ku Klux Klan has been important for what the ensuing discussion has revealed. It seemed to me that the cancellation of the visit was a simple violation of academic freedom. What seemed especially shameful about the episode was that the Faculty Executive Committee did not come down resoundingly on the side of academic freedom. If faculty governance will not support academic freedom when the chips are down, who will?
The FaeEx statement that appeared March 8 in the Kansan is essentially a defense of the view that academic freedom was not violated in the goings-on surrounding the proposed visit of the Klan. I think this view is quite wrong. The point of this column is to explain why.
If the FaceEx statement is read quite literally, it is subject to a number of different interpretations. I will forgo this analysis in order to get at what I think is the heart of the FaceEx position. FaceEx holds that academic freedom means that the decision concerning what transpires in a faculty member's classroom rightly belongs only to the faculty member teaching a class. FaceEx concludes that because the journalism faculty made the decision on their own to cancel the Klan visit without pressure from either the KU administration or faculty governance, it follows that academic freedom was not violated. This FaceEx position is clear, succinct, and easily expressed. But it is just as surely wrong.
Consider a (purely, of course) hypothetical example. Suppose that I am teaching a literature course and that I propose to devote a class session to discussion of the works of Heinrich Riehe. Heine was Jewish. Suppose an anti-Semitic group
Don Marquis
Guest Columnist
(Let's call them "brown shirts") demands that the works of Jews not be taught at KU. The brown shirts make demands on the Chancellor. They threaten to demonstrate and interrupt my class. Because a demonstration would interfere with the classroom educational process, I decide, on educational grounds, to study some non-Jewish poet instead.
post histories.
If I made that educational decision without presencia from faculty governance or the chancelor on the FacEx analysis of academic freedom entails that my academic freedom was not violated. Because in such a case my academic freedom clearly was violated, the FacEx analysis of academic freedom is wrong. The error is easy to see. When a group outside the University demands to censor the educational content of certain courses, and as a consequence of those demands, a faculty member decides to change the educational content of the course, then of course academic freedom has been violated. The Klan case is analogous in appropriate respects to the Heine case. So academic freedom was violated at KU.
There is an apparent problem with this analysis. One might argue that the administration and governance did not violate academic freedom, for they allowed the individual faculty members to make their decision. The individual
faculty members did not violate their own academic freedom. The anti-Klan group isn't responsible for upholding academic freedom. Therefore, no one violated academic freedom. Accordingly, academic freedom was not violated. Does this argument save the FacEx position?
What this argument tells me is that there is more to the duty to preserve academic freedom than noninterference. When forces outside the University attempt to interfere with the educational process, the University administration has a positive obligation to insulate faculty from those illicit pressures that distort educational decisions. In particular, the administration has an obligation to provide security when there is a threat of disruption of the educational process so that faculty aren't pressured to make educational decisions because of threats by pressure groups. The Klan visits were canceled because of security concerns. This shows that the KU administration, by failing to guarantee adequate security, failed to preserve academic freedom. That FaceEx did not pressure the administration to do its duty shows that FaceEx did not defend academic freedom. Now we can understand, at least intellectually, why this was so.
notice what our present situation is. A political group outside KU demanded the right to censor the educational content of what goes on here. They succeeded — twice! The administration and FacEx see no problem! One would do well to keep in mind the next time one hears "flagship institution," "higher education," "four-star university," and similar labels used to describe this place.
place.
Don Marquis is an associate professor of philosophy.
Other Voices
It is amazing that a campus the size of Auburn's does not have more buildings accessible to the handicapped.
Campus must be accessible to disabled
It is amazing that a campus the size of have more buildings accessible to the handicapped. An effort is being made by the University Handicapped Committee to encourage more accessibility on campus, but progress is slow.
These projects cannot be ignored because they are inconvenient or because they are not high on the list of priorities.
The Auburn Plainsman Auburn University
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K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
SDI essential to security
The Soviets are building their own SDI. Moreover, they soon will be in a position to deploy an extensive ground-based anti-ballistic missile. The battle management radar stations under construction at Krasnyarky and other sites will enable them to break with the ABM treaty virtually overnight. The fact that they have not yet done so should not diminish our efforts to construct a stable strategic environment.
The evidence continues to mount that the technical, moral, strategic and economic arguments against strategic defense are breaking down. The simple reason is that MAD (mutually assured destruction) is falling apart.
ment.
The Soviets also have thousands of mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles and large-scale defense programs. Modern delivery systems are very accurate and can employ lower-yield weapons. The combined effects of the future strategic situation means that we will face the possibility, however unlikely, of a strike against our retaliatory facilities.
strike against our readers. MAD advocates claim that none of this matters because no first strike could sufficiently destroy retaliatory capacities. There
Fortunately, there is an alternative — SDI. We currently have the technology to spot, track and kill ICBMs. Laser and particle beam weapons could become effective ground-based systems. Recent cost estimates have been in the $130 billion range. SDI is an investment in the $130 billion range that would reduce the risk of nuclear war and provide us with many options should a calamity occur. Perhaps the most subtle effect would be to convince the Kremlin that we are serious about maintaining deterrence and strategic parity. Let's not accept a dangerous short cut to that necessary goal.
are many assumptions inherent in such an argument. To name a few, it assumes ineffectiveness of Soviet defenses, our willingness to retaliate against superior forces, and their unwillingness to take risks.
Ben Casad Lawrence senior
Fundamentalists whine
Though poorly written, Steve Gantz's column on fundamentalism was coherent enough to show what a bunch of hypocritical whinners they were. It is apparent that he took a Kansan editorial literally, just as he does the Bible. See what misunderstanding can occur?
Gantz appears to be speaking for all fundalists, as he repeatedly refers to the collective as "us fundamentalists." Was he elected as a representative fundamentalist, or was he chosen by God? He never mentions Christian fundamentalists, so he must be speaking for the Middle Eastern zealots who
burn heretics alive, just like the good ol' days. As a fundamentalist, does Gantz want to return to the basics, such as burning witches? He should if he follows the literal meaning of the Bible.
Bible:
Gantz denies in his column that fundamentalism wants to return religion to public education. I agree. They don't want religion; they want Christianity. Bringing the teacher an apple would be punished as a temptation. He asks what would be wrong with teaching the Bible in school? Nothing, if you are unable to teach your child enough racism, sexism, elitism, and fear in the comfort of your own home. Again, the Golden Rule is deceivingly used to justify another's beliefs: I'll do to you as I wish others would do to me. Sounds kind of kinky, doesn't it? If a fundamentalist doesn't want his or her child to receive a well-balanced meal, should the school cafeteria serve an alternate meal of narrow-minded junk food?
Steve Gantz stereotypes himself and fundamentalists alike. Why must people label themselves as fundamentalists? Can't they stand on their own, a part of the thinking world, and just live the perils of their theology? I try to avoid labeling myself as any one thing because it is never wholly accurate. Thus, fundamentalists are labeling themselves.
Why is Gantz so paranoid about being stuck away in a corner or locked up in a padded cell? Don't his rigid beliefs already sentence him to a sterile Hell?
Forest Bloodgood Stillwater, Okla., junior
BLOOM COUNTY
GOOD MORNING, STEVE.
I'VE BEEN ASSIGNED BY
THE STEVE DALLAS
PERSONALITY INVESTIGATION
COMMITTEE "TO DETERMINE
THE EXTENT OF YOUR...
UH...
EXCUSE ME.
15 THAT
LINGUINI
ON YOUR HEAD?
by Berke Breathed
I GOT A PERM.
A PERM?
THOUGHT I'D
LOOK MORE LIKE
ALAN ALDA.
PERM!!
SAVE THE
MAWNTEE
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 25, 1988
5
KU school to see changes Council will organize education curriculum
By Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
Faculty in the School of Education hope that a recently formed council will help them discuss curriculum changes and requirements among the school, the School of Fine Arts and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Because education majors take most of their courses from the college and the two schools, officials hope that better communication will result in better-educated teachers.
"There has been a need for a governing and communicating vehicle for different departments in the School of Education and Fine Arts on issues pertaining to education," said Jerry Bailey, associate dean of the school of education and chairman of the council.
The Teacher Education Council, which has had six meetings since its formation late in the fall, is composed of faculty from each of the three areas, two teachers from area school districts and a student representative.
Bailey said the council would consider changes in credit hours for class, class content and the college level of a course, as well as problems arising in student teaching internships.
Before the council was formed, the seven departments in the School of Education discussed curriculum only with one another. Bailey said.
"Hopefully, the teacher education council will be a group that will allow the school to review programs, make changes as needed and communicate changes to other parts of the University." Bailey said.
The only exceptions were that the department of music education and music therapy worked with the School of Fine Arts and the department of curriculum and instruction
worked with the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Both departments worked out curriculums and requirements for education majors.
Edward Meyen, dean of education, said the council would play a role in examining recommendations from different departments in the School of Education.
ments for education.
"It wasn't very systematic."
Bailey said. "Sometimes, things were worked out in a clear and precise manner on a regular basis; and sometimes, they weren't."
"The council is a very important part of the overall governing structure regarding teacher education." he said. "It will have a significant impact on the quality of teacher education."
After the proposals are approved by the council, they will move to the School of Education curriculum committee and finally to the School Assembly.
Changes boost lab's business
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
Business is expanding for Oread Laboratories.
To go along with its new building and new president, Oread Labs has signed a new contract with a Japanese pharmaceutical company.
Those three factors could help Oread Labs on its way to more contracts in the future, said Bill Duncan, president of Oread Labs, 15th Street and Wakarua Drive.
Duncan said that Oread Labs would be doing analytical chemistry in pharmaceuticals included in products the Japanese company makes. The contract is for five years with an option to renew.
"We're looking at that to help us establish our base business," Duncan said. "Also, I think it will help us go a long way toward doing that."
"We're just starting up, so we really need to get some revenues flowing, and it would be very beneficial in that respect."
Oread Labs was created in 1982 to help develop commercial uses for research done at the University of Kansas.
Although the contract is in place, Duncan said he did not want to name the firm or discuss the details until he obtained all the contract's stipulations. He said he did not want to provide the public with incorrect information that the firm may not have agreed to.
"We do have a contract that is in place as of about two weeks ago," Duncan said.
"There is nothing particularly proprietary about the information. We just are approaching it as a business agreement, and we want to make
sure the information is acceptable to both parties."
Although Oread Labs is not directly affiliated with KU, it handles commercial research for profit, which is something KU's Center for Bioanalytical Research does not do, Duncan said.
Duncan said the new location of Oread Labs also had helped greatly in how it would approach clients. Oread Labs had very limited opportunities at the old location on West Campus, but the move to the present location in mid-January is making the future business of the labs look better, he said.
Now, Duncan said, companies can be more assured that Oread Labs has the space, staff and equipment available to do the specialized kind of research needed.
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Friday, March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Nicaraguan peace plan
843-4266
Here are the highlights of the cease-fire agreement between Nicaragua's Sandinista government and the contra rebels.
- Temporary truce begins Monday,
with warden at a 60-day cease-fire
before the end of the month.*
The two sides meet in Managua April 6 to discuss permanent truce
Verification to be assisted by Catholic Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo and by secretary-general of Organization of American States.
NICARAGUA AGREES TO THIS:
Government will grant gradual return without fear of retaliation.
Will free 100 jailed contras Sunday. Half of remaining prisoners to be freed when rebels are in specified zones; rest freed on conclusion of permanent truce.
1. 1800 former National Guardmen
2. the British and Dutch revolution
will be freed after time
Government guarantees freedom of expression in accordance with peace plan signed by five Central American nations last August.
Contras will participate in elections and join government talks with opposition.
NICARAGUA
Managua
Sapoa
Reagan, Congress welcome cease-fire
817 Massachusetts
CONTRAS AGREE TO THIS:
Rebels move into specified zones within first 15 days of April. Zones to be set by begin meeting Monday in Saigon, Nicaragua.
Rebels will accept only humanitarian aid from a neutral organization. Contras cannot accept military aid from United States.
SOURCE: Associated Press
Knight-Ridder Graphi
Humanitarian aid package expected soon
WASHINGTON — Congress and the Reagan administration warmly welcomed a Nicaraguan cease-fire agreement yesterday, and some officials said it could usher in a new era of bipartisan U.S. policymaking on Central America.
House Speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, said the Nicaraguan agreement marked "a new chapter in the unhappy history of that war-torn country" and vowed to move ahead before Easter on a package of humanitarian aid for the contras.
"We consider this agreement to be an important step forward," said Secretary of State George Shultz, who added that the truce left "no excuse" for continued Soviet-bloc weapons shipments to the leftist Managua government.
Later, appearing on PBS' MacNeil-Lehrer "NewsHour," Shultz said that the administration might ask Congress to include in any humanitarian aid package a provision
guaranteeing a speedy vote on a military aid request if the peace process breaks down.
"I do think there is great merit ... to have in it a mechanism for a fast-track vote," Shultz said.
Such a provision, he said, would help "to have a little strength visible in the picture, even though it isn't there."
He said the package should include food, clothing and medical assistance for the contra. Asked whether the legislation should ensure an early vote on military aid if President Reagan asks for it, Wright said, "I want to emphasize positive things and not anticipate failure."
But Wright, appearing on the same program, suggested that he would oppose such a provision.
Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn, a leading contraction opponent, said, "This is a bad day for the cynics. A piece of paper has been signed by people who many thought would never be able to sit down face to face."
Mark's Jewlers
Home-made pasta dishes steaks, seafood,and now serving wine and mixed drinks
Paradise Café and bakery
One dessert free with purchase of entree.
728 Mass.
GOOD REAL FOOD
842-5199
Enjoy an exquisite Sunday Brunch at Holiday Inn
Every Sunday our extensive brunches include:
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Lawrence Schwinn Cyclery home of The Bike Garage
April 16th
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 25, 1988
7
North, Poindexter and others plead not quilty to all charges
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Former national security aides Oliver North and John Poindexter and two businessmen pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges that they ran the Iran-contra affair as a vast criminal conspiracy and defrauded the government of $17 million.
One by one, the defendants were called before U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell at their arraignment and asked by courtroom clerk Barbara Montgomery, "How do you wish to plead?"
"Not guilty," replied Poindexter, President Reagan's former national security adviser, and North, a top assistant to Poindexter.
News Roundup
"Not guilty, your honor," responded retired Air Force Maj. Gen Richard V. Secord and Albert Hakim, who controlled the money and procured the arms for the once-secret Iran-contra operation.
All four defendants were released
on their personal recognition and to tell report weekly by telephone to a pre-trial agency. Although criminal defendants are often asked to surrender their passports, Gessell said he would not impose that condition.
Dressed in conservative business suits, the four men made their first appearance in court since a federal grand jury, convened by Independent Counsel Lawrence E. Walsh 14 months ago, handed down a 23-count indictment March 16.
The defendants are charged with conspiring to defraud the United States "by deceitfully . . . organizing, directing and concealing" a program of support for the Nicaraguan contrasts at a time such assistance was banned.
North, retiring as a Marine lieutenant colonel May 1, and Poindexter, a retired Navy rear admiral, embraced before the judge entered the crowded courtroom.
IRAN-IRAQ WAR CONTINUING: Iran and Iraq fired missiles into each other's capitals yesterday, and Teheran threatened to use chemical bombs in the war unless the United Nations punishes Iraq for using poison gas.
EXECUTIVE USED ALIASES: A former Wedtech Corp. executive, vice chairman Mario Moreno, testified yesterday that he gave at least $30,000 to Sen. Allore D'Amato, R-New York, to evade election law contri
CHARLESTON 'FLU': In West Virginia, nearly all of Charleston the police officers and firefighters called in sick yesterday to protest a 2 percent pay raise, then ignored back-to-work orders from a judge and the city council.
OKLAHOMA BANK FAILS: State bank regulators yesterday closed Cashion Community Bank in Oklahoma City, citing severe loan losses and a lack of capital. It was the fourth bank failure in Oklahoma this year and the 42nd nationwide.
bution limits.
FIRE CONJUNCTION UPHELD: A federal appeals court yesterday uphold the convictions of two men found guilty of setting a hotel fire that killed 97 people in Puerto Rico, Jimenez Rivera and Rivera Lopez, both workers at the Dupont Plaza Hotel, admitted that they set the fire on New Year's Eve 1986 as part of a labor dispute with hotel management.
CHUN LEAVES U.S.: Former President Chun Doo-Hwan of South Korea decided to cut short a visit to the United States after prosecutors linked his brother to a growing government corruption scandal involving embeblement, officials said yesterday.
JESSICA'S STORY? For 58 hours after Jessica McClure tumbled into an abandoned well, hundreds of rescuers worked together to free her, but now an effort to bring their heroism to television has divided them. Two groups are negotiating separately with different TV producers for a movie.
TACO BELL
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2120 WEST NINTH
KU STUDENTS
ome Back From Spring Break!
The House of Hupei has missed you while you've been gone and you may have missed our following specials:
Year of the Dragon Special-20% off for all Dragons
(anyone born in 1916, 1928, 1940, 1952, 1964, 1976, 1988)
Buy one dinner get one dinner of equal or lesser value for 1/2 price
with presentation of a KUID
(Does not include dragon meal, family meal, family dinner & Sunday Buffet specials).
Not Valid With Any Other Offer. Expires the end of summer school-Aug. 1, 1988.
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843-8070
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ARTCARVED CLASS RINGS
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Friday, March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Washburn budget bill will stay in committee
By Iill less
Kansan staff writer
A bill that would put the budget of Washburn University under the authority of the Board of Regents will not be brought for committee vote until there is more support for it in the House of Representatives.
State Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, which is considering the bill, said yesterday that he planned to have a committee vote on the bill this session but that he did not think there was enough support in the House vet for its passage.
“What's the point of getting it out of committee if it doesn't have a chance on the House floor?” said Bunten, a proponent of the bill.
However, he said that he thought he could get the support for the bill but that he didn't know how long it would take.
Bunten said that he thought opposition to the bill was based on a false
assumption that it would make Washburn a Regents school.
The bill would take the appropriations for Washburn out of the state Department of Education's budget and put them in the Regents budget.
Bunten said that the Regents could do a better job of handling the Washburn budget because the education department was in charge of primary and secondary schools, not universities.
Ray Hauke, Regents director of planning and budget, agreed. He said that the Regents were willing to take Washburn into their budget because they already had the ability to handle appropriations for universities.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Dawrence, a member of the appropriations committee, said that he was not a proponent of the bill but that he would not vote against it as long as he did not hear complaints from his constituents.
AIDS bill is rational senator says
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - The sponsor of a wide-ranging AIDS bill told a House committee yesterday that the measure was a rational way to deal with the disease.
"The overall problem is whether you're going to be guided by fear or by some rational approach when dealing with this extremely important problem." State Sen. Dick Bond, R-Overland Park.
The bill, which has been approved by the Senate, would require doctors to report the names of people who have AIDS or who die of AIDS to the state Department of Health and Environment. However, laboratories would not be required to provide the state with names of people who test positive for the virus but do not yet have the disease.
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THE GEORGETOWN AMUSEMENTS
Come See Our Model this Weekend.
- 10 or 12 month lease
March 26-27
12-4 p.m.
- On KU Bus Route
- 2 bedroom units
- Microwaves & Mini Blinds
FILM FESTIVAL OF TAIWAN
- Fenced pool with lounge and BBQ area
Come by, then make yourself a home!
A Retrospect on the Development of Taiwan's Society
PLACE: 1005 Hayworth
PLACE: 1005 Hayworth (in front of the Computer Center)
(1) Matrimony (G)-1503
7:00 p.m. March 25
8:00 p.m. March 27
(2) Drifters (PG)-1985 091 March
(3) Taipei Story (PG)-1986
(4) Myth of a City (G)-1985 1:00 p.m. March 27
Admission is free All movies have English subtitles
KU TAIWANESE STUDENT ASSOCIATION
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5 Years Old... Imagine That!
THE KANU
Firesign Theatre founding member DAVID OSSMAN
THE KANU
IMAGINATION WORKSHOP
Live Radio Theatre and Comedy
Two Shows: 2 p.m. Matinee 8 p.m. Evening Performance/Broadcast
IMAGINATION WORKSHOP 5th Birthday Celebration with special guest DAVID OSSMAN
Saturday, March 26th Lawrence Arts Center (9th and Vermont)
At: Lawrence Arts Center / KANU - 864-5100
Tickets: $3.00 / children under 12 free
made possible in part by
Holiday Travel
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841-8010
KANSAS BASEBALL
A
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 25, 1988
9
Sex discrimination continues
Cases of housing unfairness go unreported, specialist says
Arts and Entertainment Every Friday
By Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
The number of unreported sexual harassment cases involving housing is much greater than the cases that are reported, a human relations specialist said last night.
The specialist, Arvilla Vickers, manager of the Fair Housing Assistance Program in Lawrence, spoke at a forum in the Kansas Union sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and Legal Services for Students.
"Many women are ashamed and afraid that others will find out about it and don't report it," she said. "Sometimes, they're intimidated or threatened."
Both tenants and landlords are protected under a Lawrence ordinance from being discriminated in housing based on race, sex, religion, color, national origin, age, ancestry or handicap.
"Being discriminated against is a very damaging situation," Vickers said. "It is very humiliating and can
She said that about 20 cases of discrimination were reported every year to the Human Relations/Human Resources Department in Lawrence but that only a few were cases of sexual discrimination.
H sexual discrimination usually hap-
pens to young, single women. Vickers
said
be physically, mentally and spiritually damaging."
Vickers said that the Human Relations/Human Resources Department's mission is to identify and eliminate discrimination in Lawrence.
But if discrimination isn't reported, it can't be eliminated, she said.
People who think they are being discriminated against in housing should file a complaint with the Human Relations/Human Resources Department at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. An investigator then determines whether there is cause to believe discrimination occurred if the parties involved cannot be conciliated.
Michele Kessler, a lawyer with Legal Services for Students, said services were free for students.
Every case the department has investigated has been conciliated, Vickers said. But if no compromise can be reached, the case can go as far as district court.
Vickers said, "Laws don't hope to change hearts or minds. But one day, there will be no need for offices such as ours."
Vickers said that her department referred people to other agencies, such as the Consumer Affairs Association. 819 Vermont St.
Federal, State & Local Law
PROTECTS THE RIGHT TO
FAR HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
WHERE BENEFIT IS
BOLSON PLAZA AND ARE
BOLSON RAILWAY STREET, CALIFORNIA.
Mark Porter/KANSAN
Arvilla Vickers, human relations specialist and manager of the Fair Housing Assistance Program.
Park Inn
INTERNATIONAL
SLIDE SHOW AND LECTURE "Land of the Queen of Sheba sponsored by Arab Student Organization Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union Saturday, March 26, 7 p.m.
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents Professor Jeffery Lang Professor of Math at the University of Kansas
ALL YOU CAN EAT BREAKFAST BUFFET ONLY $3.95 Saturday & Sunday 6 a.m.-10:30 a.m.
"Men's and Women's Relations in Islam"
Place: Pine Room, Kansas Union, KU
Time: 7:00 p.m., Tuesday, March 29, 1988
Everybody is Welcome
Free Refreshments Are Provided
For more Information call 841-9768
842-7030
A. M. BORNES
2222 W. 6th St.
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French Mini Lop
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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 flexible work schedule. 35 WPM typing preferred for most positions. Responsibilities may include data entry, note examinations, customer service, document and file maintenance, microfilming and other clerical work. Most positions $4.35 per hour.
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.5 p.m. or 12:30 p.9 p.m. Apply in person at The Loan Servicing CenterKansas 2000 Bluff Drive, Lawrence, K8 6044. We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.
You can save 10% on Monday ads.Call the Kansan for the facts 864-4358
SALLIE MAE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
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March 25, 1988
Senior Party March 25,1988
10
Fridav. March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Greek leaders to meet Aim of conference is to improve relationships
By a Kansan reporter
Representatives from about 40 KU fraternities and sororites will try to get their student leaders motivated and build relations between all the houses at their annual retreat this weekend.
About 100 representatives from Black Panhellenic, representing the eight predominantly black fraternities and sororities, and Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic, representing the 38 predominantly white houses, will attend Greek Endeavor, the two-day conference in Linwood.
Each of the fraternities and sororites from IFC and Panhellenic will send representatives. Black Panhellenic will send only a few representatives for the whole group. Greek Endeavor focuses on improving participants'
leadership skills and teaching student leaders things to work on with their house members, said Molly Wanstall, Panhellenic president.
The participants will attend discussions on sexual awareness led by Phil Huntingser, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation. Also planned is a discussion on hazing.
is a obscusion of hazing.
Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life, was scheduled to speak on how to improve race relations, but she had to cancel, said Mike Vankeirsblick, IFC vice president of fraternity affairs and a coordinator of the retreat.
retreat.
"It will still be a topic that receives a lot of consideration this year," he said. "It's kind of been glossed over in the past, but we're really trying to work on it."
Du Pont plans move to save ozone layer
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Du Pont Co., producer of one-quarter of the chemicals destroying the Earth's ozone shield, plans to stop making them because of new research showing decay of the ozone, the company said yesterday.
The company gave no deadline for ending manufacture of the fully halogenated chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs. These non-toxic, non-flammable compounds that Du Pont helped develop in the 1930s are widely used as refrigeration fluids, cleaning solvents, plastic foam blowing agents and, outside the United States, as aerosol propellants.
Du Pont announced in January that it had developed a substitute foam blowing agent. Also, Petroform Inc. has announced a replacement solvent for CFCs, and other chemicals are in the works at several companies.
Dukakis aides plan campaign strategy
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Democratic presidential hopeful Michael Dukakis, slowly widening his delegate lead and /showing strength in national polls, has begun mapping plans to drive most of his rivals out of the race by May 1.
And as the campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination moves into a springtime series of Northern and Midwestern state contests, aides to the Massachusetts governor are shaking off his third place finish in Illinois and trying to lay to rest talk of a brokered Democratic National Convention.
It's conceivable that Dukakis could have a nominating majority by the day after the California primary, June 8, said Tad Devine, a senior campaign aide. More optimistic aides paint a scenario that effectively would clinch the nomination earlier.
Dukakis' rivals concede his superior organization, finances, fresh endorsements and other advantages.
death for Dukakis," said Terry Michael, a spokesman for Sen. Paul Simon, adding that most of the other contenders face make-or-break elections in the next few weeks.
But, the rivals quickly add, Dukakis and his message of managerial competence in the Massachusetts statehouse have yet to stir the emotions of Democrats around the country, and a few bumps might be all it takes to shatter his candidacy.
"I think his lack of a message of what a Dukakis administration would do is catching up with him," said Mark Johnson, spokesman for Ben Richard Genhardt.
Michael said, "They haven't captured the hearts of Democrats. All they've been able to do is convince many that they're a safe bet.
"They have been moving along picking up delegates on tactics, not on message."
Dukakis' aides insist that their candidate has a sound campaign message.
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Alfons Heck A Former Nazi Youth Leader
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1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642
---
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 25, 1988
Arts & Entertainment
11
Lawrence seeks ethnic fashions as alternative
By David Sodamann
Kansan staff writer
Lawrence is first class, dealers in third-world fashions say. And the University of Kansas is a big reason they peddle their goods here.
The demand for ethnic fashions, clothing, jewelry or techniques from the lesser developed nations of Latin America, Asia and Africa, has grown considerably in the last few years.
Jill Legler, buyer and manager
for Sunflower International Casbah,
803 Massachusetts St., said
that he will send for such
fashions in Lawrence.
Demand here for ethnic fashion is the result of a plentiful supply of ethnusiasm in the community for either women, plained and died, dealers say.
"It seems there's a high appreciation for textile arts in the community." Legler said.
She attributes that interest to KU's teaching of textile arts, which has produced in Lawrence a college of fiber-art devotees.
Sunflower International has been in business 14 years. It has always sold some ethnic clothing, Legler said. As ethnic clothing has become more fashionable, so has shopping in the Casbah.
"It's a market that's just kind of grown into us." Legler said.
The kinds of people that buy ethnic fashions are difficult to characterize. Legler said.
"It doesn't appeal to very conservative people for the most part," she said.
Barbara Clark, secretary and bookkeeper for the Lawrence Arts Center, uses a Japanese dying technique to produce fashions of her own design. She said there was a growing interest everywhere in clothing made of natural fibers.
FAMILY
Clark said that the KU design program had done a lot to increase
the community's awareness of textiles as art.
And Lawrence has been very receptive. "It's a young town," she said. "Not quite so staid and traditional."
Cynthia Schira, professor of textile design, said ethnic fashions likely appealed to buyers who are working in the apparel industry or applify of band-woven materials.
"The maker's hand shows in these ethnic textiles." she said.
Elizabeth Kurata, owner of African Adorned, 5 E. Seventh St., has looked at Lawrence from the out and reached her own conclusion
"It's just an unusual town for this part of the world," she said.
Kurata lived in Kenya 11 years before returning home to Lawrence. She opened the store where she sells African-made jewelry and other items four years ago. She also sells her imported items to dealers nationwide.
Kurata said she was surprised at how often she met people from Lawrence during her frequent travels to eastern Africa.
People here, she said, are well traveled and interested in what other parts of the world have to offer.
Sofiana Olivera also sees the University's influence on the ethnic clothing market here. Olivera is the owner of the store where she sells clothing and other crafts she sells clothing and other crafts produced by Andean craftsmen.
She said that the University brought people with diverse interests into the community.
"People are open to things from other countries," she said.
Olivera, a native of Peru, graduated from KU in 1983 with degrees in Latin American studies and economics. After graduation, she worked as an importer of Peruvian products from the villages of her
homeimed by family members. She returned to Lawrence and opened Eldorado last semester. She hopes the store will help pay for her graduate study, which begins next fall.
But Olivaera is interested in more than money. Eldorado is a way of accomplishing something important to her; it is a way of introducing others to Latin American culture.
"People think Latin America has nothing to offer." Olivera said. "But Latin America has things handmade and beautiful. It's a small way of saying we have a lot to offer."
Sheila Immel, manager of the Peruvian Connection, 600 Lawrence Ave., said her store attracted shopers from as close as Kansas City and Topeka and as far as Georgia and Maine. The store sells items handmade in Peru of Alpaca wool and Pima
cotton.
"Most of our business comes from out of town, probably 70 percent." Immel said.
The Lawrence Peruvian Connection store is affiliated with a Tonganoxic-based mail order firm of the same name. The Lawrence store is the factory outlet and sells the items overstocked by the mail order operation at 40 to 60 percent discounts.
Immel said her merchandise was investment quality clothing. Swaters ordinarily sell for $100 to $200 before the discount.
"But they last forever," Immel said.
Legler said items exactly like those sold at Sunflower International, gathered by the same importer, were now being sold in Paris. Brightly colored braided wrist bands that sell for a dollar in Lawrence are fetching as much as $7 in France.
'D.O.A.' revived by mixing of styles
Bv Kevin Dilmore
"D.O.A.," now playing at the Granada Theater, is a film that could have reached the theaters in just that manner: dead on arrival. It suffers from a noticeable wound of an unbelievable script. But the directors' mixture of '40s film noir and '80s hipness breathes life into a project that, in the hands of someone else, could have met a grisly end.
Kansan staff writer
Dennis Quaid is daxter Cornell, an English professor at the University of Texas. He is a tired and uninspired man, nursing wounds from a failed marriage and a fouled relationship with his student's suicide, discussing divorce with his wife Gail (Jane Kaczmarek) and waking up in a dorm room
our murders in a effort to keep his
viewers guessing.
Pogue's screenplay is the biggest disappointment in "D.O.A.," especially when considering that Pogue has written the excellent 1868 update of "The Fly."
The hokey dialogue thrown into the strange situations only adds insult to injury. When a drunken woman brandishes a .44 magnum at Cornell, he reacts with a disbelief that it's that's loaded as is you." Silly turns-phrase like that pockmark the script.
Film Review
843-4266
But every cut and bruise on the script is healed by the film's directors, Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel, a British husband-and-wife team of brothers who are known best in the United States as the creators of "Max Head-
CINEMAS
CINEMA
belonging to one of his freshman students in the same university, Cornell looks worse than it does.
In a daze, Cornell stumbles into an hospital, searching for a quick remedy for what he thinks is a massive hangover. But the doctors have different news for him. Some time during the previous 12 hours, Cornell was poisoned with radium chloride. His blood tests show that his body has absorbed the luminous poison, and the doctors conclude that he has about 24 more hours to live. Cornell decides to use that time to find his murderer and bring the villain to justice.
A glow-in-the-dark liquid poison such as radium chloride might seem far-fetched, but when compared to the flaky turns that the plot takes, it becomes one of the more credible plot devices in "D.O.A." The screenwriter, Charles Edward Pogue, was wise to spice up the framework of the original version of "D.O.A.", which was released in 1949. For instance, he changed Cornell from a boring insurance salesman to a bored professor, and that adds some interest. But he also peppered the plot with many gratuit-
room."
Morton and Jankel boldly acknowledge that "D.O.A." is a remake by adopting a film noir look, which pays off. The film's opening is shot in black and white, cutting abruptly to color after the first 10 minutes, but the characteristic chrioscuro lighting is maintained throughout the film. Shadows cast from venetian blinds cut across the faces of characters, and neon signs pierce murky streets. And as the story concludes, colors slowly wash away from the film, bringing the atmosphere and the plot line full circle.
Morton and Jankel give the same quirky style to their first U.S. feature as they did to their ABC-TV series: the sometimes dizzying camerawork and the staccato editing. They do everything they can to infuse a modern character into each scene.
The marriage of film noir and the music video is consummated in "D.O.A." Morton and Jankel deserve credit not only for salvaging a weak script, but also for giving credence to the adage that everything old is new again.
"D.O.A." is rated R for violence, language and sexual situations.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI
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PRESENTS
THE 1988 COLLEGIATE STUDY ABROAD PROGRAM Seven courses will be offered this summer for undergraduate or graduate credit:
BRITISH SHAKESPEAREAN PRODUCTION
PEOPLE PEOPLE PEOPLE
EUROPEAN POLITICS
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THEATER MANAGEMENT
If you would like further information on any of these programs, please contact:
People to People International
501 East Armour Boulevard
Kansas City, Missouri 64109
Kansas City, Missouri 64109
(816) 531-4701
or
The KU Study Abroad Office Lippincott Hall, Room 203
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12
Friday, March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
军训
Forrest MacDonald/KANSAN
Tossing blanks
Eric Gebhart, Wichita freshman and ROTC cadet, practices throwing mock grenades at a target approximately 50 feet away. The grenade throw is one of 12 skills tests that Gebhart must pass to qualify as a ranger in the ROTC Army Battalion. The grenade throw uses practice grenades that weigh the same as real fragmentation grenades. Gebhart and other cadets in the Ranger Company were practicing yesterday between Robinson Gymnasium and the Computer Center.
KANU plans live theater
Bv Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Glowing vacuum tubes have been replaced with tiny ceramic transistors. Static-filled AM frequencies have been bypassed for cleaner sounding FM airwaves. But the flavor of old-time drama can still be tasted in KANU's Imagination Workshop.
The Imagination Workshop, which is broadcast six times a year on KANU, will celebrate its fifth anniversary with performances at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont streets. The evening performance will be broadcast live.
The performances will feature David Ossman, an alumnus of the comedy troupe the Firesign Theater, as a guest director and performer.
Darrell Brogdon, program director of KANU and founder of the workshop, said he did not want to get too puffed up about the program anniversary, but it gave him a good chance to invite Ossman to Lawrence.
lawrence. "The Firesign Theater was and is
really popular," Brodgon said. "They really kept radio theater alive without people thinking of it in those terms."
Brogdon said he would step back from his usual position as director for the special show.
"I've invited David to do whatever he wants to," he said. "And it's nice to have the weight of a show partially off my shoulders."
Ossman said at his first rehearsal with the 10-member cast that the performances would be a collabrative hour of radio touching the old radio nerves in people.
"I am very interested in using material that has grown out of the native soil to link with what I have brought," Ossman said.
Ossman will direct the cast in three plays originally written and performed by the Firesign Theater. They are "Adventures of Young Tom Edison — Electric Detective," "Mark Time of the Circum-Solar Federation" and "Max Morgan — Crime Cabie." He described them as genre pieces styled after the '40s era of radio.
The Imagination Workshop also will give an encore performance of a comedy written by Brogdon called "Big Trouble in Studio A."
Big Problem in Studio B Brogdon said the material for the anniversary show would be representative of the series.
rattle of it. "It is consistent with what we do, and part of it harkens back to old-time radio," he said.
But Brogdon said that the Imagination Workshop did not rely on nostalgia for its productions.
"What we are trying to do is not recreate the past, except to poke a little fun at our memories on occasion," he said.
Brogdon began his career in radio drama in 1975, when he produced recreations of "The Shadow" and "Inner Sanctum" at North Texas State University.
Brodogan said the Imagination Workshop was one of a few groups performing live radio theater across the country.
Tickets are available for both performances for $3 and can be purchased at KANU, the Lawrence Arts Center, or by calling 864-5100.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 25, 1988
13
Sports
Kansas and Vanderbilt will face off in Silverdome
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
One year ago, the Kansas Jayhawks made it to the regional semifinals of the NCAA basketball tournament before they lost to Georgetown 70-57.
W.
Tonight, Kansas goes into the Midwest Regional semifinals with a 23-11 record and faces Vanderbilt of the Southeastern Conference at 6:40 in the Pontiac. Mich., Silverdove.
The No. 7 seed Commodores, 20-10,
upset No. 2 seed Pittsburgh 80-74 in
overtime Sunday to reach the
regional semifinals.
North Kansas and Vanderbilt flew to Pontiac Wednesday night in order to have more time to practice in the domed arena.
We're very much like Kansas. We have a fine center in Will, but we don't live or die by him. It's really more of a team than a bunch of individuals.'
Kansas isn't too familiar with the Commodores. The two teams have met twice, once in 1972 and again in 1973, and Kansas lost both times.
C. M. Newton
Vanderbilt basketball coach
Vanderbilt coach C.M. Newton has
kept an eye on the Jayhawks throughout the season, especially on guard Kevin Pritchard.
Kansas and the Commodores both vied for Pritchard's attentions when they tried to recruit him his senior year at Tulsa (Okk). Edison high school, with a fierce battle, but Newton is hoping the Commodores can win the one tonight.
"We're just working on ourselves, trying to be at the top of our game," he said. "We watched Kansas in Lincoln, and we're really impressed. They were better than I thought they were. If we both play well, it should
be a heck of a game."
Newton had not expected his team to make it this far in the tournament, especially after going on a down swing in the latter part of the regular season.
"It's a surprise, but we knew we could play with these teams," he said. "But it's not like we had it before." We observations in Pont-Aix or anything."
Newton compared the lineups of the two teams, especially the roles of Vanderbilt seven-foot center Will Perdue and Kansas' Danny Manning.
have a fine center in Will, but we don't live or die by him," Newton said. "It's really more of a team than a bunch of individuals."
"We're very much like Kansas. W
Because of Perdue's size, Kansas coach Larry Brown has decided to use the 6-10 Manning against Perdue instead of 6-8 forward Chipper Piper.
The only concern is that Manning could get into foul trouble, something that Brown said concerned him.
"We can't afford it, and that's a concern, but it might be a really tough matchup for Pipe," Brown said.
Kansas has been working on the zone to stop Perdue and will depend on outside shooters Pritchard, Milt Newton and Jeff Gueldner to step in if Manning is closed in by the zone.
NCAA Midwest Regionals
KU
V
Kansas
Jayhawks
COACH: Larry Brown
Record: 23-11
Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt Commodores
COACH: C.M. Newton
Record: 20-10
PROBABLE STARTERS
| | PPG | | PPG |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| F-24 Chris Piper | 6'8" | 4.8 | F-34 Frank Kornet | 6'8" | 6.5 |
| F-21 Milton Newton | 6'4" | 11.2 | F-52 Eric Reid | 6'9" | 6.6 |
| C-25 Danny Manning | 6'10" | 24.4 | F-32 Will Perdle | 70'0" | 18.4 |
| G-33 Jeff Gueldern | 6'5" | 4.2 | G-4 Barry Booker | 6'3" | 10.5 |
| G-14 Kevin Pritchard | 6'3" | 10.8 | G-12 Barry Goheen | 6'3" | 12.7 |
COVERAGE: Game time 6:40 tonight, at the Silverdome in Poti-
tiac, Mich. The contest will be televised on CBS, WIBW-TV
channel 13 and KCTV-TV channel 5. The game will be broadcast
on the Jawhay Sports Network, KLZR 106 FM.
Midwest NCAA TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE East
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL Pontiac Silverdome, Pontiac, Mich.
The road to...
The Final Four
Mar. 24, 26 Meedowilanda Arena East Rutherford, N.J. REGIONAL
Purdue
Kansas State
Vanderbilt
Kansas
To Final Four
April 2, 4
Kemper Arena
Kansas City, Mo.
To Final Four
April 2, 4
Kemper Arena
Kansas City, Mo.
Duke
Duke
Rhode Island
Temple
Temple
Richmond
West Southeast
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL The Kingdome, Seattle
North Carolina
Michigan
Arizona
Iowa
To Final Four
April 2, 4
Kemper Arena
Kansas City, Mo.
To Final Four
April 2, 4
Kemper Arena
Kansas City, Mo.
Mar. 25, 27 REGIONAL Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center Birmingham, Ala.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma
Louisville
Kentucky
Villanova
Villanova
KANSAN/Knight-Ridder Graphic
OU's Grant and King power Sooners to the regional final
The Associated Press
Harvey Grant scored 34 points and Stacey King 24 as four-ranked Oklahoma won a fast-paced shootout over Louisville with a 108-98 victory in the NCAA Southeast Regional last night.
The Sooners, topping the 100-point mark for the 20th time this season, surged to an early 11-point lead in the second half, saw Louisville close to 76-74 midway through the half and then pulled away again.
It was the seventh victory in a row and the 19th in 20 games for the Sooners, 33-3, who will face Villanova in the regional title game tomorrow for a berth in next week's Final Four in Kansas City, Mo.
Grant hit his first six shots of the second half, including, the team's first four baskets, helping build a 64-53 lead with 17:22 to play.
Villanova 80. Kentucky 74
Doug West and Mark Plansky keyed a late first-half run, giving Plansky the lead and points. Plansky scored seven and West four in a 14-3 burst in the last 4:30 of
Villanova, the lone Big East representative remaining from the six that started the tournament turned aside favored Kentucky with a nearly flawless performance. The Wildcats were flawless at the free throw line, hitting all 17 foul shots.
the half, creating a 43-32 lead. Villanova, 24-12, built its lead to 19-36 early in the second half and withstood a pair of surges that twice helped Kentucky, 27-6, get within four points.
"We have referred to coming back to the same arena, and there's a feeling of confidence in that," he said. "But I don't think that's a relevant issue anymore. This team has established its own identity."
Rex Chapman had 30 points, including five three-point baskets, for Kentucky, the SEC champion. West led Villanova with 20 points.
Duke 73. Rhode Island 72
The ACC champion Blue Devils ended Rhode Island's upset run as Kevin Strickland scored 11 of his 12-10 second-half points during a 22-10 spurt. The Blue Devils, who held an 13-point lead in the first half, had fallen behind 51-46 before their run.
Rhode Island, 28-7, surprised Missouri and Syracuse in the subregional. But the Rams couldn't stop Danny Ferry, who had 17 points and 12 rebounds for Duke, which is seeking its sixth trip to the Final Four.
"At the start of the second half, we were playing like we were waiting for something to happen instead of making something happen," Duke coach Mike Krzeryowski said. "But we played winning basketball the last 10
minutes. We made a lot of good decisions."
Carlton Owens, who made a three-pointer with 7 seconds to go, getting Rhode Island within the final margin, scored 19 points. The Blue Devils held Tom Garrick, who had averaged 30 points in five postseason games with two in this tournament and three in the Atlantic 10 journey, to 14.
"This team isn't Danny Ferry and four clowns." Rams coach Tom Penders said of Duke. "They proved that tonight."
Temple 69, Richmond 47
Temple, the champions of the Atlantic 10, now has posted progressively bigger wins in the tournament. The Owls beat Leigh by 14 points in the opening round, knocked off Georgetown 74-53 in the next round and routed唐重 by 22.
Both teams pitted their half-court offenses against similar matchup zones for the first 20 minutes, with the defenses having the upper hand most of the time.
The Owls trailed only once in the game, and that 4-2 deficit quickly was wiped out when they ran off seven straight, with Mike Vreesywk hitting a three-pointer between baskets by Ramon Rivas and Mark Macon.
Sports Briefs
FORMER TRACK STARS RETURN:
For the second year in a row, former Kansas track stars will return to Memorial Stadium for an alumni meet, beginning at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Kansas assistant coach Steve Kuefer said there was a good turnout last year despite the poor weather conditions.
"We had to move last year's meet to Anschutz (Sports Pavilion) because of the weather. This year, we expect good weather conditions," he said.
Kueffer said that anyone could attend the meet, which will run most
Alumni who will attend include jumpers Jay Reardon and Mark Hanson, high-jumper Paul Titus, decathletes Owen Buckley and Steve Rainbolt, spinner Rodney Bullock and pole-vaulter Tad Scales. Several track alumni also will be coming to watch the action.
"It is a very low-key meet, for the most part," Kueffer said. "Some of the alumi get into heated battles, but it is all in fun."
KU RUBGY THIS WEEKEND: The KU Rugby Club will play two games this weekend. The Jayhawks, 3-1, will play the Topeka Rugby Club at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Topeka and against Oklahoma Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa streets.
After the meet, there will be a alumni-only pizza reception to honor
KU TENNIS WILL TRAVEL: The Kansas women's tennis team will travel to Champaign, Ill., this weekend. The Jayhawks play northern Illinois tonight, Illinois tomorrow and Marquette on Sunday. The women's record is 12-3. Kansas opens Big Eight competition against Kansas State on April 15.
EX-JAYHAWK COACH HIRED: Former Kansas secondary coach Lou West has been hired by the University of Cincinnati. West will serve in a similar position at Cincinnati, West, 34, a defensive back before his 1977 graduation from Cincinnati, replaces Tony DeBiase as secondary coach. He has also coached at Minnesota, Middle Tennessee and Arizona Western Junior College.
Stadium. Kansas will play Emporia State at 1 p.m. tomorrow at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. The Jayhawks will travel to Omaha Sunday to play Creighton.
6
Kansas outfieldier Mike Byrn (right) celebrates after hitting the first of his two home runs against Missouri Western. The Javahawk beat Western 23-2 last night at Hoglund-Maupin
Happy 'Hawk
Athletic officials bar Zola Budd from U.S. competitions
LONDON — Zola Budd's controversial running career was plunged into further confusion yesterday when the South African-born naturalized Briton was at the center of a dispute over her eligibility to compete in the United States.
The Associated Press
A week after withdrawing from Saturday's World Cross-Country Championships at Auckland, New Zealand, amid allegations that she broke international rules by competing in her homeland last year, Budd.
21. effectively was barred from competing in the United States.
British track officials were furious. "This is totally out of order," said British Amateur Athletic Board secretary William Hobson, a directive sent to The Athletics Congress, the governing body for track and field in the United States.
"It smacks of a suspension. As far as we are concerned, Zola is perfectly entitled to take part. We are extremely angry."
TAC said Wednesday that it had
been told by the International Amateur Athletic Federation, the world governing organization, not to let Budd compete in the United States pending a hearing April 15 on her worldwide status and eligibility.
It said a letter from IAAF General Secretary John Holt stated that the BAAB "could not guarantee Zola Budd's eligibility following her activities in South Africa in 1987."
"Without this permit," Holt said, "any participation by the athlete is against IAAF rules, and we ask you
to notify meeting organizers of this fact."
The directive means that Budd, who became a British citizen in 1984 and ran in the Los Angeles Olympics, would be unable to compete Sunday in a 10-kilometer road race in New York. It was the only race she had entered during a U.S. trip.
The directive a runner purported to be Budd at a meet in Brakpan, Transvaal, was South African Agnes Berger, 17.
The Associated Press
U.S. Olympian helps Rangers defeat Oilers
NEW YORK — U.S. Olympian Brian Leech scored his first NHL goal and assisted on another in a five-gate first period, leading the New York Rangers to a 6-1 victory over the Edmonton Oilers last night.
The victory solidified the Rangers' hold on the fourth and final playoff spot in the Patrick Division, where they lead Pittsburgh over five points. The Rangers have five games left, and the Penguins have six.
The game was marred by an injury to referee Dave Newell, who was hurt when he fell awkwardly to the ice while jumping to avoid a clearing pass by Edmonton goal-tender Grant Fuhr early in the first period. Newall had to be carried off on a stretcher.
The game was held up about 10 minutes before Newell was taken to Lenox Hill Hospital "conscious but feeling weak," a Rangers spokesman said.
Linesman Ray Scapinello took over as referee with Mark Vines working as the lone linesman for the rest of the period until Pat Dapuzoo, who lives in the area, arrived at the start of the second period.
---
The loss snapped the Oliers' five-game unbeaten streak and their six-game winning streak against the Rangers.
The Rangers put the game away in the first 20 minutes and matched their highest single-period output of the season.
Don Maloney deflected Lucien DeBlois' shot past Fuhr at 1.90 and Leech made it 2-0 at 3:02 when he fired a 50-footer from the deep slot that beat Fuhr high on the glove side.
Leetch, captain of the U.S. Olympic team, had six assists in 11 previous games since joining the Rangers.
Tomas Sandstrom scored from the slot at 5:06 to give the Rangers a 3-0 lead just before Newell was injured.
14
Friday, March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Coaches travel to KU for annual clinic
By Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
The annual Kansas Coaches Clinic will begin today and end tomorrow at Allen Field House.
Junior high, high school, junior college and small college coaches from Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma will attend the two-day clinic. It is designed to give different football programs the opportunity to learn about each other.
Kansas defensive line and outside linebacker coach Bob Fell is in charge of filling the clinic. The
clinic will have guest speakers, including Syracuse coach Dick MacPherson.
MacPherson led his team to an 11-0-1 record, including a 16-16 tie with Auburn in the Sugar Bowl.
Other clinic speakers include Kansas coach Glen Mason; Kansas defensive coordinator and inside linebacker coach Jim Hillez; Kansas offensive coordinator Pat Ruel; Kansas strength coach Brad Roll; Independence College coach Mike Calvert; Pittsburg State coach Dennis Franchione; Lee's Summit.
Mo., High School coach Dick Purdy;
and Manhattan High School coach
Lew Lane.
LEW Labor.
We want to give area programs the opportunity to sample each others' philosophies." Fello said. "We want to meet with these coaches to help our recruiting efforts in the future. We also will have an exchange board so that a coach can have the opportunity to schedule a team he wants to scrimmage against, for example."
The clinic will begin at the 3:30 Kansas practice Registration
costs $16 and is from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Anyone can attend, and those interested can pre-register before tonight for $10.
Guest speakers will address those attending from 6:30 p.m. to 10 p.m., and a social time will follow that.
Tomorrow is a registration period beginning at 7:30 a.m. for those who do not attend today's session. Coffee and doughnuts will be served.
AOII
Moonlight
and
Roses
March 25, 1988
Polygram Recording Artists presents. . .
Polygram Recording Artists presents. L.A. GUNS Featuring Tracii Guns of Guns and Roses
Get tickets TODAY at CATS and SUA Box Office in the Kansas Union
"Blunt and Beer-soaked songs."
"Bee Bee Bee
In concert at the Kansas Union Ballroom
April 11, 1988 - 7 p.m.
$8 students with KUID $10 public Presented by SUA SPECIAL EVENTS
NEED MONEY?
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Everything you expect in a good hotel except high prices!
Call for an appointment or apply in person today.
841-1200
E. O.E. m/f/h
ENTERTEL
Kansan Classified (913) 864-4358
LENTEN SPECIAL Now Through April 3rd
Fish Sandwiches $1.09 with coupon
Arby's
TASTE THE ARBY'S Difference!
1533 West 23rd Street adjacent to the Southern Hills Mall 842-3229
Hours:
Hours.
Sun.-Thurs. 10:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 10:30 a.m.-1:00 a.m.
---
842-7030
SUA FILMS Don't Miss It This Weekend!
9½ Weeks
Mickey Rourke
Kim Basinger
March 25 & 26 Friday 3:30,7:00,9:30 p.m. Sarturday 3:30,7:00,9:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium/KS Union
We're
On A Roll...
KU
$1.99 A Roll!
roll of 110, 135, 126, or disc film
developed for just $1.99
We're On A Roll...
$1.99 A Roll!
Any roll of 110, 135, 126, or disc film developed for just $1.99
Reprints: 16 cents each
Enlargements: 5x7 $.99
8x10 $1.99
11x14 $3.99*
* 1/5 mm negative only
KUBookstores
KANSAS UNION
BURGE UNION
KU
Reprints: 16 cents each
Enlargements: 5x7 $.99
8x10 $1.99
11x14 $3.99*
*15 mm negative only
KU
KUBookstores
KANSAS UNION BURGE UNION
Trust In Us
2222 W. 6th
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SAVE $351.00 AND GET THE SERVICE AND SUPPORT
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We know that your first computer purchase can be kind of frightening. Don't worry it isn't really. Never the less, when you buy a personal computer from us we don't just drop it off the back of a truck you need to struggle on your own. With every purchase of the Leading Edge Model "D" (or any other product) we make sure you get the orientation and support that you want and expect. It is just part of our service. And, with our 30 day price guarantee you know that you are getting the lowest price around.
DON'T SELL YOURSELF SHORT...
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Truck Load Special
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Sometimes
90 Days
Topeka
Yes
No
Only 3 days left to submit nominations for Women's Recognition. Stop by 218 Strong.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORK SHOPS Wednesday, March 30. April 6 & 13: 30-5:30 p.m. Material fee $15 Register and pay by fc.pm. on 5:30 or 9:28 at the
MASSAGE: "Just say YES" O. K., you've been reading our eds for awhile, right? But we realize you're nervous. Can massage be helpful? Will it help ya? SURE! So, do your body and mind a favor. and get 25% off! Call Lawrence Therapy at 841 602 - nevermind what Narrie
Research Paper Workshop. Examine topic selection, taking notes, organization, writing style Tuesday, 29 March 7-9 p.m. 4034 Wescrew. Student Assistance Center, 121 Struthers. "the right to shelter for all" a home is, "the right to shelter for all" a home is valued principles of our society." *Human Relations Depot - booklet*
Lie Gidow, spokesperson, Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DISCRIMINATION AND SEXUAL ORIENTATION Wed. April 6, 8:00 p.m. Liceum Theatre, sponsored by Pennsylvania Association.
$1200.00
We Know Your Name. Until Wednesday, April 6
house of Usher, H338, 842-3610, print
graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal
blue ink. Small quantities. Call for more
Yemen, "Land of the Queen of Sheba" slides and papyrus, Kuala Lumpur 7 pm; March 25, Baskaw, Kuala Lumpur 7 pm; March 26, Baskaw, Kuala Lumpur 7 pm.
$ You Are Invited To A Contest REWARD
For Designing Our New Look
FREE ENER $230.00 in COLD CASH
Create an either Nike or Logo,
or Landscaping & Color Schemes, or both.
All participants are required to be available at ener.com
804 New Hampshire St.
Downtown Lawrence 843-7584
Formerly COMPUTER OUTLET
Boardwalk Apartments
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444
ENTERTAINMENT
IF YOUR REQUEST is Lawrent's Best, and
dustier than that, Music and Lighting for any
room. 814-1065
OCTOBER 27
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound Super Sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot spins Maximum Party 840-708-956
19057
**Important:** Humane Society Fund-raising show featuring Scrubty The Cat and the Moving Van Gogh. Sunday, for租金 Outside the Auditorium, Sunday at 11am of public hours records available until Saturday at Pentagram Records and SA Boxoffice. $1.90 raffle tickets ages 4 to 8 no alcohol. Listen to KJHK for details.
acoustica LOCATION
MUSIC "Acoustica" MUSIC "Acoustica"
Music Audio - D.J. Dervie, 8-track studio,
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry. Call
Brad 749-1275
LIBERTY HALL
VIDEO LIBRARY
Check Us Out First!
Mon Thurs. lays $1.50
players $3.00
Fri-Sun, lays $1.50 players $5.00
please add 1.00 tapes all the time.
646 MASS. 913/749-1972
O
August lease, spectacular low townhouse. Two huge bedrooms, two full baths, two walk-in closets, a private garage, garage, operer rose, bursa 843-1693. Hurry! Available immediately -- Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
FOR RENT
Available end of May or by June 1, 1988 one nice bedroom apartment, fully equipped kitchen, walk in closet, very low utilities. Call Pam at 8741-0382
64114
appropriately Furnished Bedrooms 1-2.3-8 & bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841121, 841255, or 749-2415. Master Bedroom.
Marshallville, NY
room location 2. bedroom apartment in
4-piece, carpet. CA equipped kitchen, low utilities,
available April 1, $230 at 1341 Orchid) Call 842-4232.
FANTASTIC ROOM available immediately
Hardwood floors, lots of windows and light in
house close to campus and downtown. $143 per m².
utility rooms. Care for them.
For female guests, clean big rooms, cell-
lars, private guest house, phone cable, WD use. Two blocks from KU. $175 - $195, $41-369, $75 deposit.
Furnished, private room now & summer,
rooming on 1344 Kentucky share kitchen &
bathrooms $120 - deposit $149. Leave
Please contact us with kitchen & bath facilities,
utility utilities off- street parking one block
form University. No pets please. 841-5500.
Load up the room with kitchen & bath facilities,
utility utilities off- street parking one block
form University. No pets please. 841-5500.
Most utilities paid. Off street parking
form University. No pets please. @ 814-5600.
I need a roommate and for fall
semester 88. I smoke. call Saran evenings
Furnished 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Some utilities paid. Some utilities paid with off-street parking. One block form University. No pets. No maids. 841-5500
KOIMONIA COMMUNITY has a few spaces in the Christian Living Center for summer '88 and or academic year 88-89. Apply immediately at ECM Center, 2044 Sheffield
Need roommate; share 3-bedroom apartments at
derekwood, private room; $150/month plus low
rates.
newly remodeled one bedroom near campus
may rent 16,000 $30,000 month. May rent paid.
784-269 16.
499-216
Non-smoking Female Inmate wanted. 2 BD, in base starting in May. Furniture is welcome. I will also consider moving. 749-5673 after 590
Ages 12 to 18
Leave schooling for 2 bedrooms apartments.
Close to campus. 10 and 12 month leaves. Resident Manager. Unfurished. Apartments at 1029 Kentucky. 843-0929
One or two bedrooms, aps low utilities, gas and
heat, windows, patio, laundry, dishwasher,
Avalon Apts. 829 & Avalon, 749-2922.
Avalon Apts. 829 & Avalon, 749-2922.
Reserve your room for summer or fall at Sunflower House, an experience to appreciate.
Roommate. Call 749-6871 and ask for the rental
Roommate Needed to share 2HD House. Close to
Campus 175/月. Available New/Summer
or Fall - call 842-6212
Roommate needed NOW. own bedroom at Berkley
Roommate needed NOW. 749-102 or 843-8495.
SUMMER SUBLET. Affordable, new one bedroom fully furnished, near campus.
diatwasher, clean. 480W.
Sublease Summer. 2 Br. 2 bath and
microcream. microwave, tennis court.
For two people. Available. May througth July.
31. May paid 475/mo + iti 841-849 after 3 p.m.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills & trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus & area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious & comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
Reserve Your Unit Now...For Summer or Fall!
meadowbrook
843 4390
15th & Crestline 842-4200
University Daily Kansan / Friday, March 25, 1988
15
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 WEST 24th
841-5797
Sign a lease with us before
April 15th
and SAVE $$$
1 & 2 bedroom units
• laundry facilities
• on bus route - near shopping
• water paid
• off street parkings
• rental furniture avail.
by Thompson-Crawley
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
Great Location near campus
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts. furn. or unfurn.
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
BRAND NEW COMPLEX
NAISMITH PLACE
OUSDAHL & 25th Ct.
Open the doors to an apartment with:
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Fully equipped Kitchen
* Satellite TV
Naismith Place Apts.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- contract
- Free basic cable
- Swimming pool
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
- Fire place
- Enerov officien
- On-Site Management
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
--to four
floor
three bedrooms
Sunrise Village
Spacious
three bedrooms; 28x2 baths, water/ dryer, pool, ten
bedrooms.
SUNRISE
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments and
- Garage:
- Deals
- Tennis Court
- Townhouses
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Free Cable TV
Close to Campus
On Bus Route
Sublease. 2 bedroom/2 bath apartment, at Peper-
nell. $475 monthly, available now or移
位. 749-708-3161
Sunrise Terrace 10th & Arkansas
Two bedroom Sunrise Place $75, cable paid,
two bedrooms to pay. Summer semester w/ optional
roommate.
Sublease a room in my 3 br-2 bth on the golf course * covered coursed-w pool & clubhouse. Townhouse for the summer, and if you like, a stay in the backyard. $4, $5, $4, $3, $4, $4, $4
Subleasing two bedroom apt. for June and July.
Close to campus water supply and can house
large family group.
WANTED: 2 male roommates; Summer
student; $1400 a month; % utilities; Tory Atmy
at $150 a month; % utilities.
his court.
Subject: Nice B3R, 2 bath, 1 block from
Call Nancy or Jill. 841-6078.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt at West Hills.
Close to campus. 320/mo deposit. Available
with a first-come, first-served offer.
Summer Sublet: New apartment cheap rent, microwave super nice Chris 749-5382
Summer suites need: 2 or 3 for 3 bTR, 8bTR,
bathroom to towelroom. Bathrooms must have:
Bath or Case Sten or Kue N4-3722.
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
Reserve your home for next semester!
Completely furnished studio, 1,2,3 & 4 bedroom apartments
bedroom apartments..
all close to KU
or on bus route
CAMPUS PACE * 841-1429
Hanover Place * 841-1212
Orchard Corners * 749-4226
15th & Kasold
SUNDANCE * 841-5255
Tanglewood * 749-2415
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company 842.4455
FOR SALE
Stereo 5 channel mixer 220, remot TV converter
to a cassette walkman 10, interested?
Call 841-7583.
64K XT clone w/ 2 drives, Hercules, comm board
& amber monitor. $650. 814-3657
73 Cresting Home: 12' x 50' 2 BR. Extra insulation through, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 pm; or inquire 429 North St. #4, Lawrence.
73 Crestline Home : 12.3 x 50 . 2 BR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 for 5:30 p.m., or inquire 499 North St. 6. Lawrence.
77 V.W. Rabbit, runs great. New clutch, new C.V. joints $60.50 + BU 84.91 - 869.18 after 3:30 p.m.
85 Red Hound Spree, Excellent condition, low mileage, best offer. Call Susan at 84-967.
Apple IIe with Epson printer $750 Call John at 749-5723.
ATTENTION ADVERTISING/JOURNALISM MAJORS Several local media for sale
BLACK 1984 YAMMA RVA 125 Brand new scoop; Phillips 864-6000
cake machine, in good shape, holds frozen dough
749-7636 leave message
Commodore Computer for sale C-44 1541 Disk
Computer Excellent condition
WWW.Wiho.com BH48 9177-69
WWW.Wiho.com BH48 9177-69
For Sale 1983 Liberty Home Mobile - 14 x 70' 3 bedrooms, 1½ bathrooms. Bay window, skirred and tied down. Great condition $130.000. Gaslift Village L1-6 or 749-5413
For Sale: motobase车 b75.00 + 12 inch mch-
Computer monitor Zenith 800.00 Call
800.700.
For Sale: Stereo, complete system. CD ready,
must hear to address. $400 obo Call 789-440-400
or call 789-216-5300.
save message at 6427086
For sale 32" Bianchi Dirt Blike. 18 speeds. 1 week
Bianchi Dirt Blike 141698
Honda Magna 1985 3000 ml Perf. cond $2000
841-8752 Call Allan
Maroon 80 Vegeta Scooter P200E - All metal, windchief. Carrier, low miles, rugged. Only $799.
LEAVING (t 9 Nw Qn St)
Bed-Couches, 15 each, burrows, -17, chair-
teams, 15 each, bedrooms, -15, chairs, baskets 23,
wicker table -10, also 2 color tv's. b41-2896 Scott.
Leave message
Mountain Bike for sale - Schwinn Siegel 216
Bicycle with a removable rear rack.
Condition: Asking $250.00 call 749-7219 ask for
***MOTHRAIL GOOD USED FURNITURE***
512 E. 90h. 749-4961
Pair JVR-SX100 speaker 95kW high cost coil
Pair JVR-SX100 speaker 95kW high cost coil
$400. cluster closet 10 $400. typewriter synthesizer
$400.
AUTO SALES
New (ONLY 50 miles) Centurion, 25" Frame, 27"
Sailboard - Sailrider SR2, great for learning.
$300, Tim 841-2475.
Rommates Married . Beautiful.
Serenate Exercise Room. Ample Storage. Beside
Senior Exercise Room. Ample Storage. Beside
Rock-n-tail - Thousands of used and rare albums
a to m. a to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday
1976 Cavalier. Auto air, ps, bb, amf stereo,
cassette, excellent condition. 2400 miles 6/16
wattlight. Call 842-8993 between 7-10 pm. Ask for Paula.
1866 Camero Black VB x auto overdrive, Tops,
air P. S., P.B. am/fm cassette, tlittle perfect
grey interior Owner will sacrifice to $ 8,000
O.B.O.: Weekdays after 5 p.m and weekends
SAILBOARD. Vista 370, 164 m 4mails, 5mails,
vario boom, 850, 642-9389晚餐s
Quarrell's Fish Market, 811 New Hampshire.
SAILROAD. Vista 370 cm and 48m awns. 2 sailb.
Car '78 Chevy Malibu, nice outside but doesn't
take up space for trade money or large art of
beer. $399.00
For Sale 1800 Suzuki motorcycle. Huns good
Nice commuter bike. $550 or best offer
165 Corvette. Auto, air- am fm stereo, cassette,
ps. pb. New black lacquer and Tops. T-call
equipment.
AUTO repair service on foreign cars at your home. Tune-up only $35. Ten years exp.
RED HOT Bargain! Drug dealers' cars, boats,
planes, planes. Your area. Buyers
must have 67,000 or more. 67,000 or
more.
65 WV Gilf, Silver, 4 door, air, low miles, 5 speed
roof, sun cover, Michael, 749-0794
RDX 1400 Yamaha, 12K - Good condition $400
OKP Call Luke 841-9689
Dingqi, China and other states
Date of 841-1956.
MCN Micaforcies for sale. Very low
1863 Honda C70 Motorcycle for sale. Very low
mileage auto start, shuffleshags. 542 3384
1979 Yamaha 500 Enduro. 11,800 miles, recent tune up, new battery and tires. **0780 OBU** Cable.
Found: 2 books. Wescree 3rd Floor woman's
room. Call to identify 843-4965.
1955 Fiero SE. 6, CYL A, 4 Sp. Silver, Top of line ship
35,000 pounds, $7,000. 814,346.
LOST! Opal ring. Watson First floor index!
Please call, please call 843-1929. Reward.
Please call 843-1929. Reward.
1903 Honda Shadow 9,000 Miles with Extras Call 842-6054 for Pat.
Land. 3/70. White cat on campus. 841 0732 to identify
denominy
LOST: Opal ring. Watson. First floor ladie's.
Lost. Purple glasses in Blake hall rm 190 on March 8. If found, call 841-5637.
8. Purple glasses in Blake rm110 rnm on
March 9, if found, call 841-6857 on
phone.
HELP WANTED
Two books on China in 3rd floor woman's
classroom on Cina 3/28. If found, please call
(2-789)-2780.
AIRLINES NOW HIRING Flight Attendants Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service. Listings, Salaries to $50k. Entry level positions. Call 617-829-6000 Ext. A-9738
**comm. Call to identify** 843-409-95.
**2010. White cat on campus** 841-7032 12
ownsay Tues - Clean approximately 21 hours per week. 5 a.m. to m.o.n., 8 a.m. to m.o.n., and vacation after one year. Interviews Tues. 1 p.m. and Thurs. 10 a.m. or by appointment. Apply Munchers Bakery
Bakery Sale - Cleaning Sat. 6 p.m - 1 am, Sun 6 p.m
- 1 am. $4 an hour after trained. 3 weeks paid
vacation after one year. Interviewzes Tue. 1 p.m.
- 1 am. $2 an hour for appointment. Apply
Munchers Bakery. 794-8248
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterboarding, gymnastics, scuba diving, camp painting, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $100 or more a RIB B; M.B. Macseer, 1765 Mile, Nifl. Mk.
BE ON TV! Many needed for commercials
Children too! Casting into (1) 808-687-0001
CCTV
Data Entry Operators long & short term temporary assignments available from 9 am to 5 pm, 12:30 pm to 9:00 pm and 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm. If interested, please step by step with the following Services 901 Kennett EOE/ MOPI
GOVMENT JOBS. $16,040/$25,920./yr.
Hiring Your Area. 876 677 0000. *九七 9758 for*
Work in the City of New York.
HELP WANTED Travel from Texas to Montana on a wheat harvest耕地. Call 913-567-4649 Heritage Manage has positions open for full and part time certification assistants $4.30 an hour W. 27th St.
Kansas Union Food Service Prairie Room
Restaurant hiring waiters waitresses $15 hr.
plus tips 24.99 per hour. Please note:
* Must be able to communicate clearly and effectively in English. Appl. in person only. No phone calls.
KLWN/KLR21 RADIO is accepting applications for future full- or part-time announcer/operator position based on announcement/production experience mandatory, writing and production, producing an airshift, and familiarity with FCC Rules is required. Send airshift to 304 Burlington P.O. Box 3007 Lawrence KS. 66048. EOE, P.O.
LOOKING for your own business? Mintbogging profit potential! Make money part-time now, this summer, forever, and anywhere. For exciting MLM skin care product line opportunity, informa-
tion center, or new business.
Mass Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokhouse now hiring part-time table service employees Must have 1 year experience and summer availability. Pay $2.90 per hour plus tips. Apply online at www.masstreetdeli.com.
Need two friendly individuals, one to wear Easter Bunny costume and one to assist with the activities for downtown promotion on April 20 - 30 at Cafe Eggers (424-6382 or come by to be助教 123 W. Bath. Suite 103)
Needed ASAP BabySister in my home Mon, Tues,
thursday 2:00 5:00 for two-year-old boys
Out of money from Spring Break? Make quick
suit cash selling from school in Lawrence-
ville, GA.
RESORT HOTELS, Crussettes, Airlines & Business
jobs in various occupational jobs, internships and career positions. For information & application, write Nail
National College Recreation, P.O. Box 8047 Hilton
Part time house cleaners wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Transportation required. Call 842-6264
SUMMER JOB'S, possibly continue into Fall. Spring. Personal care training. Job must have at least 8 wks./wk. & or PMRs $4/$5 per hour. Must train before May 15. Must have a reliable transportation. KU student prefer-
Resorts Employment Newsletter - All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif. Nevada/Arizona. More: www.resorts.com Vacation Resorts City Hotels REN-K B26706, Lake Tahoe, Lake Kahiawu, 85716 941-541-7502
Summer Help - Johnson County. Responsible college students need for building inspectors Tuesday through Saturday morning. Valid drivers contact the University Placement Center contact the University Placement Center.
RESORT HOTELS, CruiseLines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks, cruise tours and
interior positions. For information & application; write national Collegiate College Rep. P. O Box 8074.
CARRIER COUNTY 926-563-6244
Taking applications for dishwasher. Flexible hours. Apply Lawrence Country Club. 843-286-966.
Teaches aide for child care program needed 7:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 5 yrs or 2 yrs olds and two references required. Appl. to Children's Learning Center, 313 Main, EOE.
Seedling Tree Planters on weekend need some humpy people. Leave name and phone on phone
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Stability, dependability, and required. Send resume to: PO Box 1283.
Summer help wanted. Dock hands, cash register
attendance. Lake Perry Yacht & Marina. Call
800-326-1497.
Wesco Terrace Cafeteria feeding help. $3.45 per hour Monday through Friday 7:00 a.m to 2:30 p.m. Must be willing to do jalentiary work, cashiering, dishwashing and light food preparation. Req's B.S. in Hospitality or related field, vice mastery. Apply in person. Kansas Union Personnel Office. Level 5. EOE.
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekly hours available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to use Word, Excel, Contact Audio-Linker Network, 844-6900
Women sown softball pitchers & players needed for competitive, established team this summer. If interested call Karen 842-6222 Ext. 235 daytime, 841-7263 for 5 a.m.
PERSONAL
Fabulously handmade long-heard males seek attractive well-proportioned females upon which to lavish kisses and affection. Please enclose photo. Tony and Jeff.
A B C B. "So far as I can remember, there is not one word in the Gospel in praise of intelligence."
Bloondie, who works at Britches Corner. My, my you're a sight for sore eyes! How bout some winning, dining, and eventual intertwining? Would like to get to know you better. Respond here.
G W M. Let's see if g got anything in common if phone 1 D T. Box 163, Lawrence, Ks. 60544
D T. Box 163, Lawrence, Ks. 60544
Blue Eyes — I would settle for a gal not quite normal who lives Elton John. I like to get to know him.
Schoolkins. Thank you for coming into my life, I didn't realize how much was missing until you came.
To the guy at O'Hare 3/15: I enjoyed talking to her. She was very polite and kind. I answered question here. If not c eat la vie. The girl said, "I am going to take my car."
Sigma Nu's - Were #1 in Rock Chalk '89! Love, The Alba Chh1 (a)
Trailridge 404 - You're four of the best friends a girl could ever hope for. Wish all the men in this world were like you! Thanks for being so special. Love ya buches! Your Faithful Dishwasher
Tri Deli Ski Buddies, Thanks for a great break and memories of; wake up at 9:30 am, taking a shower in the sun to Denver, driving to our deaths, recovering, driving at 10 and 20, stopping for uschains, after 15 hours finally getting pizza by pizza; watching her dinner, day begining Lisa to turn, Amy's lost I.D. green dress, laying beside Lisa on the couch she screamed the whole way down, her head over heals fail mid-Vallacazza kitchen, coming to eat pasta, 4 bites of dinner and three hours of laughing, Lisa's getting up at 7:30, Amy's parked outside, waiting for her and LLLLoving it all. And most of all here's to the girl,
BUS. PERSONAL
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. No dues or fees. Overwaters at 235 Mile Road, Memorial Hospital, 235 Main. For confidential information contact person. Write PO Box 3482
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, I.D. line portraits.
Over $10,000 in cash awards Enter the CERTS
COLLISION INFORMATION For more informa-
tion visit www.certs.com
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8421. Confidential help/free pregnancy
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
TRUCE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head
of photography, dancers, dances, 10 years experience. B41-0032
Try it you love it, beacon glamorous with a
set of cameras. Set the setting. Glamourized make-over,
Foil posing Assistance, Creative Photography Technique
to produce sales results. 749-576. Mike W.
McNally
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
644-4264
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
Bloom County t-shirts & books
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more!
DISCOVER
THE FUTON!
BLUE HERON
Immo
937
SPRING HAS ARRIVED!
Cotton skirts, bouses, dresses,
shorts, Hawaiian shirts, new net
crinolines, 50's & 60's sunglasses.
Barb's Vintage Rose
Heartlines
Release the bodys inner physician with massage techniques
Want to improve your French and have fun on the beach? Learn from family's coaching accommodations with families. 769-314-8
Hwy 56 # 6th
Baldwin City, KS
12.00 14.00 18.00
594-2638
594-3652
College North
AMC Certified
opportunities made
$80 Value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Free Spinal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor, 843-397-79.
SERVICES OFFERED
Autoint of Lawrence offering Professional in-
terior auto window tint. Optional lifetime nai-
mental warranty. Call Kaw Specialities 842-2986
East 7th.
We Know Your Name. Until Wednesday, April 6
House of Usher, 838 Mass, 842-310, will print
Graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal
small. Small quantities. Call for more
information.
Income Tax forms filed at low fee. Call 841-9689
ask for Rochi.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwrestling Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
WORDSMITH We go beeyong typing. Let professional writers rate fast. Rates for Latinov. 91-843-9800.
I edit term papers, theses, dissertations, applications and resumes. No job too small. Very experienced. Prompt service. Call 842-2733. Income tax forms paid at low fee. Call 841-9686.
TOYOTA PARTS AND SERVICE
TOYOTA QUALITY SERVICE
Job-winning resumes, cover letters,
careers profile, resume and call
749-644-8916. KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W work-
with clients. Art & Design Building Room
206. 204-836-4007. Art
OIL CHANGE WITH FILTER
Writing your own resume is difficult. We can help. Courteous, effective, quick service. One page resume, 812.50.格意 Ideas, Inc. 927/4 Mage. Suite 4, 841-0711.
CHECK OUR SPECIALS!
MATH TUTOR since 1796, M.A. $8/ hour, 843-9032
(p.m.)
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716 ___
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Oyark, Parkland (913) 491-6878.
*nwildcare.india* need help? Call Birthright at 843-8021. Confidential help/free pregnancy
- Includes up to 5 quarts of oil and genuine Toyota double-filtering oil filter
- Complete under-the-hood check of all belts, hoses and fluid levels.
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
and Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
THERE'S NOTHING LIKE THE REAL THING FROM
Quality Typing includes accurate spelling, punctuation and grammar. Also available: Packin/download available. #843-0247.
THINK SPRING? For your motorcycle, come in Eats In's I cycle店 at our new location. 701 Eats In's I cycle店 at our new location.
TOYOTA QUALITY
TUTORING TUTORING $6.50/hr. MATH
STATISTICS and PHYSICS. B.S. Physics, M.A.
Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
481-3044.
$1495
Lawrence Auto Plaza 842-2191
ELLENA
TEAM TOYOTA
THE FAR SIDE
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
1-A1 Reliable Typing Service. Term papers, Resumes, Letters, etc. professionally typed, IBM Electronic Typewriter. B24.3246
Electronic Typewriter. 842-7630
1-der Word Woman Word processing. Former editor
2-der Word Woman Word processing. Accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2633, days or evenings.
24 hr. Typing Service. Fast. professional word processing with letter quality printer. 843-7643.
AAA TYPING: Word processing, spellcheck,
*long*, doublespace letters. After 5 p.m. T.F.
*long*, doublespace letters.
Accurate, affording typed experienced in term paper, corrected in selective correcting. 843-4954.
DISSERTATIONS, THIEWS, LAW PAPERS,
AND BOOKS. We will provide a service
with 843-727-3910 p.m. e.g. p.m.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
John Page, page. East Lawrence. Mrs
Mattie 841-1210.
**TITLE:**
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Prodressing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailings list. Letter
quality printing. Spelling corrected. 842-2747.
Call R.J.'s tipping service for all of your typing needs. 841-9924 before 9 p.m. please.
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE. Letter,
qualifier printer, prefers a check
check system. WPS9552 895-2623
2 roommates for downstairs apt. 165/month inc/
utl. 749-415. Individual contracts.
THE WORLDCOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have them do the review. Review since 1983. 843-317-2600
RESUME SERVICES professionally typeset, and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes, 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letters, business cards, and typesetting and printing services. Call at 843-2887 for hours, and at $_t the cost of Kinko's Call 843-2887. If no answer leave message on machine
Typing at a reasonable rate: CALL BARBARA at
843-011
***
WANTED
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
disertations, papers, letters, applications.
resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree 841-6254.
Roommate will want to share 2/bdrm apartment,
Med Center, Next Fall. Non-amor
841-548-3907
RUSH tickets wanted - 2 lower level or balcony next to stage. Call Steve 841-9500.
Bv GARY LARSON
©1968 Universal Press Syndicate
"Man, Larry, I don't know if we're up to this. .. I mean, this guy's got kneecaps from hell."
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16
Friday, March 25, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Foreman kept off fight card, would not fight viable foes
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Former heavyweight champion George Foreman, coming off an unimpressive showing against Dwight Muhammad Qawi, was dropped from a June 6 fight card because he refused to meet any credible fighters, promoter Bob Arum said yesterday.
The decision apparently leaves Foreman's comeback at the age of 40 in doubt, but Arum left open the possibility that the former champion could rejoin him late in the summer if he gets in better fighting shape.
"We wanted him to fight a tough younger fighter, and he didn't feel he was ready. Arum said. We didn't see it. He wouldn't have said." We didn't feel that was salable."
Arum said Foreman, who made $100,000 for stopping a flabby Qawi in the seventh round Saturday, had looked worse in his last two fights than he did in earlier comeback fights.
Foreman has won eight straight fights since beginning his comeback a year ago after a decade out of the ring.
"At each fight, he's looked progressively worse," Arum said. "He stopped training. He's training his body, but he's not sparring, not doing the things he has to do."
Foreman had been scheduled to fight on a June 6 card at Las Vegas topped by middleweight champion Thomas Hearns. Arum had given Foreman a list of five fighters to choose as opponents, including former heavyweight champion Michael Dokes, himself in the midst of a
comeback.
Foreman could not be reached for comment at his home in Houston, but Arum said the former champion indicated that he would take his comeback on the road, fighting lesser opponents in non-televised fights.
"He needs to go to the bushes and come back to us when he's ready for a major opponent," Arum said.
Against Qawi, Foreman looked slow and awkward, and his punches frequently missed their mark. He showed none of the left jab that he used so effectively in stopping Deceased December in his first televised comeback fight.
"It didn't discourage me at all," Foreman said after the Qawi fight. "I'm not going for one, two, three round knockouts. I'm an old man."
Although Foreman had trimmed down to 235 pounds for the Qawi fight from 244 for his fight Feb. 5 against Guido Trane, he had done little sparring in preparation for Qawi.
"He spars with this big white kid who has never fought as a pro." Arum said. "What good does that do?""
Critics of Foreman's comeback have dismissed his opponents as little more than journeyman fighters. Qawi, the only recognizable name, proved to be washed up and out of shape, entering the ring with 222 pounds on his 5-foot-7 frame.
Foreman was to have fought Sweden's Anders Eklund instead of Qawi, but he decided against fighting Eklund, reportedly because he was concerned with Eklund's large size.
Royals to decide bullpen list
The Associated Press
“There’ll be some sleepless nights
that he’ll be sure,” said Manager
John Watkins.
The end will come next week. The Royals by April 1 must trim seven players from among the 31 now on their roster. Most of the cuts will be predictable and easy enough to make. But it's the last one, determining the make-up of the bullpen crew, that is tough.
"It's a real problem," said Frank
Funk, the Royals pitching coach.
"And it's one we just don't have a handle on yet. We hope something surfaces in our crystal ball very soon and tells us what to do. We can't afford to make a mistake here and take the wrong guy."
The Royals must decide whether the last of the nine pitching spots on the roster goes to the high-priced Quisenberry, who has been ineffective the past two years, or Gene Garber, the 40-year-old veteran acquired from Atlanta late last season.
Quisenberry, 35, got off to a woeful start. He was shellied for five hits and five runs in his first outing of the spring.
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5 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
BEST PICTURE
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST AESThetic DIRECTION
BEST SCREENPLAY
(written directly for the screen)
John Boorman
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Philippe Rousselot
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST MEDIEN
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
NATIONAL SOFTE OF THE YEAR
HOPE AND GLORY
A LAUREN HILTON MURPHY
Friday Saturday Sunday
* 5.00 * 5.00 * 5.00
7:15 7:15 5:15
9:30 9:30 7:30
* $2.50 Matinee
642 LIBERTY HALL 749
Mass 1912
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST MOVIE PLAY
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ARTS
HOPE AND GLORY
PG 13
Friday * 5.00 Saturday * 5.00 Sunday
7.15 7.15 5.15
9.30 9.30 7.30
* $2.50 Maine
642 Mass 749 1912
Commonwealth
Bargain Matineers* & Senior Citizens $2.50
Showtimes for Today Only
MOVIE INFO: 841-7000
Granada 1020 Mass.
843-5788
D.O.A. (R) 7:30-9:45
Varsity 1015 Mass.
843-1065
BILOXI BLUES (PG 13) 7:15, 9:30
Hillcrest 9th & Iowa
842-8400
MASQUERADE (R) *4.50, 7:30, 9:25
POLICE ACADEMY (R) *4.45, 7.35, 9:30
JOHNNY BE GOOD(PG13) *4.40, 7.25, 9:35
GOOD MORNING
VIENAM (R) *4.30, 7:15, 9:40
A NEW LIFE (PG 13) *4.35, 7:20, 9:20
Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa
842-6400
Commonwealth
Bargain Matthews' & Senior Citizens $2.50
Showtimes for Today Only
MOVIE INFO: 841-7000
Granada
1020 Mass.
843-5788
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OPEN HOUSE
STUDENTS, STAFF, & FACULTY
NOW is the time to reserve your COMPLETELY FURNISHED studio,1,2,3,or 4 Bdrm. apartment for Next Semester! Saturday, March 26, 1988 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Orchard Corners Apartments 15th & Kasold
CAMPUS PLACE
APARTMENTS
1145 Louisiana
Coldwater Flats 413 W. 14th Street
- On bus route, or close to KU
Tanglewood 951 Arkansas
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida and...
- Energy Efficient
- Custom Furnishings
Summit House 1105 Louisiana
- On site managers
Hanover Place 14th & Massachusetts
Sundance II Brand New Ready for fall semester!
OREAD TOWNHOUSES Many great locations
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HIGHLANDS 13th & Ohio
- Private Parking
AFFORDABLE RENTALS
For more information go to or call:
TANGLEWOOD 749-2415
CAMPUS PLACE 841-1429
HANOVER 841-1212
ORCHARD CORNERS 749-4226
SUNDANCE 841-5255
Whether you prefer to live mind. See you Saturday!!!
Whether you prefer to live alone or with roommates, we have a place for you, designed with you in Saturday!!!
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company 842-4455
Monday March 28,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.121 (USPS 650-640)
'Hawks are Final Four bound
Newton, Barry play hero roles fuel team to KC
By Anne Luscombe
KY
Sports editor
PONTIAC, Mich. — Right after the game, Milt Newton and Scooter Barry put on their hats with the logo "Goin' to Kansas City." It was an appropriate phrase for the Kansas Jayhawks, who had just earned the honor of becoming the third team to win for the 1988 NCAA Final Four.
The Jayhawks defeated arch-rival Kansas State 71-58 yesterday in the Silverdome in the NCAA Midwest Regional Championship game. The regional had turned into an all-Sunflower State match-up once the Wildcats eliminated top-seed Purdee 73-70 and the Jayhawks knocked off up-set-minded Vanderbilt, 77-64, in the first round.
The game started with Kansas and K-State exchanging leads for much of the first half before the Wildcats took over at No. 24-24, with 44 seconds left in the half.
Coach Larry Brown gives Kevin Pritchard a hug after the victory and teammate Lincoln Minor gives his congratulations.
K-State had a 2-1 season record over Kansas going into today's game. They had broken KU's homecourt winning streak and put an end to any Big Eight conference championships the Jayahaws might have had.
However, Kansas guard Scooter Barry made a three-point shot with 2 seconds left in the half. The score at halftime was K-State 29. Kansas 27.
The Wildcats opened the second half with a three-pointer from guard Steve Henson and center Rony Meyers in the game, increasing their lead to 34-7.
assists and pulled down five rebounds.
After the Wildcats' spurt, the Jayhawks came to life. Their defense, though good in the first half, soon proved why the Jayhawks are ranked fourth nationally in field-goal percentage defense.
K-State shot 55 percent from the field in the first half, held to 34 with the serious sacrie injury.
The turnaround came with 13:43 left in the game, when Kansas forward Keith Harris stole the ball, drove down court and scored on a slam dunk.
"So many unlikely kids, who I wasn't smart enough to play earlier, stepped forward," Kansas coach Larry Brown said. "They were supposed to beat us. Our kids wanted to redeem themselves."
Especially Barry, who had a rough time filling in for an injured Pitchard in the Big Eight tournament game against K-State.
His basket put Kansas up by one, 43-42. The Jayhawks never relinquished their lead.
Twenty seconds later, KU guard Lincoln Minor also came up with a steal and sprinted downcourt only to have his shot blocked by Henson.
But Barry wasn't through. He helped give Kansas a little breathing room with a 16-foot jumper off an airplane. He pitted Pritchard. The Jayhawks led 51-46.
Barry finished the game with a career-high 15 points. He added three
"I had incentive after playing so poorly against K-State earlier in the Big Eight," Barry said. "I shot the ball in the middle of their zone. The first half I was reluctant to shoot it in. The only shots I was shooting were moved to go in. Today, when I went in, I had open shots and I took them."
With Barry's shot pushing Kansas up by five, the Jayhawks called a timeout. After the timeout, Milt Newton fired in a three-pointer with 6:56 left in the game, giving Kansas a 54-48 lead.
Newton scored 18 points, second only to Danny Manning's 20. He also had seven assists, grabbed a steal and pulled down nine rebounds.
Despite several comeback attempts, the Wildcats soon realized that it would be the Jayhawks who needed to catch the coveted Final Four — not them.
The last 5 minutes belonged to the two new heroes of the Kansas team — Barry and Newton . . . two that K-State, in their efforts to shut down Manning, seemingly overlooked.
"I think it was obvious that Kansas was the better ball club," K-State coach Lon Kruger said. "It was a pretty good game for about 35 minutes. Kansas shot well and we didn't. Danny Manny was outstanding, and give the others credit, too. Larry Brown had them ready."
See GAME. p. 12
"Obviously Danny Manning is the leader of our team. He's proved it for four years," Newton said. "No one in the nation can stop him one-on-one. But he realized that he has four other players out there. I really enjoy it when the press keeps calling Kansas a one-man team because then the other teams forget the four other players, especially me. I like that."
Manning was voted the outstanding player of the regional tournament. He was joined on the all-tournament team by Newton, Pritchard, K-State's Mitch Richmond and Will Scott, who was the high scorer for the Wildcats with 18 points, including four three-pointers.
Lottery system used for allocating tickets
By Tom Stinson
Kansan staff writers
Kansas' ticket allotment for the Final Four already has been decided through the lottery system which was used for the other NCAA Tournament games and for the Big Eight Tournament, a Kansas Sports Information official said.
distributed to players' families, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation staff, the basketball traveling party, the basketball band, cheerleaders and requests from the chancellor's office.
Each of the Final Four teams were allotted 1,625 tickets for the games in the final round.
Three groups will share the remaining tickets. KU students will receive 20 percent of the tickets, which will be distributed under the lottery system policy that was devised two years ago.
percent of the tickets, with members of the Williams Fund donor group receiving the largest share at 65 percent.
According to Richard Konzem,
assistant athletic director, only 114
students had filed lottery applications
by the Feb. 26 deadline.
Facultv and staff will receive 15
"At this point, those who went through the lottery will get their tickets," he said. "The application procedure was well-advertised, and now we have 395 students camping
outside "
Konzem said he hoped to determine by noon today the number of tickets still available. The procedure by which the remaining tickets will be distributed still is uncertain.
Despite this, many students camped out in front of Allen Field House's ticket office hoping to get tickets. The students started gathering about halftime of Kansas' Regional Final game, said Michelle Garland, Morton Grove, III., junior.
(1)
Thousands of KU students mob Jayhawk Boulevard after the game. This impromptu parade made it difficult to get through campus for a couple of hours.
Fans parade on Jayhawk Boulevard
By Jill Jess,
Kansan staff writers
By Jill Jess,
Keith Stroker
and Jeff Suggs
People crammed into and onto cars and trucks on Jayhawk Boulevard, honing horns and slapping hands of passers-by in celebration of Kansas' second trip to the Final Four in three years.
The boulevard began to fill about 20 minutes after the Jayhawks defeated Kansas State. For about two hours, fans cruised the boulevard in support of the Jayhawks.
It looked like a homecoming parade gone wild.
"This is great. Look at all these people," Scott Hallier, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said. "It's such a surprise this year. No one expected us to go. It's so crazy."
"There is no doubt who the player of the year and the coach of the year should be. Larry Brown is the greatest coach in the NCAA." Mast said.
Paul Mast, Lawrence junior,
commented on the performances
of Brown and Kansas forward
Denny Manning.
Other fans reflected on KU coach Larry Brown and the Jayawhaws overcoming ineligibility and injury.
About 30 minutes before the parade broke up, KU police officers closed east-bound traffic on the boulevard for about 15 minutes. Officers directed traffic at the intersection of Jayhawk Boulevard and Sunflower Road, telling people to get off of hoods of cars and occasionally getting high fives from passers-by.
Cars, filled and topped with cheering fans, jammed the boulevard and occasionally ventured onto sidewalks.
Todd Schnatzmeyer, St. Louis senior, was riding in a jeep with
Sec FANS, p. 12
Thousands of cheering fans welcome KU basketball team at airport, Allen Field House
Bv Elaine Sung
Kansan staff writer
As the crowd rushed out of Allen Field House last night following the homecoming celebration, Kansas guard Scooter Barry found himself surrounded by fans wanting his autograph.
"This is bigger than I expected," Barry said. "It's great with all the fans showing up. I'll let this last as long as I can. I'm just elated right now. We're going to enjoy this time tonight, and Tuesday we'll get back to work."
The celebrating started right after the Jayhawks defeated the Kansas State Wildcats yesterday 71-58 in the NCAA Midwest Regional Championship game in Pontiac, Mich.
The celebration spread all the way to Topeka, where about 1,500 fans invaded Forbes Field to greet the Jayhawks' chartered plane. More than 500 of the chanting fans were waving their hands as their forces pressed against a glass partition that separated the lobby from the arrival walkway.
nward to... KC The Final Four
weekend's battle against the Blue Devils in the NCAA championship game.
The team was expected back around 7:30 p.m., and as the time passed, the crowd started chanting the Kansas fight song and "We want Duke" in anticipation of this
When the Jayhawks finally arrived, the crowd surged forward, hoping to get a glimpse of the players.
a jubilant KU coach Larry Brown stepped off the plane, fists raised above him, punching the air. An ecstatic and united Kansas team followed him off the plane, gathering in a huddle several times and raising their arms in triumph as they waited to unload their luggage.
The crowd erupted in cheers and screams as the players finally walked through the terminal to board the bus that was to take them to Lawrence. People pushed and shoved for a chance to see the players, and the jam eventually flooded outside to the waiting bus. The bus slowly made its way out of the airport with a police escort using a bullhorn to warn the horde of people to get out of the way.
The cavalcade went on Interstate 70. where another group of people
were cheering at the turnpike toll booth
The celebration reached its height at the field house, where thousands of students were gathered and eagerly awaited the team's arrival.
The players arrived at about 9:15 p.m., running onto the basketball court with the crowd screaming and cheering, and playing the Kansas fight song.
University of Kansas users tried to make a path for the team, but still the players were nearly crushed in the first half and pressed and pushed on the court.
“This was wonderful,” Brown said. “It was phenomenal. This is so much bigger than in 1986. We had all those people outside in Topeka waiting for
The players ran back outside to unload their luggage from the bus, but they were called back into the field house for more celebrating.
They stood on center court, while Brown, Barry and the three seniors all took turns with the microphone to hank the fans.
"I'd like to thank you for four great years here," forward Danny Manning told the attentive crowd. "You are the best fans in the world. Thanks for your support and for following us to Kansas City."
---
2
Monday, March 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
From the KU Weather Service
BIRD
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Hold on to your hat
HIGH: 72
LOW: 50
Today will be cloudy, windy, and warm with a good chance of thunderstorms. The high will reach 72. Tonight, expect cloudy skies, more showers and thunderstorms, and a low of 50.
REGIONAL
North Platte
49/30
Mostly cloudy
Omaha
65/38
Mostly cloudy
Goodland
55/29
Showers
Hays
62/38
Showers
Salina
68/43
Thunderstorms
Topeka
70/48
Thunderstorms
Kansas City
61/30
Partly cloudy
Columbia
70/30
Partly cloudy
St. Louis
76/54
Partly cloudy
Dodge City
68/30
Showers
Wichita
75/55
Thunderstorms
Chanute
76/56
Thunderstorms
Springfield
83/54
Partly cloudy
Tulsa
81/57
Thunderstorms
Forecast by Brent Shaw. Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
TUE
Chance of showers
59/37
HIGH LOW
WED
Sunny
52/35
THU
Chance of T storms
55/39
FRI
Sunny
68/44
SAT
Sunny
74/52
North Platte 49/30 Moistly cloudy
Mountain 65/39 Moistly cloudy
Goodland 55/29 Showers
Hayes 62/38 Showers
Saffas 68/43 Thunderstorm
Tepee 70/45 Thunderstorm
Kansas City 72/51 Thunderstorm
Columbia 75/53 Partly cloudy
St. Louis 76/54 Partly cloudy
Dodge City 68/31 Showers
Wichita 75/55 Thunderstorm
Charlotte 79/69 Thunderstorm
Springfield 83/54 Partly cloudy
Tulsa 81/57 Thunderstorm
Forecast by Brent Shaw Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
TUE
Chance of showers
59/37
HIGH LOW
WED
Sunny
52/35
THU
Chance of T-storm
55/39
FRI
Sunny
68/44
SAT
Sunny
74/52
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 28, 1988
Campus/Area
3
AIDS actions labeled weak
Senate task force wants education and condoms
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate AIDS Task Force says the executive vice chancellor's recommendations on combatting the disease at the University of Kansas are inadequate.
In its response released last week, the task force said Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, was not taking appropriate measures to educate students and faculty about AIDS. Although the task force commended her for appointing a committee which would concentrate on AIDS research and education, Ramaley's efforts would be "too little, too late," the report said.
Michael Foubert, director of the task force, said the AIDS problem would become worse in the community before Ramaley's advisory committee could accomplish anything beneficial.
"You can applaud any effort at creating educational awareness," Foubert said, "but the University has responded by setting up a committee, a committee that may not report anything until next fall to give the university an unreachable itself and affect more people in the community."
Ramaley said the amount of AIDS publicity lately had heightened the entire community's awareness of the disease and that the committee was making sure that proper measures would be taken, such as increasing AIDS education on campus.
In December, a 22-member University task force on AIDS recommended placing condom machines on campus, but Ramaley rejected the request, saying that the University would be condoning sexual activity. The Senate task force also supported installing condom machines on campus.
"We don't believe having a condom machine suggests that the University supports sexual activity anymore than having sexually explicit materials in the library or bookstore does." Senate task force member Kathryn Anderson said.
Foubert said the University probably did not endorse smoking just because students could buy cigarettes on campus.
Ramaley said, "You can choose any metaphrase you like, but I disagree. Students already have access to condoms through many places."
Ramaley said in January that handling out safer-sex kits was "countered."
"I have evidence. I have read all the letters." Ramaley said, who reaffirmed her opinions about the kits Saturday. "It's a fact that many people were upset. There are strong opinions out there."
The Senate task force said it recognized that the University had many things to consider and that controversy was difficult to deal with, but felt in this instance the controversy was productive.
The University has received about 150 letters concerning the safer-sex kits passed out during spring fee payment.
"There is a great deal of educational value with the kits," Anderson said. "Controversy is not always a negative thing and through that people would learn and make their own decisions. We felt it would turn into something useful."
Ramaley and the Senate task force also disagreed on whether KU should have entered the nationwide study of the prevalence of AIDS on college campuses. The task force recommended to Senate on Wednesday not to participate in the study, but Ramaley said she thought KU should enter the study. She said she was disappointed that the matter potentially could be decided by referendum.
"It may preclude us from participating." she said.
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About 150 students who took out low interest loans through the KU financial aid office and the Kansas University Endowment Association to buy Apple Macintosh computers should be able to pick them up at the end of this week.
Students take advantage of loans for computers
Kansan staff writer
By Ioel Zeff
In a few days, Mark Bogner will receive his first computer, thanks to some help from the KU financial aid office.
"There would be no way in the world that I would be able to buy this computer without the Endowment Association's loan." Bogner said.
Bogner, Penalaos sophomore, was one of about 150 students who took advantage of a low interest loan provided by the Kansas University Endowment Association and the financial aid office during a computer sale at the Kansas Union Booksstore.
The loan was offered in conjunction with an Apple Macintosh computer sale at the Union. Prices for the computers and accessories ranged from $1,200 to $2,399, not including sales tax.
Bonger said he expected his computer to arrive this week
William Shunk. Endowment Association loan officer, said that the loans would help students buy computers that they were able to purchase otherwise.
Shunk said that the loan from the Endowment Association was the most popular of the three types of loans that were available to students.
"The endowment loan was popular because it had the best interest and the easiest paperwork," Shunk said. "The loans weren't specifically for the Macintoshes, but it was intended partially with that idea."
Besides the endowment loan, a supplemental loan and a PLUS loan were offered to students interested in buying a computer, Jeff Weinberg, assistant director of the KU financial aid office, said. PLUS loans are available to parents of undergraduate students.
Weinberg said that about six students applied for the supplemental and PLUS loans, while 150 applied for the endowment loan. The supplemental and PLUS loans had a 10.27 percent interest rate; the endowment loan was at 6 percent.
"There's no question that the offer created additional student traffic and calls, but we felt it was something that we needed to do for students," Weinberg said. "If the students are pleased, then it was successful."
Wes Williams, dean of educational services, said that representatives of Apple Computers had approached his office and expressed interest in running a sale in conjunction with a student loan program.
Other institutions had done the same thing, and we looked at the computers like books and other educational supplies." Williams said.
Williams said that two part-time graduate teaching assistants coincidentally were added to the staff financial aid office before the sale.
3 from KU receive Mellon fellowships
"We were thankful we had the extra help, but it really hasn't been a burden," Williams said.
By a Kansan reporter
Three KU students recently received national Mellon Fellowships for entering graduate school in 1988.
Michael Siewert, Oakton, Va.; senior; Stephen Miller, Salina senior; and Donald Dinwiddie, a recent KU graduate from Sand Springs, Okla., received fellowships, which include a $10,250 stipend and
money for tuition and fees for one year at the university or college of their choice.
Neither Miller, who is majoring in music history and philosophy, nor Dinwiddie, an art history graduate, know where they will attend graduate school.
Siewert, also an art history major,
plans to attend the University of Virginia.
study architectural history.
The three were among 127 college seniors and recent graduates chosen for the fellowship from more than 1,300 candidates nominated by faculty at their colleges, according to the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation in Princeton, N.J., which announced the winners.
This is the second consecutive year that three KU students received the fellowship.
program. "It's a very prestigious award."
"This is great for KU," said Sharon Brehm, director of the honors
Only four other universities in the nation had three or more winners this year.
Art finds home after decades in storage
The Mellon Fellowships in the Humanities were created by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Special to the Kansan
By Cory Powell
Eighteen years ago, Elizabeth Banks became curator of an art collection she wasn't allowed to see. The collection of Greek and Roman antiquities was stored in a leaky tin shed on KU's West Campus. No one was allowed in the shed.
And so the Wilcox collection sat and collected dust. But Banks, an associate professor of classics, was determined to find a home where it could be displayed.
In the fall, 100 years after the Wilcox collection was first displayed in old Fraser Hall, it will finally have a permanent home in Lippincott Hall.
"Every time a space would open up, we hoped it would be given to us," said Banks, who eventually used the collection in the late 1970s.
A two-room gallery in Lippincott is being built for the collection. It will be named for Mary Amelia Grant, a former curator of the collection.
There were several unsuccessful attempts to find a home for the Wilcox collection. But in the fall, 100 years after the collection was first displayed in old Fraser Hall, it will finally have a permanent home in Lionincott Hall.
Banks said the collection would give students a feel for the art of the ancient world.
The collection includes plaster casts of many Greek and Roman statues including the "Venus de Milo" and Myron's "Discus Thrower." The collection also contains several busts of Roman emperors, an ancient coin collection and numerous other antiquities.
"It's not going to be a crowd-pleasing museum," Banks said. "It will enhance the teaching capabilities of the department."
Problems with housing the collection began in 1965 when old Fraser Hall was demolished to build the present building. The collection was supposed to be housed in a new humanities building, but the original plans for that building were thrown out because of a lack of funds. When Wescoe
Hall was built instead, there wasn't enough space for the collection.
The collection remained in storage while Banks tried to find it a home. Finally, in 1982, 103 Lippincott was designated as the new home for the collection. In 1985, $2,000 was allocated by the University of Kansas, and $5,000 was donated from a fund set up by Grant for the renovation of the room and the restoration of the collection.
The collection was scheduled to be opened during commencement, but Stanley Lombardi, associate professor of classics and chairman of the classics department, said yesterday that the opening would be delayed.
He said that the hand-built display cases for the collection were taking longer to complete than expected, and that the collection
would be open by fall.
Oliver C. Phillips, professor of classics, did his undergraduate work at KU. He remembers the old museum.
"It had the fine old texture of old Fraser," he said. "I was a fairly quiet place. I remember spending time there alone and tutoring other students."
Phillips, who joined the KU faculty in 1964, one year before old Fraser was torn down, gave most of the credit for the completion to Banks. Phillips said that Banks never quit reminding the University of its commitment to the Wilcox collection.
As the project nears completion, Banks is quick to point out that she did not do it alone.
Banks said that she had her doubts that the Wilcox collection would ever be displayed again. But now she is more optimistic.
"It's really been a team effort over the years," she said.
"It really seems like it's going to happen,"she said.
Leaders discuss funds on city, national level
Kansan staff writer
Bv Christine Martin
Four members of the Lawrence City Commission and two city staff members discussed funding for local programs with congressional leaders and city leaders from across the nation last week at a conference in Washington, D.C.
The conference, held by the National League of Cities, gave local leaders a chance to discuss funding for local programs with national legislators, such as the proposed south Lawrence trafficway and the proposed downtown mall.
"It's primary function was to establish dialogue between local government and national leaders," city commissioner Dennis Constance 814
During the four-day convention,
Mayor Mike Amyx, city commissioners Dennis Constance, Sandra Praeger and Bob Schumm, City Manager Buford Watson, and assistant City Manager Mike Wilden met with different committees from 3,000 students, teachers and discussed different programs.
The programs included transportation, budget, community development, housing rehabilitation and social agencies.
Constance said the committees then met with the Kansas congressional delegation.
"I enjoyed and got the most value from hearing congressional people speak," Constance said.
The commissioners met with U.S. Rep Jim Slattery, D-Kan., administrative aides to Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole and heard democratic presidential candidate Jesse Moore speak on the convention. House speaker Jim Wright, D-Texas, also gave a speech on the budget process.
U. S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., U.S. Rep. Jane Meyers, R-Kan., U.S. Rep. Danielle Ross, R-Augusta, and Pat Roberts, Dodge City, also attended the convention.
Praeger said commissioners met with Congressional leaders to discuss funding of federal mandates on enforcement drug testing and drug abuse in cities.
"There were no solutions, but it's always good to touch base personally with these people," Praeger said.
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Monday, March 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Student Senate candidates must make their ideas known
You'd never know it, but in just more than two weeks, KU students will elect a new Student Senate.
Where are the debates? What are the issues? Who's running?
The answer to the last question is only known from posters, not because any candidates have made an effort to make themselves known.
because the candidates haven't made clear their stances on issues, perhaps they should consider discussing some of the following.
Lowering the student activity fee. KU students pay a $28 student activity fee each semester. This money, totaling about $1.2 million each year, is allocated by the Senate to various projects and student organizations. But not all of the money collected is used. Unused money goes into the Senate unallocated account, which has about $170,000 in it — and it's still growing. The new Senate should make lowering the activity fee one of its first actions.
Campus parking. Finding a place to park is a daily problem for many students. The new Senate administration should take an active role in the allocation of student spaces in the proposed parking garage and in the allocation of temporary parking spaces while the garage is under construction.
Student services. Senate leaders should realize that this organization has had its greatest impact on KU students by providing needed services. KU on Wheels bus service, Secure Cab and campus lighting are some of the most important and lasting contributions the Senate has made. Future senators also should seek to provide innovative services to their student constituency.
Senate leaders should concentrate on issues that most directly affect students, such as tuition, add/drop, grading systems, student housing and financial aid. And student senators should remember that their first priority is to be representatives of the student body, not of the University administration.
Alison Young for the editorial board
Bloomingdale's is conducting a great search for Kansas products to try out on the New York market. It seems New Yorkers have gotten tired of imported, exotic products such as yak's milk and sushi and decided to go for the down-home instead. Of course, to New Yorkers, anything on the other side of the Hudson River is Wild West and just as far-out as Katmandu or Kyoto.
Kansas needn't cater to fads
Here's Kansas' chance to get a good laugh. New Yorkers don't know — or, let's face it, care — about Kansas at all. As far as they are concerned, Kansas is still the dust-bowl state of Dorothy and Auntie Em. — in black and white, of course.
So why not play on our own image: Let's send 'em some products Kansas-style, by golly! Every fabric that goes from Kansas to Bloomie's should be blue gingham. Food products should taste like wheat, and the ones that don't taste like wheat should taste like buffalo meat. The possibilities are practically endless: wheat-flavored popsicles (all natural, of course).
General Foods International Wheat-and-Milo Cappuccino, buffalo flavored breath mints. Lawrence's own wheat ice cream and hickory tofu are just the beginning.
After all, we'd be following a great lead by Japan. The Japanese capitalized early on New Yorkers' love of everything fashionably exotic by turning sushi into the food of the decade for the entire Eastern seaboard.
And look how profitable the sushi market is. If Kansas can follow that lead, the price of wheat could shoot sky-high. There could be a giant new demand for all things Kansas. Heck, someone will probably come up with a Toto-ate this-brand dog food so New York dogs can chow down Kansas-style on that good country home-cookin'.
So let's do it! Let's run with Bloomie's sudden urge for a taste of the Wild West. If we play our cards right, it could be worth a lot of money — and a great laugh.
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
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 Luscombe...Sports editor
Stephen Wade...Photo editor
Richard Stewart...Graphics editor
Tom Eblez...General manager, news adviser
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Kimberly Coleman...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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Old
Pineapple
Face
NORIEGA
JIM BORDMAN
War of windows is fierce Professors battle each other for an office with a view
They say an army marches on its stomach. Well, a university is more or less the same. Universities often march on their bellyaches. One of the things that gets faculty members bellyaching the loudest is allocation of office space.
Talk about acrimony. You think that it's tough trying to make peace between the Iranians and Iraqis? You think that diplomacy is guiding the Sandimistas and the contras toward a settlement? You think the situation in Northern Ireland is about to explode in more violence? You haven't seen war until you've seen a bunch of professors going at it over who gets an office with a window. Strategy. Tactics. Forced marches. Secret missions. Suicide pacts. They're all part of the secret War of the Windows, also known as "My Tenure for a Window."
Take a recent case. My friend, Westly Tormwhippet, dean of the School of Duplicative Communigraphics, was sitting in his office the other day when Repunzel, his secretary, buzzed him. Dr. C. Mingley Praductive, a long-time member of the faculty, wanted to see him. Without even an exchange of pleasantries, Praductive said:
"OK, Wes, out with it. Who's it going to be?"
"Don't play games with me. Who's going to get Smellingford's office?"
"My stars. Is Dr. Smellingford leaving? I was sure that after we gave him the Chippendale Distinguished Chair, he'd stay here until he retired."
There's been a lot of construction on college campuses since the 1960s, and most of it has made the office problem worse. Architects and planners, wise in the ways of energy conservation and footstep-per-erglaze ratios, have centralized faculty offices deep in the bowels of great tummy classroom buildings. Row upon row of 8-by-10 foot cubicles face each other in hallways the width of the theater aisles.
"That's precisely my point," Praductive said. "I just talked to Smellingford, and he's going to retire in 1996. I want to know who's going to get his office."
These rabbit warrens are always jammed with students, all sitting with their backs to the walls, their legs stretched out into the passageways, eating chilicheededs and jabbering away like a national magpie convention.
Meantime, upstairs, professors are taping butcher paper on windows to darken the classrooms enough to
Larry Day Guest Columnist
show a few slides or get their overhead transparencies to show up on the screen.
But not everyone in academia suffers from office undernourishment. Certain individuals have what you might call an embarrassment of office.
For example, there's Maria Siempre Adelante y Arriba, the new deputy assistant vice provost. Adelante y Arriba came to the university five years ago as an assistant professor of hispano speak. Her computerized content analysis of thumb-sucking motifs in the early works of the 18th century Uraquayan novelist Umberto Salvador Martínez Ungardo was all the rage among Spanish scholars that year.
To entice her to join the faculty, the department chairman, Ivan Bludgeon, offered Adelante y Arriba the only above-ground office the university had available. It had two, count them, two, windows. Bludgeon fought a horrendous turtle battle with two other department chairmen; he lost by a blow. Bludgeon left the university, saying he could no longer stand the gaff in academia. He became a labor negotiator in the coal mining industry.
Meanwhile, Dr. Maria, as she had affectionately become known, went, well, onward and upward. The departments of quantification and antique events, recognizing her talents (not to mention the fact that her gender and hispanic surname would count twice on affirmative action reports) both offered her adjunct appointments. Each appointment came with an office.
The deputy assistant vice provost position carried a quarter-time appointment, and it came with an office in the administration building. That made four offices in all for Dr. Maria.
These days, though, she spends most of her time in a research carrel at the library. When she runs into colleagues or students who say "I've been trying to get in touch with you for days," Dr. Maria replies, "I'm sorry. I'm not in the office very much anymore." Larry Day is a professor of journalism. He has an office with a window.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Dole is not finished
To be a victor among the vanquished requires an exceedingly able and brave man.
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole might have lost the race, but he has not lost the war.
Kathee A. Crough Salina junior
Promoting ignorance
Associate professor Norman Forer's remarks regarding the need to restrict the freedom of speech of individuals or groups are most unfortunate. To argue that because some restrictions of free speech now exist "throughout Western Europe and in 30 U.S. states" any university must follow suit is a poor argument. Rather, it is this herd-like behavior which is the real source of so many social problems.
The war camps in Nazi Germany took place in a state where free speech did not exist. It is also evident that what put to death millions of people was not free speech, but, rather, free and detestable acts. Presumably, the war criminals were held accountable for their actions precisely because they were free to act, not because the rhetoric of Nazi propaganda overwhelmed their moral discernment. Words do not kill, people do.
Without the freedom to express one's opinions and ideas, communication is impossible and ignorance must be the result. Despite what even a professor may suppose, ignorance is not a good thing.
Jonathan Eck Lawrence graduate student
Turtle deserved life
"Special turtle killed for KU research."
just what kind of research is being done on this special turtle? Let's see. I guess a record-setting turtle does need to be put to sleep. I even suppose that this turtle ranks right along with animals used for cancer research in importance. This turtle probably lived all of those years with only one dream: to end up in the Museum of Natural History's reptile collection. It's a good thing that all beings big and special aren't put to sleep for research. The basketball team would dearly miss Danny Manning.
Pattee Borst Overland Park senior
BLOOM COUNTY
QUIET, EVERYONE ! THE
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IN TEN
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...FOUR,
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by Berke Breathed
I AM VERY DISAPPOINTED !
...PUTTING SUPERGLUE IN MY
SHORTS BEFORE MY PATE
TONIGHT...
I AM VERY
VERY VERY
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IN YOU !
NORMALLY,
HE WOULD'VE
FLUSHED YOU
DOWN THE
COMMODE SIX
SECONDS AGO.
DON'T
PULL! OW!
DON'T--
---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 28, 1988
5
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
MONDAY
9 a.m. — IBM microcomputer workshop:
"Programming in dBASE III"
Offered by academic computing services.
Call 884-0494 for information.
28
9 a.m. — Nehru Exhibition, Pictorial biography of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, first prime minister of India. Gallery East, Kansas Union.
**N noon — Women in Communication sandwich seminar with Ed Weathers, editor of Memphis Magazine. Alcove A, Kansas Union.**
4 p.m. — Lecture: "The American Regime and Social Policy" Ira Katzneil, professor of political science, New York, Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union. Sponsored by the departments of political science and sociology.
4:30 p.m. — Lecture: "Russian Word Order." Helmut Schaller, West Germany. Sponsored by departments of linguistics and Slavic languages and literatures. 4019 Wesco Hall.
8 p.m. — Recital, Sigma Alpha lta benefit. Alice Downs and Rita Sloan, piano. Swarthout Forum, Murphy Hall.
8 p.m. — SUA Forum; "Hitterism and the Holocaust." Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union.
TUESDAY
8 p.m. — Doctoral recital. Ron Lofgren, conduct KU Concert Chair. St. Lawrence Center, 1631 Crescent Road.
29
3:30 p.m. — Lecture: "Soviet Agriculture Under Gorbachev" Karl-Eugen Wadekin, West Germany, Sponsored by School of Business, department of political science, and Soviet and East European Program, Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
4 p.m. — Dance films: "Dance: Four Pioneers," "Day on Earth" and "The Shakers." 155 Robinson Center.
4 p.m. — Western Civilization lecture: "Homosexuality and Greek Culture." Louis Crompton, professor of Louis University of Nebraska. 100 Smith Hall.
7 p.m. — KU College Republicans
meet. West Gallery, Kansas Union.
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
7 p.m. - Research Paper workshop:
"Writing a Term Paper?" Sponsored by student assistance center, 4034 Hall. Free. no registration required
7 p.m. Lecture and live snake
Lectured by the Cub Scouts.
Hillcrest School.
7:30 p.m. — Lecture: "Literarist-historical Crite-Rite-Foreshoring: Was, Warum and Woze?" Uwe-K. Ketelsen, University of Bochum, West Germany. Sponsored by department of Germanic Literature and Sciences, International Room, Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — Women's Film Festival.
8 p.m. — Inaugural lecture: "Social Dynamics of Marmots: Strategies for Evolutionary Success." Kenneth Armitage, professor of systematics and ecology, and William J. Baungartner, distinguished professor of biological sciences. Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union.
8 p.m. Doctoral recital. John
8尉 Rhaltian conducting. Swarthow-
n Residency Hall Halt.
tion call Karen Simion at 842-7282.
10 a.m. — Retirees club coffee.
Adam Lounge, Adams Alumni Center.
11:40 a.m. — University Forum:
"The Human Brain." Ralph Adams,
professor of chemistry, Ecumenical
Christian Ministries, 1204 Ave. Call
843-4933 by noon March 29 for
lunch reservation.
WEDNESDAY
3:30 p.m. — Study skills workshop:
"Reading for Comprehension and Speed." Also April 6 and 13. Presented by the student assistance center. 121 Strong Hall.
**Noon — International Business Symposium Series:** "Investing in Africa: Still Crazy After All These Years?" Gene Kernan, professor of economics, University of Chicago.
6:30 p.m. — Campus Christians meeting
meeting Hill House, Burge Union
6:30 p.m. — Students and Community Against Oppression and Racism organizational meeting, Burge Union Lobby.
1 p.m. — IBM microcomputer workshop
*Intermediate MS-DOS.* Offered by academic computing services, Call 864-0494 for information.
3:30 p.m. — Swim-a-thon for arthritis
Sponsored by Colonial Manor of
Dallas
7 p.m. - Women's Resource Center workshop: "Auto Mechanics for Beginners 1." Byron's Autohaus, Ninth and Vermont streets. Sessions two and three at 7 p.m. April 6 and 13.
8 p.m. — Music Honor Recital
SWarthout Recital Hall, Murpitt Hall.
THURSDAY
1 p.m. — Macintosh workshop:
"Intermediate PageMaker." Offered by academic computing services. Call 864-0494 for information.
Pavane," "A Dancer's World" and "Appalachian Spring." 155 Robinson Center.
1 p.m. — IBM microcomputer workshop:
"WordPerfect III." Offered by academic computing services. Call 864-0494 for information.
2 p.m. - Softball game KU versus Washburn. Doubleheader Jaiyawk
3:30 p.m. — Geography colloquium: "Transition of Missionary Philosophy in Africa." Ron Goodman, Lawrence, 317 Lindley Hall.
7 p.m. — Lecture: "Can Politics and Sports Share a Common Arena?" Sponsored by foreign student services. McCollum Hall Lobby.
4 p.m. — Dance films: "Moor
7 p.m. -- Campus Crusade for meeting, Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union.
7 p.m. — "The American Past" with Calder Pickett on KANU 91.5 FM.
8 p.m. — Student recital. Sean Beckett, tenor. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
FRIDAY
7 p.m. — Baseball. KU versus University of Missouri. Hoglund-Maupin Field.
rium, Dyche Hall. Also 3 p.m. April 3.
8 p.m. — Student recital. Eric Schultz, trumpet. Swarthout Recital Hall,
Murphy Hall.
7 p.m. — Latin American Film Festival: "Gabriela." Dawn-to-
8:30 a.m. — Art exhibit opening:
"Japanese Women Artists, 1600-1900"
Kress Gallery, Spencer Museum of Art.
9 a.m. — "The Vintage Jazz Show"
with Michael Macher on KANU 91.5 FM.
With Dick Linder on KANU 91.5 FM
with Dick Linder on KANU 91.5 FM
1 p.m. — Men's tennis, KU versus
Wichita State, Robinson Center courts.
SATURDAY
8 p.m. — Art lecture: "Life as Art: The Geisha." Liza Dalby, Kensington, Calif. Spencer Museum of art auditorium. Reception afterward in museum central court.
5 p.m. — Baseball. KU versus Missouri. Doubleheader. Hoglund-Maupin Field.
SUNDAY
7 a.m. — Easter Sunrise Service.
East of the Campanile. Sponsored by
Great Commission Students.
1 p.m. — Baseball. KU versus University of Missouri. Hoglund-Maupin Field.
1 p.m. — Exhibit opening,
Michalene Groshek, thesis show, textile
design. Art and Design Building gallery.
2 p.m. - Concert. Colliquium Musicum,
Spencer Museum of Art.
ZERCHER
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eral has made a diligent effort to recuse himself from matters in which there might be a conflict, and he has kept himself in cases where he doesn't have a relationship that would give rise to questions."
Hillcrest, 919 Iowa
Conflict of interest cases plague Meese
Downtown. 1107 Mass
When Meese came under criminal investigation last May 11 in the Wedtech scandal, he hired private Washington legal counsel who represent other clients in criminal investigations and prosecutions before the Justice Department.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A judge's decision to remove Attorney General Edwin Meese III from investigating an FBI agent's harassment charges adds to a string of cases involving potential conflicts of interest by the nation's highest law enforcement officer.
Because of the criminal investigation of Meese, his Washington lawyers regularly provide client lists to the Justice Department.
In some cases, Meese has disqualified himself, leading congressional critics to suggest he is not in command at the Justice Department. Meese's aides say there haven't been enough cases to have an effect.
In other cases, Meese's failure to remove himself has brought him legal difficulties as well as criticism from political foes who say that he is insensitive to the high ethical standards to which an attorney general should conform.
Chicago federal Judge John F. Grady disqualified Meese from the criminal civil rights investigation
Attorney general not in control of Justice Department, critics say
Grady said Meese and Assistant Attorney General William Bradford Reynolds would not be able to remain impartial in a federal grand jury investigation because they were defendants in a civil suit brought by Rochon in November.
involving black FBI agent Donald Rochon.
Rochon said that he was the victim of death threats from white colleagues in the Chicago FBI office and that Justice Department and FBI officials engaged in a cover-up of his complaints.
His behavior casts "a pall of favoritism" on the office of attorney general, declared Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.
Terry Eastland, a Justice Department spokesman responded, "This is absolute nonsense. The attorney gen-
Nathan Lewin, Meese's lawyer, said a couple of dozen cases might be involved. Meese has removed himself from these matters, even though only "rarely do our criminal cases merit the attention of the attorney general," said Lewin.
In one instance where conflict of interest was questioned, Meese
decided not to request appointment of an independent counsel to investigate two former Justice Department officials involved in an Environmental Protection Agency controversy. His decision overruled department subordinates. Meese had attended a White House meeting where aspects of the EPA controversy were discussed.
Odor-be-gone ordinance is passed by Jacksonville
The Associated Press
Few of the city's 610,000 residents, who have lived with the industrial odor for four decades, would argue that the air needs cleaning.
Troop of monkeys attacks motorist
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — This northeastern Florida city has a booming economy, a revitalized downtown and an active community leadership. And now a new ordinance may help reduce its stench.
"I'll tell you exactly what the air smells like," said homeowner Jeanne Oster. "It's like being locked in a Port-O-Let at the county fair.
Mayor Tommy Hazouri has made a stink about the stench during his eight months in office, demoting the city's pollution control chief, hiring eight more odor fighters, pumping up his legal staff to take polluters to court and creating a smell strike force with Duval State Attorney Ed Austin.
The Associated Press
WRITING A RESEARCH PAPER?
14.1 WESTWING CITY
Attend the
The Okaz newspaper said a man was driving to work when he killed the monkey on a highway in the Khamis Meshit region. The newspaper, which did not identify the man, quoted him as saying the
AR RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — A troop of monkeys roaming the southern desert attacked a motorist who ran over one of its members, jumped on his car and smashed the windows, a newspaper reported yesterday.
RESEARCH PAPER WORKSHOP
Tuesday, March 29
7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
4034 Wescoe Hall
Free/No Registra ary
other monkeys chased his car but couldn't catch it.
STORNG NAIL
SAC
MAY 1983
esented by the Student Assistance Center.
According to the paper, the driver sped on and saw the troop dragging the dead monkey into the nearby mountains.
But when the man drove home later on the same road, he saw the monkeys still gathered around the dead animal's body, according to the report. When they spotted his car, they jumped on it and smashed the windows with their fists, the paper said.
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED
( Si x hours of instruction )
Register and pay $15 materials fee by 5:00 p.m.
on March 29 at the Student Assistance Center
Wednesdays, March 30, April 6 and 13
3:30-5:30 p.m.
in 121 Strong Hall. Class size limited
Presented by the Student Assistance Center.
TJ ST. JOHN'S
SAC
CENTER
Macintosh Delivery!
It's time for you, the KU student, faculty or staff member, to pick up your key to success! You can pick up your computer on:
Thursday, March 31
12 p.m. - 6 p.m.
or
Friday, April 1 9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Where to park: West lot Where to pick up your computer: the Burge Union, level 3 There will be people there to help load your computer and answer any questions you may have.
Training sessions:
March 31:2 p.m.-4 p.m.
April 1:10 a.m.-12 p.m.
12th Street
WEST LOT,
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Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Monday, March 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Designer opens museum exhibit, compares paintings, illustrations
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
Illustration is an art form more closely associated with books and magazines than the walls of a museum. But Spencer Museum of Art is changing that notion.
The museum officially opened its "Innovators of American Illustration" exhibit yesterday with a talk by Milton Glaser.
Glaser defined the distinction between illustration and more conventional painting to an audience of about 150, who gathered in the museum's auditorium despite what Glaser called a significant competing event, the NCAA Midwest Regional Championship basketball game.
"Illustrations are concerned with narrative function and storytelling, and usually diminish the metaphysical in the image." he said.
"But that is not to say that an illustration cannot become art in the
hands of an artist," Glaser said, citing Picasso and Matisse as well-known artists who had done illustrations. "When an artist does an illustration, it usually turns out to be a painting," he said.
As a graphic artist and designer, Glaser has done everything from designing restaurant lighting schemes to drawing portraits of music stars. His most recognizable design is one incorporating a heart into an "I Love N.Y." logo for the New York City travel and tourism board.
Glaser said he had been spending most of the last five or six years studying the use of light in illustration, and his perception of light had changed.
"Light not only has the capacity to reveal forms, it has the capacity to destroy them," he said. "When you are controlling light, you feel like God."
Tom Allen, professor of design and
honorary curator of the exhibit, said he was pleased to have Glaser open the illustration exhibit.
"He is a true celebrity in a field that used to have a lot of celebrities and now has only one," he said.
The "Innovators of American Illustration" exhibit features the work of 20 American, English and French artists and was developed from a book of the same name by Steve Heller. Allen said he was pleased with the results of the book's transformation into an exhibit.
"I had seen it in the works, when the pictures were lying flat," he said. "Now, that the prints are mounted and hanging, I'm really impressed."
Alen said that Spencer Museum of Art was setting a precedent with the
"Most American art museums don't give illustration and design much importance," he said. "European museums consider it more highly."
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 28, 1988
7
NationWorld
Israeli nuclear technician gets 18 years for treason
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Mordchechian Vanu, the former nuclear technician who said he acted as a spy for the common man when he gave Israeli atomic secrets to a newspaper, was sentenced yesterday to 18 years in prison for treason and espionage.
The 34-year-old Israeli, who told a British newspaper that his country possessed nuclear weapons, was convicted Thursday.
The sentencing climaxed a sevenmonth closed-door trial that focused worldwide attention on Israel's nuclear capability.
The charges can carry a death penalty. But the prosecution requested a life term, which Israeli law limits to 20 years. The court reduced the term by two years, citing Vanunu's cooperation with investigators, apparent signs of regret and the difficult conditions of his 18-month solitary confinement.
Defense attorney Avigidor Feldman has said he would appeal his client's case to Israel's Supreme Court.
The sentencing climaxed an affair shrouded in secrecy that began when Vanunu, a 10-year employee of Israel's Dimona nuclear facility, gave photographs and details of the facility to the Sunday Times of London.
Under Israeli law, Vanunu could be released on good behavior after 12 years. But legal commentators said that his early release was unlikely given the severity of the crimes.
Based on that information, the paper reported that Israel had stockpiled the world's sixth largest nuclear arsenal.
$70 million spent on teen abstinence
The Associated Press
NEW VORK - The Reagan administration since 1981 has spent more than $70 million, a small sum in an era of trillion-dollar budgets, trying to persuade America's teen-agers to abstain from premarital sex.
separation of church and state.
But there is a problem, said American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Janet Benshoof. She said that the money from the Adolescent Family Life Act was going to religious organizations to promote their beliefs, a clear violation of the constitutional
The Department of Health and Human Services disagrees, and the case goes before the Supreme Court on Wednesday. The arguments indirectly pit the ACLU against President Reagan, an outspoken proponent of what he once called "my Adolescent Family Life Program."
A decision in the case is expected some time before the court's July 3 summer break. It should provide a first look at newly appointed Justice Anthony M. Kennedy's views on family life questions.
Sandinistas order prisoners released
The Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — The leftist Sandinista government announced yesterday that it was releasing about 100 political prisoners in preparation for further peace talks with U.S. supported contras.
An Interior Ministry announcement said that the prisoners were to be released yesterday afternoon, but officials refused to give immediate details for security reasons.
In another development, President Daniel Ortega suggested that the United Nations send a multinational peacekeeping force to the Nicaraguan-Honduran border to stabilize the area. Ortega said she had been on the moral side to a U.N. technical commission visiting the border area.
Ortega asks for U.N. forces to help stabilize border area
Most of the prisoners to be released
yesterday were workers arrested for joining illegal strikes or people who demonstrated against the Sandinista government.
The release was ordered under an amnesty law the National Assembly approved by a margin of 82-2 Saturday night. The law could result in the release of about 3,300 political prisoners jailed since the Sandinistas seized power in a 1979 revolution that overthrew President Anastasio Somoza.
According to the legislation, another undisclosed number of contra rebels taken prisoner during the
six-year civil war will be released at an unspecified later date. The government also plans a general review of the cases of about 1,800 members of Somoza's now-disbanded National Guard, Ortega said.
In what was a surprise move, leaders of the contra umbrella organization, the Nicaraguan Resistance, met with the Sandinistas last week and agreed Thursday on a 60-day cease-fire beginning April 1. Further negotiations will follow to reach a more permanent truce.
An informal cease-fire both sides had agreed to while the negotiations
were in progress continued to hold yesterday.
Ortega said the two sides will meet again today in the little southern village of Sapoa, near the Costa Rican border, to continue talks.
The negotiations will now center on so-called "truce areas" where the contras can gather and later turn in their weapons.
In Honduras, about 3,200 American troops, sent in two weeks ago by President Reagan when Sandinista troops allegedly entered Honduras in pursuit of contra rebels, prepared to return home today.
The Reagan administration said they were sent both to bolster the Honduran government and as a warning to the Sandinistas against further incursions.
Wright adviser tied to contra arms network
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — An "eyes-and-ears" adviser to House Speaker Jim Wright tried to sell weapons to the contras through Lt. Col. Oliver North's private network three months before the Iran-contra disclosures ended the North operation.
Richard M. Pena, a former House Foreign Affairs Committee staff member, contacted North's associate Richard Miller in 1986 and offered material from two South American companies. One would sell grenades, bombs and mines, and the other had boots at $33 a pair, according to a
letter that proposed the sale.
The letter went to World Affairs Counselors, a Cayman Islands front company formed by Miller and his partner Frank Gomez to handle their Contra transactions for North. A copy of the letter was obtained by The Associated Press.
Pena's actions were lawful.
Pena has been one of Wright's advisers on Central America during the past few years, and as recently as January was Wright's paid emissary to the region while a movement toward peace talks was under way, said Wright aide Marshall Lynam. He said Pena was on the speaker's payroll for a few days on each of three occasions: in August and November last year, and in January.
Such activity would appear at odds with the objectives of Wright, who has opposed military aid to the contras and has taken an active role in efforts to get a negotiated peace agreement between Nicaragua's warring factions.
The Associated Press
Through Lynam, Wright denied any knowledge of "anything he (Pena) might have had to do with arms sales or anything like that."
WASHINGTON — Less than a month before the filing deadline, fewer than half the U.S. citizens have finished their tax returns. But refunds are bigger, the Internal Revenue Service is doing a better job answering questions, and taxpayers are making fewer mistakes than had been expected.
Half of tax returns remain to be filed
Attorneys said that it appeared
Pena was known to be sympathetic to the contrasts, in contrast to other Wright confidants.
Miller pleaded guilty in the Iran-contra case, along with conservative fund-raiser Carl "Spitz" Channell, to conspire with North to defraud the government by raising money to purchase weapons for the contras.
The letter went to World Affairs Counselors, a Cayman Islands front company formed by Miller and his partner Frank Gomez to handle their Contra transactions for North. A copy of the letter was obtained by The Associated Press.
"I'm happy to report that so far, the filing season is going much as we
had predicted and hoped," IRS Commissioner Lawrence B. Gibbs told audiences.
More than seven of every 10 returns are qualifying for refunds: 25 million refunds totaling $20 billion, an average of $809 apiece. The number of refunds is down slightly and the average is up a bit from 1987.
Through March 18, 47.6 million returns had been logged at the 10 IRS service centers. Only 35 million had been processed.
News Roundup
JACKSON WINS MICHIGAN: Jesse Jackson parlayed his built-in core of support — the potent black voice of the Michigan Democratic Party — into a landslide victory in the state's Democratic caucuses. But the 55 percent Jackson commanded far outstripped the state's black population. According to 1800 census, Michigan is 13 percent black. Jackson buried Dukakis in vote totals with 107,699 votes to Dakiks' 55,337 or 28 percent, while Gephardt came in third with 24,995 or 13 percent. Sen. Paul Simon had 4,069 or 2 percent; Gore had 3,818 or 2 percent.
CHURCH TO DISCIPLINE SWAGGART: The Assemblies of God hopes to put the Jimmy
SUSPECTED KGB SPIES CAUGHT: Police raids that began last week have netted at least six people suspected of spying in West Germany for the Soviet KGB, a leading newspaper said yesterday. The Bonn-based newspaper, Die
Swaggart scandal to rest after the church's highest governing body meets today in Springfield, Mo., to discipline the television minister for an alleged relationship with a prostitute. Swaggart, the denomination's most prominent minister, confessed Feb. 21 from his Baton Rouge, La., pulpit to unspecified sins. Swaggart did not elaborate publicly, but reports have linked him to voyeurism involving a prostitute.
Kansan Classified (913) 864-4358
Welt, quoting unidentified security sources, said the suspects included Russian emigres placed in West Germany by the Soviet intelligence and secret police agency.
VIOLENCE INTERRUPTS WORSHIP: A man wielding an ax and knife burst into a worship service yesterday in Reading, England, and seriously wounded three congregation members, police said. The attacker slit a woman's throat, sliced another woman's hand and bashed a man over the head with the ax, according to LBC, a London radio station. He then sped away in a car and set fire to his home before he was arrested, police said.
Advertise in the Kansan
COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now (starting March 28)
All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by visiting the concessions stand at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.on any weekday until Friday, April 29, or by mailing the order form from the graduation mailing. To ensure proper fit, participants are encouraged to order caps, gowns, and/or hoods at Memorial Stadium.
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8
Monday, March 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU magazine on aging has national audience
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
The tan cover is one of contrasts.
The tan cover is one of contrasts. The line drawing on the lower half shows a woman holding an issue of Gerontology Review. Blue ink details the wrinkles on her aging hands and face.
At the top of the cover stand the words, "Volume 1, Number 1," symbolizing the start of something new.
Gerontology Review, a journal sponsored by the KU Gerontology Center, published its first issue in late February.
The journal will be a semiannual publication that so far has reached a national audience of about 900 people, said Forrest Berghorn, the journal's editor and chairman of American studies.
Within the journal are articles from all over the United States. Gerontology Review is designed to include information about aging from many fields, including biology, sociology and psychology. The essays are written so that readers outside the writer's discipline can understand the subject.
Many gerontology journals are specific to one discipline, Berghorn said.
"We are interested in theoretical essays rather than reports of single studies," he said.
The first copy of the journal was free. Future issues will cost $2.
The drawing on the first cover was by Kansas artist Elizabeth Grandma Layton of Wellsville. Layton self-portraits and depictions of aging,
The first issue contains articles about such subjects as intergenerational relationships, music and aging, and relocation of the elderly.
Future covers might feature the work of other regional artists, Berg-
Berghorn said journal subscribers had reacted positively to the first issue
Mary Jane Oakland, associate professor of food and nutrition at Iowa State University, said she had read the first issue and was pleased with the outlet for gerontological information the journal provided.
"I was quite impressed with it," she said.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 28, 1988
9
Support group available New advising helps minority students adjust
By Kathleen Faddis
The isolation and homesickness felt by most new students at a university is usually heightened for foreign and minority students, according to many such students and those involved in counseling them.
Latanya Hubbard, Wichita junior,
said that minority students often felt
isolated and left out of the main-
stream of student life.
And that can lead to students dropping out or transferring to other schools.
A network of support is now available to members of both groups through peer advising programs sponsored by the University of Kansas's office of minority affairs and office of foreign student services.
Robbie Steward, assistant professor of counseling psychology, said that peer counseling programs could be an important alternative to help those minority students who would use them.
Steward is part of a minority committee in the school of Education.
Norma Miller, graduate assistant in the minority affairs office, directs its three-year-old program. Four student advisers in the minority affairs
office are working with about 40 student participants.
Carmena Starks, Omaha, Neb., third-year law student and an adviser for the minority affairs program, said new minority students found it harder to adjust in a predominantly white environment.
"If they had gone to a black college, they would also be facing traditional freshman problems, but they would be facing them with everyone else," said Starks, who has worked with about 10 minority students since September.
Starks, who went to Iowa State University for her undergraduate work after growing up in a black community, said she had to learn to cope with an environment similar to the one at the University of Kansas.
But Stark said that she was glad she could use that experience to advise others. "The reward is being given the opportunity to pass on what I learned," she said.
Dan Copeland, graduate assistant,
directs the program for foreign students that started this spring. Eight students are advising 33 participants.
support. In 1977, about 1,350 foreign students were enrolled at KU. In 1987, about 1,730 foreign students were enrolled.
With steadily increasing foreign student enrollment, Copeland said two staff people could not reach all the students who might need extra
Foreign students can gain networks of friends through foreign student associations, but they have problems going beyond their own nationality groups, Copeland said.
"Some of them have complained that they are not meeting enough Americans," Komp said. Unfortunately, there are not enough U.S. families for the students who would like a host family.
U. S. students often have the same problem. "It is hard for many Americans to go beyond initial friendliness and become more students into their daily lives," he said.
Karen Komp, Lawrence sophmore, is a peer adviser with the foreign student services office. Komp, an anthropology major, was born in England but has lived in the United States with her husband for seven years.
Copeland said that students must be subtle in trying to counsel foreign students. Because of cultural differences, foreign students often will not take personal problems to a stranger.
Award-winning architecture teacher helps students build creative designs
By Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
Bill Rogers bustly planes fine wood silvers from the triangular leg of his emerging creation in the basement of Marvin Hall.
Rogers, Lincoln, Neb., senior,
meticulously places the three sides
of the desk in the same position
in pedestal desk. He plans to attach a
marble desk top next week.
"The problem with many architects and interior designers is that they just don't realize how something is constructed," said Rogers, who briefly stopped his work to fit the three sides of the leg together. "They are more worried about it than they should rather than how it fits together."
Rogers and 17 other students are finishing indoor projects, which range from lamps to metal sculptures, for Building Technology Practicum, a course taught by Dan Rockill.
Rockhill, associate professor of architecture and urban design, recently won an American Institute of Architects Education Honors award for innovative instruction in a professional degree curriculum.
"It's not just bricklaying," said Rockhill, who has been teaching three different building technology courses for six years. "It's integration of design and technology and that's hard to do."
"Architects are frequently accused of designing things that are hard to build." Rockhill said. "My interest is to help students bring their design to some kind of fruition."
Dennis Domer, associate dean of architecture and urban design, was one of the judges for the AIA contest at the American Collegiate Schools of Architecture convention. Rockhill was one of 80 entrants and received one of four national awards presented March 15 in Miami. Fla.
"Professor Rockhill's course is a course that deals with the craft of building," Domer said. "It is both practical in approach and theoretically interesting in design. Professor Rockhill is making a magnificent contribution and we're proud of him."
Every semester, students in Rockhill's class complete a small project, such as a lamp, and a larger project, such as a piece of
furniture, in the basement of Marvin Hall.
The students are also asked to design and build a project in the building yard behind Marvin Hall, Rockhill said. Outdoor projects have included vaults, brick arches, fireplaces, columns and tile flues.
Students usually scrougn for materials from places like area salvage yards, building sites and a local saw mill, Rockhill said.
Rogers said that students were exposed to many different applications of building materials.
"You do a lot of experimenting," he said. "It covers the majority of things you'd find in the real world."
Deirdre Jacobs, Overland Park senior, an interior design student who is completing a light sculpture constructed of sandblasted glass and a piece of limestone, said that interior designers needed Rockhill's course to gain an understanding of how things were constructed.
"I wanted to learn about furniture design but I wanted to learn about the construction of interior structures as well," Jacobs said.
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-Interested CLAS undergraduate students should complete nomination forms available at the Undergraduate Services Office, 106 Strong Hall.
—Filing deadline-5 p.m. Fri., April 8
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Mondav. March 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Barry follows dad's advice, scores career high
Scooter's field goals and free throws help Jayhawks win Final Four berth
The Associated Press
PONTIAC, Mich. — Rick Barry brought the Pontiac Silverdome fans to their feet yesterday.
Not basketball Hall-of-Famer Rick Barry, but his son, Richard Barry IV, a 6-foot-3 guard for the University of Kansas. The son who Kansas fans call Scooter.
"It was given to me by my parents," Barry said of his nickname. "I used to scoot around when I was little, crawl around like an inchworm and then pop up and run — never walked.
"It definitely stuck with me," he said.
Some of his dad's instincts also seem to have rubbed off.
Scooter Barry, a junior, scored 15 points, five over his previous career high, as Kansas beat Kansas State 71-58 yesterday for the NCAA Tournament Midwest Regional Championship.
"I talked to him last night," Scooter said of his father, who didn't attend the game. "He told me not to miss any more free throws, because I went four-for-six in the last game. He's always thinking 'score' so I tried not to miss them."
Dad's advice paid off. Scooter hit five of six shots, including his only three-point attempt, and all four free throws.
"we shot the ball thinking we were going to make them, that's why they went in," Barry said. "We knew that they were going to be aware of Danny, so Coach wanted the outside players to shoot.
"I never consider a great shooter, but I think I can shoot it and I
hope I proved it today," he said.
Wherever he has played, the questions and comparisons to his dad begin.
"It itted me because I grew up around the game," the younger Berry said. "But comparisons are really kind of stupid. We don't play the same position; we don't have the same mentality on the court."
The comparisons bothered him at DeLaSalle High School at Concord, Calif, where he was an all-conference selection his senior year, "but at this level there haven't been that many because I've never scored (more than) 10 points in a game." Until Sunday.
Barry had seven points by halftime, second only to Manning's 10. His three-point basket with three seconds left until halftime brought Kansas to within two, at 29-27.
In the second half, Barry helped the Jayhawks blow the game open, hitting a layup to put Kansas up 61-50 with 2:08 left. Twelve seconds later, he was fouled by grabbing a rebound and hit two free throws.
He also snared a rebound that resulted in a fast-break basket with 1:44 left. Barry finished with five rebounds, tying a career high.
"It was a case where they were shooting three-pointers, and we knew they were going to get long rebounds," Barry said, "so we wanted the guards to help out on the boards."
Was Barry, son of Barry, on the top of Kansas coach Larry Brown's depth chart at the start of the season?
"He wasn't anywhere." Brown said.
Kansas
Kansas 71 Kansas State 58
Manning M FG FT FI R A I TP
Piper 39 10-18 0-1 7 6 1 30
Newton 36 3-6 0-2 2 4 1 6
Pritchard 29 7-10 0-2 9 1 2 18
Guelderen 38 2-7 0-1 7 3 1 8
Guelderen 11 2-3 0-4 3 2 1 8
Harris 25 5-6 4-4 4 1 3 15
Harris 15 2-3 0-0 1 0 1 4
Minor 4 0-1 0-0 1 0 0 1
Maddox 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0
Normore 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0
Mattax 1 0-0 0-1 0 0 0 0
Town 1 0-0 0-0 1 4 0 0
Totals 200 29-54 0-4 4 32 22 13
Percentages: FG; 537, FT; 643. Three
point goals: 4-11 (Newton 2-1), Blocked
Shots: 1 Manning 1) Turnovers: 3 (Barry 3),
4 (Pinard, Harris 2). Technics:
None.
Kansas State
Richmond 37 4-14 FT 2 4 A 5 TP 11
Bledsoe 33 5-4 FH 4 9 A 7 TP 11
Meyers 26 4-8 FH 2 9 A 2 0
Gilbert 25 0-8 FH 2 5 A 1 6
Scott 30 6-15 FH 2 1 O 1 8
McCoy 18 3-5 FH 2 0 O 1 9
Glew 19 9 -3 FH 2 0 O 1 8
Diggins 3 0-0 FH 0 0 1 0
Dobbins 3 0-0 FH 0 0 1 0
Stanfield 1 0-0 FH 0 0 1 0
Totals 20 22-54 7-14 29 15 14 58
Percentages: FG: 40/7, PF: 10/
point goals: 72/(2.67*10) - Blocked Shots:
3 (Bledsoe, Henson, Scott). Turnovers: 10/
blocks: 6 (Stealth), 4 (Scott 2). Technicians:
None.
Half: Kansas State 29-27; Officials: Tanner
Poparo, Tanner.
11-12
SAS
44
STATE
KU's Scooter Barry, left, battles K-State's Fred McCoy, right, for a rebound during the second half yesterday at the Silverdome.
Rich Sugg/Special to the KANSAN
16
Kansas forward Danny Manning and Coach Larry Brown thank fans for their support. About 10,000 people welcomed the Jayhawks.
History favors Duke
By Tom Stinson
Sophomore Danny Manning and senior Greg Dreiling combined for only 10 points. Junior Archie Marshall went down with a knee injury after one of his finest collegiate performances. And the University of Kansas campus spent a very quiet evening on March 29, 1986.
The Duke Blue Devils had shut down the Jayhawks 71-67 and ended Kansas' Final Four season and its hopes of a national title — at least for a couple of years.
Kansan sports writer
Kansas, making its eighth Final Four appearance, gets another shot at Duke this Saturday in Kemper Arena.
This is the sixth Final Four trip for Duke. This will be the fourth meeting between the two teams and the second this year. Duke has won the first three.
In 1986, Duke was ranked number one and Kansas was number two before the Final Four in Dallas. Experts thought the national championship game would be a media game, and media-hype had the whole country's eyes focused on the game.
The eyes also were focused on Manning's most disappointing performance in a Kansas uniform. A red Kansas uniform.
Manning went two for nine from the field and spent most of the game on the bench in foul trouble. Dreiling and junior guard Cedric Hunter were
also in foul trouble and spent time on the bench.
Duke was led by All-American Johnny Dawkins with 24 points, and freshman Derry Ferry, a secondteam All-American this year, had eight.
The Blue Devils beat Kansas earlier that season 92-86 in the finals of the Big Apple National Invitational Tournament in New York. The two losses were half of the Jayhawks defeats during the 34- season.
In last month's meeting with Duke, Kansas jumped to an early lead before the shooting of junior guard Quin Snyder evened the game and sent it into overtime. Kansas had a five point lead in overtime, but Duke come back to win 74-70.
Snyder scored 21 points and Ferry had 20. Manning led Kansas with 31 points and 12 rebounds.
This will be the fourth time the Jayhawks have played in the Final Four in Kansas City, Mo. Kansas lost in the tournament's final game the other three times.
With the phenomenal Wilt Chamberlain averaging almost 30 points per game in 1957, Kansas lost to North Carolina 54-53. The triple-overtime game was the longest in NCAA Tournament history.
Kansas fell to Indiana in the other two Kansas City finals. Indiana won 69-68 in 1953 and 60-42 in 1940.
This will be Larry Brown's third coaching appearance in the Final Four.
Sports Briefs
SOCER TEAM WINS TWO: The Kansas women's soccer team opened up the spring season with two victories this weekend.
Yesterday, the Jayhawks won 2-0 at home against Oklahoma State. Strom scored her second goal of the season and Jane Lillis scored the other goal for Kansas.
The Jayhawks defeated Missouri 4-1 on Saturday in Columbia. Joan Klausner, Kathy Moylan, Leigh Strom and Pascale Hausermanns each scored one goal.
The Jayhawks defeated Northern Illinois 9-0 on Friday, Illinois 5-4 on Saturday and Marquette 9-0 yesterday.
WOMEN'S TENNIS TEAM VICIOROUS: The Kansas women's tennis won three matches last weekend in Champaign. Ill.
KU LACROSSE DEFEATS MU: The Kansas Lacrosse Club won its first game of the season Friday when it defeated Missouri 9-6 at Shenk Complex. Kansas了 Saturday to Washington of St. Louis 12-4 and beat the Michelob Knights of St. Louis 8-5 yesterday.
Kansas' record is 15-3.
Junior Ron Conner led the Jayhawks against Missouri with three goals and added two against Washington. Sophomore Dan Grossman and freshman Ted Nash both scored two goals.
10
Alan Lehman/Special to the KANSAN
KU first baseman Tom Buchanan tries to apply a tag in an attempted pick-off of an Emporia State player. KU won both games of Saturday's doubleheader, 18-8 and 8-5.
Timely hitting pushes Jayhawks past Hornets
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham did something Saturday that the Kansas baseball team had been trying to do to him for years.
The first-year Kansas team spent 14 years coaching Emporia State, and the last two years he beat the Jayhaws.
At Saturday's doubleheader, Bingham's Jayhaws defeated the Hornets 18-8 and 8-5 at Hoglund-Paundin Stadium.
"This is very special in a lot of ways," said Bingham, who led Emporia State to the NAIA National Championship in 1978. "Nothing against Emporia State, but it's a club that KU's had a lot of trouble with. It's nice to beat a good club.
"It was hard to play against them. A lot of those kids I recruited. Some of them took us to the (NAIA) World Series."
Sophomore Brad Hinkle, 3-1, led the Jayhawks in the first game, pitching five and one-third innings and allowing five earned runs.
"Hinkle coming back (from an arm injury) has helped out a lot." Bingham said. "He got both wins down south. Hinkle makes mistakes, but he doesn't give up the big one. Brad has been the big key."
Freshman Curtis Shaw and senior Mike McLee pitched in relief for Kansas before the game was called on the 10-run rule.
Junior Craig Mulcahy won the second game, pitching six innings and allowing four earned runs. In 3-0, recorded seven strikeouts.
Junior Dan Benningshoff hit the game winning RBI with the bases loaded in the sixth run. His three runs and broke a 5-12 tie.
"We were pressed today and we handled it well," Bingham said. "I was confident they would win. There were a couple of situations where we had to have something good happen and somebody did it.
---
"Dan's hit took the pressure off our pitchers. It was his only hit all day. And that's the type of thing I'm talking about."
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 28, 1988
11
SportsMonday
College vault record is just the beginning of athlete's Olympic dreams
SAMUEL CABRERA
Bv Sandra I. Watts
Special to the Kansan
Kansas pole vaulter Scott Huffman never thought five years ago that his dream of breaking a college track record would turn into a shot at the Olympics.
With his performance this weekend he at the Kansas Alumni Invitational, Ruffman showed just how close he will be the goal of becoming an Olympian.
Huffman jumped 18 feet 6 inches at the Invitational on Saturday. The jump would have put Huffman over the qualifying mark of 18 feet 3 and one quarter inches needed to compete at the Olympic Trials.
"I'm not really worried about qualifying." Huffman said. "We are planning to jump higher than qualifying height. That height is just something to be taken care of."
The jump was the third highest vault in the United States this year, according to Track and Field News. But the vault couldn't be counted because the meet wasn't official, because it was too high to qualify for the Olympic Trials.
Through his hard work and the careful planning of his coach, Rick Attig, Huffman plans to compete in Olympic trials at Indianapolis in July.
To prepare for the trials, Huffman competed at the NCAA Indoor Championships at Oklahoma City, where he placed second. Huffman will compete at the Athletics Congress championships in June.
Huffman's preparation really began during his high school career at Quinter, a rural town in western Kansas. He competed on the school track team and set the state high school pole vaulting record in his junior year.
"During high school, I didn't think there was anything else other than Paper Towels."
Huffman's goal was to go to McPherson College after high school and put his family name back on the school's pool vault record. His father, Galen, set a record of 15 feet 10 inches in 1962. The record was broken in 1973.
"That was the most exciting week of my whole life," Huffman said. "I felt intimidated a bit because I thought there would be a lot of big feet, and it made me feel. But everyone there was equal, and I learned a lot.
Bowen called Huffman many times during his senior year at Quinter. Huffman began to believe that Bowen was sincere and that he could go to Kansas. When Huffman weighed the advice of his father, who wanted him to go to Kansas, and the attention he had received from Jayhawk coaches, he decided to enroll at Kansas.
"The best feeling was when Coach Bowen told me I had potential to be great. He told me he was not going to me alone. He wanted me to go to KU."
During his junior year at Quinter, Huffman still planned to go to McPherson after his prep career. At the Kansas state track meet, though, he read in the track program about the Kansas Jayhawk track camp. He said he didn't think he was good enough to compete at such a large school's camp, but he decided to try it anyway.
"I wanted the opportunity to improve and to be able to go somewhere," Huffman said. "I hate limiting myself."
As a freshman, Huffman set an NCAA frenzy in vaulting record with a jump of 18 feet five inches. During his sophomore season, Huffman placed fourth at the NCAA championships and fourth at the Athletic
Congress national meet
But trouble began when Huffman injured his ankle early in his junior year. He was running through a parking lot and slammed into a concrete curb when he tried to do a heel pop, which is an exercise that pole vaulters do to warm up before vaults.
Huffman tried to let the injury heal and did not compete for about a month and a half. He later competed in two track meets, but did not do very well. He unknowingly was trying to compete on a broken ankle.
His doctor discovered he had chipped a piece of bone off his ankle. Huffman had an operation to remove the chip last January and hasn't had the same trouble since.
During his sophomore year, the Kansas pole vault team received a new coach. Rick Attig came to Kansas and helped coach the pole vault team to an NCAA ranking of 19th in the nation this year.
Using Attig's scientific training system, Huffman said he planned to be at his peak in July, in time for the Olympic trials.
KANSAS RELAIS
SCHOOL OF SPORTS
OFFICIAL
Huffman works hard for two weeks a month, and the third week he works light. Training in the first two weeks consists of three days of running 100-yard sprints, lifting weights and vaulting.
Photos by Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Top, upper left: Huffman works on his vaulting in Anschutz Sports Pavilion during the evening several times a week.
Bottom left: Huffman stretches out Saturday at the Kansas Alumni Track Meet.
Above: Huffman has the chance to be a United States Olympian within his grasp.
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Monday, March 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Fans
Continued from p.1
about eight people. He said he was impressed with the afternoon's festivities
"Have you ever seen such a wild thing?" Schnatzmeyer said. "I think it's great. It shows great school spirit."
Fans said that the defeat of K-State made the victory even sweeter.
Some fans said that the only thing better than celebrating with the other students in Lawrence would have been attending the
game in Pontiac. Mast and another friend played the KU fight song on trumpets in honor of Mast's roommate, Stewart Bryson, Lawrence senior, who attended the game with the KU men's basketball band.
The crowd dispersed about 5 p.m., but not before expressing their enthusiasm for the Jayhaws and the impromptu shenanigans.
Mike Unterreiner, St. Louis junior, said, "It's a great ol' party."
Now the Jayhawks must prepare for Duke, the team that in 1986 ended their national championship dream and that in 1988 barely escaped from Kansas.
Continued from p. 1
"We're just going to play and have fun," Brown said. "Duke's a great team. We were disappointed with the loss we had at home and devastated at the loss in Dallas."
Game
But it's not the same team that will face Duke this time in Kemper Arena. This one has experienced enough ups and downs to last any team a lifetime. In 1986, Kansas and
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS SYMPOSIUM
March 30,1988
Gene Ellis
March 30, 1986
12:00 noon - 1:20 p.m.
Southeast Conference Room
Burge (Satellite) Union
Professor of Economics and Adjunct Faculty Member of the Graduate School of International Studies University of Denver
"Investing in Africa:
Investing in Kind Still Crazy After All These Years?"
U.S. Department of Education, University of Kansas.
School of Business, Center for International Programs
--the rest of the country expected the Jayhawks to make it to the Final Four. This year, after the less-than-impressive season, few even gave them a chance.
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--the rest of the country expected the Jayhawks to make it to the Final Four. This year, after the less-than-impressive season, few even gave them a chance.
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents
Professor Jeffery Lang Professor of Math at the University of Kansas
"Men's and Women's Relations in Islam"
Place: Pine Room, Kansas Union, KU
Time: 7:00 p.m., Tuesday, March 29, 1988
Everybody is Welcome
Free Refreshments Are Provided
For more Information call 841-9768
SUPERIOR
REFRIGERATION & HEATING
- Boilers
- Furnaces
* Air conditioners
* Walk-in coolers and freezers
"It's not by design that we're here," Brown said. "We have the greatest player I have been associated with in Danny. Then we have some kids with great talent, and I was just too umd to recognize that."
MADRID GARDEN
STUDIO
842-0301 AMATEURS
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(PG 13) 7:15,9:30
BILOXI BLUES
Hillcrest 9th & Iowa 842-8400
MASQUERADE (R) (4.50, 7.30, 9.25)
POLICE ACADEMY (PS) (4.50, 7.30, 9.25)
JOHNNY BE GOOD/PG13) 4.10, 7.25, 9.35
GOOD MORNING
VIRTUAL (R) (4.30, 7.15, 9.40)
A NEW LIFE (PG13) 4.10, 7.25, 9.20
Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400
FOX & HOUND (PG) '5:15, 7:00, 8:30
VICE VERSA (PG) '5:00, 7:10, 9:10
The Society for East Asian Studies presents
Sector in China"
lecture by
"The Reemergence of the Private
Professor Thomas B. Gold University of California at Berkely
Tuesday, March 29 7:30 p.m.
Centennial Room-Student Union Paid for in part by the Center For East Asian Studies, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, and Student Senate.
Centennial Room-Student Union
Healthy Hawk
OAKLAND ATHLETICS
SELF-ESTEEM
"If we are to love ourselves, we must behave in ways we can admire."
These words, written by Irvin Yalom, tell us that we are responsible for how we fee about ourselves, and that we are our own most important critics. Behaving to please others is not enough. The key to understanding self-esteem is to realize that our behavior, and how we judge it, tells the story.
HURRYING OURSELFIES People use different standards. With identical performances, ability, and effort, one person is pleased with her accomplishment. Another resents her "mediocracy." One feels he gave it a good try. Another lamentes his "laisiness." One feels good if she gets an "A." Another feels good about what she has learned.
PERFECTIONISM is a great obstacle to our self-acceptance. If we feel good about ourselves only if we never make mistakes, never fear loss, always behave unselfishly, never show anxiety, and never become complacent in the face of failure or frustration. Our self-esteem that sustains us in times of failure or frustration. The courage to act, to accept our weaknesses, and to grow from an inner faith that are we good and worthy persons whatever happens.
OLD HABITS DIE HARD If we have learned that we are more trouble than we are worth, that we are loved only if we achieve and excel, or that we are unable to handle life's challenges by themselves, we may find ourselves less capable of what is important to us. We might, for example, decide that failing and succeeding are less important than longevity and integrity. When age controls the sources of our self-esteem, we are less likely to fail.
COMMON SIGNS OF LOW SELF-ESTEEM
Classified Ads
- Feeling that problems in relationships are always your fault
- *Distrusting your decisions unless others approve of them.
**2.1.4.2 Relationship**
- Staying in emotionally or physically abusive relationship.
* Staring in emotionally or physically abusive relationship.
- Staring in emotionally- or physically-abusive relationships.
* Thinking of yourself as a 'label' (e.g., lazy, ugly, stupid).
* Feeling that others always have it *easier* than you (e.g., they don't feel anxiety, are always confident, don't have serious problems).
anxiety, are always confident, not I have seldom personality *
* Feeling that people would reject you if they really knew you
University Counseling Center, 116 Bailey, 864-3931 Mental Health Clinic, Watkins Hospital, 864-9580 Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 964-4064 Sponsored by Student Affairs.
For more information contact:
ANNOUNCEMENTS
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Gem and Mineral Show - 411 fair grounds. April 19
15:00 to 8:00, April 16 to 5:00. Demonstration
sessions
---
PYRAMID
PIZZA
We Pile It On!
Adventureurs Individuals for Boundary Waters
$340 or $100 plus transportation.
6344-346 5346
RIDGE WILDCAT HOTSPOT
MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History
Hop to the Shop
Hillel
בְּאָה
Baskets of Eggs and Rabbits Mon.-Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 864-4450
Events of the Week
Monday, March 28
Hitzer and the Holocaust
8:00 p.m.
Woodruff Auditorium
Passover
Friday, April 1
First Night Seder
Host Families Available
Cell Phone: March 29
Saturday, April 2 Second Night Community
Seder Lawrence Jewish Community Center RSVP by March 29
For Reservations/More Info Call Hillel 749-4242
MASSAGE "Just say YES" O.K. you've been reading our eds for awhile, right? But we realize you've never seen 'em. Can massage help those aching muscles? SURE! SURE! SURE! So, do your body and mind a favor. and get 25% off Call Lawrence Message at 841-6062 - nevermind that Nancy says "...
0 only 2 days left to submit nominations for Women's Recognition. Stor by 218 Strong.
Sign up now at the University Placement Center. Level One of the Burge Union
Visit with a recruiter from Merck, Sharp and Dohme on Monday, April 4. Open to all students with science majors.
INTERESTED IN LEARNING
ABOUT A PHARMACEUTICAL
SALES CAREER?
Sign up now for on-campus interviews with the following figures.
Attention Computer Science Graduates
J.C. Penney Catalog Ctr.
March 31
Payless Cashways
April 6
Physicians Corp of America April 8
Sign up and obtain details at the University Placement Center Level One, Burge Union
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP, Wednesdays, March 30, April 6 & 14; 3:30:50 p.m. Materials fee $15.
Wednesday, April 27; 3:00 p.m. on the 9th day of the Assistance Center.
Discrimination measures the institutions and
institutions that regulate human rights
Human Rights Ordinance (5488) of the City of
Liz Glowdy, spokesperson, Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DISCRIMINA-
tion at the Lawrence Auditorium Wednesday, April 6. 8 o'p.m., Alderson Auditorium. Sponsored by the Lawrence Tennessee Association.
We Know Your Name Until Wednesday, April 6
House of Usher, 838 Mass, 842-310-3011
print Graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal
small. Small quantities. Call for more
information.
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and Most Affordable. Music and Lighting for any event.
GET INTO THE GROVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot pins Maximum Party Hot. 841.7083
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FORRENT
uagnet lease, spectacular little townhouse. Two large bedrooms, two full baths, two walk-in closets. UA has route rentals. Office space, open office. Phone: 643-1892. Hurry! available immediately — Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Available end of May or by June 1, 1898 nice one bedroom apartment, fully equipped kitchen, walk in closet, very low utilities. Call Pam at 741-6382.
Available June 1 for Summer Sublease. Sablee water, cable pad, patio, pool, on bus road Causeway.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2:3 & a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 800-74255, or you 749-245. Mastercraft Management
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
West Hills Apartments
Excellent location 2 bedroom apartment in 4-pet, carpet CA, equipped kitchen, low utilities, available April 1, 1530 at 1341 Ouah Call 842-4242 FANTASTIC ROOM available immediately Hardwood floors, lots of windows and light in the home, 6 bays downtown, $43.40 *q 4 utilities, Call 841-7747
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, cell-fees free,欠留电话, phone cable, DW site. Two bedrooms, private rooms. Furnished, private rooms new & summer, room on 134 N Kentucky 2768, 134 N Kentucky 2795. 408-749-1498 Leave
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts.
furn. or unfurn.
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
Furnished room with kitchen & bath facilities. Most utilitarian. Off-street parking one block from the building.
Furnished 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Some utilities paid. Some utilities paid with off-street parking one block form University. No pets please. #841-5500.
Great location, 2 bedroom apartment with sunroom, CA. equipped kitchen, low utilities, available April 1. $340 at 1891 Mississippi. Call 842-4242
I need a roommate and apartment for fall semester 8. 18 smoke . call Sarah evening
KOINONIA COMMUNITY has a few spaces in the Christian Living Center for summer '88 and for academic year 88-89. Apply immediately at ECM Center, 1204 Oread.
southbridge
-100°
150°
200°
250°
300°
350°
400°
450°
500°
550°
600°
مراجعة تاريخ تحليل العقود في الافتراضات التالية
LEASING for fall 1 & 2 bedroom apartments 10 month leases water & cable paid
Southridge Plaza Apts.
pool
reduced summer rates
1704 Wear 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 66444
842.1110
842-1160
Newly remodeled one bedroom near city available May 16. $300 monthly. May rent paid
Now taking classes for 2 bedroom apartments
Close to campus. 10 and 12 month leaves. Resident Manager. Unfurished. Apartments at 1829
Kentucky. 843-0929
One of two bedrooms, afters, low utilities,户
grounds, 16' x 8' (180 sq ft), 4,300
Avalon Apt. sift & Avlon-749-2022
conserve your room for summer or fall at
an experience in cooperative living. Call
Coastal College.
living Call 784-6071 and ask for the rester
Camping 12/15 month. Available Now in
Summit 15/1 month.
Roommate needed NOW. Owen bedroom at Berkei
flats. Clean rent: 749-491 or 843-845.
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.
Now Leasing for Fall
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60044
913-855-8559
University Daily Kansan / Monday, March 28, 1988
13
SUMMER SUBLET: Affordable, new one-
room apartment, neat, campus,
dishwashing, 914-877-7272.
Sublease Sale. Luxurious 2 Br, 2 bath apt.
Fireplace, wet bar, microwave, tennis court.
For two or three people. Available May through July
15. 41-841-8466 after 3 pm.
Sub lease, 2 bedroom/2 bath apartment, at Pepertree Park. $745 monthly or new summer or
749-0794.
Sublase a room in my m3 by 2½ bq/h on the golf course ~ covered parking ~ w/pool & clubhouse, townhouser for the summer, and if you like it, stay at 149-206 Riverside ~ $3, t₂ deposit 841-206 Riverside ~ $7. Leave notes.
Subleasing two bedroom apt. for June and July
and moving to a lower level with kitchen and canopy
to four 'cars' Cumberland Canyon 759-268-3210
Summer Sublease: Sunrise Village Spacios
Courtyard, washer/dryer, pool, tennis
court, 789-2497
Tired of noise, and want a quite place to call home?
CALL NAISMITH PLACE APTS. 841-1815
A piece of luxury at a reasonable price.
Lifestyle
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills & trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus & area shopping.
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious & comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
Reserve Your Unit Now...For Summer or Fall!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 WEST 24th
841-5797
Sign a lease with us before April 15th and SAVE $$
- & 1 & 2 bedroom units
* laundry facilities
* on bus route - near
shopping
* water paid
* ample off street
parking
* furniture avail,
by Thompson-Cawley
beyond Cawley
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- contract
* Swimming pool
- Free basic cable
- Exercise Weightroom
- On-Site Management
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc.
---
SUNRISE
APARTMENTS
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments and
- Garages
- Tennis Court
- Pools
- Tennis C
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri.11-5
Summer Sublease. Nice 3BR, 13h, 1 block from
campus. Call Nancy or Jill. 8U-6078.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt at West Hills
Apt. 687, West Hill Estates Available
May is to August 1. Cell 749-3000
Bach 12 each. Call one or two of
WANTED: 2 male roommates. Summer
wanting. 3 new women. Washer/Dryer.
$400.00 + $3 + i₃ utilities. Call Tony at
749-3967 a 2:00 p.m.
Open Daily 1-5 p.m.
Suffern **Saucy** Kitchen microwave need call Chris 749-3826
need needed 2. need for 3 BDR, 1 bathroom townhouse, dishwasher, on KU bus route, $155 each. Call Sue or KE 842-3822
Reserve your home for next semester!
Completely furnished studio, 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedroom apartments.. all close to KU or on bus route
CAMPUS PBCE * 841-1429
12th & Louisiana
Hanover Place * 841-1212
Hanover Place * 841-1212
14th & Massachusetts
Orchard Corners * 749-4226
SUNDANCE * 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood * 749-2415
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company 842.4455
FOR SALE
Sterne 5 channel mf2m, £250, TV converter
5. sterne mf/cassette walkman 5, *interested*
5. sterne mf/cassette walkman 5
73 Crestine Home: 12' 50" 2. BHR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4522 after 5:30 pm, or inquire 420 North St. #4, Lawrence.
73 Crestview Home. 12: 40 o'clock - 2 BHr. Extra medium-
sized room. $16,950-$22,425 after $30 p.m., or please
call 612-875-6222 for details.
77 V.W. Rabbit, runs great. New clutch, new C.V.
joints $05 0 BW 81 -948 98-3: 3.30 p.m.
Average salary after college = $65,000
Analyze data with Epson printer $750 Call John at
742-8737
URALSAM
MAORS. Several local media for sale
Established and profitable. 843-1911.
BLACK 18YAMMA RIVA 125 Brand new scooter. 1894 H64-8009
Cake machine: in good shape, holds fourteen ferris-
wheel cakes, including longnecks 749-763 leave message.
Comic books, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat, Max's Comic's, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat, Max's
For Sale 1983 Liberty Mobile Home - 14 x 70' 3
bedrooms, 1½ bathrooms. Bay window, skirtd
and tied down. Great condition $13,000 FIRM.
Gaslight Village L-16 or 749514.
For Sale: Stereo, complete system, CD ready.
Call 842-7493 or call Owl. Call 749-4403 or
or leave message at 842-7493.
For sale 312 Bianchi Dirt Bike. 18 speeds. 1 week
old and want to sell. $300.00. 841-6086.
Honda Magna 1985 900 mil $perf. perf. $2000
841-8752. Call Allan.
LEAVING TOWN QTN w. S2. Hz Ibz. 252. Hide-a
Bouch, C27. Chews/Dressiags - 175. Chair-oat,
Bouch, C28. tables - 118 each, burnished tops
wicker table - 10, also 2 color tvs. b 14. 2886 Scrit.
Leave message
Maroon '80 Vega Scooter P200E - All metal,
windshields with brake low miles, run great! Only
$1499.
nightcap couch, loveatest and mattres.仓库
springs, matchnight/dresser. Fair prices. Stoc
**** MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
512 E. 9th, 749-4061
Mountain Bike for sale. Schwinn Sierra 22 inch frame. Full Cro-Mo frame oairs and rims in great condition. Asking $250.00 call 749-3716 ask for Terry.
NEW NYC 2-Barrier Centurion 24 frame
New NYC 2-Barrier Centurion 24 frame
New R.C. Model Airplane very nice paid $400
New R.C. Model Airplane very nice paid $400
Pair VAC SR1 100 speakers Peak 15W good cond
pair VAC SR2 100 speakers Peak 15W good cond
$400. Portable $100. Manual typewriter EPS
$400. Portable $100. Manual typewriter EPS
Racing Bike, in mint condition, Cannondale SR 600, call Liz at 749-1095.
Oration Anniversary Guitar and King
Tower Tenor Sax - Both Mint Edition
(913) 847/748
Tandy 1000 computer, 128 K, IBM compatible.
Tandy 2000 computer, 168 K, IBM compatible.
and software included. *All you need is monitor or*
*computer mouse.*
Students/Remainners/Married Beautiful,
Student/Remainners/Married Beautiful,
Separate Exercise Room. Ample Storage.
Renewable Energy.
natsis, var boom 606, 452 or 3830 evenings.
salboard - Sailderir SGR, great for learning.
Rock-n-roll - Thousands of used and rare albums to 10 a.m. to 6 p.m every Saturday and Sunday.
197 Corvette, Auto, air, am-fm stereo, cassette,
pb. pb. New black lacquer and T-Offs. Call
(303) 286-8541.
1979 RD400 Yamaha, 12K. Good condition $400
Obc Call Ullage 841-6898
Wedding Dress Hat. Beige size. 12. $25.00 OB
Cosmetics Loss. Bgm-863-306. Expire 12. $49.
Haircuts Loss. Hgm-863-306. Expire 12. $49.
9789 Yamaha 500 Enduro, 11,800 miles, recent tune-up, new battery and tires "7085 OBJ" Cable
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There are 400 Miles with Extras Call
and 400 Pst for Pat
AUTO SALES
1979 Honda Accord, two door hatch, new clutch.
tires. Must sell, best offer. 841-538-5680
979 Cavalerie, Auto air, pb, pa, bm fm stereo,
assette, excellent condition. 248 miles /6/00
kattany. Call 842-8963 between 7:10 pm. Ask for
Paula.
**686 Camerare Black V8 auto overdrive, T-Tops,**
ir S.P., P.B., pm/am cassette, tilt, perfect grey interior. Owner will sacrifice to sell. $8,000
weekdays after 5 pm and weekends.
***
1983 Honda C-70 Motorcycle for sale. Very low mileage, auto. start, splashgiants. 542-3384.
82 VV Quantum Wagon Power, alt. 5-speed, $770 or
Make An Offer! BM-40170
842-005 ask for Pat.
Black Granadillo 190 auto; roadside. T-Tow.
AUTO repair service on foreign cars at your home. Tune up only $35. Ten years exp.
Car: 78 Chevy Miata, nice but don't insure. Will trade for money or large amount of beer. $999.
For Sale 1900 motorcycle motorcycle. Runs good.
Nice commuter bike. $50 or best offer.
LOST-FOUND
Bakery Sales - cleaning Sat. 6 pm - 1 am, Sun 6 pm - 12 am, an hour after a training paid vacation after one year. Interviews Tues. 1pm, Wed. 3pm, Appointment. Apply My Job Bakery Baking 749-8324
ARLINES NOW HIRING Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $50K. Entry level positions.
Call 805-639-6000 Ext. A-9758
HELP WANTED
BE ON T V Many needed for commercials
Toy Casting (电话 1) (800) 857-800 877
Found: 2 books. Wescure 360 Floor woman's room. Call to identify 843-4965.
CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, archery, golf, baseball, camping, patrons, camping,戏剧, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $200 or less. Job location: Seeser, 1768 Milep, Nldl, I1, 60933, 316-424-244
Data Entry Operators long & short term temporary assignments available on 7am, 8am, 9am, 10am, 12pm, 1:30 pm, 9:00 pm and 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm. If interested, Services 901 Kenpuku, 749-782 EOF, MPH
on a wheat harvest crew. Call 913-567-4649.
LIVE-in CHILDCARE. New York Suburban. Like
our school friends, we care matching with the "right" family. All of our families are screened "one year and summer"
from the MDR program. Visit our license. Call 913-747-1445. Write Child Care Decisions. Inc. 80 Business Park Dr. Armmon,
NY 10520.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040/$25,920/Yr.
Hiring. Your Areas (87) 987-6000 or 879-4758
for position.
HELP WANTED TRAVEL from Texas to Montana on a wheat harvesting crew. Call 913-567-4649
Mass Street Deli and Bufalfa Bob's Smokehouse now hiring part-time table service employees. Must have 1 year, experience and summer training. Must be a Bachelor or higher at 719 Mass above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
Out of money from Spring Break? Make quick and easy cash selling I shrift here in Lawrence.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications. For information & application. For information & application. write National College Recreation. P. O. Box 8074 Hilton
RESEARCH ASSISTANT: Perform experiments using biochemical immunological and molecular techniques. Prepare appropriate Requirements: B.A. or B.S. on Biological Sciences. Prefer individual with degree in either Biology, Pharmacology, Molecular Genetics and laboratory experience. Salary: $16,000 per year + benefits. Application instructions: http://www.mcg.edu/jobs/
Safary: $160,000 per year, benefits. Application fee: $750 per year. Indicates indicating career goals, resume and 3 letters of recommendation to Dr. Dean Steater, Unv. of Haworth, Lawrence, K. 6045 EOE/ADA
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseline, Airlines & Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications for the Resort's vacation packages. For information & application: write national Recollection, P. O. Box 8074.
Resorts Employment Newsletter - All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif., Nevada/Arizona More! Tennis, Golf, Vacation/Rest cities
1049.6211.4750 or 6210.6200, So Lake Tahoe
0019.6211.4750 or 6210.6200, So Lake Tahoe
Seedling Tree Planters on weekend need some help. We have name and phone on phone机, 81-943-6100.
Summer childcare needed for 10-month old girl, approx. 4 hrs. morning or afternoons, M,R same position(s) for schoolyear 88-89. Experience in morning, call 8421-1678 except TMR onwards.
Summer Help - Johnson County, Respondible college students needed for building inspection teams in Johnson County. Training provided Tuesday through Saturday hours. Valid drivers license and a car are required. Placement interview interviews will be conducted March 29th.
Summer help wanted. Dock hands, cash register attendant. Lake Perry Yacht & Marina. Call 312-876-4000.
Taking applications for dishwasher. Flexible hours. Apply Lawrence Country Club. 843-286-396.
Teachers aide for child care program needed: 7:45 a.m. to 2:10 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 5 yrs. of 2 yr. olds and two references required. App. to Children's Learning Center, 313 Maine, EOE.
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Stability, dependability, and resume to: PO Box 1285, Lawrence KS 60049.
Women slowchip football pitchers & players needed for competitive, established team this summer. If interested call Karen 842-6222 Ext. 232 daytime. 741-263 after 5pm
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekend hours available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to operate broadcast equipment. Contact Audio-
Wesco Terrace Tercerate floating help. $3.45 per hour Monday through Friday 7:30 a.m to 2:30 p.m. Must be willing to do jantorial work, cashiering, bashing, dishwashing and light food preparation. Prior cacher experience in high volume food service. Catering service. Kansas University Personnel Office. Level E. 5-OHC
Blondie, who works at Britches Corner: My, my you're a sight for sore eyes! How bout some winning, dining, and eventual intertwining? Would you eat you better. Keep here. Floridian Job Seeker.
Blue Eyes - I would settle for a gail not quite so
strong. Edwin John. I'd like to get to
e. /vorn Arenna.
PERSONAL
flags, no commitments. 'call me BRX!'
no commitments in the rain of Faura Laue's wasUE突击队, let's do
ACF - How about a weekend at Tantara? No strings, no commitments. Call me DRA
Fabulously handsome long-haired male seeks attractive well-proportioned females upon which to lavish kisses and affection. Please enclose photo. Tow and, leff
A. B.C. "Religion is the venereal disease of mankind." - Henn de Menterlhay.
To the girl at O'Brien Harve 3/15 I enjoyed talking to her about her experience with sex. I got answered test answer here! But put it on table. The girl gave me a very pleasant answer.
Discovery recover thru shared experience and mutual support. dues or fees. Overmaters a Memorial Hospital, 325 Maint. For confidential information/contain person. Write PO Box 4042
Over $10,000 in cash awards. Enter the CERTS
for more information.
call 1-800-332-4CERTS
Imptistant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization card, ID, I.D. portraitraits
Swella Studio. 748-1611-03
BUS. PERSONAL
Pregnant and need help?叫*Birtbirth at 843 4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy
Try it your way! love it, become a glamourous with a camera that takes photos of you. Setting Includes; Glamourized Make-over, Full Posing Assistance, Creative Photography Technique to produce alarming alerts. 749-706. Mike
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without parcel testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shot to composition, Modya, actors, dancers, etc.
HARPER LAWYER
---
A COUCH!
A BED!
IT'S BOTH
BLUE HERON
Innovative Samp Designs
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4294
Bloom County t-shirts & books
Role-playing games, games and miniatures, Star 'Trend', Japanese comics and more!
$25 per month
*******
- Certified Instructors
MEMBERSHIP
- Certified Instructors IDEA/Rhythmic Aerobics
- Body Toning Classes
- Exclusively For Women
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
- Hourly Classes
- Sauna
- Swepe
- Shower Facilities
Body Shapes
SERVICES OFFERED
$50 Value when presented toward new patient item
Spinal Exemption Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
Spinal Exam Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
Autumn of Lawrence offering professional in-
ternational warranty. Call Kaw Specialties 942 380 6986
i edit term papers, thesas, dissertations, applica-
tions to government and military exam-
plained. Ground service. calls 827538.
Income Tax forms filed at low fee. Call 841-9689
ask for Rochti.
Job-willing resumes, cover letters. 12 years experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. Eklacek processuring within 24 hours. Complete B/W service. 90% off. Art & Design Building. Room #26.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hour, 843-9322
(NEW)
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj-Gyn and Abortion Services
(Derby Park) 3411-8371-6024
Pregnant and need help? Call Birtbirth at
Confidential help/free pregnancy
testing.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
TOYOTA PARTS AND SERVICE
CHECK OUR SPECIALS!
OIL CHANGE WITH FILTER
- Includes up to 5 quarts of oil and genuine Toyota double-filtering oil filter.
- Complete under-the-hood check of all belts, hoses and fluid levels
TOYOTA QUALITY
$1495
IERE'S NOTHING LIKE THE REAL THING FROM
Lawrence Auto Plaza 842-2191
QUALITY TUTORING. Statistics, Economics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis
804-1806.
TUTORING TUTORING 8.49/8.58 MATH
Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
Quality Typing includes accurate spelling, punctuation, grammar, editing. Fail, reliable service. Pickup/delivery available. 843-0247
THINK SPRING!
until Wednesday, April 6th
House of Usher
Printing and Copies
will print
ELENA
TEAM TOYOTA
Pickup: Pickup
THINK SPRING! For your motorcycle needs;
Come to the Bicycle Shop at our new location, 701 East 22nd Street - Off Haskell, 843-8822.
We know your name
Graduation
Announcement
Name Cards
WORDSMITHIS We go beyond trying. Let professional coaches try. Great rate. Fast turnaround. Call 415-831-8010.
Royal blue ink
Order 50, 100 or 200.
Professionally typeset
in Kaylin Script, Flemish or Zapi
Place order by
Wednesday, April 4th.
All meetings will be
ready on Friday, April 15th.
House of Usher
Printing and Copies
838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET
842-3610
We Know Your Name. Until Wednesday, April 6
know your Name, U88, Mass 842-3100, will print
Graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal
color. Small quantities. Call for more
information.
TYPING
Writing your own resume is difficult. We can help. Courteous, effective, quick service. One page resume. 812.50. Slugging Ideas, Inc. 927½ Masse. Suite 4, 841-1071.
the WORLD DOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can pay for writing? (I have a lot of loose records, law review. Since 1983, 843-317.
1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing, with many of the best features.
A-I Reliable Typing Service. Term papers. Resumes. Letters, etc. professionally typed. IBM
i-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your writables into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2033, days or evening. 24 hr. Typing Service. Fast. professional word processing with letter quality printer. 843-7643. AAA TYPING. Word processing, spellcheck, type. After 5 a.m. T-F.安妮 weekends. 842-1823.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, mice. MIC correcting. SECTOR 2.
Accurate typing by former Harward secretary
deputy was added page, East Lawrence. Mrs
Matrii 811-210
Term, paper, typesetting, typing, bibliography, dissertations, term papers, application, mailing list, other qualifying applications, 442-747-9744.
THE FAR SIDE
Call R.J. S's typing service for all of your typing needs. B4-924 before 9 p.m. please.
Lake of the Ozarks summer employment. The school has a full-time position for waiters and waitresses, cooks, shirt shop managers and sales clerks. Excellent tips and training. A variety of food furnished. Apply early while housing is still available. Enjoyailing, siking, swimming, tanning or hiking. View view call Frank Bachelor at (314) 858-7588. Roommate wanted to share 2/drm apartment near KU Med Center. Next Fail. Non-smoker.
WANTED
RESUME SERVICES – professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letters, business cards, and typesetting and printing resumes. Back in 24 hours, and at $1 the cost of Kino's. If no answer leave message on machine.
2 roommates for downtown apt. 165/month inl.
ul. 749-4155 individual contracts
RUSH tickets wanted - 2 lower level or balcony next to stage. Call Steve 841-9830.
By GARY LARSON
3. 28
Lasso
BARRY BROOKS
"So then, when Old McDonald turned his back,
I took that ax and with a whack whack here
and a whack whack there, I finished him off."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Classification ___ 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
14
Monday, March 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Grade changing not easy Students learn professors have final word
By Dayana Yochim Kansan staff writer
George Baumchen got a C in his Communications 150 class last semester.
He thought it was unfair.
Baumchen, St. Mary's junior, had a lot of friends in his class who got better grades but did less work, he said. He said that twice this semester he made appointments to discuss the grade with his teacher, and twice his teacher did not show up.
Under the University of Kansas' current grading system, his options for getting his grade changed are limited. When a KU student thinks he received an unfair grade, the grading instructor still has ultimate rule over the outcome.
Because KU does not have an established court to appeal grades, the process is handled separately through each department, said Robert Shelton, KU ombudsman.
"The University of Kansas has no
grade appeals board," Shelton said. "The only person who can change a grade is the instructor."
Shelton said that the only instance when a person other than the instructor can change a grade is if it can be proven that the instructor made a mistake.
"You have to be able to demonstrate that there was some clear malfunction on the part of the instructor," Shelton said. "It can then be taken to the grievance board of the department."
Shelton said that the grievance board decided whether the student's complaint involved prejudice or whether the student was graded on a different standard than stated on the class syllabus.
About five years ago, the University voted against establishing a grade appeals court, Shelton said.
grade appeals court, Chen Xin.
"Some universities have a grade appeals board but only a small number of complaints are accepted, and
very few are overturned," he said.
If the University did establish a grade appeals board, it would have to establish provisions on the kinds of cases it would accept, Shelton said.
Sandra Wick, administrative assistant to University Senate Executive Committee, said that the chances of establishing a grade appeals board were slim.
"That body would have the power to overrule a faculty member's grade," Wick said. "That is unacceptable to most faculty members. By and large, that would be seen as interference."
interference.
Lorna Zimmer, director of the Student Assistance Center, said that some students came to her office if they thought they had been treated unfairly in a class.
"We have no authority to direct a teacher to change a grade, but we can help a student through whatever goals he or she has in mind," Zimmer said.
CHICAGO — April Fools' Day was the date of the first two Save the Pun dinners but Good Friday falls on April 1 this year, causing "mass" confusion among punters.
Punster group's dinner is for groan-ups only
Heitler, head of the Chicago chapter of the International Save the Pun Foundation.
"Instead, the dinner is sharing April 4 with the 'Oh' ohm daying day' of the Chicago White Sox," said Joyce
"We'll have everything on the menu from soup to nuts, but we promise not to serve soup to nuts," she said. "We would have had alphabet soup but we didn't want guests grooming for words."
More than 200 punsters are
expected to attend the dinner at which the foundation will present its first Punster of the Year Award.
"We asked members to send us their votes, and there were a great many votes for President Reagan. They feel America is safer with a 'ray gun' in the White House," said John Crosbie, founder and chairman of the "bored" at the foundation.
Local Briefs
DEAM CANDIDATE NAMED: Robert R. Edwards, professor and chairman of the department of English at the State University of New York-Buffalo, was named the sixth and final candidate for the liberal arts and sciences dean position at the University of Kansas.
Rex Martin, search committee chairman, said the committee would be recommending three of the candidates to Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
KANU MANAGER ACCLAIMED: The general manager KAU, KU's public radio station, has been
Martin said the three names would be submitted to Brinkman around April 6. A new dean is expected to be hired.
named the 1987-88 winner of the Grover Cobb Award for Broadcasting Service.
The Cobb Award recognizes long-term accomplish- nts in broadcasting.
Howard Hill, who has been general manager of KANU since 1977, will receive the award and give a lecture during an Introduction to Radio and Television class Thursday.
ments in broadcasting.
TAXI WORKING WELL: Lawrence's new 24-hour taxi service seems to be working out well for its owner and for the city.
Paul Shackelford, who started the A-1 City Cab service three weeks ago, said he was pleased with the service's business. He said that he added a fourth car and might add a fifth.
Shackelford said he had five full-time and six part time employees.
Macintosh Its not too late to get your key to success. Order now. FREE MACWRITE®
The deadline has been extended! If you pay your $50 down payment at the Burge Union by March 30, you can still have your Mac on your desk by March 31 or April 1. (This extension even applies to students whose approved financing has been delayed!)
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
TM
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1, 2, 3!
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union.
Stop by and place your order by March 30.
Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want.
($50 deposit required)
Step 3: Pick up your Macintosh at the Burge Union on March 31 or April 1. Attend a free seminar to learn how to get started, if you'd like.
KU Bookstores
BURGE UNION
Macintosh SE
Macintosh SE
Macintosh Plus or SE? 2-disk or hard disk drive? You choose. The computer that will help you work faster, smarter and more creatively has never cost less!
KU Macintosh Sale Savings:
Macintosh Plus...$1200
Macintosh SE with 2 disk drives...$1979
Macintosh SE, 20 meg hard disk drive...$2399
Included in these special prices are: the computer keyboard, mouse, hypercard and multifinder. All of these prices apply to full-time KU students, faculty and staff.
Macintosh $ ^{\mathrm{TM}} $
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Tuesday March 29,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 122 (USPS 650-640)
Dry weather invites fires
Restrictions announced
Kansan staff writer
By Ric Brack
A state of local disaster emergency was declared for Douglas County yesterday based on a finding that dry and windy conditions have created an imminent threat of fire disaster.
The Douglas County Commissioners issued the declaration based on findings by the county Fire Chief's effort for an indefinite period of time.
Wakarusa Township fire chief Louie McEhlaney said the rain yesterday probably won't have any effect on the dry conditions. He said it probably would take at least two inches of rain to saturate the county enough for the disaster declaration to be lifted.
The declaration restricted several activities in Douglas County:
- Careless discard of smoking materials is illegal. Smoking materials include cigars, cigarettes and pipes.
- Open fires, such as campfires, are illegal, except in permanent stoves,
According to McElihaney, there have already been two-thirds as many fires in the county this year as there were in all of 1987.
fireplaces, barbecue grills or fires on residential lawns.
- The burning of fence rows, fields and trash is illegal, unless approved in writing by the fire chief.
The National Weather Service forecast only light showers for last night and through this morning. The long range forecast is for no further precipitation until Thursday.
"You probably won't believe some of the things that have set off fires lately," McEhaney said. He said one brush fire early last week was ignited by the spark caused when a gardener's rake hit a shovel that was laying on the ground.
"I don't know if anybody will believe that," he said. "When it gets this windy, it just doesn't take much."
Chancellor finds alumni in Korea supportive of KU
Budig discusses Campaign Kansas
Rv Ioel Zeff
Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Gene A. Budig might have wanted to discuss Campaign Kansas and the state of KU during his five-day visit to South Korea last week but instead found himself talking about Danny Manning and the KU basketball team.
"Everyone at the alumni meeting wanted to see Danny Manning play basketball," Budig said yesterday. "College basketball is very big in Korea. In fact, one of the former students referred to Danny Manning as the 'Sinner Javahnawk.'"
Budig and his wife visited South Korea at the invitation of the mayor, who invited them.
Budig met with the alumni and its director, Jong-Woo Han, president and publisher of the Korea Herald, and Yung Kim, chairman of Jindo Industries.
In addition to meeting with alumni, Budig visited the Seoul Olympic complex and the demilitarized zone between North and South Korea. He met with officials at the University of Korea and visited the Hyundai corporation, where he had lunch with its chairman.
A group of about 30 KU alumni established the chapter in Seoul, South Korea, last fall. Now, the alumni group has about 300 members. Budig said.
"It it appear they care about the University of Kansas and want to be involved," Budig said. "They want to help and they want more of Korea's bright students to attend the University of Kansas."
Campaign Kansas, a KU fund-raising project scheduled to officially begin in May, was also an important partner for the Korean alumni and the chancellor.
'E
Everyone at the alumni meeting wanted to see Danny Manning play basketball. College basketball is very big in Korea.
- Chancellor Gene A. Budig
Budig said that the alumni group
was anxious to support the Campaign Kansas fund.
"They are willing to assist in any way possible. We are now in the process of preparing several proposals for them to consider." Budig said.
Budig said that he spoke to the Korean alumni about the state of KU and that they were interested in the needs of the University.
Nancy Mitchell, an adviser in the office of study abroad, said that although students in the study abroad program are only at KU for a year, they tend to feel a strong commitment to the University.
James Martin, the executive director of Campaign Kansas, said that KU alumni would play a significant role in the success of the Campaign Kansas fund.
"Any person who goes to the University and has a good experience may want to contribute. Some don’t. Friends on the person." Mitchell said.
Martin said that the primary reason Budig visited Korea was because of the alumi group's invitation but he has not been able to finance to talk to alumni about the fund.
"Whether the alumni live in Germany or Georgia, it really doesn't matter." Martin said. "If they are young, give the fund will be successful."
YOU ARE WINNING!!
Students who won the lottery for Final Four tickets celebrate at Allen Field House.
Last Final 4 tickets sold by lottery
By Stacy Foster
Kansan staff writer
Several hours before the KU basketball team took the court Sunday, students had lined up in front of Allen Field House in anticipation of tickets to the Final Four
As students lined up, Smiley and Darrin Walton, Lawrence sophomore, began compiling a waiting list of animals wanting the caveled tickets.
Real Smiley was at the front. Smiley, Lenexa senior, watched the game from a portable black and white television. By the end of the game, about 300 students were behind him.
Both thought the tickets should go to students on a first-come, first-served basis. But that was not
the procedure used.
As a result of KU's entry into the Final Four, the University was given 1,625 tickets. Sixty-five percent of those tickets went to members of the players' families, the Athletic Department and the University itself, while 30 percent went to faculty and 20 percent, or 238 tickets were allotted for students.
Richard Konzem, assistant athletic director, said that the first tickets were available to the 131 students who had requested tickets through a lottery application. The students chose those applications was Feb. 27.
He said that many students did not take advantage of the early application period and that they were sorry for it now. Every
student who filed an application got a ticket
Konzem said that the lottery was advertised in the Kansan, at basketball games and on the radio
"The point is all the students on this campus had a chance to apply." Konzem said. "At that time, we were one and four in the conference. Nobody thought we would be in the tournament."
The 107 student tickets that were not requested in the lottery were sold in a second lottery yesterday.
Students who had signed Smiley's list were entered in the lottery, and the list of students selected to receive tickets was posted at 1 p.m.
Smiley didn't get tickets. Now he claims that he waited almost 12
hours for nothing
hours for nothing. Walton did get a ticket but did not like the use of the lottery.
He said that the lottery wasn't fair to those students who spent all day outside waiting in line.
"We, as students, thought the fairest way was chronological." Walton said. "I felt bad all day because they were doing the lottery, but when I found out I was on the list, I felt very fortunate. I still felt bad for guys like he who really wanted to go."
Konzem maintained that the lottery was the fairest way to give away the tickets.
"I feel good about what we decided here," Konzem said. "Not everyone can have a ticket, and we think we did the most fair job."
Lobbyist enjoys working for KU's benefit
CALENDAR
Forrest MacDonald/KANSAN
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
Jon Jossarden back in a chair in his office in 119 Strong and clasps his hands behind his head. It's Friday, the day the Legislature in Topeka is winding down; but for the KU legislative team, it's the beginning of a week as it meets to plan for the next week at the capital.
Josserand's job as part of that team, simply put, is being the lobbyist for the University of Kansas. But his surroundings don't fit the stereotype that the word lobbyist typically brings to mind. There are no half-empty cans of beer or ashtrays overflowing with cigars in his office or, Josserand says, in some restaurant in Topeka.
In fact, Josserdan never dreamed he would be a lobbvist
Jon Josserand
"It has the connotation of undue influence and bad intent," he said.
Officially, Josseland is KU's governmental affairs specialist, a title he's more satisfied with.
"I detest the word lobbist," Josserand said. "I'm much more comparable to any other staff member for a legislator."
Josserd spends much of his time doing the same sorts of things that a legislator's staff would do. He answers questions for legislators. And he puts them in touch with the right people when he doesn't have the information they need at his fingertips.
Legislators are starved for highquality and timely information from the courts.
Josserand's first responsibility, however, is to KU. Every Friday, the legislative队 of Josserand; Vickie Thomas, University general counsel; Marlin Rein, associate director of business and fiscal affairs; and Jim Bibb, associate University director of business affairs, meet in the Regents Room of Strong Hall. They review the status of current legislation and scan committee agendas to plan the forthcoming week.
Hundreds of bills are introduced into the Legislature each session, and
See JOSSERAND, p. 12, col. 4
KU's Spencer Research Library holds undiscovered riches
Bv Steven Wolcott
As hidden as the pot of gold at the end of a leprechaun's rainbow, the Kenneth Spencer Research Library is a treasure that few have discovered.
Special to the Kansan
"The Spencer Library is well known and well respected nationally and internationally," said Richard W. Clement, a librarian in the department of Special Collections. "Some of our collections are considered to be the best in the world, but we are not unknown to many people on campus.
"The library is hidden, both physically and figuratively, because we're back here behind Strong Hall." Clement said. "If we were stuck out on Jayhawk Boulevard, it would be another story."
The Spencer Library is the rare books, manuscripts and archives library of the University of Kansas. In addition to the department of Special Collections, the library also houses the Kansas Collection, which specializes in Kansas and its bordering states; the University Archives, which is the repository of the history of the University; and the Government Documents department.
Helen F. Spencer donated $2.25 million to have the library built as a memorial to her late husband, Kenneth Spencer. The 100,000-square-foot building was dedicated in November 1968 and opened to the public a month later.
The library was specifically built to be a rare books and archives library. Its environment is kept at a constant 70 degrees Fahrenheit and
According to Alexandra Mason, Spencer librarian, the department of Special Collections has approximately 190,000 printed books and more than a quarter of a million manuscripts in its collections.
50 percent humidity throughout the year. The lights have been shielded specially to prevent ultraviolet rays from damaging any materials.
Clement said, "These collections embody the intellectual heritage of western civilization. It is our charge to preserve that heritage, and we take it very seriously.
"Ironically, every time someone uses a book or manuscript, it shortens its lifespan. Rare books librarians must strike a balance between use and preservation."
Some rare books libraries limited use of their materials drastically. A
person would have to be an eminent scholar just to get in the front door, he said.
"We don't do anything of that here," Clement said. "Anybody can come in and use the collections, even if he or she is not affiliated with KU."
Both Mason and Clement said it would be impossible to place a monetary value on the collection or even to acquire all of the collection was the most valuable.
Clement said, "A book we paid five pounds for could have a priceless research value. Much of this material is unique, if it's gone, you can't
"Monetary value is of little concern to us once the book has been acquired," Mason said. "What concerns us is the research value. Some of our most valued research items cost us nothing."
Another collection of note is the Clubb Anglo-Saxon Collection. It is
go out and get another one. How do you put a value on that?
One of the largest and most diverse collections in the department is the Summerfield Renaissance Collection, which was started in 1857. This collection has no restrictions on subject, only that the books must have been printed on the continent of Europe before 1840, and be more than 7,000 titles in subjects such as history, literature, law, science, theology and the arts.
"Books are fascinating because through them, previous generations speak to us. Many of our books are annotated, so not only does the reader get the author's message, but also what the readers across the centuries thought of that message."
perhaps the only discrete collection of books printed in Anglo-Saxon typefaces in the world. Discrete means that the books are separated into a collection.
The department is especially strong in 18th century books, Mason said, with more than 30,000 titles covering politics, economics, literature and natural history.
The concepts of copyright and literary property were sometimes ignored by 18th century publishers. This fact is well demonstrated by the Edmund Curill Collection. Curill, an 18th century publisher, was an extremely successful businessman who thought nothing of stealing an author's manuscript to print and sell as his own edition. Probably the best
See SPENCER, p. 12, col. 1
---
2
Tuesday, March 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
TOWN CENTER
Weather Forecast From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
No picnics yet!
HIGH: 55°
LOW: 35°
The forecast for Lawrence and vicinity today calls for overcast skies and rainy conditions. High of 55. Cloudy skies and rain continue tonight with low of 35.
REGIONAL
North Platte
50/20
Partly Cloudy
Omaha
42/27
Cloudy
Goodland
1/47/23
Partly Cloudy
Hays
46/33
Cloudy
Salina
47/34
Cloudy
Tuppeka
55/35
Cloudy
Kansas City
57/36
Cloudy
Columbia
49/31
Cloudy
St. Louis
155/35
Cloudy
Dodge City
46/31
Partly Cloudy
Wichita
55/34
Cloudy
Chanute
55/38
Cloudy
Springfield
55/32
Cloudy
Forecast by Austen L. Onek.
Temperatures are today's high and tonight overnight low.
5-DAY
WED
Clearing
44 / 34
HIGH LOW
THU
Sunny
51 / 35
FRI
Sunny
59 / 36
SAT
Partly Cloudy
65 / 42
SUN
Sunny
Sun
Cloudy
RAINY
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As part of the dance film series sponsored by the department of music and the School of Fine Arts, "Dance: Four Pioneers," "Day on Earth" and "The Shakers" will be shown at 4 p.m. today in 155 Robinson Center.
A lecture titled "Soviet Agriculture Under Gorbachev" is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is sponsored by the School of Business, department of political science and Soviet and East European Studies.
As part of the Western Civilization lecture series, Louis Crompton, professor of English at the University of Nebraska, will speak about "Homosexuality and Greek Culture" at 4 p.m. today in 100 Smith Hall.
On Campus
A KU College Republicans general assembly meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the West Gallery of the Kansas Union.
An Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center film festival is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
A study skills workshop titled "Writing a Term Paper" is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in 4034 Wescow Hall. The workshop is free, and no registration is required.
A lecture titled "The Reemergence of the Private Sector in China" with Thomas B. Gold, professor at the University of California-Berkley, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is sponsored by the Society for East Asian Studies.
Brief
■ The department of Germanic languages and literatures is sponsoring a lecture titled "Literarchistorische Dritte Reich Foreschung: Was, Warum und Wozu" at 7:30 p.m. today in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
FANS DAMAGE VEHICLES: The crowd of exuberant fans that swarmed around Allen Field House on Sunday night to welcome the Kansas basketball team back to Lawrence caused more than $700 damage to two KU Athletic Department vehicles.
■ A doctoral recital with John Wojcik, instrumental conducting, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
■ An inaugural lecture titled "Social Dynamics of Marmots: Strategies for Evolutionary Success" with Kenneth Armitage, a William J. Baumgartner distinguished professor of biological sciences, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Police Reports
A KU Fencing Club meeting is scheduled for 3:00 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
According to KU police reports, the vehicles, a pickup and a van, were damaged when people climbed on top of them.
- A wallet and its contents valued together at $53 were taken Thursday or Friday from a room in Marvin Hall, KU police renorted.
About $460 was taken Wednesday from a locker room in the Parrott Athletic Center, KU police reported.
A washing machine valued at $570 was taken Saturday from a business in the 3000 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
Appliances and household goods valued together at $1,141 were taken Saturday or Sunday from a house in
the 2400 block of Alabama Street, Lawrence police reported.
- A stereo, cassettes, and a trophy valued together at $603 were taken Saturday from a fraternity in the 2000 block of Stewart Avenue. Lawrence police reported
A car valued at $15,000 was taken Sunday from the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police reported.
A cash register valued at $1,000 and $4000 of $100 cash
blocks. A cash register valued at $3,000 and $5000 of
$300 block of Iowa Lawrence, Lawrence police reported.
In This House...If You've Seen One Ghost.. You Haven't Seen Them All.
In This House... If You've Seen One Ghost...
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Med Center releases plan
Transplant service is a priority for future
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Establishing an organ transplant center will be one of the University of Kansas Medical Center's top priorities, according to the recently completed five-year plan for the Med Center.
Eighty administrators and faculty have worked since October to complete the plan, which will be presented to the Board of Regents in June. A five-year plan is required of all Regents schools.
Kay Clawson, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said the organ transplant center had been a priority for the Med Center in the Legislature this year. Gov. Mike Hayden recommended money for the center in his budget, and Clawson thinks that the Legislature will approve the funds.
Then, Clawson said, if the Legislature helps the Med Center get the necessary personnel and equipment hospital would begin to organize it.
"It will be an immediate signal that the state wants us to move ahead," he said.
"I think that the wave of the future is towards interdisciplinary types of programs. So the fact that we are moving towards putting all the pieces together to try to expand the transplant service is exciting."
The Med Center already does heart, kidney, bone marrow and cornea transplants. Part of the plan recommends the increase of those types of transplants, while expanding patient care services to include liver, pancreas, heart-lung combination and kidney-pancreas combination transplants.
Eugene Staples, vice chancellor for administration at the Med Center, said the hospital already had increased kidney transplants, performing 25 of those operations already this year compared to 24 during all of 1987.
Clawson said that if everything went well, the expanded transplant
D
cutting all the pieces together to try to expand the transplant service is exciting.
-Kay Clawson
exciting.'
executive vice chancellor for the
Med Center
services could be available in one year.
The five-year plan also includes goals in research, physical facilities, education and every other facet of care, and an additior to patient care, said Staples.
Staples said the plan was a dynamic, living document, which was not necessarily binding to the Med Center.
"You are trying to project what might happen in the next couple years at least with the knowledge that you are going to update the whole thing in a couple of years anyway. Staples said, 'I can't tell you how much equipment or technology is going to be available in the future.'"
The plan also includes the addition of a gall stone lithotriptor, the funding for which has already been requested of the Legislature. The hospital has a kidney stone lithotriptor, which breaks up kidney stones with sound waves.
Administrators also projected increased marketing efforts to attract patients to the hospital. Though the area's nursing shortage to some extent prohibits the addition of patients, more patients are needed in certain areas for educational and economic reasons. These areas include the avant-garde transplants, rehabilitation services, specifically in geriatrics, and in the broad area of trauma.
The plan does not include actual requests for funds but instead states the amount of money that will be needed to reach the hospital's goals. Those recommendations then become the basis for future financing requests made to the Legislature.
I will not tell you the truth.
Barbed wire lines Dachau, a former Nazi concentration camp.
Speakers inform young about Holocaust
Rv Kathleen Faddis
Kansan staff writer
A former captain of the Hitler Youth in Nazi Germany and a survivor of the Nazi death camps make an odd couple.
But the two, who spoke last night to about 500 people in the Kansas Union's Woodruff Auditorium, have been speaking together at universities around the country for seven years.
Alfons Heck, who joined Hitler's organization in 1938 at the age of 10, told his audience, "I am the highest ranking former leader of the Hitter Youth living in the U.S."
Helen Waterford, a German Jew, left that country with her husband for Holland in 1934 when Hitler came to power. After the Nazi occupation, Waterford and her husband were hidden for two years by Dutch families. In 1944, they were arrested and deported to Auschwitz, the most infamous of the death camps. Waterford survived. Her husband did not.
stories of the same years of the Nazi regime; he, as a young man in total awe of Adolf Hitler, moving quickly up the ranks and, at the age of 16, in charge of 3,000 other youth; and she, as a young wife and mother, separated from both her husband and child, and starved down to 70 pounds in the concentration camps.
The two met when Heck, 33 years after the war, finally decided to tell his story in an article in the San Diego Union. After getting death threats from American Nazis for speaking against Hitler, Heck then received a call from Waterford. That began their association.
Waterford and Heck said that their purpose in speaking was to inform young people what happened because they were often surprised how little was taught in the schools about the Holocaust and the Nazi indoctrination of the youth.
Sitting side by side, the two told their own
"We don't want you ever to forget," Waterford said. "Then, I know my survival was not for nothing."
Waterford said she was kept in the same barracks as Anne Frank, the author of the famous diary, and her mother. Waterford was for a while, but was shipped to a labor camp in Czechoslovakia.
Heck, who was captured by U.S. troops in 1945, said "All of us Germans knew of the persecution of the Jews. I had no pity for them, I considered them the enemy.
Waterford's camp was liberated by the Allies in 1945. She eventually returned to Amsterdam, found her daughter, who had been living with a family there, and emigrated to the United States
"I only changed my mind about Nazi Germany when presented with the evidence at the Nuremberg trials," said Heck, who became a U.S. citizen in 1969.
Asked how another holocaust could be prevented, Heck said, "The only safeguard we really have is not only education but to insist on an absolute and unrestricted freedom of speech, even for those you absolutely disagree with."
Voters must register today
Referendum would benefit school district
salaries.
By Christine Martin Kansan staff writer
If approved, the referendum would allow public schools to:
Today is the last day to register to vote April 19 in the Lawrence public school referendum that, if passed, would allow the school district to raise salaries and hire more staff.
People may register today from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the county clerk's office at the Douglas County Courthouse, 11th and Massachusetts streets, and the city clerk's office at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. Any registered voter can vote on the referendum.
Tom Christie, chairman for the Committee for Awareness in Public Education, said the referendum's primary purpose was to improve programs and services for public schools and increase employees'
- increase both certified and classified employee salaries by 7.7 percent next year and 7.2 percent the following year.
- hire eight new teachers.
- hire eight elementary librarians.
- hire four school nurses.
hire tour school bus
hire eight elementary counselors.
■ hire eight elementary counselors. If residents vote in favor of it, the council will accept them during two years. That means the schools would hire librarians and nurses the next school year and the counselors over the next two years.
The referendum also would increase property taxes by 8 mills. A mill equals $1 in taxation of the value of a home for every $1,000 assessed. For example, if a resident owned a $50,000 home, his property taxes would increase $23 per year.
Christie said that money from the referendum would allow the Lawrence school district to provide adequate programs and services for its increasing enrollment. He said
that enrollment for the district increased by 200 students a year.
The school district comprises one high school, three junior high schools, 16 elementary schools and one high school extension program.
"We've got enrollment going one direction and weid going another direction," she said.
Katharine Weickert, communications coordinator for Lawrence Public Schools, said that the majority of Lawrence residents supported the referendum when surveyed in November.
"Because of that, I'm optimistic," Weickt said. "Lawrence in general is so interested in education."
Robert Taylor, assistant superintendent of the Lawrence school district, said the referendum would help school programs.
"From a program perspective, it would allow us to do things using additional funds that we couldn't do under budget restrictions."
She said she didn't know of any organized group opposed to the referendum.
Breath analysis devices would keep drunken drivers parked if bill passes
By Jill Jess
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — People convicted of drunken driving could have to blow to go if a bill recommended yesterday by a state Senate committee is enacted.
The Senate Transportation and Utilities Committee endorsed the bill, which would establish a penalty in which an ignition interlock device could be installed in the car of a person convicted of drunken driving.
The person would have to blow into a tube attached to his car before his car would start. If the device detected a certain level of alcohol in the driver's breath, the ignition would shut down, and the person would not be able to start his car.
The bill is intended to provide an alternative to revoking a drunken driver's license that still prevents him from driving drunk.
The bill has passed the state House of Representatives 122-0, and the
Senate already has passed a similar bill, which was introduced by State Sen. Nancy Parrish, D-Topeka. That bill is in the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, and no action has been taken.
Under the House bill, a person convicted of driving while intoxicated would have to pay for the installation and rent of the ignition interlock device. State Rep. Michael O'Neal, R-Hutchinson, a sponsor of the bill, said that the rent of the device would be about $500 for six months.
O'Neal explained amendments that had been made in the House, saying they were all technical points. But the committee amended the bill so that the installation cost for the device could be deducted from the amount of the fine.
The Rev. Richard Taylor of Kansans for Life at Its Best, a temperance lobby group, said that his organization supported the bill.
"We support every measure that would encourage a driver not to drink before driving." he said.
No opposing testimony was heard yesterday in committee, and State Rep. Ginger Barr, R-Aburn, said that there had been none in the House committee when it heard the bill.
"There were questions raised, but no opposition was heard from conferences." Barr said.
She said that the questions involved whether a driver could have someone else blow into the device for them. The device was being modified, she said, to recognize only the driver's breath.
State Sen. Joseph Norvell, D-Hays, a member of the senate committee, criticized the committee for endorsing a bill that so closely resembled a bill the Senate already had passed. He said that when the bill went to the Senate floor, it would be taking up time that could be used for other important matters.
The Society for East Asian Studies presents
"The Reemergence of the Private Sector in China" lecture by
Professor Thomas B. Gold University of California at Berkeley 7:30 p.m.TONIGHT
Centennial Room - Student Union
paid for in part by Center for East Asian Studies, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures,and Student Senate
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Tuesday, March 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students must be considered in plans for parking garage
The decision to build a parking garage that will add about 650 parking spaces on campus is a welcome event. However, there are dangers lurking for the student driver.
Although the Board of Regents has approved preliminary plans for the $5 million structure, no one has determined who will be able to park in the new structure.
And as of now, students are not high on the list of priorities.
The main concern
And as of now, students are not high on the list of priorities. Ray Moore, parking board chairman, said the main concern was visitor parking. By moving visitor parking to the garage, the parking meters in lots on the south side of campus could be removed, he said.
But Moore also said current thinking was that once the meters were removed, those spaces would become red zone parking, not yellow zone parking used by students.
Moore said the board had casually discussed two options for the garbage. One good option would permit all classifications
the garbage. One good option would permit all classifications — blue, red, yellow. The other, also promising, would create "guaranteed parking," in which drivers would buy a permit for garage parking only. There would not be any oversell of parking spaces.
As with any proposal, there are pluses and minuses. It is up to the parking board to choose the best one. And the best one would include student parking in the garage or a reclassification of nearby lots for student parking.
Todd Cohen for the editorial board
Jayhawks overcame barriers
It was more than we ever imagined.
The Hawks are in the Final Four. Goin' to Kansas City. They did it, somewhat surprisingly. And we couldn't be happier.
Oh sure, during the preseason it was almost expected. The Jayhawks sported a full, talented and strong team. Danny Manning in his senior year. Archie Marshall back in the lineup. A slate of promising recruits. And Coach Larry Brown at the helm ready to steer the team to its second Final Four in three seasons.
The problems did not go away. But neither did the Jayhawks' desire to succeed
But then, it happened.
But then, it happened. Slowly and agonizingly, the road to Kansas City began to fall apart. Academic casualties, injuries and personal problems plagued the team throughout the course of the regular season. The ranks of the mighty Jayhawks began to dwindle, and Kansas City began to seem so far away.
Sucking with the 'Hawks throughout the season were more than 15,800 homecourt fans. Those same fans paraded down Jayhawk Boulevard on Sunday. They cheered at Forbes Field and at Allen Field House. They are the fans the Hawks need and appreciate.
Sadly, the University will receive only 1,625 Final Four tickets to distribute to these fans. Even sadder, only 20 percent of the tickets not going to players' families, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation staff, the basketball traveling party, the basketball band, cheerleaders and chancellor's office requests will go to student fans. University faculty and staff will receive only 15 percent of the remaining tickets.
That leaves 65 percent of the remaining tickets for the Williams Fund contributors, which is not surprising.
To Duke — Watch out. The 'Hawks are on a roll.
To Coach Brown and the rest of the team and coaching staff Congratulations. Good luck.And thank you for a great season so far
To Duke — Watch out. The 'Hawks are on a roll.
To the students who got tickets — Yell loud. Wear the crimson and blue. You'll be in the minority of KU fans. Your presence will have to be felt.
Jody Dickson for the editorial board
To the Williams Fund contributors — Thanks for supporting the team with your money. Just please stand up and be vocal. The 'Hawks need you.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Allison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alan Pryor...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 Messermanith...Production manager
Greg Knipp...National manager
Kia Sohmen...Traffic manager
Kimberly Coleman...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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MORMA!
The Heir Apparent
The HeirApparent.
Democrats should choose Jackson
Nominating a black man would bring a referendum on racial discrimination
It's possible that when the primaries are over and the Democratic National Convention begins, Jesse Jackson will have the most delegates. Not enough to automatically win the nomination, but more than any of the other bumbers.
If that happens, what do the Democrats do?
From what they're saying now, they'll look at the other candidates, decide which one is the least feeble, then try to convince the voters that they have found someone of heroic stature.
Then this person will run and almost certainly lose to George Bush, who will be propped up by Ronald Reagan, and all those tens of millions of dollars in paid TV political propaganda will have been wasted.
Because they're almost certain to lose anyway, why don't the Democrats show some imagination and do something different, make a little history and put some pizzazz into the whole thing?
What they should do is this: If Jesse Jackson has the most delegates going into the convention, they should nominate him, making him the Democratic candidate for president.
That would be the fairest thing to do. After all, the Democrats have gone to great pains to get away from the old-time backroom dealing, the delegate swapping and the brokering. When George McGovern came in with the most delegates, he was nominated. When Walter Mondale was the leader, they threw the convention to him. So what do we the same if Jackson is the leader?
50 why let you to the same level back from the leader.
What's that you say? Jackson will be a cincah to lose? That's probably true, but so what? George McGregan was a cincah to loss, but that didn't stop the Democrats. Walter Mondale was a cincah to lose, and they went right ahead and let him do it.
5
Mike Royko Syndicated Columnist
Not only did they lose, but they left no legacy that would benefit the Democratic Party in future campaigns. Just the opposite: McGovern put in motion the alleged reforms that took Democratic politics away from the professional and led it to the present marathon primary system and the pandering to every goofy special interest group.
But by nominating Jackson, the Democratic Party would create a legacy by putting the national conscience to a true test. We would be having a referendum on racial discrimination, which is the most destructive and persistent of all our domestic problems.
Name any of our urban miseries — poverty, crime, unemployment, education, housing — and it boils down to race. Add up the costs, not only in dollars, but in fear and distrust, and the bottom line is race.
So why should the country waste time listening to some white nee-liberal, pseudo-liberal, old-time liberal or whatever the rest of those Democrats are, talking about all those social problems when we can have the genuine article, someone who has lived the social problems. In fact, some might even say that he is a living, breathing, social problem himself.
And what a perfect match-up it would be — Jackson vs. Bush. The Southern-born black man
from the humblest of backgrounds against the white Eastern aristocrat.
If Jackson got up and talked about what it was like to ride in the back of the bus, to be told he couldn't eat at a greasy spoon lunch counter, to have the job doors slammed in his face, to sip from a separate drinking fountain, how would Bush respond — by describing the difficulty finding reliable domestic help these days?
Compare that confrontation with say, a debate between Bush and Michael Dukakis. Even the ladies from the League of Women Voters might doze off.
It's said that despite our glorious constitution, our state of commitment to equality, we are really a racist nation. Even our allies say it. The British scolded us all during the 1960's black demonstrations. After all, it's one thing to shoot a few troublesome Irishmen, but what we did in Selma was absolutely unsporting. The French chided us for our bigotry, between bouts of mistreating their Algerians.
So this will be our opportunity to demonstrate that maybe we aren't as bad as they, and many of us, think we are. Or maybe we will find that we are as bad. Either way, we'll learn something. Remember, knowledge sets men free. We might have a few brawls while gaining the knowledge, but that would just make for livelier Ted Koppel shows.
Finally, by running Jackson, a black man, for president, we would bring this country closer to that magic moment that some cynics say will never come.
Surely, his candidacy would mean that at long last a black man would become a professional football coach.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
State soil a good idea
As a 38-year Kansas resident whose daughter graduated from the University of Kansas in 1980, I was saddened to read the position of the Kansan on the State Soil issue, not so much because it was contrary to mine, but because it expressed an unbelievable ignorance or a decision to do less research than was necessary. Either position is uncompromising to students of KU's School of Journalism, in my view.
Your denunciation: "Telling the rest of the nation what kind of dirt Kansas has will not make a strong statement about the State," suggests your approval of the inaccurate statement now in our state's official publication, "Kansas Facts," which is, "the soils of Kansas are among the best in the world. These soils have come from decomposition of underlying rock formations or have been transported into the region by water, wind or ice."
Biologists and school teachers who support Senate bill 569 recognize our current soil statement's deficiencies and propose the following resolutions for adopting a state soil:
1) To acknowledge the unusual natural relationship among prairie plants; animals, including humans; geologic materials and climate that have interacted according to nature's laws to produce long-lasting, unusually fertile prairie soils
2) To acknowledge that Kansas has more acres of prairie soils than any other state and is second only to Texas in acres of prime farm land that has made Kansas first in production of wheat, grain sorghum and forage sorghum
3) To acknowledge and publicize the completion in October 1987 of the state's soil inventory that has been underway for nearly 50 years and is being used to implement the state's use-value land reamprraisal
4) To select one typical Kansas prairie soil of Kansas' 290 soils to which all others can be compared when teaching earth-science courses.
I agree that adoption of state symbols can be overdone, but it is not being immodest to tell the nation of the superiority of Kansas soils when they largely are responsible for providing six billion dollars annually to the state's
economy.
You will be pleased to know that Senate bill 569 never made it out of the Senate Agricultural Committee.
Orville W. Bidwell Manhattan resident
Agnostically concerned
I'm worried, really worried. Has anyone noticed that Good Friday is on the first of April this year? Doesn't this worry you? I mean, I'm no expert on calendars or anything (I even missed the word in my fourth grade spelling contest), but how do we know for sure that the "first Good Friday" wasn't also on the first of April? How do we know for sure that this resurrection stuff wasn't just a big April Fool's Day joke? How do we know for sure just who this "God" person is anyway?
P. S. — And should I ever be crucified on any day of the week whatsoever, I will back and possess the first person who names this day "Good" anything, resurrection or not.
Mark von Schlemmer Lawrence graduate student
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 29, 1988
5
TuesdayForum
SANDRA MCGREGOR
AND JOHN KINNEY
FOCUS to emphasize experience and issues
During the Student Senate election, voters must concern themselves with voting for the coalition that has solid issues and the people with the necessary experience to implement those issues. Senate is an organization that requires previous experience as a member before a student can be an effective student leader. The FOCUS coalition has the necessary experience.
Combined, the two presidential candidates have three years of Senate experience, four years of committee experience, two terms on University Council, two presidential task force chairmanships, and experience in Topeka on lobbying efforts. All of the Senate committee chairmen that are running for re-election with a coalition, including the StudenFOCUS, FOCUS, FOCUS has members from many campus groups, including SAMS, Crew, BCOB, Student Alumni, SCU, BSU, AURH and KU Bands. FOCUS displays a strong slate of issues that includes peer advising, telephone enrollment, telephone add-drop and campus-wide insurance.
Peer advising is a great way to enhance the advising process at the University of Kansas. Students who were not satisfied with the advising they received would be able to visit a peer adviser who had been trained by the University. The peer advisers would be able to advise students and offer counsel on academic probation.
Telephone enrollment is cur
rently working in 60 universities across the country. The system that FOCUS wants to bring to KU would allow students to enroll from their homes in an average of two minutes.
FOCUS plans to obtain bids from insurance companies that offer students inexpensive group rate insurance for fire and theft. The University of Wisconsin has the type of insurance that FOCUS wants to see at KU. Wisconsin offers fire and theft insurance to students at a policy starting at $22 a year for $2,000 coverage. Most insurance companies require renters to insure a minimum of $20,000 of property and will not insure multiple-member households that are not related. Extending student insurance requires no money from student activity fees and provides protection for students, no matter where they live.
No one comes up with bad issues. The question is, what are the realistic chances for implementation. Each year, candidates raise issues that never get enacted. FOCUS has feasible issues.
Senate is not a popularity contest or a game. The Senate spends $1.2 million of your money each year. We strongly urge you to research the candidates and the issues. It is important that you make the right choice.
The FOCUS coalition is led by vice president candidate William Sanders and presidential candidate Mark Flannagan.
THE REAL BOSS
INTEGRITY pledges intelligent leadership
Only one of the coalitions in this Student Senate election is looking for legitimate change. Only one coalition has announced constructive issues early. In short, only one coalition has INTEGRITY.
President Frank Partnoy is a Truman Scholar, and Vice President Brian Kramer was a national debate champion. Frank and Brian have served three years on Senate, including Finance, StudEx and Senate Rights Chair.
We know the ropes, but we haven't gotten tied up in them. We had the courage to stand up for the student body even when bitterly opposed. We will work with, but not for, the administration on such issues as:
1. A McDonald's restaurant inside Wescoe cafeteria. Missouri has one — why can't we? McDonald's already has agreed to pay us $10,000 in annual rent and cover the $4 million wasted on renovation. It will take more than 100 years before Union Square turns a profit! A private restaurant would pay $150 per student to lower textbook prices and open more classes.
The current administration has alienated powerful students such as basketball players. These players can lobby and work to rally support because, like it or not, they are influed. The sheer ignorance and insecure attitude that the Final Four appearance has on KU alumni.
2. Enrollment by telephone. From junior colleges to the University of Arizona to Brigham Young, students are enrolling by phone and saving hours they wasted standing in lines. Our coalition is the biggest in the history of KU, so we'll have the votes. The others will be outnumbered 20 to 1 in the University Senate, where this issue will be decided.
Expanding the Senate makes it more representative. Sixty-five percent of the students live off campus, but they have less than 10 percent representation. Addressing any issue concerning off-campus students without giving them more senators is yet another empty promise. The other coalitions have only five off-campus candidates, and we have more than 70.
3. Renew Secure Cab, the best program Senate has ever initiated. Others would rather waste $5,500 on Course Source or $75,000 on internal expenses such as photocopying or steak dinners. Now that more cabs are available, we'll spend the money to get you a ride home whenever you need it.
When you hear lofty promises, remember that we're promising something we can deliver. You pay $28 to Senate every semester — don't waste it! This election is not a popularity contest.
It's been a long time since KU could choose some intelligent leadership that promises true change. It's something Student Senate needs.
The INTEGRITY coalition is led by vice presidential candidate Brian Kramer and and presidential candidate Frank Partnow.
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College of Liberal Arts & Sciences (CLAS) wants UNDERGRADUATE REPRESENTATIVES for the COLLEGE ASSEMBLY
Interested CLAS undergraduate students should complete nomination forms available at the Undergraduate Services Office, 106 Strong Hall.
Student body at KU is TOP PRIORITY
Filing deadline-5 p.m. Fri., April 8
Election will be held April 13 & 14 with Student Senate Election
All CLAS undergraduate students
What's your TOP PRIORITY?
are encouraged to become involved in the governance of
WILLIAM AND RICKY
in the governance of
The College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
Good student government demands responsible student leadership. Aside from being charged with funding student organizations, Senate also is responsible for voicing the concerns of students. We have the experience and ability to do this effectively. TOP PRIORITY offers you a presidential and vice president candidate with a combination of senate and campus leadership experience, which includes representing students on University Council, Student Senate committees and boards, University committees, SUA, Board of Class Officers, and H.E.R.O. We bring to Senate the variety of experience necessary to represent the needs of students and to expand the role of Senate in the future.
A campaign slogan in the form of a question? There's a reason for that. Student Senate is representative government. In order to represent you, TOP PRIORITY wants to know your concerns. That's why we've talked with students, administrators, faculty and the Kansas Legislature about the issues facing the University of Kansas, and we've addressed those issues with workable solutions.
TOP PRIORITY has identified several major student concerns. Nearly every student lives off campus at some point during his stay at KU. However, there is nowhere off campus that students can turn for help. TOP PRIORITY has developed the concept of an off-campus center. It would provide such essential services as computerized apartment listings by price, location, etc., as well as other programs responsive to the needs of off-campus students. This type of program has been very successful at other universities; we believe it can work at KU.
Financial aid is a problem for many students. As tuition increases, we can only expect the situation to get worse. TOP PRIORITY believes that Student Senate should move beyond just providing student services and work to ensure that students have the chance to come to KU and afford to stay. TOP PRIORITY will address this problem both by lobbying in the Legislature and by working for you on campus.
Many students each semester feel frustrated during advising. We do too. Working with faculty, students and administrators, we've developed a comprehensive advising proposal to fully address the advising problem. Our proposal includes courses for preparing KU students need a comprehensive approach to a growing problem.
What Senate needs is simple. It needs people with the willingness to listen to problems and the ability and experience to solve them. In short, Senate needs progress, not politics. Senate needs to make students its TOP PRIORITY.
The TOP PRORITY coalition is led by vice president candidate Pam Holley and presidential candidate R. Brook Menees.
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The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents Professor Jeffery Lang Professor of Math at the University of Kansas
A. E. B.
"Men's and Women's Relations in Islam"
Place: Pine Room, Kansas Union, KU Time: 7:00 p.m., Tuesday, March 29, 1988 Everybody is Welcome Free Refreshments Are Provided For more Information call 841-9768
6
tuesday, March 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Herington residents lament razing of depot
The image shows a railway track with gravel and debris scattered along the side. In the background, there are industrial buildings, possibly warehouses or factories, surrounded by trees and open land. The scene appears to be in an urban area.
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
Piles of rubble are all that remain of the Herington train depot. The landmark was demolished early Wednesday morning, unbeknownst to the town's 3,000 residents.
Dale Fulkerson/KANSAN
HERINGTON — Forty-mile-an-hour winds whipped limestone dust from a pile of rubble, spreading a thin film over this town that ows its existence to the railroad. The dust is all that is left of the town's 101-year-old
While the residents of Herington slept Wednesday morning, the limestone depot was destroyed by a wrecking company hired by its owner, the St. Louis-Southwestern Railway Company.
The local historical society was working to raise money to preserve the deposit
The depot was a symbol and landmark for the town of 3,000. It was registered on the Kansas Historic Register but was denied placement on the National Register of Historic Places because the Southern Pacific Corporation, the parent company of the St. Louis-Southwestern Railway Company, filed an objection.
Few things could have angered this small town 130 miles southwest of Lawrence more than the depot's
"I think the fact that they came in the middle of the night, when we were all asleep, is what really bothered us the most," said Norman Snyder, president of the Herington Historical Society. "I think they knew that if they would have done it at high noon or 8 a.m., they would have had a whole lot of people run down and get an injunction issued to stop them from doing it."
Snyder, who retired from the railroad four years ago after more than 38 years of service, now spends time in the society's Tri-County Museum, where he proudly shows visitors pictures of steam engines and the illustrious Rock Island Rocket passenger train that often visited the denot.
The museum includes the boots that M.D. Herington, the town's founder, wore in 1887 the day he went to Topeka to persuade officials to include Herington on the train route.
"It would have been nice to have had some of this in the denot some day." Snyder said.
In 1887, Herington gave the railroad 30,000 acres of land to convince officials to lay tracks through the town. At one time, around 1934, the railroad employed 500 to 600 people from Herington. Today, it employs 120 people.
"The railroad is what sponsored the town; it helped the town grow; it is what fed and clothed its people," Snyder said.
Snyder was one of many retired railroad workers who went to the depot site last week to pick up pieces of limestone to save as mementos. He also salvaged the benchmark, a stone block with the measurement of the sea level at Herington, from the rubble, and he is planning to place it in front of the museum.
It's about all we have to
Still, the memories linger.
Snyder and others who participated in the romanticism of the train era remember when the transcontinental railroad, owned by Rock Island Railroad, was the most exciting form of transportation and brought many important people to the depot.
"Eisenhower, Roosevelt, Taft and Truman all came to our depot, campaigning for the presidency." Snyder said. "I think the president had a very hard time."
He also remembers when the University of Southern
California's football team would stop over and practice on the high school football field, drawing large crowds from the town.
On April 26, 1950, 30 top movie stars stopped in Herington. John Wayne, Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were among the stars traveling to Illinois for the world premiere of "Rock Island Trails." They were met by more than 2,000 fans.
Everything the town was proud of seemed to center on the railroad.
Last year, Herington celebrated its centennial, featuring, naturally, its origins with the railroad. Even the high school mascot is the Railroader.
Ralph Will worked for the railroad in the 1940s and remembers riding passengers trains quite often. "The depot was very active at one time." Will said. "Of course, we're really upset about it being gone, but what can you
Snyder said, "That's the thing with big business. They
Manhattan KC
70 77 Salina 56 35 Herington Emporia Richard Stewart KANSAN
exploit the populace to get what they want, and then they manipulate it, not realizing what the consequences may be for others.
Railroad companies are destroying depots that are not purchased by the city and moved away from live tracks in many towns in Kansas. Depots not in use are still on the company's taxroll and are a liability hazard, Snyder said.
"I can understand their situation," Snyder said. "They said we could have it if we moved it, but we hadn't come up with enough money to move it." It would cost about $600,000 to move the depot.
Jim Johnson, spokesman for St. Louis-Southwestern Railway Company said, "I have gotten as many phone calls over this as I would have if a major derailment had occurred, in which an entire large city was contaminated and evacuated."
He said the company had tried to negotiate with Hertington residents for more than a year.
"We gave the town a couple of extensions on deadlines. We worked with them on it for over a year." Johnson said. "But we just couldn't wait forever until something happened.
"We expected it might take a couple days to collapse the building, but it took only 45 minutes, with a single
"It was done in the early morning because of safety reasons, not because we were trying to be sneaky.
Rethinks, not because, "In this country, you're supposed to have the right to do whatever you want to with your own property, as long as you don't endanger someone else's life. I can't see why we are the bad guy in this. If it wasn't for us, 120 people wouldn't be employed."
Project to preserve Lawrence railroad depot is well underway
"Some things I just don't understand. It's not that we haven't tried."
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
The 100-year-old Union Pacific depot in north Lawrence was once in danger of meeting the same fate as the depot in Herington, but it is now on its way to a new existence under the ownership of the City of Lawrence.
The Union Pacific Railway Company planned to destroy the depot in 1984 after the railroad stopped using it to house freight
has now gone to great lengths to help Lawrence preserve the historic building.
However, because of the persuasive efforts of the Save the Depot Task Force, a combination of the Lawrence Preservation Alliance and KU Crew, the company
"The Union Pacific has been so marvelous, fantastic and incredible about the whole thing," said Craig Patterson, chairman of the task force.
"Not only are they going to give us the building, they are going to let us leave it on their property, 90 feet away from where it is now and, on top of that, give us $100,000 in cash.
"It would have cost them only $10,000 to tear it down."
The Union Pacific's offer to let the depot remain on its property if it was moved further away from the active tracks is
important. The National Trust of Historic Preservation is hesitant about putting a building on the national register if it has been moved from its original location, said Nancy Shontz, member of the task force and the Lawrence Preservation Alliance.
"We may have started off on shaky ground," said Patterson, "but we have really proven ourselves. We convinced the Union Pacific that we are serious about this project and are willing to devote the time and money necessary to finish it.
"By allowing us to stay on the same property, it gives us a better chance of getting it registered," she said.
plans."
"We're going to move right ahead on our
Tomorrow night, the task force will meet to review a proposal by Warren Schwaubauer of Norton and Schmidt Consulting Engineers to move the building. Schwaubauer designed a scheme that, if approved, would be bid on by moving contractors this spring.
The relocation of the 600-ton depot will begin in August or September.
"The plans are quite clear," Patterson said. "All we need now is money."
The committee's biggest challenge is finding money to match funds provided by the Union Pacific. The committee collected about $20,000 in pledges, cash and
services last summer. The committee's request for help has been extended to corporations and citizens of the Lawrence community.
"If the Union Pacific cares enough to do all they did for us, then I would hope that corporations in the community would follow with similar help." Patterson said.
The committee plans to revive the depot in two phases, he said.
"The first phrase is obviously move it or lose it," Patterson said. "Move it or Lose it" has been the motto of the task force since last summer.
Phase two will be the historic preservation and reconstruction of the depot.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 29, 1988
NationWorld
7
Indian activist candidate is killed during weekend
The Associated Press
PEMBROKE, N.C. — Commissioners in racially troubled Robeson County yesterday called for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the slaying of an Indian activist running for judge.
Meanwhile, supporters of the activist, 42-year-old Julian Pierce, said they would seek to change a state law that would automatically make his opponent in the primary the winner of the election.
Pierce, a lawyer and Lumbee Indian, was slain at his rural home over the weekend by three shotgun shots. Hubert Stone called on assassination
Commissioners adopted a resolution asking District Attorney Joe Freeman Britt, Pierce's primary opponent, to ask the state attorney general for a special prosecutor. The resolution is not binding, said Commissioner Wayne Oxendine.
Telephone calls yesterday to Britt's office were not immediately returned.
Backers of Pierce also said that they would seek a special legislative session to allow a substitute candidate in the May 3 primary for Superior Court judge.
Harvey Godwin, Pierce's campaign manager, said the 25-member Committee to Elect Julian Pierce decided Sunday night to ask Gov. Jim Martin to call a special legislative session to change the law to allow a substitute candidate in the May 3 primary for Superior Court judge.
State law says if a candidate dies 30 days or more after the filing period closes in that election, the opposing candidate is declared the winner.
Stone said a hotline set up to receive tips on Julian Pierce's death had received more than 50 calls. Pierce was found dead early Saturday.
The Associated Press
Gephardt had appealed to workers, farmers and the poor with his theme
WASHINGTON — Richard Gephardt quit the Democratic presidential race yesterday, saying, "We lost, no question about that," but declaring that his party could win the White House in the fall only by picking up his populist economic themes.
"I believe that our effort was not in vain that we challenged the Democratic Party and called it back to its central role as an agent of fundamental change." Gephardt said at an emotional Capitol Hill news conference packed with journalists and supporters.
Gephardt drops bid for nomination Says populist theme is key to Democrat gaining White House
Gephardt, whose campaign faltered after his initial victory in Iowa's caucuses on Feb. 8, said he had a plan to house his House seat from Missouri.
"That was our message, and that is our victory." Gephardt said as his wife clasped her hands and fought back tears. "Now, that message belongs to all the Democratic Party. And I am convinced that it is . . . the only way for us to win in 1988 and beyond."
of “it's your fight, too.” He said his drive had driven other candidates closer to his positions on trade and farm policy and would result in a nominee committed to fight for economic justice.
The Missouri congressman, also accompanied by his three children, said, "I haven't seen a crowd this large in a long, long time," after entering the ornate caucus room and giving a thumbs-up sign to his supporters.
Gephardt predicted a Democratic nominee would be chosen from among those now running but refused to throw his support to anyone. He
said he might make an endorsement at a later time.
Regarding Jesse Jackson's candidacy, he said, "I believe Jesse Jackson can be nominated, and I think he can be elected."
He turned down a chance to give advice to the party's other front-runner, Massachusets Gov. Michael Dakikas, with whom he had engaged in sharp exchanges of negative TV advertisements.
Gephardt attributed his failed candidacy to a lack of money and said that when he was able to get his ideas across, "we did connect." But he added, "I have no alibis. We lost, no question about that."
"Michael Dukakis has sure done a lot better than I did," Gephardt said. "I don't think it's my place to tell him what to do."
Gephardt's wins in Iowa, South Dakota and his home state were buried by disappointing showings in
more than two dozen other states — including Michigan, where he had said he needed a "Michigan miracle" Saturday to revive his campaign.
With his tough trade stance, the six-term congressman might have been expected to do well in a state heavy with unions and automakers. But he failed to win labor backing and finished third in the Michigan caucuses, behind Jackson and Dukakis.
Gephardt, a consensus builder in the House, found a niche in the presidential race as an anti-establishment populist. He had a well-whored message and an aggressive television campaign.
But after Michigan, Gehardt had only 167 delegates — less than one-third the totals amassed by Dukakis and Jackson and fewer than even Sen. Paul Simon of Illinois, who didn't compete on Super Tuesday.
Panama detains reporters, protest leaders
The Associated Press
PANAMA CITY, Panama — Soldiers firing into the air burst into the capital's leading hotel and detained opposition leaders and foreign journalists after an anti-government demonstration was stopped by authorities.
The military confiscated the film of foreign television crews at the Marriott Hotel, which has been used for weeks as an informal headquarters by scores of reporters and by leaders of the National Civic Crusade.
Opposition spokesmen said that nearly 20 of their leaders were detained. Eight foreign journalists,
including Richard Cole of The Associated Press, were taken away and held for about three hours.
The Civic Crusade, a leading antigovernment coalition, staged the afternoon protest march in an attempt to force the ouster of Panama's military strongman, Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriage.
Five leaders of the march were arrested.
The violence yesterday coincided with the beginning of the second week of a general strike that has closed down an estimated 90 percent of Panama's industry and commerce.
Shuttle booster rocket assembly begins
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Workers yesterday began assembling the first of two booster rockets for the next space shuttle flight, and an engineer in charge of their redesign said the test program was on track for an August launch.
John Thomas, manager of the solid
"We're well on our way in the test program," he said. "Everything is going well with the processing at the Kennedy Space Center."
The stacking of the rocket segments began even though three critical test firings remain for the overhauled model of the rocket that caused the Challenger accident that killed seven astronauts in January 1986.
rocket motor design team, said the redesign test program had gone so well that the stacking could proceed with confidence.
He spoke as technicians here mounted the bottom segment of shuttle Discovery's left booster rocket onto a mobile launch platform. Three more segments and other equipment will be stacked atop this segment, and then the right rocket will be assembled on the platform.
The Associated Press
Baby M litigation enters final stage
HACKENSACK, N.J. — An angry and bitter William Stern testified yesterday that Baby M should be kept from her biological mother for several years to protect the child from emotional harm and exploitation.
Stern, testifying in what is expected to be the final legal chapter of the 2-year-old dispute, characterized surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead-Gould as untrustworthy and capable of undermining her relationship with the child, legally known as Melissa Stern.
"Mary Beth will do anything and say anything to get her way," Stern said in 2½ hours of emotional testimony that ended with him crying.
The hearing, expected to last several days, was ordered by the New Jersey Supreme Court in its landmark Feb. 3 decision that declared the school district unauthorized and restored Mrs. Whitehead-Gould's parental rights but left intact a judge's order awarding custody of the child to the Sterns.
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The documents are expected to help Walsh answer some of his questions about Israel's Swiss bank account, which handled the funds for the shipments to Iran.
In a letter dated Aug. 15, 1966, three months before the disclosure of the Iran-contrain affair, Pena wrote to a front company set up by North's associate, Richard Miller. The company offered to procure grenades, bombs, mines and boots from two South American companies.
U.S. obtains Iran-contra papers in agreement, Israeli official says
Walsh wanted the information to help corroborate his case against former White House aides Oliver North and John Poindexter, and businessmen Richard Secord and his partner Albert Hakim. All four have been indicted on charges of defrauding the U.S. government through the arms sales and the diversion of profits to the contrasts.
Melvin Rise, a lawyer representing the Israeli government, said, "We have reached terms of how we would proceed, making litigation unnecessary."
WASHINGTON — Israel has handed over classified documents to independent counsel Lawrence Walsh for his Iran-contra investigation under a cooperation agreement reached after yearlong negotiations, an Israeli official said yesterday.
"He will get what he wants without us having to give up what we wanted," said the Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The Associated Press
The documents handed over to Walsh included detailed financial and historical chronologies prepared by Israel for the congressional Iran-contra committees last summer, the Israeli official said.
Wright said that if Pena was involved in such activity, it was when Pena wasn't working directly with him.
In return, Walsh apparently agreed to revoke the subponas he issued to four Israelis who arranged the 1985 and 1986 shipments of U.S. made anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles to Iran, the official and a U.S. lawyer said.
KU
Along with the documents, Walsh also has been given written answers to the questions posed last year by the congressional investigators with regard to the chronologies, the official said.
Football Hostess Program
Wright says he was unaware of adviser dealing with North
Walsh and the Israeli Embassy issued brief statements announcing the cooperation agreement but said the contents would remain classified.
be denied access to the documents because of his refusal to grant immunity to the four Israelis.
All freshman, sophomore, and junior students interested in participating in the Kansas University Football Hostess Program for the 1988-89 school year, report to room 135 in Parrott Athletic Center on
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Jim Wright said yesterday that he was unaware that his friend and adviser, Richard Pena, had tried to sell weapons to the contras through former White House aide Lt. Col. Oliver North's secret contra aid operation.
The agreement with Walsh is on a government-to-government basis, according to Israeli embassy spokesman Yossi Gal, which means that any questions for the four must be channeled through official Israeli representatives.
The Associated Press
KANSAS UNIVERSITY
When Israel gave the chronologies to Congress, it stipulated that Walsh
Israel's government wanted the subpoenas dropped, contending that all four Israelis were acting under its orders and thus were immune from prosecution and questioning by U.S. officials.
ISRAEL SEALS TERRITORIES: The Israeli army yesterday imposed its broadest restrictions yet on the 1.5 million Palestinians in the occupied territories, sealing the regions for three days to combat a PLO day of protest. It is the first such ban since Israel captured the West Bank and Gaza Strip from Jordan and Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war. Army spokesmen said journalists were being barred from the territories.
CONTRA PACKAGE INCOMPLETE: House Democratic and Republican leaders labored inconclusively yesterday on a package of strictly "humanitarian" aid to sustain the contras while they work out a peace accord with the leftist Sandinista government.
At the informational meeting, the program will be explained and appointments for interviews will be made. Parrott Athletic Center is next to Allen Field House.
82ND ARRIVES HOME: More than 700 members of the Army's 82nd Airborne Division parachuted into their North Carolina home base yesterday in a flamboyant end to 12 days of exercises in Honduras, where they were sent in a show of U.S. strength.
Thursday, April 7 at 5:00 p.m.
H
KUZ
---
SWAGGART FUTURE DEBATED! Elders of the Assemblies of God yesterday began debating how long TV evangelist Jimmy Swaggart should be barred from preaching. The 223-member General Presbytery began its two-day, closed-door meeting and will have the final say on punishment against Swaggart, who is accused of hiring a prostitute to pose naked for him.
REAGAN PROMOTES FREE TRADE: President Reagan said yesterday in Richmond, Va. that the U.S. public wouldn't accept trade restrictions and retaliation against foreign man-
News Roundup
COMMITTEE RECOMMENDS TREATY: The Senate Armed Services Committee voted 18 to 2 yesterday to recommend that the Senate ratify the new treaty banning U.S. and Soviet medium-range nuclear weapons worldwide. But the panel said a serious question remained about whether negotiators intended the pact to ban futuristic, advanced technology weapons or only nuclear-armed medium-range ballistic and cruise missiles.
MIDLAND MAYOR INTERVENES: Midland, Texas, Mayor Carroll Thomas said yesterday that he would try to resolve squabbling between two groups of rescuers by appointing a citizens' committee to review proposals for a television movie about Jessica McClure's rescue from an abandoned well.
S
POE BOOK TO BE AUCTIONED: A rare first edition of Edgar Allan Poe's first book, a collection of poetry written when he was 14, is to be auctioned by Sotheby's June 7. In the 161 years since its publication, only 11 other copies of "Tamerlane and Other Poems" have been found. The book, published in 1827 by an obscure Boston printer when the poet, short-story writer and critic was 18, could bring as much as $300.000.
ducturers. Reagan, promoting his free-trade stance even in the face of mounting U.S. trade imbalances, warned that a trade bill under consideration in Congress could weaken international trading systems and start trade wars.
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8
Tuesday, March 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
New manager eases tenants' woes
By Kim Lightle
By Kim Lightle Kansan staff writer
Some student tenants at Colony Woods Apartments have seen their problems addressed since a change in management at the complex.
Tenants who complained about lack of parking spaces and high electricity bills said that the problems have been reduced since Jane Ellis began working as the complex's manager a month ago. She replaced Gerald Burkhart.
Tenants have complained about a lack of parking spaces at the 370-unit
complex at 1301 West 24th St. since it opened last August. Last fall, many residents complained that a newspaper advertisement for the complex, which said four spaces were available for each apartment, was false.
The city stopped the complex's owner, Randall Davis, from adding parking spaces last year because the new spaces would have violated zoning regulations and could have caused flooding.
John Ortiz, Overland Park junior,
said that recently, he didn't have
trouble finding a parking space.
"I haven't had as many problems now," he said. "Sometimes, I have to park a few buildings down from mine."
Ellis said that she had discussed the problem with several of the residents and was working on a plan to help eliminate the problem. She said that she wanted to find out how much of the problem was due to non-residents parking their cars in the lot.
Residents also said Ellis was working to solve problems they had with high electricity bills because of outside lights that were hooked into their fuse boxes.
Several residents have been receiving reimbursement checks for the overcharges. Some new meters have also been installed so that residents would no longer be billed for the extra lights.
Holly Slaughter, a Spring Hill sophomore who organized a tenant's group when the problems began, said that she hadn't heard any more complaints from residents since Ellis began working.
Palestinian group to observe Land Day at KU
Palestinians all over the world will observe the annual Land Day tomorrow to bring attention to the continuing Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
By a Kansan reporter
KU's General Union of Palestinian Students will observe the day with a
demonstration in front of the Kansas Union at 1:15 p.m., Khalid Najib, Kuwait tumor, said.
Kuwait University.
Also, Palestinian cultural items will be on display in Gallery West of the Kansas Union from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Some items will be on sale.
Proceeds will go to the General
Union of Palestinian Students.
Unhour of Palestine. Najib, who said his family was forced to leave Israel's West Bank after the war in 1948, said it was upsetting to see the daily violence and killing.
According to United Nations estimates, 118 Palestinians have been
killed in 15 weeks of violent protests against Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
"It's hard to be away from home and see your people killed every day." Naib said.
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
Pay raises in the picture for some hall employees
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
Michael Frakes, Lawrence senior, is looking forward to getting his paycheck May 1 to see if he is among the 108 students who work in residence halls to receive a raise.
Students who work as desk assistants, security monitors and acedemic resource coordinators will receive the raises, said Jean Morrow, assistant director of residential programs.
The increase will raise students' wages 30 cents to 65 cents an hour, depending on merit and seniority. The base salary of $3.45 could go up to $4.00 after six consecutive semesters of work.
Before the new pay scale was set up, students worked at a flat $3.45 rate.
money would come out of the housing budget and that it would not cause an increase in student housing costs.
Kip Grosshans, personnel manager for housing, said that the
the assistant residence hall directors for the eight KU residence halls worked out a pay scale this year that would grant student employees a raise after three consecutive semesters of work.
The raises also are based on merit evaluations by the students' supervisors.
The merit evaluations grade students for their ability to work without supervision, for their initiative and for their ability to train other student workers.
The office of residential programs decided to use the merit system instead of a flat increase because they wanted to reward workers with better skills. Grosshans said.
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The deadline has been extended! If you pay your $50 down payment at the Burge Union by March 30, you can still have your Mac on your desk by March 31 or April 1. (This extension even applies to students whose approved financing has been delayed!)
It's the biggest ever KU Bookstores Macintosh computer sale and that means big savings for you. Like $1000 off the regular retail price on Macintosh Plus.
With prices lower than ever before, now's the time to order a Mac. Here's the deal: On April 1st, the Macintosh computers will arrive at the Burge Union. The computers will be specially priced for KU students, faculty and staff.
TM
If you want to make sure your computer arrives on March 31 or April 1st, you need to pre-order at the bookstore now.
You can have a Macintosh on your desk on April 1. All you have to do is order in advance. We'll even show you how to set it up and get started at free seminars in the Burge Union on the 1st. Sound easy? It is. As easy as 1, 2, 3!
Step 1: (optional) Interested in finding out if you qualify for student financing? Contact the Financial Aid Office at 864-4700. Make your appointment as soon as possible. The counselors there will be more than happy to help qualified students choose the best program. (Financial need is not the qualifying issue.)
You may even be able to finance your computer with help from the Financial Aid Office. There are several plans available. Some include low monthly payments during the time you're in school at KU; others don't require any payments until after you graduate! Counselors at the Financial Aid Office can tell you if you qualify (financial need is not the qualifying issue.) And they'll explain exactly how the program works. All you have to do is call 864-4700 and make an appointment to find out more.
Step 2: Order your Macintosh at the Burge Union.
Stop by and place your order by March 30.
Tell us which Macintosh, Plus or SE that you want.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 29, 1988
Sports
9
KAY
Mark Pellock, Parsons junior and former Kansas basketball team center, and Sean Murphy, Coffeyville junior, print some Final Four T-shirts. They and a handful of other KU students are producing shirts to sell on campus and at the Final Four in Kansas City.
Students sell KU T-shirts celebrating the Final Four
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sports writer
While the Kansas men's basketball team dreams of playing a championship game just down the road in Kansas City, three KU students have taken the opportunity to capitalize on an enormous market that has a definite case of Final Four fever.
Greg Scott and Don Snellback, coowners of Aristocratic, and Jon Hofer, owner of T-Graphics, joined forces and sub-contracted with Larry Sinks, the owner of Midwest Graphics in East Lawrence, to launch a massive T-shirt selling campaign.
Each shirt is selling for $10. About 4,200 shirts were sold yesterday, and the company was printing about 750 shirts an hour. Snellback estimates that a total of 12,000 to 15,000 shirts could be sold by the end of the tournament.
So the two companies pooled their resources and talents for one hectic week before the Final Four. They enlisted the aid of Sinks, who is not a KU student, and will use his facilities to produce thousands of T-shirts day and night to sell on campus and in Kansas City.
Kansas' 71-58 victory over Kansas State on Sunday in the Midwest Regional championship game. After the initial celebrating, they soon started laughing as they realized the potential in selling Final Four T-shirts in Kansas.
The idea came to the three after
"We had no anticipation of KU getting into the Final Four," Snellback said. "There was no way we could get ready for it. Everything was thrown together after KU won. This week is our week."
ing group on campus and off.
They laid out their strategy yesterday morning. Using friends as sales representatives, the temporarily merged company is hitting every liv-
"We are dealing in major volume." Scott said. "We're working together, and it's become just one huge company."
Three designs have been made, with two of them specifically focused for the Kansas market. The first one, designed by Brad Sneed, Newton junior and a KU art student, reads "Kansas City Here We Come". The second design, created by Carmen Waldmann, Silver Lake senior, reads "Jayhawk Basketball Wearing The Glass Slipper," playing off the "Cinderella" theme that Kansas is the only team in the Final Four that was not ranked in the final Associated Press poll.
Big Eight's dream season brings money, priceless exposure
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — When the Big Eight Conference said it would be playing host to this year's NCAA Final Four, no one dreamed how right that would be.
For years, Big Eight basketball was a joke, even to Big Eight players. Basketball, they ruefully agreed, was just something the conference did between football and spring
A free-lance artist was brought in early yesterday to create the third design, which includes the mascots of all the Final Four teams. The shirts with that design will be sold primarily in Kansas City later this week.
What's more, they were right. Most of the league's arenas were small, cramped and outdated. Nobody in the Big Eight except Kansas and Kansas State, spent any money
on the sport for years and years.
It seemed that few nationally recruited players ever spring from high schools in the Big Eight area and the ones who did quickly fled to the Big Ten or the Atlantic Coast Conference and the like. Football was absolute, undisputed king in Middle America, where Oklahoma and Nebraska challenged year after year for national championships.
But then, slowly, the winds of change began to blow. Coaches such as Larry Brown, Billy Tubbs and Johnny Orr were hired at places such as Kansas, Oklahoma and Iowa State. Players such as Wayman Tisdale "...
Danny Manning were coaxed into signing Big Eight letters-of-intent.
New arenas were built at Oklahoma, Missouri, Iowa State, Nebraska and Colorado. Other facilities were upgraded. More money was spent on basketball than ever before.
Now, with the Final Four back in Kansas City's own Kemper Arena, the so-called football conference has not one but two Final Four teams.
Kansas, with two-time All-American Manning, will face Duke of the ACC in the first semifinal Saturday and then Oklahoma, once a basketball doormat, will meet Arizona in
"Watching two Big Eight teams get into our own Final Four was the most exciting thing I ever saw," said Bill Hancock, associate commissioner of the Big Eight and one of the major figures in planning and running this 50th anniversarysv Final Four.
semifinal No.2.
"It's just a dream come true for us after all those years of struggling so hard." Hancock said. "We hoped against hope we would get a team in the Final Four. Now we have two. It's just unbelievable. Coaches and athletic directors from all over the conference have been calling each other and offering congra-
tulatons."
When the season opened, Big Eight coaches told anybody who would listen that their league had come of age. By the season's end, three of the league's four all-time leading scorers were winding down brilliant careers, Manning at Kansas, Jeff Grayer at Iowa State and Derrick Chievous at Missouri. It is commonly thought that most of this year's second-team all-Big Eight squad would, in the lean years, have been prime candidates for conference Player of the Year.
KU rugby team ready for Spring postseason
Bv Keith Stroker
Kansan sports writer
or the first time in eight years, the KU rugby team will play in the Western Rugby Football Union tournament, April 16 and 17, in Las Cruces, N.M.
Kansas defeated Kansas State 9-6 last fall to advance to the tournament. The Wildcats had defeated Kansas every year since 1980, preventing the Jayhawks from reaching postseason play.
Kansas has been preparing for the tournament this spring by competing in weekend games. The Jayhawks collegiate team is 4-1, losing only to Kansas State's club side two weeks ago.
Kansas has three rugby teams: a club-side team, composed of college and graduate students with a lot of rugby experience; a collegiate-side team, with just college students; and a reserve-side team, composed of first-year players.
On Sunday, the Kansas collegiate-side team defeated Topeka's club side. 24-0. Jayhawks coach Louie Riedierer said the game was a good one for tournament preparation.
"I think the college match went
really well, especially considering we played their club team." Riederer said. "The forwards did a very good job, and they scored a lot, which doesn't happen often in a rugby game."
In other games, the Kansas reserve team lost twice, 12-10 to Washburn and 34-0 to the Kansas City Blues, and the Kansas club team defeated Oklahoma's club team, 34-8.
Eight teams will compete in each of four regional tournaments, and the winners will meet in rugby's final four, April 30 and May 1, in Monterey, Calif. Kansas is in the Western Regional, and the other three regionals are the Pacific Coast, the East, and the Midwest.
The Jayhawks are the No. 3 seed in the West, and the Air Force Academy is No. 1 in that regional. Air Force won the national tournament two years ago but lost in the championship game to San Diego State last season. The Axtres are favorites to win again this season.
Kansas rugby player Pat Roberts said the team worked out five days a week, including running and a workout program.
Volleyball team adds 6
By Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
when recruiting, Kansas volleyball coach Frankie Albitz does not look strictly for blue-chip players.
She does look for athletes with blue-chip attitudes.
Albitz completed her recruiting this year by signing six players. All of them, she said, have attitudes that fit into the Kansas system.
The Jayhawks signed April Chavey, Concordia; Kim DeHoff, Tonganoxie; Woodluffrust, Castle Rock, Wash.; Mary Beth Bella, Oak Forest, Adrian Powell, St. Louis; and Kris Kleinschmidt, Prairie Village
"I try to get players who fit into the situation here," Albizt said. "I doubt these players are real blue-chippers. I think they are blue-chip mentally."
"I'm to the point that I don't like blue-chips. They expect a lot more. In our situation, we have to have kids who are student-oriented and who want to be at Kansas."
All six recruits will have full scholarships. Albitz said.
Chavey attended Cloud County Community College, where she was named a second-team junior college All-American last year and an honorable mention All-American her freshman year.
DeHoff was a Kansas All-State selection and played for Penn Valley in Junior Olympic volleyball, which
Albitz said was important for gaining experience.
Woodford was a Washington All-State selection from Spirit Lake High School. She has a 4.0 grade point average and played on a Junior Olympic team that traveled to Japan.
Bella played for the Second City Junior Olympic team in Chicago. Last year, the team ranked in the top 10 in the country.
"It is one of the best junior teams in the nation." Albitz said. "There is strong ball in Chicago. There is a lot of competition there."
Powell attended Clayton High School and played three years of Junior Olympic volleyball for St. Louis County.
Kleinschmidt attended Bishop Miege, where she was a Kansas All-State selection.
"This is a good bunch," Albitz said. "They have good, competitive attitudes and are serious players. They will get down to business." But they will get down to business.
Albitz said that she failed in her search for an all-around player but that the recruits had specialized skills the team needed.
Kansas also has received a verbal commitment from a United States Olympic Team Handball player who will attend Kansas if she does not make the final Olympic cut, Albizt said.
16
Quick kick
Janine Swiatkowski/KANSAN
Kansas defender Chucker Luetje, No. 16, fights an Oklahoma State player for the ball. Kansas beat Iowa State 1-1 on Saturday and Oklahoma State 4-0 on Sunday.
THE MEN'S KICKBOXING CLUB
Left, Jonathan Cohen, Mission Hills junior, and right, Joe McCauley, Chicago junior, practice kicks and punches yesterday in Robinson Center. They are members of the Vanguard Karate team.
Vanguard team learns secret of karate is dedication, daily workouts and pain
By Mario Talkington Special to the Kansan
Two rows of weary karate students file across the floor. They raise their left knees and sharply kick their legs forward, aiming their feet at the stomach of an imaginary opponent in front of them.
Their eyes stare intensely at their "opponent," reflecting the students' determination to execute the kick to perfection — or at least well enough to please the instructor who is pacing up and down the rows, closely watching their performances.
"You dropped your arms," he tells one student. "That'll cost you 10."
Ten push-ups. A similar mistake costs another student 15 push-ups. More kicks, another mistake and more push-ups. It's all part of a rigorous daily workout for the Vanguard Karate Team, a local nonprofit club open to Lawrence residents and KU students.
"Everyone wonders about the secret to karate, the magic and all that," said Dave Rank, business manager. "The secret is karate." "The secret to karate is hard work."
Vanguard karate students are familiar with hard work. They meet five times a week, kicking, punching and sweating their way through at least an hour-and-a-half of demanding exercise. The club meets twice a
'E
Everyone wonders about the secret to karate, the magic and all that. The secret to karate is hard work. It's exhausting, but it's also invigorating. You know you're in shape.'
-Dave Rank
business manager and treasurer,
Honored to
Vanguard team
week at the Community Building and three times at Robinson Center.
"It's exhausting, but it's also invigorating," Rank said. "You know you're in shape."
Rank said that the workouts usually began with 30 minutes of stretching, followed by karate drills. And push-ups.
"It's an intense workout and an intense club," he said. "We looked at as animals, the guys that do the push-ups all the time."
The tough workouts require dedication from the karate students, Rank said.
"Some people come in expecting to be a black belt in a year," he said. "Wrong. If you're going to take it seriously, you're going to go through pain and soreness."
"One KU student who started at this time last year lost 25 pounds," he said. "When he went home for spring break, his parents didn't recognize him. You can work out with Vanguard and expect to be in the best shape of your life."
The pain of the workouts eventually paid off for dedicated karate students, Rank said.
Vanguard's tough workouts were even tougher earlier this semester when the team held its four-week intensive exercise program. The program was open to people at any level of karate experience and was designed to teach flexibility, conditioning, and basic karate techniques.
"Fraternities have 'Hell Week',"
said Terry Cook, a Lawrence resident who attends classes twice a
week. "This is kind of like our Hell Week."
Hasan Naseer, Pakistan junior,
also began working out this semester
"The first week, I had to do pushups all the time for messing up."
“After being out for two years, I was crawling out of here,” Cook said. “I’m just an old-timer trying to get off the rust.”
Cook said that he began studying karate about 10 years ago but had not practiced for two years before he started working out in the conditioning program this semester.
Naseer said. "The instructor really pushes us."
"He looked like a martial artist. Like a warrior," Naseer said. "He was also very friendly, which was, surprising."
Naseer said that Vanguard's instructor, Duane Lewis, seemed somewhat intimidating when they first met.
Lewis' friendly attitude during the workouts made the tough exercises a little less difficult, Naseer said.
"He makes you feel energetic," he said. "His attitude is inspiring, and he makes you feel like doing it."
Lewis, a second-degree black belt, said his class had a less format approach than that of some karate clubs. For example, he teaches a combination of karate techniques and street techniques, he said.
"I don't teach passive defense," he said. "If some guy grabs you by the neck, I don't think you'll say, 'Oh come on, let go in between gasps.'"
Also, rather than wearing the traditional robes donned by many karate students, Vanguard members can wear T-shirts, sweats or other comfortable clothing, Lewis said.
Despite the informal atmosphere, Lewis said, he does have a few rules of behavior.
"you oow when you come in," he said. "And you don't swear — you do 100 push-ups."
10
Tuesday, March 29. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Campus efforts for Dole dwindle
By Elaine Woodford Kansan staff writer
The posters and campaign slogans are gone; the hopes and expectations have faded. Most Kansans are no longer optimistic that Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole will be able to republican presidential nomination.
Kansas' favorite son has seeningly drawn supporters from one end of the state to the other, especially from students at the University of Kansas.
Brett Frazier, president of Jayhawks for Dole, said the KU campaign had received an outpouring of student support and had been recognized in Kansas and other states for its work on the Dole campaign.
Campaign workers dismayed by poor nationwide showing
Brenda Eisele, president of College Republicans said, "I think everyone in Kansas should be disappointed
that Bob Dole isn't going to get the nomination."
Frazier said the status of the Dole campaign on campus has come to a standstill while volunteers wait to find out what is going to happen to the group. The group will disband if Dole concedes to Vice President George Bush.
"I am disappointed," Frazier said.
"I think we backed the better
leaders."
Earlier this spring, Dole appeared to be on his way to challenging Bush for the nomination, perhaps even all the way to the Republican national way. But after winning the
Iowa caucuses, Dole lagged behind Bush. After a disappointing showing on Super Tuesday, many said Dole had to win Illinois to stay in contention for the nomination. He did not.
Financial problems caught up with the campaign, and Dole was forced to pull advertising spots from Illinois television stations.
"Dole had problems from the beginning," Frazier said. "He had management problems and a big problem with money."
But Dole had more than just internal problems, Frazier said. Bush continued to win delegates and gain votes from Reagan supporters.
"Bush got the support in areas where Reagan was popular," Frazier said. "His victories put him ahead of Dole."
KU campaign workers are among many Kansans waiting to hear what direction the campaign will take. Frazier said he had been in contact with several state Dole campaign volunteers, who were waiting to see if money would be available to continue the campaign.
Eisele said that College Republi-
cans would support whoever was
selected as the Republican nominee.
But Frazer said that the Dole group planned to work on local politics instead of switching to the Bush campaign.
"It will be trying to get active individuals involved in the 2nd district elections," he said.
HEY JAYHAWKS . . .
EAGLE RUN
CALL
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841-9808
Avoid the Headaches of last minute planning for summer travels
PLAN NOW SAVE $$
m New York on Scheduled Airlines
DISTINCTION LACEWAY
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London Special Destination
Paris $206
Melbourne Bouguerie $206
Frankfurt, Munich, Nürnberg $220
Munich $220
Madrid $223
Michigan, Germany $223
Hamburg, Southampton, Berlin $223
Napa $223
Oklahoma City $223
Oslo $223
Philadelphia $223
Veneto $245
Rome, Milan $218
Marseille $218
Belgique, Dubaiwijk $250
Bulgaria, Prague $250
Washington $255
Athens $255
Tel Aviv $380
JAYHAWK TRAVEL 2721 W. 6TH SUITE C
Zoologist says turtle didn't die needlessly
By Stacy Foster Kansan staff writer
The killing of a Missouri River Cooter turtle at the Museum of Natural History was done for scientific study. It did not needlessly, a museum official said yesterday.
Joseph Collins, a zoologist at the museum, said that the Missouri River Cooter turtle was important because the museum did not have many turtles of its kind. Researchers at the museum wanted to study the turtle's digestive and reproductive systems.
"It's a valuable scientific specimen." Collins said. "It is hard to distinguish between a river cooter and a regular cooter." Collins said.
Philip Humphrey, director of the museum, said that specimens such as the Missouri River Cooter turtle are being collected to show the environment affects animals.
"In the whole world, there are 30 or 40 million specimens," Humphrey
said. "We collect specimens to understand what they eat and how they reproduce."
Collins said that the number of animals that were killed for research at the University of Kansas was much less than the number killed by environmental accidents in the Douglas County area.
Many of the live animals the museum receives are not killed. They are instead released into their natural environment, Collins said. The Missouri River Cooter turtle could not be released because its species was not native to the Douglas County area.
Collins said that the Missouri River Cooter turtle population was not threatened by studying a single specimen.
"It is not an endangered or threatened species," Collins said. "They are just hard to catch. Dumping chemicals in the river is much more harmful than studying a single specimen from a population."
Loan program means KUEA spells financial relief to some
By Jeff Suggs Kansan staff writer
For those who have taken advantage of it, the Kansas University Endowment Association's short-term loan program has enabled students to help pay their way through school.
William Shunk, Endowment Association loan officer, said the short-term loan program had a 2 percent rate of default on loans.
And fortunately for the Endowment Association, it has had little trouble getting students to pay their loans back.
“It’s not a problem, but there are a few students that do default.” Shunk said. “It’s more than we like to see.”
If a student doesn't pay back his loan, Shunk said, the Endowment Association will send letters and make phone calls to get the student to pay the loan.
have its attorney send a demand letter to the student. If there's still no response, the Endowment Association will send the problem to a collection agency. Ultimately, the Endowment Association will file suit in court to receive the owed money.
If that doesn't work, then it will
To receive a short-term loan, a student has to have at least A coverage and have a co-signer at least 21 years old.
Undergraduates can take out a loan of $700 in a semester, with a $1,200 ceiling during their stay at KU. Graduate students can take a $1,200 loan in a semester, with a $2,400 ceiling.
Students have four months after graduation to pay back the loan at 6 percent interest. If the loan is not paid back by that time, the Endowment Association sets up a payment plan in which the interest could be as high as 14 percent.
It's time for you, the KU student, faculty or staff member, to pick up your key to success! You can pick up your computer on:
Macintosh Delivery!
Thursday, March 31 12 p.m. - 6 p.m.
or
Friday, April 1 9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Classified Ads
Where to park: West lot Where to pick up your computer: the Burge Union, level 3 There will be people there to help load your computer and answer any questions you may have.
12TH STREET
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Training sessions:
March 31:2 p.m.-4 p.m.
April 1:10 a.m.-12 p.m.
DON'T FORGET YOUR FREE MACWRITE® PROGRAM!
KU
KUBookstores
Burge Union
Visit with a recruiter from Merck, Sharp and Dohme on Monday, April 4. Open to all students with science majors.
INTERESTED IN LEARNING
ABOUT A PHARMACEUTICAL
SALES CAREER?
Macintosh $ ^{ \mathrm{TM}} $
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Helping You Make the Grade at KU
Adventureous Individuals for Boundary Waters
346-8346 Mitch Ride $150 plus transportation
346-8346 Mitch Ride
Sign up now at the University Placement Center. Level One of the Burge Union
Hillel
בלון
Events of the Week
Friday, April 1
First Night Seder
Host Families Available
Saturday, April 2
Second Night Community
Seder
Lawrence Jewish
Community Center
For Reservations/More Info:
Call Hillel, 749-4242
Attention Computer Science Graduates
Sign up now for on-campus interviews with the following firms.
J.C. Penney Catalog Ctr.
March 31
Payless Cashways
April 6
Physicians Corp of America
April 8
Sign up and obtain details at the University Placement Center Level One, Burge Union
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
$25 per month
SEMESTER
MEMBERSHIP
- Certified Instructors IDEA/Rhythmic Aerobics
- Body Toning Classes
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
- Toning Programs
- Exclusively For Women
- Air Conditioned
- Hourly Closures
- Air Conditioned
- Air Conditioned
- Hourly Classes
- Tanning
- Whirlpool
- Shower Facilities
FITNESS CLUB
Body Shapes
601 Kasold Open
7 days
a week
B Published: Society for Fantasy & Science Fiction
P Published: Society for Fantasy & Science Fiction
P Iterated by Petorideryta's legal. Send original poetry, art, and short stories to PO Box 2151, Strong Hall,
Lawrence Kames 6045, deadline Friday, April 9.
******************************
Wildlife Management
MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History
Hop to the Shop
Baskets of Eggs and Rabbits
Mon.-Sat. 10-5/Sun 1-5 864-4450
FROM: The M.C. Players.
To: Black individuals interested in forming a local black theatre. There will be an organizational meeting.
Date: Wednesday, March 30, 1988
Place: Room 209 - Murphy Hall.
Time: 7:30 P.M.
Last day to submit nominations for Women's Recognition. Stop by 218 Strong.
Gem and Mineral Show 4-11 fair grounds. April 19
- 10 to 8:00, April 26 - 10 to 5:00, Demonstration
- 10 to 10:00
Math, Engineering and Physical Sciences Majors with 3.0 G.P.A., earn $1,000 per month during the academic year. Find out more about the Navy's Engineer officer candidate program, call Navy Management Office.
MASSAGE. "Just say YES" O.K. you’ve been reading our eds for awhile, right? But we realize you’re nervous. Can massage help those aching muscles? Do you know what to ask? SURE! So do your body and mind a favor, and get 25% call Dll Lawrence Message at 841-692-7 nevermind what Nancy savells!!
Myth # 1: There is simply not enough food.
Fact: The world had an abundant food supply.
Enough wheat, rice, and other grains are produced
in the United States, every human being with 3000
calories a day.
Liz Gowdy, spokesperson, Citizens for Human Rights in Laurels, speaks on DISCRIMINA- 6.9 p.m. Alderson Auditorium. Sponsored by the Lawrence Tenants Association
READING FOR COMPREHENSION AND SPEED WORKSHOP Wednesdays, March 30, April 6 & 11; 3:30-5:30 p. m. Materials fee: $15. Register and be by 5:00 p. m. on the 3rd at the Studio.
Discrimination manifests the institutions and
Human Rights Ordinance (5406) of the City of
Make your party the hotest. Rent a hot tub. Call
To-Go To 841-2691.
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
Music and Lighting for any
Occasion. 841-1800
MUSIC********************************** MUSIC********************************** MUSIC**********************************
Redesign Audio - DJ. D.Service - B-track studio.
P. and light, Maximum Audio Wizart. Call
Road 247-1975
5 Academy Award Nominations
Hope and Glory
642 Mass LIBERTY HALL 749 1912
FOR RENT
Apartment room available for summer, pool, great roommates, cheap utilities, 102-month call.
Available immediately — Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities. Call 841-1297.
Available end of May or by June 1, 1882 nice one bedroom apartment, fully equipped kitchen, walk-in closet, very low utilities. Call Pam at 8741-0382.
Available June 1 for Summer Sublease. Spacious RW, cared wash patio, patio, on bus route.
Completely Furnished Studio, 1-3-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-3255, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
Excellent location. 2 bedroom apartment in 4px, carpet, CA equipped kitchen, low utilities, available April 1, $300 at 1341 Ohio Call 842-4242 FANTASTIC ROOM available immediately Hardwood floors, lots of windows and light in the kitchen, hardwood downs, $145 + m² utilizes. Call 841-7747
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, ceil,
fans, free utilities, phone, cable, W/D use. Two blocks from KU $175 - $195. 84-3889. $75 deposit.
Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming house on 1344 Kentucky share kitchens &
bathrooms $20 + deposit $449. 14-283 Leave
Furnished 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Some rooms have private bathrooms. Parking one block from University. No pets.
Furnished room with kitchen & bath facilities.
Mat utilities paid. Off street parking one block
from the door.
Great location, 2 bedroom apartment with sun-port,
CA, equipped kitchen, low utilities,
available April 1. $340 at 1801 Mississippi. Call
842-4242.
KOINONIA COMMUNITY has a few spaces in the Christian Living Center for summer '88 and/or academic year 88-89. Apply immediately at ECM Center, 1294 Oread.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, March 29, 1988
11
Sublease a beautiful apartment in the Oread neighborhood at a seasonable price. $225 on all plus utilities. Occupancy May 1 - August 1 (with option to rent) evening, weekends, or leave message anytime.
Summer Sublasee : Surprise Sunrise Spa; Spacious bedroom, 2’s bath, wash/drater, pool, tennant wall, carpet
Sublease Mastercraft 2 bedroom apt. on campus.
Cash advance only.
Call 842-898 anytime. Call 842-1429 am - 5 pm.
E-mail mastercraft@hawaii.edu
Subleasing two bedroom apt. for June and July.
Sublease to two people and can house and can house up to four. Call Cajun 749-388-7011.
Summer Sublease. Nice 3BR, 2 bath, 1 block from campus. Call Nancy or Cly. 841-6078.
Bedroom spd at West Hills
Close to campus
Available May 15 to August 1. Call 749-5063.
Summer Subset New apartment cheap rent microwave, super nice cell Chry 749-3826
Summer submails needed: 2 for 3 or 3 BDR, 18 for 4 or 6 BDR.
route $155 each, Call Sun or Kex 887-3722.
route $185 each, Call Sun or Kex 887-3722.
ADVANTAGES
Summer Sublase 1 bedroom furnished apartement Hanover Place $33 room. Water included
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.
Now Leasing for Fall
After a tough day, wouldn't you like to relax in the privacy of your own Jacuzzi?
Call Naismith Place Apts.
841-1815
Location
Lifestyle
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills & trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus & area shopping.
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious & comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
Reserve Your Unit Now...For Summer or Fall!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
West Hills Apartments 1013 Emery Rd.
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts.
furn. or unfurn.
1012 Emery Rd.
Now leasing for June or August
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
Newly remodeled one bedroom near campus
May 16 - $800/month, May rent paid
780-275
Nonsmoking female to share 2 bedroom apt for
fall. Close to campus. Call Debbie 849-6931
Bedroom apartment
Close to campus in 10 and
25th floors.
Campus apartment at 1328
Kentuckie 94-9292
One or two bedrooms, apts, low utilities, gas and water paid, display apt, open room 1:00 1:00 - 4:00
Reserve your room for summer or fall at
the library. Call 415-0871 and ask for the
call.
ly Flats Cheap rent. 749-4912 or 843-8409.
Roommate to reside in 2D House. Close to
campus 175/month. Available Now/Summer
and/or Fall - call 843-6212.
SUMMER SUBLET: Affordable, new one-
baited tub with nearby campus,
dishwashing, bid 841-797-91
Sublease Number: Luxorian 2 Br, 2 bath apt;
two or three summer rooms; two or three people Available May through July
15th. Room is fully furnished.
Sublease a room in my 3-1/2 br. 2-bath on the golf course — covered parking -w/pool & clubhouse, townhouse for the summer, and if you like, it stay at the resort -l/travel $1,694 -1896 -Brock. Leave message.
31. May paid 872/mo + usr 941-804-0000 a.m.
32. bedroom, 2 bedroom/2 bath apartment, at Peppertree Park $475 monthly, available now or summer. 749-0794
seed roommate, share 2-bedroom apartments at edwarden, private room; $150/month play in the schoolyard.
EDDINGHAM PLACE
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
2 AFR FOENDABLE PR
- 10 or 12 month
- AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Free basic cable
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
841-5444
EDDINGHAM
PLACE
Professionally managed by
A
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments and
- Garages
- Deals
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri.11-5
SUNDANCE
BRAND NEW!
Sundance II
Coming to you this fall!
- Located on the old
- Located on the old
- Sanctuary site
- Super energy efficient
Call today to reserve
your unit for next fall!
Offered by:
MASTERCRAFT
841-5255 * 841-1212
FOR SALE
73 Crestine Home - 12' 40" x 2 BR. Extra insulation through, newplumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-275-4522 after 5:30 p.m. or inquire 490 North St. #, Lawrence.
WANTED: 2 male roommates, Summer
semester w/ option to renew. Washer/Dryer.
$140.00 a month + t_3 utilities. Call Tony at
749-3967 after 3:00 p.m.
Stereo 5 channel mixer 220), remote TV converter
6" stereo f/cm cassette walkman 4", interested?
*
77 V.W. Rabbit, rats great. New clutch, new C.V.
joints $850 or 16.81 - 941-869 3:30 a.p.
85 Red Hood Spree, Excellent condition, low
mileage, best offer. Call Susan at 941-867
comic books, Playbills, Penthouse, etc.
Camis' is 11 New Hampshire, Open Sat & Sun
LEAVING TOWN Qn Sq. Hbd bed - 225, Hide-a-Bed-Couch, 725, Chest/Drawers 175, Chair-otman table, end chairs 15 - each, barstools 20 - each, 2 color tv's. v41 8288 Scroll. Leave message
For Sale: Stero, complete system CD, ready to hear at $800. soho Call 749-4035 or visit www.stero.com.
ATTENTION ADVERTISING/JOURNALISM
MAJORS Several local media for sale
and publication. Mail resume to:
ADVERTISING/JOURNALISM, 2014,
365 N. Broadway, New York, NY.
******
Cooke machine: in good shape, holds fourteen different types of bottles including longnecks
A complete bedroom, Bed 2, two chests, small table desk, wall and a small color t. buy
Table desk by piece. Price negotiation. #82-2494.
Apple it with Epson printer. $750. Call John at 7852772.
For Sale 1838 Liberty Mobile Home $70,000
For Sale 1926 Liberty Mobile Home $70,000
and (down) Great condition $150,000 FIHR
and (down) Condition $150,000 FIHR
save message at 842.6960
for sale 31" Blancy Dirt Bike 18 speeds 1 week
BLACK 1987 YAMABA RIVA 125 Brand new scooter, Phillips 864-6000.
Commodore Computer for sale C-64 1341 Disk
80/00/0/b.o. Call 811-977-4121
Commodore Computer for sale C-64 1341 Disk
80/00/0/b.o. Call 811-977-4121
fonda Magna 1985 3000 mli. Perf. cond. $2000
(41)-8752. Usa
Marron '70 Vespa Scooter P200E = All metal,
Vespa Lowriles, low miles, run great! Only 69.
Call 1-800-345-2000
mountain Bike for sale. Schwinn Sierra 22 inch frame. Full CRO-Mo frame铝臂 and rims in great condition. Asking $250.00 call 749-3716 ask for Terry.
*MOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE*
*512 E. 9h, 749-4961*
Music equipment for sale: Ross 4-track, $35.00;
Gibson/ Electric phone electric, $195.00;
Yamaha acoustic, $65.00; 842-295 evenings,
weekends, or leave message anytime.
matching couch, lovestay & chair, mattress/box
springtime nightstand & dresser. Price拍卖
Stacy
ONLY (LWV 50 miles) Centurion, 25" Frane, 27"
New B.C. Model Airplane very nice $480 sell
New R.C. Model Airplane very nice $480 sell
Oration Anniversary Acoustic Guitar and (913)
843-7458 Tent Sax. Both Mint Condition (913)
Pair JV25 KW-100 spackers TEW 19W good condition
Pair JV25 KW-100 spackers TEW 19W good condition
Portable chest 11. $Manual typewriter £99
Portable chest 11. $Manual typewriter £99
Rockwell's - Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday.
Quantum's Flick Market, 811 New Hampshire.
SAILBOARD, Vita 720, 6m and 4m sails, 2
PC/XT clone 640K 10 m, foppy PC color monitor DWL QW-190, software $1300 BOB call
Racing Bike, in mint condition, Cannondale SR 600 call Litz 749-1095.
Sailboard - Sailrider SR2, great for learning.
$300. Tim 841-2475.
AUTO SALES
Tandy 1000 computer, 128 K, IBM compatible
Expandible. Color graphics installed. MS-DOS
and software included. All you need is monitor or
or iv. $800, ww43-3510 for 5:30 pm.
Wedding Dress, Hat, Beige size, 123 020 OB0
Contact Lost, Day 864 365 Ext. 412; Night
642 365 Ext. 412
1975 Monte Carlo rebuilt motor and transmission.
Will service must sell. $700 749-3458.
1977 Honda Accord, Runs, needs carburator. Call Hele
z 283-2835. Best offer.
Helen 891-283. Best offer
1979 Yamaha FG Endure 11,800 miles, £750
1979 Harley-Davidson FG 750 OBO, Recent
Call
1800 Ford Mustang. New tires; good condition.
$1500 callable. Notice 842-2404, anytime.
1968 Camerole Black BVM auto overdrive, T-Tops, air P. S.P., bm. am/vm cassette, tilt, perfect grey interior. Owner will sacrifice to $8,000 weekly after 5 pm and weekends 9:31:44-0446.
32 WY Quantum Wagon Power, air, 5-speed. $270 or
Make An Offer** 842-9710
1979 Cavalier, Auto air, pp. bm-fm stereo,
cassette, excellent condition. 24,800 miles 6/60
wattage. Call 842-8993 between 7:10 pm. Ask for Paula.
VW Golf Silver, 4 door air, low miles, 5 speed
red, roof cassette. Michelle, 740/070H.
AUTO repair service on foreign cars at your location. Call 841-862-4950. Ten years experience. Call Alison 841-862-4950.
For Sale 1980 Suzuki motorcycle Runs good.
Nice camper bike. $550 or best offer
LOST-FOUND
Must sell 76 Rabbit. $700 or best offer. Runs well.
782. KABB.
Lost: Somebody out here has my opal ring. Will
last it back. No, I answered. No questions asked
it back it back. Rewar. No answers.
HELP WANTED
ARLINES NOW HRING Flight Attendants,
Airlines Lounge Entrances,
Lourries to $600 Entry level positions.
Salaries to $800 Entry level positions.
Bakery Sales - cleaning Sat, 6 p.m - 1 am, Sun, 6 p.m - 12 am. a $4 hour after payment. 3 weeks paid vacation after one year. Intervies Tues, 1 pm. Bakery Sales - appointment. Apply Mummy Bakery, 794-3234
**AMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps.** Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, watersports, gymnastics, archery, arts and crafts, camping, carpets, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $200 or more **R & B** & MARC Sergei, 1765 Maple, Nild, MN.
RE ON TV 7
Made needed for commercials.
TV casting (1) 108-600-687-001
TVCast.
Data Entry Operators long & short term temporary assignments available. Data entry operators 9:00 am & 5:00 pm - 9:00 am & 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm. If interested, please top by or call Kellery Services 901 Kenley Blvd. Attn: Kellery Services.
Business Manager Applications
Car Cleaning. Part time - full time. Help need
car cleaning. Apply at Lawrence
inch & csh $249.00
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $10,040-$29,250.yr. New
Government Job(s): 867-687-0000. RI-7958 for
current Federal List.
(667) 867-687-0000. RI-7958 for
current Federal List.
Half-time graduate assistant; the Organization and Activities Center serve 5 weeks half-time and 1 week full-time. University Events Committee. Required qualifications: enrollment as KU graduate student.
Mass Street Dell and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse now hiring part-time table service employees to work in a warm, clean environment available. Pays $2.01 per hour plus apply. At 719 Mass above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse. To apply visit www.buffaloobbs.com or Lawrence, must also be instrumentalist, vocalist, and have church experience. 3-8 hours a week.
LIVE IN CHIHUAHUI. We take the time and care match you with the "right" family. All of our families are screened. Is every year and summer positions. Good salary. Must be 14 yr, old, driver license. Call 914-717-4145. Or write: Child Care Decision. Inc. Bus Park Dr. Armnok.
and services; able to work Wednesday afternoon, essential clinical skills. Complete job要求 include application and resume of an Ann Entertainment Company position and resume of an Ann Entertainment Company position. Union, Lawrence, Kansas 60455 Application Deadline: Tuesday, April 12, 2023
HELP WANTED TRAVEL from Texas to Montana on a wheat harvesting crew. Call 913-657-4649
SORT HOTELS, Cruiseline, Airlines &
amusement Parksnea accepting application
for the position. Please submit two pos-
itions. For information & application, write
national Collegiate Recruitment, P.O. Box 80714
Hilton Bay
Out of money from Spring Break? Make quick
plans! Send a message to Lawrence in La-
wrence within 824-338 ask for Jon.
(www.loefer.com)
seedling Tree Planters on weekend need someaky people have name and phone on phone seedling Tree Planters on weekend need someaky people have name and phone on phone
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1988 summer and fall semester business manager. This is a paid position and requires some newspaper experience. Interested persons may pick up applications in 119 StaFFER-Flint Hall, the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT: Perform experiments using biochemical immunological and molecular techniques for the analysis of Biological Requirements. B.A. or B.S. on Biological Sciences. Prefer individual with degree in either Biochemistry, Microbiology, Immunology or Drug Discovery. Req. $10,000 per year + benefits. Application deadline: April 1, 1988. Send letter of application indicating career goals, resume and 3 letters of recommendation to Dr. Dean Stelter, Univ. of Hawaii, Haworth, Lawrence, K. 6946 EOE/AA.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiseline, Airlines &
amusement Parks NOW apply for
award opportunities to serve
pacific regions. For information & application; write national Collegiate Recruitment, P. O. Box 8047.
Business manager applications are due Friday, April 1, 1988 at 5:00 p.m. in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Monday, April 4, 1988.
The Kansan is an equal opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, age, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, or ancestry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Resorts Employment Newsletter - All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif., Nevada/Arizona More, Tennis, Skiff Golf, Vacation Resorts City Meds, 921-645-8270, 62700, So. Lake California 95716 9619-541-7923
SUMMER JOB'S, possibly continue into Fall. Spring is probably on hold. Staff member. tn 18 wk/wk. hrs & / Or PM's $4-$5 per hour. Must train before May 15. Must travel. Transportation. KU students preferred. 842-168
Summer childcare needed for 10-month old girl, approx 4 hours, mornings or afternoons, M.R. same position(s) for schoolboy 88-89. Experience preferred, own car, call 843-1017 except T-R
Summer help wanted. Dock hands, cash register
Lake Perry Yacht & Marina. Call
930-859-5957
Taking applications for dishwasher. Flexible hours. Apply Lawrence Country Club. 845-286-966.
Teaches aid child care program needed 7:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 5 yrs and 2 yr olds and two references required. Applies to Children's Learning Center, 331 Main Street, GOE.
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Stability, dependability, and ability. Send resume to: PO Box 1283, RKS 6900.
Women slowpitch softball pitchers & player,
needed for competitive, established team this
summer. If interested call Karen 842-6222 Ext.
233 daytime, 841-7833 by 5 p.m.
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekends hours available. Some experience with computers preference. Opportunity to learn to use a laptop. Contact Audio-Reader Network, 844-6400
PERSONAL
A. B.C. "Religion is the venereal disease of mankind." - Hent de Mentionler.
A door is a jargon — please let me in. Dancing in the door is not what was unforgettable, let us do it again! Colorado
Blondie, who works at Britches Corner; My, my you’re a sight for sore eyes! How bout some winning, dining, and eventual intertwining? Would you dare to dance and be respond? Here匹ordian Job Seeker
Blue Eyes — I would settle for a gal not quite so normal when Elton John. "I'd like to get it on," he said.
AX Gentlemen — "check it out" D.B? You wouldn't like to know? Dinner's on the top shelf (not the boxes-wine) but we're crazy about them. We've seen weirder in a hot tub. Never fear Carter. Prudential now offers Cliff-protection strapem. Strap em from the door, but a cold one at Jaques Laft (not over the head please!) We'll wangle with you guy any day! We Lauwnuwu you love, the GPh Ladies. and remember Bob Daisy is one of our stars. I'll be calling you. We call you tomorrow!! (Nudge, gwink, nude.)
To the gorgeous 100 lb. brunette I sat beside Wescoe 10:00 A.M. 3:23; thanks for the rewarding, sensual experience we shared together. I'd like to sit down and come or leave. MWF MWF 8:30 John Deer.
Fabulously handsome long-haired males seek attractive well-proportioned females upon which to lavish kisses and affection. Please enclose photo. Tony and Jeff.
Discover recovery, thrust on experience and knowledge, shared through dues. Overcaterers Anomalyum, Moneta Hospital, Memorial Hospital, 325 Main. For confidential information/contact person. Write PO Box 3482
BUS. PERSONAL
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization
D. fine portraits, D. fine portraits,
Swiss Studio 789-1011.
Over $10,000 in cash awards Enter the CERTS
For more information 1-800-323-4CRT5
1-800-323-4CRT5
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential, help/free pregnancy
The Coffin Corner
N E Comfort of 23rd & Iowa
4194
Bloom County t-shirts & books
Role-playing, war games and miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese Comics and more!
RING
SUPERWATER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided.
841-2916
TRUE TO LIGHT portfolio photography. Head shots to composites, Models, actors, dancers, etc.
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
Try it if you like it, be glamorous with a beautiful makeup and hairstyle. The course includes: Glamorized Makeover, Full Posing Assistance, Creative Photography Technique to produce alarming results. 792-706. Mike
$25 Value when presented toward new patient service
Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiroprator, Spinal Exam.
Dr. Johnson
Income Tax forms filed at low fee. Call 841-9699
ask for Roebli.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7799
Autotut of Lawrence offering Professional installed Auto window intt. Optional lifetime national warranty. Call Kw Specialties 942-2966 6 East 7th.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hour, 843-9632
(p.m.)
Job-willing resume, cover letters. 12 years excursion
KUP PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekchorea
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service.
Room 206. 84-4776 Design & Building.
Room 206. 84-4776
I edit term sheets, the dissertations, and retumes. No job too small. Very easy to get. $10,000.
Quality Tying includes accurate spelling, punctuation, and capitalization. Packing/id delivery available. 843-0247
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park ... (913) 481-6887.
Vice Overland Park… (013) 401-6878
943-8211 Confidential help/free bright at
943-8211
THINK SPRING! For your motorcycle needs; visit our new 80th Anniversary Bicycle Cycle店 at our new location, 701 East Broadway, New York, NY 10019.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
TUTORING TUTORING 8.60./98. MATH
Math, N.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
Math, N.S. statistics, 8 years experience call
WORDMISTRY We go beyond typing. Let professionals work fast. Rate high. Work with Carolyn. 814-399-3900
We Know Your Name. Until Wednesday, April 6 House of Usher, Ussr. Mass. 842-3061, will print Graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal size. Small quantities. Call for more information.
VIDEO ELITE We videotake weddings, sporting
results. Call 814-8417 or 814-8430.
**RESERVED**
Writing your own resume is difficult. We can help. Courteous, effective, quick service. One page resume, $12.50. Logic Ideas, Inc. 927½ Mass. Suite 4, 841-1071.
TYPING
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, tissues, misc. and corrective Secting.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac-
crude typing, typeying and wordprocessing,
882-794-3611
i-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbies into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2603, days or evening, AAA TYPING Word processing with letter quality printer. 843-7643
AAA TYPING Word processing, spellcheck, $1,pg, doublespace/pica After 5 p.m. T-F, anytime weekends. 842-1942
L2: Relai Ingleding Typing Service. Term papers,
thesis papers, and typewritten, typed IBM
Electronic Typewriter 842-3246
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
Walter D. Sternberg page East Lawrence. Mrs
Matilda 811-320-6455
THE FAR SIDE
J is T's typing service for all of your typing
dissertations, THESES, LAW PAPERS,
DISSERTATIONS, THESES. LAW PAPERS
DISSERTATIONS, THESES, LAW PAPERS
dummy's Typing & Graphics. One day service
begins.
valuable. 842-3378, before 9 p.m.; please
jona's *Quality Typing* and Word Prodsessing.
`erm papers`, these; dissertations, letters,
letters of correspondence. 842-3378,
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Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA st
849-0111
RESUME SERVICES - professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes a 20-page letterhead, letterhead business cards, and typewriting and printing services for up to 6 hours, and at $t_4 the cost of Kino's Call 842-3877.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 814-6254.
WANTED
THE WORKDOCTORS. Who pay for typing when the WORKDOCTORS resume, law review. Since 1983, 843-3147.
2 roommates for downstown apt. 165/month incl.
749-415, Individual contracts.
Lake of the Ozarks summer employment. The Barge Floating Restaurant is accepting applications for waiters and wattresses, cooks, 12-hour room service, cleaning and salaries - great working conditions. Some food furnishings. Apply eat. housing is still available. Enroll in skiing, skiing while earning back to school money. For interview call Frank Bachelor at (314) 365-7588. Roommate wanted to share 2/4 apartment.
Roommate wanted to share 2bff apartment
848-500-3684 Center. Next Fall. Non-smoke
848-500-3684
French & Spanish interpreters wanted for simultaneous translation in a grain storage & market course to join班 22.18.2018. Translation experience desired, must have college degree or be fluent in French. Call (913) 532-6141 for more information. Application deadline April 4. 2018. KSU equal opportunity
RUSH tickets wanted -- 2 lower level or balcony next to stage. Call Steve 841-5900.
Bv GARY LARSON
Laws
CLINIC
PSYCHO
© 1988 Universal Press Syndicate 3-29
Amidst congratulatory applause,
Cindy leaves the group.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Tuesday, March 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
DISCOVERY OF INDIA
Story of Nehru
Steve Ballew, Lawrence resident, views the photographic exhibition of the Life and Work of Jawaharlal Nehru in the Kansas Union. Nehru was the first prime minister of India from its independence in 1947 until his death in 1964. The exhibit, which was on temporary loan from the University of Missouri at Kansas City, was on display in the Union during the weekend and Monday. The exhibit is on a national tour sponsored by Air India.
Election posters don't stay up long
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Student Senate elections are still more than two weeks away, but poster wars are going strong.
Leon Baker, student body president, said that posters disappeared every year during elections and that the coalitions typically accused each other. He called it irresponsible and recommended to the coalitions not to put up all their posters too early.
"All you can do is hope your posters are a reminder of your campaign and not the main element," Krakow said.
Mark Flannagan, presidential candidate with the Focus coalition, said his coalition had put up about 1,000 posters so far. He said he was surer that he found even one still hanging.
"I think about every poster we had on campus was torn down," Flannagan said.
Frank Partny, presidential candidate of the Integrity coalition, said that if his coalition put its remaining posters up, it would have none left for the elections at the rate they were coming down.
“It's incredibly ironic when one of our posters gets torn down and one from another coalition replaces it,”
Partnoy said, who added that the coalition had put up about 700 posters so far. "You would think after a poster is put up, it would stay up for two or three hours.
Brook Menees, presidential candidate of the Top Priority coalition, said that not only had his coalition's posters been disappearing but also that he had found them ripped in half and wadded up. Menees said that his coalition had put up about 1,000 posters.
"All my posters are disappearing," he said. "We kind of expected it, but not this bad.
Spencer
Continued from p. 1
known of Curll's "involuntary authors" is Jonathan Swift.
The department's Bond Periodicals and Newspaper Collection covers the 17th and 18th century development of the English periodical press and contains more than 1,100 items. Newspapers and periodicals give the researcher a picture of the daily life of a time period. One fourth of this collection is made up of essays written by Adison and Richard Steele's famous essay papers, the Spectator and the Tattler.
original editions of Cervantes" "Don Quixote," along with original editions of books by Virgil; James Joyce; Alfred Lord Tennyson; William Butler Yeats; D. H. Lawrence (including signed copies of the first edition of "Lady Chatterley's Eye"); and works of H. L. Mencen.
Clement said one of the most heavily used collections was the Science Fiction Collection. It contains both books and periodicals and is the source of the science fiction exhibit on display in the third floor lobby of the library.
"Our Science Fiction Collection is one of the top three in the country." Clement said. "There is great potential there for curricular applications and equally great scope for research."
Mason said, "There was considerable opposition to the science fiction collection because in the past, it was not considered respectable literature. Watson never collected any in those days, and I think they thought we were a little batty for wanting to. I see science fiction as our piece of popular literature that we are laying down for the future."
Both Mason and Clement stressed the need to maintain and improve collection facilities.
"This is a bad time for libraries." Mason said. "Nobody has any money
Josserand's responsibility is to identify the ones that will affect the University community. This session, Josserand will track bills dealing with the Margin of Excellence, classified employees, retirement, health care, medical malpractice and nursing salaries.
Josserand
Continued from p. 1
Josserand spends most of his work week in Topeka, talking to legislators and explaining the University's viewpoint on issues.
He said that a lot of people thought that higher education owned the keys to success.
"I've spent a lot of time explaining that the Margin of Excellence is not an outlandish request," he said.
Josserand not new to $ \mathbf{K}^{1 1} $
The walls of Josserand's office are almost bare and might mislead visitors into believing that he is new to KU.
Although Josserand began his professional association with KU only last October, his familiarity with the university goes back to his college years.
Josserand graduated from KU in 1976 with a bachelor's degree in business administration and a concentration in political science. He received a law degree in 1979. But his experience at KU was more than books and classes.
He was involved in Student Senate, the Union Memorial Corporation and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
"He was highly effective in student engagement and student affairs." Burger's notes.
Frank Burge, former director of the Kansas Union and the person for whom the Burge Union is named, remembers Josserand as an outstanding young man and an inspirational leader.
That success had been accomplished in an environment dramatically different from the one he grew up in. For Josserand, KU was a different world, seven hours removed from his home of Johnson City. He sees himself as a small-town kid from western Kansas.
"There are more people in McColum Hall than there are in my whole county," he said.
Back Jrier, former Kansas secretary of state, first knew Josserand when Josserand was in law school and working for him part-time.
of state's office in Topeka immediately after college. He spent eight years there, serving as the deputy assistant, assistant and special assistant secretary of state for a $2.1 million agency.
The contrast between Lawrence and Johnson City was so great that he almost decided to seek a degree elsewhere.
"A lot of my high school instructors encouraged me to go to small schools or go east," he said.
Josserdand led the drive to acquire the first computers for the secretary of state's office at a lower price than had been offered. Josserdand was also directly responsible for lobbying on behalf of the office.
The success that the small-town kid enjoyed at KU stayed with him when he landed a job in the secretary
But while Josserand was away from KU, he kept abreast of campus events. And when the chance to work for the University came up, he held the job.
As the chamber's registered lobbyist, Josserand worked last September on projects that included the special legislative session on highways.
Josserman left the secretary of state's office in 1986 to become vice president of government relations at Alohaita Area Chamber of Commerce.
After college
"Anybody who knows me knows how much I love the University of Kansas," he said.
A friend encouraged him to apply for the position, and Josserand did. When he got the job, one of his friends invited him to dinner, and he's got an excuse to a talk about KU.
Bibb, who works with Josserand on KU's legislative team, was a member of the selection committee that chose him. Josserand's personality, Bibb said, was one of the factors that clinched the job for him.
Josserand became KU's governmental affairs specialist last October. He was chosen out of a pool of more than 90 applicants.
The department has numerous
"Jon has the kind of acquaintance with legislators and political leaders that gives him a head start against anyone else," he said.
Legislators sense Joosander's feel for politics. and they admire him for that.
"He knows people, and he knows how this place works," said Sien. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, who was in law school with Josserand.
Rein, another member of the KU legislative team, talks with Josserand on a daily basis. Josserand, he said, plays the role of the eyes and ears in the Legislature.
Rein thinks there was another reason for Josserand's selection.
"He had blue blood in his veins," Rein said, referring to KU's colors and Josserand's love for KU.
Life in politics
Josserand's fascination for the governmental process seems to be a product of his upbringing.
His grandmother was involved in politics all her life, and both his grandfather and great-grandfather served in the State Legislature.
Josserand's rural Kansas heritage also contributed to his political leaning.
"People from less urban areas sometimes are more interested in the political process," he said.
Because agriculture is so dominant in Western Kansas, people spend a lot of time in the political process trying to improve it, he said.
Josserand is so dedicated to his professional interests that they enter into hi personal life.
He spends his free time, some evenings and Sunday mornings, reading newspapers, any newspaper he can get his hands on.
One of his preoccupations, in fact, is the public's lack of interest in other cities. Kansas, he said, is fortunate to have a more diversified economy than other states.
"Unless you read newspapers, you don't know what's going on locally in other markets," he said.
"University people complain about how poor things are. I tell you what, if you had been in Oklahoma or Texas in the last two years, the perceptions would be very different," he said.
When Josserand was working in the secretary of state's office, Brier said, he took home all the technical manuals on the office computers to read one weekend.
Josserman's curiosity goes further than his obvious affinity for politics.
One interest of Josserand's that never seems to fade is the University of Kansas.
"Out of all the political and governmental experience, he has never wavered in his love for the University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence," Brier said.
Josserand doesn't conceal the pride he has for KU.
He said that he considered himself fortunate to be able to work for KU. For him, that is a chance to pay back his friends and former professors.
Yet, the satisfaction that Josser- and receives from his job stems from something deeper.
"Hey, if I'm successful, I've bene fitted a hell of an institution."
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Monthly meeting Wednesday March 30,1988 7 p.m. in Learned Hall All hands and interested persons are welcome. Tune in the world with us.
COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now (starting March 28)
All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by visiting the concessions stand at gates 22 and 23 at the north end of Memorial Stadium between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday until Friday, April 29, or by mailing the order form from the graduation mailing. To ensure proper fit, participants are encouraged to order caps, gowns, and/or hoods at Memorial Stadium.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Wednesday March 30.1988
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.123 (USPS 650-640)
Dole quits presidential race
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole ended his campaign for president yesterday, saying he was "bloodied but unbowed" by the series of bruising primary losses that finished his candidacy.
Dole withdrew before a supportive audience of Senate and House colleagues and offered congratulations to the all但一antoned GOP nominees.
Dole had signaled for days that he was ready to how to the inevitable.
"My friends know that I am a fighter; I don't like to lose," the Kansas senator said. "I have been beaten before and no doubt will be again. But I have never been defeated and never will be."
"One thing you learn how to do pretty well in our business is to count," he said in his withdrawal announcement. "You come to trust your instincts to tell you when it's time to say my heart, I know the time is now."
"So I return to the Senate as the Republican leader, . . . ready to do all I can to elect Republicans in November and doing all I can for our nominee, George Bush."
Bush, in Wisconsin, said he had telephoned Dole to thank him for a "very generous statement." He added, "It been a hard-fought campaign, and I respect the tenacity of Bob Dole."
Pat Robertson, in a statement
patred from his headquarters in
Chicago, criticized the decision.
State GOP will back nominee
Bv Iill less
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden and state Republican party chairman Fred Logan Jr. said yesterday that they were disappointed with Bob Dole's withdrawal from the presidential race but that the state party would support whoever was nominated.
The two spoke at a news conference at the state GOP headquarters here after Dole's announcement of his withdrawal.
"While today's news is disappoiwe, we point the same pride in Senator Dole as we did the morning of November 9, when we gathered in Russell," Hayden said.
Dole kicked off his campaign in Russell, his hometown.
first ballot as a show of support
Logan said Kansas delegates to the Republican National Convention in August in New Orleans would cast a vote for Dole on the
He said he had told all but one of the 34 delegates to the Republican National Convention of the party's plan.
By the Republican by-laws, the delegates now are technically uncommitted. Logan said.
But both Hayden and Logan said that if Vice President George Bush were the nominee at the national election, he would be a Republican. Republicans would govern him.
Ken Martinez, chairman of the Douglas County Republican central committee, said he thought the vice president was the best choice now that Dole had withdrawn.
magnificent competitor." The former television evangelist, with almost no delegate support, conceded that it seems obvious" that that he nominee but said anew that he wouldn't withdraw from the GOP contest.
"His experience is incredible," he said. "I think he'd make a great president."
Hayden said that the Dole campaign had not had strategic problems but that a reported lack of organization might have
accounted for the senator's difficulties.
Robert McCurdy, chairman in the Russell chamber of commerce and an avid Dole supporter, said Mr. McCurdy's Russell were disbanded by the news.
But he said the news was not a surprise.
"We may not be the most sophisticated politically, but we can read the newspaper." McCurdy said.
He also said he would support whoever the Republican nominee was
McCurdy had traveled with the Dole campaign selling souvenirs supporting the senator. He said he had noticed a lack of organization when he traveled to four towns where he reported that to the campaign problems.
Logan said that although the campaign was over, it had strengthened the Republican party in Kapsas.
White House spokesman Marlin
Dole made his exit before an audience jammed into the Senate Caucus Room, a historic room where John F. Kennedy was installed as president, bid and the site of the Senate Watergate hearings 15 years ago and the
ira-ncontra hearings a year ago.
Fitzwater said that President Reagan had not changed his policy of neutrality, despite Dole's action.
Surveying the crowd and hearing an effusive introduction by Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., Dole began by saying, "Maybe I ought to change
Student health fees may be raised $12
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Students could end up paying $12 more a semester for health care under a request from Watkins Hospital to raise the student health fee.
The Student Senate Finance Committee last night unanimously approved the request, which will go before the full Senate April 6.
Hospital officials said the fee increase, the first one in five years, was necessary to maintain current standards of treatment.
"We feel we're doing quality work and we would like to continue that," said James Boyle, assistant director of the hospital. "We want to make students feel good and proud of the health service."
Boyle said the fee increase also was necessary to dispel rumors about confidentiality problems arising from students who work in the health center.
Stephanie Quincy, student body president, said she had received reports that some students who worked in the Watkins admissions office, clinic, and lab of lice had made contact with that they had access to student medical records. Hospital officials could not confirm these reports.
The increase, which would raise the health fee from $68 to $68, would go to increase salaries of Watkins employees by about seven percent. It
also would add three medical staff positions and increase the hospital's insurance coverage.
In addition, seven full-time employees would replace 22 students who worked in sensitive record areas. The number of students working in these areas fluctuates each semester.
Ray Walters, associate director of the hospital, said he knew of no problems with breaches of confidentiality, but he said that some students' perception of the hospital had changed and that denying students access to records could improve the hospital's image.
"In order to meet the needs of the students, I think it is necessary we do that." Walters said. "We had no instances where there was a compromise of confidentiality, but we were concerned, too."
As long as the health service informed students of personnel changes, the health-fee increase could be justified, said John Penny, Finance committee member. He also said that keeping students from handling records was necessary.
Committee examines need for honor code in School of Business
"I was for this to clear up all the rumors go around," Penny said. "With a little more professionalism in staff, you would get rid of all that."
The Board of Regents has final approval of the proposed fee increase and will consider it at its next meeting.
Kansan staff writer
By Dayana Yochim Kansan staff writer
The path to academic success for some of Larry Sherr's students is not inspiration or perspiration.
"On three out of four surveys, over half said they had cheated on an exam at KU," he said. "One on one, over one third said they had."
For the past few years Sherr, a professor of business, has distributed the Anonymous Random Response Survey to find out if his students have ever cheated on an exam at the University of Kansas.
Sherr said those results were not unusual when he compared them with the results of similar surveys at other universities.
"The problem we have here, I
them also a national problem."
Sherry said.
To deal with the problem of cheating, the School of Business is trying to determine if it needs to establish a student honor code.
The only KU school with a student honor code is the School of Law.
An honor code is a set of guidelines and rules that establish the standards of student conduct. The code is given to students, but it also give a moral obligation not to break it.
David Shulenberger, associate dean of business, said that a student
honor code was one way to deal with academic misconduct.
"I don't believe cheating is any worse in the business school than in any other school on campus," Shulenberger said. "Something needs to be done about academic misconduct at this University in general."
Sulenberger, Sherr and Kenneth Cogger, professor of business, organized the Honor Code Committee, with business school associations.
Sue Ann Hong, committee member and New Buffalo, Mich., senior, said the committee was still trying to find other students wanted an honor code.
"This is not going to happen overnight," Hong said. "We can't just impose an honor code on students. We are going to ask them what they think the student's and teacher's obligations are."
Hong said that some of her peers were skeptical about the establishment of an honor code but that she thought it would be valuable.
The Honor Code Committee will conduct a meeting to discuss the development of the code. The meeting is open to all business students.
"A degree is much more valuable if you know you got it honestly," Hong said.
The meeting is at 7 p.m. April 7 in 427 Summerfield.
AMERICAN BOY SCOUTS AMERICA
Snake tales
Joseph T. Collins, a zoologist with the KU Museum of Natural History and an author and editor, shows a bullsnake to the Hillcrest Elementary School Cub Cup pack no. 3053. Collins told the scouts
Forrest MacDonald/KANSAN
last night that snakes weren't as bad as people made them out to be and that they served useful purposes. He also dispelled popular ideas about treating a snake bite.
Mountain lures student into ordeal
By Ric Brack
Kansan staff writer
"At 4 o'clock Sunday morning, I,
heard a tent zipper, and I thought,
a tent, that means warmth," he
said. "Then, I heard myself saying,
I've been lost in the mount,
and I'm not sure where to sit
in your tent where it's warm."
After sleeping in a warm place for the first time in more than 90 hours, Kun, Topeka sophomore, was finally on his way home.
After spending four days and nights lost in Arizona's Rincon mountains last week, David Kun heard a sound that told him his ordeal was ending.
Kun said it was about 9 a.m. when he left their car, which was parked in a dry river bed, to explore and climb a mountain.
"I call it a mountain, but out there, they call it a hill," he said. He found a stream while he was
climbing, and because of the heat, he decided to strip down to cut-off shorts to take a swim. Tucson authorities said the area had been having a record heat wave and temperatures had reached about 100 degrees during the day.
Kun came back down the mountain to where his T-shirt and boots were, but the heat forced him to find a boulder large enough to shade him from the sun, he said. Kun stayed there for about four hours, until the sun started going down.
After the swim, he continued climbing, clad only in the shorts and without shoes. he said.
Kun reached the top of the mountain by about noon, he said, and by then, his back was starting to be badly sunburned. He later learned that he had suffered third-degree burns.
"I went back to where I parked the car in a dry river bed, but I was in the wrong river bed," Kun said. After he realized he was lost, Kun began retracing his steps.
"When the night crept up on me,
I couldn't distinguish one mountain from the other," he said.
"That's when I lost my bearings." For the next four days, Kun lived on nothing more than water from mountain streams and a handful of chocolate chai cookies.
Sgt. Jim Kermse of the Pima County, Ariz., sheriff's office, said Kun hiked at least 30 miles over the mountains while he was lost.
Kermse, who investigated the incident, said Hurst told him she was in voice contact with Kun for much of the first morning. When Kun didn't return for lunch, she drove to a ranch and telephoned for help.
Kermse said that about 70 people spent four days searching for Kun but that their search area was about 10 miles southwest of the campground where Kun reappeared.
The Arizona Department of Public Safety, the Arizona National Guard, the Southern Arizona Rescue Association, an Air Force helcopter and a mounted posse made up of local ranchers all participated in the search effort, Kermsse said. Kun said he heard that kids on mountain bikes also participated.
Kun returned to Lawrence last night after being released from St. Mary's hospital in Tucson yesterday morning.
He had been hospitalized for observation late Sunday, St. Mary's hospital officials said. He was sunburned over most of his body, was dehydrated, had lost 15 pounds to muscle deterioration and was bruised and marked by puncture wounds from cactus thorns.
Kun said that overnight temperatures in the mountains were in the upper 20s.
Kun said he stopped walking only for 15-to-20-minute sleep breaks.
"It was too cold to sleep at night, and during the day, I wanted to get back so bad that I just kept walking," he said.
"I was searching frantically for any hole, or anything, that I could get inside of to stay warm," he said. At one point, he climbed into a cave and pulled himself completely inside his T-shirt in an attempt to stay warm.
Military intervention possible in Panama, Reagan official hints
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration expressed growing impatience with the regime of Panamanian strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega yesterday and hinted that U.S. military intervention was being considered to deal with the rapidly deteriorating situation there.
The Associated Press
President Reagan discussed with top advisers yesterday various options for dealing with the changed situation in Panama. Afterward, a White House official said no action was imminent.
"There are limits to our patience," presidential spokesman Martin Fitzwater said after a violent crackdown by Panama's military against opposition forces and the detention of several U.S. journalists.
"It has always been a principle that we will protect American citizens as best we can and, while we have said that we don't plan to go in militarily, it's also important to note that there are limits," he said.
According to an administration official who demanded anonymity, the meeting adjourned without any decisions being made on future action.
Several proposals for increasing pressure on Noriega were discussed but use of U.S. military force was not among them, the official said.
During the past month, administration actions have effectively cut off the flow of dollars into Panama, leaving the country near insolvency. Reagan has called on Noriega to step down.
On Monday, thousands of anti-government demonstrators were routed by government forces with the help of guards, tear gas and water cannon.
Later, security agents forced their way at gunpoint into the offices of four U.S. networks at a local hotel and confiscated tapes of the demonstration. Eight foreign journalists, including Americans, were detained for several hours before being released.
2
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Mostly sunny
Mostly sunny skies today with a high near 60. Increasing cloudiness overnight with a low near 40.
HIGH: 57°
LOW: 40°
KEY
Rain T-Storms Snow Flurries Ice
REGIONAL
North Platte
50/30
Partly cloudy
Omaha
53/32
Sunny
Goodland
59/34
Sunny
Haye
58/37
Sunny
Salina
56/40
Sunny
Topeka
57/40
Sunny
Kansas City
58/40
Sunny
Columbia
60/41
Showers
St. Louis
61/41
Partly cloudy
Dodge City
59/41
Sunny
Wichita
61/43
Sunny
Chanute
58/44
Sunny
Springfield
63/43
Sunny
Forecast by Alice V. Mane
Temperatures are today's
high and tonight's low.
5-DAY
THU
Showers
53 / 37
HIGH LOW
FRI
Showers
55 / 41
SAT
Partly cloudy
56 / 39
SUN
Partly cloudy
52 / 36
MON
Partly cloudy
58 / 40
Car tires valued at $500 were slashed Monday in the parking lot of a business at Second and Locust streets, Lawrence police reported.
A Palestinian cultural exhibit is scheduled for 9 a.m. today in the West Gallery of the Kansas Union.
Senior Gallery of the Kansas Union.
A Retirees Club coffee is scheduled for 10 a.m. in the Adam Lounge of the Adams Alumni Center.
Police Reports
■ The door of a city-owned vehicle received $170 damage sometime during the weekend while parked in the 1900 block of East 19th Street, Lawrence police reported.
LAWRENCE Twenty-five rose bushes valued together at $210 were taken Sunday or Monday from a business at 15th and New York streets, Lawrence police reported.
A computer and software valued together at $15,000 were taken March 13 from a business in the 900 block of Iowa Street. Lawrence police
A backpack and contents valued at $372 were taken Monday from a car in the 1700 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police reported.
A car windshield valued at $200 was broken Monday in the 1100 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ Office equipment, cash and stamps valued together at $1,165 were taken Sunday or Monday from a business in the 800 block of Lynn Street, Lawrence police reported. The business sustained $100 damage.
A car radio antenna valued at $200 was broken Sunday on campus, KU police reported.
■ A University Forum titled "The Human Brain" with Ralph Adams, professor of chemistry, is scheduled for 11:40 a.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
As part of the international business symposium series, Gene Ellis, professor of economics at the University of Denver, will be speaking about
On Campus
"Ivesting in Africa: Still Crazy After All These Years?" at noon today in the Southeast Conference Room of the Burge Union.
■ the second annual arthritis swim-a-thon, sponsored by Colonial Manor of Lawrence, is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today at Robinson Center. For more information, call Karen Simon at 842-7282.
An Environs meeting is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. today in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union.
A Students and Community Against Oppression and Racism
organizational meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Burge Union lobby.
A Campus Christians meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room of the Burge Union.
A music honor recital is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
- An organizational meeting of the KU chapter of National Organization for Women is scheduled for 7 p.m. today in the East Gallery of the Kansas Union.
Briefs
WORKER BEATEN: A City of Lawrence sanitation worker was listed in fair condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital yesterday after being beaten Monday evening by two men north of Lawrence.
According to the Douglas County Sheriff's office, the man, Robert I. Goins, 37, said he received a telephone call at work Monday afternoon from a man he didn't
know. The man told Goin to meet him at a site north of Lawrence on County Highway 1675 East.
He said that when he arrived, two men pulled him from his car and beat him up.
He was admitted to Lawrence Memorial Hospital at 8 p.m. Monday. He suffered injuries to his abdomen. The sheriff's office is investigating the incident.
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April 4-9 Womens week
Monday, April 4, 7:00 p.m.-Dr. Carol Konek from Wichita State University Program:"The Feminist Revolution: Reflections on the International Women's Decade"
Tuesday, April 5, 7:00 p.m.--Panel: "Sexism in the 80's," Dr. Dennis Dailey moderator
Wednesday, April 6, 7:00 p.m..-Panel: "Superwoman Syndrome," Dr. Barbara Ballard moderator
Q
Thursday, April 7, 7:00 p.m.. Sandy Dorrell from Emporia State University, Program:"History of Fashion"
Saturday, April Fashion Scot's LTD models i Mom's
Saturday, April 9, 11:30 a.m. Fashion Show sponsored by Scot's LTD. with GSP-Corbin models in conjunction with Mom's Weekend
*All programs will be held in the GSP lobby.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 30, 1988
Campus/Area
3
KU Space Program takes off Students' experiments to go up on shuttle flight
By Julie Adam
Kansan staff writer
As early as next year, KU engineering students could be sowing their seeds in space.
KU Space Program plans to send up five experiments on one of the first four flights of the next NASA space shuttle. One of those experiments includes sending seeds into space.
The first space shuttle since the Challenger explosion is scheduled to launch Aug. 4 with a crew of five. The KU group hopes to finish its projects by the end of the year to go up on the fourth shuttle launch, which could be as early as next spring, said Paul Fieseler, Lenexa senior and the organization's president.
Mahayar Rahbairad, Olathe junior and vice president of the group, said
KII
KU Space Program plans to send five experiments on one of the next four space shuttle flights.
that the engineers had been working on the projects for about two years. The group has a guaranteed space on the shuttle. The guaranteeed space cost $3,000.
In February, Student Senate allocated $3,733 to the group to pay the final installments on the capsule and to buy materials needed to construct and finish the projects.
Fieseler said that one of the experiments dealt with sending cotton, wheat and guayule seeds in space to see how they would mutate or change
upon being exposed to radiation.
Rahbarrad said guayule, a desert plant, was a source of rubber and petroleum. Cotton would be examined because of its value in producing fiber for clothing, and wheat would be examined because of its food value.
"The reason we are sending those seeds up is that we believe they will have applications for space stations in the future," Fieseler said.
Another experiment is called vapor deposition. The purpose of the experiment would be to see how different metal-coated plastics would withstand being exposed to space.
Rahbarrad said, "Plastics don't last in space due to radiation, so what we do is try to coat them with metals to make them stronger and more durable."
David Dibble, a Lakeland, Fla., senior who is working on the vapor deposition experiment, said that the experiment would also determine the possibility of building space stations in space, rather than building them on earth and sending them to space.
Rahbarrad said that all of the projects were self-contained, which means they would work by them without interaction from the shuttle crew.
Rahbarrad said anyone could buy space on the shuttle, but Fiesler said he thought that the University of Kansas was the only university in the Midwest to participate.
Rahbarrad said the engineers would write reports on the outcome of the experiments and send them to NASA to evaluate and keep in its files.
Trauma unit helps head injuries
By James Buckman
Kansan staff writer
KANSAS CITY, KAN. — A special unit at the University of Kansas Medical Center might give victims of severe head injuries a better chance of recovery than ever before.
George Varghese, a physician at the Med Center, is the head of a neuro-trauma unit at the Med Center that has taken normal rehabilitation beyond past methods.
The unit works primarily with car-capident victims with severe head injuries but also has patients who have had gunshot wounds or severe blows to the head.
"Ten years ago, many of these patients probably never reached rehabilitation," Varghese said. "We didn't know what we could offer those patients. They either stayed in a coma or went to a nursing home.
"We feel that we can offer these patients something."
patients. One of the differences from many other rehabilitation services is that the Med Center unit begins working with a patient sooner than typically had been done in the past.
"KU is very unique in that we get involved in rehabilitation right from the intensive care phase," Varghese said. "Most places wait until the patient is out of ICU. Our neurosurgeons feel that rehabilitation begins soon after injury."
PETER AND HELEN
Each member of the neuro-traumat unit has a special interest in head injuries. The team includes three physical therapists, two occupational therapists, two nurses, a neuropsychologist and a rehabilitation psychologist.
"In the past, the patient could be treated by any physical therapist or any occupational therapist," he said. "When you have a special interest, it is likely they are going to be more proficient in the treatment."
"Rehabilitation is time-consuming, and burnout is high. But if you have selected people of special interest, they are likely to do more, research more and also learn more. And they always work together, always as a team."
Sonja Pittrich, a physical therapist for the team, said the team concept made the process more focused. "All we did was play for the game."
"We are all shooting for the same goal," she said.
She said part of the rehabilitation involved the patient's family.
Sonja Pittrich, physical therapist at the University of Kansas Medical Center, helps Eliot Brown, a 13 year-old head trauma patient, with some shoulder-strengthening exercises.
... the patient is in a comatose state, we start instructing the family," she said. "They help by bringing in items that are familiar to the patient like pictures, or even just their familiar voices.
Ruth Jacobson/KANSAN
familiar voice before he will respond to one of us."
Varghese said that stimulating the patient in the comatose state was an attempt to awaken undamaged brain
"A patient will often respond to a
cells and get them functioning upon
The undamaged cells might be able to teach dormant or unused brain cells to take over functions lost in the accident.
Methods of stimulation might involve almost anything, he said.
"We have even taped the barking of a pet dog and played it in the room," he said.
Basketball team honored by city
Bv Christine Martin
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night awarded a basketball signed by the commissioners and a special proclamation to the Kansas men's basketball team for making it to the Final Four.
Commissioner Bob Schumm gave Kansas forward Chris Piper the basketball on behalf of the commissioners.
Mayor Mike Amyx congratulated Piper and wished the team luck for its game Saturday against Duke University.
I unintel I've known Chris since he was about my height," Amyx said. "The team strives for excellence in class, on the basketball court and in the community."
Brown said next week's activities would include a panel discussion on hunger. Commissioner Schumm and KU student body president Jason Krakow are among those on the panel. The group also plans a balloon launch, a benefit concert and a cleanup in
The commission also proclaimed April 4-9 "KU's War on Hunger Week." Steve Brown, president of KU Students Against Hunger, said the proclamation helped to make people aware of hunger in Lawrence and around the world.
Lawrence to raise money to fight hunger.
In other action, Bruce Beale, director of the Douglas County-City Committee on Alcohol Abuse, presented a report from the Mayor's Study Committee on drug abuse.
In the report, the committee recommended that the city endorse activities by civic groups, schools and the business community in Lawrence to fight drug abuse. Also, it recommended that the city endorse a youth treatment program that will be started as soon as it receives financing from the state.
The committee was formed in January 1887, and it reports annually to the City Commission.
Beale said that about 570 elementary and secondary students in Lawrence were involved in Project Star, a program aimed at fighting drug abuse. Two elementary schools also have formed "Just Say No" clubs.
Commissioner Sandra Praeger, who was mayor when the committee was formed, said the best way to approach the problem of drug abuse was to have a community working together.
Departments plan how to spend funds
Kansan staff writer
By Brenda Finnell
From planning for a groundwater studies program to deciding what new research equipment might be bought, officials in several University programs are considering possible uses of mission-related enhancements money.
The University of Kansas has targeted gerontology, geohydrology, pharmacology and toxicology, and biological sciences as areas to strengthen if the Legislature approves a Regents budget that includes money to enhance campus programs.
The Regents Margin of Excellence budget plan would allot $4.5 million to mission-related enhancements at the six Regents institutions. KU would receive about $1.9 million for fiscal 1899.
An additional $4.4 million would go to enhancements at the other Regents institutions such as the University of Kansas Medical Center, the Kansas State University Veterinary Medical Center and Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
The state House of Representatives passed a Regents budget version earlier this month that did not include mission-related enhancements. Last week, the Senate Ways and Means Committee approved complete funding of those enhancements.
The bill is expected to reach the Senate floor sometime after April 4. If the full Senate passes the budget with the enhancements, the bill would go to a Senate-House conference committee before it returns to the House floor.
Although department officials don't know how much, if any, money to expect, they have outlined ways they might spend it.
The geology department would use
the money to establish a groundwater studies specialty within existing degree programs.
Tony Walton, chairman of geology, said Kansas gets about 85 percent of its water from groundwater sources, a higher proportion than any other state.
Inadequate water supply is a problem that many states face, Walton said. A groundwater studies program would help increase the number of people who are able to work in this field.
"It is an area that is a great economic development need of the state." Walton said.
Studies in geohydrology would deal with the origins of groundwater, its motion, chemical composition and optimum use.
Elias Michaelis, who will become chairman of pharmacology and toxicology July 1, said he was pleased his department might receive money through mission-related enhancements.
Michaelis, professor of human development and biochemistry, has outlined a five-year plan for the department that includes ways such money might be spent.
Money could be used for research facilities, new faculty, research personnel and research equipment.
Future research might include investigations in cellular and molecular biology and how these areas interact with pharmacology
James Crockett, director of the gerontology center, said money might go to new programs that will be developed when the gerontology center merges with the Bureau of Child Research. The two programs will form the Institute for Lifespan Studies, which will be located in a building planned for a site east of Haworth Hall.
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4
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Oral Roberts misled students with his scholarship promises
More than a year ago, Oral Roberts ascended to his Prayer Tower and said that he needed to raise $8 million by last March 31 or God would "call him home." He said that God had commanded him to turn the Oral Roberts University medical school into a missionary research program and that he needed the money to supply full scholarships to medical students.
But it's now apparent that Roberts grossly misled ORU medical students. He got his money and was saved from death, but less than a year later, the $8 million is gone.
As a result, students in the ORU medical school have been told that they might each have to pay bills of up to $71,000 by the time they graduate. And if they transfer to try to avoid some of their debt, they will have to repay the scholarship funds they have already received plus 18 percent interest, a total of $26,550.
The school's application material refers to the medical school sequence as a four-year program. Oral Roberts' publication, Abundant Life, said last spring that the fund-raising effort had full scholarships as its goal. Roberts wrote in a column titled "God's Mandate to Me" that the money would "give full scholarships to each of our young physicians in training, including their room and board."
Roberts implied that medical students at ORU would be able to use the $8 million he raised to cover their school expenses for four years.
Calls to ORU on the subject result in an ambiguous prepared statement from the office of Larry D. Edwards, physician, who is vice president for health affairs and dean of the ORU school of medicine. The statement is filled with religious references and pious statements, but it fails to address the question of where the $8 million has gone.
The official statement says that the ORU school of medicine is "increasing its methodology for medical missions", whatever that means. The statement also defends the university by saying ORU is concentrating on supplying medical missionaries to needy communities within the United States.
It was bad enough for Roberts to say that God blackmailed him into raising $8 million, but it's worse that he misled medical school students. Those students had a goal of helping people in Third World countries, and Roberts' tactics may now prevent them from doing so.
It's sad that the 117 students now in the scholarship program had to learn so harshly that Oral Roberts' words definitely are not gospel.
Alan Plaver for the editorial board
Fighting teen sex is expensive
President Reagan has learned that not only is it difficult to persuade teen-agers to abstain from premarital sex, it's also expensive.
Since 1981, the Reagan administration has poured more than $70 million into religious organizations that promote chastity among teens.
Today, the Supreme Court will hear the case to determine whether this money is a violation of the constitutional separation of church and state. The justices should reach a conclusion some time before their July 3 summer break.
The court decision could be intriguing, but what's really interesting is the amount of money the government spent promoting a solution that in itself simply isn't enough.
These days, $70 million is a drop in the federal bucket, but a person could buy a lot of things with $70 million.
The money would provide 17,500 University of Kansas students with the maximum $4,000 guaranteed student loan. Struggling businesses could buy themselves a car fleet of about 17,000 Yugos.
Closer to home, $70 million is worth about 2 million kegs of beer or about 1.75 million kegs if it's the good stuff.
The money could help furnish countless high schools and grade schools with about 58,000 Macintosh computers from the KU bookstores.
If Reagan really wants to address the teen-age pregnancy problem, he could have invested the cash in education programs in the nation's school systems.
Or he could spend the money on about 15.5 million 12-packs of Trojan condoms or about 1.5 million three-month cycles of birth control pills.
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board
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"MODERN" WARFARE:
70 Years of Progress...
POISON GAS
World War I
Iran-Iraq War
Western culture good for students
There have been times when the end of Western civilization has been viewed with alarm. At Stanford University, it is viewed as an objective devoutly to be wished and, more than wished, demanded. About a year ago, Jesse Jackson joined a group of chanting students there who demanded: "Hey, hey, ho, ho, Western culture's got to go!" They were referring to the course in Western culture required by schools like Stanford, courses that strike these critics as full of "sexist and racist stereotypes" and reflecting, to slip into Protestspeak, a "European-Western male bias."
As an old guide once told a novice hunter who had just shot a sitting duck and was wondering how to tell his friends about it. "No need to go into town," he said, smiling, then denying they offence are also full of revolutionary ideas
— like faith, reason and liberty. If Plato and St. Augustine are on the reading list, so are radicals like Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Stuart Mill. But being men, and white men at that, perhaps they are disqualified from an Affirmative Action reading list — as if the value of an idea depended on the racial origins of those expressing it.
Today's new barbarians and their slogans ("Western culture's to go to get!") may not be all that different from yesterday's old ones. It was a fictional member of the Brownshirts who drew applause from Naudi audiences: "When I hear the word 'culture', I reach for my revolver."
The critics of Western culture at Stanford are quick to explain that they're not out to purge Plato and his intellectual descendants from the reading list but only to balance Western civilization with non-Western culture, or maybe minority civilization. Behind all this Protestspeak is an approach inspired by the unexamined assumption that all ideas are created equal and that it's only fair to balance a white male thinker from the fourth century B.C. with one black female from the 20th century A.D. — a kind of proportional representation of culture. The object is to give the minority something to identify with, as if in being the minority means one can't identify with an idea.
The notion that the great ideas are those that withheld on the test of time is being dropped at Stanford on the ground that it's an example of age discrimination, this time in favor of the old. If the Bible is to be on a reading list, a separate but
Paul
Greenberg
Syndicated Columnist
THE RECOVERY OF THE MILLION-THOUSAND.
equal spot should be reserved for the Whole Earth Catalog, or maybe Eldridge Cleaver's "Soul on Ice." Fair is fair. One suspects that modern authors with some discernible link to Western civilization, like Martin Luther King Jr., or Flannery O'Connor, would be disqualified as Uncle Tom or religious fanatics.
The theory, apparently, is that if the Greeks and Hebrews are going to be represented on this reading list, then the Esquimau and Pygmies should also get one author each. It's the intellectual equivalent of the United Nations General Assembly. Gresham's Law soon sets in: No idea is bad enough to be ignored, but many are disqualified because they're too good. Nothing travels quite so rapidly as student fads; the same demands are now being made on other campuses.
Jonathan Swift claimed that one could tell a true genius because all the dunes would form a confederacy against him. Enough students and faculty at Stanford now have formed a confederacy against Plato et al to revamp the old reading list in favor of — what? Quotations from Chairman Mao? Shirley MacLaine's latest eruption? The collected works of Susan Brownmiller? The metaphysics of Noam Chomsky? Whatever the choices, the odds are the substitutes will be inferior to Plato et al. John Sturgeon Mill That is modern inferior. Compare Wagner to rock 'n' roll, for example — classic rock 'n' roll, of course. As with literature, time winrows and validizes music, too. Telman and Elvis Presley are both making a much deserved comeback.
Unfortunately, one suspects that political ideology rather than a seasoned judgment will determine the new reading lists. Booker T. Washington, the Machiavellii of the civil rights movement, will probably lose out to W.E.B. DuBois, who finally gave up on Western civilization. Martin Luther King Jr., whose roots went deep in Christian philosophy, is much too practical a choice compared to a romantic but largely irrelevant figure like Malcolm X. On this Pro
crustain bed, ideas are not judged or weighed or
strongly criticized but fit political prescriptions.
William J. Bennett, who is remarkably well educated for a U.S. secretary of education; sounds like he's seen it before. Talking of Stanford's drift away from Western civilization, he said: "They are moving confidently and swiftly into the late 1960s, and why anybody would want to do that intentionally, I don't know. It looks to me as though policy by intimidation is at work." Unfortunately, a lot of academic leadership is readily intimidated by the noisiest of its students and faculty.
Happily, not all the faculty is buckling. William M. Chace, an English professor, called the attack on Western culture "a version of academic populism, and populism is always dangerous for a university. Education is not a democracy...There is a system of deference, and if the system breaks down, we're in real trouble. We owe it to our students to tell them 'Here's the kind of thing you will find of long-term value'. To relegate (these books) to the status of white male writing may be factually true, but it's of low significance."
Students regardless of creed, color or sex will be cheated if the old reading list is excised in accord with transient prejudice. As one student of the classics at Stanford put it: "The overriding motivation for the change is political expediency. I think that the consequences will be the impoverishment of the undergraduate experience. What is a liberal education? It's an education that liberates people. And if there's a liberating idea in the Western tradition, it is that it doesn't matter if you're black or white or Jewish or Chinese, that there are truths that transcend the accident of birth. That's why the great books are important."
And that's only one of the reasons. Another is that ideas are power. By spreading around the best ideas, Stanford has been empowering its students, including those traditionally denied the reason of the Greeks, or the wisdom of the Hebrew scriptures, or the insights like those in Machiavelli or the Federalist Papers, and feed them fashionable simulacra instead, to be cheat those students, to disfranchise them intellectually. If this diminution of the curriculum were being forced on such students, rather than demanded by them, it would be seen as the racist, sexist公害谚 it is.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Need qualified advice
studies itself, 'tought that he was degrading the department of African studies and in some way saying that it wasn't competent to advise. I don't think that was his message at all. He was merely saying that a person interested in a specific field of study should be able to have an adviser in that same field of study.
A while back there was an editorial in the Kansan that received a lot of flak. It concerned an individual who I think was an English major. He was upset over the fact that he had been assigned to the department of African studies for advising. Many angry letters poured in; and in the process, the whole issue got turned around. It seemed that a great many people, including the department of African
I recently received a letter from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Services that read as follows:
KU Student Records lists your degree and major as the following: POUR-JOURNALISM.
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES: This is the department you should contact for advising for main enrollment for fall of 1988.
Does anybody see a problem here? Now, I want to make clear that I am in no way putting down the department of biological sciences. I'm sure that they are a highly intelligent, highly competent group who are more than qualified to advise students ... interested in biological sciences as a field of study. All I am trying to say is that as part of the process of education that this institution provides, a student should receive advice from a person knowledgeable in his or her particular field of study. I sincerely hope that I haven't ruffled too many feathers. If I were a biological science major, I certainly wouldn't want a journalist giving me advice.
M. Sean Rodman Andover sophomore
BLOOM COUNTY
YOU MAY NOT HAVE
NOTICED, QUICHE...BUT
I'VE GONE THROUGH SOME
CHANGES OF LATE!
- 1989 Washington Post
by Berke Breathed
MY EYES ARE SUDDENLY OPEN.
TERRIBLE TRUTHS ARE
REVEALING THEMSELVES...
AND I FIND THAT I CARE...
I REALLY...
DO...
CARE...
DARN IT! THE RED MAN IS JUST NOT GETTING ANY JUSTICE IN AMERICA!!
MY MARTINI'S IN YOUR TORTELLINI.
I...AM ALERTING ED MEESE RIGHT NOW.
5
Democrats heat up campaign
Gore takes negative stand, says Jackson lacks experience
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Jesse Jackson will meet today with the front rank of Washington's Democratic establishment in a summit session one day after a rival criticized him sharply for a "complete and total lack" of the experience needed to be president.
Sen. Albert Gore Jr. took the negative tack yesterday in a departure from the general practice of Jackson opponents, who have avoided public criticism of him.
"I have sharp disagreements with Jesse Jackson," the Tennessee senator said. "I (have) talked about his complete and total lack of experience in the national government. He hasn't served a single day in the national government or had a single day's experience in foreign policy."
Answering questions after a speech to the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, Gore denied that he had been afraid to criticize Jackson, and he challenged Jackson's position on unrest in the Middle East.
"I also cannot disagree more with Jesse Jackson's views on many foreign policy issues," Gore said. "I categorically reject his notion that there's a moral equivalence between Israel and the PLO. . . And I am dismoved by his embrace of Arafat and Castro."
Dukakis refused to answer a question on whether he considered Jackson qualified to be president.
Massachusetts Gov, Michael Dukakis, who leads Jackson by only a few delegates, refused yesterday to say anything negative about the civil rights leader.
"I'm not going to comment on that," Dukakis said while campaigning in Connecticut. "That's something the people of this country are going to have to decide. In the last analysis, they're going to have to decide which one of us, of all the candidates, has the strength, the values and the experience to lead this country."
He also refused to outline any differences on issues with Jackson, something he has done repeatedly with the other candidates.
KU Amateur Radio Club
Monthly meeting
Wednesday March 30,1988 7 p.m. in Learned Hall
All hands and interested persons are welcome.
Tune in the world with us.
The worst day at the lake... Is better than the best day at classes!
□ ▼ □ ▼ ▼
Join the KU Sail Club
INTRODUCTORY MEETING TONIGHT
The KU Sailing Club meets every Wednesday night in Parlors A and B of the Kansas Union at 7:00 p.m.
Information on:
- Learn to sail classes
- Club Racing
For more call
- Intercollegiate Racing
COASTAL DEVELOPMENT SERVICES
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Kansan Fact:
ParkInn Building our business one guest at a time!
KU students spend over $4 million a month on discretionary items.
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STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
Do You Want to TEACH CPR?
SUNFLOWER
804 Mass., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 913-843-5000
CIRR
We are offering a CPR instructor's class on April 19, 21, 26 and 28, 6:30-9:00 p.m., at Watkins Hospital. You must already be certified in CPR 'B'. There is a $15.00 charge and some material that must be read in advance. If you have any questions, please call 864-9570, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
The Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders Support Group holds meetings every Tuesday and Wednesday of the semester at 7 p.m. at Watkins Memorial Hospital/ Student Health Services. The meeting is free. Those interested are invited to attend. For more information, call the Department of Health Education at 864-9570
ANAD
BANQUET DE CHAMPIONS
Cholesterol is a waxy, fat-like substance. Too much of which increases the chances of having a heart attack. It's never too early to have a cholesterol problem or too late to do something good for your heart and your health. Open to students only.
During the week of April 4-8, a special clinic will be set up to facilitate quick and easy cholesterol screenings for students at Watkins Hospital from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. each day. Just bring your ID card and drop by for the simple test. Your results will be mailed to you. This service is covered by your health fee -no additional charge.
In Observance of World Health Week: Quick and Easy Cholesterol Screening
Call for more information or to register!
STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
Main Hospital # 864-9500 Department of Health Services # 864-9570
Department of Health S
WEEK#4 March 22-30
Film Developing & Double Prints
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D
Jayhawk Bookstore
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Your book professionals at the top of Naismith Hill.
Your book professionals
Hrs: 8-5 M-F 9-5 Sat. 12:30-3:30 Sun.
6
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU conference topic is women who work
By a Kansan reporter
Women researchers from around the world will present their views on women in the work force next week at a three-day symposium at the University of Kansas.
The symposium, scheduled for April 7-9, will be in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Speakers will discuss work-value concepts in Asia, Latin America, the United States, Africa, the Middle East and Europe. Their research focuses on three aspects of women and their work: women and the definition of work; women and work space; and women's work in the community.
The symposium, "Women and Work: A Comparative Perspective," is sponsored by KU Women's Studies in collaboration with the KU Center for International Programs and the office of Sen. Nancy Kassebaum.
in women's studies, said the symposium would be important not only to those interested in women's issues but also to those interested in international issues.
Theresa Early, research assistant
Alice Cook, professor emerita of industrial and labor relations at Cornell University, will give a keynote address about "Problems and Possibilities in the Comparative Study of Working Women."
Other speakers during the week include Li Min, a member of the Shanghai Women's Federation of the People's Republic of China; Alkapana Bardhan, a consultant to United Nations University of Tokyo and lecturer in economics at the University of California-Berkley; and Emily Taylor, the senior associate and former director of the office of women in higher education, American Council on Education. Taylor is also a former KU dean of women.
Registration information is available at the office of continuing education.
Black Student Union selects new officers; president-elect aims for more participation
By a Kansan reporter
KU's Black Student Union met last night at the Kansas University and chose officers for the 1988-1989 school year.
Officers-elect are Darrin Johnson, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, president; Sophie Paris, Omaha, Neb.; sophomine, vice-president; Shannon Moore, Kansas City, Kan., sophomine, treasurer; Lisa Thompson, St. Louis sophomine, corresponding secretary; and Elizabeth Lounds, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, recording secretary.
Johnson said that one of his goals for next year was to let new freshmen know about BSU and about what it could do for them.
Johnson said that BSU needed to be a union for all black student organizations on campus and that he wanted to increase participation of all black students on campus.
He said he also planned to increase participation and cooperation among all minority student organizations so that they could speak with one voice on issues that affect all minorities.
Collegium Pro Christophorum
trecesam ad
The Episcopal Church Welcomes You Holy Week Schedule
Maundy Thursday-March 31
7:30 a.m. Morning Prayer-St. Anselm's Chapel
1116 Louisiana
12:00 noon The Holy Eucharist-Danforth Chapel
Good Friday-April 1
7:30 a.m. Morning Prayer-St. Anselm's Chapel
Holy Saturday-April 2
8:00 p.m. Great Vigil of Easter
St. Anselm's Chapel
Canterbury House The Episcopal Church at KU
The University of Kansas Printing Service Announces
MEDIA CONVERSION SERVICES The Missing Link... for more than 700 systems!
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If so, our comprehensive disk conversion system may have the solutions to your conversion needs.
If you wish to eliminate costly re-keyboarding or eliminate the resulting errors that can occur in re-keyboarding documents, we can offer you an alternative service.
Please Call Our Customer Service Coordinators at the
KU Printing Service
864-4341 2425 West 15th
PRAIRIE PATCHES
We've Got Your Bunny! 811 Mass.749-4565
FOOLS ON THE HILL FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1988
$ \star $ Rex Boyd, the comic/juggler will be performing in front of the Kansas Union from 12 p.m. - 12:30 p.m. on Friday.
Beth Scalet, a local guitarist, will be performing on level three of the Kansas Union from 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. on Friday.
WATCH FOR MORE DETAILS IN TOMORROW'S KANSAN.
ROCK CHALK REVUE 1989
Applications available for the following positions:
Executive Producer Director Assistant Director Business Manager Promotions Coordinator I.B.A. Coordinator
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"Life More Than Body: New Testament Insight on Health and Physique"
by Bruce Fitzwater, C.S.B. of Portland, Oregon Member of The Christian Science Board of Lectur
Thursday, March 31, 1988 8:00 p.m.
Lawrence Community Theatre
1501 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas
Ample Parking Available
Auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, Lawrence, Kansas
"Gripping...James Woods is brilliant."
—Jack Kroll, Newsweek
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—William Wolf, Gannett Newspapers
"Absolutely stunning..."
—Jeffrey Lyons, Sneak Previews, INN
A New Film from OLIVER STONE
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JAMES WOODS • JIM BELUSHI • MICHAEL MURPHY And JOHN SAVAGE
HEMODE FILM CORPORATION Presents An OLIVER STONE Film SALVADOR
Executive Producer, JOHN DAILY & DEREK GIBSON Screenplay by OLIVER STONE And RICHARD BOYLE
Music by GEORGES DELERUE Produced by GERALD GREEN And OLIVER STONE Directed by OLIVER STONE
from HEMODE FILM CORPORATION
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
FIFTY YEAR ANNIVERSARY
1988-1988
March 30, 31
Wed. 3:30; 7:00 p.m.
Thur. 3:30; 7:00 p.m.
WOODRUFF AUD.
KANSAS UNION
-SUA SPECIAL EVENTS PRESENTS Three very HOT bands!
bone + The R --- H --- C ---- Peppers +
T ---------- Monster = A PARTY
— Coming your way on April 13 —
— Tickets on sale This Friday Watch the UDK this week for the scoop.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 30, 1988
7
NationWorld
Iraq accuses Iran of using poison gas in latest offensive
The Associated Press
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Iraq yesterday accused Iran of using poison gas in its Kurdistan offensive and threatened to attack Iranian cities with chemical weapons.
Iran accused Iraq of using chemical bombs in the area last week.
Iran said that Iraq dropped chemical bombs March 16-17 on Halabja, Dojaila and Khalmal, three Kurdish towns in Iraq captured by Iranian troops in an offensive that began March 16. Iran said 5,000 people were killed and 5,000 wounded.
Most of Iraq's 3.5 million Kurds live in the northeast. Kurdish separatist guerrillas, now backed by Iran, have been fighting Iraqi governments for decades.
Two dozen Kurds burned on their faces, backs and hands from reported Iraqi poison gas attacks countries yesterday for treatment.
Swiss Red Cross President Felix Christ said the Iranian government was paying for the medical treatment.
The Kurds were taken from an Iran Air ambulance plane that touched down in Austria, Switzerland, West Germany and Britain.
Gerhard Freilinger, department head of Vienna's University Clinic for plastic surgery, said that the patients he talked to appeared to have been injured by mustard gas that might have been mixed with nerve gas.
Appeals court rules on Murdoch case
WASHINGTON — Congress unconstitutionally singled out publisher Rupert Murdoch by prohibiting his continued ownership of newspapers and television stations in the same city, an appeals court ruled yesterday.
The Associated Press
A recently enacted provision barring the Federal Communications Commission from extending temporary waivers from its cross-ownership rule is unconstitutional because
it strikes solely at Murdoch without a legitimate purpose, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Washington ruled in a 2-1 opinion.
The law violates the Constitution's equal protection clause as well as the First Amendment's guarantee of freedom of the press, the court said.
The decision means that Murdoch might petition the FCC to extend past June 30 the waiver that allows his News America Publishing Inc. to own both the Boston Herald and that city's WFXT-TV.
Meese's No.1 deputy resigns
WASHINGTON — In a move that reportedly shocked Attorney General Edwin Meeze III, the Justice Department's No. 2 official and the head of the department's criminal division abruptly resigned yesterday amid a nearly year-old criminal investigation of Meeze.
Deputy Attorney General Arnold Burns said in a letter to President Reagan, "Unfortunately, I have regretfully concluded that I must return to private life at this time."
The Associated Press
William Weld, who as an assistant attorney general oversaw all federal criminal investigations, resigned effective the close of the business day yesterday despite a personal plea from other department officials for him to stay on for several weeks.
He did not elaborate.
Weld told his aides that the continuing investigation involving the attorney general and "Wallach" was casting a "cloud" that was having a negative impact on the Justice Department, according to department sources who spoke on condition of anonymity.
events leading to the resignations said the precipitating factor at this time was an internal fight over the successor to Stephen Trott as associate attorney general, the department's No. 3 post.
E. Robert Wallach is a San Francisco attorney who is at the center of the criminal investigation with Meese.
Weld, who publicly declined to discuss his reasons for resigning, said he wasn't quitting because he might be upset over possible new legislation uncovered by an independent counsel that has been investigating Meese.
Another source familiar with
Burns unsuccessfully supported Weld for this post, according to this source. Weld was willing to stay on if he got the job but was unwilling to do so when he lost it, in part because his two predecessors as criminal division chiefs both had won the same promotion.
DUKAKIS WINS CONNECTICUT: Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis defeated Jesse Jackson in the Connecticut presidential primary last night and bid for a victory strong enough to reassure party leaders about his Democratic candidacy.
News Roundup
or his television show for at least a year while he is rehabilitated from "moral failure" that reportedly included a prostitute to pose nude.
MURDER SUSPECT CHARGED: A Lumbee Indian was charged yesterday in Lumberton, N.C., with killing an Indian judicial candidate Saturday, and an accused accomplice committed suicide. Local authorities said the murder was not political. Racial tensions had erupted last month in Lumberton when two Lumbees took hostages at a newspaper.
SWAGGART SUSPENDED: Evangelist Jimmy Swaggart was ordered yesterday by the Assemblies of God not to preach from the pulpit
PRISON LAW STRUCK DOWN: The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that states trying to cope with rising prison costs may not seize Social Security benefits received by inmates. The court unanimously struck down an Arkansas law that permitted authorities to use an inmate's Social Security benefits for state purposes.
PLO LIFTS BAN: The Palestine Liberation Organization lifted its ban on meetings between Arabs from the occupied territories and U.S. Secretary of State George Shultz, a Palestinian said yesterday. U.S. officials said they hoped
such a session, expected to take place next week in Jerusalem, would help breathe life into a U.S. peace proposal for the region.
ECONOMIC INDICATORS RISE: The index of Leading Economic Indicators, the government's primary economic forecasting gauge, increased 0.9 percent in February, and sales of new homes, which had fallen for three consecutive months, shot up 20.3 percent in February, the biggest monthly gain in almost two years.
EX-ENGINEER SENTENCED: A judge yesterday sentenced ex-Conrail engineer Rick L. Gates to five years in prison for driving three locomotives into the path of a passenger train on Jan. 4, 1987, killing 16 people in Amtrak's worst accident.
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E. O.E. m/l/h
Society for Science Fiction and Fantasy presents episodes from
The Prisoner
The Prisoner A British science fiction-spy series
Wed., 7:30 p.m. Walnut Room, Student Union Business meeting at 7:00 p.m.
O
COLONY WOODS
Youth Volunteer Corps INTERNSHIPS
HURRY!
4 OR 8 WEEK SUMMER TERMS WITH THE UNITED WAY IN KANSAS CITY!
Don't miss a chance living with all your friends this year!
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drama, construction, summer recreation, tutoring for disadvantaged youth. Some projects work with disabled youth and the elderly. Receive United Wav training.
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For more information and an interview, call the University Placement Center at 864-3624.
Small stipend and housing in Kansas City provided.
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8
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Kansas House subcommittee endorses reclassification plan that Hayden wants postponed
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Members of a House subcommittee on Monday tentatively endorsed continuing a salary reclassification plan for state employees that Gov. Mike Hayden has recommended postponing.
However, the subcommittee was scheduled to meet again yesterday or today to reconsider the proposal before making a recommendation to the House Appropriations Committee, said State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, the subcommittee chairman.
In his budget for the next fiscal year, Hayden recommended a 4 per cent cost-of-living salary increase for all state classified employees instead of implementation of the reclassification plan.
However, representatives of state workers have said that it was not fair for the state to postpone the salary
changes. Most of the controversy has centered around state institution workers who contend that they must undergo more training than state employees such as prison guards but are paid far less.
Chronister said that the subcommittee proposed implementing the plan beginning the last three months of fiscal year 1989. It would be paid for with money from a longtime dayben has a longtime plan for longtime state employees.
The state has already completed the first two phases of the six-part plan to examine the salaries of all state classified employees.
Phase III, which originally was scheduled to begin next year, would affect about 7,400 employees who work as corrections and law enforcement officers, custodial and food service workers, and direct-care workers in state institutions for the mentally retarded and mentally ill
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Thursday March 31
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Some call him a great teacher
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See this movie
and decide.
GENERAL AUDIENCES
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30
FRIDAY, APRIL 1
7:00 p.m.
ALDERSON AVENUE FORUM, KANSAS UNION
Thursday March 31
25¢ KAMIKAZEES
Live Band - SAVANNA
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must be 21
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Some call him a great teacher
...a prophet
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What will you call him?
See this movie
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30
FRIDAY, APRIL 1
7:00 p.m.
ALDERSON AUDITORIUM, KANSAS UNION
FREE ADMISSION
LIVE MUSIC
The Jazzhaus
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Wednesday March 30:
Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam
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- Post-Game C.D. Music & Video
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 30, 1988
9
Bill would change restaurant seating
Half of space would go to nonsmokers
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Opponents of a bill that would require Kansas restaurants to provide at least half of their seating for nonsmokers told lawmakers that the proposal was discriminatory, but supporters said it would protect patrons from the habits of others.
George Puckett, representing the Kansas Restaurant Association, told the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee that restaurant owners had been singled out as an example regarding the public smoking issue.
The bill would require all restaurants to prohibit smoking by customers in at least 50 percent of its seating.
"Laws are not capable of determining the individual needs of the customers in a restaurant at any given meal." Puckett said. "Sometimes, more than 50 percent is needed for non-smokers, which the bill does not allow, but more than 50 percent is needed, which the bill does not allow."
He also told the committee that the bill could drive some restaurants out
of business.
of business.
State Sen. Ben Vidricksen, R-Salina, said he thought the breakdown of seating for smokers and nonsmokers should be left to the discretion of the restaurant owner.
But Dave Pomeyer, representing Kansans for Non-Smokers' Rights, said the provision would protect people from passive smoking, which is the inhalation of smoke from another's cigarette.
"Kansans who have chosen not to smoke should be free not to do so," he
"For some unknown reason, the restaurant industry in Kansas has opposed any mandatory smoking regulations. The restaurant industry has continued to ignore the wishes of the majority of Kansans who do not smoke."
Gary Hulett, representing the Department of Health and Environment, said the department supported the bill.
"It would help protect the nonsmoker from the involuntary health consequences of exposure to tobacco smoke in public places," he said.
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ENVIRONS MEETING Thursday March 31,1988 4:30 p.m. Kansas Union Walnut Room
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We've got the kind of summer jobs you'll love to get your hands on. Choose your own assignments. Work as much as you want. Or as little as you need.
Tuesday, April 5
We've got the kind of summer jobs you'll love to get your hands on.
Join your fellow students supporting KU and Margin of Excellence by participating in H.E.R.O.'s Lobby Day.
For more information call the Student Senate Office at 864-3710 Brought to you by the Associated Students of Kansas
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The Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic would like to thank the following sponsors of Greek Endeavor '88!
Domino's J.B. Blue Party Favors
Dillon's
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And a special thanks to all committee members Co-chairmen: David Byrd $ \sum\phi E $
Lisa Karr AΔΠ
Kathy Brennan KA $ \Theta $ Derek Locke $ \Sigma N $
Gary Clothier $ \phi K \Theta $ Boyd McPherson TKE
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Laurie Ernst A $ \Gamma \Delta $ Jill Singer KA $ \Theta $
Clark Hamilton $ \Theta X $ Nora Sweeney $ \Delta \Delta \Delta $
Scott Hoy $ \Delta T \Delta $ John Van Blaricum TKE
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10
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
House passes bill to help overcrowded state prisons
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The House yesterday passed a bill designed to ease overcrowding in the state's prison system by keeping some criminals out of state institutions and making it easier to parole those now incarcerated.
The measure would permit the agency to set up a system of "house arrest," increase the amount of time off a sentence an inmate can earn for good behavior, improve corrections Corrections to put some inmates in community programs before they are eligible for parole.
Currently, more than 5,800 inmates live in state prisons designed for a maximum capacity of 5,015.
The first major change the bill would make is increase inmates' "good time" credits by about 25 percent. In effect, the bill would move inmates' parole eligibility dates forward.
George Michael mimic wins lip-synch contest
By Donna Stokes
Kansan staff writer
Darin Simmer, alias George Michael, won the Students Against Multiple Sclerosis Rock-a-Like contest last week by lip-synching to "I Want Your Sex."
Simmer', a Wamego freshman, raised $200 for SAMS. A videotape of Simmer's performance was sent in to MTV national Rock-a-like contest.
"He made it to the regional competition to appear on MTV, but he was knocked off by another George Michael from Dartmouth," said Shelley Hansel, Wellington sophomore and co-chairman of SAMS.
Simmer said, "I had a really good time: it was a lot of fun."
Simmer was awarded dinner and a room at the Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Drive, for winning first prize.
The lip-sync contestants collected $600 for multiple sclerosis, but total events raised more than $2,000, Hansel said.
The second prize was shared by Trisha Hudson, Omaha, Neb. sophomore; Crescent Bretz, St. Louis sophomore, and Courtney Watkins, Overland Park sophomore, who performed to "The Time Warp." They won gift certificates to Gutierrez restaurant, 2600 Iowa St.
A final performance was not given because a place to hold it was not available, Hansel said. The results of the contest were made final last week.
"We really appreciate all of the contributions from students and Lawrence bars for the contest." Hansel said.
Many local bars donated half of the cover price at the door to SAMS during the Rock-a-Like performance nights. Also, contestants sold 12-oz. SAMS mugs for $2. Bars cooperated by allowing 50-cent draws with a SAMS mug
On April 5, SAMS is sponsoring a concert in conjunction with KJK at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., featuring three bands: Ricky Dean Sinatra, the Red Zone and the Backsliders.
Mug specials would probably be offered during the evening, said Shane Langton, Wichita junior and member of SAMS.
On April 15, SAMS has planned a TGIF party with mug specials and pizza give-aways.
Crown Hill Courthouse
Immonsit
Costello's Greenhouse Restaurant
(913)749-1255 3400 W.6th St. March Specials
Sunday Homemade Lasagna & House Salad $5.
Monday Prime Rib, Baked Potato, & House Salad $8.
Tuesday *Meatloaf, mashed Potatoes, Corn on the Cob & House Salad $5.
Family Night 'Fried Chicken, Mashed Potatoes, Corn on the Cob, & House Salad $6.
'KC Strip with Baked Potato & House Salad $7.
Wednesday Lasagna $5.95 Manicotti $7.
Spaghetti & Meatballs $6.95 Chicken Seafood Fettuccine $8.
Thursday Prime Rib or T-Bone Steak (14 oz.), New Potatoes, & House Salad $8.
Friday Spiced Boiled Shrimp (All-U-Can-Eat), New Potatoes, Corn on the Cob, Salad Bar $10.
(Salad Bar $1.50 with All Specials)
Bar Specials
Monday
Pizza & Beer at Regular Price $ .80
Taco Bar $ .15 $ 1.50 Maracitas
Wednesday Prime Rib & BBQ Sauce & Cheese & Crackers or Veggie Tray & Ranch, $1.50 House Wine
Chicken Wings
Free Bar Appetizers
$1.00 Bloody Mary's
No Club Cards Accepted on Specials.
2. Alpha Chi Omega 12
Sorority Donors
1. Chi Omega 16
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expires 4/16/88
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any size pizza with coupon expires 4/16/88
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Friday & Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m.
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Congratulations and thanks from I.F.C. and Panhellenic
Saturday 10 to 4
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 30, 1988
11
Business students' 'spying' spurs West Virginia school to establish ethics committee
The announcement, made by Frank Franz, vice president for academic affairs, comes one week after the Wall Street Journal reported that graduate students in the program had received and inventory figures gained in a study to competitors of the businesses they surveyed.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — West Virginia University administrators set up a committee yesterday to explore the ethical obligations of students who do "corporate espionage" for companies under the auspices of the university.
The Associated Press
"The article points out that the confidentiality of respondents was promised but not observed," Franz said.
"The key problem is that the students were put in a very unfortunate position by the sponsors of the project, and I think inappropriate things were asked of them."
Franz said the seven-member committee would consider whether students should be required to disclose routinely the sponsor of a study, its purpose and the recipient of the information obtained.
He said the committee also would suggest ways to avoid conflicts of interest in internships, research projects and other opportunities that arose through consulting performed by faculty members for private companies.
The Journal reported that two groups of students who conducted competitive analyses for two Caterpillar heavy-equipment dealers were asked by the dealers to identify the competitors they interviewed.
competitive play. Several students said they did. One of those involved likened the work to spying.
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KANSAS UNIVERSITY
Football Hostess Program
All freshman, sophomore, and junior students interested in participating in the Kansas University Football Hostess Program for the 1988-89 school year, report to room 135 in Parrott Athletic Center on
Thursday, April 7 at 5:00 p.m.
At the informational meeting, the program will be explained and appointments for interviews will be made. Parrott Athletic Center is next to Allen Field House.
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Public: $14 & $12; KU and K-12 Students; $7 & $6; Senior Citizens
and Other Students; $13 & $11
8:00 p.m. Tuesday, April 12, 1966
Hoch Auditorium
Celebrating his 25th anniversary season
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reservedFor reservations, call 913-864-3982
PEER ADVISOR IN GN STUDENT SERVICES
FOREIGN STUDENT SERVICES
Would you like to help new foreign students adjust to life at KU this fall? Come to Foreign Student Services, 112 Strong Hall for more information.
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It's time for you,the KU student, faculty or staff member, to pick up your key to success! You can pick up your computer on:
Thursday, March 31 12 p.m. - 6 p.m.
or
Friday, April 1 9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Where to park: West lot Where to pick up your computer: the Burge Union, level 3 There will be people there to help load your computer and answer any questions you may have.
Training sessions:
March 31:2 p.m.-4 p.m.
April 1:10 a.m.-12 p.m.
West Parking Lot
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Iving Hill Road
Burge Union
Alien Field House
DON'T FORGET YOUR FREE MACWRITE® PROGRAM!
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12
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
State House committee OKs AIDS legislation
By Elaine Woodford
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The House Public Health and Welfare Committee voted yesterday to favorably recommend an AIDS bill that would require testing for people convicted of crimes
Although a total of eight bills dealing with the deadly virus have been introduced to the Legislature this year, State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said that this bill probably would be the principal AIDS bill. Cameron that could be
Crimes that could fall within the purview of
the bill are rape, child molestation, aggravated battery, and sodomy.
The bill was heavily amended and State Rep. Frank Buehler, R-Claffin, said he expected the bill to be amended again in conference committee.
The bill was amended to allow physicians to determine whether information about patients with AIDS should be given to health care workers, and if so, when.
"We should bear in mind the risk of losing patient confidentiality," she said.
Also under the proposed measures, physicians would be required to submit the names of AIDS victims or those who have died from the disease to the Secretary of Health and Environment.
The bill states that the information would be completely confidential, except in statistical form, or in a court proceeding involving a minor.
Lawmakers deleted a section of the bill that specified the crimes for which AIDS testing would be mandated. The bill now states that after a conviction, the court must
determine whether the transmission of body fluids occurred during the incident. If transmission is determined to have occurred, an AIDS test will be ordered and the victim will be informed of the results.
Branson disagreed with the deletion of a section of the bill that would have required AIDS testing when a suspect was charged.
"It could be six to 12 months before a suspect is convicted of the crime," she said. "Victims should also be encouraged to be tested for AIDS."
State Rep. Donna Whiteman, D-Hutchinson, suggested that a non-discrimination section be added to the bill.
"I think we should provide for non-discrimination on the basis of AIDS in schools, employment and medical services," she said.
Whiteman's motion was defeated in the committee.
But Branson said that anti-discriminatory language could be added during debate on the House floor or in conference committee.
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NIKON N2000 OUTFIT SALE $49999 Reg. $569.95 Only $17
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NIKON AUTOFOCUS OUTFIT
SALE $679.99
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635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 913-235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 6601-1437
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 30, 1988
13
Manning wins the Eastman Award
ALFRED DAYE
Kansas forward Danny Manning was named the 14th recipient of the Eastman Award, given to the top basketball player of the year as selected by the National Association of Basketball Coaches.
KU senior named best in country
By Elaine Sung
Kansan sportswriter
In an elaborate ceremony yesterday afternoon on center court at Allen Field House, Kansas forward Danny Manning received the 1988 Eastman Award as the nation's outstanding male college basketball player.
The award was presented by Jack Hartman, head of the National Association of Basketball Coaches and former Kansas State men's basketball coach.
"Coaches around here say he's unstoppable, and I can definitely support that," Hartman said.
Manning, with his mother, Darnelle, on his right, received the gleaming silver statue in front of about 50 members of the media.
"The award means a lot to me because coaches across the country voted for it." Manning said.
The NABC selected its All-America team last week and, of the five players picked, the recipient of the Eastman Award, now in its 14th year. The honoree is selected based on sportsmanship, contributions to team play, and leadership. He joined Manning on this year's All-America team were Arizona's Sean Elliott, Michigan's Gary Grant, Bradley's Hersey Hawkins and North Carolina's J. R. Reid.
Other players who have received the award are David Thompson (1975), Scott May (1976), Marques Johnson (1977), Phil Ford (1788), Larry Bairy (1979), Michael Brooks (1980), Danny Ainge (1981), Ralph Sampson (1982 and 1983), Michael Jordan (1984), Ewing Smith, Berry Jerry (1984) David Robinson (1987). The award is on permanent display in the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass.
The ceremony was originally planned to take place at the Downtown Athletic Club in New York, but the plans were changed after Kansas won the Midwest Regional Championships on Sunday in Pontiac, Mich.
KU coaches will visit Indiana's Calloway
Assistant sports editor
Bv Craig Anderson
Kansas men's basketball coach Larry Brown, assistant Alvin Gentry and assistant Ed Manning plan to visit Indiana junior forward Ricky Calloway next week. Calloway, the Big Ten's freshman-of-the year in 1985-86, announced March 21 that he would transfer from Indiana.
Calloway reportedly is a lock to come to Kansas if he is assured that Brown will remain as Jayhawks coach for the next two seasons. The 6-foot-6 former high school All-American from Cincinnati originally listed Maryland, Ohio State and Xavier as his other top choices but has since decided against hometown Xavier.
"I really don't want to come home," Calloway said. "Nothing against them, but if I wanted to stay with them I would have done so out of high school."
Because of NCAA rules, Calloway will have to sit out next season and will be in his 20s.
Gentry said that Calloway would be a big addition to the Kansas program.
"I think he's going to be a typical Big Eight (swingman)," Gentry
said. "He's a Jeff Grayer, Mitch Richmond, Derrick Chievous-type plaver.
"He's a tremendous athlete who can go either inside or outside. He's a good kid," Gentry said.
Before his freshman season at Indiana, Calloway played for Brown at the National Sports Festival in Baton Rouge, La. Last season, Brown said that Calloway was the best small forward in the United States.
Calloway started last season for the 1987 National Champion Hoosiers. This season, he averaged 11.8 points and 4.3 rebounds a game. Calloway didn't play in Indiana's 82-78 loss to Richmond in the first round of the NCAAs. He failed to after reportedly having fallen into Coach Bob Knight's dooher.
Callaway said that he was leaving Indiana because he was unhappy with his lack of playing time under Knight. However, he denied reports that he left Indiana to ensure that he'd earn a shot in the NBA.
"The NBA isn't the reason I left, though it enters your mind," he said. "I just wasnt happy (at Indiana)."
Blackledge gets wish; QB traded to Steelers
The Associated Press supplied some information for this story.
The Associated Press
Quarterback Todd Blackledge, the No.1 draft choice who never lived up to expectations at Kansas City, got his wish to leave the Chiefs yesterday when they sent him to the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Steelers gave up a fourth-round choice in this year's National Football League to obtain the offensive father, Ron, is their offensive line coach.
"I'm esstatic," said Blackledge, 27, who returns to the state where he starred in college, helping lead Penn State to the No.1 ranking in 1983.
Blackledge, after backing up Bill Kenney his first three seasons, won the starting job in training camp in 1986 and again last season, only to lose it back to Kenney both times.
Last season's reversal was particularly galling to Blackledge. He
started the two games, but after the players' strike, Coach Frank Gansz went back to Kenney, just as John Mackovic, former Chiefs coach, did after seven games the previous year.
Blackledge, who maintained he was never given a fair chance to prove himself, played in only one game the rest of the season, ended it on the inactive list and asked to be traded.
Yesterday's deal culminated several months of negotiations between the Chiefs and Pittsburgh.
"It's been a long process, but under the circumstances we have a deal we can live with and Pittsburgh feels the same," said Jim Schaaf, the Chiefs' general manager.
Blackledge's contract with the Chiefs expired Feb. 1.
37 Clemson athletes fail drug tests
The Associated Press
Kansas swimmer sets sights on Olympics
CLEMSON, S.C. — Thirty-seven athletes at Clemson University have tested positive for drugs since the school's testing program began in January 1985, the school said yesterday.
Of that number, 29 tested positive for marijuana, six for cocaine and two for steroids. Suspensions have been reported, but school officials would not reveal how many, and the names were those who tested positive made public.
Of the 37 positive results, 11 resulted from random testing.
"I think we've got a viable drug testing, counseling, education program," said athletic director Bobby Robinson. "I think our results are accurate, and I think it shows we are serious about it."
The results, released because of a request by the State newspaper in Columbia, S.C., under the Freedom of Information Act, showed that 2.171 million were random, had been administered since the program began.
[Athletes who test positive are required to undergo counseling and might be subject to suspensions from their respective sports.
On Oct. 19 of that year, Clemson cross-country runner Stijn Jaspers was found dead in his dormitory room. An autopsy later showed the cause of death to be heart failure. An analysis of his blood found a nondilide dose of a prescription pain killer, phenylbutazone.
Clemson began drug testing in 1980 and began testing illegally dispensed prescriptions.
Two track coaches were suspended and later resigned in connection with the incident.
100 YEARS OF SWIMMING
Correction
Because of a photographer's error, the scores of last weekend's soccer games were incorrect and a player was misidentified. Kansas defeated Iowa State 1-0 and Oklahoma State 4-1. The Kansas player was Marc Boussaquet, graduate student mid-fielder.
Bv Tom Stinson
Kansan sports writer
It's a picture of the eight 100-meter backstroke finalists at last summer's national swimming championships. The defending Olympic champion and former world record holder, numerous national champions. All Americans and world-ranked backstrokers are in it.
Kansas junior Glenn Tramnel is in it.
It's on his wall.
it. It's on his wall.
With a good swim, any one of the eight men could win a national championship. Any one of them could be a 1988 Olympian. Any one of them could come home from the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea, with a medal.
Trammler knows this. But he's not too worried about it.
"I keep the rankings in the back of my mind," the Topeka native said. "Any one of eight can make it (to the Olympics). We're all within about a half second. And I'm one of them if I'm on that day.
"But when the time comes, I'm not going to get all upight about making the team. If I make the team, great. But if I give it my best shot, that's great."
Glenn Tramml, one of the best backstrokers in the country, is seeded sixth in the NCAA meet and is an Olympic hopeful.
Trammel was sixth in last summer's championships. The top two in this August's Olympic Trials will make the trip to Korea.
The All-American also placed sixth in the 100-yard backstroke at last year's NCAA Championships. Going into next week's NCAA Championships, he is seeded sixth again with a 49.61 in the event. But he is less than a second out of first.
"But he has to hit it (the national championships) right. The top six or seven are all right there. This year, we trained him for the 100 and 200 backstroke and the 200 IM (individual medley). This summer, we will train just for the 100 backstroke. I think he'll be ready to go."
"When I sat in his living room, I told him that I felt he'd be one of the greatest backstrokers in the country," Coach Gary Kempf said about recruiting Trammel. "I thoroughly expected him to be this good.
Trammel's career best, and KU's school record, is 49.38. He holds the school record in the 200-yard back-stroke with a 1:50.48.
At the NCAA meet in Indianapolis, Trammel also will be competing in
He is also on the record-holding 400-ydr medley 400-ydr freestyle 400-ydr skateboarding.
the 200-yard backstroke, the 200-yard individual medley and the 400-yard medley and freestyle relays.
On the medley relay with him is junior Dan Mendenhall and sophomores Pat McCool and Andrew Billings. On the freestyle relay is Billings, junior Allan Chaney and freshman John Easton.
Tramnel does not waste energy thinking about goal times and rankings. His philosophy is to work at life but to take it as it comes. If Glenn Tramnel thinks he did his best, Glenn Tramrel is pleased.
"If I can look into a mirror and say that I did my best, I satisfied. I can't really remember any specific instances when I couldn't do that. I'm sure I blew off a test sometime or was tired at a workout but, as far as the majority of life, I can't remembrere that. I didn't do everything I should have I try to do everything to its fullest until it's done."
Trammel had to put everything he had into a new idea when he came to Kansas. As this year's tri-captain, he has had to adjust to dealing with a team concept.
At Topeka West, the high school All-American set six Kansas state records but he said he never felt he competed for a team.
"We really only had about four or five swimmers," Trammel said. "We all swam for ourselves but also for others." He never really developed into a team.
"The people here are like family.
We all go through the pains, problems and troubles with workout, but also play together outside of the pool.
"Being a captain as a junior was a different role. I had to adjust to giving leadership to the underclassmen and not overdoing it to the seniors. It was a lot of fun with us being such a close team. We really came together at the conference meet."
Kempf said, "His team-mindedness is incredible. He showed this at the conference meet. I wasn't going to have him shave because he
already had his (NCAA) cuts, but he wanted to shave so the relays could make their cuts. That says a whole hell of a lot for Glem Tramml."
Competitive swimmers usually shave their bodies for the most important meet of the season. It is part of the tapering process that swimmers use to mentally and physically prepare for their races.
Trammel said the NCAA Championships were his individual meet.
The Big Eight Championships were Trammler's team meet, he said. He won the 200-yard backstroke and finished second in the 100-yard backstroke and the 200-yard individual medley.
Although competing on the two relays, he said he was striving for good individual performances.
"Now, I just kick back from the team aspect and go to the individual aspect," he said. "I concentrate on myself even though six people are going. I look at what I'm doing and not really worry about everyone else."
---
14
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Stores welcome rush Final Four shirts in high demand on campus
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
Celebration of the Kansas basketball team's entry into the Final Four in Kansas City, Mo., has spilled into campus bookstores.
Mike Reid, general manager of the Kansas and Burge Union bookstores, said clothing sales at the stores this week had doubled.
And Bill Muggy, owner-manager of the Jayhawk bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, said that in terms of store business this week had quadrupled.
Both stores offer Final Four hats, sweatshirts, bumper stickers and buttons, but T-shirts seem to be the hottest item. Reid said his stores sold
out of T-shirts yesterday morning. Muggy said the Jayhawk Bookstore sold out of T-shirts Sunday and had sold 1,000 of them so far.
The shirts run from $10 to $14 at both stores, and Reid and Muggy said they were ordering more shipments to keep enough of them in stock.
"If we run out," Reid said, "we won't be out for long."
Muggy said he had had some Final Four shirts in his store since December. But he didn't have as many shirts on hand as two years ago, so he took his last point to Final Four. He said he was caught off guard because he said it was unexpected that KU would make the Final Four this year.
He said sales were comparable with those two years ago.
"It itms different this time," Reid said. "I think this year, customers have more choices to get their merchandise."
Reid said he wasn't sure that sales were the same two years ago. He said that back then, only a few stores in Lawrence sold Final Four merchandise. This year, he said, more local stores have gotten into the act.
Both Reid and Muggy said they didn't have any goals on how much Final Four product they planned to sell. The team was concerned not to order too much.
"We're just planning not to go in the red," he said.
Survey will question classified employees
By Rebecca J. Cisek
Kansan staff writer
A survey planned for June will determine the needs of classified employees, members of the Classified Senate said yesterday.
Diana Dyal, a cataloguer in Watson library and a member of the Senate's personnel affairs committee, said that the committee had identified some areas that the survey might address.
One of those areas was educational benefits of classified employees. At the University of Kansas, classified employees pay the in-state tuition fee minus the student fees, a cost of $37 per credit hour for the spring 1988 semester.
But Mick Quinn, training manager in personnel services, said that KU didn't compare favorably with its peers.
For example, at the University of
Colorado, classified employees can take classes free of charge. Employees at KU must make up the time they miss from work while some universities give employees an allotment of time each week for classes.
Dyal also said that classified employees could not qualify for tuition assistance unless the class was related to the job.
Another concern of the committee is working conditions for classified employees.
Dyal said that the heating and cooling in some buildings didn't always work well and that the lighting for some employees was poor.
"A lot of times, it's 85 or 86 degrees in the library," she said.
A third area of the survey might ask for opinions on classified employees' benefits. Currently, the state contributes more money to the retirement of unclassified employees than that of classified employees.
Soviet doctors conceal truth from patients
The Associated Press
BETHESDA, Md. — Soviet doctors participating in an international teleconference said yesterday that they routinely concealed the truth from patients diagnosed as having cancer.
"Only in rare cases, when the patient refuses treatment, does the doctor have the obligation to the patient." said Dr. Nikolai Napalkov, president of the U.S.S.R. Oncological Society and a leading cancer researcher in the Soviet Union.
He said that Soviet doctors kept cancer diagnosis secret in order to "preserve the peace of mind" of the patient. Fullly informing the patient could "interfere with internal processes," he said.
American doctors taking part strongly disagreed.
Last Chance To
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Mac
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1. Get a $50 Refund From the Bookstore Today.
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ConnectingPoint
804 New Hampshire St.
Downtown Lawrence
843-7584
Macintosh is a tm of Apple Computer, Inc. IBM is a tm of IBM Corp. Only valid 'till 3/31 to KU students/faculty/staff'
9 a.m.-12 noon & 1-4 p.m.
Pre-nursing Students
Advising for Summer and Fall
Tuesday March 29
Friday April 1
Wednesday
Legal Services for Students
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Preparation and review of legal docs.
- Notarization of legal documents.
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5665
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Funded by student activity fee.
Classified Ads
Adventurous Individuals for Boundary Waters
Contrup. Trap 6/1/8-6/15, $130 plus transportation
Travel up to 2 days.
*PIERST CLUB meeting.* 7:00 Tuesday April 5.
*Parlot* C., 5th Kansas University.
Be Published! Society for Fantasy & Science Fiction is preparing Spring 1988 issue of the journal. The book is a short story to PO Box 215, Strong Hall, Lawrence, Kansas 60455, deadline Friday, April 18.
FROM; The M.C. Players.
Hillel
כפל
FROM: The M.C. Players.
To: Black individuals interested in forming a
music group. There will be an organizational
meeting:
Date: Wednesday, March 30, 1988
Date: Wednesday, March 30, 1988
Place: Room 209 - Murphy Hall
Time: 7:30 P.M.
Discrimination menaces the institutions and
human rights of black people in the City of
Human Rights Ordinance (6400) of the City of
Gem and Mineral Show. 4:41 fair grounds. April 9
Gem and Mineral Show. 5:00-7:00. Demonstrations.
Dealers - Doormirrors
MASSAGE "Just say YES" O.K. you've been reading our eds for awhile, right? But we realize you're nervous. Can massage help those aching muscles? Yes! So do your body and mind a favor...and get 25% off! Call Lawrence Massage at 841-696-2 nevermind what Nancy
Friday, April 1 First Night Seder Host Families Available Saturday, April 2 Second Night Community Seder Lawrence Jewish Community Center
Hillel
Events of the Week
nowy, spokesperson, citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DISCRIMINATE WED. Wednesday, Feb. 10, 6: 8 & 9 pm, Alderson Auditorium, sponsored by the Lawrence Tenants Association.
For Reservations/More Info:
Call Hillel, 749-4242
**WE TAKE YOUR NAME.** Up until Wednesday, April 6
House of Usher, U38, Mass. 842-3610, will print
Graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal
colour. Small quantities. Call for more
information.
RESUME
WRITING &
INTERVIEWING
FOR WOMEN
This workshop is designed to help women enhance resume writing techniques and interviewing skills. There will be two opportunities to participate.
Saturday, April 26, 1985
9:40 a.m - 4:00 p.m
International Expo
Farms Union
Tuesday, April 5
2:00-9:00 pm
Fine Room
Kansas Union
For more information contact Pam Lathrop at 864-3552.
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 218 Strong
A
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology
Univ. of Kansas
New Arrivals!
Southwest Purses, Rugs
R
Mon. - Sat.
10-3
Sun. - 1-4
Mon. - Sat.
10-3
Sun. - 1-4
Math. Engineering and Physical Sciences Majors
M.S. in Math., Physics, or Engg.
Junior and senior years plus 4,000 upon
find out more about the Navy's Engineer Officer
program, call navy Management
1-800-231-5110
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and
most popular Music and Lighting for any
Occasion. 814-760-8352
Make your party the hottest. Rent a hot tub. Call Tub-To Go 841-3691.
**MUSIC** ******** **MUSIC** ******** **MUSIC** ******** **MUSIC**
A, P and Aigua, lightness Audio Wizardry
Call, Aigua, lightness Audio Wizardry
A. Academy Award Nominations
★ 7-15 **Hope and Glory** ★
2 LIBERTY HALL 749
ss 1912
FOR RENT
Available immediately - Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities.
Call 841-1297.
Apartment room available for summer, pool, great roommates, cheap utilities, $100 monthly, call 877-654-9232.
Available end of May or by June 1. 1992米 nice boots.
Available end of March or by April 1. 1992米 nice boots.
walk in clothes, very low utilities. Pam Call at
nobody.
Available June 1 for Summer Sublease. Spacious 28R, water cableed patio, patio, on bus route.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 & bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call (866) 758-1825, or 749 2413. Mastercraft Management
Excellent location. 2 bedroom apartment in 4-plex, carpet, CA equipped kitchen, low utilities, available April 1, $830 at 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4242.
Female, nonmushroom need starting Aug. Also need 2 or 18ers for summer stay. Phone 842-8983 evenings.
Female roommate needed for summer and next year to share 2 bedroom & bath apartment with non-smoking graduate student. $195/m plus electricity. Dishwashing, a/e on bus route. Call 842-4174 17th hour, 842-8611 evening, weekends.
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, ceilers, free utilities, phone, cable, W/D use. Two blocks from KU. K$175 - $195. B41-3689. $75 payoff. Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming house on 1344 Kentucky share kitchens & bathrooms $129 → payment 4349. Leave
Furnished 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Some utilities paid. Some utilities paid with off-street parking one block form University. No pets please. 841-5500.
Furnished room with kitchen & bath facilities. Must utilities paid. Off-street parking one block from hotel.
Great location, 2 bedroom apartment with sun-
room and kitchen. Available April 1. $400 at 101 Mississippi Street.
KOINONIA COMMUNITY has a few spaces in the Christian Living Center for summer '88 and/or academic year 88-89. Apply immediately at ECM Center, 1294 Oread.
Need roommate, share 2-bedroom apartments at Cedarwood, private room; $155/month plus low rent.
one or two bedrooms, apts, low utilities, gat-
water paid,账贴 apc open Mon 1 Sat 10:43
0:43
Nasimuking female to share bedroom 18 for 4 weekends. New taking leaves for 2 bedroom apartments Close to campus, 10 and 12 month leaves. Resident Manager: Unaffiliated. Apartments at 1829
Reserve your room for summer or fall at
the reception in an cooperative
living. Call 1-800-659-2435.
Roommate needed to share 23D House. Close to room:
178 rooms. Available. Now/Summer.
Room with kitchen, laundry room, pool, carport.
SUMMER SUBLET. Affordable, new one-bedroom fully furnished, near campus; located on the campus.
Sublease Sunrise Luxurious 2 Br, 2 bath apt;
Fireplace, wet bar, microwave, tennis court.
For two or three people. Available May through July 31. May paid $75 + mo to 814-846-82 after 3 pm.
Available on 2 bath apartment, at Peppertree Park 472 month, available now or summer 749-0794
Sublease a room in my 3 br 2+ bth on the golf course - covered parking - w/pool & clubhouse,
full office, private bathrooms, next year* 158/mo , utilities * 3 deposit
841-2606 - Scott. Leave message
Sublase a beautiful apartment in the Oread
neighborhood at a seasonable price. $25.00 plus
utilities. Occupancy May 1 - August 1 with optio
weekends, evenings, weekdays, or leave
message anytime.
Subleasing two bedroom apt for June and July
and turning the kitchen and bathroom can
and house up to four. Call Calgary 749-387-981
Sublease Mastercraft 2 bedroom apt. on campus.
Lease begins May 16. Mity rent paid. Water paid.
Upgrade to 2 bedroom. Mity rent paid.
Subleasing two bedroom apt. for June and July.
Close to campus water paid. Cheap and can house
Summer Sublease. Nice 3BH, 2B4, 1 block from campus. Call Nancy or CJ. 841-6078.
Summer Sublasee Sunrise Village. Spacious three bedroom, 2 baths, water/ dryer, pool, ten- rooms.
ADVANTAGES
Summer Sublease: See three bedroom apartment for 3-4 people. Three levels, spiral staircase. Very room. Close to campus. Call 749-4274.
Summer Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apartment Harbor Place $338 water. Water included
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.
Now Leasing for Fall
---
NAISMITH HAL
1890 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS 60044
913-843-8559
- 1 & 2 bedroom units
HILLVIEW
APTS.
1733 WEST 24th
841-5797
Sign a lease with us before April 15th and SAVE $$$
- & 2 bedroom units
• laundry facilities
• on bus route - near shopping
• water paid
• ample street parking
• rental furniture avail.
by Thompson-Crawley
Tired of noise and want a quiet place to call home? Call Naismith Place Apts. 841-1815. A piece of luxury at a reasonable price.
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills & trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus & area shopping.
Lifestyle
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious & comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
Reserve Your Unit Now...For Summer or Fall!
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
West Hill APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts.
furn. or unfurn.
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
Summer Sublease - 4 bdm, new, pool, close to campus, furnished, 842-1028
Summer sublets needed: 2 or 3 for 3 BDR 1.8K,
6 for 4 BDR 2.5K, 9 for 5 BDR 3.5K.
Rentals $155 each. Sue or Kex or Mem 84-3722.
Summer Sublease; two bedroom, two bathroom,
one bathroom. Free car ride. Route 2 half of MAY FREE! *Call 843-300-6900*
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
- 10 or 12 month contract
- OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- Swimming pool
- Free basic cable
- Exercise Weightroom
- Fire place
- Laundry room
- On-Site Management
- Energy efficient
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
A WATER CITY
SUNRISE APARTMENTS
- Studios
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments and
- Garages
- Tennis Court
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 11-5
Reserve your home for next semester!
Completely furnished studio, 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedroom apartments.. all close to KU or on bus route
go to:
Hanover Place * 841.
Hanover Place * 841-1212
14th & Massachusetts
Ochard Corners * 749-4226
15th & Kasold
CAMPUS PBCE * 841-1429
SUNDANCE * 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood * 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
Professional Management and Maintenance Company 842.4455
FOR SALE
Stereo 5 channel mixer 220, remote TV converter
6term fsmr cassette walkman 5, Interested?
7term fsmr cassette walkman 7
73 Crestline House. 12' x 50'. 2 BR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-277-4522 after 5:30 p.m. or inquire 429 North 8. 6 Lawrence.
77 V. W Rabbit, runs great. New clutch, new C.V. juniors $ 405.00 B - 841.96 - 841.98 after 3:30 p.m.
85 Red Honda Spree, Excellent condition, low mileage, best offer. Calen Susan at 841-967.
At complete bedroom, Bed, two chests, small table, desk, mirror and a small t.v. buy It
by piece, price negotiate 698-241-3588
ICc Ile with Epson printer .750 Call John at
878-5723
ATTENTION ADVERTISING/JOURNALISM
established and profitable. 893-1011
Gentic books, 811lys, Penthouse, etc. Mats
Ogne's: 811 New Hampshire, Open Sal. & Sui
**EMERGENCY!** Liquidators take command of Mark & Quinnie Paint Warehouse of Lawrence and Bassett Paint Warehouse of Lawrence, the disposed of immediately. Save up to 75% on all purchases from New Hampshire, Lawrence.
For sale 312 Bianchi Dirt Kick. 18 speeds. 1 week
and want to sell. $300.00. 814-6068.
Odil King w / 9 Rubies. I NEED money! Best offe-
l. Ask for K迪利. B41-7585.
players during winter. Make offer. 749-809.
Pilton Fate - Oak lakers, converts to queen
of hearts. Make offer. 749-809.
Honda Magna 1985 1000 miles. Perf. cond. $2000
84172. Call Allian.
Grey and White combination chair/bed great condition $20.90 or best offer. Call 842-968-9917
LEAVING TOWN Qn Sq. 1b20 bed - 2h2e, Hide-a-Bed Couch,-3ch5, Chest/Drawers 17, Chair/otoman-10, endables 15, each, barstools 20, wicker table 10, also 2 color tv's. b4 1826 Scott. C壁
****NOTHBALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
912 E. 9th, 740-4961
Mountain Bike for sale. Schwimm Siera 22 inch frame, Full Cree Mo back frame and in great condition. Asking $200.00 call 749-3716 ask for Terry.
New R.C. Model Airplane very nice paid $480 sell for $325. Call John at 749-6579.
Music equipment for sale: Ross 4-39c, 1050;
Gibson/ Epiphone electric guitar, $105.0;
Yamaha acoustic, $95.0; 842-294 evenings,
weekends, or leave message anytime.
Nikon microsphere with carrying case. Four objectives. Excellent condition $350.811-742.4
Ovation Anniversary Acoustic Guitar and King Super 20 Ternsax - Both Mini conditions (913)
PJV ICSR 100 speakers Peak 170W good condition $290. Nobel Clairtien Excellent condition $400. Portable cloet $10. Manual typewriter $25. pareasek case $6. Call 831-4187
PC/XT clone 640k 16W, floppy PC color
PC/XT DL WQ LAP software, 5100 $80 IBM
USB
Bacing Bike, in mind condition, Cannondale SR 60,
call Lt. 749.189.65.
Rock-n-reel — Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday
Quantril PtA Market, 811 New Hampshire.
SAILBOARD, Vinta 370, 6m and 4m sails, 2
Sailboard - Sailor SR2, great for learning
$300. Tm 841-2475.
Tandy 1000 computer, 128 K, IBM compatible.
Expandable. Color graphics installed. MS-DOS
and software included. All you need is monitor or
tv. $500. @ 841-3510 for 5:30 p.m.
Two Final Four tickets for sale! Best offer. Call Short, 810-8491
Wedding Dress, Hat. Beauty. beige 12.025 OBBO
Contact Lob. 864 3965 Ext. 412. Night
Hazard. 864 3965 Ext.
Yamaha Riva 180 Scooter, Excellent condition $700 or best offer, Frank 749-2338.
AUTO SALES
1975 Monte Carlo rebuilt motor and transmission.
Will sacrifice, will cost $800 749-3458.
Honda Accord 4x4 Runs, needs carburator. Call Helen 844-2583. Best offer
296 YAMAHA 500 Enduro, 11,800 miles, recent
sales and stories and lire's 750 OBO Dave
Dave at 841-1856
1980 Ford Mustang. new tires; good condition.
1500 negotiable. call 842-2044, anytime.
camero Black V8 auto override, T-Tops,
air P. S., P. B., am/fm cassette, tilt, perfect gray interior. Owner will sacrifice to $ 8,000
weekdays after 5 pm and weekends
931.344-046
85 WV Golf, Silver 4 door, air low, miles 5 speed
road, sun roof, Michael, 749-0794
AUTO repair service on foreign cars at your home. Turn up only $35. Ten years exp.
For Sale 1980 Suzuki motorcycle Runs good
nineteem bike runner $50 or best offer
of 650
Must sell 76 Rabbit. $700 or best offer. Runs well.
499-3182.
LOST-FOUND
**LOST!** card zip possibly at *Main Union* Satur-
day. **If found**, *buy* 941 253-8532.
Leave message
Lest: Somebody out there has my opal ring. Will you PLEASE return me. No quease asked I should know what to do.
HELP WANTED
ARLINES NOW BRING Flight Attendances
INFORMATION TO ALL SALARIES. Listsings to $800 earn position.
Salaries to $900 earn position.
Bakery Sales - cleaning Sat. 6 pm -1 am, Sun 6 pm -12 am. a 4h an hour after payment. paid vacation after one year. Interviews Tues. 1 pm. a 4h an hour. Appointment. Apply Mrs Bakery Bakesh. 749-4324
BE ON T V
Children can castle (信息 1) 800-868-4000 Ext
TEXT
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterkipping, gymnastics, archery, camp fishing, patricia camp, camping, crafts, dramas, OR riding. Also kitchen, office maintenance, Salary $200 or more R & B. M.Cerger, 1765 Maple, Nild. Mt.
Car Cleaning. Part time - full time. Help needed
Car Wash. Part time - full time. Help needed
Acrylic Painting. 6th & 8th graders.
Gallery Cleaning. 6th & 8th graders.
Childcare and light housekeeping needed for eight-year-old girl this summer. Transportation, room, barrel, camperiies of cold Gees to N.Y.C. campers from N.Y.C. No smoker Call 841-3901 for further information.
Cocktail Waitress needed part-time weekends.
Room: 2411; Suite: 601; Plumber: 8. W 24th (behind McDonald's).
Phone: 714-391-7254.
Data Entry Operators long & short term temporary assignment positions 8 am - 5 pm; 9 am - 5 pm; 12:30 pm - 9:00 pm and 5:00 pm - 9:00 pm. If interested, please stop by our Office [OEF MFH] 906 King Street, San Francisco, CA 94107
GOURMETMENT JOBS. $10,649-$459/23rd. Ynr.
Hiring Date: 1033.607 459 ext. 1. G.19758
from 1033.607 459 ext. 1. G.19758
LIVE IN CINDHEAR- New York Suburb. Like working with children? You take the time and care matching you with the right 'family' All of us have a place in our school positions. Good salary. Must be 19 yr, old, driver license. Call 414-747-145. Or write. Child Care Decisions. Inc. 80 Business Park Dr., Armunk, NY 10532.
Half-time graduate assistant: the Organization and Activities Center (OAC) seeks half-time university events personnel. University Events Committee. Required qualifications: enrollment as KU graduate student for Fall 2018, knowledge of KU operations for all departments, and clinical skills. Complete job anals; and clerical skills. Complete job anals.
Nanny Position Available in Boston, June, 1988.
Flexible family with two children, 8 & 10 sees warm, patient, lovingly caring. Hours may vary depending on availability with own entrance. Contact Judith Gates, 46 Walnut St. Brookline, MA 02146, or call (671) 465-7500 to request collected. One year commitment required.
Mass Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokebase now hire part-time table service employees. Must have a year experience and summer experience. Park at 179 Mass Street at 179 Mass Street above Buffalo Bob's Smokebase.
MUSIC DIRECTORS for Unity Church of Lawrence, must also be instrumentalist, vocalist, and have church experience. 3-5 hours a week. Salary budget 841-1447.
nouncement available May 16, 2018. Submit letter of application and resume to Ann Evernal, Director, Lawrence, Kansas. Apply by July 15, 2018. Union, Lawrence, Kansas. 66045. Application deadline is Friday, April 29, 2018.
Mother's Helper Wanted. Wanting to take a year out of school and travel? Great benefits, paid airfare, beautiful Philadelphia shores. Summers in New York City or any other city. Mother's helper needed to aid another nanny already here with non-workening mother. Live in four days/week, 3 days off. Occasional evening.
Nature's Best Health Foods needs Saturday help
105. Call 842-1883.
furnished room, 3 days/week, 3 days off. Occasional evenings,
free room/board, two great children. #75/wEE
must have excellent references and experience with
children. Call (215) 667-4543.
RESEARCHACH ASSISTANT: Perform experiments using biochemical immunological and molecular biological techniques to study rheumatoid disease. Requirements: B.S. or B.S. on Biological Chemistry, Microbiology, Biochemistry, Microbiology, Immunology or Genetic Molecular and laboratory experience. Salary: $39,000 per year. April 1888. Send letter of application indicating career goals; resume and 3 letters of recommendation to Dr. Dean Steatier, Univ. of Haworth, Lawrence, KS. 6045 EO/AA
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines & Amusement Parks No longer accepting applications for the resort. For information & application; write national Collegiate Recreation, P.O. Box 8074 Hillston
Out of money from Spring Break? Make quick
decision. Call Lawrence
Inquire within 842-3384 for Jon
Lewis.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks NOW apply applications
for information and application
tations. For information & application
write national Recreation Collec-
tion, P. O. Box 12477.
Resorts Employment Newsletter- All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif., Nevada/Arizona. More! Travel Vacation /Resort Cities. REKN BK 62700, So. Lake Tahoe. 9571 6914 51-7502
Retail Sales micro computers. Individual for part time sales of IBM compatible computers for Microsoft applications. Micro experiences preferred. Send resume by 4/01 to Lawrence, KS 66044 EOE/MFH8. Please no phone calls.
Sub n - Stuff is now hiring for all shifts
drivery. Applies at 1618 W. 23rd after p. 4m.
Teachers aide for child care program needed 7:45 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. weekdays. Experience with 45 or 8 yr. olds and two references required. Apply at Children's Learning Center, 311 Maine,
Summer childcare needed for 10-month old girl, approx 4 hrs. morning or afternoons, M-R, same position(s) for schoolyear 88-89. Experience preferred, owe call,驾车 82176 except T-R
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but ability to communicate, dependability and accuracy required. Send resume to: FO XU 205, Lawrence KS 60044.
Be a NANNY
- Great salary & benefits,
- Seaside Connecticut towns near New York City
- airfare provided
Charge from home/location
- Choose from warm, loving families are screened by us.
- Year round positions only
Care for Kids, Inc.
Business Manager/
Summer Editor
Applications
- Must enjoy working with children
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1988 summer/fall semester business manager and summer editor these are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Interested persons may pick up applications in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
Applications are due Friday,
April 1, 1988 at 5:00 p.m. in
200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Monday,
April 4, 1988.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, March 30, 1988
The Kansan is an equal opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, age, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, or ancestry.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Work Study Office Assistant. Evening and weekends available. Some experience with computers preferred. Opportunity to learn to write in English. Contact Audio-Reader Network. 844-6400
Women穿上短袖 softshell pitches & players
hats, and swim trunks. They stay in the
summer. If interested call Karie 84222 Ext.
616-8422.
MISCELLANEOUS
Jen C on the flamingo foyer. *Sorry day late!* Hap-
teen have fun at Kemper! (*Sorry, no sup-
prise party.*)
Dare Wife, I don't often say it. I don't often show you. But you mean a great deal to me. I Love You!
Gunther – Privileged living, Rio, wrong numbers, Stu and Rog, head baders, backstreets, tweens, ‘amis’ spaghetti, Bobby the 380 dinner at Carney’s, break out, psycho, and Drew in Chelsea, out of the Publix, out cash, naughty girls, hot legs, shook me all night and J.C. Thanks
GRAPE APPLICITIONS - please with research on your study methods. Five minutes. 841.2178.
Fabulously handsome long-haired males seek attractive well-proportioned females upon which to laish kisses and affection. Please enclose photo. Tony and Jeff.
Katie: Happy 19th! We'll celebrate tomorrow night. We love you. Love Courtney and TRISA. P.S. Thanks for getting out of those bushes last Thursday night!
A. B.C. "Religion is the venereal disease of mankind." - Henr de Mentionlter.
Fact: Population density is not the root cause of hunger. The problem occurs in societies where land ownership, jobs, education, health care and old age security are beyond the reach of most people.
PERSONAL
To KU students. Myth #2: Hunger is caused by overpopulation.
to our loyal fans who met us at the turpake gate
Sunday night and escorted us to Murphy Hall:
Thanks for your enthusiastic support! - The
Lawrence Chamber Players.
To the gorgeous 100 lb. brunette I sat beside Wescoe 10:00 A.M. 3/21! For the rewarding, sensual experience we shared together I tread through a world of beauty or come to MWF. MWF 8:30. John Deere.
Join "KU's War on Hunger". April 4 - 9.
Join 'KU's War on Hunger' April 4-9.
Tony and Jeff, You sex long-haired Babes, two hot girls are wondering what your address is. J. and J.
Wendell - HAPPY BIRTHDAY! - Coors light -
green couch - turn on the white while - play head
light games - do not forget the ice scraper -
C.Y.A.!)
Unattractive well-read intelligent female seekers interested. "Repeat Here."
A door is ajar — please let me in. In dancing it was unfortunate, let's do it again. Colorado!
Wendell: Happy birthday! What are you doing? Playing the new game! Bowling? Pickup on dudgeon! Watching You! One! Bed! There is a comedy show! I am always here for you! Love Ya, Hack.
BUS. PERSONAL
Discover recovery thru shared experience and mutual support. No dues or fees. Overstates $30,000. Referral to Memorial Hospital, 325 Main. For confidential information contact person. W write P.O Box 3482
Over $10,000 in cash awards Enter the CERTS
For more information
电话 1-800-3243 CERTS
Pregnant and need help? Call Birch bright at Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Instant passport, portfolio resume, naturalization, immigration, visa, ID. fine portraits
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-236.
Try if you'll love it, become glamorous with a camera. (Make sure your settings include; Glamorized Make-over, Full Posing Assistance, Creative Photography Technique to produce alarming results.) 740% Mike. $760
❤️ ❤️ ❤️
We make hearts thump.
Balloons-N-More balloons
and gifts have an uncanny
ability to make hearts thump
without saying a word. Jump
in someone's heart, or touch.
Balloons-N-More
Use It or Lose It.
749. 0148 609 Vermont
8 Beds for Your Convenience!
Unlimited Use Tanning Packages
Tanning: 6 visits/$20
$15 mo./$2/1 visit 10 visits/$25
25th & Iowa
EUROPEAN 841-6232
SUNTANNING
(formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY
Lowenbrau 6 pack $3.24
Coors Light 12 pack $5.65
Beer sales March 30-April 5
Cools Light 12 pack $35.65
Busch 24 pack $8.49
Old Style case $6.99
Old Wife 24 pack $7.26
Old Mill Light 24 pack $7.36
Wiedemann case $5.79
$25 per month
SEMESTER
MEMBERSHIP
- Certified Instructors
- Certified Instructor IDEA/Rhythmic Aerobics
- Body Toning Classes
Job-winning resumes, cover letters. 12 years exp in the Photographic Services department. Kekhrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service. Call or email Design & Build Room 206. 844-6767
income Tax forms filed at low fee. Call 841-9689
sk for Rockdil.
- Individualized Weight and Toning Programs
- Exclusively For Women
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hour, 443-9032
(n.m.)
FITNESS CLUB
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
(p.m.)
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and A _ action Ser-
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj-Gyn and _aRtion services. Overland Park...(913) 461-6678.
- Whirlpool
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841-7316
The Comic Corner N.E. Corner of 32nd & Iowa
BodyShapes
- Shower Facilities
Quality Type including accurate spelling, punctuation, and grammar.
Prickly/idustive available. 814-037-978
Fax/Email available.
N E CENTER OF SONS & TOWNS
841-4294
Bloom County t-shirts & books
Role-playing, war games and miniatures,
Star Trek, Japanese Comics and more!
---
1
TUTORING TUTORING *6.59*./hr, MATH STATISTICS and PHYSICS, B.S.M. A.M.A. Math, M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 841-304.
- Air Conditioned
- Hourly Classes
HARPER
VIDEO EXTRA We videotake weddings, sporting events, parties, most anything with professional photography.
WORDSMITHIS We go by waypoint. Let professionals do their thesis, papers. Great rates. Fast delivery.
TYPING
We Know Your Name. Until Wednesday, April 6 House of Usher, 838, Mass 842-310, will print Graduation Announcement Names Card in royal blue ink. Small quantities. Call for more
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accu-
sion 842-7945 or 842-7913, 841-1913,
841-1916, 841-1918, 841-1923, 841-1925,
SERVICES OFFERED
4 mh. Typing Service. Fast, professional work
processing with letter quality printer. 843-7643.
AAA TYPING. Wor辞 processing, spellcheck
p10; poundless letters. After 5 p.m. T-P
messenger. 842-1942.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 30 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages or documents.
2-24 hr. Typing Service. Fast, professional work.
A1 Reliable Typing Service. Term papers, lesumes, textbooks. professionally typed, IBM Typewriter. Typewriter
58 Value when presented toward new patient services. State & student insurance accepted. Freeipalpinal Exam. Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor, 435-3879
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term
paper, prepared by correcting Selectric
correcting 833-4212.
edterm terms, these, dissertations, applications
expertise. Prompt service: call 845-273-683
*
DISSERTATION, THESES, LAW PAPERS
service available 442.378.210 before 9 p.m. per service
Accurate, fast word processing. Specializing in
pick up and deliver
SPEEDTEM 843-2376
12 online space paper; fast lawrence, also
12 online space paper; fast lawrence, also
Accurate, fast word processing. Specializing in
word processing.
Call R.I. call service for all of your tying needs. 841-9494 to 9 p.m. please.
**Evaluated:** 824-3278, secure y. pill. **Phillips**
Donna's *Quality Typing and processing*
of documents by addressing letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter
quality printing. Spelling corrected. 842-2747
THE FAR SIDE
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE, Letter
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 884-7500 spell check
TOP-NOTCH SERVICES 884-7500
RESUME SERVICES - professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. 10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letters, business cards, and typesetting and graphics for any uses. All services back in 24 months. CALL 826-2957. 'No answer leave message on machine.'
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at 845-0111
TYPNING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
the WORDCOCTORS. Why pay for typing when they are less expensive, lucres, law review. Since 1983. 983-3147.
WANTED
Female, nonsmoker, for summer roommate in
house close to campus. Interested?
Call Ann 841-235-6760
Lake of the Ozarks summer employment. The Barge Floating Restaurant is accepting applications from shop managers and sales clerks. Excellent tips and salaries – great working conditions. Enjoy your time at the resort as it is still available. Enjoy skiing, skiing, swimming, while white water rafting is available. Front Bachelor at (419) 365-5788. Roommate wanted to share 2 b/drm apartment near KU Med Center. Next Fall. Non-smoker
French & Spanish interpreters wanted for simultaneous translation in a grain storage & university. June 6 to July 22, 1988. Translation experience desired, must have college degree or be certified in French. (933) 521-6940 for more information. Application deadline April 4, 1988. KSU equal opportunity admissions.
FEMALE roommates for FURNISHEIR
TOWNHOUSE starting Aug. 1. On bus route, owner,
washer & dryer, fireplace, own room. Must be
neat & responsible. Call 749 5774.
WANTED FINAL FOUR TICKETS Instant cash
Bank Call Andy Day 816-212-477-8
913-812-479-8
Night of 4-5-6-7-8-9-10
Four basketball Tickets. Will pay
Gift card. Gift card. Gift card.
BCAF, BCF, BCF, BCF, BFC23, BFC23
price can be $49.00 per ticket.
Wanted to Buy; one final four ticket — will pay large amount of cash immediately! I interested, and have a home, leave message on answering machine.
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Universal Press Syndicate
3.30
"Oh, my! Aren't these fancy drinks!"
Policy Words in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Bold face on 3 words
Classified Information Mail-In Form
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Billed has 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.
- Prepale Order Form Ads
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan
Deadline is on Monday at 4:00pm 2 days prior to publication.
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
01 announcements 300 for sale 500 help usued 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
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Please print your ad one word per box:
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins
Total days in paper
Amount paid
Lawrence, KS 66045
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
Classification: ___
1
16
Wednesday, March 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Dillons
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Ham & Water Product 95% Fat Free (Sliced Free) Additional Purchases . . . $1.39 LD.
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Certain Ad Prices May Vary By Town.
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We give a loving heart
To girls all around
Dare to all under your eyes
PRINCESS
ENGLISH
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Limit One Coupon Per Customer.
Coupon Good Mar. 30-April 5, 1988.
Coupon Used in Double Coupon Program.
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Deli Fresh Potato Salad Old Fashioned or Mustard
B Be Sure To Check Our Bedding Plants. We Have A Large Selection For All Your Garden Needs.
89¢ Lb.
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Take home a fresh salad tonight! Make it right in the store at our new self-service kitchen. Enjoy a variety of choose from, including 5 Marie's Salad Dressings. Take the chill off a cold day & warm yourself & your family with some of our fresh salad dressings. (Available Only in Stores With Salad Bar)
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Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate
Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Kraak said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakel said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain.
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtlife said. "They really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the
Society is hosting a competition.
[Moonlit Sea](image_url)
KANSAN
MAGAZINE
HERMAN JOSEPHS.
ORIGINAL DRAFT
Cragm
flavorful refreshing
HOME
BREWING
MARCH 30, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
ier Service is calling for a high
iversary
serve Land Day
Khalid Najib, president of theoup, said that the purpose of thehibit was to show the Americanople that Palestinians are a peopleio are proud of their heritage andstorms. Najib's family was forcedleave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demotion yesterday. Najib said that proximately 40 students particiated in a peaceful march from the insas Union to Strong Hall and ck.
Cansan reporter Kathleen Faddis conbuted information to this story.
ins to defy ulpit ban
Treeby said that the national eskytery might dismiss Swagrt from the denomination if he summed preaching May 22 but at Swaggart could appeal that, Juleen Turnage.
been Turnage, a spokeswoman
the national office of the
semblies of God in Springfield,
b), said Swaggart's option to
turn after three months "does
it exist anymore."
'The General Presbytery overlmelym and without a dissent- vote affirmed the authority of Executive Presbytery to make onms matters concerning credentials.' she said tectly.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the chief board of directors, intertied its regular bimonthly meet to watch Treeby's televised conference, "We don't concur that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we't communicate through television news conferences with our illplained ministers," Turnage!
ne Rev. G, Raymond Carlson,
Assemblies' general superin-
ent, said Tuesday that if
ggart did not accept its ruling,
Executive Presbytery would
loubt take action to dismiss
ked if Swaggart had consid- leaving the Assemblies, by said, "He is considering possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate
Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Ieff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case." Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain.
Glenn Shirtliff, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shriftle said. "They will have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemake senator,
money刀 KU Crew had received in the
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests." Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m.yesterday,the
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--serve Land Day
MUMS
NOT
THE
WORD
Mummy
The KU Men's Glee Club Join us and get on a role with singing, good times, and performance.
LET YOURSELF BE HEARD
You can receive 1 hour credit. Enroll now for Fall '88. Meets Tues. and Thurs.2:30-3:20 Room 328 Murphy Hall No auditions or experience required.
1er Service is calling for a high
iversary
Khalid Nalib, president of the out, said that the purpose of the hibt was to show the American ople that Palestinians are a people 10 are proud of their heritage and stoms. Najib's family was forced leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demon- tation yesterday. Najib said that proximately 40 students partici- ted in a peaceful march from the insas Union to Strong Hall and ek.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis conbuted information to this story.
Treeby said that the national eskytery might dismiss Swagart from the denomination if he summed preaching May 22 but at Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman
the national office of the
sembles of God in Springfield,
s. said Swaggart's option to
turn after three months "does
exist anymore."
ins to defy ulpit ban
'The General Presbytery overlimely and without a dissent-vote affirmed the authority of Executive Presbytery to makeisions on matters concerningcredentials," she saidtoday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the arch board of directors, interted its regular bimonthly meet to watch Treebury's televised conference, "We don't concur that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we we'll communicate through television news conferences with our affiliated ministers," Turnage
2 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
ae Rev G. Raymond Carlson, Asssembles' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if gart did not accept its ruling, Executive Presbytery would loot take action to dismiss
ked if Swaggart had consid- leaving the Assemblies, by said, "He is considering possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow obiects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Kraak now last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it." Krakaw said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cassel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain.
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliffe said. "I really have some problem with that."
Roger Templain, Nunemaker senator,
of money KU Crew had received in the
week.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m.yesterday,the
KANSAN magazine
8 ...HOME BREWING
Dwight Burnham, associate professor in the School of Fine Arts, first made home brew when he was a college freshman 50 years ago. Now he makes about 200 gallons of beer and 100 gallons of wine each year. See page eight for Burnham's stories and a description of the brewing process.
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.
I
ON THE COVER
Dwight Burnham disinfects wine bottles in his basement with a chlorine solution. Photo by Jan M. Morris.
DEPARTMENTS
Trends: Spring styles ... 4
Interview: Vanna White ... 6
Reviews: New sounds, old videos .. 12
First Person: America by train ... 14
10
A
STAFF:
C
Editor: Kjersti Moen
Associate Editor: Jerri Niebaum
CONTRIBUTING STAFF: Brad Addington, Valorie Armstrong, Keith Bruns, John Buzbee, Kevin Dilmore, Dale Fulkerson, Carol Funk, Norissa S. Gordon, John Henderson, Jennifer Hinkle, Stephen Kline, Rob Knapp, Jan M. Morris, Dave Niebergall, Andrew Pavich, Dan Ruettimann, David Stewart, Rick Stewart, David White, Joel Zeff.
KANSAN MAGAZINE is a monthly supplement to the University Daily Kansan. Articles and photographs to be considered for publication should be sent to 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan., 60454.
The Total Look introduces Total Nail Care by Muriel Walters
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KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30,1988
ier Service is calling for a high
iversary
serve Land Day.
Khalid Naib, president of the oup, said that the purpose of the hibt was to show the American ople that Palestinians are a people 10 are proud of their heritage and stoms. Najib's family was forced leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that proximately 40 students particited in a peaceful march from the insas Union to Strong Hall and ek.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis con puted information to this story.
ans to defy ulpit ban
Treeby said that the national esystery might dismiss Swagart from the denomination if he sumed preaching May 22 but at Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman,
the national office of the
semblies of God in Springfield,
s. said Swaggart's option to
turn after three months "does
it exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery over-emblyming and without a dissentive vote affirmed the authority of Executive Presbytery to makeisions on matters concerningcredentials." she said terdy.
although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors,interested its regular monthly meeting to watch Treebys television conference, "We don't con't that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we 't communicate through televised news conferences with our aligned ministers." Turnage
ne Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, Assistants' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if ggart did not accept its ruling, Executive Presbytery would laud take action to dismiss
kied if Swaggart had consid- leaving the Assemblies, by said, "He is considering possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Kraak last night n vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cassell said that KU Crew deserved a new shell as well as the set of 948.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain.
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senate
of money KU Crew had received印
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliffe said. "I really have some problem with that."
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the
[Moonlit Lake]
trends
STYLES
SPRIN
W what's new for spring? The color is green, especially lime and chartreuse.
The pattern is floral, and the fabric is washed silk or body-hugging Lyrca® spandex. The motif is nautical, and many styles are reminiscent of the '60s.
Dresses , . . femininely romantic. Fabrics are sheer and silky, many with floral prints. Important tailoring trends include fitted bodices, full skirts, simple necklines and buttoned backs. Multiple tiers and flounces add a fifty touch.
Another option is the "Jacqueline Onassis" look in linen. It offers simply constructed dresses in solid colors, often with white accents.
Shorts . . . now for dressing up. Shorts are taking the place of skirts for dressy occasions, especially with jackets for a business look. They are walking shorts, sometimes called "city" shorts, and they often are made of linen. As sportwear for men and women, shorts are taking the shapo of bicycle pants, worn very tight, cut to mid-thigh length and made of a stretch knit.
How much leg skirts reveal is a heated issue in the fashion world right now. "Like it or not, miniskirts are here to stay and shorter than ever this year," says JoAnn McFarland of Saks Fifth Avenue in Kansas City, Mo. True, you will see many more minis this year than last, but women across the country are rebelling. Many refuse to buy short skirts, forcing designers to come out with both short and long styles. This means that for now, women have a choice. Although the long, narrow styles are turning up less frequently, long, full skirts are still a viable option for those who don't have the shape for a mini. For those who can wear them, short skirts are worn casually as well as for dressing up, and they are a cool alternative to shorts.
Jeans . . . "double chemical!" in place of acid wash. The new process creates jeans with a pale, even color, not blotchy as acid-washed jeans were. Also seen are jeans patched with different fabrics and adorned with embroidery. Later in the season and into the fall, dark denim will make a comeback.
Pants . . . getting wider at the hem. The wide look hasn't reached Lawrence yet, but be prepared. Otherwise, capri pants, made of stretch knit and ending at mid-calf, are hot.
Tops ... cropped away. Tank tops are tight and short, some looking nearly like jogging bras. Bandeaus are big. Lots of styles are made of clingy stretch knits.
Swinsuits . . . tanks are hot. Many have low backs and spaghetti straps. Monokinis are back. Bikinis are in, in but new shapes. The string is out; baneaus and bra tops are in. The panty has a higher waist than last season's. Suits are made in metallics or tropical prints, or they are black with a bright flash of color. Some suits have studded designs on the front.
Career looks . . . long jackets with short skirts. How much skirt shows below the jacket depends on what skirt length a woman is comfortable with. Jackets are either long and boxy or short and fitted. The skirt that goes with a short, fitted jacket must be shorter to look balanced. But beware of buying a too-short skirt for work. Most men and women in the business world agree that a very short skirt is inappropriate for the office. Both Jacket styles can be paired with dressy city shorts as an alternative. Underneath, instead of the usual collared shirt, many designers prefer a sheer, silky blouse, simply cut.
Eveningwear . . . also short. Most styles are strapless and have flounces or multiple tiers. Crinolines still peek from underneath skirts, and bubble-shaped skirts are back from last season. Florals up this spring, and the important fabrics are tafeta and organa.
Shees . . . slingbacks are big, in heels and flats. Aknstrap shoes and ballet slippers with ribbons that lace around the ankle are in. Fabric-covered shoes dyed to match and canvas spadrilres in floral, striped or bold, geometric patterns are popular. Woven leather shoes with lace ties update the hurache style for both men and women.
Accessories . . . golden, dangly earrings and bright, chunky bangles worn in multiples . . . watches with big faces, Roman numerals and reptile bands . . . large silk flowers to pin on dresses, collars, hats, purse straps and in the hair . . . scarves as sashes around the waist, as hat bands or as replacements for last season's bows . . . wide-brimmed straw hats laquered in bright colors . . . cinch belts in assorted colors, especially black . . . tights with flowers or bold, geometric shapes.
Menwear . . . washed silk. In Kansas City, Mo., and across the country, silk is turning up in shirts and shorts for men. The fabric has a matte finish and is extremely soft and comfortable. In Lawrence, however, shoppers will not find it. Cotton still reigns here. The reason: Men who shop in Lawrence tend to be more conservative, says Jeremy Furse of Britches Corner. Generally, they resist the flashy New York styles and opt for more classic, preppy looks. For those men, silks are going too far. Furse says. His customers prefer what he calls an "undated traditional" look
Colors, patterns ... black and white ...
black with fluorescent brights — acid green,
shocking pink, burning orange ... navy and
white, red and white ... polka dots;
stipes; checks; bold, geometric prints;
floralis.
Because it is a classic look, the nautical motif is well represented in Lawrence. The "Out of Africa" look is back, as well. Mud-washed madrases is the latest pattern. Crests on the breast pocket decorate button-downs and casual shirts. Suits are updated with a subtle thread of color woven into a neutral background.
Some fun, new patterns show up on silk ties. Bold geometrics and optical illusion prints take the place of the traditional repeat patterns and paisleys. Some designs are reminiscent of the '40s and '50s.
Norissa S. Gordon is a Lenaeza senior majoring in maazine journalism.
THE FUNNIEST PART OF TIME
Stay cool on campus. Nautical navy and white stripes for him; a flirtible double-tier skirt and stretch-knot cropped tank for her. His outfit from Litwin's. Her top and belt from JCPenny. Skirt from Litwin's. All shoes from College Shoe Shop.
1er Service is calling for a high
iversary
serve Land Day.
Khalid Najib, president of the oup, said that the purpose of the hibit was to show the American ople that Palestinians are a people 10 are proud of their heritage and stones. Najib's family was forced leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demotion yesterday. Najib said that proximately 40 students partici-
ted in a peaceful march from the insa Union to Strong Hall and ck.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis computed information to this story.
Freeby said that the national eskytery might dismiss Swagart from the denomination if he sued preaching May 22 but as Swaggart could appeal that Julie Turnage, a spokeswoman
ins to defy ulpit ban
Jüchen Turnage, a spokeswoman in the national office of thesemblies of God in Springfield,
said Swagart's option toturn after three months "does exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery over-
lmelym and without a dissent-
vote affirmed the authority of
Executive Presbytery to make
insions on matters concerning
credentials," she said
tardy.
although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the arch board of directors, interted its regular bilimbeaty meet to watch Treeby's televised conference, "We don't conr that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we't communicate through televisie news conferences with our pliined ministers." Turnage
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
te Rev G. Raymond Carlson, Assmibles' general superinten-
sion, said Tuesday that if gart did not accept its ruling,
Executive Presbytery would loub take action to dismiss
ked if Swaggart had consid- leaving the Assemblies, by said. "He is considering possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate
Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
Bv leff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakaw last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakaw said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliff said. "They have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the
1987
Turn heads at the beach. His suit shows the nautical look; hers a new cut in bikinis. Swim trunks from Litwin's. Bikini from Carousel.
ABOVE: Look sharp at the office. A double-breasted suit for him; a longer-cut jacket for her. His outfit from Britches Corner, Wingtip shoes from College Shoe Shoppe. Her outfit from Scot's Ltd. RIGHT: The latest accessories for men: woven leather makes the shees; bold, new patterns update ties, socks, and suspenders; a nautical motif decorates a bulky-knit sweater. Shoes from College Shoe Shoppe. Ties, socks, suspenders and sweater from Britches Corner.
JUSTIN LADY AND CHRISTOPHER DUNLAP
TIE
STORY BY NORISSA S. GORDON
PHOTOS BY DALE FULKERSON
1234567890
The freshest in women's accessories: Flowers adorn a hat and barrette; polka dots jazz up sucks and a hairband. New takes: a nautical motif in spadrilles; sling-back style in flats; bold, chunky jewelry. Shoes from College Shoe Shoppe. Bolo tie and collar pins from Carousel. Earrings and necklaces from Scot's Ltd. Hat, cinch belt, socks and flower barrette from JCPenney.
THE FASHION DANCE HALL
Look smashing at the party. His suit is a sharp cut in a textured, silvery-gray wool/silk blend. Her dress is a sassy, bubble-shaped cut in taffeta with a polka-dot crinoline peeking underneath. Long, white gloves complete the look. His suit from Britches Corner. Shoes from College Shoe Shop. Her dress from Weavers. Gloves from Barb's Vintage Rose.
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
1er Service is calling for a high
serve Land Day
iversary
Khalid Najib, president of the oup, said that the purpose of the hibit was to show the American ople that Palestinians are a people so are proud of their heritage and storms. Najib's family was forced leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demotion yesterday. Najib said that proximately 40 students particiated in a peaceful march from the nasa Union to Strong Hall and ek.
ansan reporter Kathleen Faddis computed information to this story.
ins to defy ulpit ban
Freeby said that the national eskyterb might dismiss Swagrt from the denomination if heumed preaching May 22 but it Swaggart could appeal that
Julie Turnage, a spokeswoman
the national office of the
semblies of God in Springfield,
said Swaggart's option to
urn after three months "does
exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overlmelying and without a dissent-vote affirmed the authority of Executive Presbytery to make imisions on matters concerning credentials." she said terday.
Though the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the chief board of directors, interted its regular bimonthly meet to watch Treeby's televised conference, "We don't concur that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we't communicate through television conferences with our iliplined ministers," Turnage
ie Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, Asssembles' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if gartt did not accept its ruling, Executive Presbytery would lautte take action to dismiss
ked if Swaggart had consid- leaving the Assemblies, by said, "He is considering possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I veto it," Krakaw said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
"Obviously, that was not the case." Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliffe said. "I really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator,
noted the amount of money KU C
paymen in New York.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
A
interview
MILTON COX AND JONATHAN WESTER
Dan Ruettimann/KANSAN
Vanna, clad in a blue chiffon-looking evening dress, signed an autograph for me and smiled. I smiled back. The photographer smiled. Everyone was smiling.
Vanna
Glitter, glamour and too much glare
BY JOEL ZEFF
One brief moment in the glittery and glamorous world of Vanna White, and already, my heart had been steamed into rapid culture hail.
The only obstacles between ecstasy and consonant heaven were two Topeka businessmen skipping work, three screaming teen-agers and a housewife with a crying baby. Opportunity knocks only once, and my door had been off its hinges for three years. My time had arrived.
After years of research, Wheel-watching and vowel-buying madness. I was only nine feet away from the world's fastest and most prolific letter-turner.
Vanna, in a rare publicity appearance March 2 at the grand opening of West Ridge Mall in Topeka, signed autographs and smiled all day to thousands of worshippers and media hounds. In one minute, it would be my turn to hound.
badge and stepped up to the table where the true alphabet queen held court. At that moment, I knew that all other letter-turners in the world daring to wear the sacred sequins were only wasted facsimiles. Taking a deep breath, I stepped up, shook hands and introduced myself to the woman I had thought of as the good witch of the North, the tooth fairy and my mother all rolled into one.
Vanna, clad in a blue chiffon-looking evening dress, signed an autograph for me and smiled. I smiled back. The photographer smiled. Everyone was smiling. The security guard scratched his leg.
I clasped my hands, adjusted my media
Thousands of questions roared through my head. What should I ask the woman who makes more money in a week than I'll make in two lifetimes and turned lights letters for a living? My mouth agape, I spit out the question, "How do you like Kan-
Alan Johnson Special to the KANSAS
1er Service is calling for a high
iversary
serve Land Day.
Khaidal Najib, president of the oup, said that the purpose of the hibt was to show the American ople that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and stoms. Najib's family was forced leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demotion yesterday. Najib said that orximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the nasa Union to Strong Hall and sk.
ansan reporter Kathleen Faddis consulted information to this story.
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ins to defyulpit ban
Freey said that the national asbystery might dismiss Swagat from the denomination if heumed preaching May 22 but it Swaggart could appeal that it uleen Turnage, a spokeswoman
the national office of the
semblies of God in Springfield,
. said Swappart's option to
go on a "moments" month "does
exist anymore."
The General Presbytery overrelly and without a dissent-vote affirmed the authority of Executive Presbytery to make imison matters concerning credentials." she said tereday.
Though the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the rch board of directors, interted its regular bimonthly meet to watch Treebys' televised s conference, "We don't conr that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we w't communicate through televiws conferences with our iplined ministers," Turnage
ie Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, Assessments' general superinten- said Tuesday that if gart did not accept its ruling, Executive Presbytery would lout take action to dismiss
6. KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
ked if Swaggart had consid- leaving the Assemblies, by said, "He is considering ossibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31,1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate
Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakw last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cassel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain
that had a chance to win.
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliffe said. "I really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests." Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the
sas?" Thousands of questions at my finger-tips and two years of college education under my belt and I ask a cheap two-dollar question. Joseph Pulitzer turned over in his grave.
Now it was her turn. With every consonant and vowel at her disposal, she smiled and said, "I like it!" A knife ripped into my back as I stumbled away from Vanna's table and toward the water fountain. I furiously began splashing water on my face, hoping this evil grammar nightmare would end. Little did I know that it was only beginning.
After that first meeting with Vanna, I roamed through the mall to get a feel for the biggest publicity stunt in Topeka's history. From commercial spots on local banks and television stations to the mall's ribbon cutting ceremony, every moment was geared toward Vanna. Cynthia Shipper, a member of Argon Public Relations Inc., the company that organized the event, explained why her company wanted Vanna. "She has a 36 or 37 share in the Kansas television market. She's the hottest thing in Kansas, and that's why she's here."
If the lightbulb wasn't on then, there was a short in the fuse. I was expecting a champagne-and-caviar segment on "Lifestyle's of the Rich and Famous" and got a 30-second used car commercial. Vanna was just a publicity prostitute. Money, the sin of Satan himself, had ransacked Vanna to promote an empty vision in the middle of Kansas. Vanna had her money, the mall had its publicity, the people had a star and an adbut. He I had a grasp of the true
publicity world as I walked into Vanna's pews conference.
"Tape recorders, cameras, people. All right, who wants to start? Fire away." Vanna told about 20 people at the news conference. The true journalists in the crowded room looked at each other like sharks at a feeding frenzy. At least, I looked at everybody like a shark at a feeding frenzy.
That was the easy question. Sure, she wove the question into a sweater, but I was ready for the next round — the money question. How much was she paid to be transported into the middle of nowhere and Wanamaker Road? Her reply was a simple "I'll never tell." Ha, foiled again. The reporter next to me gave me a grin, looked at Vanna and asked an even more complex question: "Why do people at the end of Wheel of Fortune pick the same six letters in the bonus round?" Now, that's a brainteaser.
self-clean and I was asked. "Vanna replied. "I love to meet And, I thought it would be a great opportunity to see a new mall. I love going to malls because you have everything in it. You have food in there, you have clothes in there, you have vitamins in there. Just about everything you need, you can find in a mall."
teach her.
After a few boring, tabloid magazine questions, I asked my first real journalistic question. "Why would someone of your stature come to West Ridge Mall in Topeka, Kansas?" Every journalist in the room locked his chops in anticipation. I had begun to redeem myself in the sanity of search and destroy journalism.
Every answer from Vanna seemed like
retroceded, regurgitated babbie. She had the "most-embarrassing-moment" answer, the "what she-does-in her-sperature" answer and even the dreaded "why-do-people-watch-Wheel-of-Fortune" answer memorized and rehearsed.
anisthe
instinct.
Do you know what my favorite sight in
Topeka? See the land, seeing those
farms on the land. Just beautiful land
as far as I can see. No big buildings, no city
(1)
Taking a deep breath, I stepped up, shook hands and introduced myself to the woman I had thought of as the good witch of the North, the tooth fairy and my mother all rolled into one.
buildings — it's just very relaxing." Vanna said. Now, that's babbie.
said. Now, how did I find that was ever an ending to this evil publicity and media epic, it was a statement I overheard from an elderly couple trying to catch a glimpse of Vanna at an autograph session:
"Honey, can you see Betty White yet?" Joel Zeff is a Kansas City, Mo., sophomore majoring in journalism. He also is a Kansan staff writer.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30,1988
ther Service is calling for a high
niversary
bserve Land Day
Khaidil Najib, president of the coup, said that the purpose of the hibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and storms. Najib's family was forced leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students particiated in a peaceful march from the ansas Union to Strong Hall and eck.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis conbuted information to this story.
ins to defy ulpit ban
Treeby said that the national esbystery might dismiss Swagart from the denomination if he sumed preaching May 22 but at Swaggart could appeal that Julien Turnage a goddess.
Then Turnage, a spokeswoman
at the national office of the
semblies of God in Springfield,
s』 said Swagart's option to
turn after three months "does
exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery over-embling and without a dissent-vote affirmed the authority of Executive Presbytery to makeisions on matters concerninginister credentials," she saidterday.
Though the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the rch board of directors, interted its regular bimonthly meet to watch Treeby's televised conference, "We don't conr that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we 't communicate through televi news conferences with our ilpined ministers," Turnage
ie Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, Asssemble's general superintendent, said Tuesday that if gart did not accept its ruling, Executive Presbytery would tout take action to dismiss
ked if Swaggart had consid- leaving the Assemblies, by said, "He is considering possibility of an appeal.
---
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate
Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Kraak now light nvoyed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
“If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I veto it,” Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. “It's not consistent.”
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain.
Glenn Shirliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliffe said. "I really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the
HOME
VODKA
Dwight Burnham makes 300 gallons of beer and wine each year in his basement brewery.
T
STORY BY NORISSA S. GORDON PHOTOS BY JAN M. MORRIS
he sample of brew reached the red line on the tester. He message above the line said, "Bottle here." Dwight Burnham and his professor buddies siphoned the fermented barley and hops into empty glass a bottle and left the bottles in the cellar for their final aging. A week later, the three returned to taste their creation. Burnham saw it first
three readied cups. A shard of brown glass stuck in the dry wall above the bottles they had left the Pale Ale. The bottles had exploded under pressure and left a mishmash of glass and smelly, bubbly liquid.
sultry, bubbly. Ten years after the Pale Ale disaster, Burnham was in ten his cellar fermenting home recipes, this time making wine. He had made a grape mixture that was ready to be poured into the plastic fermenting tub. All he needed was one more ingredient: sugar. He reached to the shelf and grabbed a five-pound bag. In it now. All he had to do was wait for grapes, yeast and sugar to transform into wine.
wine.
Days, then weeks, went by with no sign of life in the tub.
No bubbles, no froth, no heady aroma, no warmth created from the biochemical reaction.
DAHUTON
Then, it hit him. That five-pound bag of granulated white stuff wasn't sugar. He hrummed through a big bin in the corner and found the evidence: an empty bag with white letters that said, "canning salt."
Burnham keeps more than 1,000 bottles of wine and beer aging in a four feet high room of his basement. The large bottles in the foreground contain wine that is still in the early stages of fermentation. Some of the bottles are more than 10 years old.
Every master has one or two humbling stories to tell. These are Burgham's. Even so, the salt wine wasn't a total flop. Instead of throwing it away, he added some sugar and fermented it. It made a great meat marinade and good Christmas gifts. Out of the five gallons he made in 1974, only one quart remains. Since then, Burgham has successfully made thousands of gallons of wine and beer. Some have been so superior that they have earned him national awards at home brewing and winemaking contests.
Art teacher and Stones fan
When he's not conecting libations, Burham teaches drawing. He is an associate professor in the School of Fine Arts. After more than 40 years of teaching, he will retire this spring.
He is a likable man, full of energy and mischief. Although
he will turn 70 this year, he acts as if he were 30. He wears T-shirts and jeans, plays the Rolling Stones at his parties and dances to soul and jazz music.
Today, Burnham uses state-of-the-art home brewing equipment and scientific methods to make an average of 200 gallons of beer each year. He also makes 100 gallons of wine.
Lard tubs and light bulbs
wine.
Last year one of his beers placed third in a national competition in Kansas City. The beer, "Roastaroma Deadline Delight," got its name from the Celestial Seasonings he used to flavor it. Burnham has won at least 10 beer awards, both national and regional, since he began entering contests in 1981. When someone recently asked to see his awards, Burnham fumbled through stacks of crumpled papers in his musty basement and produced a few wrinkled satin ribbons. His wife, Lillian, says that the ribbons are only a quarter of the awards he has won. But Burnham doesn't care about awards. He makes beer and wine for himself and his family, not to impress judges.
Burnham tried his first batch of home brew 50 years ago when he was a freshman at Rhode Island School of Design. It was awful stuff, he recalls. He and his roommates made it in an old lard tub in the closet of their coldwater flat. They didn't have a recipe, just improvisation and hand-me-down instructions from upperclassmen. They strung up a light bulb and let it hang right in the beer to keep the brew warm enough for the yeast to work its magic. When the bubbles stomped, they bottled the brew.
Burnham does his brewing in the basement of his Lawrence home. Plastic barrels and big glass jugs, some brown liquid inside, stand on shelves around the room. In one corner, empty wine and beer bottles are heaped three feet high. On the wall near his workbench, like a child's growth chart, numbers and letters are scribbled to keep track of batches of beer. Between the empty bottles and his workbench, in the crawl space underneath the house, rests his treasure — more than 1,000 bottles of wine and beer. One dates back to 1972 — his oldest remaining bottle of wine, he thinks. A Rose Peach. He's not sure because he has never kept an inventory. He just makes the stuff and撕hes it.
Burnham began making wine many years after he made his first hatch of beer. In 1970, he fermented his first grapes, making one gallon of peach-flavored wine from a kit. The wine was pretty good, he says, so he kept doing it. Now, he makes 500 bottles a year, allowing him a bottle with dinner every night and enough left over to give to friends who visit. He also gives friends a bottle of wine along with a loaf of homemade wheat bread for Christmas.
nothing else. Full, Burnham buys 200 pounds of freshly harvested Evan Carbett Sauvignon grapes from California. He buys them right off the truck in Mission and waits while they are crushed on site. During the grape crushing, the skins and stems are left in, giving the red wine its intense color and the taste that makes the mouth pucker when one drinks the wine. Burnham also buys 20 gallons of white grapes, already pressed. Pressing, unlike crushing, renders only the juice, which gives white wine its lighter, less full-bodied character.
Rhubarb and pawpaw wine
Rhubarb and a nut in season, Burnham makes five-gal-
ton batches of wine from canned grape concentrate.
Sonny adds her other fruits to the mixture to lend
subtle flavor to the wine. Some of the more unusual
flavorings he has used are gooseberries, rosehips, raisins
and rhubarb. Occasionally, he uses wild fruits that he
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
(Continued on page 10)
er Service is calling for a high
iversary
serve Land Day.
chaidal Najib, president of the cup, said that the purpose of the hibit was to show the American apple that Palestinians are a people o are proud of their heritage and stoms. Najib's family was forced 'leave the West Bank in 1948.
the group also sponsored a demotion yesterday. Najib said that proximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the nasas Union to Strong Hall and k.
ansan reporter Kathleen Faddis conuted information to this story.
freeby said that the national sibytery might dismiss Swagt from the denomination if he immed preaching May 22 but Swaggt could appeal that.
Burnham checks a
ns to defy ulpit ban
dileen Turnage, a spokeswoman
the national office of the
embies of God in Springfield,
said Swaggart's option to
turn after three months "does
exist anymore."
The General Presbytery over-
lmingly and without a dissen-
vote affirmed the authority of
Executive Presbytery to make
sions on matters concerning
interial credentials," she said
eray
through the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the chair board of directors, intered its regular monthly meet-to watch Treeby's televised conference. "We don't con- that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we communicate through televi-nes conferences with our olined ministers." Turnage
revs. G. Raymond Carlson, revs.'s general superintendent, said Tuesday that if heart did not accept its ruling, Executive Presbytery would oblate take action to dismiss
need if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, he said, "He is considering availability of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow obiects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I've veto it," Krakw said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain.
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliffe said. "I really have some problem with that."
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the
Sarasota had overnight high of 78°F.
BREWING
CREATIVITY UNLIMITED
batch of beer to see if it is ready for bottling.
Burnham corks a bottle of burgundy wine. The
Burnham corks a bottle of burgundy wine. The wine will not be ready for drinking for at least three years.
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SYSTEMS
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Beer siphons from one five gallon bottle to another. The beer nears the final stages of fermentation and will be ready for bottling in about three weeks. This batch is slated for a party for Burnham's art students at the end of the semester.
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30,1988
other Service is calling for a high
niversary
observe Land Day.
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
lans to defy pulpit ban
Treeby said that the national Presbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denomination if he resumed preaching May 22 but that Swaggart could appeal that.
Julene Turnage, a spokeswoman for the national office of the Assemblies of God in Springfield, Mo., said Swaggart's option to return after three months "does not exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overwhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of the Executive Presbytery to make decisions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treebury's televised news conference, "We don't consider that we've heard from Jimmy Swaggart, because we don't communicate through television news conferences with our disciplined ministers," Turnage said.
The Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, the Assemblies' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if Swaggart did not accept its ruling, "the Executive Presbytery would to doubt take action to dismiss him."
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, Freeby said, "He is considering his possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow obiects for $1.600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakaw said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case." Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
Glenn Shirlttie, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
sanl.
David, Brendt. KU Orgw oenteln.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirlteff said. "really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
100
BREWING
(Continued from page 8)
gathers near his home. Once, he picked persimmons that had fallen from a tree near Strong Hall and flavored a batch of wine with them. This year, if all goes well, he will try flavoring a batch with pawpaws that ripened under his neighbor's rosebushes.
The first step in Burnham's winemaking is to check the sugar content of the juice. The amount of sugar determines the amount of alcohol in the finished wine. During fermentation, sugar converts into equal amounts of ethyl alcohol and carbon dioxide gas. Therefore, grape juice with 24 percent sugar will make wine with 12 percent alcohol, which is just about right. The carbon dioxide gas escapes into the air.
If the sugar percentage is too low, Burmash adds sugar or fruit concentrate. After he corrects the sugar level, Burmash checks the acidity. Too much acid will make the wine harsh. Not enough will encourage bacteria growth. After fine-tuning the acid, he is ready to add yeast. Enzymes in the yeast cause the sugar to break down into alcohol.
The mixture, called must, goes into its first fermentation in a five-gallon plastic tub covered with plastic sheeting — loosely, so that the yeast cells still can get oxygen to multiply. The must hums and bubbles furiously for five to 10 days. When the must settles down, most of the sugar has changed into alcohol. At this stage, the brew is technically wine, although it doesn't look like wine and it tastes terrible. The wine must go into a second fermentation, which clarifies it, mellows the acid and ferments out any traces of sugar. To do this, Burnham siphons the wine into a glass jug, filling it to the top and capping it with an air lock. The airlock allows gas to escape but doesn't let contaminants in. At this stage, the wine is vulnerable to invading bacteria.
After a month in the second fermentation, Burnham siphons the wine into another jug, leaving the dead yeast cells behind. Then, he filters the wine, siphons it again and adds potassium metabisulfite to inhibit the growth of wild yeasts before he bottles it. Finally, he siphons the wine into bottles and stores it for final aging. He could drink it after only three months, but he always waits at least a year before uncorking. The wine is much better then, he says. Each bottle costs him about $2.50, but he says the quality compares to an $8 or $10 bottle.
Burnham's basement or Chateau Latour?
Burnham celebrates his winemaking efforts with an annual May Festival by breaking out plenty of bottles of homemade wine. This gives his friends a chance to sample his newest recipes and compare them to earlier vintages.
He has other wine-tasting parties throughout the year. Often at these gatherings, he will serve commercially made wines along with his own to see if his guests detect a difference. Last year, he invited several buddies to taste wine. Ralph Clement was one of them. Clement and Burnham work together with the Boy Scouts in Lawrence. He says Burnham bought 10 fine European wines and added two of his own. He removed all of the labels, then asked his friends to pick out his wines. Out of a dozen people, only one identified the homemade from the store-bought variety. Clement couldn't tell the difference.
The winemaking process seems simple when compared to the process of brewing, Burnham says. "Wine is a natural occurrence," he says. "You just leave some fruit around, and it makes itself. Beer is another story. It's so complicated, I wonder how they ever invented it. Everything has to be done just right."
Gary Roberts, a friend of Burnham's, says that beer is
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other Service is calling for a high
niversary
observe Land Day
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
ans to defy
ulpit ban
Treeby said that the national Presbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denomination if he resumed preaching May 22 but that Swaggart could appeal that.
"The General Presbytery overwhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of the Executive Presbytery to make decisions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman for the national office of the Assemblies of God in Springfield, Mo., said Swagart's option to return after three months "does not exist anymore."
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treeby's televised news conference. "We don't consider that we've heard from finny Swaggart, because we don't communicate through television news conferences with our disciplined ministers," Turnage aid.
The Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, he assemblies' general superinendent, said Tuesday that if waggart did not accept its ruling, the 'Executive Presbytery would to doubt take action to dismiss
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, Treby said, "He is considering his possibility of an appeal.
---
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate
Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night noved to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
an incentive for capital expansion.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain.
Glenn Shirliff, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget." Shirtliff said. "You have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker sen-
tator of money KU
Credit had received in the
form of a certificate.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the Senate had approved the right
more fragile than wine, partly because of its low alcohol content. Roberts used to own Bacchus and Barcarycn, a supplier for home brewers and winemakers in Mission. Beer is more susceptible to contaminants and off-flavors. The higher alcohol content in wine can kill invading bacteria and mask flavors that are not supposed to be there.
To make beer, Burnham starts with maked barley that he mashes himself, or he buys a malt extract syrup that is already mashed. To mash the barley, he adds water until it has the consistency of porridge. He heats it to 120 degrees and then lets it rest for 20 minutes. Next, he reheats the mixture and holds it at 150 degrees until all of the starch is converted to fermentable sugar.
To separate the sugar from the barley husks, he puts the mash into a vessel with small holes in the bottom. He pours hot water over the mash, causing the sugar to drop through the bottom. He repeats this process until he has a clear liquid called wort.
Burnham boils the wort, then adds hops. Hops are flowers that add bitterness to the beer to counteract the sweetness of the barley. He boils the wort with the hops again, then adds another dose of hops for aroma.
When the mixture has cooled to 80 degrees, yeast is added — top-fermenting yeast for ale and bottom-fermenting for lager. Ale is fermented at room temperature and takes only 10 days. Lager, on the other hand, is fermented in cold storage and takes much longer because the yeast works more slowly at low temperatures. Burnham stores his lager in the refrigerator for six months during fermentation.
'Mozart's Minuet Lager' and 'Smokey the Beer'
At the end of fermentation, he carefully checks the sugar content to be sure that it is all fermented out before he bottles the beer. Then, he adds a precisely measured dose of corn syrup during bottling to create a predictable amount of gas in the beer. This method, which prevents the bottles from exploding, is one he discovered after the Pale Ale disaster. He waits five weeks before drinking his beer, although it is drinkable after only seven days.
Barnum beers twice a month. He brews 12 gallons of single beer, the same Pale Ale he recipe has used for years, and five gallons of specialty beer. His specialty beers are recipes that simulate famous European beers, such as Irish stout, English bitter and Belgian Chimay beer, which ages for two years. Or, they are flavored beers, such as his
cherry, raspberry and ginger beers. Some of his beers have odd names, such as "Mozart's Minut Lager" and "Smokey the Beer," so-named because the grain is smoked. In all, he has tried nearly 100 varieties.
Why does a man spend hours upon hours making beer and wine in a musty cellar, when he can, in 15 minutes and for not much more money, go to the store and buy the same thing? It's because Burnham gets satisfaction from doing it himself. He also sought that satisfaction by designing and building his house and art studio. A few years later, he added a greenhouse to grow his own herbs and vegetables. Then, he designed and built a gazebo with a wet bar lights, and a ceiling fan for entertaining in his back yard. He built his own television. He even bakes his own bread, not from flour, but from whole wheat kernels that he grinds himself.
He enjoys the creative process. And although home brewing and winemaking have become nearly a science in recent years, they remain an art for Burnham. He is always experimenting and varying his tried-and-true formulas to come up with something even greater.
Norissa S. Gordon is a Lenexa senior majoring in magazine journalism.
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1. A ball is thrown from a height of 20 m with an initial velocity of 30 m/s. It falls to the ground in 6 seconds. Calculate the speed of the ball at the moment it hits the ground.
ither Service is calling for a high
niversary
observe Land Day.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
ans to defy bulpit ban
Treeby said that the national Presbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denomination if he resumed preaching May 22 but that Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman for the national office of the Assemblies of God in Springfield, Mo., said Swaggart's option to return after three months "does not exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overwhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of the Executive Presbytery to make decisions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treebey's televised news conference, "We don't consider that we've heard from Jimmy Swaggart, because we don't communicate through television news conferences with our disciplined ministers," Turnage said.
The Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, the he Assemblies' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if Swaggart did not accept its ruling, 'the Executive Presbytery would do doubt take action to dismiss him."
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, Freeby said, "He is considering his possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Kraakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I veto it," Krakaw said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakwal said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's request for more equipment so far.
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cassel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew, captain
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtliffe said. "I really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
THE FALL.
FRENZ
experiment
THE FALL.
New Sounds
The Fall
Morrownight, Nov. 23
BEACUSING FOR A FALL
PALACE
SWORD
REVERSED
BY JOHN HENDERSON
THE FALL, "Palace Of Swords Reversed" (Rough Trade)
This album compiles Fall singles from 1980 to 1983. It is the second of two collections of Fall singles; the first was the epic "Fall Early Years 77-79." This one goes a bit further, sacrificing some not quite up-to-snuff B-sides for a couple of album tracks and a live version of "Neighborhood Of Infinity".
under the strain of economic realities and the public's continued ignorance of Western culture's true folk music of the '70s and 80s.
Unlike the thinly disguised traditional rock of "punk" groups like the Clash and Jam, the Fall members are true anti-heroes. The Fall is the best known of a collection of obscure bands like Essential Logic, the Nightingales and This Heat. The group is one of the few that didn't collapse
That's right, the Fall released two LPs this season. "Frenz" is the group's 18th album and its first unadulterated large-label release in the United States. To find out who is really on the cutting edge, compare the Fall to the Alarm, which was signed to RCA after just one 45-speed record on an independent label.
Somehow, the Fall survived and even prospered so much that a "historical retrospective" such as this LP isn't the pompous move it would be for other, lesser known groups. The Fall has worn well. "Totally Wired" and "Elastic Man" sound as brilliant as ever. "An Older Lover" is just as sinister. And, try as he might, Marc Riley never have equaled the amazing guitar riff on "Wings." Buy the compact disc; it's got two extra tracks: the astounding "City Hobgoblin" and "Leave the Capitol" from the "Slates" EP.
THE FALL, "The Frenz Experiment" (RCA)
record on an independent label. "The Frenz Experiment" is RCA's best album this year but the Fall's worst ever. The Fall relies too heavily on cover versions for "hits," such as the old Kinks' song "Victoria." The song is worth a laugh, but after the Fall's recent covers of "Ghost in My House," "Mr. Pharmacist," "Rollin' Danny" and "A Day in the Life,"
the group seems to have run out of steam. Consider that the group never attempted a cover until after its 10th album.
The song "Frenz" is OK, but it steals from one of the group's earliest songs,
"Various Times." The rest of the album teeters between half-interesting and annoying. The repetitive chanting on
"Oswald Defense Lawyer" is particularly irritating.
But don't get the wrong idea. This album is miles ahead of the average MTV junk; it's just a disappointment compared to previous Fall works of art and adventure. For those who don't like taking big chances, this would probably be a good foot in the door to the wonderful and frightening world of real music.
Video Alternatives
What to rent when your first choice is checked out
BY KEVIN DILMORE
Probably the most frustrating thing about renting a videotape is finding a new release. Short of camping in front of a rental store or accosting every person returning a tape to see what title he or she is holding, one can find it an impossible task. And there is no disappointment quite like having a special movie in mind, then discovering it has been rented to someone else for the weekend.
alone else for the weekend.
But fear not! Don't yell at the video clerk or settle for a movie you have seen three times this month. On this list are films that can substitute for unavailable new releases. And in some cases, the substitute is a better film.
Sure, they are not new. You might have seen some of them before. But once new stock shows up in some stores, many good movies are relegated to the bottom racks or to the avoid at all-costs 99-cent shelf. They get dusty, neglected and usually better with age.
Can't find "Platoon"? Try "Apocalypse Now." Nervi is the finest film yet
background for the narrative.
Martin Sheen stars as Captain Willard, an Army intelligence officer assigned to hunt down and assassinate Colonel Walter E. Kurtz (Marlon Brando), whom the Army has declared insane. While journeying into the jungle on a small Navy patrol boat, Willard meets more than his share of bizarre warriors. He slowly begins to question his sanity.
"Apocalypse Now" is the finest film yet about the Vietnam War, at least from the perspective of one who never fought in it. "Platoon" uses a preachy script and negative characters to force a "Vietnam-War was-bad" theme, but "A apocalypse Now" takes the approach of a classic war story, where a wartime setting serves only as background for the narrative.
"Apocalypse Now" is a masterpiece of direction by Francis Ford Coppola and has 12 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
gained much respect and admiration since its release in 1979. Besides standout performances by Sheen, Robert Duvall and Dennis Hopper, it contains some of the most beautiful frightening images ever captured on film.
to an film.
"Platoon" fans might argue that their film is the most realistic war film ever made. But realism sometimes can work against itself. In a typical "Platoon" battle scene, Kevin Bacon brags after splitting a Vietnamese boy's head with his rifle but. The scene is blunt but less emotional than any "Apocalypse" scene, such as in one which a helicopter attack on a Vietnamese village is choreographed as if it were an aerial ballet.
aerial ballet.
In "Platoon," director Oliver Stone assaults viewers with brutal depictions of fighting in Vietnam. With suchugliness, it is not surprising that Stone's message gets noticed. Coppola achieves the same result by using combat locations and effects that seem almost beautiful.
Forget Patrick Swayze; forget dope,
doe-eyed girls named Baby; forget any
movie set in the '60s with a soundtrack full
of '80s music. "The Flaming Kid" is a fun
look back at beach-club life in 1963, with
better acting, funnier jokes and more fully
developed relationships.
VIDEO RENTAL
YOU SAID YOU WANT "PLATOON";
HOW DOES JULY OF '92 SOUND!
KLINE
"The Flamingo Kid" stars a surprisingly good Matt Dillon as Jeffrey, a Brooklyn kid who gets a job as a cabana boy at a seaside resort called "El Flamingo." He falls in love with an exercise instructor (Janet Jones). He also falls under the spell of a car dealer (Richard Creena) who swindles guests by playing gin rummy and talks of making Jeffrey a millionaire.
Can't find "Dirty Dancing"? Try "The Flamingo Kid."
Dillon puts a lot of effort into his role and makes Jeffrey honest and appealing. Hec
the film.
This 1984 film directed by Garry Marshall did not get as much attention as Marshall's next one, "Nothing in Common." But Marshall gives it the same style and warmth. "The Flaming Kid" is worth renting, even if "Dirty Dancing" is in the store. It is a better film.
tor Elizando is also good as Jeffrey's father, a gruff, hard-working man who masks his jealousy of his son's friendship with the car dealer by yelling at his son. Their relationship is interesting, real and the best part of the film.
Can't wait for "No Way Out"? Try "The Third Man."
1949 release has all the political intrigue, the riveting performances and tension-filled chase scenes of any movie released 40 years later, including "No Way Out." Since "The Third Man" is a British black-and-white film, it might turn off a large segment of today's U.S. audiences. But anyone who dismisses the film on those grounds will be missing a classic.
grounds will be missing a classifier. The setting is Vienna after World War II. Holly Martins (Joseph Cotton), a popular
Alan Lehman/Special to the KANSAN
eather Service is calling for a high
niversary
observe Land Day.
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Kansan reporter Kateleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
ans to defyulpit ban
Treeby said that the national resbystery might dismiss Swaggart from the denomination if he assumed preaching May 22 but at swaggart could appeal that. Juleen Turnage, a swaggart
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman
r the national office of the
ssemblies of God in Springfield,
o., said Swagart's option to
turn after three months "does
exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery over-emelingly and without a dissent-vote affirmed the authority of Executive Presbytery to makeisions on matters concerningusier credentials," she saidterday.
although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the chieh board of directors, intered its regular bimonthly meeto to watch Treeby's televised a conference, "We don't con'r that we've heard from my Swaggart, because we communicate through televi news conferences with our olined ministers." Turnage
Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, seabems' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if part did not accept its ruling, Executive Presbytery would ubt take action to dismiss
id if Swaggart had consid-
leaving the Assemblies,
- said. "He is considering
sibility of an appeal.
WANSAH MAGAZINE March 30, 1988 13
---
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakaw said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's request for more equipment so soon.
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cassel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain,
said that the club needed the new
Glenn Shirtliff, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shrilufte said. "I really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the Senate had approved the bill.
102
NAHLATHIVI
THE LION OF SOWETO
1970 HONORARY MEMBER
MAHLATHINI, "The Lion Of Soweto" (Earthworks/Virgin)
This album is a surprise, though. Mahlathini has a low-down, nasty voice, like he drank too much absinthe and is going to unleash his fury on the listening public. Go for it!
Faui Simon makes a million dollars swiping native South African music, and we're supposed to thank him for allowing South African acts the chance to score a big Yankee recording contract. Great. So Miriam Makeba, the Barbra Streisand of South Africa, is back in vogue.
VOLCANO SUNS, "Bumper Crop" (Home-stead)
This is the third and best Volcano Suns LP. Nothing here is quite as infectious and sing-along as their best song, "White
Everything in "The Third Man" is strangely captivating, from Anton Karas' Oscar-winning zither score to the tilting camera angles, to Welles' portrayal of the black market kingpin Harry Lime. And a climactic chase scene through the sewers of Vienna rivals any car chase on the screen today.
HUNGER CROP
Keith Carradine and Powers Boote the star as two self-described "weekend warriors" on maneuvers with the Louisiana National Guard. The men are assigned to traverse the bayou using only a compass, a map and their skills. But they quickly tire of the mission and begin looking for ways to stir up trouble.
"Predator" places Arnold Schwarzenegger against an invisible space creature in a Latin American jungle, but "Southern Comfort" pitts nine National Guardsmen against invisible Cajun trappers in the Louisiana bayou. The film was dismissed by critics after its 1981 release as a weak Vietnam allegory. Still, "Southern Comfort" is a well-directed adventure film that features strong performances.
writer of pulp westerns, returns to visit his best friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles). But upon his arrival, Holly discovers that Harry has been murdered. He tries to uncover the circumstances of Harry's death from a British Army officer (Trevor Howard), but details are sketchy. So Holly decides to investigate the murder and begins his search by locating a "third man" who someone saw at the murder scene. Holly's search provides him with more answers than he bargained for.
Director Carol Reed orchestrates every element in "The Third Man" as if he had conducted it. This is an example of a film that makes one exclaim, "They don't make 'em like they used to!"
Can't find "Predator"? Try "Southern Comfort."
Elephant," from their second album, "All-Night Lotus Party." Still, all the songs are pretty good, making for a far more pleasurable 45 minutes of listening than "Bright Orange Years" or "All-Night Lotus Party."
"Southern Comfort" is just one of many great action films by director Walter Hill, whose work includes "48 Hrs." and his most recent film, "Extreme Pressure." In "Southern Comfort," as well as in Hill's films "The Warriors" and "The Long Riders", he recounts an almost Homeric odyssey of a group of fighters returning from battle.
Although none of the music approaches the work of drummer and singer Peter Prescott's former band, Mission of Burma, these guys clearly are working. The piano on "Offsprings" adds greatly to the song, as does ex-Suns, current Big Dipper Gary Walek's guest appearance on "The Central." This album shows the Suns' willingness to experiment and grow. Here's looking to their fourth.
john Henderson runs "Time to Develop," Lawrence-based independent record label.
Hill squeeze tension from every element in "Southern Comfort." From the tougher-than-tough acting of Boote and Fred Ward to the murky lighting of the forest, to the twanging steel guitar music of Ry Cooder, this film is intense.
Can't find "Spaceballs"? Try "Dark Star."
Can't find "Spaceballs"? Try "Dark Star." This 1972 science fiction comedy is the first feature-length film by director John Carpenter. And although the laughs come from slapstick and satire than parody, as in Mel Brooks' "Spaceballs," the film is still a funny look at a sometimes too serious genre.
The film tells the story of the four-man crew of the space cruiser Dark Star. The crew's mission is to search out any unstable planets in the space sector and blow them up with robotic bombs. Although the bombs are delighted to explode and serve their purpose for existing, the men aboard the ship are bored and constantly grate on each other's nerves. They roam the船, looking in vain for some distraction. Their wish for excitement is fulfilled when the Dark Star is damaged in an asteroid storm and Bomb 2 concludes that it must explode on board to comply with its programming.
The movie is crudely filmed, and most of the special effects seem homemade by today's standards. But the humor in "Dark Star" lies in Carpenter's screenplay. The frustration the crew experiences while trying to convince Bomb 20 not to explode is funny. Sometimes "Dark Star" drags, but that comes mostly from the desire to see more of Dan O'Bannon as crew member Sergeant Pinback. His performance is professional but undeniably good. Some may recognize O'Bannon as a co-writer of "Alien" and as the writer-director of the hilarious "The Return of the Living Dead."
Those who have seen John Carpenter's suspense films, such as "Hallowen," "Escape From New York," and "The Thing," might be unaware of his flair for humor. And science fiction comedies are hard films to come by. "Dark Star" proves the existence of both.
Kevin Dilmore is an Abilene senior majoring in film studies and journalism. He also is a Kansan staff writer.
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KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30,1988
Alan Lehman/Special to the KANSAN
eather Service is calling for a high
niversary
observe Land Day
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
lans to defy pulpit ban
Treeby said that the national Presbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denomination if he resumed preaching May 22 but that Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman for the national office of the Assembles of God in Springfield, Mo., said Swaggart's option to return after three months "does not exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overwhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of the Executive Presbytery to make decisions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treebury's televised news conference, "We don't consider that we've heard from Jimmy Swaggart, because we don't communicate through television news conferences with our disciplined ministers," Turnage said.
The Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, he Assemblies' general superinvented, said Tuesday that if swaggart did not accept its ruling, 'the Executive Presbytery would do doubt take action to dismiss um."
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, Freey said, "He is considering his possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
honey for capital expenditures.
Krakow also obeyed to P11 Crew.
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cassel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brendt KU Center
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirttife said. "They really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, note the amount of money KU Coca-Cola spent in Iraq.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
THE MOON AND THE SEA
first person
America...by train
D down the hill from campus, a couple of blocks past downtown, over by the river, a train station stands closed and lonely.
But some tracks still lead west from the station through Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona to Los Angeles. Other track heads from Los Angeles up the Pacific coast to San Jose, which has an active station that accommodates commuters and travelers on Amtrak, the government-owned rail passenger service.
BY JOHN BUZBEE
In Lawrence, dwindling use of the Amtrak station forced it to close in 1981. But late every night, cars still gather in its parking lot. People wait in the cars talking or sleeping, while outside, the corner of New York and New Street is quiet and dark.
The Southwest Chief shatters the silence. It screams up next to the parking lot, sometimes at 1:25 a.m., often later. The westbound Amtrak train, named for the American Indian country that it travels through, takes on the passengers waiting in Lawrence and continues to Topeka.
When I hurried on the train at about 2 a.m. a few weeks ago, I knew I wouldn't be getting off for awhile. It would be 33 hours before I would get to Los Angeles. There, I would catch the Coast Starlight to San Francisco which is just south of San Francisco Bay.
The train car I climbed aboard had two levels, each with rows of seats next to the windows. It was dark. An Amtrak attendant took me by the arm and quickly led me up the stairs in the middle. I dragged my garmet bag and backpack behind me, and a family of five waited below to get their seats. The attendant sat me down next to a sleeping woman and barked something about my bags. I didn't understand her. I put them at my feet.
Most of the passengers on the upper deck were sleeping with the window shades pulled down. I was disappointed. I had taken the train so I could see where I was going, not just see the inside of airports. But all I could see as we pulled out of Lawrence was a little slice of the Kansas River through a space between the shade and the windowsill.
Soon, the conductor came and took my ticket. I could put my luggage downstairs, he said, or slide it in the overhead rack. The luggage rucks are similar to those on a
bus or airplane, but the seats are much bigger and roomier. With all the shades pulled down, only the constant clicking of the wheels beneath the swaying car reminded me that I was on a train. I put up my bags, slid into my seat and eventually went to sleep, hoping that when I awoke, I'd get a chance to see a little of America.
A man was walking by when I woke up at about 6 a.m. I wondered whether he was going to the lounge car, which has the best view. I wasn't sure whether it was open, or even where it was. I was a little afraid that if I walked around looking for it, the driver I met the night before track me down and drag me back to my seat.
But I was curious, and the country was passing by behind the blinds that were still down. I got up and walked down the car, trying to act like I knew where I was going.
Doors and a closet-sized space separate the Amtrak cars. It's a little tricky to walk between them, but not nearly as hard as it looks in black and white movies.
The lounge car was the next one behind me. Swivel seats for one or two people line the windows in its observation deck upstairs. The lower deck has a snack bar, tables and toilets. I went downstairs to get a cup of coffee and something to eat.
The seats upstairs were comfortable. The view was unbeatable. But the music they piped in was reminiscent of a dentist's office. That might be because many of the Amtrak passengers are retired couples, although there were younger families and a few other college students on spring break.
Kicking back with the coffee upstairs, I watched the sun rise over the plains of western Kansas. The plains seemed even flatter than they do from a car because of the higher perspective from the observation deck.
After sitting in the observation car for a few minutes, I started feeling brave again and left to look for the dining car. It was directly behind the lounge car. Tables for four lined the windows, with an aisle in the middle. I walked in about 6:30 a.m., and it
Clouds and early spring muted the colors of the plains outside Garden City, and it looked cold. KBUF-AM radio was predicting snow for western Kansas and eastern Colorado.
was already half full. A waiter was busy taking orders, so I stood in the aisle waiting for him to tell me what to do.
"How many?"
"Table 14."
I sat at the first empty table.
"Table 14!" he said sharply. I found table 14, where a guy was already sitting. They put passengers together in the dining car to fit more in. I didn't mind, but it was beginning to feel a little like summer camp, like someone was always telling me what to do.
Breakfast was good — french toast, sausage, orange juice, coffee. The menu wasn't big, but it wasn't any more expensive than Perkins.
Passengers were generally very friendly with each other. On planes or buses, some people are happily going on vacation but others have to be there. But on Amtrak, everyone is traveling by choice because buses are cheaper and planes are faster. Passengers do get a little ugly when seats become scarce in the observation deck. But usually, there is enough room.
After breakfast, I returned to the observation deck and tried to write a letter, but that was difficult because the car was shaking a little. I settled back and read as we traveled into eastern Colorado, where we ran into some snow. The scenery through the mountains and past a ghost town was spectacular. The snow continued as we swung south into New Mexico but tapered off well before we reached Albuquerque in the evening. At Albuquerque, the train stopped long enough for me to get off, stretch my legs and make a quick phone call. American Indians sold jewelry to other passengers at tables outside the train.
After the video in the lounge car came the "Chief's Round-up" the Amtrak equivalent of happy hour. Canned margaritas and daquiri sold for $1.50. At home, the margarita would have been marginal at best, but it tasted pretty good as the sun set on the New Mexico desert scrolling by the
An Indian joined the train as a tour guide and rode with us to Gallup, near the Arizona border. He discussed the culture and history of Indians in the area and showed a video from the Gallup chamber of commerce that described how great it was to spend money in Gallup.
I watched a good suspense movie in the lounge car that night. When it was over about 10 p.m., I evaluated my other entertainment options and watched it again. I went back to my seat and went to sleep around midnight.
window.
We passed through Arizona that Night. I woke up in time to see the beginnings of Los Angeles, which stretches a long way into the California desert. We stopped at San Bernardino, Pomona and Pasadena before reaching the Los Angeles train station at 9 a.m. Pacific time, two hours behind schedule.
I still had an hour to make my connection. The Los Angeles train station is huge; it can accommodate many more than the handful of Amtrak lines that run through it. Like all the other train stations along the way, it has seen busier days.
I climbed on the Coast Starlight. As soon as the conductor took my ticket, I headed for the observation car and staked out a seat. The train ran along the Pacific coast
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observe Land Day.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
College Shoe Shoppe
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lans to defy pulpit ban
14 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
Treeby said that the national Presbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denomination if he resumed preaching May 22 but that Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman for the national office of the Assemblies of God in Springfield, Mo., said Swaggart's option to return after three months "does not exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overwhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of the Executive Presbytery to make decisions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treebry's televised news conference. "We don't consider that we've heard from Jimmy Swaggart, because we don't communicate through television news conferences with our disciplined ministers." Turnage said.
The Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, the Assemblies' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if Swaggart did not accept its ruling, 'the Executive Presbytery would do doubt take action to dismiss um."
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, Freeby said, "He is considering his possibility of an appeal.
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow obiects for $1,600 for Crew
Bv leff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I will veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's request for more equipment so soon
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said, "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain,
said that the club needed the year
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirttale said. "I have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the post."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the Sonata had concluded by 8:47 f.
[Moonlit Scene]
ILLUSTRATION
for a few hours out of Los Angeles, so the observation car was very popular and seats were scarse. I skipped lunch and dinner, settling for a microwaved cheese-burger from the snack bar so I wouldn't lose my seat.
That time, they didn't give any warning. After we had stopped at a station, I asked a passing attendant if it was San Jose. He said yes.
The Chief's Round-up came a little earlier that evening. I sat on the observation deck with a guy from Dallas on spring break and a guy from Los Angeles who was heading to Seattle to look for work. I watched the clock as we talked, knowing that we were soon due in San Jose, but also knowing that they always announced stops five minutes ahead to give passengers time to return to their seats and collect their stuff.
I panicked. I grabbed my jacket, said goodbye and hurried toward the car where I had left my bags, although I wasn't sure
John Buzbee is a Hutchinson senior majoring in journalism and political science.
Arto Guthrie sang about the City of New Orleans, and John Coltrane captured the feel in Blue Train. They knew what it is that emerges from the mix of rumbling wheels, scrolling scenes and long nights that makes trains the only way to travel.
if it was three or four cars behind me. As I went down the aisles, I had to dodge passengers who were getting on the train. I knew that when they were all on, we'd leave. I guessed that the third car back was mine, went down the stairs, found my bag and scurried off. My brother was waiting outside.
Sometimes, I was bored, and sometimes, lonely. Why all that is fun, I don't know, but it is.
The trip took 43 hours. It cost about as much as a discount plane ticket.
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SAN MARCO JAZINE March 30, 1988 15
KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30,1988 15
eather Service is calling for a high
niversary
observe Land Day
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
lans to defy pulpit ban
Treeby said that the national Presbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denomination if he resumed preaching May 22 but that Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman for the national office of the Assemblies of God in Springfield, Mo., said Swagart's option to return after three months "does not exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overwhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of the Executive Presbytery to make decisions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treebey's televised news conference, "We don't consider that we've heard from Jimmy Swaggart, because we don't communicate through television news conferences with our disciplined ministers," Turnage said.
The Rev. R. Raymond Carlson, he assemblies' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if swaggart did not accept its ruling, 'the Executive Presbytery would to doubt take action to dismiss
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, Freeby said, "He is considering his possibility of an appeal.
。
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow objects for $1.600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakaw said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8,200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during budget hearings because the committee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he
Glenn Shirliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shirtlite says. "really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Coca-Cola spent on labor.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the
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ther Service is calling for a high
niversary
observe Land Day.
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced o leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall andack.
Kansan reporter Kathleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
ans to defyulpit ban
Treeby said that the national resbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denunciation if he assumed preaching May 22 but hatt Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman or the national office of the assemblies of God in Springfield, 40., said Swagart's option to return after three months "does of exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of ne Executive Presbytery to make cessions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treeeby's televised ews conference, "We don't conder that we've heard from immy Swagglart, because we won't communicate through television news conferences with our isciplined ministers," Turnage iid.
The Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, or e Assemblies' general superinvented, said Tuesday that if waggart did not accept its ruling, the Executive Presbytery would *doubt take action to dismiss*
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, reeby said, "He is considering e possibility of an appeal.
16 KANSAN MAGAZINE March 30, 1988
Thursday March 31, 1988
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published since 1889 by the students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 98, No.124 (USPS 650-640)
Student body leader vows to veto budget amended by Senate Krakow objects for $1,600 for Crew
By Jeff Moberg
Kansan staff writer
Student body president Jason Krakow last night vowed to veto any budget that contained additional money for the KU Crew.
"If this is the only capital expenditure request made, I don't think it's a sound budget and I veto it," Krakow said during a special budget session of Student Senate. "It's not consistent."
Senate last night amended the Senate Finance Committee's proposed budget and voted to give KU Crew an additional $1,600 to buy a set of eight oars. The committee's original recommendation called for KU Crew to receive $7,875. Krakow said it would not be fair to other student organizations to give only the crew team money for capital expenses.
Krakow also objected to KU Crew's request for more equipment so soon. Last year, Senate paid for $1,520 in new KU Crew equipment, including a new racing shell. Krakow said that after that, members of KU Crew told Senate they were satisfied and would not ask for more equipment this year.
"Obviously, that was not the case," Krakow said. "I thought they would stick to what they said last year with a good faith agreement."
Earlier in the evening, John Cissel, liberal arts senator, made a motion to restore a request from KU Crew that would have used Senate money to buy a four-man shell costing $8.200. This request was denied by the Finance Committee during a brief meeting. Thetee was hesitant to finance any large expenditure unless it was necessary for a group's survival.
Cissell said that KU Crew deserved the new shell as well as the set of oars.
"They not only bring good times and an education, but they bring recognition to the University," he said.
David Brandt, KU Crew captain,
said that the club needed the new
shell to replace old ones. He also said
that he thought KU Crew told Senate
last spring it would not ask for new
equipment until now.
"I think it was a misunderstanding," Brandt said. "Hopefully, it can all be cleared up.
Glenn Shirtliffe, Finance Committee chairman, said that the Senate should not finance the shell because of the cost and because KU Crew needed to plan for future expenditures.
"If this goes through, they are going to walk out of here with one-fourth of the budget," Shriftte said. "They really have some problem with that."
Roger Templin, Nunemaker senator, noted the amount of money KU Crew had received in the past.
"We do have a fixed amount of money and there will be future requests," Templin said. "The question for this body to decide is whether they want to spend that much on one organization, especially with the large amounts we've spent in the past."
By 10:30 p.m. yesterday, the Senate had considered only eight of the 38 groups being recommended for financing by the Senate finance committee.
Stephanie Quincy, student body vice president, said the entire budget would be considered before adjournment.
Iran-contra papers show Bush briefed about deal
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A handwritten note among documents released yesterday by the congressional Iran-commissioned offers new evidence that Cabinet-level opposition to the Iran arms deal was on the agenda of a January 1986 meeting attended by Vice President George Bush.
The vice president has maintained that he was not aware of the concerns of then-Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and Secretary of State George Shultz until much later.
Among documents released yesterday was an agenda pennaed by then-National Security Adviser John Poindexter for his Jan. 17, 1866, briefing of President Reagan and Bush. It includes an item that states, "Shultz
Had he been aware of their objections, Bush has said, he might have advised the president against the sale. "When you don't know something, it's hard to react. We were not in the loop." Bush said in August.
Documents released yesterday include an agenda penned by then-National Security Adviser John Poindexter for his Jan. 17, 1986 briefing of President Reagan and Vice President Bush. It includes an item that states, "Shultz & Weinberger still recommend against.
and Weinberger still recommend against."
The agenda also states that Attorney General Edwin Meese III and the late CIA Director William Casey approved, and it lists a new finding: a document to authorize the covert arms sales.
Reagan signed the document that day.
The scrawled, 26-word agenda is marked "Done" at the top.
Bush in January said of the meeting, "The president may have signed a finding, but there was no discussion of a finding in front of me. I do not recall any suggestion of a finding that day."
Bush maintains that specific details were not discussed in the briefing, which he considered to be an informal session, the Washington Post reported today, citing an unidentified aide to the vice president.
The newspaper noted that a memo released earlier and relating to the same meeting stated, "The secretaries do not recommend you proceed with this plan." That memo, prepared for the president, carried an order to send the secretary a briefed verbally and that Bush was among those present.
Poindexter is among those under indictment in the Iran-contra affair.
P
Rowin' in the sun
A women's crew team practices in the early morning sunlight. KU Weather Service is calling for a high of 62 degrees today with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
4 killed on Palestinian anniversary
The Associated Press
BEIT SAHUR, Occupied West Bank — Hundreds of Arabs defied a massive security crackdown and battled Israeli troops in the West Bank yesterday to mark Land Day, a Palestinian anniversary. Soldiers killed four Arabs and wounded 39 others, officials said.
quiet," West Bank commander Maj. Gen. Avraham Mitzna said. "It was not."
The army's toughest restrictions in more than 20 years of occupation failed to contain the violence. The measures included mass arrests, the deployment of thousands of extra police, restrictions on media coverage and a ban on Palestinians traveling in occupied areas.
Land Day commemorates a confrontation that occurred on March 30, 1976, when Israeli Arabs protested the forced sale of 1,600 acres of their land for Jewish settlement. Six Arabs were killed.
'We can't say that Land Day was
Yesterday's fatalities brought the Arab death toll to 123 since the unrest began Dec. 8, according to U.N. figures. One Israeli soldier also has
The General Union of Palestinian Students at the University of Kansas sponsored a cultural exhibition yesterday at the Kansas Union to
observe Land Day
Khalid Najib, president of the group, said that the purpose of the exhibit was to show the American people that Palestinians are a people who are proud of their heritage and customs. Najib's family was forced to leave the West Bank in 1948.
The group also sponsored a demonstration yesterday. Najib said that approximately 40 students participated in a peaceful march from the Kansas Union to Strong Hall and back.
Kansan reporter Kateleen Faddis contributed information to this story.
Apple takes bite out of area sales
By David Sodamann
Kansan staff writer
Truckloads of Apples arriving on campus today are causing bushels of headaches for Lawrence businesses.
"My retail business is down 60 percent," said Myles Schachter, owner of the Connecting Point Computer Center. 804 New Hamshire St.
Center, 804 New Hampshire Ave.
The Apples on the trucks are Macintosh computers made by Apple Computer Inc. They were ordered by KU students, faculty and staff who took advantage of a special sale of the computers that ended yesterday at the Burge Union branch of the KU Bookstore. The sale was heavily advertised.
Those taking advantage of the sale were able to buy Apple computers at savings of as much as $1,000 off normal retail prices. About 300 Macintoshs were ordered.
Schachter said most of the store's retail sales typically were university-related. He attributed the recent drop in sales to the Bookstore's computer sale.
"It has taken us out of the Apple business, period," Smucker said. Smucker said he had stopped carrying Apple computers in the first week of February, about the same time the KU sale began.
Smucker said computers could be sold to students through authorized retail dealers at or near the same prices offered by the Bookstores, but with the added bonus of support and service after the sale.
Schacter said he and Ted Briscoe, the Apple salesman handling the KU sale, unsuccessfully had discussed the University work with a dealer.
Al Smucker, owner of the Computerland stores in Lawrence and Topeka, is also concerned about the Bookstore's Apple sale.
Kathleen Dixon, a spokesman for Apple's Higher Education Purchase Programs at the California headquarters, did discuss university sales.
Briscoe refused to comment about the Apple sale at KU.
"I have to admit there are some
items that make me happy with
the program," Dixon says.
But Mike Reid, manager of KU Bookstores, said that selling the computers through off-campus dealers was not an available option for KU. He said Lawrence did not have an Apple retail outlet at the time.
a local retail dealer to handle the sales, she said. The University chose to sell the computers through the Bookstore.
KU had the option of choosing to sell Apple computers directly to students and faculty, or of permitting
"Apple set this program up for us," Reid said. "Apple made this available to benefit students and faculty. We took advantage of this. We were just trying to provide a service."
Apple Macintosh Plus computers were sold at a sale price of $1,200 by the Bookstores. Apple recently cut
When the on-campus sale began, at about the same time Computerland here dropped the Apple product line, the computers were selling for $2.199 in Lawrence. The retail price cut had no effect on KU's sale prices, Dixon said.
Smucker said he would like to open a dialogue with KU to discuss ways the University and the Lawrence business community could work together. He also would like to discuss with the University how marketing decisions are made.
Macintoshes arrive at the Burge Union
They're here. Macintosh computers ordered through a special KU promotion arrived yesterday at the Burge Union. Those who ordered computers may pick them up today.
Apple Inc. devised a program that made it possible for the University of Kansas to offer Macintoshes for about $1,000 less than the retail price.
Apple has offered the same program at about 100 other universi-
The program was to benefit KU students, faculty and staff, said Mike Reid, general manager of Kansas Union Bookstores. About 300 orders were placed through the bookstores.
By a Kansan reporter
the list price of the Mac Plus by 18 percent. They retail price is now $1,699.
ties across the country. The University of Minnesota in Duluth, Minn., and Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., had such a program available.
A large portion of the Lawrence community wants to buy Apple computers and services, Smucker said.
"The goal of Apple was to get their products in as many people's hands as possible." Reid said.
The bookstore personnel are also trained to help people with questions, Reid said. Employees at the bookstore have been to a training center in St. Louis, which is one of the regional distributors of the computers.
As people pick up their computers today, Apple representatives will be available to answer questions about their products, Reid said.
"But they want to buy the products at university prices," he said.
Those buying Apple computers through the Bookstore are getting them at 10 to 15 percent below dealers' costs, Smucker said. Retail dealers can't match the price and still make a profit.
"Students have the privilege of buying the product at a lower price than I do." Smucker said, "even though I've bought millions of dollars worth already."
When the Bookstore advertises computers at such low prices, Smucker said, it creates the perception in buyers' minds that retail dealers are trying to rip off their customers.
Reid said there had been interest in the Bookstore's sale among many outside the KU community, but the
See MACINTOSH, p. 6, col. 1
Swaggart plans to defy year-long pulpit ban
The Associated Press
BATON ROUGE, La. Evangelist Jimmy Swaggart plans to resume preaching three months after he tearfully confessed to sin, his lawyer said yesterday.
The move would defy the suspension by his church and could lead to his dismissal.
The date coincides with the end of a three-month suspension by the church's Louisiana council. The national church's General Presbytery on Tuesday overruled that term as too lenient and ordered an extension at least year under two years of rehabilitation and counseling.
Swaggart, an Assemblies of God minister who stepped down from the pulpit Feb. 21, will return May 22, said Bill Treeby, a lawyer for Swaggart and a board member of Jimmy Swaggart World Ministries.
"He is willing to submit himself to the Louisiana District," said Treeby. "He will be considering an appeal to the national Presbyter."
Although the fiery preacher did not specify his sins, a prostitute has said Swaggart paid her to pose nude.
"We have an issue involving the constitution and by laws of this organization," said Treeby, noting there was a conflict over whether the national presbytery or the Louisiana council had the right to discipline ministers.
Treeby said that the national Presbytery might dismiss Swaggart from the denation if he resumed preaching May 22 but that Swaggart could appeal that.
Juleen Turnage, a spokeswoman for the national office of the Assemblies of God in Springfield, Mo., said Swaggart's option to return after three months "does not exist anymore."
"The General Presbytery overwhelmingly and without a dissenting vote affirmed the authority of the Executive Presbytery to make decisions on matters concerning ministerial credentials," she said yesterday.
Although the 13-member Executive Presbytery, which acts as the church board of directors, interrupted its regular bimonthly meeting to watch Treebry's televised news conference, "We don't consider that we've heard from Jimmy Swaggart, because we don't communicate through television news conferences with our disciplined ministers," Turnage said.
The Rev. G. Raymond Carlson, the Assemblies' general superintendent, said Tuesday that if Swagard did not accept its ruling, the Executive Presbytery would not take action to dismiss him."
Asked if Swaggart had considered leaving the Assemblies, Treeby said, "He is considering the possibility of an appeal.
---
2
Thursday, March 31, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Weather Forecast
From the KU Weather Service
LAWRENCE
Wet Weather
Mostly cloudy skies today with a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms toward evening. Highs are expected in the upper 50s and lows in the mid 40s.
HIGH: 58°
LOW: 46°
KEY
REGIONAL
North Platte
39/26
Snow
Omaha
55/12
Showers
Goodland
34/26
Rain
Hays
48/37
Rain
Salina
52/42
Rain
Topeka
57/47
Rain
Kansas City
59/14
Rain
Columbia
61/45
Rain
St. Louis
63/48
Rain
Dodge City
48/37
Rain
Wichita
55/14
Rain
Chattanooga
58/48
Thunderstorm
Springfield
61/49
Thunderstorm
Forecast by Jamie Zahara. Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5. DAY
FRI
Thunderstorms
66 / 44
HIGH LOW
SAT
Clearing
58 / 38
SUN
Sunny
62 / 40
MON
Sunny
65 / 42
TUE
Cloudy
74 / 49
FRI
TUE
Cloudy
FRI
Thunderstorms
66 / 44
HIGH LOW
SAT
Clearing
58 / 38
SUN
Sunny
62 / 40
MON
Sunny
65 / 42
TUE
Cloudy
74 / 49
Correction
Due to a reporter's error, Stepha- terdery's Kansan. Quincy is student nie Quincy was misidentified in yes- body vice president.
GOLFING
Steve Kraft's Pro Shop located at Lawrence Country Club is having its Annual Spring Sale!
Savings on All Golf Accessories.
Students Welcome!
On Campus
400 Country Club Terrace
843-2938
As part of the geography colloquium series, Ron Goodman, Lawrence resident, will speak about the "Transition of Missionary Philosophy in Africa" at 3:30 p.m. today in 317 Lindley Hall.
As part of the dance film series sponsored by the department of music and dance and the School of Fine Arts, "Moore Pavane," A Dancer's World to Appalachia Spring will be shown at 4 p.m. today Robinson Center.
The office of study abroad is sponsoring an informational meeting and proposal writing workshop at 4 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. For more information call 864-3732.
KU men's soccer tryouts and spring practice are scheduled for 4 d.m. today at the Shenk Complex,
23rd and Iowa streets.
An East German program is scheduled for 4 p.m. today in Miller Hall. Information about East Germany resulted not a presentation will be given.
- A Campus Crusade for Christ meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
A student recital with Sean Beckett, tenor, is scheduled for 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall of Murphy Hall.
A KU fencing club meeting is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. today in 130 Robinson Center.
■ The office of foreign student services is sponsoring a program titled "Can Politics and Sports Share the Cure" today in the lobby of McCollum Hall.
Police Reports
A car stereo, two books and five cassette tapes valued at $285 were stolen between Monday and Tuesday from a car in the 1400 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. A camper shell valued at $300 was
A KU student had $750 stolen Tuesday in the 1000 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
stolen Tuesday from a backyard in the 1200 block of New Jersey Street, Lawrence police reported.
KU debater Barry Pickens, Winfield junior, captured second place at the National Debate tournament last weekend at Weber State College in Ogden, Utah. The competition featured 144 of the top debaters in the country.
Brief
Pickens and Pat Whalen, San Antonio, Texas, junior, won fifth place as a team in the competition. A second KU team of Andrea Richard, Laramie, Wyo., senior, and Erik Doxter, Ft. Collins, Colo., senior, captured eighth place.
MUSEO DE ESPAÑA
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Toll-free t: 1-800-325-6664
March 31,1988
April 1: No Free Movie Good Friday
Mar. 31: LAS Planning Meeting 6:00 p.m.
April 3: Easter Sunday Worship 8:00 a.m.
(no evening worship)
April 5: Discussion Group "Corporate Simplicity; The World" 4:30 p.m.
"A Radical Combination"
$ \sum N\sqrt{\Delta^{3}} $
April 6: University Forum
Lynn Halliburst
"Pac's: Democracies
Scourge or Salvation?"
11:40 a.m.; lunch
Noon; speaker
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 31, 1988
3
KU to study racial issues Minority task force will meet on April 7
By Rebecca J. Cisek Kansan staff writer
The Minority Issues Task Force will review the actions that campus organizations are taking on minority issues, a University of Kansas administrator said yesterday.
The task force was originally proposed Feb. 17 by Chancellor Gene A. Budig in response to concerns of the university comms visit by the Kwu Klux Klan.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor and chairman of the task force, yesterday announced the creation of the 22-member force, which will meet for the first time April 7.
Ramaley said the task force would not do an in-depth study of minority concerns. Instead, it will act as an audit team to examine the effectiveness of the programs on campus.
A surprising number of groups on campus deal with minority concerns, Ramaley said. Among these are college students, student and governance groups.
"There is a lot of activity on campus," she said. "Part of our job is to figure out what it is."
Subcommittees within the task force will focus on at least four areas:
- Reviews of previous task forces and committees;
- Discussions with heads of departments and governance committees that deal with minority concerns;
- Discussions with student groups
that deal with minority concerns;
■ Examination of recruitment and retention of minority faculty and staff.
Jason Krakow, student body president, said the task force would provide the opportunity for discussion of minority issues.
Krakow said students could take classes on different cultures, but integration really didn't occur at KU.
Marshall Jackson, assistant direc-
tors of admissions wants the task
form to be completed.
"We need to create a better atmosphere for minority students on campus and for the minority community in general." he said.
Mohamed El Hodiri, professor of
W,
We need to create a better atmosphere for minority students on campus and for the minority community in general.'
- Marshall Jackson assistant director of admissions
economics and research associate in the Institute of Public Policy and Business Research, said he hoped KU would take a more positive attitude toward recruitment and retention of minority faculty and students.
"We should take an active rather than a protective approach," he said.
He said the policies of many universities focused on avoidance of breaking laws regarding minorities.
Members of the task force are:
Ramaley; EI Hodiri; Suzanne Collins, assistant to the dean of education;
Rosita Dorsey, director of minority affairs; Henry Gentry,
Kansas City, Mo., junior; David J. Gottlieb, professor of law; Edith Guffey, assistant to the director of student records; Charlotte Gunawardena, Sri Lanka, graduate student;
Carla Hanson, KU police officer;
Dewayne Hickman, Kansas City, Kan., senior; and N. Ray Hiner, professor of history and educational policy and administration.
Also, Hobart Jackson, professor of architecture and urban design; Marshall Jackson; Krakow; Sadye Logan, associate professor of social welfare; Mary Padilla, Overland Park senior; Clarence Rayton, equipment operator in facilities operations; Reggie Robinson, alumnus and lecturer in law; Elizabeth Schultz, Chancellors Club teaching professor of English; Robbie Jean Steward, assistant professor of counseling psychology; Norman R. Yetman, professor and chairman of American Studies; and Edward Zammaripa, associate director for administration in the Bureau of Child Research.
Coca-Cola
CLASSIC
ORIGINAL
Formula
'Coke is it' for residents of Templin Hall
Craig Goscha, Sharon Springs sophomore, puts the finishing touches on a Coca-Cola painting.
Mick McVey wanted to paint a mural of Coke cans on the fourth floor of Templin Hall just for the fun of it, but the residence halls' interior designer was slow to catch the wave.
By Kim Lightle
Kansan staff writer
McVey, Overland Park sophmore, and several other floor members came up with the new design after they decided that the three-year-old brown and gold designs were more careful consideration of five designs, the residents unanimously decided Coke was it.
The project should be completed in about two weeks, said George Robinson, fourth floor resident assistant. McVey and about 15 other residents have spent their weekends and spare time working on the mural.
But they had no idea when they came up with their proposal that it would be received so unfavorably by Carol von Tersch, coordinator of planned hall improvements, who had to approve the change.
MeVey said von Tersch was concerned that people would write graffiti all over the new design.
Von Tersch also was concerned about the use of Coke's trademark and told McVey he needed to get back in line with the company before she would approve the plan.
After McVey wrote a letter to Coca-Cola and got approval for the designs, von Tersch still was reluctant to approve the design. She was worried that it might look like an endorsement, causing the University of Kansas legal problems.
Von Tersch said, "I really didn't feel the commercialism was appropriate. I still don't."
McVey then called Vickie Thomas, the University's general counsel, to get the University's approval for the design.
"She said that it was OK as long as KU doesn't promote it." he said.
But McVey had to go to the Association of University Residence Halls to get consent and finally to Ken Stoner, director of student housing, before he got the design approved.
"I was very upset at the attitude me, von Tersch had toward the design." McVey said. "She was doing her job, but she should have made her objections all at the same time. It would have saved me a lot of time."
Von Tersch said she had looked at the work the floor members had completed and thought they had made a good effort, although she didn't approve of the content.
Robinson said he was surprised that the idea didn't fizzle out after facing so much opposition. He credited McVey for getting the project approved.
"It was a pretty tedious process," he said. "I was surprised. He kept plugging away. Most residents would have given up."
MeVey said that although he didn't plan to live in Templin next year, he didn't want to give up on the design. He thought the new design would improve the hall's image.
Theater company to voice black actors' views
"When freshmen move into the hall, they kind of look around and say, 'Great, I get to live here for a year.'" he said.
Mcvey hopes freshmen who move onto the floor next year will see the Coke design and smile.
By Kevin Dilmore
Kansan staff writer
A black theater company may soon find a home on campus under the direction of a University of Kansas graduate student who runs a similar company in Kansas City, Kan.
Martin Chislom, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, met with about 10 students last night in Murray to form a core group for the theater.
"It came to my attention that a lot of black students haven't had the opportunity to be in a production," he said.
Chislam said he was organizing the group to submit production ideas to the department of theatre and media to effect the group to be active by talk
Chislim said the voicing of black actors' views should not interfere with theater department productions.
"I don't want to make a situation where we are carrying signs, throwing bricks through windows or sitting in streets during another performance," Chislam said. "The way to bring change in the department is to organize ourselves, get together
some plays and poetry, and present it ourselves."
Sharon Hamlet, Guyana graduate student, said the group would give more to black student actors than just production experience.
"One of the things we can do as a group is keep in mind the difficulty in getting jobs," she said. "But we must be sure to draw a line between problems in a career and the other baggage an actor carries.
"This is not an 'us against them' situation, but we would like to hear from the students about any play choices or any complaints against
the department or whatever.'
Chislom said he hoped a local black theater group would give more training to actors than he had experienced.
“Sometimes a person would walk in a room and someone would say ‘Hmm, he’s a tall guy. He'd make a good father.’ And that was the extent of their training,” he said. “Any warm body was handed a script.”
Another meeting is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. April 13 in 235 Murphy.
Foreign visitors to join KU department for two-week course on the Constitution
By Brenda Finnell
Kansan staff writer
From elementary school through college, the U.S. Constitution plays a part in a U.S. education. Students learn about the document's origin and its meaning in history and contemporary society.
Fourteen visitors from 14 countries will experience a short course on the Constitution when they visit the University of Kansas April 10-16.
An American Studies seminar on "American Studies and Contemporary Applications of the United States Constitution" will allow the visitors to examine U.S. culture and listen to lectures about the Constitution.
The visitors all are involved in the teaching of social sciences in their countries, whether they are instructors or administrators. They are from Australia, Brazil, West Germany, Finland, Hong Kong, Japan, Jordan, the Netherlands, Panama, the Philippines, South Africa, Sweden, Urugay and Venezuela.
The visit is sponsored by the United States Information Agency. Two USIA escort officers also will attend the seminars, said Forrest Berghorn, chairman of American Studies and the seminar's coordinator.
"Through this, we've gained a reputation in Washington at the USIA as being a strong resource in American studies." Berghorn said.
By visiting the United States, the educators can see the setting in which constitutional issues are applied, he said.
The seminar will feature speeches by faculty members from KU and Haskell Indian Junior College. Speech topics include the Civil Rights movement, gender roles in U.S. society and politics and television. The speakers will discuss the Constitution's application to those areas.
Loomis, who will speak about the U.S. Congress during the seminar, said some aspects of U.S. government mystified people outside the country.
Burdett Loomis, chairman of political science, said the seminar would be helpful for both the 14 visitors and for KU.
"When Reagan goes to Europe and says he will push a missile treaty, but that the Senate has to approve it, many people can't believe the Senate can have that much power," he said.
Students get college preview
By Katbleen Eaddis
Kansan staff writer
About 65 Kansas City area high school students got a realistic look yesterday at what to expect in college.
A pre-college program, sponsored by KU's Minority Affairs Outreach Program in Kansas City, Kan., took place yesterday in Battenford Auditorium at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Rosita Dorsey, director of minority affairs, said the program was conducted once a year to encourage the students to continue their education in college and to help them prepare to more successful when they got there.
The Minority Affairs Outreach Program provides information about educational opportunities to Wyandotte County high school students by working directly with students, counselors, teachers and parents.
consultant, and officials from the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Donnelly College in Kansas City, Kan., made presentations to the group.
Boyd, whose radio shows, "Concerning Learning" and "The Generation Rap," are broadcast on KPRS on Saturday mornings, said he promoted success for students through positive self-image.
He warned of the dangers of life on the street today, compared with the 1950s when he was growing up in Chicago. The group laughed frequently as Boyd caricatured street talk and street characters.
Mark Carter, a junior at Schlagle High School in Kansas City, Kan., said he enjoyed Boyd's talk because it made him think not only about his actions but about how he appeared to others.
Upward Bound works with disa-
vaged high school students from
Houston.
ence were involved in either KU's Upward Bound program or Inroads, a private career development program in Kansas City, Mo., that recruits talented minority students for careers in business and industry.
Hakim Salahu-Din, assistant director of admissions at K-State, told the students to use available resources and to get involved in student organizations, not only for support, but to gain experience in leadership.
most students attending the confer-
"Get into those things that will help you grow and develop," he said.
including five from KU, related their own experiences as freshmen.
Denise Sturd, Hartford junior, encouraged the students to join student organizations.
"The more you do, the more resources you can draw on, and those resources are the most valuable thing you can have in college."
ROCK CHALK REVUE 1989
Applications available for the following positions:
Director
Assistant Director
Business Manager
I. B.A. Coordinator
Promotions Coordinator
DUE MONDAY, APRIL 4th at 5:00 p.m. in 105 BURGE UNION
Executive Producer
FOOLS ON THE HILL FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1988
Rex Boyd, the comic/juggler will be performing in front of the Kansas Union from 12 p.m. - 12:30 p.m. on Friday.
- Beth Scalet, a local guitarist, will be performing on level three of the Kansas Union from 11:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. on Friday.
WATCH FOR MORE DETAILS IN TOMORROW'S KANSAN.
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Thursday, March 31, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Final Four brings a barrage of announcers' top cliches
It's Final Four week in Kansas City — that is, for all of the country except that great amorphous body called the media. For sportswriters, radio announcers and especially TV sportscasters, it's Final Four Cliche City.
Let's take a look, as the sportscasters say, at the Final Four Cliches.
After an "injury-plagued season," the Kansas Jayhawks survived that "all-important" first round and then "roared" through the next three rounds to become this year's — here it comes, folks — Cinderella Team. No tournament would be complete without a Cinderella Team, unless, of course, the expected four teams played, in which case it would be the Clash of the Titans.
First it was Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass. Then it was Josie and the Pussycats. Now it's Danny Manning and the
Once and for all, the Jayhawks are not a one-man team! True, this is not the year of Greg, Danny, Ron, Cal and Cedric. But those who wonder about depth should get out their VCRs and watch reruns of the Kansas-Kansas State game in Pontiac, Mich., until they figure out just how many players contributed to that victory.
Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas anymore. There's no place like home. Lions and tigers and bears ad nauseam. If the Jayhawks played in Idaho, the sportscasters would talk about potatoes.
And while they had their VCRs out, viewers would be subjected to the continuous babble of Big East-loving CBS sportscasters about that far-off land, Kansas.
"Kansas: Silos, Barns, Flat prairies." That's actually the way one sportscaster opened a segment in the NCAA tournament coverage. (Hey, buddy, have you ever BEEN to Kansas?) Perhaps the announcer was once a stringer for Sports Illustrated, the magazine that in 1986 exported Danny across the river because there were no decent cornfields in Lawrence for him to stand in.
These four tough cliches have survived a taxing tournament to meet head-to-head in Kemper Arena. Which will become the 1988 NCAA Champion cliche? Only time will tell.
Katy Monk for the editorial board
Protect innocent from AIDS
There is little doubt that we as a society need to apply both concern and genuine compassion to the victims of AIDS. But there is also a need for us to avoid being blinded by that compassion into acceptance of behavior that is not only irresponsible but can be fatal to the innocent.
A bill that would provide for the prosecution of persons who knowingly infected another person with the AIDS virus is now in the House Public Health and Welfare Committee. The bill is a necessary measure and should be passed.
Education and the counseling of AIDS victims about the potential dangers has been somewhat effective in slowing the spread of AIDS. But society still has the moral obligation to protect all of its members. This social contract includes provisions for the protection of its members against the acts of any person who endangers the life of another — be it with a gun, a knife, or the knowing transmission of a deadly disease.
One of the real reasons AIDS is such a sensitive issue is because it often relates to homosexuality. Many people are afraid that a stand against the reckless conduct of an AIDS victim has the appearance of discrimination. Nothing could be further from the truth. How would we judge someone who knowingly infected a person with cholera or small pox? There are times when a society must take a stand that may not be popular but is necessary.
The past few years have shown that most AIDS victims would never knowingly inflict their fate on others. But there have been cases where some people with AIDS have demonstrated a complete disregard for anyone by transmitting the virus to unsuspecting men, women and even children. No matter how it is viewed, knowingly endangering another human being's life is more than negligent — it is criminal.
Legislation that would make it a felony to infect another person with the AIDS virus is a sad but necessary measure. Like it or not, we must accept that there are people in the world who will act responsibly only with extreme persuasion.
Van Jenerette for the editorial board
Editorials in this column are the opinions of the editorial board.
News staff
Alison Young...Editor
Todd Cohen...Managing editor
Rob Knapp...News editor
Alan Pleijer...Editorial Page
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 Messermanith ... Production manager
Greg Knipp ... National manager
Kria Schorno ... Traffic manager
Kimberly Coleman ... 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.
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JESSE JACKSON'S QUESTIONS:
IF NOT ME, WHO?
IF NOT NOW, WHEN?
The DEMOCRATS' QUESTION:
IF NOT HIM, WHY?
JACKSON LEADS
WINKIN 88
BLINKIN
NOD
For KU students, the writing's on the wall
have an idea
John Buzbee's article about graffiti that appeared in the March 2 edition of Kansan Magazine thoroughly entertained me but left me feeling rather empty. Being something of a pragmatist, I prefer to see concrete new ideas emerge from any such creative endeavor. Therefore, I suggest extending Buzbee's research into the practical arena.
Too many students chasing too few academic resources have caused a plethora of problems for the University of Kansas in the past few semesters. The enrollment center is a jungle, class sizes are exploding, student/faculty ratios are skyrocketing and a lack of funds has left KU unable to ameliorate these overcrowding problems.
3. Administer comprehensive graffiti exams to students before their junior year.
Graffiti, those seemingly pointless scribbles that serve only to distract the average student, could hold the key to a new, flourishing academic environment at KU. Picture the three parts of my proposal to Develop these Resources Already With us (DRAW):
Don't snicker, snarl or guffaw! I predicted opposition to this rather unorthodox proposal, and so I spent an hour one afternoon browsing through
2. Require underclassmen to spend their first two years perusing graffiti in the stacks at Watson Library, on desktops, in bathroom stalls and wherever else it may appear.
3. "I am not interested."
1. Abolish all freshman/sophomore courses.
2. Money and faculty thus freed could be concent-
rated on.
Derek Schmidt Guest Columnist
the sprawling graffit collection at Watson Library — a very educational experience.
Philosophy was well-represented (" Up your's is my philosophy") as were political science ("Anarchy is an impossible form of government, sturid", and literature ("Trip Shakespeare").
Repeated references to the Dead Kennedy convinced me that the authors had a grasp of recent U.S. history. The curriculum also included religious studies ("Scott Baio is the anti-Christ") and music studies ("Michael Jackson is the anti-Christ").
Most of the graffiti was grammatically correct.
When an errant graffitiist (is that a word?) wrote "everbody," a helpful on-the-wall editor responded, "Is your name Jethro? Yew ain't letrn to spel yet, I see."
One children's story was included, though I did not understand why the Mad Hatter was mentioned and Alice was not.
The collection even offered information about Kansas to help out-of-state students better understand our native land: "If Kansas had an official state car, it would be a 1973 Chevro Nova."
Despite graffiti's obvious ability to provide a liberal education, my critics might argue two things.
program and we can't afford to experiment. I suggest, however, that KU is the perfect proving ground for this system. Following our handing out condoms at enrollment, the invitation of the KKK to campus, the continuing debate over the role of student athletes and last fall's question about black coaches, all of America is used to controversial, atypical ideas emanating from KU. People look to us for leadership.
Second, critics might contend that graffiti is an inadequate or inappropriate source of knowledge. Au contraire! Kansas graffiti is of solid origin ("Only very important people write on these walls") profound, ("There is more to life than velour seats") and inquisitive ("Roses are red, violets are blue — says who?"). One writer summarizes graffiti's inherent value on a wall in
"Graffiti is literature
Graffiti is art
Graffiti is art
Graffiti is graffiti
And what is that? — a procrastination from homework."
This concludes my case. Perhaps University officials will package a refined version of my ideas and submit it to the legislature — they could call it the Marginal Excellence proposal.
Maybe someone influential will read this and take my off-the-wall proposal to heart. Maybe it will be instrumental in relieving the overburdened educational system here at KU.
Derek Schmidt is an Independence sophomore majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Letter was irritating
It's always disappointing to read something written out of hatred. But when it is poorly written, it's downright irritating. Forest Bloodgood's March 25 letter is just such a piece.
Bloodgood says he avoids labeling himself because he realizes that labels are "never wholly accurate." But he is more than happy to grab hold of a ready handle, "fundamentalists," and start swinging, coming in from far left field with a barrage of vicious, unfounded, completely irrational generalities.
I think it is clear enough that Steve Gantz (whom Bloodgood attacks) supports Christian fundamentalism, not "Middle Eastern zealots who burn heretics alive." (Where did come from, anyway?) Neither does Dantz advocate with hutts or malnutrition — physical, spiritual or otherwise. If, in fact, Bloodgood does desire a philosophical "well-balanced meal," then I should think he would welcome, or at least tolerate, the Christian fundamentalist perspective, not plug his ears and scream, "Dogmism!" (There is a big difference between legitimate, sincere, Christian morality and mere narrow-minded dogmatism — a difference that many secular humanist partisans are quick to ignore, becoming dogmatic themselves in the process.) And though I don't consider myself a dyed-in-the-wool fundamentalist, I am offended by Bloodgood's self-righteous assertion that this group
is not "a part of the thinking world." I don't think his letter was written out of thought, but rather out of a violent emotional reaction to Gantz's genuine moral concerns.
I don't detect much of a reasonable argument in the "Fundamentalists whine" piece. What I do detect is some bad blood, Mr. Bloodgood.
Douglas Fishback Tulsa, Okla., freshman
News takes precedence
Perhaps the Kansan needs to be reminded of the value of news stories over feature stories. For many KU students, the Kansan is the sole source of daily news. Unfortunately, students skim the paper and find feature stories that have little news value on Page One and important, current news on the back pages. Tuesday's Kansan gave perhaps 18 column inches to a survey of the resources of Spencer Research Library. While the story may interest some, Rep. Richard Gephardt's recent withdrawal from the presidential race was hidden on page seven.
Kansan editors are probably instructed to lead with articles that most concern students. If this is the case, how can editors justify allowing this feature to override the obvious importance of the withdrawal of a presidential candidate? Maybe editors need to take a second look at the difference between a frontpage article and a Page 7 story and re-evaluate their news judgment.
Stacie Kennon Overland Park senior
Serese Swartzendruber Salina senior
Cheers to Manning
During this week of championship dreams and fairy tale endings, much of the attention has been focused upon one individual. He is known to most as "Danny." His mom calls him "Dan." Many of we Jayhawk faithful simply call him "The Man." He has destroyed Big Eight records and stands among the elite in NCAA history. His many accomplishments on the court are well known, and he is quickly becoming a household name.
All of this, of course, is common knowledge. I wish to thank Danny Manning for the exemplary way he has conducted himself off the court. In these times of poor academics, disciplinary actions and other incidents contrary to the amateur athletic ideal, Danny Manning shines.
I got a chance to see Danny as a high school phenom. He soundly beat my high school. We watched him play as a freshman. We all felt the pain of Dallas. We watched as the press chided him for not scoring enough, for being unselfish. And we have watched him blossom into a superstar.
Everything he has said and done while he's been at the University of Kansas has brought respect and praise to the school and his family. He conducts himself with as much class and humility off the court as he does with extraordinary skill and teamwork on it.
Danny Manning represents something many people regard as rare anymore: a sports star whose attitude deserves praise, deserves respect from his peers and is worthy to be a role model for youth to emulate.
Doug Roth Overland Park senior
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Jackson's platform defies Reaganomics
Democratic hopeful says higher taxes for rich,corporations would cut deficit
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Jesse Jackson is running for president on a liberal platform he calls "the opposite of Reaganomics" — raising taxes on the rich, slashing Pentagon spending, creating a national health program for all, doubling the budget for education and doubling the minimum wage.
Jackson has finished first or second in most of the Democratic presidential primaries and caucuses and is close behind Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts in the delegate chase. Jackson has cast himself as the candidate of the working class, farmers, the jobless, the hungry, the homeless and others who have not prospered in the Reagan years.
"Economic violence haunts the lives of most Americans," Jackson said.
"There is nothing wrong with the American worker, the family farmer or the small businessperson. There is
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 31, 1988
something wrong with the system," he said.
Jackson said that he could cut the deficit by one-third by raising taxes on "the richest one percent" of Americans and on corporations.
"There's nothing radical about his message," said John White, who was former chairman of the Democratic Party during the Carter administration and is now a Jackson supporter. "It's neither liberal nor conservative. It's the core language of the Democratic Party."
Jackson has called for a moratorium on family farm foreclosures; civil rights legislation to protect lesbians and gay men; tapping public pension funds to build housing, roads, mass transit and water systems; debt relief; an "international Marshall Plan" for the Third World; a national floor for welfare benefits; a phase-out of nuclear power; a freeze on nuclear weapons, and a halt to U.S. aid for the contrasts in Nicaragua and the UNITA insurgents in Angola.
WASHINGTON — An adviser to Jesse Jackson said yesterday that he detected the beginnings of an anonymous "Stop Jackson" movement in the Democratic Party and that much apprehension existed in the party about the possibility of Jackson's nomination.
The adviser, Rep. Mike Leland, D-Tex., said he did not know who was behind the attempt and said he knew of no party leaders joining such a movement. But he said it did not appear to be confined to Southern
"There is some movement afoot," Leland said. "We can't put our hands on it. We don't know who the leader is. But we do understand . . . different players of the Democratic Party have been approached."
Although Jackson fell substantially behind Michael Dukakis in Connecticut's primary Tuesday, his 2-to-1 victory in Michigan on Saturday has forced Democratic leaders to confront the possibility that Jackson could end the primary season as top vote getter and perhaps delegate leader.
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Thursdav. March 31, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
ACLU challenges abortion decision
The Associated Press
SALT LAKE CITY — The American Civil Liberties Union is challenging an order that blocked a woman from having an abortion because her estranged husband objected to her ending the pregnancy.
The woman has a constitutional right to an abortion that the judge should not have interfered with, the group said, citing the Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion.
The ACLU said it would go to court today to ask state judge David S. Young to vacate the restraining order he granted last week to Michael Jon Reynolds, whose wife, Jennifer Franks Reynolds, is about two months pregnant.
Uah is one of four states with laws requiring wives to notify husbands of abortion decisions, said Planned Parenthood spokesman Mary Carlson. However, Uah is the only state that hasn't been challenged in court, or appealed.
The ACLU said that if Young didn't change his ruling, the group would
take the case to the Utah Court of Appeals.
"We feel (the order) is shocking and a restriction of personal liberties," said Robyn E. Blumner, ACLU executive director. She said the order should not be allowed to stand.
"Uttah will find itself once again a target of national mockery," she
ACLU spokesman Michele Parish-Pixler said the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled that no one could keep a woman from ending a pregnancy in its first trimester. "It's overreaching on the part of the judge to issue any type of restraint on the first trimester," she said.
Michael Jon Reynolds, who is seeking a divorce and custody of the couple's 10-month-old infant as well as the unborn child, obtained the restraining order because he is morally opposed to abortion, said his attorney, Evan Hurst.
Jennifer Franks Reynolds was served with the restraining order on the day she was leaving home to have the abortion performed.
Macintosh
Continued from p. 1
Bookstore had not been attempting to sell or advertise cut-rate computers to anyone other than KU students, faculty and staff.
Reid said that all advertising promoting the Bookstore's computer published in the Kansan had also sold at Apple Computer, not the Bookstore.
Kent Nichols, who manages Apple
Kent's non-campus retail sales
throughout eastern Kansas, said the special promotion at the University has had no significant impact on retail sales of Apple's products in this area.
"Where we are seeing a problem is with the non-Apple dealers," Nicholls said.
Kansan reporter Stacy Foster contributed information to this story.
Join your fellow students supporting KU and Margin of Excellence by participating in H.E.R.O.'s Lobby Day.
For more information call the Student Senate Office at 864-3710 Brought to you by the Associated Students of Kansas
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Goin' to Kansas City Kansan Special Section Watch for it this Friday!
- Danny Manning and his mother
- Role of the supporting players
- Feature story on Chris Piper
- Firsthand trip to Detroit
- Comparison of the two Final Four years
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
24 people die of hunger each minute. 18 of them are children.
KU Students Against Hunger present:
KU'S WAR ON HUNGER
APRIL 4-9,1988
...AN IDEA WHOSE TIME HAS COME
CALENDAR:
- MONDAY
balloon Launch, 12-1 p.m. on the lawn next to Wescoe Beach. Sponsored by Delta Sigma Pi, the business fraternity. TUESDAY
Comedian-activist Dick Gregory, 7 p.m.
at the Christian Union Ballroom.
at the Kansas Union Bailroom.
Sponsored by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
* WEDNESDAY
Teacher In-Service Briefing, designed to instruct KU faculty and Lawrence teachers about the hunger problem, 7 p.m. in 300 Strong Hall.
- THURSDAY
- THURSDAY
Panel Discussion on Hunger, 7 p.m. in the Mayflower Room of Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont.
- FRIDAY
- Benefit Concert. Mahoots, Common Ground,
and the Homestead Grays, 9 p.m. at The
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- SATURDAY
Hunger Clean-Up. Help clean Lawrence to raise money to fight hunger, 12-3 p.m.
JOIN "KU'S WAR ON HUNGER,"--APRIL 4-9
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 31, 1988
7
NationWorld
Meese called 'crown jewel' of sleaze by Senate leader
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd yesterday called Attorney General Edwin Meese III "the crown jewel of . . . seaze" and urged him to quit, but Meese said he saw no reason to resign. President Reagan reiterated his support for his old friend.
Meese, the focus of an 11-month criminal investigation that has sapped Justice Department morale, also predicted that Solicitor General Charles Fried would not follow the path of two other officials who shook the department Tuesday by turning in their resignations.
"Business is operating as usual at the Justice Department," Meese said.
On Tuesday, Fried, who argues the government's position in Supreme Court has been widely criticized.
had prompted him to reassess his own future.
Deputy Attorney General Arnold Burns and Assistant Attorney General William Weld resigned because they were concerned that Meese's continuing legal difficulties were damaging the effectiveness and credibility of the Justice Department, department sources said.
Congressional reaction against Meese was strong the day after the resignations of Burns and Weld.
"Mr. Meese has become the crown jewel of the sleaze factor in Reagan administration history." Byrd told reporters. He said that if Reagan doesn't want to ask Meese to quit, he should find someone else to ask him.
But Reagan told reporters during a ceremony honoring young scientists. "He's been a friend for over 20 years. I have every confidence in him. I'm not going to comment any further."
ARAB MEDIA CURTALLED: The Israeli army yesterday padlocked the Arab-owned Palestine Press Service, cutting off a key source of information in a campaign to curtail media coverage of Arab unrest in the occupied territories. The news service, which reports on activities in the West Bank and Gaza Stip, was ordered closed for six months.
THEATY RATIFICATION PREDICTED: The Senate Foreign Relations Committee recommended overwhelmingly yesterday that the Senate ratify a historic treaty to eliminate all U.S. and Soviet medium-range nuclear weapons. Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., said his head count showed no more than five senators would vote against the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty when the full Senate took up the treaty, probably late next month. Ratification requires a two-thirds Senate majority, 67 votes if all 100 senators are present and vote.
KUWAIT I BLANK ATTACKED: Three Iranian speedboats fired from several hundred yards yesterday at Bubyan, a Kuwait island off Iraq, and wounded two soldiers, the government and
News Roundup
shipping agents reported. Iran denied it. It said the boats speed away unscathed after the attack, which appeared to be for propaganda rather than to cause damage. The reports did not say what weapons were fired, but Iranian speedboats normally carry machine guns and grenade launchers. Bubiyan is about 20 miles from Iraq's Faw peninsula, part of which Iran seized early in 1986.
CONGRESSIONAL OZONE DEBATE: The Reagan administration was urged yesterday to begin a 'massive diplomatic mission' to curb global production of ozone-destroying chemicals. The call from sometime-divergent voices in the chemical industry, Congress and the environmental lobby came as scientists told two Senate Environment subcommittees about their recent conclusion that chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs, are depleting the Earth's stratospheric ozone layer more quickly than previously thought.
FRENCH PLANE EXPLODES: A French jet fighter crashed and exploded yesterday near a nuclear power plant in West Germany, but
officials said the facility could have withstood the force of the impact if the plane had hit it. The plot of the Mirage jet fighter was killed when his plane went down at 9:20 a.m. about a mile from the Isar plant at the Bavarian village of Ohu.
FLOODS THREATEN WEST GERMANS: U.S. servicemen joined West German firefighters yesterday in piling sandbags to protect the city of Wiesbaden, West Germany, from the floodwaters of the swollen Rhin River. Thousands of volunteers have pitched in the past three days to protect people's lives and property from flooding. Six people are thought to have died in flood-related accidents.
PANAMA STRIKE FALLING APART: Supermarkets, pharmacies and small shops opened for the first time in 10 days yesterday as a nationwide strike aimed at toppling Gen. Manuel Antonio Noriega began to fall apart. Despite the defections, Alberto Boyd, president of the National Council of Private Enterprise, said he and other strike leaders were not ending their effort to get rid of Noriega.
KU
KANSAS UNIVERSITY Football Hostess Program
All freshman, sophomore, and junior students interested in portfolio.
pating in the Kansas University Football Hostess Program for the 1988-89 school year, report to room 135 in Parrott Athletic Center on
Thursday, April 7 at 5:00 p.m.
At the informational meeting, the program will be explained and appointments for interviews will be made. Parrott Athletic Center is next to Allen Field House.
KU
KU
KU
KU
"None of it's pretty, and all of it's the L.A. Guns!"
April 11, 1988 — 8 p.m.
Doors open at 7 p.m.
Kansas Union Ballroom
Get tickets at SUA Box Office, all CATS Outlets
Mother Earth in Topeka and UPC in Manhattan
— Presented by SUA SPECIAL EVENTS —
L.A.GUNS
KU
MADO
presents:
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今春大学を卒業され、御两親を卒業式に呼んであげる方には超格安な料金を用意しております。
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DISCOUNT FARE FROM KANSAS CITY (WEEKDAY DEPARTURE)
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Thursday, March 31 12 p.m.-6 p.m.
Friday, April 1 9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Macintosh $ ^{TM} $ Delivery!
It's time for you, the KU student, faculty or staff member, to pick up your key to success! You can pick up your computer on:
Where to park: West lot Where to pick up your computer: the Burge Union, level 3 There will be people there to help load your computer and answer any questions you may have.
Training sessions:
March 31:2 p.m.-4 p.m.
April 1:10 a.m.-12 p.m.
West Parking Lot
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Iving Hill Road
Burge Union
Allen Field House
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8
Thursday, March 31, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Legislature to act on budget
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas Legislature is trying to wrap up work on bills, including the Board of Regents budget, before a two-week recess begins on April 11.
The Regents budget was approved by the House of Representatives without mission-related enhancements of the Margin of Excellence but was amended by the Senate Ways and Means Committee to include the entire first year of the Margin plan.
The committee is expected to take action on the Regents budget next
In other action:
The House and Senate could not agree on a school finance bill that would benefit urban school districts. They also could not agree whether to extend a self-imposed deadline for moving the bill.
week. This week, Ways and Means subcommittees are considering budgets of the individual Regents schools.
= ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
If the Regents budget is approved by the committee, it will then go to the Senate floor. State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said he expected the budget to pass the floor.
A House committee approved a bill that would require the issuing of stickers with the full names of counties to put at the bottom of the new license plates. The bill also would allow for special plates for university alumni, legislators and former prisoners of war.
If the budget passes the floor, it then will go into a combined conference committee to have the differences between the Senate and House versions ironed out.
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Ask a few women who found an empty tomb centuries ago and millions around the globe who celebrate Resurrection this Sunday.
We welcome you to join us for
MAUNDY THURSDAY Eucharist (3/31) at 6:30 p.m.
GOOD FRIDAY Adoration of the Cross (in Danforth) at 12:30 p.m.
and EASTER Festival of the Resurrection Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
843-4948
Enjoy an exquisite Sunday Brunch at Holiday Inn
Every Sunday our extensive brunches include:
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ALPHA PHI ALPHA (As a contribution to KU's War on Hunger) Presents
Expires: 4/30/8
Presents
PETER SMITH
DICK GREGORY
He gained fame as a comedian and is today a human rights activist, social satirist, author, lecturer, recording artist, actor, philosopher, and political activist. Moveover, he combines these roles to serve the cause of human liberation and alleviate human suffering.
He is the provocative and outspoken DICK GREGORY.
He is the provocative and outspoken DICK GREGORY Credited with opening many doors for black entertainers, GREGORY found comedy an expedient avenue toward getting people's attention, to make them think as well as laugh. Once he achieved success as an entertainer, he used it to assist causes he knew desperately needed help.
His participation in the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s is well documented, as are his efforts roward world peace, hunger, and rights of American Indians. His efforts, however, have had a cost. GREGORY was virtually barred from the entertainment business; he was jailed numerous times for his part in demonstrations; and cancelled bookings, travel costs, and legal fees have run over one million dollars.
YET DICK GREGORY continues in his struggle for human dignity. He ran from Chicago to Washington, D.C. in 1974 to call attention to world hunger. His fasts have become legendary, as he employs them to symbolize the suffering of oppressed people everywhere. His 1980 journey to Iran saw him take only liquids for 145 days as he prayed for the release of American hostages and for the cessation of world hostility. While in Iran, GREGORY met with the Ayatollah Khomeini, the last westerner to do so. More recently, he visited IRA attackers in England and, while arriving too late to help, the experience was the catalyst for his medically supervised fast in New Orleans in 1981. There, he proved fastings to be not only effective but could be done without risk to life. In 1982, GREGORY assisted the ERA movement by instructing hunger strikers in Illinois on proper fasting methods.
Certainly difficult to label, DICK GREGORY is simply, as he says, "For People."
A self-taught authority on nutrition, GREGORY's nine books include Dick Gregory's Natural Diet for Folks Who Eat: Cookin' with Mother Nature in addition to his acclaimed autobiography, Nigger.
People. This well known political activist will address the campus of the University of Kansas as a part of this year's 'Alpha' week events. The event will take place on April 5, 1988, at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. There is no admission charge. All students and faculty are welcome to attend.
ALTERNATIVES
[Image of a young man typing on a computer keyboard. He is wearing a dark sweater and appears focused on his work.]
Looking for an alternative to typical student housing? Then explore the Naismith Hall alternative. Naismith Hall feature a top-notch fitness center, luxurious pool and patio, semi-private suites with weekly maid service, a computer center and so much more. When you tour Naismith Hall you'll see why it's the talk of the campus. Also, consider the super social calendar, cable tv lounges on each floor, great menus, private parking and easy access to classes. Fall semester leases are available only while space remains. So arrange your tour today and explore Naismith Hall, the best alternative.
NAISMITHHALL
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 31, 1988
9
Living
Jacque Janssen, arts/features editor
Cheap fun helps beat spring stress
By Michael Carolan
Kansan staff writer
Those final exams are creeping up.
With just a month left to catch up in
class and begin studying for finals,
you might find yourself feeling a bit
uneasy.
You might lose part of your appetite or find less time to eat dinner. You might wake in awake and think you hear your biology professor whispering, "Study" or "It's F City for you."
You might find yourself stopping in the midst of a math problem and uncontrollably screaming at the top of your lungs. Worse, you might feel like running down a hallway as fast as your dog, shnashing your head into a brick wall.
exams. It's not caused just by final exams. Everyday living is stressful. From rocky relationships to failing a pop quiz to realizing that you're graduating and haven't found a job, stress permeates all parts of life.
There is no telling how many times a day students experience stress,
"People can have stress simply crossing the street or failing a test." Duiley said. "At low levels, people
are feeling stress an of the time. Sherrill Robinson, a graduate assistant at the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, said stress in the springtime could be the worst sometimes.
a day students experience stress, said Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, because students deal with different levels of stress in many ways.
It's a time when things are changing. "Robinson said. 'People are graduating and moving away from friends. Final exams and midterms
are things that cause stress in students. Relationships can take different turns.
"When people are facing some eminent change in life, the change by itself will cause stress."
Richard Nelson, associate professor in the department of counseling psychology, said students needed a release valve for their stress.
"Stress is cumulative," Nelson said. "It just builds up over time. But if you build in fun time, doing things you enjoy, then the system can deal more effectively with the stress."
Many students don't know how to spend their time releasing that stack of books.
"If you aren't nice to yourself, who will be?" she said. "It is their mind and body. If they don't take care of themselves, emotionally, physically or not, no one else is. People that love themselves are good to themselves."
"Many students are not doing anything fun or know what fun is," he said. "All you do is work, go to school and study. It is very important for students to remove themselves from the stresses of being a college student. If you don't build in any enjoyment time, you let those stresses build up."
Robinson said that many students weren't nice to themselves often enough.
buildup once in a while.
Because spring is here and the semester is winding down to an end, now is a good time to begin being nice to yourself, not just because finals are a month away and you've skipped class to go to the lake for the last few weeks but because everyone needs to relax and alleviate stress
Here are just a few fun, easy and cheap activities to treat yourself to now and then.
Let's go fly a kite
Kite-flying. Every little kid does it, and every adult wishes they could do it more often. It's controlling the wind on the end of a string. It's the enchantment of flight and the fascination of the sky.
Ever wonder why the other guy's kite stays aloft longer than yours and avoids the trees and power lines you seems attracted to? Here are some examples. An anime-clopedia Americana that some would be kite fliers never learn:
For those who prefer store-boughts, there are some with fantastic designs and swirling colors on materials such as nylon, satin and plastic. There are kites with comet-like tails. There's the dragon, the diamond, the tetrahedron, the centineed and Chinese disk.
Many of these kites are much more complex than the traditional "bat kite," the plastic kind with two fiery eaves.
Then there's the homemade kite that every kid's grandfather helped put together and later tried to save a tumbled into the only tree in the fifties.
It just takes paper, glue, two thin wooden rods and plenty of string to ride the sun on sunny Sunday afternoon.
Don't run with a kite to launch it.
Stand with your back to the wind.
Have a friend stand about 100 feet away,
holding the kite pointed upward.
As your friend lets go, pull
the line in with a hand-over-hand motion, and off the kite will soar.
Pulling on the string will cause the kite to rise. Letting go will allow the wind to carry the kite away but will cause the kite to lose altitude. Combining the two — pulling, letting out and pulling again in a pumping motion — lets your kite fly high and far.
some rays
It's probably the most convenient stress-releaser. Thousands flock to
O
the southern sands about this time of year to make their annual pilgrimage to the sacred tanning grounds. But the holy rays of the sun can be found in your own back yard.
The Midwest sun is waiting just beyond your door and is about 500 times less expensive. Just be sure you have the ritualistic "Walkman" or "blaster." Don't forget the fashion magazine, the appropriate factor in the fold-out chart, the blanket and the cooler of cold beer or ice tea.
Relax, read a little, absorb some rays and feel good about your newly bronzed body.
Discover the parks
Lawrence has plenty of parks for people to enjoy. A map from the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department on the fourth floor of City Hall lists all 30. Ask your neighbor if you can borrow his Labrador, or better yet, his 5-year-old, and take a stroll.
Read for pleasure
Camp in your backyard
People hate reading what they're forced to. When reading for classes becomes too laborious, relieve the pressure of those boring texts by picking up a good suspense novel, a trashy romance or anything else your professor would consider mindless, and enjoy some reading for a change.
Dad won't be there to help set up the tent, but you can rent one from Wilderness Discovery Camping Equipment Rental Service sponsored by Student Union Activities for as little as $2.75 a night.
If you want a little more adventure, rent a four-man tent for a weekend for just $7.50, pile the friends, barbecue and coolers in the car; and enjoy one of the six campgrounds at Clinton Lake.
Feeling cramped up in your dorm room or need to get out of the house? There are endless possibilities in one's backyard. It's the closest green space outside your back door. Why not rent a tent and invite the friends over for a camp-out just like the weekend retreat that you took as a kid?
Walk through the past
Dog Playing
You don't need to go as far as Clinton Lake to relax. Take a walk through Lawrence's past. More than 25 Lawrence buildings are on the homebound Register, and many more are valuable remnants from the past.
你 似
Take a walk along tree-lined streets and note the different styles of early Lawrencian craftsmanship and architecture, such as the stone vernacular, the cottage style, the Italianate and the Victorian baroque. Watkins Community Museum has brochures about historic homes and buildings that give Lawrence the enduring character that it retains today.
Take advantage of the serene little
town outside the hustle and bustle of campus life.
Bathe in bubbles
Taking showers is a product of a society of hustlers and bustlers. Students want quick, five-minute sprays of water to gain more time to get to class in the morning.
Slow down. Fill the tub up with water and pour in some bubble bath. Bubbles, the sweet aroma, a good magazine and some time can do wonders for a tired body and overworked mind. And, if you have the inclination, invite someone to hop in with you.
Look, touch, don't buy
If you find yourself in the dumps, lose yourself in downtown Lawrence.
Leave your money, credit cards and checkbook at home and go on a make-believe shopping spree. Try on some outrageous clothes.
Window shop for albums, furniture, appliances, knickknacks, kitchenware, or anything else that you wish you could buy but can't. Head over to Quantrill's Flea Market and spend a few hours sorting through neat stuff that you'd probably never use.
Students almost never voluntarily get up early enough to watch the sunrise. It's one event that is taken seriously, and even as it was unappeted, potential for relaxation.
Do something new, get up early on Saturday morning or stay up all night. Find a friend or do it by yourself. Find a spot to watch the sun rise swiftly in the morning sky. Watch the colors in the sky change from deep ocean blue to orange to yellow and then to sky blue. Relax, meditate or chat about great philosophical issues. It's in the stillness and beauty of the morning that some find peace from the business and stresses of the day.
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FOOLS ON THE HILL
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1988
★ Giant, decorated cookies provided by the Hawk's Nest bakery on level three of the Kansas Union will be given away in a drawing.
★ 500 batting helmets provided by the KU Bookstores will be given away at the KU Baseball game on April 1.
★ All humor books will be 15% off in the Oread Book Shop on April 1.
WATCH FOR MORE DETAILS IN TOMORROW'S KANSAN.
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10
Thursday, March 31, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Humanitarian aid for contras OK'd
House shows support for truce, talks
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The House overwhelmingly approved yesterday a $48 million package of humanitarian aid for the contrasts in Nicaragua and for children injured in seven years of civil war.
The aid bill, passed on a 345-70 vote, was portrayed as a gesture of U.S. support for a temporary truce reached last week between the rebels and the Sandinista government and for continued talks aimed at achieving a long-term end to hostilities.
"The hope is that this will lead to political instead of military processes now taking over" in Nicaragua, said House Majority Leader Thomas Foley.
"This war is over, whether some like it or not," said Rep. Leon Panetta, D-Calif.
White House spokesman Martin Flitzwater said after the House vote,
"We are pleased and look forward to the vote tomorrow in the Senate."
Despite producing the first strong bipartisan vote on U.S. policy toward Nicaragua in more than five years, lawmakers showed more weariness than joy as they plodded through two hours of debate.
"It is not the magic key to facilitate a cease-fire in place or fruitful negotiations and all the rest," said Minority Leader Robert Michel, who said it had become clear Congress no longer was inclined to grant the military aid he would prefer. "But for the moment it's the only thing we have to give."
Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd promised speedy consideration on the other side of the Capitol, although it was unclear whether the matter could come to a vote today. GOP lawmakers said President Reagan had indicated strong support for the measure.
start of the cease-fire.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — A contra radio station reported yesterday that the U.S.-backed rebels had attacked Sandinista soldiers, violating a truce days before a formal 60-day cease-fire was to go into effect.
An agreement signed last week by the leftist Sandinista government and the contrais called for the ceasefire in an effort to end more than six years of war.
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fire was to get Government and rebel representatives ended two days of technical meetings Tuesday night by agreeing to set up five zones in which the rebels were to gather tomorrow, the
years of war. They declared a truce March 21, the start of the historic talks that produced the fragile peace agreement. But reports reaching the capital this week indicated several violations by the contras.
Contras attack Sandinistas, endanger truce, reports say
The Associated Press
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MAKE
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BLOOD
DONORS
donate BLOOD!
American Red Cross BLOOD DONOR HALL OF FAME The following students, faculty and staff have donated blood through Mar. 25. Call for your appointment! Lawrence Blood Center 329 Missouri.
Brooke Baker
Margaret Baker
Brian Bartlett
Stacy Beckman
Stephen Bewitzia
Anita Bertolillo
Lori Beltis
Bern Blaice
Jim Berman
Maureen E. Borland
Carol Boyer
John Boys
Grace Burke
Diana Burton
Mark Byrn
Amy L. Callies
Mattell Hilfner
Amelbert Chismonton
Allen J. Cipley
Neat Coates
Draw Coleman
Hyperman Davis
Dennis Collins
Matt Cooley
Jan Darting
Suellen Ferguson
Michael A. Fakes
Lin Fredericksen
Jay Fry
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Sheryl Foy
Susan Gable
Drew Gillard
Steven Hamburg
Richard Hahn
Richard F. Hardin
Frances Harper
Conrad Henderson
Margaret Hill
Markith Smith
Mary Holey
Ervin F. Husley
Mary Ann Holly
Mary Ingrid
Beth Janssen
Tom Johanningmeier
Debh Johnson
Michael S. Johnson
Travis Kearns
D.M. Keslar
Eric Kivett
Doug Klumm
Paul
Nancy Lounge
Warren Lucus
Patrick Lynch
Jon Mongius
Jill Masterson
M.J. McClendon
Susan S. Meains
Patrick Owens
Don Mongius
Tony Montes
Phil Montgomery
Cindy Muckey
Danny Otto
Dorea De'Nail
Patricia Oland
Kathryn Otto
Lora Palmer
Brian Pawley
Michael Perkins
Linda Peterson
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Rail Walters
Phil Wanzenberg
Melanie Wulf
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Hillcrest 9th & Iowa
842-8400
FOX & HOUND (PG) *5:15, 7:00, 8:30*
BEETLE JUICE (PG) *5:00, 7:10, 9:10*
(R) *4:30, 7:15, 9:40
PG13) *4:35, 7:20, 9:20
cinema Twin 31st & Iowa
842-6400
(1)
KU . . . the Final Four
and Mister Guy of Lawrence a winning combination for Spring '88 for men and women
MISTER GUY
MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS
Hours:
Hours:
M-T-W-F-Sat. 9:30-6:00
Thursday 9:30-8:30
Sunday 12.5
842-2700 920 Mass. Lawrence, KS
70
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 31, 1988
11
Sports
KJ
Kansas junior Scott Taylor pitches for the Jayhawks. Kansas won 11-2 last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium.
KU beats Washburn
Bv lill M. John
Strong pitching performances and solid hitting were the key ingredients in Kansas' 11-2 victory last night over the Washburn Icha-bods at Hoglund-Maupin stadium.
Special to the Kansan
The victory improved the Jay-hawks' home record to 11-1 and their overall record to 14-9.
Junior Scott Taylor, 3-3, pitched five innings and gave up two earned runs to pick up the win. Taylor struck out two batters and allowed no walks.
given overlaid on the image.
"We play well at home," said coach Dave Bingham. "We're comfortable here, and I think we believe in ourselves more at home."
Sophomore Tom Bilyeau took over at the beginning of the sixth inning, allowing one hit and striking out three. Senior Mike McLeod and sophomore Craig Stoppel each pitched a single inning and gave up one hit.
The Jayhawks took an early lead when sophomore Spencer and junior Troy Menterz hit home runs in the second inning. It was Spencer's fifth home run of the season and Menterz's sixth.
After the Jayhawks took a 4-0 second-inning lead, the Ichabods answered with a run in both the third and fourth innings. It was Washburn's only challenge of the game.
Mentzer hit his seventh home
run of the season in his next at-bat.
Mentzer, who has been a designated hitter in the last few games,
played catcher yesterday.
player. Mentzer said he needed to concentrate for an entire game. Although he hit two home runs, he said his lack of concentration late in the game was fratrating.
"I may have some good hits," said Menterz, who went 0-2 after his home runs, "but it what's what I do determines how my season goes.
"The biggest thing is for me to just go out, settle down and play the game I know how to play."
Five singles, two walks and a double by Kansas created another four-run inning in the seventh to put the game out of reach.
The Jayhawks will play the Missouri Tigers in four home games this weekend. The series marks the beginning of Big Eight play for the Jayhawks.
Media crush begins for Manning, Jayhawks
"I hope we have a good game against Missouri," Mentzer said. "I hope we get some of the same performances."
Wasburn 001 100-2 000 - 2
Kansas 041 101-40 - 11 15 1
Washburn, Hatcher, Helichrion (2), Stremming (7) and Jackson, Kauley, Taylor, Bilyeu (6), McLeod (8), Stopper (9), Mentzer, W-Taylor (3-1), L-Hatcher (0-3),
SV-None, 2Bs-Washburn, Watrip, Kansas,
Ruelas, 3Bs-None, HRS-Washburn,
Wright, Kansas, Mentzer, 2(7) and Spencer
(5).
Kansan sportswriter
KANSAS 11, WASBURN 2
By Elaine Sung
When the media descended upon Allen Field House on Tuesday, most of them huddled around forward Danny Manning, who, as usual, was the star of the event.
Kansas coach Larry Brown herded the rest of the team to the red bleachers on the right-hand side of the court. There they sat, uncomfortably but obediently, and awaited the rest of the media to drift toward them.
But there is still a group of players who has never encountered the thrill of playing in the Final Four or even in the national tournament.
The special one-hour press conference had been arranged to satisfy the media's craving for Final Four information. Most of the team had grown accustomed to the attention, having experienced it from the 1986 Final Four or from last year's NCAA tournament play.
One of them is forward Mike Maddox, the only freshman still playing after forward Mike Masucci was suspended earlier this month from
Maddox had seen limited action during the season, but scored a career-high 12 points in Kansas' Big Eight tournament semifinal loss to Kansas State. And when the Jayhawks beat the Wildcats for the Midwest Regional championship Sunday, both Detroit newspapers ran shots of Maddox cutting down the net.
the team.
"I don't know if there's anything in basketball that can equal this," Maddox said. "It's an unbelievable feeling. We've reached part of our goal with this."
Coming within reach of the national championship is less of a surprise for junior college transfer guard Lincoln Minor. Minor played for Midland (Texas) Junior College, which last year made it to the NJCAA championship game.
Yet the magnitude of the fan support that he saw when the team returned from the regionals in Michigan still caught him off guard.
there was going to be a lot of people on Sunday, but it all still kind of shocked me. I've never been mobbed like that before."
'just with the size and the publicity here, you can't really compare it to juice,' Minor said. 'They told me
"This is a great total feeling," said Mattox, who had been playing on the junior varsity basketball team before Brown pulled him up in early February because the bench was thin. "In football, as soon as we got behind, that was it. But here, people do what they have to do. When Danny's not scoring, someone else steps up. Someone else takes responsibility."
Mattox's highlight in the tournament came against Vanderbilt, when he scored his first points of the tournament near the end of the game, and viewers across the nation saw Manning jump off the bench grinning to greet Mattox as he ran off
the court.
"I hadn't scored yet in the tournament, and I wanted to score to feel like a team member," Mattox said. "It's one of the greatest feelings in the world."
Normore has seen more playing time, having joined the team in December. As a free safety on the football team, he is being excused from spring football practices until the Javahawks finish their season.
The 6-4 guard has not only had a chance to play collegiate basketball, but also started the game against Oklahoma in Norman in place of sophomore Jeff Guelder, who was out with a sprained ankle.
Normore has noticed an attitude change within the team, a team that has gone through sudden lineup changes because of injury, academic ineligibility or disciplinary problems
"Before, it was like when you just meet someone. You're apprehensive about talking to them," he said. "Now, we're like brothers. It seems like we've been together for a lifetime."
K-State coach will not compete for Texas job
The Associated Press
AUSTIN, Texas — University of Texas Athletic Director DeLoss Dodds said yesterday that Lon Kruger of Kansas State had asked Texas to remove his name from the list of possible candidates for the basketball coaching job.
would remain at the school
K-State officials said Kruger was offered a contract extension and
"We've offered Kruger a very competitive contract," said K-State President Jon Wefalid. "We met with him privately for a couple of hours
today.
Several newspapers reported that Kruger had been or would be offered the job.
Dodds said yesterday that Krueger visited the Texas campus on Tues.
day.
"We had a discussion. There was no job offer, and he has asked us to remove his name from any consideration," Dods said.
Reports linking Kruger with Texas surfaced after he led the Wildcats to the NCAA Midwest Regional final before they lost to Kansas on Sunday.
Dodds said Kruger had been in Austin only one other time before
Tuesday and wanted to see the Erwin Center and other facilities.
Asked if he had been offered the job, Kruger said, "I'll visit with you later," then boarded an airplane for the trip back to Manhattan.
the trip at the K-State Athletic Director Larry Travis said he was aware that Kruger was going to talk to Texas because Dodds had asked him for permission.
THE COACHES OF
Final Four's fiftieth
Gary Simmons, Kansas City, Kan. resident, and his nine-year-old son, Jon. visit the 50-year Final Four Exhibit in Municipal
Auditorium's Little Theater in Kansas City, Mo. The free exhibit is open to the public from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. every day until April 7th.
Turgeon sees Final Four from coaches' end of bench
BASKAN
loe Wilkens III/KANSAN
Mark Turgeon
By Craig Anderson
Assistant sports editor
Mark Turgeon, didn't remember many details about Kansas' 71-67 loss to Duke in the Final Four two seasons ago, but his memory of the Monday night championship game between the Blue Devils and the Louisville Cardinals still remained clear.
"The hardest part of the whole thing was watching the final game." Turgeon said, shaking his head. "We stayed in Dallas an extra night and went out to watch the game. Nobody really wanted to watch the game. We just never expected to lose."
The Jayhawks lost more than just a national semifinal game against the No. 1 Blue Devils on that Saturday in March. Talk to any Kansas fan about the 1986 game against Duke, and the loss of forward Archie Marshall to a knee injury inevitably comes up. People will always speculate on whether Marshall's injury cost Kansas a national championship.
Turgeen, a junior point guard on the 1985-86 team, said he and his teammates didn't know at the time the severity of the injury. Despite losing their spark plug off the bench, Turgeen said, he and his teammates still thought they would triumph over Duke.
"We figured we would adjust to Archie's injury and we would still win," said Kansas' first-year student
Much of Kansas' success against Duke could be traced directly to Turgeon. In a season in which fellow junior Cedric Hunter had garnered most of the playing time at point guard, Turgeon played probably his finest game of the season when Hunter got into early foul trouble.
assistant coach. "After all, we had played most of the game without Greg (Dreiling) and Danny (Manning) because of foul trouble, and we were still ahead."
Forced into duty, Turgeon recorded five assists and scored two points on his only field goal attempt. To help put the game in perspective, consider that the 5-foot-10 Topeka product had recorded only 10 assists in the seven games before the Duke shootout.
CBS television commentator Brent Musburger said during the telecast that he sensed from the minute Turgeon stepped onto the floor that he would be providing key leadership and hustle for the Jayhawks. Turgeon didn't disappoint Musburger or the national television audience, but he said that to him, it was just another game.
"Once we got onto the court and started playing, it didn't seem that big," Turgeon said. "All the attention we got before the game was the only difference."
The reception the Jayhawks got
Turgeon said the Jayhawks' 35-4 record and No.2 national ranking two seasons ago influenced the fans' reactions.
from their fans upon returning from the Regional Finals Sunday was different from that of two seasons ago. Turgeon said. About 1,500 fans greeted the Jayhawks when they stepped off the plane at Forbes Field on Sunday night in Topeka, and about 10,000 fans cheered their team at Allen Field House later that night.
"Two years ago, everyone expected us to go, so when we made it, it wasn't that big a deal to them," he said. "This season, when we were coming back, we heard people were partying in Lawrence. We never expected the reception we got, though."
Jayhawks assistant coach Alvin Gentry said Turgeon had done a good
a shuffle one.
"My relations with the players hasn't changed that much," Turgeon said. "Socially, it's about the same, but when we're on the court, it's a player-coach relationship."
This season, Turgeon has gotten a different view of the Jayhawks' on-court preparations for their second Final Four appearance in three years. As a student coach, Turgeon has been giving instructions to players who had been his teammates. Turgeon said the transition had been a smooth one.
when giving up. "Turg has done an unbelievable job in his first year," Gentry said. "The toughest thing about moving from a player to a coach in one season is the social aspect.
job handling conflicts that may arise when giving orders to friends.
"You have to detach yourself socially somewhat from the players. Mark's handled it well."
Through his eyes as a student coach, Turgeon has watched coach Larry Brown do possibly his best coaching job ever. In his first season on the sidelines, Turgeon has watched Brown take a team beset by injuries, defections and ineligibilities to the brink of a national championship.
Brown's resurrection of this season' edition of the Jayhawks hasn't gone unnoticed by college athletic directors and professional basketball general managers around the country. Brown's name has been linked to several coaching vacancies in both college and professional basketball.
Turgeon said he expected to be learning from Brown next season at Kansas just as he had during the past five seasons.
"He's pretty set on staying," said Turtleon, a member of Brown's first recruiting class in 1983. "He's in such demand with the job he'd done this season, but I think he loves his situation at Kansas."
---
12
Thursdav. March 31, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Campus vending earns more than small change for Union
By Jeff Suggs
Kansan staff writer
Vending machines on campus may deal with loose change items, but for the University, enough quarters have gone through to make a profit.
Robert Derby, manager of concessions at the Kansas Union, is in charge of about 260 vending machines throughout campus. Derby said that from July 1987 to the end of February, there had been a 17 percent net profit on vending machine items. Derby said that all profits from vending machine sales helped pay for capital improvements at the Kansas and Burge Unions.
Some students said using vending machines was cheaper or more convenient than purchasing items at Wescoe Cafeteria or Union Square.
"The cafeteria seems to be more expensive," said Cheryl Triola, Overland Park senior. "It seems that you get less for your money."
Laura Mayer, Prairie Village sophomore, said. "Before every class I've got to take a Coke. So if you want to buy, I'll go to a vending machine."
Of all the candy bars and soft drinks sold in the machines, Derby said that Snickers and Diet Coke were the most popular of the two. He
said Diet Coke gained No. 1 status only recently.
"I think it follows what the national trend is." Derby said.
"I just personally don't like a lot of sugar," Beck said.
Mayer, a Diet Coke drinker,
agreed that he drinks lasted
the whole day. He also drinks.
Though not a Diet Coke drinker, Judy Beck, St. Louis sophomore, said she bought Diet Orange Minute Maid Soda from the vending machines on campus. She said she bought diet beverages for the taste.
"I like the taste better than Coke," she said.
KU celebrates April 1 with 'Fools on Hill'
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas and Burge Unions, along with Student Union Activities, are sponsoring "Fools on the Hill," an April Fool's Day celebration, all day tomorrow.
during the KU baseball game at 7 p.m. at Hoglund-Maupin Field.
Special events will include the following:
Rex Boyd, a comic/jugler, will be performing in front of the Kansas Union from noon to 12:30 p.m.
Beth Scalet, a guitarist, will be performing on level three of the Kansas Union from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
- Any student wearing something inside-out will receive 25 percent off any clothing item in the KU Bookstores at the Kansas and Burge Unions (except for sale items).
Free drink coupons will be given away at Union Square, the Hawk's Nest, Union information counters, KU Bookstores, the Kansas Union Jawbowl and SUA.
Batting helmets provided by the
KU Bookstores will be given away
Mark's Jewlers 817 Massachusetts
All humor books will be 15 percent off in the Oread Book Shop of the Kansas Union.
NEW GIBSON $195.00
Hayes House of Music
944.Mass
842-5183
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquaters.
We're here because we care:
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
Video Player
Four Movies
Two Days
$9.95
(Higher Weekends)
XPRSS-VIDEO
1447 W. 23rd
Open 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Daily
Home-made pasta dishes, steaks, seafood, and now serving wine and mixed drinks.
Paradise Cafe
and bakery
Paradise Café and bakery
One dessert free with purchase of entree.
GOOD REAL FOOD
728 Mass.
842-5199
NCAA FINAL FOUR
50
KANSAS CITY 1983
Headquarters for Officially Licensed NCAA and KU Sportswear brings you the Essentials in Final Four Sportswear.
SPORTS WEAR
KUBookstores
KANSAS UNION BURGE UNION
---
SPORTS WEAR KUBookstores KANSAS UNION BURGE UNION
Advertise in the Kansan
Macintosh™ Computers... your key to success.
post &ers FRAMES fields
Macintosh™
ST. LAWRENCE CATHOLIC CAMPUS CENTER HOLY WEEK SCHEDULE
UBookstores
downtown 842-7187
十
⊗
HOLY THURSDAY — 7 p.m.
GOOD FRIDAY - 12:30 p.m., 7 p.m.
EASTER VIGIL - 7 p.m. Saturday
EASTER SUNDAY — 9 a.m.,
⊙
NO 5 p.m. or 10 p.m.
MASS ON SUNDAY
10:30 a.m., 12 noon
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Classified Ads
Adventuremnt Individuals for Boundary Waters
684-536 Mitch or Rick.
AHEIST CLUB meeting 7:00 Tuesday April 5.
Burke,"C" floor, Kansas Union.
Parker "C", 5th floor Kansas Union.
Be Published! Society for Fantasy & Science Fiction is preparing Spring 1988 issue of the Pterodactyl's Egg. SEG written original poetry, art, and short stories to PO Box 2151, Strong Hall, Kansas, 60455, deadline Friday, 1 April, 1988.
Gem and Mineral Show. 4:14 fair ground. April
10-09 to 9:00. Applicants to 5. Demonstration.
6:00.
MASSAGE "Just say YES" O.K. you've been reading our ads for awhile, right? But we realize you are nervous. Can massage them? Will it hook ya? SURE! So do your bod and mind a favor. and get 25% off! Call Lawrence Massage at 841-696-3232; neverwhat with Mary
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Discrimination menaces the institutions and foundations of a free democratic state" from Human Rights Ordinance (5486) of the City of Lawrence
The real foods are the ones who refuse Jesus – still Lord, still life, still returning.
Lit Gloody, spokesperson, Citizens for Human Rights in Lawrence, speaks on DCHIMINA-Week. Wednesday, Wed. April 6, 8:00 p.m., Alderson Auditorium. Sponsored by the Lawrence Tenants Association.
We Know Your Name Until Wednesday, April 6
House of Usher, 838 Mass, 842-3610, print
Graduation Announcement Name Carols in royal
blue ink. Small quantities. Call for more
Hillel
שונה
Events of the Week
For Reservations/More Info:
Call Hillel, 749-4242
Friday, April 1 First Night Seder Host Families Available
Saturday, April 2 Second Night Community Seder Lawrence Jewish Community Center
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology
Univ. of Kansas
New Arrivals!
Southwest Pots, Rugs, Jewelry
Mon.- Sat.
10-3
Sun.- 1-4
Mon. - Sat.
10-3
Sun. - 1-4
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Mon.-5
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Sun.-1-4
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MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
NO FOOLING!
10% off everything. April 1
Mon.-Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 864-4450
ENTERTAINMENT
AT YOUR REQUEST is Lawrence's Best and Affordable D.J. Music and Lighting for any event.
Joe King* Carrasco Live at the Bottleneck Wednesday the 6th.
Make your party the hotest. Rent a hot tub. Call To-Bo Go-141-8691
MUSIC ***
Red House Audio - D.J. D. Service; 8-track studio,
P.A. and lights, Maximum Audio Wizadry. Call
Padrón 581275.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
5 Academy Award Nominations
7:15 Hope and Glory
642 Mass
LIBERTY HALL
642 Mass 749 1912
FOR RENT
Apartment room available for summer, pool,
great roommates, cheap utilities, $100 monthly call.
Available immediately -- Nice two bedroom apartment for two or three people. Between downtown and campus. Deposit plus utilities. Call 841-1207.
available end of May or by June 1989 one nice
clay in closet, very low utilities. Calf Arm at
carmen is on the right.
available 1 year for Summer Sublease. Basket cable, patio, patdo, pool, on bus route #9427979
9427979
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient, assigned with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-1252, or 749-1243. Mastercaret Management
Summer Sublease: two bedrooms, two bathrooms,
wright rooms, hot bus, on bus route. Second
room has a separate bathroom.
Summer Suburb 3 bedroom townhouse, close to campus low utilities, available May 163 - July 2015
Summer Sublease - Campus Place apartments 1
block form campus, rent negotiable 843-845-8.
Excellent location. 2 bedroom apartment in 4,pleat carpet CA,raised kitchen, low utilities, large backyard, full bath. Female, nonsusman needed starting Aug. Also need 1 2 renters for payment. Phone: 856-893-8003 www.nonsusman.com
Female roommate needed for summer and next year to attend a baseball event with department of graduate studies in trichity Dishawing, a/c on bus route. Call Melody at 841 4176 8240 0811 evening.
For female in great house. Clean big rooms, ceilins fan, free utilities, phone, cable, W/D use. Two blocks from KU. $719 - $195. $84-3689. $7 deposit. Furnished, private rooms now & summer, rooming house on 1344 Kentucky share kitchens & bathrooms. $120 + deposit. $149-1439 Leave
Furnished 1 & 2 bedroom apartments. Some rooms have stairs to parking one block form university. No pets.
Furnished rooms with kitchen & bath facilities. Most utilities paid. Off street parking one block from the building.
Great location, 2 bedroom apartment with sun
patio. A, equipped kitchen, low utilities,
available April 1, $340 at 1801 Mississippi Call
842-842-942
KOINONIA COMMUNITY has a few spaces in the Christian Living Center for summer '88 and/or academic year 88-89. Apply immediately at ECM Center, 1294 Oread.
Need roommate, share 2-bedroom apartments at D稚馆, private room; $150/month plus low rents. Call (800) 374-3900.
LEASE NOW for fall. Deluxe 3 DUPLAGES. dr. duplages 100/mo. baggage 50/mo. bus. no bus. Petra, Refs & lenght req $700/mo.
Shipment fee $249/mo.
LEASE NOW for Roo. Falloon BR duplex. Base-
phone #4398501. Fax #4398501. Petr & Fehr
reqs. rsq8 7439-796 and rsq8 7439-796.
Nonsusking female to share 2 bedroom apt. for fall. Close to campus. Call Devine 864-6994.
Now taking leaves for 2 bedroom apartments. Close to campus. 10 and 12 month leaves. Resi-
Now taking leaves for 2 bedroom apartments
the manager hired an unfurnished Apartment at 1905
dent Manager. Unfurnished Apartment at 1905
One or two bedrooms, apt. low utilities, gas and water paid, display apt, open Monday 10:40 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Reserve your room for summer or fall at Sunflower House and enjoy an experience in cooperative living. Call 749-0871 and ask for the renter.
Roommate needed to share 23D House. Close to Campus /17M, available. Not New/Summer.
Spacious, two bedroom apartment. Central A.C.
Close to campus. Available late May for summer
or 12 month leave. $360 per month. 941 Louisiana.
Call after 6 pm 749-2871
Spacious Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom; 1'/bath, Walking distance to campus: on bus route, pool, water paid, dishwasher; 841-8738
SUPPLY THESE WITH 5'/bldg. mini duplex.
Walking distance to campus; on can route, pool,
square; near campus. SUBLAGE lbr. lpw d w, m dicw, dw covered
SUBLAGE lbr. lpw d w, m dicw, dw covered
SUMMER SUBLET. Affordable, new one-
bedroom apartment, near campus,
Brantley 811-9728.
Sublease S堂, Luxurious 2 Br, 2 bath appli-
Fireplace, wet bar, microwave, tennis court.
For two or three people. Available May through July 31, May paid $75/mo + usd 84/864 after 8 pm.
Sublease. bedroom/2 bath apartment at Pepe,
349 74074 471 month, available now or sur-
ver. 349 74074 471
Sublease a room in my 3 br-2 bth on the golf course - covered by winnery - pool & clubhouse, townhouse for the summer, and if you like it, stay next year for the winter. $3 + tuxedo + $3 deposit Love message.
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.
Now Leasing for Fall
NAISMITH HALI
890 NAISMITH DRIVE
HILLS, KANSAS 60644
913-843-8559
After a tough day, wouldn't you like to relax in the privacy of your own Jacuzzi?
Call Naismith Place Apts. 841-1815
Location
Located among 70 acres of rolling hills & trees, you'll enjoy the convenience of being close to campus & area shopping.
Lifestyle
Reserve Your Unit Now...For Summer or Fall!
Meadowbrook offers a selection of spacious & comfortable studios, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom apartments, and townhouses to fit your lifestyle.
meadowbrook
15th F. Crestline 842-4200
West Wiltshire
APARTMENTS
1012 Emery Rd.
841-3800
Now leasing for
June or August
Spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts.
spacious 1 & 2 bd. apts. furn. or unfurn.
Great Location near campus
OPEN HOUSE
Mon. Wed. Thurs.
1:00 - 4:00
No appointment Needed
southridge
unforgettable wooden living
Southridge Plaza Apts.
LEASING for fall
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
10 month leases water & cable paid
reduced summer rates
1704 West 24th
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
842-1160
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, March 31, 1988
13
Sublue a beautiful apartment in the Greed neighborhood at a seasonable price. $225.00 plus utilities. Occupancy May 1: August 1 (with option for early evening, weekends, or leave message anytime.)
Sublease Masterclass 2 bedroom apt. on campus
Call 842-9850 anytime. Call 841-1489 am-5 pm
at 841-1489 p.m.
Sublasing two bedroom apt. for June and July.
Close to葵河 water pot. Cheese and can house
appliances.
Summer SubLEASE: Surprise Village Spacious three bedroom, 29 bath,洗衣/dryer, pool, ten bedroom.
Summer Sublease. Nice three bedroom apartments in a quiet, quiet location. Very roomy. Close to campus. Call
Summer Sublease. Nice 3BR, 8ail, 1 block from campus. Call Nancy or Jill, 841-6078.
Summer Sublease 1 bedroom furnished apart-
ment located at Place $835 month. Water included in Place $824 month.
Summer Sublase - 4 bdm, new, pool, close to campus, furnished, 842-1928.
Super Summer Sublease; furnished, two bedroom rooms, water paid, great loca-
tion.
FEERING LUXURY
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Summer sublets needed: 2 or 3 for BDR 1, 800 or 450.
Summer sublets needed: 2 or 3 for BDR 1, 800 or 450.
Raspberry Pi: $155 each. Sue Car or Kueen 843722
Sue Car or Kueen 843722
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
- Free basic cable
- Exercise Weightroom
- Fire place
- Energy efficient
- On-Site Management
841-5444
EDDINGHAM PLACE
Professionally managed
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc.
--your unit for next fall!
Offered by:
SUNRISE
Nature Reserve
- Studios
- 1,2,3,&4 Bedroom Apartments and Townhouses
- Garages
- Pools
- Tennis Court
- Fireplaces
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
9th & Michigan
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-1287
Mon.-Fri.11-5
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
SUNDANCE
BRAND NEW!
Sundance II
Coming to you this fall!
- Completely furnished
- Located on the old
- Located on the ol Seminary site
- Super energy efficient
Sanctuary site
Call today to reserve
MASTERCRAFT
841-5255 * 841-1212
FOR SALE
Sterio 5 channel mixer 232, remote TV converter 500, m/cassette walkman 59, Interested tachometer 60
Futon Frame - Oak lounger, converts to queen size bed. Purchased new October '17. Only $290
Gold Ring w / 8 Rubies TNEED money Best of her
Ask for Cinderl. 641.7596
72 Crestone Home: 12' x 6' 20.2 BHR. Extra insulation throughout, new plumbing, completely reconditioned. 316-237-4254 after 5:30 p.m., or inquire 428 North St. 6, Lawrence
Grey and White combination chair/bed great condition $20.00 or best offer Call 842-9655
85 Red Honda Spree, Excellent condition, low mileage, best offer. Call Suan at 914-9670
Honda Magna 1965 5000 mi. Perf. cond. $2000
841-8752 Call Allian
3 NCA CHAMPIONSHIP game tickets for sale
Will take best offer. Call 864-6885.
A complete bedroom, Bed, two chests, small table, desk, mirror and a small color to buy. Buy it now at Price.com.
Apple Itle with Epson printer ¥730 Call John at 749-5723.
ATTENTION ADVERTISING/JOURNALISM
MAJORS. Several local media for sale
with job offers.
comic books, Playboy, Penthouse, etc. *Mas*.
*Comic's*. New Hampshire, Open & Sat
*Sat.*
Final Four Ticket highest bidst takes. Call 842-5102 Friday 6pm to 10pm.
Four first tickets for cash. Best offer before 7:00 p.m. Fri. 749-0531.
Final Four Ticket for Sale, Best Offer, Call 843-799-0
For sale 87 Honda Elite red, 600 miles, stored indors during 78 winter. Make offer. 749-369-0.
Doors during winter. Wake out 24/7/360.
Room temperature. I.v. plants and
plants. Cell phone. Call 811-4821.
LEAVING TOWN Qn W 32. Sr H 180 - 252, Hide-a Bed-Couch, 729, Chest/Crawdash - 175, Chair/otoman 125, endtables - 15 each, barstools 25 each, chairs - 2 each color v 2 (84) - 8496 - Scott Leave message
Microphone 2Shure SM-57. Brand new, never used.
0900.088H.ear. ASK for John.
****MOTHALL GOOD USED FURNITURE.
512 E. 789-746-961
Mower -- 2 years old w/side bagger. $75 obo
841.6206
Music equipment for sale; Ross 4 (travel) $355.00
Gibson; Epiphone electric guitar, $195.00
Yamaha acoustic, $85.00 ± 824 295 evenings,
weekends, or leave message anytime.
R new R.C Model Airplane very nice paid $480 sell for $325. Call John at 745-5678
Nikon micro镜头 with carry case. Four objectives. Excellent condition. $350.811-742.8
Ovation Anniversary Accenture Guitar and King
Tenor Sax - Both Mint Condition (113)
847 758
Pair JVK SK-100 speakers Peak 170W good condition $200. Noliver Clairman Excellent condition $400. Portable clack $10. Manual typewriter $25. Parakeet case $5. Call 833-411-8
PC/XT clone 640k 10K clip, fdpc PC
kernel DW LQ kernel, software $1500 BO8 call
code
Racing Bike, in mint condition, Cannonadale SR 600, call Liz at 749 1095.
Rock-n-tell - Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday.
Check out www.skyreel.com for more info.
a. 10 a.m. to p. 10 a.m. every Saturday and Sunday.
b. 10 a.m. to p. 10 a.m. every Monday through Friday.
SALAIDHOB Vita 734, 278 and 4m. tails 2 and 3.
SALAIDHOB Vita 734, 278 and 4m. tails 2 and 3.
Sailboard - Sailrider SR2, great for learning.
$300, Tim J8-2475.
Tandy 1000 computer, 128 K, IBM compatible.
Expandable. Color graphics installed. MS-DOS
and software included. All you need is monitor or
PC. 3100 after 3:30 pm.
Two Final four tickets for sale! Best offer. Call Sherry 841-1941
Wedding Dress, Hat. Belt. Beige 12. $25.00 OBJ.
Conta Lois 864 3696 Ext. 412. Night
Bathroom Set, Towels 744 5256
Yamaha Riva 180 Scooter, Excellent condition
% on offer best Frank 744-2338
AUTO SALES
1975 Honda Accered. Runs, needs carburator. Call
Henry 864-2838. Best offer.
1979 Yamaha 500 Enduro. 11,800 miles, recent tuneup, new battery and tires. 1979 OBA 000
Dave at 841-1956
1980 Ford Mustang. New tires: good condition.
1980
1980 Ford Mustang. New tires; good condition.
$1500 mailcharge. Call 842-204, anytime.
85 WV Golf, Silver 4 door, air low, miles 5 speed
suo roof, sun canopy, Michael, 749-0794
AUTO repair service on foreign cars at your location. $55. Ten years experience. Call Aaron 841-6270.
For Sale 1980 Suzuki motorcycle Runs good.
Nice camber hike. $550 or best offer
$350
Must sell 76 Rabbit. $700 or best offer. Runs well.
749-3182
NINJA 600 Vance and Hylan execute K & W
Bike 600 mille. Mast sell 600 lbs! Call
Must sell 600 lbs! Call
LOST-FOUND
LOST! Zip card possible at Main Union? Satur-
day? If found, please call 841-2535. Leave message.
Lost: Somebody out there has my opal ring. Will I ask ASAN if she asks? I don't question asked. I don't question asked. Reward: $200.
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES NOW BIRING FLY Attendants:
1. Bachelors in Hospitality & Travel
Listings, Salaries to $6k. Entry level positions.
2. Masters or higher in Hospitality &
Travel
Borsesw's Lawn Service has openable openings for full and part time employment. This Kansas City based lawn service provides flexible hours, a fully trained staff, and a hardworking individual. Experience in lawn care preferred. If interested, contact Mark at 212-7700 or mail 841-659-3621. Please have a message.
Bartenders + Cocktail Waitresses needed part-time weeks. Apply in person on Wed. 7 - 10 p.m.
Just a Playhouse. 806 W 24th (behind McDonald's).
CAMP COUNSELORS Wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach swimming, caneing, sailing, waterskiing, gymnastics, surfing, horseback riding, camping, patricks, crafts, dramatics, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance, Salary $200 or less. Recruiter's name: Steger, 1763 Nagle, MId. IL 60093; 312-444-244
Bakery Sales - clean up Sat, 6 p.m - 1 am, Sun, 6 pm - 12 am. a $4 hour after lunch. 3 weeks paid vacation after one year. Interview Tues, 1pm. a $5 hour after lunch. Appointment. Apply Monly Bakery Bakes, 794-4324
BE ON T V many needed for commercials.
Casting (info) 1 [0] 803-867-0000 Exit
Car Clinification. Part time - f/uillage. Help HP use
Infrastructure. Infant care. Apply to NECW and LMCW.
Data Entry Operators long and short term temporary assignments availabie. The entry fee is $250. Call 904-763-8333, 9:00 p.m and 5:00 p.m - 9:00 p.m. If interested, please stop by or call Karly TECHS 901 Kerry Street.
Desperately seeking students. Be part of a special team. Help care for home bound clients as part of the VNA private home care pool. Flexible training. Train. Call Douglas County VNA-9373-E280
Childcare and light housekeeping needed for eight-year-old girl this summer. Transportation, room, board, car, and salary provided on Connolly. Smoke-free room. No smoke. Call 841-3904 for further information.
Mother's Helper Wanted. Wanting to take a year out of school and travel? Great benefits, paid airfare, beautiful Philadelphia suburb. Summers in the city with children need another nanny already here with non-working mother. Live in four days/week 3 days off. Occasionally earnings. Travels 20 miles each week. Must have excellent references and experience with children. Call (215) 675-4543
Dos Hombres is hiring all positions. 115 New Hampshire. Apply after 2 pm.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines &
Amusement Parks NOW accepting applications
for our travel packages and services. For information & application, write National Collegiate Recruitment, P. O. Box 8047.
Resorts Employment Newsletter—All occupations, Tahoe, Hawaii, Calif., Arizona/Nevada, Morel Mountains, Vacation/Resorts City, RedKEN-RENK BACK, 62790, Lake Tahoe, California, 60751 841-594-7022
GOVERNMENT JOB. $10,464-$14,953/yr. Now
with 978-0007 987-0001. R-97858
current Federal List.
CALL 612-533-7070 for more information.
Half-time graduate assistant: the Organization and Activities Center (OAC) seeks half-time graduate assistant to serve as secretary to qualifications; enrollment as KU graduate student for Fall 1860, knowledge of KU operations and programs; membership in noons; and clerical skills. Complete job announcement available at awa.edu or resume to Ann Eversol, Director, Organization and Activities Center, 105 Burge Union Building. Application deadline is Friday, April 29, 1988.
Immediate opening part-time work AIDM w 8 M
pm 5 p.m. and Sun & Sat 9 p.m. Apply here
http://www.idafm.org/careers/490-496-7233.
pm-9 p.m, Sat. and Sun 8-3. Apply at Hortage
1800 M 180 W 5th Bed 8:00-9:48 M - EOE
LIVE IN CHILDCARE .New York Suburb. Like
children in Care. Don't be the baby. Our
families are screened. One year and summer
positions. Good salary. Must be 18 yr. old, driver.
license. Call 914-747-1455, or写. Child Care
@ 89. Business Park Dr., Armork,
N 10504
Mass Street Deli and Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse now hire part-time table service employees. Mast炉店, year experience and summer employment. Park Avenue at 719 Mass Street and at 719 Mass Street above Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
MUSIC DIRECTORS for Unity Church of Lawrence, must also be instrumentist, vocalist, and have church experience. 3-5 hours a week Salary warehouse 841.1447.
Nanny Position Available in Boston, June, 1968. Flexible family with two children, 8 & 10 seals, warm, patient, fun-loving person. Hours may vary. Required with own entrance. Contact Judith Gates, 468 Walnut St., Brookline, MA 02146, or call (617) 734-5416 (collect) One year commitment
Out of money from Spring Break? Make quick and easy cash selling i shirts here in LaRueville. You can find them online.
Nature's Best Health Foods needs Saturday help 10:5. Call 842-1983.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisneuse Airlines &
careers for summer jobs, internships and career
positions. For information & application; write
national College Recruitment. P.O. Box #8741 Hilla
RESEARCH ASSISTANT. Perform experiments using biochemical immunological and molecular biological techniques to study rheumatic disease. Requirements: B.A or B.S on Biological Chemistry, Microbiology, Immunology or Molecular Genetics and laboratory experience. Deadline: April 1, 1988. Send letter of application indicating career goals, resume and 3 letters of recommendation to Dr. Dean Stetler, Univ of EOE/A庐 Haworth, Lawrence, K. 60045 EOE/A庐
Business Manager/
Summer Editor
Applications
The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the 1988 summer/fall semester business manager and summer editor these are paid positions and require some newspaper experience.
Interested persons may pick up applications in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall, the Student Senate Office. 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities. 105 Burge Union.
Applications are due Friday,
April 1, 1988 at 5:00 p.m. in
200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Monday,
April 4, 1988.
The Kansan is an equal opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, age, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, or ancestry.
Retail Sales micro computers. Individual for part time sales of IBM compatible computers for Lawrence's largest computer store. Micro experience preferred. Send resume by 4/10 to Brian, Connecting Point, 894 New Hampshire St., Lawrence Ks. 69044 EOE/MFH. Please no
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Summer children needed for 10-month old girl, approx 4 hours, morning or afternoon, M-R same age for schoolyear 88-89. Experience prefers female call, ear 841-071, except M-rornings.
Sub n- Stuff is now hiring for all shifts and delivery drivers. At 1018 w 21hr after 2
Women slow pitch softball pitchers & players needed for competitive, established team this summer. If interested call Karen 842-6222 Ext. 323 daytime. 841-7633 by 5 p.m.
Wanted immediately full-time legal secretary for small law office. Legal experience preferred, but not essential. Stability, dependability, and ability to resume a resume to PO Box 1283. Lawrence KS 66044
Taking applications for dishwasher Flexible hours. Apply Lawrence Club Country. 843-286-3967.
A B C : "Religion is the venereal disease of markind." - Hegret de Mentionlerv.
MISCELLANEOUS
Fabulously hardcore long-haired males need
to know the culture, history and affection. Please enclose photo
lift/kiss him and affection. Please enclose photo
a. to 2 m. p. weekdays. Experience with 5 yr
olds or 2 yr. olds and two references required. App
at Children's Learning Center, 331 Maine.
EOE.
Hey Maria - Elvis is in your backpack, he bagies, his bronce (you drive bad), even in your birthday cake. (Don't worry, I've got a coupe for franking mix). Happy 223, you big as a bat!
PERSONAL
Sury, Happy Birthday. This has been a great year. During all of the runs to see Mr. Kinkos, Graduation Checks, Expensive shopping spree and, wondering if it really would be worth it to change the monogram. I have found a very good one for the best next year, you deserve it. Michelle.
GRE APPLICANTS - please help with research on your study methods. Five minutes, 841-2178.
***
Floridaan Job Seeker. The only winging, dumbing,
dismembering, or stifling you may be her boyfriend ME. Enjoy the beach not to be in your way.
To our loyal fans who met us at the turnpike gate Sunday night and escorted us to Murphy Hall: Thanks for _your enthusiastic support! - The Lawrence Chamber Players.
To the gorgeous 100 lb. brunette I sat beside Wescoe 10:00 A.M. 3:23; Thanks for the rewarding, sensual experience we shared together. I'd like to thank you and everyone together. MWSF, MWF 9:30. John Deere.
To KU students, Myth #3: Increased foreign aid will help the economy.
Fact: Only a handful of governments receive the bulk of U.S. buildup aid. Most of these oppose reforms that benefit the hungry. Until this system is changed our foreign aid cannot help and we are losing.
to whosoever Jesus says "Whoosever hearthee seshings of mine, and doeth them. I will liken um unto a wise man, which built his house upon a rock and he saw the wind blowing through the and the winds blew, and beat upon the house; and Well not for it was founded upon a rock. And well not for it was founded upon the rock. And well not for it was lifted upon them not shall be likened unto a foolish, which built his house upon the sand; and the rain slew, and beat upon the sand; and the slew, and beat upon the house; and it fell; and
which built his house upon the sand; and the rain descended, and the floods came; and the winds blew, and beat upon the house; and it fell; and baptized of it" From a student saved by Amazing Grace.
Impatient passport, portfolio, resume, naturalization ID. D.I. (fine portraits Swell Studio 749-1611)
Unintractable well-read intelligent female seeks name for unsatisfying platonic relationship. Inquire about availability.
Over $10,000 in cash awards. Enter the CERTS
COLLEGE STYLE AWARDS. For more information:
www.collegestyleawards.org
tanger
'oin "KU's War on Hunger". April 4 - 9.
BUS.PERSONAL
Pregnant and need help? Call Bibright at 841-8212. Confidential help/free pregnancy care
Try it you'll love it, become glamorous with a sauteur "Bowie Portrait" from Photo's Plus. "Love You," a 1976 portrait using Assistance, Creative Photography Technique to警告 alarming results. 749-506. Mike
RUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
driver's license without patrol testing upon
successful completion. Transportation provided.
41-2316
Bloom County shirts & books
Role-playing, war games and
miniatures, Star Trek, Japanese
Comics and more!
The Comic Corner
N E Corner of 23rd & Iowa
841-4244
Use It or Lose It.
8 Beds for Your Convenience!
Unlimited Use Tanning Packages:
Tanning: 6 visits/$20
$15 mo./$2 visit 10 visits/$25
since 1980 25th & iowa
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING 841-6232
BEST
We make hearts thump.
Balloons: N*More balloons
and gifts have an uncanny
ability to make hearts thump
into someone's heart today
into someone's body today with
a surprise gift from Balloons: N*More!
Balloons-N-More
749. 0148 609 Vermont
Check Undercover for your strapless slips and Christian Dior Hosiery.
UNDERCOVER
21 W. 9th
Lingerie Exclusively
SPRING HAS ARRIVED!
Cotton skirts, blouses, dresses,
shorts, Hawaiian shirts, new net
crinolines, 50's & 60's sunglasses.
Barb's Vintage Rose
207 W. Hewlett St. N. 10,530, B41, 2461
**65 Value when presented toward new patient ser-
ience** Dr. Johnson, Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
Spinal Exemal Dr. Johnson, Chiropractor,
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
SERVICES OFFERED
I edit term papers, theses, dissertations, applications and resumes. I do no job (except for special cases) 826-7233
Income Tax forms filed at low fee. Call 841-9689
ask for Rochdi.
Job-winning resumes, cover letters, 12 years exp.
Training on Microsoft Office KPHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekakioa
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service.
HSV'S **NEXSPORT** 80.00. Art & Design Building.
**PAGE 63**
We know your name
until Wednesday, April 6th
House of Usher
Printing and Copies
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj Gymn and Abortion Service
Overland Park, (512) 604-6087
vices. Overland Park... (913) 641-6788
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Oklahoma City.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $8/hour, 843-9322
(0 m.)
Place order by
Wednesday, April 6th.
All name cards will be
ready on Friday, April 15th.
Royal blue ink
Order 50, 100 or 200.
Professionally typeset
House of Usher
KORA data lab
Order 50, 100 or 200
Professional typeset
in Kayln Script, Flamish or Zapf
Graduation Announcement Name Cards
1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac-
tractive. Coding in Java. Word processing, Judv.
842-7945 or Lai. 841-1913.
TUTORING TUTORING *65*.5e/hr. MATH STATISTICS and PHYSICS. B.S. Physics. M.A. Math. M.S. statistics, 8 years experience call 814-3064.
VIDEO ELITE We videotake weddings, sports-
tournaments, and private parties with pro-
fessional teams. Call 841-8171 or 841-8300.
WORDSMITH We go beyond typing. Let professionals edit your papers, papers. Great rates. Fast delivery.
TYPING
838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET
842-3610
We Know Your Name Until Wednesday, April 6
House of Usher, 838 Mass, 842-3610, print
Graduation Announcement Name Cards in royal
small. Small quantities. Call for more
information.
Writing your own resume is difficult. We can
provide you with a sample resume for $12.90 (Graphic Ideas, Inc.
website).
I. Reliable Typing Service Term papers,
II. Reconfigurable Typewriter, type II.
Electronic Typewriter 842-3266
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in termite control. Correcting selecting, selffelling corrected. 843-954-6011
1-der Woman Word processing. Former editor transforms your scrubs into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2603, days or evening.
24 hr. Typing Service. Fast, professional word processing with letter quality printer. 843-7643.
TYPING Word processing. spelling check.
11/pg. e-mail. Send after a s p. T.F. anyweekends. 842-1942
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
Marcus Pattilla, page EastLaw. Mrs.
Mattila 814-1219
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Prodigying.
Term papers, thesas, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mail lists. Letter quality printing. Spelling corrected. 842-7247.
Call R.J. r's typing service for all of your typing needs. 841-7942 before 9 p.m. please.
Pregnant and need help? Call Brightest at 843-6421. Confidential help free of pregnancy
DISSERTATIONS. THESES. LAW PAPERS
ON DESSERTATION. (THIS BOOK IS NO
available. 842.3787, before p. 6 m., please)
Accurate, fast word processing. Specializing in
pick up and deliver
SPEEDETM 943-2376
FAST, ACCURATE, DEPENDABLE Letter quality printer, special student, apid exam teacher.
RESUME SERVICES - professionally typeset and laser printed resumes. $10 package includes 20 professionally finished resumes. Also do cover letters, business cards, and typesetting and printing documents for travel dates, hours, and at $4 the cost of Kinko's Call 643-2887. If no answer leave message on machine.
THE FAR SIDE
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, Paper Degree 84434 application
Ternational a resgable ba: C41 LABBARA at
Typing at a reasonable rate. CALL BARBARA at 845.0111
Larson
THE WORDIOCTORS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordrocks. From 1983 to 1985, See 843-3147.
WANTED
Roominate want to share 2/b/drm apartment near KU Med Center. Next Fall. Non-smoke
Lake of the Ozarks summer employment. The Barge Floating Restaurant is accepting applications for seasonal cooks, shop managers and sales clers. Excellent tips and salaries — great working conditions. Some positions are available. Enjoy sailing, skiing, swimming, tanning while saving bank to school expenses. Mail resume to: Barge Floating Restaurant, 314-367-5888.
Female, nonsmoker, for summer rooate in
college close to campus. Interested?
Call Amy J-3366.
FEMALE roommates for FURNISHED
TOWNHOUSE starting Aug. 1. On bus route, own
washer & dryer, fireplace, own room. Must be
neat & responsible. Call 749-5774
WANTED FINAL FOUR TICKETS. Instant cash.
Let's make a deal. Call Andy. Day 816-221-0772.
Night 813-429-4491.
Wanted: Final four Basketball Tickets. Will pay high price. Call Ron 749-5723.
French & Spanish interpreters wanted for marketing course to be held at Kansas State University, June 6 July 22, 1988. Translation exerted by students enrolled in KSU. Contact Merla Brookman at (913) 523-6146 for more information. Application deadline April 4, 1988. KSU equal opportunity
WANTED-URGENTLY. EXTREMELY. Student desperately seizes up 1 or 2 Final Four game (gamets) tickets. Will pay top $$$, call collect.
(1) 383-9739
Wanted to buy. One final four ticket - will pay
$100. A small gift card - one home, leave message on
mailing address.
By GARY LARSON
We're still one player short... Someone's gonna have to cut themselves in half.
Planaria sports
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Classifications
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help unpaid
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal
100 entertainment 410 rentals
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14
Thursday, March 31, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
School, students revive organization Group would provide forum for KU social welfare students
By Michael Carolan Kansan staff writer
Social welfare students can look forward to a new student organization next fall that would provide a forum for students to discuss professional issues, provide better communication with faculty and sponsor social events.
At an organization meeting yesterday in Twente Hall, about 15 students and faculty discussed plans for rebuilding what would be the first student organization in the School of Social Welfare in two years.
"We're trying to get the foundation laid for next semester," Lori Denny, Laramie, Wyo., graduate student
and one of the organizers, said.
She said that class representatives and a faculty liaison would be nominated at the next organizational meeting May 2. Eventually, the group plans to apply for financing from the Student Senate.
Among many events, the organization would sponsor a fall orientation for new students in the social welfare school to acquaint them with the University of Kansas and people in the school, she said.
"When I came here, there wasn't anything to get involved in and no way to meet everybody," she said. "The faculty have an orientation to the school, but there's only so much
The organization would ask social welfare professionals to speak and also would give students a forum to express their ideas.
they can do."
"There's no way for students to approach the faculty as a whole if there's a concern," Denny said. "With a formal group, those grievances could be handled more appropriately."
Edith Black, assistant dean of social welfare, said that because of lack of interest, the last student organization died out about two years ago.
"Many students were holding jobs, raising families and at the same time
were going to school," Black said. "The student organization wasn't a high priority."
Black said that although 50 percent of the school's several curriculum committees could be made up of students, only a few students have been involved with the committees.
"Their attention is so stretched to meet all of their demands, that they don't have time to spend on committees," she said.
Mike Peters, Lawrence graduate student and one of the organizers, said that the school had a fragmented class because many students took courses at the Kansas City campus or commuted to the Lawrence campus.
"Gripping...James Woods is brilliant."
—Jack Kroll, Newsweek
"Bold. ★★★★"
—William Wolf, Gannett newspapers
"Absolutely stunning..."
—Jeffrey Lyons, Sneak Previews, INN
A New Film from OLIVER STONE
Author of MIDNIGHT EXPRESS
and SCARFACE
SALVADOR
Based on a true story.
JAMES WOODS • JIM BELUSHI • MICHAEL MURPHY And JOHN SAVAGE
HEMDALE FILM CORPORATION Presents An OLIVER STONE Film SALVADOR
Executive Producer: JOHN DALY & DEREK GIBSON Screenplay by OLIVER STONE And RICHARD BOYLE
Music by GEORGES DELRUE Produced by GERald GREEN And OLIVER STONE Directed by OLIVER STONE
From HEMDALE RELEASE COPY
Mark's Jewlers
The Swarthout Society
Friends of the University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts
Concert, Chamber Music & New Directions Series
Presents
The 1988 Swarthout Society Resident Artist
Bob Berky
Mime Artist, Performer, Clown
The last time you laughed with such uninhibited abandon was last October when Berky performed as one of The Alchemedians, the premiere performance in the KU New Directions Series.
Residency Week April 4-7,1988
fine jewelry and repair
843-4266
817 Massachusetts
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
FIFTY YEAR ANNIVERSARY
1938-1988
Bob Berky will demonstrate mime and movement skills, and provide workshops for the Lawrence community at:
South Junior High, Central Junior High, West Junior High, Lawrence High School, University of Kansas dance and theate classes; Lawrence Arts Center acting classes; Rotary; Senior Center; and SallieMae Corporation.
Public Performance 8:00 p.m., Thursday, April 7, Liberty Hall
March 30, 31
Wed. 3:30, 7:00 p.m.
Thur. 3:30, 7:00 p.m.
WOODRUFF AUD.
KANSAS UNION
Free and Open to the Public SWARTHOUT SOCIETY'S THANKS TO THE COMMUNITY
le chuckle
HA HA H
e ho HO ch
HA ha ha
nee hee S
EE HEE
ho chuckl
e chuckle
A H A Ho
chuckle S
e chuckle
EE HEE ha
For more information call the Swarthout Society, 913/864-3469.
Park Inn
INTERNATIONAL
CHECKERS PIZZA
4 Star Specials
**************************
★ 2 12" 2-topping pizzas & 2 soft drinks $7.75 plus tax
12" 2-topping pizza & 1 soft drink $3.99 plus tax
2 16" 2-topping pizzas & 4 soft drinks $12.99 plus tax
16" 2-topping pizza & 2 soft drinks $6.75 plus tax
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First there was the Holy Trinity, Then there were the Three Musketeers Then there were the Three Stooges NOW WE HAVE:
The Red Hot Chili Peppers Fishbone Theloneous Monk
V
Wednesday April 13,7 p.m. Kansas Union Ballroom
Get tickets at SUA Box Office, all CATS Outlets, and UPC in Manhattan. $10 with KUID, $12 public -Don't Miss The Campus Concert of the Year!-
Presented by SUA SPECIAL EVENTS