THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 99, No.47 (USPS 650-640)
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday November 1, 1988
Israelis vote amid violence
Killings may affect election
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israelis vote today in an election tied to 11 months of violence that has cost the lives of more than 300 Palestinians and 10 Jews, including a rabbi's daughter and her three children killed in a weekend attack.
Zeev Eitan, a political analyst at Tel Aviv University's Jaffae Center for Strategic Studies, said, "In this election, that could be the difference between a clear victory by one party or a."
Sunday's firebomb attack on a bus that killed 27-year-old schoolteacher Rachel Weiss and her children was expected to boost the chances of Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir of Israel to kick back his advocates tougher measures against the Arab uprising in the occupied lands.
"There's no question it will help Likud," said Daniel Elazar, a political analyst of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. "For most voters, this will only reconfirm their beliefs, but for those voters sitting on the fence something like this could push them off to the right."
Polls taken before the attack and published yesterday in the newspaper Maariv either gave Likud the edge or indicated a dead heat similar to the one that forced Likud and the center-left Labor Party into a
"national unity" coalition in 1984.
Four different polls indicated Labor, led by Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, and its left-wing partners would win 47-55 of the Knesset's 120 seats, with Likud and its allies getting 56-65.
Some seats are expected to be taken by three Arab-oriented parties whose strong support of the Palestine Liberation Organization make them unacceptable in either major party's coalitions.
To guard against violence on election day, authorities ordered 14,000 police, border guards and other security personnel into the 17 election districts, which have 5,000 polling places.
Final results were not expected before tomorrow and days may be needed to determine a clear winner, for example, if Israel's complicated coalition politics.
A 48-hour travel curfew confined the 1.5 million Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip to their homes. It began at 11 p.m. yesterday and also barred press coverage without army escort in the territories.
Campaign rhetoric became increasingly harsh in the final days as the rivals sought to attract undecided voters, who pollsters say total from 4 to 8 percent of the 2.9 million Israelis registered.
Big Eight teams share the wealth
Although Colorado, Nebraska and Oklahoma State didn't play in the NCAA basketball tournament, they netted more money from it than the national champion Jayhawks.
By Mark E. McCormick Kansan staff writer
Big Eight teams that play in the national tournament receive money for participating in the tournament. That money is collected and distributed evenly to all Big Eight schools, whether they participate or not.
Because tournament teams must pay their own expenses, they usually finish with less money than non-tournament players. In other words, KU assistant athletic director
Wachter said that KU basketball received about $1.4 million in late June from the NCAA for the Jayhawks' April tournament appearance. That money included television revenue, ticket sales, concession sales and other miscellaneous income.
yet Kansas sent $1,109,89 of that money to the Big Eight Conference in July to be divided among the other conference teams. The difference was used to cover a portion of the expenses the University incurred during the tournament.
Wachter said the amount of money an institution could use to pay debts was determined by the NCAA formula never enough to cover all expenses.
The Big Eight Conference pocketted about $3.6 million from five schools' participation in the tournament. The money was pooled and divided into eight $450,000 chunks for the conference schools.
And while Oklahoma State, Colorado and Nebraska were counting their loot, the tournament schools were facing debt payments such as travel expenses from their tournament participation.
Please see MONEY, p.8, col. 1
Recruiting violations ruling Frederick will reveal NCAA findings on possible infractions
By Arvin Donley and Elaine Sung Kansan sportwriters
Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick confirmed last night that the National Collegiate Athletic Association had reached a decision regarding the 14 alleged recruiting violations in the Kansas men's basketball program.
A press conference is scheduled for 9 a.m. today in the film room at Parrrow Athletic Center to announce the NCAA decision.
Frederick met with other athletic department officials last night to discuss what they would say at the press conference. Frederick, reached at his office last night, said he would not make a
comment regarding possible penalties until the press conference.
NCAA director of enforcement David Berst said the NCAA office would send the Infractions Report to University officials today at approximately 9 a.m. that it would be made public at the press conference.
After the meeting with the Infractions Committee, Gentry said that former Memphis State guard Vincent Askew was involved in 90 percent of the allegations.
Askew transferred to Kansas during summer of 1980, but decided to return to Memphis State that
When asked about his involvement in the allegations several days following the Sept. 30 meeting, Askew declined comment.
Frederick, University general counsel Vickie Thomas, Chancellor Gene A. Budig, and vice chancellor for academic affairs Del Brinkman on Sept. 30 to present their case.
Former Kansas coach Larry Brown, assistants Ed Manning and Alvin Gentry were also present at
University officials had originally expected a decision from the NCAA within two weeks of the meeting. Frederick and Kansas basketball coach Kevin Hearn agreed to accept the decision he had hurt the Javahaws recruiting.
Crowd of 7,000 listens to Bush in Kansas City
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
As children knocked on neighborhood doors asking for Halloween treats last night, Vice President George Bush knocked on Missouri's door asking for something even sweeter — votes.
Eight days before the election, Bush push at what some of his supporters called a Kansas City Halloween Bash. A crowd of about 7,000 greeted the vice president on a pleasant evening at the pavilion at Westin Crown Center in Kansas City, Mo.
Bush was quick to comment on recent polls that said he was losing some of his lead in the presidential contest. The governors Governor Michael Dukakis.
"We are involved in a tough race, and I don't care what these polls show. I am going to keep on running like I was 10 points back." Bush said. He'd do it to drum up the support he did I mean to let up, but I not going to let up."
After being introduced by Kansas City Royals first baseman George Brett, Bush was joined on stage by his twin granddaughters, who were dressed as a pack of Juicy Fruit gum and also was also joined by his daughter Laura, his brother Bucky and Bucky's wife, Patty.
"All I want from Missouri is to win by about one-half as much as (Missouri Governor) John Ashcroft and Senator (jack) Danchi."
Bush maintained that U.S. citizens were content with the economy, and linked world peace with recent U.S.-Soviet arms treaties. He also reinforced his policy differences with Dukakis
XXI,
We are involved in a tough race, and I don't care what these poll show. I am going to keep on running like I was 10 points back. I mean to drum up the issues, and I mean to win, but I am not going to let up.'
George Bush
"Don't let my opponent come into Kansas City and tell you how bad everything is. He has this terrible problem: He can't get elected unless things get worse, and things aren't going to get worse unless he gets elected," Bush said.
Bush arrived yesterday at the Kansas City downtown airport at about 4:30 p.m., and was greeted by about 100 people. He spoke briefly to the press corps, thanked the crowd, and gave a thumbs up sign before he entered his limousine, which took him to Crown Center.
Even before Bush made his way to the stage at Crown Center, the crowd had been enthusiastically greeting other regional and national celebrities, including Missouri Governor John Ashercroft, Missouri Senator Kit Bond, and the band Larry Gatin and the Gatin Brothers. The Gatin Brothers did their best to help the Republican
JUICIT FRUIT
Please see BUSH, p. 9, col. 4
Catherine Wheeler/KANSAN
Vice President George Bush stops to pose for a picture with his twin grandchildren Barbara and Jenna. Bush arrived at Kansas City Downtown Municipal Airport yesterday afternoon and gave a speech later at Westin Crown Center.
Part of job market comes to KU
By Daniel Niemi
Kansan staff writer
Engineering, accounting, sales and management are the leading fields for jobs and on-campus recruiting this year, KU placement directors say.
their mentors.
Jim Henry, assistant director of the University Placement Center,
said most companies were looking for graduates for sales and management positions. He said that the number of recruiters was about the same as last year.
"I thought it was going to be slower, but it seems like it's coming out to be the same, maybe slightly fewer companies," he said.
the job market.
"The economy will have a whole lot more to do with hiring than the calendar," said Fred Madaus, director of the School of Business Placement Center.
Madaus said that if the economy were strong, companies would be recruiting new employees. Usually fewer companies interview on campus in the fall, he said, but fewer students graduate in December than in May.
last week.
However, December graduates should not be at a disadvantage in the job market.
DETECT how well said, "It all depends on how well they prepare themselves. If they have a good resume and their interview skills are honed and they do a good job presenting themselves they should do well."
themselves they must. He said some companies, such as Quaker Oats and General Mills,
had recruited last year but had not yet signed up to recruit this year. But they still might schedule interviews, he said.
On the other hand, Henry said Northwestern Mutual Life Inc., Deluxe Printers Inc. and Sears, Roebuck and Co. were recruiting this year at KU but which didn't recruit here last year.
"It would depend a little on the background they have," he said. "It would be very easy, especially if they had a foreign language background, to go into an international career, working for an international company or something like that." Glenn added that the science department at a field for liberal arts majors. But many companies recruit graduates without asking for a specific major.
Terry Glen, assistant director of the center, said most jobs for liberal arts graduates with a law degree will be in the sales and management fields.
"We had an increase in the number of vacancies this past year which would indicate more job opportunities," he said. "Enrollments are climbing in elementary and secondary schools. At some time, we will have to add staff to take care of those enrollment increases."
However, not all liberal arts graduates choose to enter the job
Glenn also said the market for teachers appeared strong.
Average starting salaries
The following figures are from September 1987 to August 1988. They represent both the total number of job offers for each major and the average starting salary. 187 placement offices at 154 colleges and universities participated in the survey. Not all degree programs are shown.
BUSINESS Number of offers Average starting salary
Accounting 6,275 $24,000
Business Administration 1,804 21,456
SCIENCES
Economics* 845 24,312
Letters (incl. English, Lit., etc.) 139 20,664
History 128 22,848
Psychology 230 20,592
Social Sciences-All Other 480 22,176
Aerospace & Aeronautical 467 28,176
Chemical 1,511 30,996
Electrical (incl. Computer Engrg.) 5,347 29,736
Mechanical 3,421 29,388
Petroleum 177 32,016
SCIENCES
Chemistry 99 26,004
Computer Science 1,965 27,408
Mathematics 432 26,724
Nursing 274 23,652
Pharmacy 203 34,356
Journalism 141 18,372
- Includes economic programs with both business and social orientation.
Source: The College Placement Survey Salary Network KANSAN graphic
market. For example, Albert Cook, coordinator of undergraduate studies in the English department, estimated that 20 percent of
English majors went to graduate school.
Please see JOBS, p. 6, col. 4
Stephan's attorney claims conspiracy
TOPEKA - A lawyer for Attorney General Robert T. Stephan repeatedly suggested to a federal court jury yesterday that Stephan was the victim of a conspiracy to run his political career that was hatched by former Attorney General Vern Miller and a Topeka law firm.
The Associated Press
However, Miller, who was the state's chief law enforcement officer in 1971-75, told the jury Stephen knew he was violating a secrecy clause when he disclosed in October 1985 that $24,000 in cash was paid to settle a 1983 sexual harassment suit brought by a former employee of Stephan
Miller helped negotiate terms of the settlement, but said it was Stephan himself who made the final deal with Toneka attorney Margie Phelps.
The disclosure resulted in a $5.2 million breach-of-contract suit against Stephan and former state Sen. Bob Storey, filed by Marcia Tomson Stingley, who worked as a clerk in Stephan's office.
The second week of testimony in the trial began yesterday. Miller testified more than four hours and is scheduled to return to the stage for further cross examination from Stephan's lead attorney, Gerald Michaud of Wichita.
She filed the two lawsuits as Marcia Tomson, but said during her testimony last week that she has reverted to using her maiden name.
During his questioning yesterday, Michaud had Miller go over telephone records from February and March 1985, when Miller was negotiating the settlement for Stephan with the Phelps Chartered law firm of Topeka.
Margie Phelps represented Stingley in her first lawsuit and filed the second suit on her behalf, but she was unable to defend herself because she became a witness in the case.
Michaud said the phone records showed Miller called Phels repeatedly on the days just before the crash. He did not raise the $24,000 paid to Stingley.
Stephan's lawyer also accused Miller of calling the Phelps firm repeatedly as he was writing a letter in November 1985 to outline the terms of the settlement to Stephan — the first time he put the terms in writing.
In her suit, Stingley alleges Stephan broke an oral contract by replaying terms of the settlement of the first suit. She contends terms of the settlement were to remain confident, and in his opinion he originally and at her insistence later.
She also alleges Stephan and Storey, a co-defendant and political supporter of Stephan's, placed her in a "false light" during the news conference. Storey participated in the news conference and characterized the first suit as a "niusance suit."
---
2
Tuesdav. November 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
Key
Crystal clear!
High: 71°
Low: 44°
Expect beautiful sunny skies today and a mild high of 71 degrees. Tonight, expect a few clouds with a crisp low of 44 degrees.
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
70/37
Sunny
Omaha
71/39
Sunny
Kansas City
80/41
Sunny
Columbia
68/39
Sunny
St. Louis
80/41
Sunny
Goodland
73/45
Sunny
Salina
72/45
Sunny
Topaka
72/44
Sunny
Dodge City
74/50
Sunny
Wichita
73/47
Sunny
Chanute
72/46
Sunny
Springfield
70/42
Sunny
Forecast by Brent Shaw
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
Tulsa
75/50
Sunny
5-Day
Wednesday
Partly cloudy
74/50
HIGH LOW
Thursday
Mostly sunny
73/45
Friday
Partly cloudy
74/46
Saturday
Sunny
76/49
Sunday
Sunny
65/41
The nation
Seattle
67/45
Los Angeles
71/61
Phoenix
87/61
Dallas
79/55
Chicago
69/35
New York
62/43
Miami
81/64
Fronts:
cold
colored
warm
stationary
Seattle 67/45
Denver 76/34
Chicago 88/35
New York 92/43
Los Angeles 71/61
Phoenix 87/61
Dallas 79/55
Miami 81/64
Fronts:
cold occluded
warm stationary
KU student listed as critical after liver transplant surgery
By a Kansan reporter
A KU student who received a liver transplant Monday morning was listed in critical condition yesterday at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
The student, Rick Castaneda, Kansas City, Kan., senior, received the transplant in an operation that lasted from midnight to 9:30 a.m.
Tom O'Connor, media coordinator at the University of Nebraska Medical Center, said that a critical case was typical in liver transplant cases.
"They may be listed critical for two to three days, or even a week," O'Connor said.
He said that the nine and a half hour surgery was a standard length
for the operation and that the translants could last up to 12 hours
O'Connor said that Castaneda's transplant went well.
"He came through surgery fine," O'Connor said. Castaneda is in the Adult Intensive Care Unit at the medical center.
He was transported to Omaha on Oct. 24, and a liver was donated sometime Sunday. O'Connor could not say who the liver donor was.
Nebraska has one of the most active liver-transplant programs in the nation. O'Connor said.
O'Connor said that Kansans often went to Nebraska for liver transplants because Nebraska was the closest transplant center available.
Colleges get odd gifts from alumni
OXFORD, Miss. — A 19-foot-tall King Tut mask, 200 old-time music machines and a 1597 map of the New World are testing college administrators' ingenuity in finding uses for the sometimes odd gifts of well-meaning alumni.
The Associated Press
ed bronze, copper and aluminum mask in storage for possible use in the foyer of a new library now under consideration, Lago said.
The one-ton King Tut mask was donated to the University of Mississippi two years ago by a Houston developer who was an Ole Miss graduate. The mask hung in a building sold by the developer, said university spokeswoman Barbara Lago.
"We've had all kinds of gifts given to us," said Don Fruge, the school's development director. "We even had somebody build a 2 million gallon reservoir on our golf course to provide water for irrigation."
The school has put the disassembl-
The music machines, part of a collection valued at $500,000, were donated to Mississippi State University. The students once played in the school's band.
The music machines and other memorabilia dating to the Civil War
will be put on public display. More than 20,000 pieces of sheet music also included in the collection will be used for research by music students, school officials said.
The 400-year-old map was donated to the University of Southern Mississippi by James Riley, a retired insurance adjuster, and his wife.
"The library has been the beneficiary of so many gifts from them over the past 30 years, they've dubbed it the Riley collection," said Phil Hearn, assistant public relations director.
Among the Rileys' gifts: old books
and the 1862 mechanical pencil. All have been put on display.
Sandra Guest, a development assistant at Ole Miss, said the gifts, referred to as in-kind donations because they do not involve money, sometimes were extremely valuable. The King Tut mask, for example, is worth about $100,000.
Three acres of Palm Beach real estate was bequeathed to Ole Miss in 1986 by an alumnus. A Bonanza steakhouse and a gas station sit on the property and the school now receives rent from the two businesses, Fruge said.
News Briefs
COMMUNICATION RESEARCH GRANT: Mabel Rice, professor of speech-language-hearing, has received a five-year, $450,000 federal grant to her research of language-impaired children.
The money will be used to study why some children have difficulty in mastering oral communication, Rice said. Most children acquire a partial understanding of the language in a few times, but some children cannot learn words in that manner.
Rice said her research would develop ways to improve vocabulary in language-impaired children. Those will include videotape training materials that repeat a word more often or separate a new word from a sentence to help the child recognize that word.
CITY COMMISSION MEETING:
The riverfront development project is at the top of tonight's agenda
Other items on the agenda include:
a report about sidewalk improvements on Louisiana Street south of !tst Street.
for the Lawrence City Commission meeting. The Chelsea Group, the developers of the project, will be requesting industrial revenue bonds.
The bonds will be for improvements to the riverfront project. If approved, the commission will provide intent with the East Coast developer.
- a public hearing to discuss declaring public right-of-way on portions of Pinckney Street, Rhode Island Street and an adjacent alley
- a site plan for Oread Laboratories, 2, 1501 Wakarasa Dr.
- a site plan for the remodeling of a business at 3120 W. Sixth St.
- recommendations for engineering services for various projects.
- proposals for banking services.
- ordinances for a Lawrence Historic Resources Commission, a revised schedule of rates for water and sewage disposal service and a schedule of rates for sanitation servi-
The commission will meet at 7 p.m. at City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts.
BUSINESS SEMINAR BY SATELLITE: A business management seminar, broadcast live by satellite from Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., will be shown on a big-screen television set from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The seminar was originally scheduled for the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union.
universities around the country.
A telephone hookup will allow Lawrence viewers to call in questions to Peters.
Tom Peters, co-author of the business management books "In Search of Excellence" and "A Passion for Excellence", will discuss successful business technologies. The seminar will be broadcast to more than 100
The Lawrence division of FMC Corp., a manufacturer of phosphorous chemicals, is contributing $1,500 to cover the cost of bringing the seminar to KU. The seminar is free and open to the public.
BAILYN LECTURE POSTPONED:
A Nov. 8 lecture sponsored by the University of Kansas Hall of Humans, has been postponed indefinitely, the director of the Hall Center for the Humanities said yesterday.
Theodore Wilson said that Bernard Bailyn, Adams University professor at Harvard University, was scheduled to visit KU Nov. 8 and 9 as a lecturer. His visit will be rescheduled and announced later.
On Campus
■ The Socialist Workers Party candidate for president, James Warren, will speak at 7 onight in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. Warren will speak on "The Decline of the S Empire" for the Work for Women People." The KU chapter of the Young Socialist Alliance will sponsor the event.
in the World," will be at 4:30 today in the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1294 Oread Ave.
- The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center is sponsoring a "Career Options for Women" workshop from 7 to 9 tonight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
■ The Carlos Merida: "Prints"
exhibition will show through Dec. 31
in the south balcony at the Spencer
Museum of Art. Museum hours are
8 a.m.
The biblical seminar "The Church
Bill Martin, philosophy department doctorate candidate, will give a presentation called "Blindness and Hindsight: A Discussion of the Paul Demant Controversy," at 7 tonight in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
■ Maranatha Campus Ministry will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
A concert featuring Australian music and instruments will be at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The School of Business, with the Lawrence division of FMC Corporation will sponsor the live broadcast of a seminar via satellite featuring Tom Peters from 11 to 1 today in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union. Peters will speak on "Managing Your Company." Admission is free.
The Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs will meet at 6:30 tonight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union. Ray Velasquez will be the guest speaker.
- Amnesty International will meet at 7 tonight in Parlors A and B at the Kansas Union.
CLIPPED WRITER IN
MANTONIUM'S THE SCARLET
LETTER
Cliffe
WRITER
The AIDS Service Providers meeting will be at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the lower level NLA Conference Room, 336 Missouri St.
tian Ministries building, 1294 Oread Ave. To reserve lunch call 843-4933. Lunch lines open at 11:40 a.m.
The University Forum featuring Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, will begin at noon tomorrow at the Ecumenical Chris-
The KU History Club will have an initial meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. Refreshments will be served.
**Anorexia Nervosa and Associate**
Disorders will meet from 6 to 7:30
p.m. tomorrow in Room 7 at Watkins
Memorial Health Center.
Dungeons and Dragons club will meet at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Pioneer Room at the Kansas Union.
Police Record
An unidentified man exposed himself to a female student near Sellars Scholarship Hall late Sunday night.
A telephone, an answering
machine, microwave and a black-and-white television valued together at $30 were taken Sunday night from a house in the 200 block of East 14th
Ah yes,
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Scholarship Hall, KU police said.
An unidentified man exposed himself to a female student Thursday night in Marvin Grove,
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 1, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Honor code proposed for School of Business Program could be in place for next semester
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
A KU School of Business honor code in the works since September has reached students for a vote, and an honor code committee member hopes the code will be approved quickly.
"We want to have it implemented and ready to go at the
McCloud, Oyceeland Park graduate student"
Before it can be enacted, the code must obtain a simple majority of votes for approval from business students. A ballot box in the advising center, 206 Summerfield, is available for students when they obtain dean's stamps for spring enrollment. Undergraduate voting will continue through Friday.
The honor code would specify action to be taken in case of academic misconduct by teachers or students.
If students approve the code, faculty will then vote on it. Steve Hillerman, professor of business and chairman of the business school executive committee, said his comments were in line with what he either makes a recommendation or list the pros and cons.
Then, he said, the code would probably go before the school assembly for a vote. The assembly includes all business faculty members and several students. If both faculty and students approve, the code will be enacted.
Scott Schueta, Horton junior and honor code committee member, explained the code's intent.
Dave Shulenburger, associate dean of business, said an honor code clearly was needed.
There's academic misconduct that goes on all the time," he said. "We're not trying to get everybody who's cheating. We're trying to get the values across to the student that says, 'If you cheat now, what are you going to do in 10 years?'
honor code clearly was received.
"The concern exists because of the business ethics problems that have been so prominent in the newspapers in recent years," he said.
Shulenburger said students needed to build a foundation of ethical behavior if they were to act ethically in the
business world.
Jody Brown, Wichita senior who serves on the honor code committee, said the code would be good for the school.
business world.
"A lot of companies are concerned with ethics," she said. "If people leave here with good attitudes about that, then companies are going to be more excited about KU graduates."
The code, drawn up by a committee of one graduate and seven undergraduate business students, closely follows the academic misconduct section of the University Senate rules and regulations.
The following points are included:
- instructors would be required at the beginning of each course to explain classroom rules related to academic conduct;
■ definition of academic misconduct, which includes disruption of classes, giving or receiving of unauthorized aid on tests or other class assignments, or knowingly misrepresenting the source of any academic work. Academic misconduct by an instructor includes grading student work by criteria other than academic performance or "repeated and willful neglect in the discharge of duly assigned teaching duties."
■ explanation of how to file a charge of academic misconduct:
misconduct:
procedures following a charge, and the rights of those
elected with academic misconduct;
■ sanctions for students ranging from oral admittion to expulsion from the school; for instructors, recommendation of suspension or dismissal;
- publication of actions taken against violators, not including names or other identifying references;
including names of order denoting the honor code
yearly formation of a committee to review the honor code. Any code revisions would require majority vote of the school's students and faculty.
McCloud said committee members had visited several classes to hear students' opinions about what the code should include. Students seemed to favor having a code, she said.
"At this point in time, the indications are that it's being strongly supported," she said.
I MUST KNOW
Halloween faces
RIGHT:During the Halloween pumpkin carving contest sponsored by Student Union Activities, Chad Coker, Olathe junior, takes his turn with the knife. ABOVE: Members of the Non-Traditional Students Organization painted faces for a small fee to celebrate Halloween. Diana Garrison, Wichita sophomore, has "pink pussycat" makeup painted on her face by Kaye Miller, Lawrence graduate student.
JACKSON PARK
ACLU concerned about drug tests May challenge the constitutionality of Hayden plan in court
By Barbara Joseph Kansan staff writer
A civil rights group and a state employees' union have expressed reservations about Gov. Mike Hayden's new drug-screening and testing program, which went into effect today.
"We testified against it last spring when it came before the Legislature," said Dick Kurtenbach, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas and Western Missouri. "It started out with much broader coverage than it ended up with. But we still have substantial concerns and would be open to considering a lawsuit if approached by someone."
Kurtenbach said drug testing violated Fourth Amendment guarantees against invasion of privacy without probable cause. Although the governor's program provides that current employees cannot be asked to test for drugs unless there is reasonable suspicion they are using drugs, Kurtenbach pointed out that the governor would be tested.
"What probable cause is there to suspect him of using drugs?" Kurtenbach said.
Drug test procedures are monitored closely
Hayden, his cabinet and his staff,
the lieutenant governor and the attorney
general and his staff will be tested first to set an example.
Kurtchenbaud said people shouldn't have to prove they are free of drugs.
"You should be assured of your innocence until the government comes up with specific proof of illegal action," he said.
By a Kansan reporter
Procedures for the new drug testing program are followed closely to prevent misidentification or tampering with urine specimens.
specimens.
Employees are tested at one of the 18 collection sites around the state and must produce photo identification and a signed consent form, said Bobbi Mariani, program coordinator for the governor's drug testing program.
Mariani further described the test procedure.
**test procedure**
■ the employeer supplies medical
prescription including what
prescription or over-the-counter
drugs he has taken.
- the attendant opens the test kit in front of the employee, watches until the employee goes into the stall and remains in the room until the specimen is produced.
- the employee removes bulky outer wear and leaves purses or briefcases outside the restroom stall.
Both the employee and the attendant sign a chain of custody form and other verification.
- the attendant examines the specimen to verify proper temperature, color and consistency, seals it with security tape and puts it in a zip-lock bag.
Officials at the Kansas Association of Public Employees, which represents more than 6,000 state employees, also had concerns about the governor's initial proposal and are still skeptical about the program.
Mariani said that if the test was negative, the employee would know the result the next day. If the result was positive, the specimen would go through another overnight screening. The state's medical officer reviews positive results, which may take three or four days.
"We're going to monitor the program as closely as the state monitors its employees," said Bob Redling, KAPE's public information director. "We're not wholeheartedly supporting it."
Redling said the union had questions about the constitutionality of the program. One of those questions was whether a job is considered as property.
"They can't take your house because you failed a drug test," he said.
they test positive for drugs a second time.
Employees can lose their jobs if
The union was instrumental in adding amendments to further protect employees to the governor's original proposal.
The program makes mandatory the testing of all applicants who have been offered jobs in safety-sensitive positions. Safety-sensitive positions are law enforcement and corrections jobs that require officers to carry firearms or authorize them to do so.
State employee now in those positions can be tested only on reasonable suspicion, determined by trained supervisors. The program applies to about 2,300 employees in the KU police department and 39 police officers at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Tests will detect use of marijuana, cocaine, amphetamines, heroin and phencyclidine (angel dust).
Tim Sotos, executive vice president of Clinical Reference Laboratory in Lenexa, which will test the specimens, said the tests were 99.9 percent accurate.
Sotos said the reliability was largely due to a relatively new technique called gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, or GC/MS. He also said the technique differentiates between over-the-counter drugs and illegal drugs.
"Current drug-testing is extremely accurate," Solos said. "GC/MS is accepted in court if irrefutable evidence of a positive result."
Computer system could access loan information
Kansan staff writer
Jeff Weinberg pictured the future: students walking into the office and instantly accessing from a microcomputer information about their Guaranteed Student Loans.
by early spring, the associate director of financial aid hopes to install a program in a yet-to-be purchased microcomputer that will enable staff to directly access a student's loan file from the Higher Education Assistance Foundation in St. Paul, Minn.
"We are on the leading edge of technology," Weinberg said.
Currently, staff in the financial aid office must call the lending body that has guaranteed a student's loan and request information. With the microcomputer, Weinberg said, much time and money will be saved.
About 40 percent of KU students' GSLs are guaranteed by HEAF. GSLs are low-interest loans given by private lenders, usually a bank, and guaranteed through the federal government.
Last winter, Weinberg went to St. Paul to initiate discussions with HEAF on what could be done to simplify the process of accessing a student's loan file.
During the meeting, they decided to develop a new system.
"We decided we needed an easier way to access a student's account so we could know what was going on with his loan." Weinberg said. "We also decided that we could do a much better job of loan counseling."
Weinberg said that not only would office staff have immediate access to
students' files, but it would be easier to counsel students on their loans. Such a process has been under discussion since last year.
The microcomputer system would have a program to plan a student's loan payments based on where the student planned to live after graduation and the average starting salary of his profession.
we are in the process of developing a second generation of software for computer systems," said Garry Hays, president of HEAF. "We hope to have it completed by the end of February or in March."
Hays said the system would make life much easier for financial aid offices.
"It makes counseling much easier and much more efficient," he said. "The offices will not be as inundated by paperwork."
The system would appeal to larger universities who find themselves overwhelmed with demands on their time.
Hays said HEAF planned to choose one or two schools to test the program.
grum. "I hope that KU will be one of those two." he said.
Weinberg hopes that KU's system eventually will be connected with other repositories for GSLs in addition to HEAF.
Although the first microcomputer will be for staff use only, Weinberg would like to have a second microcomputer by next summer for student use.
The microcomputers are part of a plan to update the financial aid office technologically.
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Tuesday, November 1. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Whale effort proved that enemies can work together
It's a modern-day saga of the sea, but this tale is no fish story: Three California gray whales get stuck in an icy trap, and the world responds with help.
The whales that were trapped off the Alaskan coast caught worldwide attention and sparked the compassion of an unlikely cast of rescuers: whale-hunting Eskimos and environmentalists, the U.S. and Soviet governments, wildlife experts and oil companies.
Estimates on how much money was spent on the three-week rescue attempt range from $600,000 to $800,000. Yet 169 gray whales each year are killed by Soviets to feed Eskimos, and about 1,000 die each year from natural causes.
Scientists said the loss of those three whales wouldn't affect the species significantly. But as one newspaper article put it, "Cold facts have no chance against heated emotion when human nature fights Mother Nature."
The point is not whether the whales should have been rescued. What should be recognized is that now the world knows how well groups that usually are enemies, particularly the Soviet Union and the United States, can work together.
But can they work that well together when it comes time to think about the preservation of our species? Can they respect each other enough to reach agreements that will help the millions of human lives dependent upon both governments' decisions?
Maybe a couple of trapped whales have opened our eyes to how easy it is to work together. Seeing that even the most adamant adversaries can work together can hearten people everywhere.
Julie Adam for the editorial board.
The Douglas County Commission race — and the candidates — has been particularly uninspiring this year. The main distinctions between the candidates are experience and priorities for economic development.
DOUGLAS COUNTY COMMISSION
Pvle, Stoneback
■ Second District: Tom Pyle of Eudora is running against Mike Amyx of Lawrence for the four-year term that will be vacated by David Hopper.
Pyle pledges to hold down the cost of county government, to look for ways to improve county roads and to work with business leaders to expand county-wide economic development projects. For 12 years, he has been a leader on the Eudora city council. His experience here will serve him well on the county commission.
Mike Amyx's agenda is short. Simply put, he says his top priorities will be accessibility to his constituents and listening to their needs. He thinks the county commissioners are paid too much and promises to take $4,000 of his salary and give it away in the form of scholarships. Amyx has served $5½ years on the Lawrence city commission — years that have been marked mostly by the commission's inability lead and resolve important issues. As a county commissioner, voters should expect the same.
Third District: I.J. Stoneback is running against Louie McElhaney for the four-year term that will be vacated by Warren Rhodes.
Stoneback, a Lawrence farmer, served on the county commission from 1973 to 1976. His main concern deals with saving taxpayers money. His agenda calls for eliminating the job of county administrator so residents don't have to pay someone to do what the county commission already does. Stoneback strongly supports a mall away from downtown to increase Lawrence's tax base. He supports the proposed south Lawrence trafficway and thinks the state should take some leadership in financing it. Stoneback has the necessary experience and new suggestions that will serve well to provoke change on the commission.
McEhlaney, chief of the Wakarusa Township Fire Department, never has held a public office. He has no formal campaign platform. His main concerns deal with keeping the mill levy from increasing, creating more jobs in the county and providing good communication with county staff and residents. However, he has not said how he would try to accomplish these things. His weak platform suggests weak leadership.
The two elected county commissioners will compose a majority on the commission, and their ideas and leadership are going to be important the next four years. Voters need commissioners whose experience and firm agendas will prove to be the best for Douglas County. Pyle and Stoneback are the best choices.
News staff
The editorial board
Todd Cohen...Editor
Michael Horak...Managing editor
Julie Adam...Associate editor
Stephen Wade...News editor
Michael Merschel...Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes...Campus editor
Craig Anderson...Sports editor
Scott Carpenter...Photo editor
Dave Earnes...Graphics editor
Jill Jess...Arts/Features editor
Tom Fenn...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Drake Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Kurt Messeruth...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
BradLenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Assistant producer
Michael Lenhman...Classified manager
Hinse Hine...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.
faculty.
Guess columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
guess will be photographed.
writer K. the Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
can be mailed or brought to the Kansan
Letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kananu (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Sauver-Fint Hall, Lawrence, KA. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, KA. 60044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid online. Subscriptions are included in the University Daily Kananu 118
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The town at the top of the world Life among Eskimos offers understanding of whale rescue
California gray whales and Eskimo hunters — columnists and commentators have painted the predator helping the prey as an icy irony and the expense as a fiscal folly. But the real irony and folly does not lie north of the Arctic Circle, out on an obscure ice pack, rather, back in the Lower 48 in the more civil environs of our own homes.
In Barrow, Alaska, indeed, in all Eskimo villages of the Aleut and Inupiaq people, these native Americans hold a personal communion with nature that few tenacill (non-natives) understand. To the animal rights groups and popular media, the bloody deaths of the gentle giants at the hands of the natives and their harpows is a photo opportunity only too-willingly accommodated by unassuming Eskimos. to沾染 societies biologist operation does not mathematically equal two whales. To the rest of us who prefer to hide our carnivorous natures in brightly packaged containers conveniently dispensed at pick-up windows, the irony and folly also seems evident.
Life in our nation's northern-most town is not exactly like life in Lawrence. In understanding life at the top of the world, there is an opportunity to learn and drama of the whale rescue and ourselves.
or a good time in Barrow, there is cable TV and Pepe's "North-of-the-Border" Mexican restaurant. Depending on the outcome of the annual prohibition referendums, a few ad hoc bars come and go. The people of Barrow, like those of Kotzebu, Gamble, Savooga and elsewhere along a coastline that is longer than the rest of the
Tom Wilhelm
Staff columnist
প্রশ্নের জন্য
continental coast combined, go about their business quietly. To hear them talking in their intriguing, unwritten language is fascinating. In the ancient tongue of the Inupiaq, there are no fewer than 20 words for "snow." For "hunting" whales there are also many words, most of which mean "harvesting."
Eskimos themselves have two names. One is in their native tongue and is nature-inspired. The other is a legacy of Christian missionaries and Hollywood — there are lots of Bob Smiths and John Wayne's around. In this society, community values prevail.
And these values are held with a strong reverence of action. Physical punishment of children, for instance, is an alien concept in Native Alaskan society. It becomes everybody's business to get a spare part for a snow machine or a message about a spring rendezvous across vast distances of mountains and tundra. Village elders still are consulted, and town council meetings are observed in many jurisdictions for modified versions in the slurp burgers and eskimo pies fown in from the Kotzebu Dairy Queen.
They also value the wildlife in this special way.
For furs and ivory, you would do better at a
souvenir shop in Anchorage or Kansas City than directly at the source. For whale meat, caribou and seal oil, which are the staples of the Eskimo diet, there is neither an associated dollar value for the effort of harvesting, processing and distributing, nor a local grocery that stocks them. The price is paid in tradition, and the store is the Arctic Ocean.
Prior to a whale hunt, the politics of petitioning the state for a permit range from a cabin-to-cabin caucus to tundra gerrymandering. Vying for state allocations often has resulted in intense inter-village rivalry. Nevertheless, once the modern necessities have been dispensed, tradition takes over. Armed with handheld harpops and in skin-shelled boats, the hunters positions themselves from bow to stern according to age and experience and go after the whales.
The hunt can range from a few hours to several days. Upon their return, the entire village turns out to help with the hauling and butchering. An Eskimo "beach party" accompanies this activity. The feasting, singing and butchering last up to three days. When it's over, everyone returns with the winter's food, having paid for it with some personal participation and tribute to the hunt.
So the bowheads named Putu and Situ finally have been freed from their icy prison. Many people wonder at the irony of the rescue's size and the nature of the people involved. But knowing the Eskimo and their traditions, I'm not surprised.
- Tom Wilhelm is a Lawrence graduate student in Soviet-East European Studies.
Judging by the headlines a fun pastime
Legal career doesn't sound appealing, but sometimes the urge to judge is strong
At various times while growing up, I wanted to be a firefighter, cowboy, doctor, private eye, rock star, Playboy Magazine photographer and baseball commissioner. Right now I'm plugging away at being a newspaper columnist until a vacancy in Hugh Heffner's darkroom pop up. But at no time have I ever seriously considered a career in the legal profession — as either a lawyer or a judge. Making Solomon-like decisions out of our knowledge of Solomon-like decisions the guilt or innocence of another human being would be too much responsibility heaped upon my slender shoulders.
Having said that, I do have to admit that there are certain times when I would love to do the robes and hammer the gavel for a particular case. Some of those cases, as we like to say in the newspaper biz, are as fresh as today's headlines: ■ Robin Givens, with more nerve than an exposed tooth, has a new divorce lawyer. When Mrs. Mike Tyson originally hooked up with Marvin Mitchellson on the West Coast, famed New York attorney Raoul Felder told TV reporters that Givens didn't up the ante of a man who lived up to a living. Now RoboMittelson met Michelson at a 10th-round TKO and retained Felder as her mouthpiece, and Raoul has changed his tune. As the presiding judge in that divorce trial, I wonder whether I could order Mr. Tyson and Mr. Felder to come into chambers and settle this like men.
Staff columnist
PABU
Bill Kempin
- Recently, defense attorneys said that Oliver North cannot be prosecuted for lying to Congress about the tran-contra scam because the former presidential aide was never warned that making misleading statements about covert operations was a crime. This is known within the ranks of the judicial system as invoking the "Steve Martin defense". Several years ago, the comedian did a routine telling his audience that your best defense in front of a magistrate were the two words, "I forgot," as in. "I'm sorry, your honor, I forgot that not paying income taxes was a crime in this state." Once upon a time, Art Ditmar was a pitcher for the New York Yankees. He was a member of the Yankee team that lost the 1960 World Series to the Pittsburgh Pirates on a ninth-inning home by Bill Mazeroski in the seventh and deciding game. New York's Ralph Terry gave up that gopher ball. But announcer Chuck Thompson, the original broadcast, incorrectly stated that Ditmar was on the mound for the Yanks. That momentary slip of the tongue was soon forgotten until three
years ago, when a beer company decided to use the famous call of that home run as part of a commercial and repeated the reference of Mazerowski hitting Ditmar's pitch. Ditmar decided to sue the beer company and the ad agency that made the commercial. He claimed that the spot held him up to undeserved ridicule, humiliation and contempt, and may have cost him appearance money for playing in baseball "old timers" games and charity golf tournaments. Yeah, Art, those events always go out of their way to make sure there are no pitchers involved who ever gave up a home run. ■ The godfather of soul, Saying it's too funky in here, the godfather recently got on the good foot and left for a month long European concert tour despite pending court dates in two states. The charges include driving under the influence, assault and battery with intent to kill, and carrying a deadly weapon to a public gathering, among others. How I would love to preside over that trial once police brought his hot pants back into this country. James, you're stoned to the bone, talking loud and saying nothing, but now it's a new day. This panda don't take no mess, there it is, so since you're super bad, here's the payback. Go into it get involved, ain't it funky now, brother rapp.
Bill Kempin is a Lawrence graduate student in in
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---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 1. 1988
5
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6
Tuesday, November 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Semi-Final Voting Period: Monday Oct. 24 - Friday Nov. 4 Final Elections: Wednesday Nov. 16 & Thursday Nov. 17 Voting in each School's Office of the Dean.* *CLAS voting in 106 Strong Hall.
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JOBS
Julie Cunningham, director of the Engineering Career Services Center, said that companies recruiting at the engineering school had increased 30 percent from last year.
Continued from p.1
"There's an increased confidence on the part of employers that they will have jobs available," she said. "There is a difference in the economic stems from economic factors."
"There aren't really any (areas) on the decrease, and I'm happy to report that because two or threeago things were looking bleak."
Leading the influx is General Motors Corp., making its first appearance on campus since spring 1986.
"A lot of oil companies are back on campus, and a lot of chemical companies seem to have an increased demand," Cunningham said.
Cunningham said that electrical and mechanical engineering remained strong and that chemical engineering were making a comeback.
In addition to an increase in the number of recruiters, the number of on-campus interviews has increased 33 percent. Cunningham said.
"With civil engineers, it's real clear what's happening," she said. "Back about 35 years ago, when they started building the interstate highway system, building bridges and tunnels, with the transportation hired a lot of civil engineers. Those people are now retiring at the same time our highways."
Starting salary best for pharmacy grads
Pharmacy graduates lead the list for starting salaries, and accounting graduates recorded the largest salary gain.
By a Kansan reporter
According to a salary survey compiled by the College Placement Council of Bethlehem, Pa., graduates with pharmacy degrees last year were offered an average starting salary of $34.56 a year.
Last year's biggest increase was in accounting salaries, up 10 percent to an average of $24,000. Dawen Oberman, coordinator of the salary, said it was the largest salary increase she could remember.
Oberman also said that petroleum engineering made a comeback after decreasing 6.6 percent last year.
way system needs a lot of work.
"The state departments of transportation have a very large need for civil engineers."
Julie Cunningham, director of KU's Engineering Career Services Center, said, "Salaries are increasing even though the job market has been down the past two years. I think we're looking at a bigger jump. This year I should expect to see a 3 to 5 percent increase because of increased demand."
Fred Madaua, director of the School of Business placement center, said that companies did not use credit with a fixed percentage increase.
Cunningham *also* said that although demand for petroleum engineers had increased, it wasn't cost-effective for employers to recruit on campuses because interest in petroleum engineering courses had dwindled.
Madaus, director of the School of Business Placement Center, said the center had the most calls for accounting and field sales.
Madaus said. "The accounting student has both the public accounting market and the private accounting, internal audit and so forth.
"The student who is willing to go out and look at field sales position has excellent opportunity because everybody is selling something. Any of those people like a college degree. Not necessarily a business degree, but a college degree."
"Accounting is always good,"
Madaus said that recruiting at the business school had increased about 10 percent but that banking interviews had decreased.
Two from KU enter pageant
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
Two KU students will be participating in the 1988-89 Miss Kansas U.S.A. pageant Saturday in Hutchinson, Mo., for one of the program said yesterday.
Larry McKellips, director of the state pageant, said he had personally picked Peggy Cobb, Wichita junior, and Tracy Schildhauer, Lenexa freshman, to be among the 25 women who will compete for the title of Miss Kansas U.S.A.
The event will be at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Hutchinson Convention Center.
"All the girls were ones that I
knew or ones that were referred to me," she McKellips said. "I wanted every girl to have some experience in pageants."
McKellips said Cobb was named Miss Wichita and was a runner up at Miss Kansas America in 1987. She was named to the roster up at Miss Kansas U. A., in 1985.
The three areas of competition in the pageant will be the swimsuit, interview, and evening gown. Each participant will receive a swimsuit and various other prizes. The pageant will also include cash, a full-ride scholarship to Wichita Business School, a wardrobe from Dillards and a trip to the
national competition in Mobile, Ala., in February.
"My focus was to let every girl have a good time and feel like they gained something," McKellips said.
Cobb, whose sister was Miss Kansas America in 1984, said that she enjoyed participating in pageants.
"I originally got involved as a favor to a friend," she said. "But once I was in, I caught the pageant bug and I was hooked."
Cobb said this particular pageant attracted her because it did not have a talent competition.
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Student Union Activities Calendar of Events
November
November
s m t w t f s
30 31 1 2 3 4 5
OMGO BONCO Concert
8 p.m. Hoch Audiobium
General Admission
6 7 8 9 10 11
Milat-O-Matic Javelinball
6:30-11 p.m.
MOVIE - Mokaboot
and 9:30 p.m.
Chevrolet 7:10 p.m.
Basketball 5:10 p.m.
D & D 6:10 p.m.
MOVIE - Mr Brittani
Career and 9:30 p.m.
Champions 7:10
MOVIE - Crocodile
Douglas 0:30, 7
9:30 p.m.
Medieval Movie
Bridge Warner
Bridge Club 8:45-12 p.m.
AL in KU Football
im a la with Chuck Bing
invading the game
on the Lions
Jewel Gaming 12-6 p.m.
Movie - Crocodile
Painter 9:30-7
Road Warrior Midnight
MOVIE - All the King's
Moments
Chevrolet 7:10 p.m.
Pepsi 7:10 p.m.
D & D 6:10 p.m.
MOVIE - Double Feature
The City of Renoun
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 1, 1988
7
Nation/World
Walesa promises to protest Lenin shipyard shutdown
The Associated Press
WARSAW, Poland — An infuriated Lech Wesla yesterday vowed to fight government plans to close down a port on the Baltic Sea, the Solidarity trade union was born.
The state-owned shipyard in Gdansk is being closed down Dec. 1. It is the first big industrial plant to be singled out for closure by the month-long government of Prime Minister Mieczyslaw F. Wakowski.
The decision was announced while the shipyard was closed on the eve of All Saints' Day and caught many workers and Solidarity activists by
surprise. The yard reopens Wednesday.
A longtime foe of Solidarity, Rakowski took office Sept. 27 with a pledge to restructure Poland's aging industrial base and get the economy moving. In an interview with the BBC, he said the decision "has nothing to do with Solidarity."
The announcement came during an impasse in preparations for talks between representatives of Solidarity and the government, which had been promised to Walesa on Aug. 31 during the last strike at the shipyard.
Videotape of U.S. hostage released
BEIRUT, Lebanon — American hostage Terry Anderson, in a videotape released yesterday by his kidnappers, read a statement that accused the Reagan administration of blocking his release and urged the next president to do more.
The Associated Press
urged the next president, President Reagan, to intervening with efforts by the Navy and his chief spokesman, Marlin Fitzwater, denounced the tape as “a cynical attempt” to influence the Nov. 8 election.
Copies of the 2-minute, 35-second tape were delivered to two Western news agencies in Beirut four days after Anderson, 41, marked his fourth birthday in captivity.
bit
Statements from the pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad,
which holds Anderson, accompanied the tapes.
"On the occasion of Terry Anderson's birthday and in response to your letters, and according to his desire to send you a recorded message, we hereby enclose with this statement the recorded message on videotape," the kidnappers said.
Anderson, chief Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press, began the message by identifying himself and saying the date was Oct. 30.
"Once again I'm being given a chance to speak to my family, to my friends and to the American people," he said.
Anderson said his spirits were boosted by the birthday greetings he received, "But as my fourth birthday in captivity passes and as the end of my
fourth year (in captivity) approaches, I find it difficult to keep my hopes and my courage high.
In Los Angeles, Reagan told reporters that his administration had done everything possible to win the hostages' freedom. "I don't think that was Terry speaking," he said. "I think he had a script that was given to him."
When asked about the statement on the tape that the U.S. government interfered when the hostages were about to be released, Reagan said, "That is absolutely not true, but let me point something out. Terry Anderson in that terrible confinement at the hands of those barbarians — any information he has has to have come from there; there is no contact with the outside world."
U.S. takes steps to diminish hostility toward North Korea
WASHINGTON — The United States yesterday took tentative steps toward ending decades of hostility with North Korea by relaxing some trade, travel and diplomatic restrictions against the communist nation.
The Associated Press
by South Korean President Roh Tae Woo to promote the eventual peaceful reunification of the Southeast Asian peninsula.
Asian pennsylvania.
American diplomats would be allowed substantive contact with North Korean diplomats for the first time in almost a year, and commercial exports of humanitarian goods to North Korea would be allowed on a limited basis.
State Department spokesman Charles Redman said the steps were being taken in support of the efforts
News Roundup
IMELDA MARCOS PLEADS NOT QUILTY:
Imelda Marcos pleaded not guilty yesterday to racketeering charges for allegedly helping her husband, deposed Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, plunder $100 million from their country's treasury. U.S. District Judge John Keenan set bail for Imelda Marcos at $5 million and said she could not return to Hawaii and her allying husband until details of the bond were worked out.
SEARS REVAMPS APPROACH: Sears, Roebuck and Co. said yesterday it was selling the world's tallest building and revamping its
merchandising approach in a sweeping bid to strengthen the lackluster earnings record of the nation's largest retailer. Sears also said it would buy back up to 10 percent of its stock, divest its Coldwell Banker commercial real estate subsidiary and take $425 million in after-tax fourth-quarter charges.
oxide in the next 10 years were Finland, Norway, Belgium, Italy, France, Austria, Switzerland, Sweden, West Germany, Liechtenstein, Denmark and the Nitrolands. Nitrogen oxide, derived mostly from car exhaust fumes and the burning of fossil fuels, contributes to smog, acid rain and the "greenhouse effect," or the warming of the atmosphere around the Earth.
NATIONS PROMISE POLLUTION REDUCTION: Twelve countries yesterday signed a declaration to reduce emissions of air pollutants that contribute to acid rain and the depletion of the ozone layer. The countries that promised to reduce by 30 percent their emissions of nitrogen
U. S., SOVIETS DISCUSS RADAR! Top U.S. and Soviet arms control officials met yesterday at the Soviets' request to discuss the Krasnoyarsk radar in Siberia which the United States said violated the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty.
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"The counselor helps me out with things such as where and when to get advised or how to get in touch with teachers — things dealing with the University," Hamilton said.
Another new component of the program is a monthly party at which all 70 group members and the nine group counselors meet. The group recently had a Halloween party.
Julia Eklund, a Kansas City, Kan. senior who is a counselor in the program, said that although the program required more than 10 hours a week on the part of group leaders, there were no requirements regarding what goes on during that time.
Sala said the office was trying to change the image of the program.
The program is designed to match incoming minority students who may have trouble coping academically and socially at KU with students familiar with the University, Sala said.
Hamilton said that minority students can sometimes be overwhelmed by the impersonal nature of the University.
Last summer, Tuere Sala, Seattle, Wash., law student, was hired to head the program from the office of minority affairs. She said that besides the addition of a full-time graduate student, the primary change in the program was the increased time commitment now required from all participants.
Changes in the peer counseling program for incoming minority students will increase the help available to those students, the program director said yesterday.
Delivery from 5 PM every night
"What we talk about most is just social, friend-type stuff. It's a little like having a big brother away from home."
Peer counseling program to increase commitment
"We're getting away from this idea that the peer counselor is an adviser or counselor," she said. "In the past, there was a distance between the new student and the counselor. We've
By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer
MONEY
The program places nine upper-class counselors, or "friends," with a group of seven or eight incoming students, who are mostly freshmen. Sala said that counselors helped students become familiar with the University and often would informally tutor students in classes.
tried to take away that image."
This fall, incoming students involved with the peer counseling program must spend at least one hour a week individually with their peer counselor and another hour a week with the entire group, she said. The groups meet both semesters.
In the past, the counselors decided how much time a group would spend together, she said. Thus, the committees the incoming student often was light.
Christopher Hamilton, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, transferred from Kansas City, Kan. Community College this fall. He said the extra meeting time had helped him become closer to his group leader.
"I really appreciate the time to talk to my group leader," he said.
Continued from p. 1
Of its $450,000 share, KU netted only $415,000 after paying bills, Wachter said.
That money will be put back into the athletic department and used for the financing of smaller programs, Wachter said.
OU received the same amount that KU received, K-State received $958,539, and Missouri and Iowa State each got $293,635.
Bob Frederick, KU athletic director, said the benefits KU netted in the tournament weren't undervolerable as people might think.
"There's a big misconception that we got some sort of huge windfall," Frederick said. "But we didn't, not by any means."
Wachter said tournament schools sometimes got the short end of the deal.
"It doesn't seem very fair," Wachter said. "But that's just the
way it works. It's part of being part of the conference. But I'm sure Oklahoma and Nebraska feel the same way when they go to bowl games and have to pay for expenditures that they have incurred, and we get money also."
The money situation, however, tends to work itself out because schools that aren't strong in one sport can contribute in another sport, Wachter said.
sport. well.
Sales from T-shirts, programs and other items help schools recuperate from tournament debts, but those totals are hard to measure, she said.
The basketball championship rings to be awarded to the team at this weekend's KU-KState game will cost roughly $300 apiece, Wachter said. The rings commemorate the national championship and will be awarded by the athletic department.
Wachter said the Big Eight distribution policy was a smaller version of the NCAA's. The money is totalled and divided among its member schools.
Wachter said the NCAA took in roughly $75 million from the tournament and divided it among the 64 tournament institutions.
The distribution system isn't only for tournament money; it works for all revenue sports.
This year, the conference received about $100,000 less per school because of a reduction in the number of televised conference football games, Wachter said.
KU expects $850,000 from conference football revenue in the spring, not including $200,000 in football television revenue and a $100,000 College Football Association distribution, she said.
KU bridge players will have a chance today to trump their way to Reno, Nev., and Nottingham, England.
By a Kansan reporter
Bridge is back again; KU hosts tournament
steven Nixon, president of the bridge club, said that players who entered the tournament as a pair would be guarded play but that single-person entries would be considered.
The KU Bridge Club will play host to a regional competition in the North American College Institute Bridge Championship at 7 p.m. in Alcove A of the Kansas Union. The entry fee is $4.
Sandi Clark of the American Contract Bridge League, the tournament's sponsor, said from her home in Memphis, Tenn., that the tournament was an attempt to bring bridge back into popularity at colleges.
"Bridge seemed to die out on the campuses," she said. "We're trying to get it going again."
Clark said that 35 schools were competing in the tournament. The schools are separated into five conferences, with KU in the central conference, which includes six teams.
The league has been sponsoring the tournament for three years.
The five conference winners and one at-large team, the team that receives the highest score after the conference winners, will receive an all-expense paid trip to Reno, Nev., from March 17 to 19, to play for the title of North American Collegiate Bridge Champion.
The winning team will go next fall to Nottingham, England, for the World Junior Championships.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 1, 1988
9
Dukakis smells victory Democratic candidate seeks women's support
The Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis made a populist pitch for the support of women and young voters yesterday and said that his boisterous reception smelled like victory in the Nov. 8 election.
He won cheers from an audience at San Jose State College for his stands on abortion, the environment and economic opportunity. He also drew loud, supporting cheers that he said were "insignificant" and his running mate, Dan Quayle, on the same issues.
But unlike his campaign speeches elsewhere in California on Sunday, when he defiantly proclaimed himself a liberal, Dukakis did not mention the "L word" that Bush was repeatedly to taunt him during the fall inauguration.
Instead, he invoked the legacy of Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman and John F. Kennedy as presidents who provided "a caring government and caring political leadership." Dukakis said, "That's the kind of president I want to be."
"It's Halloween today, isn't it?" the Democratic nominee reminded his nosey campus audience in this environmentally sensitive state with its bigger-than-any prize of 47 electoral votes.
"Mr. Bush is going to be passing himself as an environmentalist. No treat for us. That's the biggest trick in the book," Dukakis said.
He went on the counterattack against Bush's criticism of pollution in Boston Harbor.
He reinforced his opposition to oil drilling off the California coast and said the Reagan-Bush administration had "the worst environmental record in the history of this country."
of pollution in Boston Harbor." I'm not the guy who polluted Boston Harbor," Dukakis said. "I'm the guy who's cleaning it up, no thanks to Mr. Bush and his friends."
Making his first major appeal to women voters, a traditional source of Democratic strength, Dukakis said the Republican ticket had "been on the wrong side of every issue of special importance to American women."2
He shook his head when he said Quayle had told a 12-year-old girl last week that if she were raped by her father and became pregnant, "the government had a right to force her to bear that child."
Bush leads in recent polls
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Michael Dukakis' counterattacks have improved his rating as a crimefighter, but the Democratic presidential nominee still suffers from unsteady support within his own party, polls said yesterday.
Republican George Bush led by 11 points among likely voters in a national survey by the Gallup Organization for the Times Mirror Corp., 52 percent to 41 percent, and by seven points, 52 percent to 45 percent, in a poll by Louis Harris and Associates.
The Times Mirror poll was done in the first half of last week; the Harris poll was more recent, conducted Friday through Sunday. Its 52-48 ratio is a very slight marring from 58-44 in a Harris poll conducted Oct. 14-17.
Dukakis only recently began to counter Bush's charges that he was weak on crime, and the Harris poll indicated some results: Fifty-three percent rated Dukakis on crime, 60 percent down from 63 percent in the earlier poll.
Harris also indicated that Dukakis had scored slightly by portraying Bush's campaign advertisements as unfair. Seventy-five percent called Bush's ads too negative, while 68 percent said the same of Dukakis' ads.
The Times Mirror poll, meanwhile, found support for Dakukas uneven within his own party, while Bush marshalled monolithic backing from Republicans and siphoned away some Democrats.
Gallup said the presidential race
Presidential endorsements
Here are some of the metropolitan newspapers that have
Here are some of the metropolitan newspapers that have endorsed a presidential candidate.
Here are some of the metropolitan noteworthy endorsed a presidential candidate.
Bush Dukakis
Minneapolis
Milwaukee
Detroit
Chicago
Philia
Boston
New York
Atlanta
Dallas
Houston
St. Petersburg
Miami
Bush-Quayle
- Boston Herald
* Chicago Tribune
* Chicago Sun-Times
* Dallas Morning News
* Detroit News
* Houston Chronicle
* Houston Post
* Miami Herald
* New York Post
* Sunday Oregonian (Portland)
* Topeka Capital-Journal
SOURCES: Associated Press, Washington Times
Dukakis-Bentsen
has been largely stable for months, with Bush ahead at least since September. But its poll found an underlying factor in his favor: His
*Atlanta Constitution*
*Boston Globe*
*Detroit Free-Press*
*Milwaukee Journal*
*Minneapolis Star Tribune*
*New York Newsday*
*New York Times*
*Philadelphia Inquirer*
*St. Louis Post-Dispatch*
*St. Petersburg Times*
*Wichita Eagle-Beacon*
*Kansas City Times*
supporters were more loyal than they had been previously.
Knights-Ride Tribune News/JUDY TREIBI
*
Dukakis, meanwhile, has suffered slow erosion in his popularity.
BENGUINE
USM
Henry Jinishian, Winter Park,
Fla. resident, and his daughter
Roxanne Anenndesn, Branson,
Mo., resident, await the arrival of
Vice President George Bush.
About 7,000 people attended
the rally yesterday.
BUSH
GEORGE
BUSH '88
FOR PRESIDENT
candidate by revving up the crowd with their songs.
Continued from p.1
But not everyone at the convention was cheering. A group of about 20 people wearing black T-shirts with stark white letters reading "release our POWs" were there to oppose Bush. They are members of a Kansas City and national organization called Tu-
Showing his support for Vice President George Bush, Kansas City Royals first baseman George Brett was on hand to introduce the candidate. Bush, with his granddaughter Jenna, spoke at a rally Monday at Westin Crown Center in downtown Kansas City.
Rinh 52 Rescue.
Elzene Gourley of Kansas City, Mo, somberly held a large black and white photo of her brother, Lee Gourley, who she said has been a prisoner of war in Thailand since Aug. 9, 1969.
"Its ironic that Bush is part of an administration that said it would do all it could to bring back the POWs," Gourley said. "Bush was
nead of the CIA then (when her brother was taken prisoner). He had all the information available to him and he didn't do anything."
Bush briefly addressed the POW group during his speech, saying that POWs and people listed missing in action are always a top priority. ■ Kansas reporter Grace Hobson contributed information to this story.
Preparations start for inauguration
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Far from the rough and tumble of the campaign trail, preparations are quietly under way in the nation's capital for the transfer of power from President Reagan to his successor.
President Reagan sent a message on Capitol Hill, carpenters already are hammering nails into the inauguration platform where the next president will take the oath of office at noon on Jan. 20.
dent will take the bath or once it has been cleaned. Across town in the Dupont Circle neighborhood, Commerce Department employees are moving out of their offices in a government-leased building, leaving room for the transition team of either Republican George Bush or Democrat Michael Duakis.
into the transition headquarter. For the next 72 days, they will screen applicants for thousands of jobs, from Cabinet secretaries on down, and begin charting policy for the next president. In 1980
DENIRECT INTERSECT ON the morning of Nov. 9, the day after the election, the vanguard of a Bush or Dukakis administration will move into the transition headquarters.
To pay for the transition, Congress has approved up to $3.5 million.
about 1,500 people wound up on Reagan's transition
sound many of them $1-a-year volunteers.
$5.3 billion.
If Dukakis wins, he'll get the full $3.5 million. If Bush wins, the sum will be reduced by $250,000. The law specifies a lesser amount if the incoming president is the outgoing vice president. Congress reasoned that a vice president only has to move down the hall.
Regardless of who wins, the transition headquarters will be ready for immediate occupancy. By Election Day, telephones will be installed, copying machines will be plugged in and furniture will be in place.
Stationery already had been ordered with a politically neutral heading of "Office of the President-elect."
Along with the government offices, the building at 1825 Connecticut N.W. houses a drug store, Chinese restaurant and Pakistani bank. Across the street is a bath house that once was a massage parlor.
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Tuesday, November 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Supreme Court will review laws guarding classified information
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday stepped into a simmering feud between Congress and President Reagan by agreeing to review legislation limiting presidential authority to withhold classified information.
information.
The justices, in a case to be decided by July, agreed to consider reviving a "whistleblower" law decreed unconstitutional by a lower court. The legislation was designed to restrain the president's ability to keep national security information from Congress.
The court also left intact Kansas laws permitting people to use deadly force to defend their homes or personal property even when they are not threatened with death or great bodily harm.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who had breast cancer surgery 10 days ago at Georgetown University Hospital, was back on the bench as she and her fellow justices returned from a two-week recess.
O'Connor, 58, who reportedly had a breast removed, previously said the cancer was detected in an early stage and the prognosis was for a full recovery.
The case involving classified information, a sticking point between Congress and various presidents, provides a new test of where to draw the line separating legislative and executive powers.
The case stems from a national security directive adopted by President Reagan in 1983.
The directive requires federal officials, before they are allowed access to classified information, to sign an agreement stating that they will not disclose the information.
The directive also created a standard form for officials to sign, promising they never will divulge classified or "classifiable" information without written permission from proper authorities.
Some members of Congress bridled at the directive, particularly the use of the word "classifiable."
particularly the use of the word
They said the president is seeking to abridge free speech rights of federal employees and impose "after-the-fact classification of information in order to punish whistleblowers for making disclosures that embarrass their superiors."
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
Spring enrollment begins Course openings, closings listed in Strong Hall
Enrollment for the spring semester is going smoothly, said Gary Thompson, director of student records.
The main enrollment session began Friday and will continue through Nov. 21 in 111强 Hall.
As of yesterday no major required courses, such as languages or western civilization were listed as closed.
Students who have questions about changes in course listings in the timetable, should first check the bulletin boards outside the enrollment center, then contact the scheduling officer for the appropriate department, Thompson said.
Thompson builtin boards, which are outside 103 Strong Hall, list courses that have been canceled, added or closed. The availability of various sections of a course are usually not listed, Thompson said.
languages of western civilization were visited in closed, Eidith Gufteh, assistant director of foreign affairs, said that while the language changes that had to be made in these areas due to errors or course changes, were no more than usual this year.
Thompson said that an addendum to the spring timetable would be published the first week in January.
Corrections to the timetable other than changes in courses are posted by department request outside 111 Strong Hall. As of yesterday only one correction was posted.
posted.
Barbara Paris, administrative assistant for freshman and sophomore English, said that a paragraph on page 37 of the timetable stating that the English department reserved the right to drop students out of English 102 if they missed two consecutive classes in the first two weeks should have been omitted, and would not be enforced.
enforced.
She said that a paragraph on the previous page stating that students could not add or change any departmental course after Feb. 1 would be enforced.
concern. She said the English department became aware of the error in late October, but they were told that the timetable had already gone to the printer when they notified the enrollment center.
Thompson said that the bulletin boards were updated every morning. The computer automatically records and prints out closed courses. Canceled and added courses are added to the computer program by the enrollment center's scheduling officer.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 1, 1988
Sports
11
Jordan will appear on Wheaties boxes
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Michael Jordan was dressed to play basketball yesterday, but instead he talked about breakfast cereal, posed with a picture of a cereal box almost as tall as he is, and the team drew three with an actual-size box in hand.
Such was Jordan's inauguration as only the seventh "celebrity athlete" to be pictured on the front of packages of Wheaties, the General Mills Inc. cereal marketed as "The Breakfast of Champions."
"I very nappy to be part of the Wheaties organization," said Jordan, clad in his No. 23 Chicago Bulls jersey and black sweat pants. "A lot of people would love to be in my shoes."
He said Jordan was "a man of real character and integrity," fitting for the positive image the product tries to have.
"He truly is a champion in every sense of the word." Jim Nuckols, product manager, said as he introduced Jordan to reporters.
Many might also want to have his bank account, which will swell even further with the Wheaties deal. Jordan and company officials said that the terms of the deal were not being disclosed.
They did disclose that Jordan's picture would be printed on at least 12
million to 14 million boxes of the cereal.
Others who have contracted with Minneapolis-based General Mills for the Wheaties limelight, beginning in 1956, include pole vaulter Bob Richards, decathlon champion Bruce Jennings, dear Mary Lou Redton, baseball player Pete Rose, football's Walter Payton and tennis star Chris Ewert.
Richards, now a clergyman in Texas, first adorned Wheaties boxes before Jordan was born 25 years ago. Jordan said that as a child, he didn't know about the cereal.
"We had a big family" and pennies had to be watched, said the North Carolina native. "We used to eat wheat puffs — remember those in the big bags that could last ... through five or six kids? That's what we had."
Actually, "a dozen or two" athletes have been pictured on the front of Wheaties boxes over the years, but Jordan is only one of seven "celebrity athletes" to get the honor through major deals with the company, said Kathryn Newman, public relations supervisor for General Mills.
Jordan said yesterday's honor was "up there" with being the NBA's MVP. "You have to be at the top of your game to be a part of it," he said.
Dickerson leads Colts to 55-24 rout of Denver
Lady Cobras
EAS
Freshmen forwards Danielle Shareef, left, and Tanya Bonham are two of the eight newcomers on the Jayhawks women's basketball team this season.
The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS — Eric Dickerson rushed for 159 yards to go over 1,000 yards for an NFL record-tying sixth consecutive season and scored a career-high four touchdowns as Indianapolis punter named the Indiana Broncos 55-23 in the first Monday night football game last night at the Hoosier Dome.
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
The Colts, scoring on seven of their nine first-half possessions, forced four fumbles, sacked Broncos quarterback John Elway three times and didn't Denver cross midfield until its seventh possession, five minutes into the second quarter.
1ne mark is held by Chicago against Philadelphia in 1941 and Green Bay in 1983 against Tampa Bay.
in 1983 tugger. Quarterback Gary Hoeboom, starter cherry Chandler whenever the Colts went to a wishbone offense, threw a 53-yard touchdown pass to Bill Brooks in the second quarter. Biasucci got another field goal in the third quarter and Albert Bentley rushed for a fourth-period touchdown as Indianapolis evened its record at 4-4 with the most points ever scored in a Monday Night game.
Basketball practice in full swing
By that time, Indianapolis led 31-0 on Dickerson's four touchdowns and the first of two field goals by Dean Biasiusco. The Colts built the margin to 45-10 at halftime, four points short of the NFL record for records in a half
Dickerson, the NFL rushing leader, rushed 21 times in the game. He had 124 yards in the first half and was used sparingly in the final two periods. He raised his season total to 1,038 yards, joining Francis Harris and Walter Payton for the most consecutive 1,000-yard seasons.
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington watched intently as the Jayhawks worked through a passing drill at practice yesterday afternoon at Allen Field House.
Whenever the flow of the drill broke down, Washington immediately stopped play and explained to the players what they were doing wrong and what they needed to do to correct the situation.
On a couple of occasions, the Kansas coach even took the basketball and demonstrated the drill herself.
With eight new players on the Kansas roster this year, Washington said much of her time this season would be devoted to teaching the basics.
"don't care what level you are at," Washington said. "Coaches will tell you that if you don't have the basic fundamentals down, all the talent in the world isn't going to keep you from getting beat by a team that does."
After two weeks of practice,
Washington said she had seen gradual improvement in the young
Javhawks.
"Every day they are getting something new, but I think they have handled it well," she said. "I've seen some positive things from them. They are beginning to read the defenses and starting to create some opportunities, but we have to keep them from trying to go too fast."
One of the payers new to raise this season is freshman Gert Hart. The 5-foot-8 guard from Independence said the early-season practices were important in her understanding of the system.
"We are picking up the fundamentals pretty quickly now and trying to work as hard as we can." Hart said. "C Coach Washington will play it off to hit it hard now because we will play like we practice."
"We have a natural instinct to go, and I want to see them do that," Washington said. "But at the same time, we have to play
Keeping mistakes at a minimum was something Washington said Kansas would need to work on.
"The game is a lot quicker and more physical than in high school, so you're going to make some mistakes. It's important to concentrate on getting things done. You need to get making mistakes bother you."
under control because we won't be able to afford giving the ball away."
Kansas opens its season against the Australian Junior National team Nov. 16 at Allen Field House. Marion Sandifer, a 6-foot-4 freshman who will back-up junior Lynn Page at center, said the Jayhawks would be ready for their opener.
"Coach Washington will make sure that we are ready to play," she said. "Practices are much more intense here than anywhere I've been before. I've learned a lot more about basketball in two weeks than I did all through high school. It was a big transition."
While the Jayhawks have made their share of mistakes in the first
couple of weeks of practice. Washington said they had impressed her with their overall desire and work ethic.
"On the whole, this is one of the hardest working groups I've ever had here," she said. "They are very tuned into what we are trying to do and are very disciplined players."
Retired baseball analyst to pursue dreams
Special to the Kansan
By Mike Considine
At age 39, Bill James decided he had devoted enough time to baseball statistics.
"I never talk about the future," he said,
"because then you have to do it."
devoted eloquence that he
He concluded the 1988 Bill James Baseball
Abstract with an essay that announced the end of his work on the annual publication
All James will reveal about his plans is that he has "only one lifetime and many dreams."
Because these James, who earned English and economics degrees in 1973 and a teaching certificate in 1975 from the University of Kansas, in past years had begun analyzing Major League statistics for the coming abstract. He published 12 editions between 1977 and 1988.
"I never completed an abstract without telling Susie (McCarthy, his wife). "This is it. This is the last one," James said. "And I meant it every year."
On a recent Friday morning at his house in Winchester, James was fixing breakfast for his daughter Rachel, age four, and son Issac, five, months. He said his "retirement" had not been as leisurely as expected.
not been up waiting to have time on my hands, "james said. "It seems to me there's as much or more pressure on me as there has been."
At the start of the major league playoffs, he appeared on the NBC TV Today Show, The Larry King radio show and wrote a column for the Village Voice in one week.
Editing The Baseball Analyst, a newsletter, is James' last link to sabermetrics - the study of baseball statistics.
or baseball statistics. Although the abstracts were critically
acclaimed and had steadily increasing sales, James listed numerous reasons for moving on. He said he was frustrated with the misuse of statistics, a competitor who pirated his formulas and format and the difficulty of producing the book annually.
James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts, said, "There are three contemporary (baseball) writers who rank in a class by themselves: Roger Angell, Thomas Boswell and Bill James. Each has a slightly different style, but all assume the intelligence of their audience."
James' choice of Boston Red Sox third baseman Wade Boggs as American League Most Valuable Player in the Village Voice column was typical of his flair for controversy. Many fans would have thought Oakland Athletics star Jose Canseco's 42 home runs and 40 stolen bases would merit the award.
was in the middle.
In addition to becoming the first player to hit at least 40 home runs and steal 40 bases in one year, Canseco had a 307 batted average and drove in 142 runs. Boggs rated higher in James' Runs Created formula largely because he had 47 more walks, 27 more hits and scored eight more runs than Canseco.
"If Jose (Caneco) able to prove in a court of law that he hasn't used steroids, it will be the biggest upset of the decade."
"Probably no one will ever commonly believe, but I have no evidence."
James said that Boswell's allegations that Canseco had used steroids would not tarnish his statistics. He said he agreed with the Washington Post columnist, though.
"Canseco had a wonderful year, but Boggs was more valuable," James said.
The Royals' appearance in the 1976 American League Championship Series indirectly canned James to write the first abstract.
"When the Royals reached the national spotlight, I couldn't believe (announcers) knew as little about them as they did." James said. "I had never had that experience in sports and never it had again until last year when the Jayhawks got to the national championship (in basketball)."
The 1977 Abstract was printed in Lawrence at the House of Usher, 838 Massachusetts, and sold just 75 copies. James had written from this year's edition would exceed 100,000.
"I didn't have any idea how long it would take me to figure the statistics," said James, who was working at the now-defunct Stokely-Van Camp plant in Lawrence. "By the time I got through it was May or something. I didn't have time to stop and write articles.
As a Kansas student, James learned the economic models which are the basis of his formulas. The first book was heavy with statistics.
"Also, I had this strange idea that if I was going to charge money for it, it had to be pure information. I thought people weren't going to pay for my opinions."
"When he began adding player comments and the prose sections it began to be longer." Carothers said. "I remember thinking, 'This guy is funny.'"
george Carothers said the book had improved significantly by its third edition.
For example, he said ex-St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Dal Maxvill, "couldn't hit a blast furnace with a heat-seeking missile."
Mike Kopt, a Lawrence resident who wrote five articles in this year's abstract
noticed by us. "It touches on all aspects of life," he said. "People don't realize that until they go through it pretty carefully."
In The Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract, published in 1985, the author writes about the 1978 shooting death of California Angels outfielder Lyman Bostock.
"The murderer, Leonard Smith, received a light sentence because, as I understand it," James wrote, "he was able to prove that he didn't ordinarily kill people, but just happened to be in a particularly bad mood that day."
said the scope of James' observations isn't noticed by casual readers.
estate
"It is kind of remarkable." James said of his wife's work on the abstracts. "One of the big reasons a lot of young writers give up is because their wives are subtly telling them they have to make a living."
To produce the historical abstract, James rented a downtown Lawrence office and hired an editor, Jim Baker.
McCarthy also contributed in several areas, including typing, research, proofreading. She has written occasional essays in the annual abstracts.
pushed them. "There were a lot of books written about comparing one great player to another." James said. "Rather than who was better (Ty) Cobb or (Babe) Ruth, I wanted to put it in a broader-based discussion of their times."
The historical abstract was a decade-by-decade look at the game which included plaver rankings and statistics.
He recently finished editing a collection of essays from past abstracts. The working title is "This Time Let's Don't Eat the Bones."
KU FOOTBALL REPORT: The Kansas foot-bootball team emerged from its 63-14 loss to Oklahoma with only one player sidelined by an injury, said Kansas Coach Glen Mason.
"We're a little bit better than we have been," Mason said. "We're still banged up and bruised."
"braised."
Senior cornerback Peda Samuel suffered a left groin pull last weekend against Oklahoma but is listed as probable for this weekend's match against Kansas State.
cmp against Kansas state.
Samuel spent most of yesterday riding the stationary bicycle and practiced little on the field.
Sports Briefs
Linebacker Tony Barker, who has not played the last two games because of an ankle sprain, was back in practice yesterday.
Amnough linebacker Curtis Morris was nursing some problems with his back and leg and was wearing a cast on his left hand because of a broken finger, he was still able to practice.
KSU BACK MISSES WORKOUT: Kansas State fullback Lee Pickett missed yesterday's workout with a bruised right knee.
The 240-pound senior rushed for a season-high 130 yards in Saturday's 45-27 loss to Oklahoma State despite missing all of the second half with the injury. Pickett leads the Wildcats with 496 yards rushing in seven games.
Coach Stan Parrish said he expected Pickett to play in Saturday's game against Kansas in Lawrence.
Kansas State and Kansas are both 0-8 overall and 0-4 in the Big Eight Conference. Kickoff is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. at Memorial Stadium.
NBU NAGED UP: Starters Ken Clark at lback and Andy Keeler at left guard had sprained left ankles and missed preparations for Saturday's game at Iowa State, but Nebraska Coach Tom Osborne said yesterday they should be back later this week.
be back later. Reserve wingback Jamie Worden missed the one hour and 15 minute workout with the flu and reserve fullback Brian Harchelroad was out with a strained left knee. Harchelroad will miss this Saturday's game, Osborne said.
OU CENTER RETURNS: University of Oklahoma center Bole Latham returned to
"Latham looked a little bit rusty, but you expect that after someone misses so much action," said Coach Barry Switzer. "Richard Dillon also practiced today and he looked pretty good."
practice yesterday as the Sooners worked for $ _{1/2} $ hours in preparation for Saturday's game against Oklahoma State.
Kickoff against Oklahoma State in Stillwater is at 3:30 p.m. Saturday. The game will be televised by ESPN.
Latham returned to practice for the first time since suffering a knee injury in the Sooner's opener against North Carolina. Coaches said he is expected to see action against the Cowboys.
OU could get NCAA penalties
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Oklahoma athletic director Donnie Duncan says problems in the Sooner program aren't those "of a corrupt program," but the school likely will be impacted by the NCAA conclusion declaration.
"I think scholarship reduction is something we can anticipate." Duncan said Sunday. "I don't think we will come out of this without having some kind of penalty."
"It was not necessarily the best and friendliest thing in the sense of what to look forward to on a Sunday afternoon," Duncan said.
Duncan tucked Oklahoma City television station KOCO he thought "things went well from the standpoint of a professional approach with a professional group
Oklahoma, which was on a two-year football probation from 1973-74 said last June that it was facing 16 allegations, most of which were related to scary category. The items appeared mostly minor in nature as described by the university.
some other team.
The NCAA Infractions Committee spent all day Sunday reviewing its case against the Oklahoma football program, sources told The Associated Press.
Duncan said he expected the NCAA to make a ruling and its investigation.
By coincidence, the Big Eight Conference's annual basketball media day was going on at the same Kansas City hotel just one door away.
Oklahoma officials, to escape detection by more than 70 media representatives gathered for basketball, came and went all day via a back entrance through the hotel kitchen, sources said.
---
Big Eight and NCAA officials declined comment on the meeting.
declined comment on the meeting. Coach Barry Switzer, whose Sooners are 7-1 and ranked No. 8 in the Associated Press Top Twenty, said in August he did not expect a major penalty.
12
Tuesday, November 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Student loans are available Students needing aid should apply, official says
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Students who find themselves financially strapped at mid-semester may still apply for a loan at the financial aid office.
"There are always funds available through several programs," he said. "If a student needs a loan, he should definitely come to the office."
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said the prognosis was good for students who need loans.
Students have two main loan options: Endowment loans and Guaranteed Student Loans. Endowment loans are financed by private donations and awarded through the KU Endowment Association. GSLs are low-interest loans given by a private lender, usually a loan and guaranteed through the federal government.
Weinberg said Endowment loans usually were for amounts up to $500 and GSLs for amounts more than $500.
Students apply for Endowment loans if, for example, they need money to pay their rent or buy school supplies. GSLs, however, are commonly used for college students whose parents do not wish his or her job and there is no money to pay for school.
Last year, 3,600 Endowment loans were awarded.
totaling more than $2 million. Weinberg said the amount of this year's awards were comparable. An undergraduate may be able to borrow up to $1,200 during four years; a graduate student may borrow up to $2,400.
$10,240.
Last year, 5,000 GSLs were awarded to KU students,
worth $13 million. Weinberg said the amount of
money loaned so far was higher than the amount
loaned last year for the same time period. The average
GSL last year was for $2,700, compared to this year's
average of $3,150.
William Shunk, director of loan programs at the Endowment Association, said $10 million was available for student loans, but only $7 million could be loaned out at one time.
"We loan out as much as is needed," he said. "We try to plan it so we have sufficient funds to cover emergencies."
enter genie
Shunk said about $2 million came in each year from former KU students paying back loans. This covers the cost of outgoing loans.
Weinberg said the Endowment Association did not run out of money.
"There was a time about 30 years ago when a sign would be put outside the financial aid office saying, 'There's no money,' " he said. "This doesn't happen anymore."
Missouri college opposes Klan leaflets
The Associated Press
MARYVILLE, Mo. — Efforts by the Ku Klux Klan to foster racial tension between black and white students at Northwest Missouri State University will not be tolerated,
university officials said yesterday.
About 200 students, faculty and administrators met Sunday night to discuss recent incidents of racism directed toward black students. Black students said leaflets, some of which say "We're watching you,"
have been placed on their cars and beneath the doors of their rooms and homes.
University President Dean L. Hubbard said officials suspected that five student members of the Klan were distributing the leaflets.
Acutely ill get homecare from eight KU students
When Don Crouse started working on his master's degree in counseling psychology, he also started looking for a job. During his search, he noticed a classified advertisement in the newspaper.
By Derek Schmidt Special to the Kansan
"Desperately Seeking Students!" the advertisement said. "Be part of a special team . . . as part of the VNA private homecare pool."
Crouse saw his chance and called the number in the advertisement.
"I was looking for some kind of work related to counseling in some way," said Crouse, an Albert graduate student.
That was 13 months ago. Today, Crouse has the seniority out of the eight KU students who work for the Douglas County Visiting Nurses Association, a non-profit organization.
or organization.
"I decided to work with VNA because it was more related to counseling than working at McDonald's would be." he said.
VNA is a certified, licensed home health care agency which provides care for acute and chronically ill clients. One division of VNA employs health professionals to provide medical care to homebound people.
KU students work with a second division of VNA, the private home-care pool. Aides visit clients' homes and help them with shopping, cleaning, laundry or other chores.
Students care for about 20 of VNA's 250-300 clients in Douglas County.
"We need personnel and this is a college town," said Pat Turmes, VNA home care support services director. "Students have flexible scheduling. They're available at hours that people with families wouldn't want to work."
hours that people work in Crouse said that the hours he and other students worked varied, but that he would work between 15 and 60 hours a week.
Though VNA hires many social work and nursing
students, Turmes said a student's major was not the most significant factor in hiring.
"I'm looking for someone who enjoys the elderly." Turmes said. "You know them when you see them. I'm basically looking for someone who likes people."
Crouse is that client. "With some clients it may be housework, going to the store, sometimes readings to them, or discussing current events," Crouse said. "There's listening, a lot of listening. I've used my counseling skills a lot. It's basically belting them do things they can't do for themselves."
Although Crouse said that he liked his work, he said the job could also be stressful, especially when aides must do the job.
"After you've been there for a while, it's almost like being a member of the family." Crouse said. "You develop a fondness for clients, and yet you have to realize that they could die."
For instance, Crouse remembered a time when he was working last summer and a client became ill.
"I was sitting there hoping, 'Please don't die on my shift, please don't die on my shirt.'"
Days later, the client used,
"When the client finally did die, the family was there," Crouse said. "In a sense, it would have been a relief for him to die. In a sense, it was."
Kris Jacobs, another KU student who works as a VNA aide with disabled children, agreed that the death of a client was the job's most difficult aspect.
"The boy that I used to work with had a lot of problems," she said. "He was 18 years old, and he died about a month ago. I'd feel him, change his diapers, try to keep his mind busy, play games with him, do puzzles. We did a lot of stuff with his family. He loved family things."
Jacobs, a Shawne fifth-year senior majoring in sociology, has been with the VNA for almost a year. Regulations require that all personal care aides complete 100 hours of training to maintain their positions.
Share your good health...
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
Please Donate Blood!
Legal Services for Students
American Red Cross
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
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; all seats reserved; for reservations, call 913-864-3982
(Visa/MasterCard accepted for phone reservations)
"This is how great orchestras play!" Sydney Morning Herald
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Noterization of legal documents
8:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5665
- Many other services available
You'll Have The Time of Your Life!
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
Because You Love To Live
Funded by student activity fee.
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
Australian Bicentennial Tour 1988
Because You Love To Live
SYDNEY
SYMPHONY
ORCHESTRA
8:00 p.m. Saturday November 5,1988 Hoch Auditorium
Conducted by Stuart Challender Featuring Shura Cherkassky, Pianist
AVIA.High Performance Basketball.
Stability, c
Flexibility,
perfor-
style of play
AVIA
BUILT FOR YOUR BODY
822
MODEL 822M
Nobody knows the athlete's foot like The Athlete's Foot
The Athlete's Foot.
942 MASS.
from NORTH FACE
PATAGONIA
ROYAL ROBBINS
TERRAMAR and
WOOLRICH
100%
cotton trousers
Pleated Pants
841-6966
SUNFLOWER 804 MASS.
OPRYLAND'89 AUDITIONS
Set the stage for your career in entertainment!
For the 1989 season, Oplyang will be casting more than 400 talented performers, instrumentalists, stage managers, and stage crew members in a dozen lavish productions featuring every kind of American Music. We want talent that sparkles with showmanship and professionalism.
You'll work with top professionals and polish your performing skills before an audience of over 2 million. You'll gain exposure in one of the nation's music capitals...Nashville... "Music City, U.S.A."! You'll get good pay.
And best of all, the opportunity to step into the limelight like numerous other Opryland veterans such as members of the Grammy nominated country band "Bestle Heart," Mary Elizabeth Mastraonte from "The Color of Money," Cynthia Rhodes from "Dirty Dancing," and Patti Cohenow, now starring in "The Opera on the Broadway"
No appointment is necessary. A piano accompanist, record and cassette players will be provided at auditions.
For more information on any of our 23 city auditions, just contact Opryland Entertainment Department, 2802 Opryland Dr., Nashville, TN 37214. (615) 871-6656, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (CST) Monday through Tuesday.
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI
RAINAS CITY, MISSOUR
Wednesday, Nov. 9, 1988, 12:00:30 p.m.
University of Missouri, The University Center,
Pierlson Hall.
OPRYLAND
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 1, 1988
13
We carry the Cons ERX 843-7621
MEXICAN FIESTA
Tues. & Sun. 1$^{00}$ Margaritas
Wed. 1$^{25}$ Mexico's
Finest Beer
Sun. Nite 2$^{90}$ Student's
Dinner
Special
BECERROS
BECERROS
2515 W. 6th 841-1323
NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing For Men & Women 820-822 Mass. 841-0100
5 p.m. — 1
Cheeseburger,
Fries &
Beverage
$2.50
Johnny's
Monday & Tuesday
1 p.m.
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
Sigma Psi's 1st Big Bash!
Where: Ichabod's
When: November 2, 1988
Time: 8:00-12:00
Cost: Non-Members - $1.00
(Snacks/pop provided) Bring your friends!!
10% Student Discount on Kansan Classifieds*
*Valid with K.U.I.D.
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ECKANKAR discussion group forming. For more info.
contact 749-1127.
Mary Kay Cosmetics Contact Deeann Wilks at
SKI BRECKENRIDGE: January 18/8-15 $199
land only $249 land + roundtrip transport.
For more information contact David Perry.
842-1161
ENTERTAINMENT
GOOD VIBRATIONS: the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call (Brian) 841-9484.
JOHN G. SINGS Press, B-days, singing messages. 841-1874
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound Superior sound and light. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot Spins Maximum Party Thurs. DJ Ray Kawaiyah 841-7083
FOR RENT
Complete. Furnished 1,3, and 4-bedroom rooms available immediately & near KU. Call today at 841-1212, 841-3253, 841-1429, or 749-2415.
Compa. funtified funibm 1.bt机 lbpts from campus.
Quaint. Available Dec. 26, 841-3529
Female Roommate wanted: to share beautiful apartment in Pepperfield Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes: own bedroom, kitchen, laundry room, fireplace, and free water. Please call 749-0363.
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
Extra Nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment to sublease second semester. Call 749-3174
Female roommate needed immediately to share 3 bedroom tenure for KU bus route. $170/month
For rent : 2 bdr - 1 Bath, in great location, on bus route. We need someone to take over our rear Jan-May Call for details: 843-4225
Hillel
לָבִית
Events of the Week
Tuesday, Nov. 1
Elie Wiened Continuing Discussion Series "The Farm Criss and the Far Right" 7:30 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Wednesday, Nov. 2
United Jewish Appeal Meeting
6:15 p.m., Hilliell House
Thursday, Nov. 3
General Planning Meeting
Open to All
7:30 p.m., Hillel House
Sunday, Nov. 6
1 L.C.I.B. Clintz Bunch
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
917 Highland Ave.
Sunday, Nov. 6
For more information call Hillet House, 749-4242.
Large 1 bedroom apt. Hanover Place. Quire, very clean, first hall of Nov. Free if lease is signed by
Call: 841-9628 or 841-1212.
HILLVIEW APTS
Lease for spring semester. One space in mce
large 2 BD. apt 5 min. walk from campus
Available Dec. 20, Call 841 6882.
HILLVIEW APTS:
1733 West 24th 814-5179
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units facilities
- Laundry tubs
- On bus route-near shopping
Hits paid
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
- Rental furnished
by Thompson-Crawlev
- Some with gas paid
- Ample off-street parking
- Ample off-street parking
Dental furniture available
- Ample oil
- Rental furniture available
- Crawley
New Hidden Meadow Townhomes. Two Bedroom and Two Bedroom with Study and Fireplace. 749-1141, 841-3919, 2832 Iowa. Behind Raco Carnash.
nominate wanted for non-smoking law student.
Nw large bedroom, private master bath, $198 +
Call 1-846-6007 3:11 pm on Wknd. For On rent,
Semester 8 September w/brd. W.D. On bus rst.
729-4560 769
Sublease next semester. Nominating roommates.
Sub lease one bedroom apartment. Water paid.
Sub lease one bedroom apartment. Water paid.
Blessure nice 1 bedroom apartment starting at $249/month. Phone 740-828-8428 or 6:30pm.
Sublease: Tangwood Studio Available in December: Furnished, low utilities. Call 749-0286.
Vacancy for next semester: Own furnished house. DLG house JDWE. Mend plus utilities. *749-7429*
FOR SALE
1985 Honda Nighthawk 450, Blue, Great shape must sell $900. Call 843-5032
81 Grand LeMans Cruise control, must sell
780/100
houser royal X103 typwriter with Textwriter jr. $900.00. Adler Rare Satellite IHC $400.00. Smith Corona DX250 typewriter $279.00. Midwest Business Systems 745 New Hampshire.
1985½ Ford Escort 3-speed AM/FM cassette,
rear defrost plus more. 842-3146 evees.
1985 Honda Accord, Gold, Pioneer Stereo System.
ture framing, preschool, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playbills, collector and cheep rock-n-roll records, vintage clothing, books, coins, baseball cards, slot machines, Maxfield Park Theatre, antiques, toys, Royal Doulton, and so much more stuff it will blow you away! QUANTRIL'S FLEA MARKET, 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sat; and Sun. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. local rental info 842-646-3167.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, dolls, ceramics, dells, comp books.
T-SHIRTS
AUDIO Sale: CASTE deckes, Teac. JVC, Sony from $75 - $150. Must sell. B4-9184-984
Bicycle #440 w. W/ #45-3869
Drum set 4 pc. Ludwig w/ Piaste Cymbals. $325.
42-4626. Must sell.
100% Cotton L and XL Sizes Only $10 call Tim 842-3606
Drafting table $4.00 .Stere Receiver $4.00 .T1 handheld machine $7.00 .Centre from manifeu
Go to Miami, F1 for Thanksgiving and or
Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for
a price. Call 749-5773 after 6:00 pm for
more info.
For Sale 1988 Sunkul Samurai. Take over payments/members. Call evening (316)
Why Beer is Better than Women at KU
BIKE: Motobecane, nice bike, good condition, must sell quick! Bargain: $109. Call Nile 841 49726. Comic books, playbooks, Penthouses, etc. Niles.com. 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat. & Sun
MUSICIANS Brand New Music DR-41 acoustic drums or bass. Or a drum set. My arm can not play. Purchased for $500.00.
FUTONS Quality cotton mattress from $88.88
New Wave Fetures 842-7378
*80 Old Formula Coupe, power steering brakes, air blower, tilt, cruise. AM/FM stereo cassette, all season radials, $1599, *86 Cougar, air conditioning, 4-speed. car defender, AM/FM stereo cassette, 10.0 miles, $900. Both cars purchased new, transferable warranty. Both in excellent condition.*
doble DJ system on sale. 1000 watts sound,
luzs. lasers. 749-1500
roate computer 60KH, 2.54x disk drives, 120kb
modem, IBM compatible, case carry; Daisy
Wheel Printer - 48pcs, platen or continuous flow, 3
print wheels, Macintosh, print资格:竖立 222-820
AUTO SALES
844-844
Honda Aero 125 MNT Condition!; must sell-make an offer. Days 843-4993 & Evers 841-8995 ask for Anne.
Great School Car!'s! Corrallia '77 $700 Honda Civic 80 $550. Stereo. Very Dependable. Tel. 644-223-9900
rear defrost plus more. 842-319-0935.
'985 Detroit Accord, Gold, Pioneer Stereo System,
nice car, good car in snow, 842-9383.
LOST—FOUND
1981 Blazer Silverado AC, PB, PC, AT, AM/FM
cable, CB radio, 4" lift with 3" Radial mudders
looks and runs great. After 6:00 749-593,
¥7000.00
London/901): Malachite (green stone) earrings,
in uniqueness of Wescow cateraice or between
Wescow and Haworth. Found, call Beth.
8471-7321
Records Show & Sale Sunday
Nov. 6. 9-5 V.F.W. Hall
9550 Pfum屡, Lexa, Ks.
enteret, Inc. is now hiring 20 daytime and 50 evening employees. No experience necessary. Earn $1 to $ per hour. Call to set up interview.
841-1200.
Rock-oll rite - Thousands of used and rare albums to 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. everday and Sunday. Quantity $89. New Rampage Hammett Ft. EG, 60, 20, 40, 30, 20. Sale $49. Cake Day 749-524. ACS store, price $49.
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight Attendants,
Mechanics, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $10k. Entry level positions.
Call 516-947-6000 Ext. A-9738
HELP WANTED
LOST Minolta camera on 10/25/88 outside of 3139
Wescoe. If found please call 841-4486.
Bakery Sale / Cleaning. Late night weekend weekday.
$4.00/hr after trained. Three weeks paid
vacation after 1 year. Interviews 5:00 p.m
Nov. 1, and Wed. Nov. 2 or contact Daria. Apply
iotw4 1604 u-4 p-5 spd.: S-Rs all options red
mault set! 4340 abcd 6508 k-811 9922
RED HOT bargains! Drug dealer's cars, boats,
planes报单. Buyers in need.
eBay: s100 6f000 4c000 E-S7982
at munichers bakery
Checker's Pizza is immediate openings for
pizzas, and pizza sandwiches/sandwich
makers. Day and night positions available.
Order takers $3.45 per hour; sandwiches makers
$3.50 per hour plus generous discount. Apply
to the nearest 10 p.m. Yale Rd. Be sure to
arrive at 11 a.m. and 8 o.m.
Cheeker's Pizza has immediate openings for driver merchants. Must be its license number and/or driver's license, and insurance. $3/75 hour tip, commission, and easy to reach bonuses. Apply in person at 9am or by mail to Cheeker's Pizza at 160 West 4th Street in am and 8pm.
Checker Dex has immediate interfaces for 2 driver drivers who will use corporate vehicles during lunch 11 am - 5 pm. Must be 18 years old, have valid driver license, and exceptional driving record $37/荷刀. Apply in person at Checker's Park 2124 Yale Rd. between 11 am and 5 pm.
EXCELENT LIST TIME MONEY, easy work.
EXCELENT LIST RESEARCH 129
APPLEPARTY APPLE II AR 72701
Chiropractic Assistant to work 8 am to 1 pm.
MWP. Call 749-0312.
experienced Photographer (student hourly or evening) must be a graduate degree & magazine style photography. Must demonstrate camera and darkroom skills, also experience with DSLR cameras & application with color slide film. Submit portfolio and application to FREE SPRING BREAK VACATION IN FREE SPRING BREAK VACATION
Become a College Team representative on your team. You'll be given the opportunity to provide everything you need. It's easy! Call
BREAK VACATION IN CANCUN!
Sull or part-time position to fuel, tube and bead灯
hours. EOE apply to person in M. D. Johnson
seconds of hours.
Geology and Engineering Students part time position is available with Overland Park oil and gas firm. For information and interview please call Argon Resources Corporation Exploration
GOVENMENT JOBS. $10.06-$40.00 /Y. Now Hiring. 8:30am-6:30pm Exp. W/ Fax 878-250-1100 Federal list.
Help Wanted: Telephone sales, personnel. Hourly wage. Day & Evening hours. For interview call 843-3343
NAMIES need to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible mature and enviable with children, Gift cards, and more information call: Janet K (CEL 1-722-6900).
Now hiring cooks and cashiers for days, evenings,
weekdays. Send resumes by email or post.
any time. Hardie's on the turpentine 843-2061.
WWW.TURPENTINE.COM
Pizza Shaita is immediately hiring both full-time and part-time positions. Please indicate your 8.50 or $8.50 per hour possibly including daily pay, mileage, and bonuses. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shaita.
pre-law Senators, first and second year law students. Go to OCS this summer to become a Marine Corps Judge Advocate after passing the Bar. %92 Incall 841-1821.
SUMMER NEEWS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send Stamps. For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming. Mint Mail MT 9907
We are looking for two line cooks. Must be able to work nights. Contact Windell at Beercoar
Taco John now hiring energetic responsible persons looking for flexible part-time hours. Apply at taco.john.com.
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
dependents 2 children with $25 deductible only
$53.66 month. With parent slightly higher Kansas
Insurance Service #841-161
On TVs, VCAs, Jewelry Stores, Music in
theaters, Dancing at the M.A.E. Jawk Paint & Jewelry
M/A.E.M/A.E. Jawk Paint & Jewelry
ACE
Happy Natakala, you is belching p. May day your
be happy so you peak in tears, scream in
Southern, and have wild monkey love. Love,
Lesbians.
PERSONAL
AP at GP. Fall will get you every time! How long is a very long time? I need Ali's other sock. Hebrews 12:11 · H
MISCELLANEOUS
Sure- we blue up a blender to a pizza, and has one little orgatism at least we don't have a freeze dri肌 muk or sloocha hair. Forge about the Founding Fathers, remember the beat - I'll beat them.
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWF, 21-30;
P.O. P. Box 442-643, Lawrence, KS. 66044
*Photo attributed.*
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
MAX: U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT? !!
Aome play in my orchestra. Love you JEFFERSON!
Come play in my orchestra. Love you JEFFERSON!
Hey Sugaynes! Meet me at Prime Time this
Thursday in the Kansas City ! You Wagumphin.
KEN Happy 20th Birthday) P.S. Are you
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-216.
winter months. Only $10 will cover a complete maintenance card at Phillips 66. I only have 30 left (very important for winter), battery (recharge, very important for winter), battery (recharge, ride on the highway), fast tire repair plus more! I must sell all new card good on any vehicle that you purchase 5 gallons of competitively priced pre-owned tires. We also ship tires so catch me. Jim, at 842 6153 MWF (mwf 12pm, 8pm - 12am) or HT (9pm - 12am) or
Government Photos, Passport, immigration,
visas, Modeling, theatrical, Advanced fine art
portfolio. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
artistic future. Tum Swells 794-1611.
WOLF! Congrats! Heard you lost it in Pittsburg
HEY YOU! Get your car in shape for those cold winter months. Only $10 will cover a complete maintenance card at Phillips 66. I only have 30 left. Card includes oil change, heat, job, radish, and more.
Tuesday
BUS. PERSONAL
Well Drinks
$1.00
Watermelons
75"
Johnny's
12 oz. Rib Eye
Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs
Dancing
$6.00 Well Drinks
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
Johnny's
Your connection to the real business world.
LOWEST FARES 841-7117
New members are welcome! Date: November 1, 1988 Time: 6:30 p.m. Place: Pioneer Room Level 3, Burge Union Speaker: Ray Velasquez of Metropolis Mobile Sound
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:5:30 * Sat. 9:30-2
SERVICES OFFERED
Astrology - Would you like to know about someone special, more about yourself, or what a wand would be used for? A detailed address stamped to Astroal Operations P.O. Box 334, Smithville, Md. 64690
Bendor Portraits are still the greatest gift idea for anyone. The portraits assisting assistance. For more information call (212) 690-8348.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving serving KU students for 20 students' driver's license obtainable, transportation provided 841-7749
French tutoring. Translations. Paper revisions done on computer. Exper work, 8 years experience.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
HELP: KEY DECLARATIONS:
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekachrome
processing hours. Complete B/W ser-
vice. SPORT $0.00. Arts & Design Building.
Room 296, 804-4767
ON CAMPUS
LOCATION
K.I. INFORMATION CENTER - campus, com-
bined K.I. INFORMATION CENTER - campus,
BELLP REFERRALS 24 hours/day; 884-3500.
no service charge
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
PRIVATE OFFICE OBJECT Gn and Abortion Services
Overland Park ... (813) 491-6078
Pregnant and need help? Call Bighight at 843-641-7023. Confide helpful/free pregnancy
Maupintour
749-0770
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
Lawrence. 841-5718.
Quality Tutoring. Economics, Statistics.
Mathematics. All levels. Call Demis. 842-1055.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrivings into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-263, days or evenings
Can a Jayhawk really eat a Wildcat?
letter quality.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc. IBM correcting Selective, spelling corrected. 843-6544
spinning corrector. 940-735-8211
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
Call evenings before 10.749-1961
Hawkodile-Dundee
Hawk-Hogan
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double spaced page; page Lawrence
Herring
Hawk-Mania
See our Breakfast of Champions T-Shirts!
EXPERT TIPING. Mary Daw 273-419 I
Topeka. Accurate professional word processing
of reports and documents.
Call R.I.'s Typing Service 841-5942 Term Papers, Legal, Thesis, etc. No campus fee. Materials available upon Preprocessing Tom's papers, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser engraving, photocopying.
Expert Typist. Reasonable calls. Call 842-2903
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE in back. IBM typeset typesetting software and process machine, palletcheck and Daisy wheel printer. Reliable, fast, reasonable, guaranteed
Pussy-cat Eaters Club
MAC - WORDPROCESSING - papers,
bookreports, thesis, project plans,
manuals and reports passed through Macintosh
Wordprocessing. Format to your specifications
with spelling checked, all laser printed output
files.
Balloons-n-More
609 Vermont 749-0148
RESUME SERVICES - professional, quality resumes. Formatted to your specifications with laser printed output. Quality, professional services at $1 the cost of Kinka's 24 hour service.
PEACE ITTING
Wordprocessing. spelling check. $1.25/pg. Bid projects. Sally 841-2279. Let me help.
projects. May 24, 2017
SPEEDERM Word Processing Service. Qualified
dependent service on academic papers.
Discounts on large projects. $1/20 double-space
TYPNING/WORD PROCESSING. Do on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes Letter Quality Program. Legal exp. Laura, 542.738. Leave Message.
***typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 84311-0114. Monday-thursday and 9 on Friday. THEWORDCORTS.-Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, theses, resumes, commercial, IBM PC, MAC, CDP Daisyheel, dot matrix, laser. Since 1983
WORD PROCESSING. Fast, efficient, accurate.
Also tutoring on writing projects. Call Anne,
842 7708
ATTENTION: Art Students
WANTED
I need a portrait of a German Villa painted for x-
gifts gift. Supplies pd. & fee neg. Call Rachelie at
271 098 between 94 M-F. ASAP
Need someone to assume my lease of 1-bdrm apt.
at semester end. 749-3407 after 3:30.
3. Word processing IBM Okidata printer. $1.25/double spaced page. Call before 10 pm. 749-1300. Kathy
Word processing, typing. Papers, resumes, applications, dissertations. Also, assistance with grammar, spelling, composition, editing. Have M.S. Degree, 81-0697, 84-6254.
Policy
Roommate wanted to share space 2 bedroom apartment. Reasonable rent & utilities. Indoor-outdoor pool and jacuzzi. Prefer non-smoker. Take after 4 o'clock weekdays. Greg 843 3779.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate needed to assume lease, or sublease from January 1. On sharing a bedroom Harvard Baskerville. Own bedroom. $200 + rent. ALT780 after 5.
Roommate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne 749-4261.
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester. Call 749-5075. Leave message.
Thirty year old professional needs dependable
housename to JBR shop $165 + $i bills.
844-3546, 841-4842, Rick.
Policy
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
CAPS count as 3 words.
Second Semester Female Roommate wanted.
$180 and ½ units. Walking distance or bus route. Call 842-7855.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
insertion of any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind books are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Deadlines
Words set in **BOLD CAPS** & **BOLD FACE** count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect
placement.
- Deadlines
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Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
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Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
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| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 2 Weeks | 3 Weeks | 1 Month |
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| 16-20 | 3.60 | 5.40 | 7.60 | 12.20 | 17.85 | 22.40 |
| 21-25 | 4.20 | 6.25 | 8.75 | 13.60 | 19.55 | 24.40 |
| 26-30 | 4.75 | 7.10 | 9.90 | 15.00 | 21.30 | 26.35 |
| 31-35 | 5.35 | 7.95 | 11.00 | 16.45 | 22.95 | 28.35 |
CLASSICATIONS
001 announcements 300 for all audiences announced 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personals 900 tipping
100 games 250 sports 700 personal 900 tipping
Please print your ad one word per box:
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Date ad begins.
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119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Chronicle reatures
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"So! . . . Out bob bob bobbing along again!"
Tuesday, November 1, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
C
O
25¢ OFF any 6" SUB
50¢ OFF any 12" SUB
75¢ OFF any 20" SUB
(expires 11:30:88)
S
--shampoo, haircut, & style
OR
highlighting
OR
permanent waving
(expires 11/30/88)
Dine in, carry out, Free Delivery
C H E C K E R S
Reflections
hairstyling
hairstyling
valid thru
Nov. 30th
1031 Vermont
Sus&Stuff Sandwich Shop
good only on Mondays 842-1253
49¢ plus tax
2 16" 2-topping pizzas
+ 4 soft drinks
$9.99 + tax
with this coupon
not valid with other offers
expires 11/14/88
1618 West 23rd
TUFSDAY SPECIAL
Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
--hair care products
8th expires 11-1-
Dine in...Carry out...Free Delivery
3 MOVIES FOR 2 DAYS
CHECKERS
ONLY $400
Good Mon., Tues.& Wed. through
BORDER Buy One Get One
BANDIDO FREE Taco Bar*
1528 W 23rd (across from post office) 842-8861
*valid with this coupon only thru Nov. 14th
Not valid with other offers
VIOEO BIZ
Dine In Lunch Special
6" sandwich of your choice +
cup of soup & salad bar
$2.59
(expires 11:30:88)
749-3507 9th & Iowa
CHECKERS
BORDER
BANDIDO
Buy One Get One
FREE
1 Texas Burrito*
$2.69 value
1528 W. 23rd (across from post office) 842-8861
*valid with this coupon only thru Nov. 14th
TACOS 49c
(Limit 10 with this coupon) OFFER EXPIRES 12/31/88
Get a FREE Runza
Sandwich or 1/4 lb.
Hamburger with the
purchase of French Fries
or Onion Rings.
2214 Yale 0418010
TECO JOB'S
1626 W. 23rd
RUNZA
DRIVE INN
RESTAURANT
1101 W. 6th 1006 Mass.
Cheese, double, deluxe and mushrooms extra One coupon per visit. Not good with any other offer.
--hair care products
8th expires 11-1-
Chicago Style
Italian Roast Beef Sandwich With Fries $2.50
2700 Iowa Lawrence, KS
Cornucopia Restaurant
1801 MASSACHUSETTS
Expires: November 6, 1988
Southern Hills Mall
1001 W. 23rd
Next to Lems
EXTRAORDINARY FRUIT, SOUP & SALAD BAR $3.75 WITH COUPON
Offer Expires 11-15-88
PIZZA Shoppe
MEDIUM
PIZZA
ORIGINAL OR
DEEP PAN
1 TOUR
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
601 KASOLD
1 TOPPING
32 OZ. COKE
ONLY $ 5.95 + TAX
1 TOPPING
32 OZ. COKE
ONLY $7.95 + TAX
Buy one dinner Get 1/2 off 2nd dinner (of equal or lesser value) or
EVERY RECORD IN THE STORE (this does not include...
cassettes. CD. or Advertised Special LP)
House of HuPEI
842-0600
$ 1.00 OFF any one dinner
_DINE-IN !.CARRY-OUT!
FREE DELIVERY
Dine in or carry out. Does not include
Dragon meal. Family dinner. Appetizers on Sunday butler
or any other offer. Limit one coupon per visit
2907 W. 6th
843 W. 1207
Expires 12-31-88
843 W. 1207
湖北
25% OFF
good through 11-04-88
--hair care products
8th expires 11-1-
1 POUND
SPAGHETTI
GARLIC TOAST
32 OZ. COKE
STANDING OVATION presents... 15% OFF
--hair care products
8th expires 11-1-
PIZZA Shoppe
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
601 KASOLD
$4.95
MANICOTTI
GARLIC TOAST
32 OZ. COKE
$4.95
KMS
GYROS
$1 OFF
842-0600
A delicious sandwich made with selected meats and served on fluff
1234567890
-DINE-IN-L.CARRY-OUT-L
FREE DELIVERY
8th expires 11-14-88
COMPADRE'S
749-0771
selected meals and served on fluffy
Pita bread with fresh onions,
tomatoes, and tangy cucumber sauce
COME IN AND TRY ONE TONIGHT!
Good thru Dec. 31st, 1988
not valid with any other offer
not valid with any other offer 1820 W.6th (just east of Iowa)
749. 2770
--coupon expires 11-14-88
NATURAL WAY NATURAL BODY CARE PRODUCTS
THE GRINDER MAN
NATURAL BODY CARE PRODUCTS
15% OFF
all shampoos,
lotions & soaps
FREE
sample
of essence oil
with any purchase
(expires 11/14/88)
Natural Fiber Clothing.
820-822 Mass. 841-0100
FREE LARGE DRINK
Not valid with other offers.
(expires 11/14)
704½ Massachusetts
Purchase any 6" sandwich at regular price and get a FREE large drink.
Open Mon.-Wed. 11-5
Thurs. 11-7
Fri. & Sat. 11-5
PENNYLINE
CASSETTES • COMPACT DISCS • RECORDS • VIDEOS
20% OFF
--coupon expires 11-14-88
Limit one per customer Downtown Hours: 10-8 Mon-Sat.
Not valid with any other offer 844 Mass. 11-6 Sun.
Foynes Nov 6th 19bw Lawrence Ks 66044 749-4211
Men's and women's tube socks $100
Reebok sweatshirts 15% off
Selected shoes up to 70% off
Everything in store 10% off
FREE TOPPING
$1.00 VALUE
SPORTS
UNLIMITED
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
FROZEN YOGURT, ICE CREAM & BAKERY
W/ 10 w. Wth
9:14-10:30 mornings
9:14-10:30 noon
843-0412
1012 Massachusetts
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA LASAGNA SALADS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
Pistoriano
---
GQ
HAIRSTYLING
For Men & Women
$1 off any Yogurt Pie
Please present this coupon before ordering. One order per coupon per customer, up to 100 per person. No returns. Valid with any other offers. Offer good deals at participating HCPR stores. valid value. *Wg of a coupon.*
"TCBY"
The Country Best Yogurt.
Shampoo, Cut
& Blowdry...$13
longer hair (reg. $15)
slightly higher
Call the Anthony Chiropractic Clinic at 841-2218 to make an appointment for your free spinal examination. Please allow 45 minutes for your personal consultation with the doctor and examination procedure.
Coupon good wi iudy.
LoriH., Beckie and Ann.
843-2138
611 W. 9th
Free Spinal Exam Certificate This certificate entitles the bearer to a free spinal examination at the Anthony Chiropractic Clinic.
---
Aerobic Studio 842-1983
Expires 11/15/88
Anthony Chiropractic Clinic
(Across from the Dillons Super Store)
W. 6th Street, Lawrence 841-2218
6 weeks for $30
THE Fitness Factory
We carry a full line of aerobic clothing in the malls shopping center穿上 must be brought in for redemption
---
25c Bowling
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 25¢ game during open bowling (weekday afternoons).
The Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One 864-3545 Expires Nov.15, 1988
$3.00 OFF
Any Large Pizza With 2 or more toppings PYRAMID PIZZA The delivery is Fast, Friendly, and FREE. "We Pile It On" 842-3232
---
r
Vol. 99, No.48 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wednesday November 2,1988
Probation ruling stuns KU
THE PENALTIES AGAINST KANSAS
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportwriter
The verdict is in. The University of Kansas men's basketball program has been found guilty by the National Collegiate Athletic Association and will not be given the opportunity to repeat as national champions.
Kansas Athletic Director Bob Frederick announced yesterday at a news conference in Parrot Athletic Center that the NCAA had put Kansas on probation for three years, prohibiting the Jayhawks from playing in the 1989 NCAA tournament this
Other penalties included in the infractions report are the elimination of all expense-paid recruiting visits by the basketball program in 1989 and a loss of a scholarship for the 1989-90 season.
During that year, Kansas will be allowed to have 12 scholarship players, a reduction of one from this year and three below the NCAA limit of 15.
Kansas is the first school in NCAA history to be put on probation the year after winning a national championship.
- The men's basketball team is on three years probation, including the banning of three unnamed individuals from involvement in Kansas athletics.
- Kansas loses one scholarship for 1989-90, dropping the Jayhawks to 12 scholarship players, three less than the NCAA limit.
- Kansas is banned from postseason play for the 1988-89 season.
- Kansas is not allowed to pay for recruits to visit the KU campus in 1989.
All of the infractions occurred in the summer and fall of 1986 when Larry Brown was basketball coach and Monte Johnson was athletic director. None of the players on last year's national championship team or this year's team were involved in the infractions.
Frederick said he was disappointed by the severity of the penalty, especially since it affected people not involved in the infractions.
infractions case involving the institution within a five-year period. The Kansas football program was put on a two-year probation in 1983.
is frequently the case in NCAA penalties, the people who suffer the consequences of the violations were not involved in the infractions. The University, however, accepts the institutional responsibility for all students whose senior student-athletes, the fact that they will not be eligible for postseason competition."
The ruler was damaging to Kansas' program, but the Jayhawks could have received the "death penalty" since it was the second major
If Kansas had received the death penalty it would have been unable to compete in basketball for at least one season and would have been prohibited from offering scholarships and being involved in recruiting activities for two years.
Kansas coach Roy Williams' reaction to the penalties was mixed.
"I'm extremely disappointed for this year's team," the first-year coach said. "That is very disappointing and frustrating. The NCAA tournament is a great time of year for college basketball. For these young men — the seniors — I'm extremely disappointed.
"But now it's behind us. It's been tough fighting innuendo and rumors. There's no doubt in my mind that our team will do the best it can every day in practice and games. There's no doubt that we can finally happen men (recruits) what has happened. I think this will not affect your career."
when asked if he was angry toward the NCAA or the previous coaching staff Williams said, "What good will it do? I have anger. Scooter (Barry) and Milt (Newton) have anger. Why
Barry and Newton represented the Kansas players at the news conference. Barry said he was upset by the decision that banned him from post-season play during his final season, but vowed to do his best this year.
dwell on it? I'm not saying I'll invite the NCAA or last year's staff to dinner tonight."
"As a team, it would be easy to make executes and say there's nothing to look forward to, to pack it in." Barry said. "We're not highly picked anyway. But I don't think that's the type of team we are. Now is a good opportunity to do a lot of growing up and a lot of fighting."
Newton, who was visibly shaken by the decision, spent much of the conference staring blankly at the floor
Please see INFRACTIONS, p10. col. 1
PETER J. BURKE
Painful news
aling the weight of the NCAA sanctions, men's basketball coach Roy Williams expresses his dismay.
Brown angry in interview Coach says he resents Williams' implications
By Elaine Sung
Associate news editor
Former Kansas coach Larry Brown lashed out last night against the new Kansas men's basketball coach in a live interview with ESPN.
"I resent the fact that they can imply that we didn't run a clean program, just hearing Roy Williams" remarks about what North Carolina was did. He was solved with a program that wasn't clean. It obvious after you read the infractions that it wasn't an effort on our part to try to cheat."
"The thing that bothers me is that ever since I left KU, the new coach and the athletic director have been taking shots at us right from the start, and that has really troubled me because I know I left the program in pretty darn good shape." Brown said at the news conference.
In a 3 p.m. news conference yesterday in San Antonio, Texas, Brown also accused Bob Frederick, Kansas athletic director, of making disparaging remarks about Brown and his staff.
Brown left Kansas in June to take
INSIDE
**Page 8**
■ The effect on KU recruiting
■ Fans' reaction to ruling
**Page 9**
■ KU came close to death penalty
■ How another school responded
■ Why KU won't appeal decision
**Page 11**
■ the complete NCAA report
INSIDE
Frederick, reached at his home last night, responded to Brown's remark.
the head coaching job with the NBA San Antonio Spurs, taking along Alvin Gentry, Ed Manning and R.C. Buford, his three assistants at Kansas
"Well, I don't take shots at anybody, especially a friend, and I was surprised to hear him say that because I have never said anything but complimentary things about him. He's a great coach and he did great things here," Frederick said.
During the live interview, Brown
Please see BROWN, p. 10, col. 1
Despite news, seniors try to shake off frustration
and Jeff Luston Kansan sportwriters
By Mark E. McCormick and Jeff Fuston
Seven months ago, Milt Newton and Scooter Barry stood on top of the basketball world.
work.
At the glory of a hard-earned national championship began to sink in, their thoughts turned to defending that title this season as seniors.
But those dreams crumbled yesterday morning when Kansas coach Roy Williams informed them they would not be able to defend the title.
"I met with the team this (yesterday) morning at 7:30 and that's by far the most difficult meeting I've ever been associated with," said Williams, who took over for
former coach Larry Brown on July 8. "I'm extremely disappointed for this year's team, especially the seniors. That is very disappointing. It's frustrating."
"When I heard the news this morning, it really hit me like a ton of bricks," said Newton, who, like Barry, is in his fifth year at Kansas. "I thought I wasn't going to be really seriously affected by it.
in the aftermath of the NCAA penalties against the Jayhawks, which included a three-year probation, no paid visits by recruits in 1988 and a ban on postseason play this spring. Newton sat staring at the table in front of him.
"Personally, during the summer when we were being investigated by the NCAA, I tried
to ingrain in my mind that if we did go on
probation, I would try not to let it affect me
tears
Barry, of Oakland, Calif., fielding questions in a fixed stare, shared his teammate's disappointment.
Newton, who was drawn into the spotlight last spring in the NCAA tournament, was overwhelmed by the attention yesterday. He left midway through the morning news conference with reddened eyes glazed with tears.
Neither Newton nor Barry said they harbored any resentment toward their former coach.
"It still comes as a shock to me that we were not going to be able to play in the NCAA," Burry said. "I've been fortunate enough the last four years to make it every year."
"I don't feel bitter at all toward the past coaching staff or Coach Brown," Newton said.
Brown in 1884 and made two Final Four appearances with him.
Barry showed concern for the new coaching staff and the problems they v inherited.
Years of Marks ever played
Newton and Barry were recruited by
"I feel bad for Coach Williams and his son, and the rest of our team in that we're the people — they're the people — who are going to have to pay for all the things that were done," he said. "It's hard for me to understand that.
"I'm upset that the violations that were
done by the last staff have to be paid for by this staff. I don't think that's fair."
the menace Though their senior season has not started as they had planned. Barry and Newton said the season wasn't a total loss
Williams shielded the rest of the players from the media.
"I think now, because it happened, I think we'll be more fired up and it will make us play even harder." Newton said. "We're going to have to play together and not give up this year."
this year.
Barry said, "It's an opportunity for us to do a lot of growing up and a lot of fighting. We've got an uphill battle. But that didn't stop us last year, and I don't think that's going to us this year."
Israeli parties fight for election victory
JERUSALEM - The right-wing Likud bloc and left-learning Labor Party duelled head to head in yesterday's parliamentary elections, and the small religious parties held the balance of power
The Associated Press
Likud leader Yitzhak Shamir appeared to have the edge in forming a rulernation, and said he was convinced he could remain prime minister with the help of the religious parties.
Related story p. 6, col. 1
parties.
But Foreign Minister Shimon
Apure said his Labor Party still had a
chance of luring religious parties into a
Labor-led coalition.
The election was widely viewed as a crossroads in determining the future of the occupied territories and
shaping Israel's policy for dealing with its hostile Arab neighbors. A Palestinian insurrection has gone on for 11 months in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, claiming the lives of more than 300 Palestinians and 10 Israelis.
Labor advocated an international conference to talk peace with the Arabs, and proposed sacrificing some of the occupied land for a negotiated settlement. Likud opposed both proposals.
With 95 percent of the 4,300 polling stations reporting, Israel army radio said Likud was projected to get 39 seats in parliament and the 129 seat Knesset, or parliament
Intense negotiations were expected to take place behind the scenes today, as Labor leaders woo the Shas party, projected to be the largest religious party with six seats.
Dukakis invokes memories of Truman
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
KANSAS CITY, MO. — If the scoreboard at Penn Valley Community College was any indication, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis will win the election in a landslide.
The score was Dukakis 50, Bush 6.
One week before the presidential election, the Democratic nominee invoked the memory of Harry Truman as he continued attacks on Vice President George Bush at a Democratic rally at the college.
An audience of 5,000 crowded inside Penn Valley's gymnasium while 5,000 listeners listened to the speech from loudspeakers outside.
to the speech from local public school
Dukakis quickly challenged Bush's statement that Harry Truman would be a Republican were he alive today.
"Can you believe those Republicans?" Dukakis asked the audience. "I guess they don't have any heroes, so they have to try to steal ours. We're not going to let them do it."
Dukakis compared the 1988 campaign with the 1948 campaign between Harry Truman and Thomas Dewey in which Truman came from behind to win the election.
Dukakis compared the 1988 campaign with the 1948 campaign between Harry Truman and Thomas Dewey in which Truman came from behind to win the election.
"In 1948, Harry Truman said, 'The smart boys said we can't win. They tried to bluff us. We called their bluff. We told people the truth.'" Dukakis said, "Harry Truman stood for the little guy, and you're looking at him."
Dukakis also attacked the Republicans as a party of the rich and privileged.
"He (Bush) wants to help people on easy street," Dukakis said. "I want to help people on Main Street."
Matti He thinks he can inherit the White House. I think the next president needs to earn the White House. Hard workers, not high rollers, built this country."
country duakis then hit hard on the question of ethics
"We will demand public service, not self-service," Dukakis said. "We need a White House where the ethics office is in the Oval Office."
where the ethics office is in Dukakis reiterated his attack on the federal budget and trade deficits and repeated his promise of "good jobs at good wages."
He accused the Republicans of inaction while jobs were moved to foreign countries.
"We're going to turn the deficit into a surplus and bring those jobs work," Dukakis said. "If you believe the minimum wage should be living wage, and not a poverty wage, we're on your side."
Dukakis finished his speech with a prediction that he would win the election.
"On November 8, we'll be celebrating with a bottle of beer and a plate of Kansas City ribs," Dukakis said.
Most speechgoers were unanimous in their approval of Dukakis' performance.
Tom Brown, Kansas City, Mo., resident, said the momentum of the presidential race had shifted to Dukakis.
---
Please see DUKAKIS, p. 6, col. 1
2
Wednesday, November 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Unseasonable weather!
High: 74°
Low: 43°
Expect mostly sunny skies today with a few late afternoon clouds and a mild high of 74 degrees.
Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low of 43 degrees.
North Platte
74/42
Partly sunny
Omaha
79/42
Mostly sunny
Goodland
78/45
Mostly sunny
Salina
78/44
Mostly sunny
Toppeka
79/43
Mostly sunny
Columbia
67/08
Partly cloudy
St Louis
65/35
Partly cloudy
Dodge City
78/44
Mostly sunny
Wichita
77/44
Mostly sunny
Chanda
77/44
Mostly sunny
Springfield
79/42
Partly cloudy
Forecast by Mike LaPoint
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low.
5-Day
Thursday
Mostly sunny
70/45
HIGH LOW
Friday
Partly cloudy
70/42
Saturday
Sunny
68/40
Sunday
Sunny
66/36
Monday
Partly cloudy
67/40
The nation
Seattle
59/00
H
Denver
70/39
H
Phoenix
83/58
L
Dallas
79/60
New York
58/34
Los Angeles
71/60
Fortress:
cold
occurred
warm
stationary
Miami
81/67
Seattle 75/50
H
Denver 70/39
Cleveland 52/37
New York 55/34
Los Angeles 71/60
Phoenix 83/58
Dallas 79/60
Miami 81/67
Fronts:
cold
occurred
warm
stationary
Menu Featuring fresh beef, seafood, lamb, veal, and chicken dishes People make the difference at Fifi Nabil's 9th & Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center
fifi's NABUEN
Restaurant
M-F 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Tu-Sa 5 p.m.-10 p.m.
Sun-Mon 5 p.m.-9 p.m.
841-7226
The AIDS Service Providers meeting will be held in Room 804, Missouri State
On Campus
The KU History Club will meet at 4 today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union. Refreshments will be served.
■ Anorexia Nervosa and Associate Disorders will meet from 6 to 7:30 tonight in room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Dungeons and Dragons Club will
meet at the Lions Club. Ploneon
from the Kings Club.
The KU Chess Club will meet at 7 tonight in Alcove A at the Kansas
The University Forum will begin at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. For reservations, call 843-4933. Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, will speak on "Bloom's Criticism of High Education: We're not Completely Gully."
The KU Chapter of Mortar Board will meet at 5 tonight. For a ride, meet at 4:45 p.m. at Nunemaker Center.
The KU Society of Fantasy and Science Fiction will meet at 8:15 tonight in the Oread Room at the Kangas Union.
The Retirees Club will meet at 10 a.m. today in the Adam Loung at
A Mainframe Seminar on "Introduction to SPSS-X" will be at 1 p.m. in the Computer Services Facility
Adams Alumni Center. Music will be at 10:45 a.m.
A research support seminar will be at 1 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union. Call 864-0100 to register.
The School of Business Dean's Seminar will be at 2 p.m. today in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union. Judith Hancock, head of internals in practice at Shook, Hardy and Bacon in Kansas City, Mo. will be speaking.
■ The film "Women for America:
Women for the World" will be shown at 7:30 tonight in the Walnut Room at the Kansas University.
Patricia Goodiek of the University of Montana will give a poetry reading at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
■ James Yorke will speak on "The Furniture Designs of Robert Adam" at 7:30 tonight in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
SUA will show the movie "Walk-about" at 8 tonight in woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. Cost is $1.50.
A music honor recital will be at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
Police Record
■ Perishable food valued at $2,400 was ruined Monday when an unknown suspect turned off the power at the breaking box of an ice cream shop in the 1000 block of Lawrence Street. Lawrence police reported.
Lawrence police reported.
A Rolex watch, men's shirts and currency valued together at $2,376 were taken Sunday from a car in the parking lot of a restaurant in the 3400 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported. The suspect also took $200 worth of food from the restaurant
A stereo system valued at $1,600 was taken Monday from a residence in the 2300 block of Freestreet Lane,
An inexpensive stereo, an amplifier and a radar detector mounted together at $850 were taken Monday from a car parked in the 1800 block of 23rd Street. Lawrence police reported.
An alpine tree valued at $500 was taken Monday from a car parked in the 4800 block of West 15th Street, Lawrence police reported.
■ An alpine tree valued at $430 was taken Mounday from a car parked in the 1600 block of Crescent Drive, Lawrence police reported.
■ Women's clothing valued at $200 was taken sometime between Sunday night and Monday morning from a car in the 1000 block of Emerv Road.
If you need abortion or birth
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841-2665
2011 ECUNIT for women
4401 West 109th (1.435 & Roe)
Overland Park, Kansas
For information and appointments (913) 345-1400
Toll Free (except KS) 1-800-271-1918
THE COMIC CORNER
NE corner of 23rd & Iowa *814-4294
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
Call 864-4810
BROOKLYN BANKING CENTER
YOUR VOICE IN THE KANSAS SENATE
Wint's great-great-grandfather homesteaded near Lecompont around 1854, and the family has lived in the area ever since. Wint attended the University of Kansas, graduated with honors from the KU Law School, and now practices law in Lawrence.
Active in many civic organizations, Wint has served as a board member of the United Fund, Boy's Club and The Shelter, inc. children's home. A member of the first class of Leadership Lawrence, he was chosen by the non-partisan Council of Young American Political Leaders as a U.S. representative to an international-relations conference in West Berlin in 1984.
In the Kansas Senate, Wint serves as Chair of the Economic Development Committee, and serves on the important Ways and Means Committee as well as the Board of Directors of Governmental Organizations committees.
Re-elect Wint Winter November 8th.
WINT WINTER
Paid Adj. Adv. Winter for Senate Committee, Bonnie Wells, Treas.
Start practicing for for the real world.
Using an IBM Personal System/2 computer to help you succeed in college can also prepare you to succeed in a career. Because chances are, after you graduate, you'll be working on an IBM computer.
So the IBM PS/2 is the perfect investment. It can help you organize your notes, write and revise papers, produce high quality graphics, and more. And not only is it easy to learn and use, but if eligible, you'll have the opportunity, during PS/2 Campus Sale days, to purchase a new Personal System/2 at special low prices.
Get a head start by working now on the computer you'll probably be working on later. So stop by for your Personal System/2 and start practicing today!
ORDERS WILL BE ACCEPTED FROM NOVEMBER 1,
TO DECEMBER 7, 1988.
ABOUT FINANCING!
Loan Assistance
If you are a student interested in financing a Personal System/2, contact the Financial Aid office at 26 Strong Hall.
An application for the IBM Credit Card (for Students, Faculty and Staff) is available in the Jayhawk Bookstore.
IBM Credit Card
DEMONSTRATION FAIRS
Hands-on demonstrations will be held daily from 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. at the Jayhawk Bookstore and Academic Computer Center. Attend a demonstration and receive a free "Make an Impression" t-shirt.
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
$ \textcircled{c} $IBM CORPORATION 1988
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.•Lawrence, Ks. 66044 (913)843-3826
IBM
The Bigger Picture.
© IBM CORPORATION 1988
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 2. 1988
Campus/Area
3
AUDRIEL LACOSTE
Lisa Pfleiderer, St. Louis senior, and Eddie Scheer, St. Louis., senior, begin a long night of painting.
Students hope for paint rooms with ventilation in Marvin Hall
Kansan staff writer
By Debbie McMahon Kenson staff writer
When deadline is near for some architecture projects, students can smell it in the air at Marvin Hall.
ects, students can sniff in paint, and students in the School of Architecture and Urban Design don't have a ventilated room to paint their models.
So they work in the building's halls or they take their projects outdoors.
"Everybody knows we need a paint*room," said Jimmy Powell, St. Louis, Mo., senior. "You can't really go outside if it's dark. And if it's 10 degrees out there, your paint won't spray right."
The support rooms, where the painting is done now, do not have adequate ventilation or lighting. Powell said.
Ventilation is important in using paints. Face masks also can help, Kelly said.
Theresa Kelly, poison specialist at the University of Kansas Medical Center Poison Control Center, said exposure to fumes from spray paints could cause respiratory problems that required hospital treatment. The concentration of the fumes and length of exposure determine the amount of danger.
Lisa Pflederer, St. Louis, Mo., senior, said painting occurred every two to three weeks. She has had headaches because of the fumes.
"it's particularly bad at certain times, when we're working on something at once. Sometimes you don't
want to breathe it's so horrible," she said.
I believe we need to have that type of a facility, and we should make it a priority on the dean's list," Rockhill said.
Dan Rockhill, associate professor of architecture and urban design, said the school would need more money to get a ventilated paint room.
But, he said, "I think we would be hard pressed to find room for it."
Rene Diaz, chairman of the architecture program,
said a ventilated room to paint models had been a priority at the school. But he said it was one priority among many.
"We are overcrowded in this building." Diaz said.
"Spraying is just one issue of many. We need more lecture halls. I think a spray room is small potatoes compared to our other needs."
Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design, said that the school had requested the addition each of its 12 classrooms to be equipped with a digital
Diaz said the ultimate goal at the school was to get an addition to Marvin.
Eric Eakins, Wichita senior and vice president of the American Institute of Architecture Students at KU, said that he sent a questionnaire to architecture students last spring and that many responded positively to a spray room with good lighting and windows. However, he hasn't been able to work on the project this semester.
College Assembly decides against plus/minus system
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
For many students in the College Assembly, yesterday ended their long, drawn-out battle to defeat the plus/minus grading system.
Effort to rescind motion gains student support
The Assembly, the governing body of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, voted 255-200 by mail-in ballot to drop the grading system. The assembly voted to rescind a decision made this spring to implement the system.
The decision was announced at yesterday's Assembly meeting, attended by about 50 members, most of whom were students.
William Bayne, Lawrence sophomore and president of Students Against the Plus/Minus Grading System, said that the Assembly's student membership was responsible for nullifying the decision.
"The students voted 72 to seven to rescind," Bayne said. "If you took away the students, the motion would have failed by 10 votes. It proves that students play an important role in governance at the University of Kansas."
Stephen Shawl, professor of physics and astronomy and proposer of the plus/minus grading system for the college, said that he was disap
pointed with the Assembly's decision.
"Although KU likes to think of itself as the Cornbelt Berkeley, the students show they think of it as the Cornbelt Oklahoma." Shawl said, referring to the University of Oklahoma. He didn't Big Eight school without a plus/minus system.
On Monday, the mail-in ballots were counted by two college officials with Bavne and Shawl witnessing.
In March, the Assembly voted 213-165 to adopt the plus/minus system, which was modeled after similar ones used in some professional schools.
AT the time of the original vote, only 20 students filled the 113 student representative seats in the Assembly. An election this fall added 75 members.
In October, the Assembly voted to reconsider the system through a mail-in ballot because of the controversy the grading system evoked.
James Muyksens, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said at the meeting he was encouraged by the unusually strong student participation, but the precedent of rescinding an Assembly decision concerned him. The Assembly should be more careful when considering policy, he said.
"It behooves all members of the Assembly to take a consistent, active interest in proposals before the body, so that it may take timely and decisive action," he said.
James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said that since coming to the University in 1970, he had never seen the Assembly. "Only after a policy had been implemented for years had he seen a reversal"
Judy Beck, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, said she thought the recent decision was positive for students. The plus/minus grading system would have placed too much emphasis on grades, and competition for grades is already too intense, she said.
"It really would have violated my beliefs of education," Beck said. "Education shouldn't be based on the mark you receive."
Muyskens commended Shawl, who did not attend the meeting, for his efforts.
"He persevered in the face of indifference from his colleagues and in the face of uncertainty and inaction from the standing committee structure," he said. "His original success proves that an individual can make a difference."
Fraud suit filed against 60 parties in area-based operation
Investors may regain money
By Daniel Niemi
Kansan staff writer
Investors in a pyramid scheme operated from Lawrence in 1985 may see some of their money returned if a lawsuit filed this month in federal court receives a favorable ruling.
favorable ruling.
John Noonan, a Kansas City, Mo., attorney, filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Mo., against 60 people and companies involved in Culture Farms Inc., a corporation set up in Lawrence in early 1985
"The whole purpose of the suit is to try to recover money for persons who bought cultures and were defrauded." Noonan said.
defrauded. Noonan said.
Noonan said the bankruptcy trustee, Christopher J. Redmond of Wichita, had traced money from Culture Farms to the individuals and corporations named in the suit. Some of the money has been traced to Great Britain, France and other foreign countries.
"Money flowed from individuals to corporations, sometimes by very circuitous routes." Noan said.
sometimes by In Culture Farms bought packets of an activator from a sister company of Culture Farms to grow bacterial cultures from milk. Investors sold the cultures to Culture Farms, which then was supposed to sell them to Cleopatra's Secret, a Reno, Nev., firm.
However, officials have said that the Reno firm never produced cosmetics and that the investors received money from Culture Farm's sale of activator kits to additional investors, not from the sale of the culture*
Cleopatra's Secret supposedly used the cultures in facial cream.
Culture Farms eventually stopped making payments to investors, and the sale of activator kits was banned by a Kansas judge in June 1985. Noonan said a dozen people were indicted and pleaded guilty to charges in connection with the scheme.
with the scientist
Diana Castelli, a para-legal in Redmond's Wichita office, said $113 million in claims had been filed against Culture Farms by more than 20,000 investors.
"My goal is to bring the claims down to $20 million," Castell said.
However, she sad many of the investors had filed claims for lost profits and that Redmond was allowing only the initial investment to be recovered.
Redmond was out of town and unavailable for comment.
The 294-count complaint includes charges of money lauding, bankruptcy fraud and securities fraud. Also, Noonan said the suit charged that the operators of Culture Farms used the mail and telephone in the course of committing a fraud, a violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.
Census recount not much different
Kansan staff writer
By Deb Gruver
Census count+
About two weeks ago, KU resident assistants became door-to-door representatives for the state census office.
But their work in a campus census recount did little to boost the census figures of Douglas County and Lawrence. The final census figures for the state were released yesterday and peg Douglas County at 59,411 and Lawrence at 44,980.
The following figures include everyone who has declared permanent residency as Douglas County and Lawrence.
The figures are lower than those of the 1979 agricultural census and are not much higher than the preliminary figures that spurred the recount on the campuses of all Regents schools.
November 1, 1988 figures:
Douglas County...59,441
Lawrence...44,980
In the first census, students and military personnel were not counted as permanent residents of Douglas County and Lawrence, and students
1988 preliminary count:
Douglas County...58,272
Lawrence...44,095
1979 agricultural census:
Douglas County...74,257
Lawrence...58,561
KANSAN graphic
in residence halls were not contacted at all.
Four Lawrence legislators said that the decision was unconstitutional and demanded the recount.
State Sen. Wint Winter, R-
Lawrence, State Rep. John Solbach,
D-Lawrence, State Rep Betty Jo
Charlton, D-Lawrence and State
Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence
have opposed the census figures and
are not satisfied with the recount
In an interview last week, Winter called the recount a farce.
I telt all along that the recount was a useless gesture." Charlton said. "The off-campus students were ever counted, and not not have ever been counted at all."
Charlton said yesterday that the figures might cause Lawrence to lose representation in the state.
She and the other legislators had requested the use of voter registration records in consideration of census figures.
The Business Staff would like to recognize the following individuals for outstanding achievement and service to their accounts during the month of October.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Scott Frager Regional Divisional Sales Manager
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Independent Study is a statewide service, mandated by the Kansas Board of Regents to serve the correspondence study needs of Kansans. As a unit of the University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education, Independent Study offers approved college courses similar to those taught in residence. Independent Study courses include:
Independent Study is flexible, convenient, and personalized. You can enroll at any time, set your own pace, and study at home. For further information on Independent Study and its costs, or to obtain the complete catalog of courses, call 864-4440 or stop by independent Student Services. Continuing Education Building Annex A, located directly north of the Kansas Union
4
wednesday, November 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Basketball program hurt, but everyone feels the pain
Maybe the image of Milt Newton at the NCAA news conference yesterday sums it up best.
With tears welling up in his eyes and his voice choked with emotion, Newton symbolized the feeling of many University of Kansas students: humiliation, shock and disbelief that the Jayhawks have fallen so low, so quickly, after soaring so high in April.
The NCAA's surprise decision to place KU on three years probation makes KU the first NCAA basketball champion to be legally denied the chance to defend its title.
The main victims of the violations are KU students and basketball players - who often are one and the same. Their school, coaches and administrators have victimized them.
school, coaches and administrators Students and players depend on the advice and teachings of parents, teachers, coaches, administrators and others. The trust is given with the belief that they will not be led astray.
trust is given with the better understanding. KU has failed on that count. How could Newton have known that his one chance to be the leader on a major college basketball team would go unnoticed in basketball circles because of the illegal acts by coaches and team supporters who Newton put his trust in?
Newton put his trust in:
How could students who eagerly await basketball season have known that they must endure a season that has almost lost its meaning? Or that they represent a school that is now better known for lack of integrity rather than for athletic and academic achievements?
The answer is they couldn't. They put their trust in University officials, who in turn performed illegal acts that cost students these chances.
cost students these chances.
And while students, players, athletic director Bob Frederick and coach Roy Williams take the brunt of the punishment, the main violators have left town scot-free. If the NCAA is serious about stopping illegal actions, it should go beyond yesterday's rulings to ensure that the guilty people are disassociated from college athletics for several years.
college athletics for several years. Larry Brown was clever enough to move to San Antonio before the bill collector came. What is to stop to him moving to another college coaching position? If the NCAA were serious about athletic integrity, it would ban Brown from any NCAA coaching position. He has demonstrated an inability to run a clean program. It is too late for KU, but there is no reason another university should have to suffer the same way.
reason another team might win. In its findings, the NCAA wrote that it had lost confidence that the school would enforce its rules. The fact that the violations came within five years of KU's football probation led the NCAA to consider the death penalty for the basketball team.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig's failure to be present at the news conference did not help in this respect. As the most responsible official at the University — and the only one still at KU who was here when the violations occurred — Budig chose to allow Bob Frederick and Roy Williams, two innocent people in the situation, to face the press yesterday.
That type of invisibility and lack of leadership doesn't suggest a very serious approach to a very serious situation. Leadership was needed yesterday and during the football probation period. Budig apparently has failed to do so.
profession. In the goal of athletics and extracurricular activities gets lost in the hoopla surrounding major college programs and the burning desire to win. But in the end, sports and other activities are designed to supplement and enhance a young person's education and enable that student to make a meaningful and lasting contribution to the real world.
Activities such as sports, music, art and student government give students the opportunity to learn to work with others, to take on practical responsibility, and to discover the best in others and themselves.
The championship team can keep the trophy with pride. It was won fairly, the team played honestly and it represents good memories that the NCAA can't change. The athletic department, however, needs to work to rebuild its record and restore the University's reputation.
Mark Tilford for the editorial board
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board.
The editorial board consists of Michael Merschel, Mark Tillford, Todd Cohen, Michael Horak, Julie Adam, Julie McMahon, Christine Martin, Tony Balandran and Muktha Jost.
News staff
Opinion
Todd Cohen...Editor
Michael Horak...Managing editor
Julie Adam...Associate editor
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Jill Jess...Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
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MICHAUD UDK
Nobel given to a great literature
Prize reveals sad lack of concern in West for Arabic ways
The Swedish Academy of Letters is to be congratulated on its award of the Nobel Prize for Literature this year to an Arabic writer for the first time in its history. The award to Egypt's Nagub Mahfouz says something both newly encouraging and vastly depressing: that the West is again reaching out to one of the world's great literatures, and that it should have taken so long.
The general appreciation of Islamic literature in the West may be limited to the "Arabian Nights" and the "Rubaiyat," which is no longer Omar Khayyam's so much as Edward FitzGerald's; its traditional English version resembles a medieval picnic rather than a Persian picnic. A Book of Wine, called *An Arabic/Ajug of Wine*, a Loaf of Bread — and Thou . . .) The Persians themselves know Omar Khayyam as a minor poet, and among Arabs "The Thousand and One Night" is given all the literary weight of a comic book.
Westerners may know what the Koran is but may never have read it. More importantly, they may never have heard it, that "imitable symphony, the very sounds of which move men to tears and ecstasy." That description of the Glorious Koran comes from an English scholar who knew Arabic. Marmaduke Pickhall.
A critic who did not, Thomas Carlyle, found it as "tedious a piece of reading as I ever undertook, a wearisome, confused jumble, crude, incodite — nothing but a sense of duty could carry any European through the Koran." Such is the difference between the original experience and the facsimile for export. To read the Koran in anything but Arabic, as the Jews say of reading the Hebrew Bible in any other language, must be like kissing the bride through the veil.
*How familiar Americans may be with Islamic civilization in general is illustrated by a portion of Grant Butler's memoir of life with the Arabian American Oil Company back in the 1960s. He wrote:
---
"During our first week at the Aramco school on Long Island, questions were asked of us to ascertain our general knowledge about the Arab world. The questions 'What is Islam?' and 'Who was the Prophet Mohammed?' brought forth some interesting answers. One of our members thought that Islam was 'a game of chance, similar to bridge.' Another said it was 'a mysterious sect founded in the South by the Ku Klux Klan.' One gentleman believed it to be 'an organization of American Masons who dress in strange costumes.' The Prophet Mohammed was thought to be the man who 'wrote the 'Arabian Nights.'" Another said he was 'an American Negro minister who was in competition with Father Divine in New York City.' One of the more reasonable answers came from one of our men who said, 'Mohammed had something to do with a mountain. He either went to the mountain, or it came to him.' "
Paul Greenberg
Syndicated columnist
spiritual sensibilities were not sufficiently conventional to please the religious ones. That he should now be honored, and that his fellow Arabs should take pride in this honor from the West, is a hopeful portent.
this year's Nobel for literature honors the greatness of a civilization, not its decay. Naguib Mahfouz is not a writer for those who dream of vengeance and lose themselves in idle hatreds. His life's work is a reminder of the Arabdom of old, for once upon a time it was the Arabs who represented science and learning, tolerance and enlightenment in the known world. His writings were banned across the Arab world when he supported Anwar Sadat's peace treaty with the infidel. He depicted Gamal Nasser's Egypt so well that he found himself in trouble with the political authorities, and bi-
If Westerners now know a little more about the Arab world, what we know is often distorted by stereotypes, the kind inevitably produced by that most predictable refuge of every decadent civilization: fanaticism. Surely no one need tell Southerners how that debilitating process works. Defeat leads to bitterness to rage, rage to violence and terror. The history of the Palestine Liquidation Organization is not entirely dissimilar from that of the Knights of the White Camelia or the old Klu Klux. Defeat will breed some of the same strange growths anywhere.
Blacklisted or not, Nagub Mahfouz was read throughout Arabdom, and modern writer or not, his words trill and incandesce as they express an old longing — finally to be free of history's shackles. ("... you still feel oppressed in this cottage, in the midst of a grassy lawn surrounded by a fence lined with cypress trees. And you await the day when the cypresses will disappear, the day when the plants will no longer whisper night's sorrows, the day when the frogs will fall cockroaches and the croaking of the frogs will silent, the day when memory will lose its tyranny
The critiques find in his writings the story of a modern society emerging out of old ways, but Naguib Mahfouz is no sociologist or politician but a writer, a writer only, and so surpasses all, as literature surpasses trends, as people surpass the expectations of those who would classify and predict their every reaction. Naguib Mahfouz is a writer of the city, and his city is Cairo, as surely as Lawrence Durrell remade Alexandra in his own vision, and Buenos Aires still belongs to Borges.
with the impetus of the Nobel, all the world will soon learn Cairo through the eyes of Naguib Mahfouz, what a stark, unrelenting, piercing, instructive sight it should be.
This tribute from the West is more than a tribute; it is an expression of hope. A writer who can capture the past and present, as in "Cairo Trilogy," has shaped the future, too. The civilization that blossomed in the gardens of Cordoba before the barbarian arrived awaits only a word to thrive again in the light. And in the world that Nagub Mahafuoz has spun, there is visible the first glint of a new day true at last to the old and best.
Awake! for Morning! We put that put the Stars to flight; And Lo! the hunter of the East has caught
■ Paul Greenberg is a syndicated columnist who writes for the Pine Bluff, Ark. Gazette.
Beerbower Hall
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 2, 1988
5
Building marks 100th year
Steve Jansen, director of Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St., displays old photos of the bank building as part of an open house celebrating its 100th anniversary. The structure cost $100,000 to build and would cost about $4 million to replace
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
The image shows a man holding a large photograph. He is wearing a suit and tie, and has a beard. The background includes a desk with several photographs displayed on it.
On Nov. 1, 1888, there were 10,000 people living in Lawrence, just more than 500 students were enrolled at the University of Kana- and J.B. Watkins opened what was the largest building in the city.
Yesterday marked the centennial of Watkins Memorial Bank Building, 1047 Massachusetts St., which has housed many businesses during the century, and is the Elizabetht. M. Watkins Community Museum.
The Watkins building downtown was described as "a veritable marble hall" when it was opened 100 years ago. Museum director Steve Janssen said preservation of the beauty of the building was an important part in establishing the Watkins interest in Lawrence and the University.
"I.B. Watkins was the first to try to make Kansas attractive, to try to rid it of the reputation as the great American desert," Jansen said. "He chose the location at 11th and Mass, as an indication of how optimistic he was that Lawrence would grow."
Jack Newcomb, Lawrence resident and museum volunteer, compiled a history of the Watkins building and of the Watkins farm.
"I fell in love with the building, so I started looking at the history of it — the letters Watkins wrote and then got to getting it built," Newcomb said.
Jansen said that when Watkins opened a farmers' loan mortgage company in the building, Massachusetts Street was not the core of Lawrence's business district, as it is today.
"The University was a quarter-mile from town then," Jansen said. "If it hadn't been for the students, KU would be down town today."
The Watkins built their home, the residence of the KU chancellor on the edge of campus.
When J.B. Watkins died in 1921, his estate was left to his wife.
Elizabeth Watkins became the executor of the estate in 1924 and donated the money for the construction of Miller and Watkins halls and Watkins Hospital, which then was located in Twente Hall. She also donated the money for Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
The Watkins building downtown was given to the city of Lawrence, and was used as City Hall from 1929 until 1970. While the building was used as a governmental office, some of the original features were amended to make the building more modern.
"They lowered some of the ceilings and covered much of the floor," Jansen said. "Then in 1969, the city manager said it was unworthy of renovation, so the city moved out."
"When they covered all of that up, it helped preserve it," Newcomb said. "Only a few repairs bad to be made to the ceiling."
Newcomb said attempts by the city to modernize the building actually helped retain some of the
original features, such as the ornately patterned plaster ceilings and the mosaic floors.
Jansen said that $500,000 was raised between 1970 and 1985 to help keep the Watkins building as a museum.
"Our initial desire was to save the building, but then we saw it would be suitable for a museum," the architect said, in buildings need to have a function.
He said that care had been taken to preserve the character of the interior, and that the exhibits were all freestanding so as not to interfere with the original plan of the building.
Candidate for Socialist party campaigns for political action
By Mark E. McCormick Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
James Warren, the Socialist Workers party candidate for president, would rather have people change the world than do it himself.
A. E. F. B.
"I want people to think socially and act politically." Warren said to about 50 people last night at the Kansas Union.
During the speech, which lasted almost two hours, Warren attacked the presidential candidates for their lack of attention to working class issues, and presented his three point Action Plan that is the basis for his campaign.
"They don't care about you; they are trying to make themselves presentable to the rich bankers and capitalists," Warren said of Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis and Vice President George Bush.
Leaders like Jesse Jackson, former democratic presidential candidate, add to the problem of oppression of the working class by not properly addressing problems like drug abuse, he said.
"Jesse Jackson blames the victims," Warren said. "He tells them, 'Clean yourself up' and offers them
Sandra J. Watts/KANSAN
Sandra J. WattisKANSW
James Warren, Social Workers
Party candidate for the presidency,
addresses about 50 people in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
no alternative on how to change their lives."
Warren said drug users and small-
time pushers were the victims and big business, which brings in the drugs, was the criminal.
drugs, was the criminal. "We should treat victims like victims, not criminals, and these people are victims," he said.
Point one of Warren's Action Plan calls for universal recognition that most people live in a depression and are being exploited by the rich.
People who can, should fight to defend the oppressed like they are defending themselves, Warren said in point two. As part of point three, he urged the shortening of the work hours for 40 to 30 hours with no pay deduction.
People should enter the political battle and fight for their rights instead of waiting for charismatic leaders to rescue them, Warren said.
"There are no heroes," he said, Alvino Carrillo, of Kansas City, Kan., said he'd lost faith in the American system and was a Warren supporter because he believed in Warren's thinking.
"My experiences in life have shown me that America is racist, and I had no illusions that this was a democracy." Carrillo said.
Supremacists declining, speaker says
Carrillo said people and not political parties would make changes in this country.
By James Farquhar
Kansan staff writer
Seeds of resentment often find fertile ground in the minds of those who feel threatened.
In the early 1980s, right-wing white supremacist organizations took advantage of economically tough times in the Midwest to recruit farmers into their hate groups, said Leonard Zeskind, national research director for the Center for Democratic Renewal in Kansas City, Mo.
Supremacists have suggested the reasons for economic crises in agriculture stem from others who have control over the economic market.
"They (white supremacists) have figured out they weren't going to win without violence," Zeskind said. So they have promoted division between whites of European descent, Jews and blacks.
And worse, they have found a new following among younger communities in this country. The average age of supremacy organization members is declining, he said. Zerkliak spoke last night for about an hour in the Big
Zeskind spoke last night for about an hour in the Big
Eight Room at the Kansas Union. Then he fielded questions from about 60 people for another 45 minutes.
KU Hillein sponsored Zeskind's presentation, which was the first in a three-part discussion series examining issues raised by Elie Wiesel's Oct. 17 visit to the University of Kansas.
The remaining two forums will be Nov. 15 and 29.
The remaining two forums will be Nov. 15, 15.
Zeskid said the image of house of Klaus Klan marches might have faded from the collective psyche of the country, but organized radical right-wing politics did not.
sound 10100. named Popist party, originally of the late 1890s,
nominated Duke David for the 1898 presidential elections.
Duke, he said, was an imperial wizard of the Ku Klux
Klan in the 1790s.
Kiah in the 1980s. Right-wing supremacists have recently employed more insidious tactics of gaining support in rural communities, Zeskind said.
communities, besides our "Many times they will portray themselves as representing farmers when there's a threat of a farm foreclosure," he said.
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Wednesday, November 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Faculty, students pessimistic about Israel election, future
With last night's Israeli election results pointing to the possibility of another unity government, some KU faculty and students are pessimistic about Israel's future.
By Barbara Joseph Kansan staff writer
A KU professor who specializes in Middle East politics predicted that another unity government of the two major parties, the Labor and Likud, would be disastrous for Israel's internal and foreign policy.
"The Labor and the Liked parties have very different views on whether to negotiate with the Palestinians or attempt to squash them," said Deborah Gerner, assistant counsel in the U.S. government, "no clear consensus on how to deal with police."
Gerner said that the close vote indicated how split the Israelis were.
Israelis vote for parties, not individual candidates. In Israel's history, neither Likud nor Labor, the two major parties, has won a major, 61 seats out of 120.
Rather, the party receiving the plurality of votes has been able to form a coalition with smaller parties to lead the government.
For the last five years, the government has been a unit government in which the two party leaders split in a white house.
Morris Margolies, adjunct professor of history and a
research associate with the Hall Center For the Humanities, said another unity government would paralyze policy-making. The only way to Israeli peace is through a Labor party coalition.
"A coalition under Likud would be worse in moving (ahead) peace negotiations," he said.
arhead, peacefully standing.
The president of KU Hillel, speaking for himself and not the organization, said that although results would not be final for a few days, he thought some form of unity government was likely. He was not pleased with that prospect.
"I don't think either side can form enough of a coalition government," said Aaron Rittmaster, Overland Park junior.
journal
Mahmoud Ali, president of KU's American Friends of Palestine, said it was inevitable that neither party would get a clear majority.
"To be frank, as a Palestinian, neither party makes much difference to me," said Ali Iriad, Jordan graduate student. "Neither believes in Palestinian self-determination or in a homeland for the Palestinians."
"From my point of view, both parties are the same in terms of their danger to the Palestinians, but at least the Labor party is more likely to compromise with the Palestinians," said Sami Ayyad Jerusalem, Israel senior.
DUKAKIS
Continued from p. 1
"It seems a lot more people are turning out at his gatherings, and there's more enthusiasm," he said.
Jim Quinly, Kansas City, Mo. resident, said Dukakis would have more appeal to voters than Bush.
I am honored to be here today. I will be joining you in this celebration of the nation's history and future. I'm proud to represent my country as a public servant. I'll work with you to achieve common goals for a better nation. I'm grateful to you and your team for their hard work and dedication. I hope that you enjoy this event and that it will bring us closer together. Let's make this a success!
"I think he's talking what the mainstream wants to hear," Quinny said. "The Bush campaign keeps talking about the Democrats being out of the mainstream, but I think Dukakis hit on it tonight."
Scott Wallace/KANSAN
"It's not the me, me, me attitude that the Republicans have. It's we're all in this together."
Jim Parrish, chairman of the Kansas Democratic Party, said Dukaix finally was reaching the voters.
"It was electrifying," he said. "I think it's so important for people to have an opportunity to see him in person and realize that he is a warm, personable, feeling man."
Presidential candidate Michael Dukakis, his daughter Andrea, Rep. Richard Gephardt, left, and Rep. Alan Wheat, D-Mo., share the stage at a Democratic rally last night at Penn Valley Community College in Kansas City, Mo.
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Nation/World
7
Soviet aircraft in Afghanistan to increase tension, U.S. says
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Administration officials said yesterday that the deployment of new Soviet aircraft and missiles in Afghanistan will increase tensions in the region. The U.S. defense secretary, states "remains unshakeable" in its support of the Mujahedeen rebels and neighboring Pakistan.
White House and State Department officials voiced new alarms following the display in Kabul of Soviet SS-1 Scud missiles, and after the United States already had protested, on Monday, the introduction of advanced Soviet aircraft in Afghanistan.
Pakistan's Western frontier is within range of the missiles, supplied by the Soviets to government forces in Afghanistan. Charles Redman, State Department spokesman, said, "If the purpose of these latest military developments is to threaten Pakistan, the Soviet Union knows that Pakistan enjoys our full support in this situation."
In this situation,
In San Bernardino, Calif., White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater,
accompanying President Reagan on a political speaking tour, issued a formal statement.
Fitzwater said, "We are concerned about the display of SS-1 missiles in Kabul."
Iran, Iraq agree to step up talks
GENEVA — Iran and Iraq agreed yesterday to step up the pace of their U.N.-mediated peace talk, acknowledging what U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar termed a "sense of urgency."
Speaking briefly to reporters after the meeting, the U.N. chief said this reflected a "sense of urgency" and showed that Iran's Ali Akbar Velayat and Iraq's Tariq Aziz were interested in moving forward toward a lasting settlement of the 8-year-old war.
In the first direct meeting since early October, the two foreign ministers accepted Perez de Cuellar's proposal that all future negotiating sessions be held jointly.
The Associated Press
Velayati and Aziz did not speak to each other during the $3\frac{1}{2}$-hour meeting, Perez de Cuellar said. The next session was scheduled for today.
Yesterday's meeting in Geneva was only their sixth since negotiations began Aug. 25 — five days after a cease-fire took effect.
Perez de Cuellar is giving priority to consolidating the cease-fire by disengaging the troops, at some point, as faces apart on the 730-mile border.
Talks have bogged down over the border.
definition of the common border, specifically in the Shatt-al-Arab, the waterway which is Iraq's only sea outlet.
Under a 1975 treaty, which Iraq repudiated five years later, the border runs down the middle of the waterway. The Iraqis want it moved to Iran's shore, where it was before the treaty.
The Shatt-al-Arab, which Iran calls the Arvand River, was closed soon after the war began in September 1980 and is blocked by stranded ships, unexploded shells and accumulated silt. Iraq has pressed for dredging to begin immediately while negotiation.
tions on sovereignty continue.
A U.N. peace plan also calls for an exchange of an estimated 100,000 prisoners and an end to ship searches for war-related cargo.
Iraq has yet to make a formal pronouncement on the U.N. proposal.
pronouncement on the U.N. proposal
In Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, foreign ministers of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council opened an emergency session to look for ways to break the Iran-Iraq deadlock.
Prince Saud Faisal, the Saudi foreign minister, said he was confident the Geneva talks would bring peace "if the intentions (of both sides) are sincere."
Liberals lead election race in Canada,new poll shows
TORONTO — A poll yesterday put the opposition Liberal Party in the lead for the Nov. 21 elections, reviving the once-sagging fortunes it has tied to a fight against the free trade agreement with the United States.
The Associated Press
The poll by the Environics Research Group, published in the journal Science on Wednesday with 37 percent of decided voters and Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's
Conservative Party with 31 percent. The socialist New Democratic Party was third with 26 percent.
News Roundup
Anything less than a majority Conservative government jeopardizes the trade agreement, which is scheduled to take effect Jan. 1.
Liberal leader John Turner met with Toronto party leaders and said later they had "reinforced my cruisade for Canada to defeat this trade deal."
EL SALVADOR REBELS ATTACK: Leftist rebels launched a daring mortar and rifle attack yesterday on National Guard headquarters in San Salvador, El Salvador, wounding at least 16 soldiers, the Defense Ministry said. Col. Jose Galileo Torres said resel mortar fire set off grenades stored inside the main building at the compound during the 15-minute attack. Firefighters were able to extinguish the blaze, he said.
TURKS ACCUSED OF TORTURE: Amnesty International on Wednesday accused Turkey of widespread torture of political prisoners and said the human rights record of its 5-year-old civilian government was no better than that of the military predecessor. The report said torture continued despite the signing in August of the United Nations Convention Against Torture by the government of President Kenan Evren.
by the government of President Kenan Evren. SOVIETS CUT DEFICIT The Soviet Union's top economic managers said yesterday they have begun to reduce a 10-year budget deficit and now are worried about a socialist-style inflation that is driving cheap consumer goods off the shelves. Finance Minister Boris Gostev told a news conference called by the new Information Department of the Council of Ministers that the deficit was "extremely large, critically large" in the mid-1980s but has begun to close slightly.
THATCHER VISITS POLAND: Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, scourge of British labor
and "Iron Lady" to Moscow, arrives today in Poland, where she is admired by communist leaders and the banned Solidarity trade union movement. Increasing the diplomatic challenge of the three-day trip, the Polish government said Monday it will close the Lenin shipyard, birthplace of Solidarity, because it is unprofitable.
YUGOSLAVIAN WORKERS STRIKE: About 1,500 workers of a clock factory in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, went on strike yesterday to protest low wages and falling living standards, the news agency Taniju said. It was the first strike in the capital since the government amended an economic austerity program Oct. 22, allowing raises for employees at some companies.
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Wednesday, November 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE NCAA RULING
Reactions are mixed about NCAA's verdict
After 30 days full of rumors, the KU and Lawrence communities received the verdict.
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
Tuesday, the NCAA hit the Kansas men's basketball program with a three-year probation that included the loss of scholarships, limitations on recruiting visits and a one-year ban from the NCAA tournament. The NCAA spent the past month deliberating about what penalties should be dealt to the Jayhawks for recruiting violations.
The violations included at least $1,244 offered to a prospective player.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig released a prepared statement yesterday stating the importance of supporting Williams and of adhering to NCAA standards.
standardos.
"Every possible effort will be made by the administration to assure that NCAA rules and regulations are clearly understood and rigorously enforced," he said.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said she was disappointed by the ruling because the smallness of the incidents did not merit the magnitude of the punishment.
"I'm confident that Athletic Director Bob Frederick and Coach Williams will develop a strong program that will meet any ethical standards set," she said.
Robert Billings, a Williams Educational Fund donor and KU alumnus, wasn't pleased with the NCAA decision.
suit:
"Obviously, I am very disappointed," he said. "It appears that the alleged infractions were relatively minor compared to what goes on in athletics at other universities."
The Williams Educational Fund helps pay scholarship expenses for Kansas student-athletes.
Many Kansas students, faculty and administrators said they regretted that basketball coach Roy Williams had to suffer for the NCAA infractions committed under the leadership of former Jayhawk coach Larry Brown. Brown left Kansas in July to become the coach for the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association.
"It's really unfortunate that Coach Williams has to inherit this situation," said Brook Menees, student body president. "But I hope he remains positive about it. We just have to look beyond this year."
I'm mad at Larry Brown for leaving KU and running off with the money. I think that is despicable.'
Son Nguyen, Prairie Village senior
7
Some students said KU deserved the penalties.
At the news conference that announced the NCAA sanctions, Milt Newton, senior forward, showed his disappointment in the ruling.
"Any school that defies NCAA regulations should definitely have punitive action taken against them," said Mark Levine, Chicago, Ill. sophomore. "I do think three years is a bit harsh. Maybe two years would have been better."
KA
John Gribas, graduate teaching assistant in communication studies, agreed that NCAA standards needed to be unheld.
"I think that the NCAA made an extreme example of KU and Coach Brown," he said. "But I'm certainly in favor of keeping strict standards."
Unable to hold back tears, Newton briefly left the conference.
unfar Mark Perlmutter, Denver, Colo. Mark Perlmutter and a manager of the basketball team when Brown was coaching, said the violations wouldn't have been investigated if Brown would have continued coaching.
Although Kansas holds the dubious title of the first NCAA basketball champion ever barred from defending its title, many in the KU community believe the probation won't seriously hurt the basketball program.
1967. Brown asked the "I'm mad at Larry Brown for leaving KU and running off with the money." said Son Nguyen, Prairie Village senior. "I think that is despicable. This is a terrible situation."
have convinced "They (NCAA) just wanted to slap a championship team," he said. "Someone won a national championship, and they think there has to be something bad behind something good. Coach Brown did everything by the book."
Other students criticized Brown's departure from the University while under an NCAA investigation. The NCAA sent a letter to KU in June of 1987. Brown left in July of 1988.
"Sure, I'm pretty disappointed," said Percy McClendon, Savannah, Ga. sophomore. "But I don't think it affect us much because we're young. This year will just be a rebuilding year for the team."
4 prospective recruits not bothered by recent sanctions against Kansas
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
The sanctions imposed on the University of Kansas men's basketball program probably won't affect the decisions of four prospective recruits, their coaches said yesterday.
day.
The top-ranked recruit of the group, Jeff Webster, a 6-foot-8 forward from Midwest City, Okla., visited Kansas this weekend. Webster is the nation's tenth-best high school player by Bob Gibbons of All-Star Sports Publications.
Star Sports Phlebotomy Webster's coach, Dub Raper, said the three-year probation would not be a major factor in Webster's college choice because Kansas was not restricted from participating in the NCAA national tournament next season.
so.
"I have no problem with that."
Raper said. "There wouldn't be any
thing that would affect him."
Webster is considering North Carolina State, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, Oklahoma and Kansas, Raper said.
said.
He said Webster would sign a national letter of intent on Wednesday, the first day high school seniors and junior college transfers can legally commit to colleges.
ally commi-
kation.
Kansas will be under no NCAA
during these signing period. However, the school will not be permitted to pay for campus visits by prospective recruits from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 in 1989.
The restriction will be in effect during the second national letter of intent signing period in the spring and the first signing period next fall.
Roz Goldenburg, Oakwood High School coach in North Hollywood, Calif., said one of her players would not be able to visit Kansas if the
school was unable to pay for the trip.
school was about "It would have a major effect on his decision." Goldenburg said of Mitch Butler.
Butler, ranked 27th nationally by Gibbons, is considering Arizona. California, Duke, UCLA and Kansas. Goldburg said the 6-5 guard had not yet visited Kansas or Arizona.
All-state guard Val Barnes of Wichita South High School has not been contacted by KU recently, his coach Steve Eck said. Eck said the sanctions would not prevent Barnes from attending Kansas.
nor yet visited him.
Goldenberg said there was a 50 percent chance Butler would sign a letter of intent next week.
"I Kansas is interested in Val and Val is interested in Kansas," Eck said. "I would be willing to take him up there."
Barnes averaged 19 points a game last year. He is ranked 30th among
high school point guards by Van Coleman's National Recruiters' Cage Letter.
Jackie Jones, a 6-7 forward from Barton County Community College, also has not visited Kansas.
Jones, ranked sixth nationally among junior college players by the Sporting News Basketball Magazine, has visited North Carolina State, Oklahoma and the University of Detroit, Barton County coach Dan McGovern said.
McGovern said neither the probation nor recruiting sanctions would have an impact on Jones' selection process.
Barnes and Jones will probably make their decisions during the spring signing period, their coaches said.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 2, 1988
THE NCAA RULING
9
Ruling could be worse than it was SMU recovering from 'death penalty' imposed on football team in 1987
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
The NCAA dealt a heavy blow to the Kansas men's basketball program yesterday by putting the Jayhawks on three-year probation for recruiting infractions, but the ruling could have been worse.
Yet, as damaging as the decision
wins, hayhaws still can compete
next year.
Under the ruling, the Kansas basketball team will be banned from postseason competition this season, was stripped of one basketball scholarship for the 1989-90 academic year and the program can't pay for any recruiting visits to the school in 1989.
The NCAA Committee on Infractions said in its report to Kansas that because the Jayhawks had committed "major" violations within five years of another "major" infractions case, Kansas could have been exposed to more serious penalties, such as the "death penalty."
The Kansas football program was placed on probation from 1983 to 1985 for violations.
Under the death penalty, an athletic program can be ended for a specified amount of time, as well as having restrictions on recruiting and the number of scholarships available.
The Southern Methodist University football team, which built a national-power reputation in the 1980s around big-name players such as NFL standouts Eric Dickerson and Craig James, was given the death penalty in 1987.
Ed Wysneksi, sports information director at SMU, said the university athletic program still was trying to recover from the ruling.
"It was a difficult transitional period trying to function without a football team," Wysneski said. "The absence of football gave more attention to other sports out of necessity. Our homecoming game that year was a soccer match.
"Right now, we're just trying to get the program back on its feet. Most of the players from that team transferred to other schools and the coach and the athletic director resigned.
"There's been a large turnover in the athletic department."
Darryl Terrell, a running back who transferred to Kansas from SMU after the death penalty was imposed on the Mustangs, said the Kansas basketball players probably were going through some of the same feelings he experienced in 1987.
"The first reaction you have is that you know the goals you had at the first of the season are tarnished because you can't play," Terrell said. "I feel especially bad for the seniors. They just won the national championship and I love back to the tournament. Now with the sanctions, it puts a dark cloud over everything you do."
Terrell, whose career ended last year after he suffered a torn Achilles tendon in the last game, said at SMU most of the players affected by the NCAA penalty weren't involved in the violations.
"Most of the time it's people doing things prior to when you get there that cause the problem," he said. "Sometimes it will be punished for what happened."
The SMU football program was given the death penalty after it was revealed that during the period from September 1985 through December 1986, monthly payments from $50 to $725 were made to student-athletes in the football program. The payments were made from money supported by an outside representative with university athletic interests.
Under the death penalty ruling, all Mustang football games were canceled for the 1987 season. SMU could have played seven away games this fall, but the school decided to wait until 1989 to compete again.
After having its scholarships taken away in 1987, SMU was allowed to give 15 for the 1988-89 academic year and 25 in 1989-90.
Forrest Gregg, who coached the Cincinnati Bengals to the SuperBowl in 1982, was hired to rebuild the Mustang program.
Now that SMU has a new coach, Wysneski said all efforts were being directed toward fielding a team next fall.
Staff will focus on starting over
Roy Williams knew the Kansas basketball program was under investigation by the NCAA when he accepted the Jayhawk position July 8.
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportwriter
July 8.
But the man who hired Williams, Bob Frederick, did not have that advantage when he took the job as Kansas athletic director 17 months ago.
Although no one cited in the NCAA report is currently affiliated with the University of Kansas, Frederick said the penalties may have tarnished the University's image as well as his own
"Two weeks after I accepted the job in May of 1887, I was informed that the NCAA had decided to conduct a preliminary inquiry with some aspects of the basketball program," he said late yesterday afternoon.
ty's image. "The person who is sitting in Laguna Beach, Calif., sees this on the national news and just assumes that the athletic director is in the wrong." he said. "I think this represents some kind of signal that the enforcement committee intends to deal severely with violations in the future."
told in the face of Williams said he did not regret his decision to come to Kansas despite the stiff penalties.
Frederick, the man in the eye of the storm, said he was relieved the business of the NCAA investigation was over.
"Right now I just feel very emotionally wring out," he said. "From the time we received the official letter of inquiry I was very nervous until yesterday (Monday), when we received the letter."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Frederick informed the NCAA yesterday that the University would not appeal the penalties.
"A number of things went into that decision," Frederick said. "The number one thing was recruiting. We wanted to resolve the whole thing now. We didn't want to drag it out any longer."
An appeal involves appearing before a 35-person NCAA committee and might not be acted upon without the original penalty had been served.
"I was trained in North Carolina under Dean Smith in how to run a program clean and that's the way we're going to run it here," he said. "The NCAA is not going to make me change the way I was going to run the program anyway, because we're going to run it cleanly. We're going to do it the right way."
Williams said the penalties would not change the operation of the program.
"I'm extremely frustrated for these young men and I'm extremely disappointed. I say I have mixed emotions about this, because now we can put this all behind us."
THE BIRD MAN
Larry Brown
David BrandtJKANSAN
KU escapes 'death penalty' for abuses
Kansan sportwriter
By Mark E. McCormick Kansan sportwriter
Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick said there were tense moments leading up to the NCAA's announcement of the penalties.
The University of Kansas men's basketball program escaped an NCAA imposed death penalty because it showed "unique circumstances" in its case, an NCAA enforcement official said yesterday.
"I was really nervous about the worst possible scenario," Frederick said. "We were hopeful that we could prove that unique circumstances existed in our case. Our response was based on the unique circumstances and trying to argue that these violations were not major."
Richard Hilliard, assistant director of enforcement for the NCAA, said Kansas avoided the sweeping censure of the penalty because no other serious violations were found in the program, the current violations were not connected to 1983 football violations and vice versa, and most of the violations were confined to a 10-day period in June of 1966.
Only one school, Southern Methodist University in Dallas, has received the death penalty, which eliminated the school's football program for two years.
01 7860:
The term "death penalty" was created by the media and doesn't appear in the NCAA rule book, Hilliard said.
years.
SMU, in the Southwest Conference, was banned from competition, practice and recruiting for two seasons. In 1987, the Mustangs were charged in a seven-page report with the payment of players and recruits, said Ed Wysneski, the sports information
director at SMU.
The death penalty was imposed upon SMU because it was convicted of many of the same violations the year before. Hilliard said the rule was created for repeat offenders like SMU.
"If a coach gives a player $20 in an isolated incident, there may not be a major violation," he said. "But if people were paying players $100 a month or $200 a month, that would rise to the level of serious infractions and would also be establishing a pattern that the committee could examine."
After a school commits a major penalty, it is placed under the umbrella of the rule, being watched closely by the NCAA. Hillard said. But if a second violation occurs within five years, the umbrella would close, bringing penalties such as prohibition from competition and the loss of recruiting and scholarship rights.
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Wednesday, November 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE NCAA RULING
BROWN
Continued from p. 1
defended the way he ran his program during his five years at Kansas and resented the remarks made about him in a staff since they left Kansas in June.
"Since the first day we left, I don't think it's been fair," he said. "I spent five years there with a great staff and I'm proud of the kids we recruited. I'm proud of the team we set out on the court and I'm proud of everything we did for the University of Kansas."
Brown already had admitted to giving then-basketball recruit Vincent Askew $366 in cash out of his own pocket to purchase a round-trip plane ticket. Askew used the ticket to visit his grandmother, who was ill and who died shortly thereafter, according to Brown.
Brown was asked by ESPN whether he knew NCAA rules were being violated at the time. He said he was aware of the investigation and had made no attempt to hide his involvement.
"in you mean with the investigation and what happened with Askew, yeah, I was aware," Brown said. "A lot of these things were self-reported — the flight ticket back to see his grandmother. I was aware, but I was not aware of the gravity of it and I was led to believe it would not be a severe penalty or else I'm sure I wouldn't have left. After meeting with the NCAA in front of their Infractions Committee and hearing
their response to what we said. I was convinced there wasn't going to be anything done."
Brown hesitated when asked to comment on who started the initial investigation. An earlier report on KCTV'S last night had quoted sources saying former Memphis State men's basketball coach Dana Kirk had initiated the inquiry. Kirk is being charged with tax evasion and obstruction of justice in an unrelated case.
"I don't want to comment. I know where it started. It came from a source close to Vincent, that's obvious," he said.
Brown said during the afternoon news conference that he would not have left Kansas had he known the severity of the penalties the Jayhawks would receive.
"When I left Kansas to accept the job to come to San Antonio, I was led to believe that this was no big deal," he said.
Brown told ESPN that he did not believe the punishment fit the crime.
THE ROW
"No, I certainly don't," he said. "We ran a program for five years. They spent two-and-a-half years investigating our program and didn't come up with anything other than the Vincent Askew situation. When you look at the allegations and the things did, we it was just bad judgment. We weren't trying to break the rules."
The University of Kansas basketball program became the first program ever to be placed on NCAA probation following a national title
because of recruiting violations that occurred under former Kansas coach Larry Brown and his staff in 1986.
INFRACTIONS
Continued from p. 1
and left midway through the conference with tears rolling down his face. He later returned.
"Upon hearing the news, it hit me like a ton of bricks." Newton said. "But we won't give up. It would have nice to be好 to the NCAA, but we
In San Antonio, former Kansas coach Larry Brown, now the San Antonio Spurs' coach, conducted a news conference and said he resented implications by Williams and Frederick that the program had been left in poor shape.
"Ever since I left KU the new coach and athletic director have been taking shots at me right from the
start," Brown said on a newscast on WIBW-TV in Topeka last night. "And that has really troubled me because we left the program in pretty darn good shape."
Frederick said he was surprised by Brown's statement.
"Well, I don't take shots at anybody." Frederick said. "Especially a friend. And I was surprised to hear him say that because I've never said much about it, or the little things about him. He was a great coach and did great things here."
The NCAA Committee on Infractions' report stated that Brown, members of his coaching staff, and three University representatives
gave extra benefits totaling $1,244 to a "highly-visible transfer student" during a 10-day period in June of 1986. Vincent Askew was a guard from Memphis State who was being recruited by Kansas and was in Lawrence during that time. He reportedly was involved in most of the violations.
One of the University representatives reportedly involved in the infractions was former Kansas guard Mike Marshall, who played for the Jayhawks during the 1983-84 season, former Kansas assistant coach Alvin Gentry said after meeting with the NCAA on Sept. 30.
NCAA Director of Enforcement
"They were trying to say that those kind of people shouldn't be held accountable for their actions by the University." Berst said. "We believe those acting with the knowledge and approval of the coaching staff should be held accountable for their actions."
David Berst said University officials and the Committee on Infractions disagreed on whether two of the three people were representatives of the institution's athletic interests because they were not "typical alumni representatives."
after it's 1983 case, had not helped to establish institutional control over its basketball program.
The NCAA report said Kansas' compliance program, which had been established at the University
Frederick said measures that recently had been taken to improve the compliance program were: the creation of a new compliance auditor position; that all coaches must comply with NCAA and Big Eight Conference rules as a condition of employment; the successful completion of a recruiting rules examination by all coaches; and an annual compliance audit of the football program and men's basketball program by an outside agency.
the NCAA also was disturbed by the casual administration of the summer jobs program by Kansas. The infractions report said prospective student-athletes were hired by an institutional representative and paid for work that was never performed.
Frederick said the ultimate reason for the severity of the penalty was the fact that Kansas was a repeat violator, but vowed that as long as he was athletic director, history would not repeat itself.
"If you read that statement carefully," Frederick said of a sentence in the infractions report. "The thing that bothered the committee most was that we were there in 1983. I guarantee you one thing. We won't be back there again."
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 2 1988
11
THE NCAA RULING
The report on Kansas basketball violations
University of Kansas Infractions Report.
by the NCAA Committee on Infractions.
Introduction
In October 1986, a confidential informant telephoned an NCAA special investigator and arranged a meeting during which the informant reported possible violations of NCAA legislation in the recruitment of a highly visible transfer student-athlete by the University of Kansas. In November 1986, a member of the NCAA enforcement staff met with the then associate director of athletics at the University of Kansas to inquire whether this same prospect ever enrolled or attended classes at the University. This inquiry was made in order to determine the student-athlete's eligibility at another institution. When the associates reported of athletics discussed this inquiry with the then men's head basketball coach, the head coach, for the first time, reported his involvement in the violation described in Part II-E of this report to the University's associate director of athletics. In a letter dated December 11, 1986, the University reported this violation to the NCAA and to the Big Eight Conference.
--ent program. Of equal importance to the findings of specific violations of NCAA legislation is the University's disturbing failure to exercise appropriate institutional control over the men's intercollegiate basketball program. The University appeared before the committee in 1983 in connection with violations in its intercollegiate football program and has had subsequent communications with the committee regarding the University's athletics administration. Although the University argued that it adopted procedures to ensure that all of its athletics programs comply with the terms of NCAA legislation, the violations found in this case indicate that these procedures were not implemented in the men's basketball program in a manner that accomplished this result.
The enforcement staff interviewed the young man who was involved in this violation on January 7, 1987, and other possible violations of NCAA legislation in addition to those reported by the original informant and the University's then men's head basketball coach were reported. On May 28, 1987, the NCAA enforcement staff sent a letter of preliminary inquiry to the University. A letter of official inquiry followed on June 17, 1988, and on September 2, 1988, the University filed its response to the NCA's inquiry. The Committee on Infractions met with University representatives, the former men's head basketball coach and two former men's assistant basketball coaches on September 30, 1988, to consider the University's response to the alleged violations.
Following this hearing, the Committee on Infractions deliberated in private and found that former members of the men's basketball coaching staff and representatives of the University's athletics interests who were closely affiliated with the men's basketball program had violated NCAA legislation. These violations included the provision of improper recruiting impersonators totaling 8244 to the above-mentioned young man During the period when these violations occurred, the prospect was eligible for recruitment as a transfer student but could not sign a National Letter of Intent.
--ent program. Of equal importance to the findings of specific violations of NCAA legislation is the University's disturbing failure to exercise appropriate institutional control over the men's intercollegiate basketball program. The University appeared before the committee in 1983 in connection with violations in its intercollegiate football program and has had subsequent communications with the committee regarding the University's athletics administration. Although the University argued that it adopted procedures to ensure that all of its athletics programs comply with the terms of NCAA legislation, the violations found in this case indicate that these procedures were not implemented in the men's basketball program in a manner that accomplished this result.
As described more fully in Part II of this report, these inducements included: (a) improper recruiting contacts by a representative of the University's athletic interests, who also provided a $183 one-way airline ticket for the young man to travel from his home to Lawrence, Kansas, in order to work during the summer, and a loan of $350 to the young man's family; (b) the provision of clothes purchased for $231 by another athletics representative; (c) the payment of at least $297, for another mother representative of the young man for work not actually performed, and (d) $366 cash from the then men's head basketball coach for the young man (e) purchase a round-trip airline ticket in order to travel home to visit his grandmother who was ill, and the provision of improper automobile transportation by a then men's assistant basketball coach for the prospect in connection with this trip.
The committee made additional findings of improper recruiting inducements, contacts and transportation related to the recruitment of this prospective transfer student-athlete, as well as one finding of improper entertainment for a different prospective student-athlete.
The violations documented by NCAA
Violations concerning local transportation between the Kansas City airport and Lawrence, which had been committed in a previous case heard by the committee, are repeated in this case (as described in Parts II-E and K-1) with no evidence that the athletics administration has taken steps to prevent them.
Violations of NCAA legislation, as determined by committees
A. (NCAA Bylaw 1-1-(b)-(1)
On or about June 8, 1986, while recruiting a transfer student athlete, a representative of the University's athletics interests purchased a one-way airline ticket for the young man to travel his home town and Kansas City. Mo., in order for the young man to work in Lawrence during the summer. Specifically, on June 8, 1986, the representative used a credit card to purchase a prepaid airline ticket (at the cost of $183), and on June 11, 1986, the prospect used this ticket to travel between his hometown and Kansas City, and finally, the representative intended for the young man to reimburse him for the cost of the airline ticket, but the young man has not done so.
B. NCAA Bvials 1-1-(b)-(1), 1-2-(b) and 1-9-(i)
During the summer of 1986, while recruiting a transfer student-athlete, a representative of the University's athletics interests provided a loan of $550 to the prospect's family in order to pay an electric bill for the young man's grandmother. Specifically, the representative provided automobile transportation for the prospect to a Western Union office in Lawrence where the representative wired the money; further, the loan has not been repaid.
C NCAA Bylaws 1-{b-(1), 1-{2-(b) and 1-9-(j)}
**N U L A R A B YLaws 1.1-(b)-(1), 1.2-(b) and 1.9-(j)**
During the summer of 1986, while recruiting a transfer student athlete, a representative of the University's athletics interests provided round-trip local automobile transportation for the young man from the University's campus to a clothing store where the representative purchased slacks, shirts, socks and underwear (a total cost of $231) for the young man at no cost to the prospect; further, it was the representative's understanding that the young man would work for the representative in order to repay the cost of the clothing, but the prospect did not do so.
D. NCAA Bvlaw 1-1-(b)-(1)
In the summer of 1986, during the employment of a transfer student-athlete at a local company owned by a representative of the University's athletics interests, the young man was paid at least $297.12 for work not actually performed, including pay for a period when the young man was in his home town.
E. NCAA Bvlaws 1-1-(b)-(1) and 1-9-(i)
E. NCAR BJYNYJ
On or about June 19, 1986, while recruiting a transfer student at Johns Hopkins, the men's head basketball team have $366 cash to the young man in order for the young man to purchase a round-trip airline ticket for travel between Kansas City, Mo, and his home town to enable the young man to see his grandmother who was ill, and no arrangements were made for repayment; further, a men's assistant basketball coach provided automobile transportation for the prospect
from the University's campus (the head basketball coach's office) to a local travel agency where the young man purchased the airline ticket, and then to Kansas City International Airport (an approximate one-way distance of 65 miles).
F. NCAA Bylaw 1-1-(b)-(1)
In June 1986, member's of the men's basketball coaching staff arranged for a transfer student-athlete to be provided lodging on a credit basis from June 11 to June 19, 1986, in a privately owned dormitory.
G. NCAA Bylaw 1-1-(b)-(1)
During the summer of 1986, a former student equipment manager gave a pair of blue and white Puma basketball shoes to a transfer student-athlete at no cost to the young man after the prospect told a men's assistant basketball coach that he did not have basketball shoes, and the coach responded that he would take care of it; further, the prospect then participated in pickup basketball games at a local high school
H. NCAA Bylaws 1-2-(b) and 1-5-(a)
In June 1986, during the official paid visit to the University's campus of a transfer student-athlete, a representative of the University's athletics interests contacted the prospect in person, off campus at local restaurants and at KCI. Specifically, on June 4, 1986, the representative provided local automobile transportation for the prospect from the University's campus to a restaurant where they ate a meal; further, the representative then drove the young man to a local travel agency where the representative purchased an airline ticket for himself, and later that evening, he contacted the young man in a bar in Lawrence, and finally, on June 6, 1986, a men's assistant basketball coach transported the prospect and the representative to KCI where the representative used a credit card to purchase a one-way airline ticket (at the cost of $183) for the young man to return home when it was discovered that the prospect left his airline ticket at a hotel and that the assistant coach did not have sufficient funds to purchase the ticket; further, the representative accompanied the young man on the flight to his home, and finally, the assistant coach reported the use of the representative's credit card on the expense report filed with the university and obtained reimbursement for the representative
1. NCAA Bylaw 1-9-(j)-(2)
On November 7, 1986, during the official paid visit of a prospective student-athlete, a men's assistant basketball coach entertained the young man for a meal at a site more than 30 miles from the University's campus.
1 NCAA Bylaws 5-6-(d)-(3) and 5-6-(d)-(4)
J. NCAA Bylaws 5-6(d)-(3) and 5-6(d)-(4)
At the time that certain practices of the
University's intercollegiate men's basketball
program were not in compliance with NCAA
legislation, the then men's head basketball
coach, two then men's basketball coaches
and another university employee attested
on a statement filed with the chief ex-
ecutive officer of the University in 1966 that they
had reported to the chief executive officer their
knowledge of and involvement in any violation
of NCAA legislation involving the University;
further, based upon the information provided by
these individuals, and without intent to do so,
the University's chief executive officer erroneously
certified the University's compliance with
NCAA legislation.
K. NCAA Bylaw 1-9-(j)
Additional violations of NCAA legislation discovered by the institution as a result of its investigation of the allegations in this inquiry: ■ 1. On or about June 9, 1986, a men's assistant basketball coach provided one-way automobile transportation for a prospective student-athlete from KCI to Lawrence (an approximate one-way distance of 65 miles), in order for the young man to begin summer employment.
2. In June 1986, a men's basketball assistant coach provided one-way automobile transportation for two prospective student-athletes from the University's campus to an apartment building where the young men were to work in their employment.
L. NCAA Constitution 3-2
The scope and nature of the violations examined and found in this case demonstrate that the University did not exercise appropriate institutional control over the men's intercollegiate basketball program. For example, violations concerning local transportation between the Kansas City airport and Lawrence that had been committed in a previous infractions case were repeated with no evidence that the athletics administration had taken steps to prevent them. Actions known by assistant coaches and the head coach to be violations were not reported to appropriate members of the administration, even when there were apparent mitigating circumstances explaining the actions. The unauthorized provision of airline tickets to a student-athlete, which resulted in extra benefits to the student-athlete, were not promptly reported to a superior or to the NCAA when discovered by an athletics department staff member. In summary, these actions demonstrated that the compliance program established by the University after its 1983 case had not, in fact, resulted in the establishment of institutional control over its basketball program.
Other actions known by assistant coaches and the head coach to be violations were not reported to appropriate members of the University's administration, even when their apparent mitigating circumstances to explain the violations. Funds were deducted from a student-athlete's grant-in-aid by the institution to pay a debt owed to a private travel agency. The unauthorized provision of airline tickets to a student-athlete, which resulted in extra benefits to the young man, were not promptly reported to a superior or to the NCAA when discovered by an athletics department staff member. In summary, these actions demonstrated that the compliance program established by the University after its 1983 case had not, in fact, resulted in the establishment of institutional control over its basketball program.
Very troubling was the casual administration of a summer jobs program by the University. A representative of the University's athletics interests who had offices in the athletics complex purchased substantial amounts of clothing for a prospective student-athlete before the young man began to work for him. In another instance, prospective student-athletes were hired by a representative of the University's athletics interests and supervised by an assistant basketball coach who transported the players to the job site. No time sheets were kept for the prospects; payments were made for work not performed, and the checks were distributed at the basketball office. A former men's basketball team member, who also was a representative of the University's athletics interests, was allowed to mix freely with student-athletes and prospects at meals, meetings and during official visits in such a manner as to almost certainly become engaged in violations of NCAA regulations.
T
The committee also was troubled by statements by the University in its official response to the NCAA's letter of official inquiry and during the hearing before the committee that clear and admitted violations of NCAA regulations somehow should not be considered violations. Such statements diminished the committee's sense of confidence that the University was prepared to take institutional action to discipline individuals for whom it was responsible and who were involved in NCAA violations. While much has been done to prevent violations since the committee last reviewed the University's athletics program in 1983, much remains to be done to ensure that members of the athletics staff put into effect in day-to-day practice the policies enunciated so persuasively by the chancellor. Fuller, more detailed, more determined educational and monitoring programs are needed.
The men's intercollegiate basketball team shall end its 1988-89 season with the playing of its last regularly scheduled, in-season contest.
---
The Committee on Infractions determined that the violations set forth in Part II of this report constitute a "major" infractions case. Although the transfer student-athlete involved in most of the recruiting violations did not attend the University of Kansas, violations of NCAA legislation are not made less serious by the fact that a prospect does not attend a university after receiving improper inducements. Because these violations occurred after September 1, 1985, and because this is the second major infractions case involving the institution within a five-year period, the University normally would be exposed to very severe penalties applicable to member institutions found guilty of repeated major violations as set forth in Section 7-(1) of the Official Procedure Governing the Enforcement Program.
Under NCAA legislation establishing prescribed penalties for major violations, however, the committee also may impose lesser penalties if it determines that the case is "unique". Ordinarily, the unique circumstances that would justify relief from the Association's mandatory penalties would include factors such as prompt detection of violations, investigating and reporting violations to the NCAA; cooperating in the processing of the case, and initiating strong corrective and disciplinary measures before action by the committee. The committee gives weight to these actions in bringing the extent that a case presents "unique" circumstances. Other circumstances, although not as significant as these institutional measures, also may warrant viewing a major or repeat case as "unique" for some purposes. In this regard, the committee determined that this was
a "unique" case in some respects.
In making its findings in this case, the committee took into account: (a) that although the provision of improper recruiting inducements was calculated to obtain a significant recruiting advantage with a highly visible transfer student-athlete, the serious violations involved only one prospect and were confined to a 10-day period, and the investigation revealed no other significant violations involving other prospects for the basketball program; (b) the basketball program was not involved in the 1983 infractions case, and the football program, which was the focus of attention in the 1983 case, was not involved in this case, and (c) The university's compliance, educational and monitoring programs, which need further attention to assure institutional control, can best be strengthened through a length period of probation, annual reports audits to the committee, rather than through some of the penalties set forth in Section 7-(f) of the NCAA enforcement procedures. The committee also notes that the coaches who were involved in this case are no longer at an NCAA member institution and, even though they were not required to be present at the committee hearing, they did appear voluntarily to provide assistance in the committee's consideration of the case.
For the foregoing reasons, the Committee on Infractions did not impose the full penalties identified in Section 7-(-f) of the enforcement procedures, but did impose significant penalties. These penalties include: a three-year probationary period, rather than the minimum two-year penalty set forth for a repeat major violator; an order to show cause why the representatives of the University's athletics interests who were involved in the violations should not be disassociated from the University's athletics program during the probationary period; a prohibition against postseason competition by the University's men's basketball team during the 1988-89 academic year; the elimination of all expense-paid recruiting visits by the basketball program for a one-year period; a limitation on grants-in-aid in men's basketball during the 1989-90 academic year, and institutional recertification.
---
The committee's findings of violations are set forth in Part II of this report, and the committee's penalties are set forth in Part III.
Committee on infractions penalties.
In November 1983, the University of Kansas received a "major" penalty for violations of NCAA legislation in its football program. Because the present case also is considered to be "major" in nature and because the violations were found within a five-year period of the first major case, Section 7-f) of the NCAA enforcement procedures provides that minimum prescribed penalties shall be imposed, subject to exceptions authorized by the Committee on Infractions in unique cases on the basis of specifically stated reasons. The prescribed penalties normally would include: (a) the prohibition of some or all competition in the sport involved in the latest major violation for one or two sport seasons and the prohibition of all coaching staff members in that sport from involvement directly or indirectly in any coaching activities at the institution during a two-year period; (b) the elimination of all initial grants-in-aid and all recruiting activities in the sport involved in the latest major violation in question for a two-year period; (c) the requirement that all institutional staff members serving on the NCAA Presidents Commission, Council, Executive Committee or other committees of the Association resign those positions, it being understood that all institutional representatives shall be ineligible to serve on any NCAA committee for a period of four years, and (d) the requirement that the institution relinquish its voting privilege in the association for a four-year period.
---
The committee believes, however, that the following unique circumstances were present in this case: (a) the violations, while serious and calculated to obtain a recruiting advantage with one highly visible transfer student-athlete, were isolated to a 10-day period, and the investigation revealed no other serious violations in the basketball program; (b) the basketball program was not involved in the 1983 infirmities case and the footnotes from the focus of attention in the earlier case, was not involved in this case, and in compliance, educational and monitoring programs, which need further strengthening, can best be established through a lengthy period of probation, annual reports and audits, rather than through certain of the penalties set forth in Section 7-f) of the enforcement procedures. Accordingly, the following penalties were imposed in this case.
A. The University of Kansas shall be publicly reprimanded and censured, and placed on probation for a period of three years from the date these penalties are imposed, which shall be the date the 15-day appeal period expires or the date the institution notifies the executive director that it will not appeal to the NCAA Council subcommittee of Division I members, whichever is earlier, or the date established by Council subcommittee action as a result of an appeal by the institution, it being understood that should any of the penalties in this case be set aside for any reason other than by appropriate action of the Association, the penalties shall be reconsidered by the Committee on Infractions.
B. The men's intercollegiate basketball team shall end its 1988-89 season with the playing of its last regularly scheduled, in-season contest, and the team shall not be eligible to participate in any postseason competition following that season.
C. In the sport of men's basketball, there shall be no paid visits permitted to recruits during the period January 1, 1989, to December 31, 1989.
D. The University shall reduce the total number of grants-in-aid in effect by one for the 1989-90 academic year. (For example, if the current number in effect is 13, the University may award no more than 12 grants for the 1989-90 academic year.)
E. The University annually shall report actions that it has taken during the probationary period to bring its athletics program into compliance with NCAA legislation, to the NCAA enforcement staff by September 1 each year. Included in that report shall be:
1. A full audit of the summer jobs program in which its student-athletes are involved.
2. A report on wages and salaries paid to student-athletes employed in summer camps at the University or summer camps operated by members of the University's athletics staff.
3. The University's compliance program activities for that year.
F. The University shall "show cause" why it should not be penalized further if it fails to disassociate three representatives of the University's athletics interests from the University's athletics program based upon their involvement in violations of NCAA rules. In the committee's present view, such disassociation should be for the University's probationary period and shall include: (1) refraining from accepting any assistance from the individual that would aid in the recruitment of prospective student-athletes or the support of enrolled student-athletes; (2) refusing financial assistance for the institution's athletics program from the individuals; (3) ensuring that no athletics benefit or privilege is provided to the individuals that is not generally available to the public at large, and (4) taking such other actions against the individuals that the institution determines to be within its authority to eliminate the involvement of the individual in the institution's athletics program.
(NOTE: Should the University of Kansas appeal either the findings of violations or proposed penalties in this case to the NCAA Council subcommittee of Division I members, the Committee on Infractions will submit an expanded infractions report to the members of the Council who will consider the appeal. This expanded report will include additional information in accordance with Section 6 of the Official Procedure Governance of the NCAA Enforcement Agency. A copy of the committee's report will be provided to you prior to the University's appearance before the Council subcommittee and, as required by NCAA procedures, will be released to the public.
G. The University shall be required to recertify its compliance with NCAA legislation for its intercollegiate athletics program for the 1988-89 academic year.
Also, the Committee on Infractions wishes to advise the University that when the penalties in this case become effective, the institution should take every precaution to ensure that their teams observed by the committee intend to monitor the penalties during their effective periods, and any action contrary to the terms of any of the penalties shall be considered grounds for extending the University's probationary period, as well as to consider imposing more severe sanctions in this case.)
NCAA COMMITTEE ON INFRACTIONS.
Roy F. Kramer
Thomas J. Niland J. Nixon
John E. Nowak
Patricia A. O'Hara
Milton R. Schroeder
D. Alan Williams (chair)
---
12
Wednesday, November 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Commission will receive request for Chelsea bonds
By Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
Last-minute surprises with the riverfront project have plagued the Lawrence City Commission and the project's developers for the last few months.
developers for the last months.
John Lungstrum, a lawyer representing the East Coast-based Chelsea Group, said last night that financial complications had threatened the project.
"It looked like this project might be a dead duck." Lunestrum said.
Lungstrum said.
Lungstrum went before the commission last night to request industrial revenue bonds. The commissioners voted unanimously to receive Chelsea's request for the bonds and set a 7:30 p.m. public hearing at next week's meeting.
Lungstrum said that the bonds would stabilize the property tax blow that the developers were predicting. He speculated that Chelsea would pay $120,000 a year in property taxes.
"The costs are higher than it appeared they would be," Lungstrum said.
Buford Watson, city manager, said that the bonds would carry the regular market rate and would be subject to regular taxes.
Mayer Bob Schumm said that it looked like the project would go over the $21 million mark.
Commissioner Dennis Constance said that although he
was worried about oversights, he thought that the increased cost of the project would ultimately testify for itself.
"Let's let this prove itself," Constance said. "I would like this project to proceed. Frankly, I think this will be wildly successful."
my successful.
Mike Vieux, president of the Downtown Lawrence Association and commissioners that the association was supportive of the riverfront retail shopping center that is scheduled to be completed within the year.
Heading from a prepared letter, Vieux said that the project would:
physically extend the downtown area bring new shoppers to Lawrence.
project wollur
physically extend the downtown area.
- renew a brighted area.
- expand the local tax base.
- expand the local tax base increase jobs for local residents.
- encourage entrepreneurship with the goals of the Lawrence Comprehensive Business Downtown expansion.
Plan, which provokes downward Schumm said that he went last week to a New Jersey shopping center that Chelsea developed and that the response from shoppers was good.
"The downtown there has just filled up." Schumm said.
"Rents have increased because of the demand for property."
If approved, the industrial revenue bonds will close on Dec. 1.
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City commission decides to vote on historic landmark ordinance
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By Janell Good Kansan staff writer
"It would stop people from using their own property, and it was an attack on private property rights," Allen said.
Private property owners of historic buildings or sites were a little restless after city commissioners debated a historic landmark ordinance last night.
Mayor Bob Schumm requested that the commission address details of the ordinance and scheduled a vote for Nov. 15.
would probably approve them."
"This isn't to say that an owner couldn't change the structure at all," he said. "If changes were compatible to the structure's present state, both commissions
the ordinance requires that any changes to a historic structure or district be regulated by both the city commission and the City Commission.
A 15-member task force appointed by the City Commission last year developed the ordinance Historic Resources Commission.
Allen said that problems could arise if property owners were against participating in the historic program. He suggested that the task force create an ordinance that would preserve historic property but that wouldn't destroy people's rights to private property.
Commissioner Sandy Praeger said that the ordinance should involve the Douglas County Planning Commission. The ordinance must enable the planning commission to review changes in historic sites and make recommendations to the city commission.
Arly Allen, task force member, said that the focus of the ordinance was to preserve historic properties and establish a historic structure was unclear.
"If there is an ordinance, there should be a definition of what it is you want to protect," Allen said.
Ron Schneider, chairman of the task force, said that once designated a highly significant structure, a historic site was protected from any dramatic changes the owner might make. This would be with or without the owner's consent.
Allen, owner of Allen Press, is suing the city for refusing to grant him a demolition permit. Allen wants to demolish a church located on his property, which is within 500 feet of the wings of county churches, a historic structure. However, the state controls changes to property within that distance of a historic structure.
Schneider said that both commissions had a check list of what was to be considered historical, ranging from the age to the style of structure.
New hearing set for suspect in boy's death
Currently, the Kansas Register in Topeka is where historic sites in Lawrence are listed.
The Associated Press
kidnapping to the first-degree murder charge already filed against William, a 27-year-old transient who had been living in the Lawrence area.
Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory said that his motion to file the superceding complaint would also be heard Nov. 10. He said the new complaint would add aggravatd
The second competency hearing for John William in the killing of a 9-year-old Lawrence boy will be Nov. 10, and the state is seeking permission to file a new complaint against him.
William was returned to Lawrence last week from the Larned State Hospital, where he was sent in August after being found incompetent to stand trial in the death of Richard D. Settlemyre. The child's body was found in the Kansas River
on July 14, and William was charged with murder the next dav
An order filed in Douglas County District Court last week said that the chief medical officer at the hospital ruled that William had attained competency. The first psychiatric examination of the defendant concluded that he was able to understand the nature and purpose of proceedings against him but that he was not competent to assist in his defense.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 2, 1988
13
Sanders avoiding publicity
Sports
STILLWATER, Okla. — Barry Sanders of Oklahoma State was relieved to learn that the Heisman winner will be announced Dec. 3.
The Associated Press
He should be among the finalists, but he will not be in New York for the announcement. On that date, Sanders and his team will be in Japan for a game against Texas Tech.
The truth is, his friends say, that Sanders doesn't like a lot of attention, and those who know him insist he is sincere about that.
Through seven games, Sanders has averaged 210 yards rushing a game. He has twice topped the 300-yard mark, and has an outside chance to break Marcus Allen's single-season rushing record.
"For him to be such a good athlete, in the public eye all the time, and still be so humble, it's amazing," Oklahoma State linebacker Sim Drain said.
"It's glamorous and everything, but I don't care." Sanders said of the Heisman. "We have more important things to worry about."
Dramatist
Amazing is how the Oklahoma State junior's play has been described.
His 37-carry, 320-yard effort against Kansas State this week gave Sanders 1,476 yards this season. To surpass Allen's 2,342 yards, Sanders must average about 216 yards in the final four games.
After Oklahoma, the Cowboys finish with Kansas, Iowa State and Texas Tech, none of which is very strong.
Sanders had 189 yards against seventh-ranked Nebraska earlier this year.
The 12th-ranked Cowboys face No. 8 Oklahoma this weekend. The Sooner defense is good, but not what it has been in recent years.
strong.
Sanders opened the season by running a kickoff 100 yards for a touchdown, and he hasn't slowed down. He has had some great games against soft competition, but his 189 yards against Nebraska, 157 yards against Texas A&M and 174 yards against Colorado prove he is capable.
Sanders gives most of the credit to his offensive line as many good halfbacks do. But coach Pat Jones says Sanders means it.
say.
"When he says something, he means it. I think he was raised that way."
"If there was a sincerity award in college football, he'd win it hands down," Jones said. "I don't think he goes into an interview thinking 'Well, I think this is what I'm expected to say.'"
Sanders, whose brother Byron is closing in on a 1,000-yard season at Northwestern, chose Oklahoma State over Tulsa and Iowa State. No other Division I school offered him a scholarship, but the Oklahoma State coaches knew early that they had found a gem.
round a game.
"As a freshman, you'd pitch him the ball and he was extremely hard to corral," offensive coordinator Larry Coker said. "He just made people trying to tackle him look bad."
trying.
He moved quickly up the depth chart that year, helped in part by injuries to players above of him, and he played sparingly behind All-American Thurman Thomas. As a sophomore, Sanders rushed for 622 yards, averaging 5.6 yards a carry, and led the nation in kick returns.
and led the race.
This season has been one impressive performance after another. The 5-foot-8-inch, 195-pound Sanders has the speed to run past people, the strength to run over them and the waterbug quickness that leaves defenders grabbing at air.
delthesheen to be some of that the things he did in a ball game would surprise me," teammate Jarrod Green said. "Now I almost expect him to do things other people aren't capable of doing."
Manning waiting until price is right
He's unhappy about deferment of 30 percent of annual salary
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Danny Manning says he will continue to hold out until he gets a contract from the Los Angeles Clippers that pays the full amount up front.
The NBA's No. 1 draft pick, who last week rejected a 5-year, $10 million contract, said Monday night in an interview with KNBC-TV that he remains unhappy that the Clippers want to defer 30 percent of each year's salary.
That would make the cash value of the contract a little more than $1 million a year, Manning said from Cincinnati.
"And right now that's not the going rate and that's not what the previous No. 1 pick's got in deferred payments received cash deals," Manning said.
money deferred, and the players have had some trouble in getting their money," Manning said. "I don't want to run into those problems. I'd just like my money up front."
"A lot of times in the past the Clippers have had players who had
Clippers officials could not be reached for comment.
received 10. Manning, whose agent is Ron Grinker of Cincinnati, said the amount of deferred money was supposed to be negotiable, "but they told us they want to leave it at 30 percent, which is the maximum amount of money you can defer."
money you can sell. If the Clippers won't budge, "I'll just have to sit and hold out," Manning said.
"I really love the game of basketball and it's something I want to do, but you have to look at it from a business point of view and if they try to get over on you on the first contract, they'll probably try it on the second one and third one."
KANSAS 25
Gary Mook/Special to the KANSA
Los Angeles Clippers draft pick Danny Manning doesn't want the team to withhold any of his contract money.
Parrish sees tight battle for Miami Kansas State coach tssup between OU, OSU and NU
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas State's Stan Parrish is the first coach to play all three Big Eight Conference heavyweights this year. And he figures it a tossup among the Sooners, Cowboys and Cornhuskers.
"The way they played us, I felt Nebraska was a consistent, strong team." Parrish said. "To be very honest, they all have their own identity, all do different things well. If they put their best foot forward, they're all capable of beating one another. After seeing all three, I'd say the thing is totally up for grabs."
rarrish and just about every other coach in the Big Eight is opposed to the idea of adding a 12th game to the schedule.
game to it, "I think it's ridiculous." Parrish said. "We never think about the players, always the money, always this, always that. Eleven games? Three weeks of preseason practicing, on AstroTurf, with the academic demands and pressure on kids? In my mind, a lot of times, there is too much pressure right now. Adding a game, to me, is in the best interests of everybody but
the most important people, the players."
"It a bunch of junk," said Iowa State's Jim Walden while reminding everyone that he has fewer scholarship players than programs that have been well managed for several years. "With 69 scholarship guys, that's all I need is another game. I hope we can get Miami or Florida State. Why don't we just give the kids the first semester off and play 15 games?"
Kansas State is busily looking for a replacement for Parrish, who has announced his resignation, to take effect at the end of the year. The Wildcats are winless for the year and without a victory since beating Kansas two years ago this month.
"As a coach, I would have some reservations." Nebraska's Tom Osborne said. "The season is plenty long enough right now. I would hope that if something is done, some compensation could be given to the players, whether it's some kind of stipend or provision where a student could attend Christmas did for. We're progressively asking more and more of the players and giving them less and less in return."
Only Colorado's Bill McCartney was solidly in favor.
K-State suffers from the same legacy of bad management by previous staffs that Walden faced when he came to Iowa State two years ago. And under the circumstances, the Cyclone coach is not optimistic for the Wildcats in their search.
was born. "I'm for it," he said. "I'm for it if we can attract an opponent where we can have a capacity crowd. I don't see any reason not to."
"I can't imagine anybody going down there unless they're out of work," he said. "Because of the numbers situation. It has nothing to do with the pride of Kansas State or the facilities. If the president and athletic director at Kansas State can't show the coach coming in that he, within two years, have the same ample number of athletes that everybody else has, then it's ludicrous.
"I can't see anybody in Division I football leaving their jobs under normal circumstances to go to Kansas State right now. Why would anybody do what I did? I'm
the only idiot in this world."
A lot of people will be laughing at the prospect of Kansas and Kansas State playing this week with their collective 0-16 record. But in fact, the game will showcase two of the best receivers in the Big Eight, if not the nation. Kansas State's Greg Washington leads the conference with seven touchdown catchers, 728 yards inceptions; Charlie Vaughn, Kansas' slick senior, has caught 29 passes for 712 yards and six touchdowns and also has a rushing touchdown this season.
And neither man is playing for an offensive juggernaut.
"I certainly hope that because we're not playing well, what he's doing will not be overlooked by anybody," Parrish said of Washington. "He and Hart Lee Dykes (of Oklahoma State) put on one of the greatest shows I've ever seen Saturday. Willie Vaughn's a tougher too. He might be the fastest guy in the league. It brings some prominence to our league. It's not strictly a running conference."
Red's 3rd baseman given rookie award
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Chris Sabo proved that the Cincinnati Reds don't have to finish second at everything.
Sabo was named winner of the Jackie Robinson National League Rookie of the Year by the Baseball Writers Association of America yesterday. The third baseman 271, hit in the first four games in 44 for the Reds who finished second in the NL West for the fourth consecutive season.
Sabo received 79 points and 11 first-place votes from a panel of 24 writers, two from each National League city. First baseman Mark Grace of the Chicago Cubs was second with 61 points and right-hander Tim Belcher of the Los Angeles Dodgers was third with 35.
Angel:
"It means a lot to me." Sabo said.
"It's like the All-Star Game. I was noticed to that but I wasn't counting on it. When I got it, I was happy. It's the same with this. I wasn't counting on it. If I did it, great. If I didn't get it, I wasn't going to quit."
wasn't going to acquire Reds owner Marge Schott, who has been critical of the team's second-
place finishes, attended Sahoo's conference at Riverfront Stadium
"Well, at least we won something. Right Chris?" she quipped.
Sabo is the sixth Cincinnati player to win the award, the first since pitcher Pat Zachry tied Butch Metzger of the Padres in 1976, the only tie in the award's history.
Sabo stole 46 bases, tying for fourth in the league. He holds the most stolen bases record for a Reds' rookie since Bob Descher's 54 in 1909. Sabo hit 40 doubles, third in the NL behind Andres Galarraga's 42 and Rafael Palmeiro's 41. Sabo was the only rookie to play in the All-Star Game, playing before the hometown crowd.
On June 18, Sabo had his first four-ft game and the Reds traded Bell to the Houston Astros. Sabo was 11-for-23 that week, stole four bases in four attempts and was named the league's player of the week.
He made an impact from the start.
On April 7, Sabo had 11 assists in
Cincinnati's 8-1 victory over St. Louis
tiring the record for third basemen.
KU WOMEN'S HOOPS: Forward LaTanya Nelson scored 21 points to lead the blue team to a 56-54 victory over the white team in a Kansas women's basketball team scrimmage last night in Salina.
Nelson, a Landover, Md., sophomore, also had 13 rebounds and four steals in the scrimmage.
10 points and had 13 points. Other leading scorers in the scrimage were junior guard Lisa Braddy with 12 points for the white team, freshman guard Geri Hart with 10 points for the blue team and freshman guard Shannon Bloxom with 10 points for the white team.
steals in the scrimmage.
Lynn Page, Junior center, set the pace for the white team. She scored 15 points and had 13 rebounds.
Sports Briefs
points for the white
The Jayhawks will scrimmage
again Tuesday at Washburn University in Topeka.
*way in Topeka*
SAMUEL DOUBTFUL: The University of Kansas' starting cornerback Peda Samuel was listed as doubtful for this weekend's game against Kansas State, Coach Glen Mason said yesterday.
Samuel suffered a left groin pull last Saturday against Oklahoma and sat out practice both Monday and yesterday.
SANDERS BREAKS RECORD:
Oklahoma State's Barry Sanders,
for a record nine time, has been
honored Eight Conferences offensive
player of the week.
yesterday Samuel has recorded 51 tackles and four interceptions this season.
The quick, elusive junior gouged K-State for a school-record 320 rushing yards Saturday, scoring on runs of 26, 38 and 17 yards. Sanders is the
The Jayhawks focused on offense and the kicking game during yesterday's practice. MARKERS, BREAKS, RECORD:
first player in NCAA history to rush for 300 yards twice in a season and the only Big Eight player ever named offensive player of the week five times in a season. The Wichita North product was a unanimous pick.
Strong safety Otis Smith of Missouri was chosen by the media panel as defensive player of the week for his work against Nebraska.
Smith, a junior college transfer, had 10 tackles, including four behind the line for 24 yards in losses. He also intercepted a fumble and intercepted a pass.
GOLDEN SPIKES AWARD: Third baseman Robin Ventura of Oklahoma State, who helped the U.S. team win the Olympic gold medal, was named winner of the Golden Spikes Award yesterday, presented to the outstanding amateur baseball player in the nation.
KU
---
Gary Mook/Special to the KANSAN
Curtis Shaw, a Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, pitched in yesterday's sixth game of the Jayhawk World Series between two teams divided up from the Kansas baseball team.
Violence dominates early NHL contests
The Associated Press
During the off-season, the NHL took action to crack down on players guilty of flagrant stick fouls.
Meanwhile, the players have been cracking down, too, not only with their sticks, but their fists, fingers, knees and just about anything else they can use to hurt their opponents.
During the first month of the season, violence has dominated much of the NHL season and cast a blood on ice along with the blood that has been spilled.
The latest incident occurred Sunday night in New York, where Pittsburgh superstar Mario Lemieux was injured by a stick slash from David Shaw of the New York Rangers. Shaw was suspended pending a hearing yesterday in Montreal.
It continued an early season trend of player suspensions for a variety of violent acts.
On Monday, three players were suspended by the NHL. Edmonton's Mark Messier, Philadelphia's Rick Tocchet and Chicago's Dave Manson.
Manson was suspended for 10 games because he instigated a fight after the game last Friday night against Vancouver's David Bruce.
Messier was suspended for six games for slashing Vancouver's Rich Sutter on Oct. 23.
Tocchet was suspended for 10 games as the result of an eye-gouging incident against New York Islander Dean Chenywon ether Oct. 27.
Ranger defenseman James Patrick is among those calling for stiffer penalties, particularly in slashing incidents. Patrick has called for the league to set a precedent of "half a season (suspension) at least for a similar infraction" to the one that took place in Madison Square Garden last season between Philadelphia's Dave Brown and New York's Tomas Sandstrom.
Shaw's slash of Lemieux Sunday night lacked some of the Brown-Sandstrom ugliness, but could have inflammatory reverberations, particularly when the Rangers and Penguins next meet on Nov. 23 in Pittsburgh. At least some Pittsburgh players have promised retaliation for the slashing of Lemieux, last season's most valuable player.
Brown was suspended for 15 games — the longest in NHL history — for his attack on Sandstrom in a controversial decision by the league. The NHL was criticized for what many considered a light penalty to Brown, who struck Sandstrom with his stick in the neck while the Ranger forward's back was turned.
the next time we play New York, he dead," Pittsburgh defenseman Steve Dykstra said of Shaw. "And if he hasn't got the (guts) to dress for the game, I'll get him in the stands. We play these guys six more times. He'll his get. Nobody swings his stick at Mario Lemieux and walks away."
Llemieu's injury, described as a "brushed sternum," was not considered serious. But other players have not been so lucky this year.
Chynnow, for one, will miss four to six weeks with his eye injury. Rich Sutter lost several teeth to Messier's stick, and Reed's nose was cut in Philadelphia, suffered a broken jaw and a concussion in a high sticking incident with Patrick
"It it was a vicious cross-check, totally unnecessary and unprovoked," said Bob Clarke, Flyers vice president and general manager.
14
Wednesday, November 2; 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Toxic Waste Dump.
The Great American Smokeout. Nov. 17. AMERICAN CANCER
GROUP
Lawrence.
Amy Johnson, president of the organization, said that 40 students, divided into groups of five, visited more than 500 homes, asking for canned food.
GROUP COLLECTS CANNED FOOD: KU Students Against Hunger collected more than 800 cans of food last night by trick-or-treating in Lawrence.
"Cooperation from people in Lawrence was incredible," she said. "They were so willing to give us food."
Johnson said the donations would go to the Salvation Army.
KU STUDENT IN PAGEANT: A KU student has been selected as a seminalist in the 1989 Miss U.S.A. I. student competition and 27 and 27 in Arlington Heights, II,
News Briefs
Yvonne O'Neill, Glen Ellyn, IL,
junior, will be competing for a
chance to represent her home state
at February's Miss U.S. A pageant in
Boston. She would be more than
more than $100,000 in cash and
more than $100,000 in prizes and awards.
Miss U.S.A. will be judged on beauty of face and figure, poise, personality, grooming, intelligence and speaking ability.
LAWRENCE MAN CHARGED WITH
LAWRENCE MAR CHARGE
A man was arrested. Monday on charges of strong armed robbery and armed robbery, Lawrence police reported
Police said that on Oct. 20, the suspect took a woman's purse and knocked her down in the 1800 block of Massachusetts Street. The purse was worth $25 and contained $104 in currency.
A witness followed the suspect's car until he removed a bag covering the license plate. The witness then reported the number to the police.
On Oct. 21, the suspect reportedly
robbed a liquor store, also in the 1800 block of Massachusetts Street. He took an undisclosed amount of currency.
MAN CHARGED WITH LEWD
BEHAVIOR: A male suspect was
arrested Monday for reportedly
masturbating in front of two women
in Lot 111, near Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall, KU police reported.
The suspect was charged with lew and lascivious behavior and obstruction of the legal process by resisting arrest. No bond was posted.
Apple Seasonings
Salt Shaker
Works
Works
WORKSHOP
WORKSHOP
WORKSHOP
Macintosh Plus
Macintosh Plus
TICKETS
[Image of a ticket with text]
**TICKETS**
*FREE*
*2 HOURS*
*10 AM TO 5 PM*
*PLEASE RSVE BY MAY 30*
[Image of a ticket with text]
**TICKETS**
*FREE*
*2 HOURS*
*10 AM TO 5 PM*
*PLEASE RSVE BY MAY 30*
Microsoft Works - Word processor, spreadsheet and data base manager all in one.
Microsoft Excel - The ultimate in spreadsheets with outstanding graphics
Lotus
Dollars & Sense Home accounting system for money management and checkbook maintenance
Panasonic printer for the Mac- Panasonic 1080
with tractor and friction feed, excellent quality with Mac
interface and 24 month warranty, all for ... $ 369
Great pieces on disks, paper supplies (including
papers, label cards, Rolleis), games, WordPerfect.
KU's connection for Apple enhancements from the professionals at:
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER
Downtown Lawrence
804 New Hamshire St.
843-7584
To Illustrate Our 14-Point Oil Change.
The JTeam performs these 14 vital services on your vehicle in 10 MINUTES with NO appointment.
1
OIL CHANGE *
1 OIL CHANGE *
2 INSTALL NEW OIL FILTER
3 CHECK AND FILL TRANSMISSION FLUID
2 INSTALL NEW OIL FILTER
8 LURRICATE THE CHASIS
4 CHECK AND FILL POWER STEERING FLUID
5 INSPECT AIR FILTER
6 CHECK AND FILL BRAKE FLUID
7 CHECK BATTERY SYSTEM
9
4 PORCANOL POWER STEERING FLUID
CHECK AND FILL DIFFERENTIAL FLUID
8
LUBRICATE THE CHASSIS
9
5 INSPECT AIR FILTER
10
not valid with any other offer
10 CHECK AND FILL WINDSHIELD WASHER SOLVENT
11 INSPECT WIPER BLADES
12 INFLATE THE TIRES
13 VACUUM THE INTERIOR
14 WASH THE WINDOWS
Be a NANNY
14 WASH THE WINDOWS
VISA
MasterCard
$2
jiffylube
Expiration date: 12-3-88
jiffylube
Expiration date: 12.3.88
not valid with any other offer
VISA
MasterCard
$2'00 off
14-point oil,
lube and fluid
service. (Reg. $23.99)
*up to 5 quarts
914 WEST 23rd ST
749-1599
Expiration date: 12-3-88
0340
COMPUTER
SUPPLY SOURCE
near New York City
• Great salary & benefits,
airfare provided
• Choose from warm, screened
families pre-screened by us
• Year round positions only
• Must enjoy
working with children
Grace for Vide Ine
---
Care for Kids, Inc.
PO Box 27, Rowanton, CT 06853 203-852-8111
Supplies & Accessories
for freshmen and Sophomores,
Millions go unclaimed yearly.
Write: Student Guidance Services,
622-KAIF Avenue, New Kensington, PA 15068. Money-Back Guarantee.
2512 W 6th St. 842-6379
COLLEGE MONEY
KANU, Peoples National Bank and the Ottawa Herald Proudly Present:
The
2
The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
and the Big Band Sounds of the 1940's - 1950's In a Special Dance/Concert
TUESDAY, NOV. 8, 8 P.M.
at the
OTTAWA MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM
Just 20 minutes South of Lawrence on Iowa St.
•THERE WILL BE A DANCE FLOOR IN THE ORCHESTRA PIT
OR GROUND WORK
•FOR UP-TO-DATE ELECTION RESULTS.
THERE WILL BE TWO LARGE SCREEN TV'S IN THE LOWER LOBBY
Come Enjoy The Songs of An Exciting Era
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE BOX
OFFICE OR CAN BE CHARGED BY
CALLING 242-8810
State employees : no passing phase
Jessie doesn't quit. This summer she asked local legislators to join her in writing a letter requesting the governor to implement Phase III.
But Phase III of a salary equity study that would have helped service and security personnel was blocked. That's frustrating.
State employees are taking home an average pay increase of 6.5 percent this year. Jessie Branson fought for that.
Jessie will continue to battle for state employees. For fairness' sake. And with tireless will.
ALEXANDRA JOHNSON
Vote Jessie again.
Jessie Branson STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Pad for by the Committee to Reelect Jessie Branson. Ben Zimmerman. Treasurer
Special Student Price with Senior Stylist
RIVER CITYHAIR CO.
Special Student Price with Senior Stylist - $12
1021 Mass. • We ♥ Walk-ins • 842-0508
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents
Sister Aminah Al-Silmy
an American Muslim who is a media specialist and Associate Editor of the American Trust Publication in Plainfield, Indiana speaking on
speaking on
"Islam: The Path
"Islam: The Path to Women's Liberation" In this lecture Mrs. Al-Silmy will explain to you how Islam changed her to a committed liberated Muslim woman.
Time: 7 p.m., Friday, Nov.4,1988
Place: Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
Refreshments are provided Free and Open to the Public For information call 841-9768
LAST CHANCE!
OZT
JANUARY SEMESTER BREAK
STEAMBOAT
COLORADO
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
COLORADO
WINTER PARK
COLORADO
KEYSTONE
COLORADO
$156*
from
LODGING • LIFTS
PICNIC • PARTY • MORE
Syndicate
7TH ANNUAL
COLLEGIATE
WINTER
SKI BREAKS
1989
We love it! you want to take a semester ski break to Colorado, but you're sure who to call or order to go? DON'T WORRY. BE HAPPY. After seven years of riding College Winter Ski Breaks, you most popular destinations including hard or fully equipped condominium (with kitchen) lodging for 16 or 7 days including amenities like picnic parties, taxes, goodies bags, no damage deposit and expert maintenance on your Ski base staff to make sure you Collegiate Winter Ski Break 89
Don't worry. We worried about driving in the snow! Finances a problem!
DON'T WORRY. BE HAPPY. Organize a ski group and we'll get you the bus! Consider why we get your round trip tickets really. Need some time to pay chars using the plastic!
Steamboat Valley Beaver Creek Winter Park or Keystone. The hardest part is choosing which destination to "conquer" this coming January. Available space is limited. DON'T DEAD. Call Sune base TODAY for your complete color ski brochure with all the exciting details!
UNI
STEAMBOAT
COLORADO
VAIL/BEAVER CREEK
COLORADO
WINTER PARK
COLORADO
KEYSTONE
COLORADO
$156*
from
LODGING • LIFTS
PICNIC • PARTY • MORE
SUNCHA
7TH ANNUAL
COLLEGIATE
WINTER
SKI BREAKS
* 1989
Hurry-Call today!
you want to take a semester ski break to Colorado, but you re
DON'T WORRY. BE HAPPY. After Seven
days, you have to go to ski breaks. Skihouse has the amenities at
winter ski breaks. Destinations including hot-tail lily
downtown ski breaks. 5, 6 or 7 days inside.
deposit and expire.
Sunchair
7TH ANNUAL
COLLEGEIDATE
WINTER
SKI BREAKS
* 1989
Sunbabe
THIRD ANNUAL
COLLEGIATE WINTER SKI BREAKS
* 1989
You have to want to take a semester ski break to Colorado, that you re
not sure about to call or other way. DON'T BE HAPPY.
You have to call the college Winter Breaks. College has the answer.
equipment condiment (with optional loafing) for 6 or 7 days. You'll be hul-
equipped conditioned (with all the goodies) loading hail no damage deposit and expire-
tion on site picnic, mortar all the goodies, goojee bags, no damage deposit and expire-
nence will last 4 lainute.
Nice year yet! Married about drawing in the snow? Finances a problem?
NO WORRY. BE HAPPY. Organize a Winter Skip Break '89
(but tenderly we will go your major tickets credit) Need some time to pay
for the trip using the plastic.
Steamboat Beach/New River Creek. Winter Park or Keystone. The hardest part
is choosing which destination to "conquer" this summer January.
Available space is limited. DOAY for your
Hotel/Sunbeach ski brochure with all the details details!
TOLL FREE INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS
1-800-321-5911
sunchase tours
15
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders
meeting will be held tonight from 6:30 at
Watkins Student Health Services, room 7.
our stress and don't forget our GIFT CBP
the street and don't forget our GIFT CBP
we'll get a holiday shopping easy, we won't
gust be leaving too early! Call 841-6926 - Remember you knail!! ECKNARKR group discussion group For more
ECKNARKR group discussion group For more
Jewish Community Center, Blintz Brunch. Sun.
Nov 6, 10-2, 917 Highland, Lawrence.
Mary Kay Cosmetics. Contact Deeann Wilks at
841-9072
Write-in San Eckert for the U.S. House of Representatives. You do have a choice.
The Student Senate Elections Committee
now accepting applications for Graduate Replacement Senators.
Applications can be picked up at the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union, 864-3710.
Application
Deadline:
Friday Nov. 4
at 5 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
GOOD HIRRITIONS: the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call 'Brian' 841-9484.
JOHN G. SINGS Biodays, singing messages. 841-1874.
FOR RENT
Available Jan. 1, 2 bedroom apt, new carpet, new paint, and appliers, nice porch, close to campus, cats okay /350/month + utilities: 749-5213 or 749-3656
Available immediately! b bedroom apt. for male
room. Available immediately! c bedroom apt. for
electric and contact. Call 841-3207
Available immediately i-bedroom basement
apartment with free closet close to KU and
bathroom (74-96-05).
Completely Furnished 12 and 4 bedroom apart-
ment suite at 941-1212, 842-5255, 841-1429, or 748-2415.
Completely furnished 1 bdrm apt. 2 blks from campus. Quiet. Available Dec. 25th. 841-3529.
*meticulously Furnished Bedrooms, 1-2-3 & 4 Bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call (855) 222-4225, or 749-2413. MasterClass Management
Extra Nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment to sub-
lease, sequent apartment. Call 799-3174
For rent: 2 bdr. - 1 Bath, in great location, on bus route. We need someone to take over our leave. Jan-May: Call for details: 843-4255.
DOWNTOWN APARTMENT quiet, clean, new
dresser and drummer. Marilyn Tolmari-
842-7687 savings.
romantic hostmate wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Availiable immediately. Apartments include: own bedroom, own bathroom, private fireplace, and free laundry room. Call 794-6083.
Large i bedroom apt. Hanoi Place Quiver, very
large rd. B41 804-9236 or 841-1212 signed by the
merchant B41 804-9236 or 841-1212
Lease for spring semester One space in nice large 2 BD. apt 5 min walk from campus Available Due 20 Call 841 6882.
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped. Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
Sat 8-3
Sun 1-4
meadowbrook
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 814-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
- On bus route-near shoppin
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 2, 1988
- Ample off-street parking
- Dental furniture available
- Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
Freehold Now Call 624-822-8000
Sublease nice 1 bedroom apartment starting
Date $455.90 month Electricity paid. Phone
343-289-1289 by 6:30pm.
Spring Semester 89' Sublease 1br. W/D. On bus rt.
Call 749-4560.
Call 719-345-800
Sublease next semester. Nonmoking roommate $100/mo + one utilities. Near campus. 842-608-600
Sub-lease two bedroom apartment. Water paid. Near campus. 842-608-600
FOR SALE
New Hidden Meadows Townhomes. Two Bedroom
and Two Bedroom with Study and Fireplace.
749-1141, 841-3919, 2832 Iowa. Behind Raco
Carwash
Silhouette Tangued Well Storage in
December. Furnished low utilities Ca 749 749
Vacancy for next semester Own rented
bedroom in room 214-749 749
749 749
Portable Computer - 4048, 2454 disk drives, 1200b modem, IBM compatible, case carrying; Daisy Wheel Printer 406ps, plcsam or continuous flow, 3 wires; Nintendo, price negotiated. 292-628 or 824-188 after 4pm.
Records Show & Sale Sunday Nov. 6. 9-5 V.F.W. Hall
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and couture jewelry, a large selection of books, playboards, collector and cheep rock-n rocki records, vintage clothing, books, coins, baseball cards, slot machines, Maxfield Park toys, kitchen utensils, desks, antique tools, Royal Doulton, and so much more stuff it will blow you away! QUANTRIL'S FLAE MARKET. Open every week. Open 9am to 5pm. For best rental info call 842-6516. Visa Mastercard welcome.
AUDIO Sale- Cassette deck. Teas. JVC, Sony from $75 - 180. Must sell. 841-9844
**IKE:** Motobecane, nice bike, good condition, must sell quick! Bargain: $109. Call #841-9726. Comic books, Playbies, Penthouses, et al. *Max's Comics*. 11 New Hampshire. Open Sat. 10 a.m.
Drafting table $4.00. Scree Receiver $4.00. T1 handheld computer $7.00. Centron Ironman $7.00.
Drum set 4 pc Ladwid w/ Piaste Cymbals $325
849 drum. Must sell.
For Sale: 1988 Sursuki Samurai Take over payments/negotiations Call evening (316)
364 890
information on Ka Police Photo
radar. Now in use. Also new offer to SAVE
$80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 radar unit. New
will detect fires. New BEL BWL
O F. Box 274, Laming Ks. 66043
FULTONS Quality cotton mattress from $88.88
New Wave Felters 842-7378
Go to MiMM. FT for Thanksgiving and/or
discount price. Call 794-7523 after 6:00 on the
Leather jackets (new) For $150. Call 841-0359
after 6 p.m.
monitor DD system back on sale. 1000 watts sound.
lights lookers. 749-1500
Rock-n-roll. Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ever Saturday and Sunday. Quantrill's Fiex Market, 811 New Hampshire. Trailer: "12" x 65", w & d, shell deck, AC, store,
Trailer 12 x 65, h & w, d & shed, deck, AC, stove,
Rfice, njce, 4300, Call Day 749-3240
T-SHIRTS
Why Beer is Better than
100% Cotton L and XL Sizes
Only $10 call Tim 842-3606
AUTO SALES
1981 Blazer Silverado AC, PB, PS, AT, AM/FM
stereo, CB radio 4 " lift with 35" Radial muddies
looks and runs great. After 6:00 749-590S,
5700.00
1948 Toyota 4x4 u p-5-spd. S-RS all options red
1948 Toyota 4x4 obc John 841-9023
1922 Ford EXP Stereo Cass. and more. Good condition,
must sell. 1600 DBD 844 6333
1985% Ford Escort 5-speed, AM/FM cassette,
rear defrost plus more. 842-3145 eyes.
McLaren-Led, Gold Pioneer Stereo System.
dition, must sell $1,600 OBD 844 6333
Ecord Escort 5-series. am/FM cassette
1885 Honda Accord, Gold, Pioneer Stereo System,
nice car, good ear, snow in, 842-9383
185 Hong Kong Accident, Good, nice car, good car in snow, 842-9033.
78 Mazda RX4 (5-speed), Runs good, Stereo. New
78 Mazda RX4 (x5-speed), Runs good, Stereo, New bikps, 860 KOQ, Call 81-3942
81 Grand LeMans, Cruise control, must sell $900,
749-0105
86 Olds Forenza Coup, power steering, leather seats, 1953-1954, 1955-1956, cassette new, all season lawn chairs, $5500,
Cougar, air, tilt, crusse, powertrain, door lockers, rear seats, BMW MFM stereo,
$5000. Both cars purchased
doorlocks, resale, cruise ship AM/FM stereo cassette, 19,000 miles, $900. Both cars purchased new, transferable warranty. Both in excellent condition. Call 843-3898.
GOVERNMENT SEIZEED Vehicles from $100
and up. Surplus cars may be shipped to:
1) 806-275-4000 ext. 5972
2) 806-275-4000 ext. 5973
Great School Cars! Corolla 77 $700 Honda
9500 $9500 Stereo. Very Dependible
9500 $9500
abere 450 125 MINT Condition ¥ must sell me an offer. 843-4939 and Eve 841-6959 as for
the same condition.
Is It True You Can Buy Jeep for 444 through the
JEEP website? (the facts) call 'JEEP' 123/124 118 141 Ext. 3944
it starts. It stops. What more could you want for
w/o WB Beetle? 749-7302
REDS HOT bargains! Drug dealer's cars, boats,
READS plan to stock in 40,000 buyers.
Represent your local dealership.
LOST-FOUND
Pizza Shuttle is immediately hiring both full-time and part-time job drivers. Day and evening shifts are required. Pay is daily pay, mileage, and bonuses. Must have own vehicle. Apply in person at Pizza Shuttle 1601 W. 32rd
Found- Musical Instrument Case. Call to identify
141.490
Found young female tiger cat. Unusual color and marking on tiger tail. Found Oct 29 14th
68-847-6124
HELP WANTED
*Only Call Us*
OSTM Influenza on 10/25 98th out of 3139
OSTM Influenza call B4 6496.
Michelle, I found your keys, 10th & Tenn. Eric
862-770.
Bakery Sale/Cleaning. Late night late night position $4.00/hr after trained. Three weeks paid vacation after 1 year. Interviews 5 o'pm Tues, 1 and Wed, 10 and 2 contact Daryle Apply
*625/mo. Duties: Participates in program-
coding; assists in the preparation of
program documentation, and preparation of necessary test data. Required: 1 courses from college/univer-
sity, high school or professional exam,
in affiliation with a KU student. Full job description available. Send cover letter and resume to Ruth Hurst, Personal Coordinator, University of Kansas, Computer Center, Lawrence, KS 65034.
Experienced Photographer (student hourly position) needed for University Publication, new research photography, camera and darkroom experience, also experience with artificial lighting and on-camera Skip. Prefer experience in a studio or classroom by 5pm. Nov. 4 to University Relations Center 662-352-8900. MAGAZINE & ACCESS IN
SUMMER BORDS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Open
Parks; Forests, Fire Crews, Snow
Stamp. For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming,
Valleys MT 59601
HAIMLIN AIRLINE NEW HIRING. Flight Attendants,
Mechanics, Mechanics. Customer Service
Liaison. Salaries to $10K. Entry level positions.
Call: 805-689-6000. Exit: A-9758
BIOLOGY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Part-time, approximately 20 hours per week. Must be available for 24 hour blocks of time during lab work. Prior experience with application to Inter Research Corp., 2200 W. 21st Street. References and transcript required. Applicant must be 18.0. An equal opportunity employer. M-F-H-R.
Student Applications Programmer 1/2 - tue
student 1/2 - tue
Duties: Participate in program
Cheeker's Pizza has immediate openings for chef, pastry chef and baker. The劈劈, Day, and nighttime positions available. Order pallet sizes per hour; sandwich makers are limited to 10 per hour; in person at pianoforte 2214 Yale Rd. Ref. #973560.
Cheicker's Pizza has immediate openings for driver deliveries, kitchen staff, and all drive adr. license, and insurance. A $17-hour训. commission, and easy to reach bunnies. Apply in person at Cheicker's Pizza. Call (866) 450-8230.
Full or part-time position to fuel, tube and doe light maintenance for heavy equipment. Flexi-exeroxed. Apply in person to R.D. Johnson Exeroxing O., 300 Clark Suite 120.
Excavating
Engineering Students part-time position is available with Overland Park based oil and gas firm. For information and interview please call Arion Resources Corporation Exploration
BREAK VACATION IN CANCUN!
Become a College Tours representative on your campus and get a free trip. Nothing to buy we provide everything you need. It's easy! Call 140-279-0055
Chiropractic Assistant to work 8 am to 1 pm.
MWF: Call 749-6132.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$18,520.yr. Now
hiring. Your Area. (1) 865-687-4000 Ext. R-9758
for current Federal list.
graphic designer. Half-time, 11/18/88-6/27/89.
$750 per month on position offered.
Pricing: $499 per year, a college of any
communications curriculum or equivalent;
evidence of ability to handle the job;
appropriate combination of complete position description
contact Carol Leffler, Office of University
Admissions (913)-844-8155, eo.ac.uk, U.S.
(913)-844-8154, EOA.com. employer.
Job name: Telephone sales, personnel. Hourly wage. Day & Evening hours. For interview call 834-3343.
Junior women. Consider a commission in the Marine Corps. See Lieutenant Milburn at 925 Iowa Street.
NANNIES need to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good salary and experience are more information call: (712) 724-9800.
Network Support Assistant. *Student Hourly*. Deadline: 11/18, $88. Salary: $2.65/hr. Duties: Prepare and perform IT support duties within performance. 2 Takes phone messages, etc. Requires: 1) types at 6 p.m; 2) current enrollment as a student; 3) write instructions & write instructions; 4) schedule to time in 3-hour班; 5) and 6) assist with data entry M-F 8:00 p.m. Full job description available Fill out a job application at the reception desk at HWL Business Center.
woe hire cooking and cashiers for day, evenings,
and over night shifts. Starting pay $4.09 $4.50.
Apply anytime. Harbeeb on the turbike 843-8200.
(Hardie Flexible)
m. a.m. 5:00 p.m. Full job description available.
m. a.f. one job application at the reception desk at
the Computer Center, University of Kansas
EOA艾摩埃。
We are looking for two line cooks. Must be able to
nightlights. Contact Windell at Beererr
841-1235
Young couple seeks Nanny in New York. Call collect at 516-365-5908.
Are you a student concerned about responsible or non-use students? Get involved in KU's meeting Monday, November 7, 7-8 pm at Room 5, Kansas Union. Call 491-266-6056.
MISCELLANEOUS
On instruments, VCs, VCA's, Jewelry, Steres, Musical in-
tubes, cameras, and more. We honor
Visa/MC/A.M.E.X. J - Hawk Paw & Jewelry.
1804 W. 6th. 1491-1919.
- Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
BIG GENIUS
Wednesday
Chicken breast
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
Chicken
Dinner
$4.00
Draws
60¢
Johnny's
Low cost Maier Medical Insurance for
dependent 2 children with $25 deductible only
$65 $66 month. With parent slightly higher, Kansas
Insurance Service #911 1861.
BASIC CREW
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided.
Hillel
שְהוּד
Thursday, Nov. 3
General Planning Meeting
Open to All
7:30 p.m., Hillel House
Wednesday, Nov. 2
United Jewish Appeal Meeting
6:15 p.m., Hilliell House
Events of the Week
Sunday, Nov. 6
6 L.I.B.C. Bunch Brun
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
917 Highland Ave.
For more information call Hillel House, 749-4242.
PERSONAL
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
lucky for friendly, sincere, nice SWF, 21-30
P.O. P. Box 422-943, Lawrence, KS: 60044.
Photo appreciated.
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquaters
We're here because we care
Be at hand. We're always open
To the Marching Jayhawks, "Our biggest and best trumpet and percussion sections ever." Let's get ready for some fun. When we're at it, let find a way to win a game. Love you, love me. The Mad Pice is here: **SHIRT UP!**
Hey Sugley! Meet me at Pratee Time this
week. How can I help you? Hey Sugley!
MAX U: 180 WOULD YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT?
AP at GP- Fall will get you every time! How long is a very long time? I need Ali's other sock Hebrew 12:11: H
伞
WEBB'S PARTY SUPPLY (formerly Green's) 810 West 23rd
Tracey, please accept this public apology for publishing your phone number and nocturnal habits in the paper last Thursday. P.S. Who dumni?
Hi: el House, 749-4242
Alaja Bobo - well the day is finally here, it's been two great years. Jeff.
S.F. Come play in my orchestra. Love you Joe
Average
Nov. 2-Nov.8
thursday in the Kansas Union! You Hagmutt!
MAX: UHOO DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT?
Mommy Adamich thanks for everything PEE-
Fido, Fido, and I Love you. Love your baby
Government Photos, Passport, immigration,
via. Modeling, theatrical, Advanced fine art
portfolios. Sliden can be a valuable asset to your
project. Includes original artwork for HOU-
VEL VIII GW! You are welcome in those fordic
s your car in shape for those winter maintenance needs. You must have a permanent maintenance card at Phillips 66. I only have 30 left now. Card include oil change, tug toy, rad. flush drain, fuel filter, brake fluid and tire rotation and spin balance (smoothes out your ride on the highway). tug tire repair plus more 1 year warranty. Oil change exp Dec. 31, 1988. All Phillips 66 asks is that you purchase a competitively priced piece of equipment so you can maintain it so catch me. Jim, at 842-6155 WWM (18am-7pm), calls.
Coors Light 12 pk. $5.78
BUS. PERSONAL
WOLF· Congrats! Heard you lost it in Pittsburg.
Lite 12 pk. $5.92
qualify gas with visit each. These are...
15m³ (12cm³) BF (30m³) FB (45m³)
18pm, 9am 12am) OR TH (15pm, 12am)
OR WH (16pm, 12am)
CALL FOR QUOTES
ON MULTIPLE-CASE
ORDERS!
841-4420
SERVICES OFFERED
Astrology. Would you like to know about someone special, more about what you will infuse your team with? Envelope to Astroalpi P.O. Box 344, Silmien, Mo4698. Mail
Boulder Po'traits is the greatest gift idea.
Setting includes glamourized make-over and full
passion assistance. For more information call
Mike or Grace collection 1-299-3789
CUSTOMER SERVICE CLERKS Several opening for customer service clerks in the Lawrence area, day shifts, phone experience, good transportation, excellent benefits. Call immediately.
DUMMIE TEACHING
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
Driving School serving KU, students for
20 years license obtainable, transportation
obtained, 841-799.
FILE CLERKS Several openings for file clerks in the lawrence area. Numerical and color coded bus transportation. 6-9 per hour benefits. Call 27713. DUTCH TEMPORARY SYSTEMS 2677-2773
Trick or Treat Specials
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Don't let your vehicle trick you this fall.
treat it to a service of your choice.
Oil Change Service
* Genuine Toyota filter,
up to 5 quarts.
$14.95
Toyota Vehicles Only, coupon required
10% Off Coupon
Any repairs or maintenance
performed in our shop.
Expires 11/1/88
TOYOTA QUALITY
HAVE GROWN MY FOR ANYTHING MORE!
ELLENA
TEAM TOYOTA
29th & Iowa 842-2191
Can a Jayhawk really eat a Wildcat?
PRIVATE OFFICE ObGyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park...913) 491-6878.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9023
(p.m.)
K. U. INFORMATION CENTER: campus community events; University procedures CRISIS HELP REFERRALS 24 hours/day; 844-356-356
Friend or family of a girl or a lesbian? Go talk to 'Talk' For a friend, confidential referral to 'Gay & Girl Concerning Singing' Call KU info at 844-306-8441 or 844-304-8441 by GLOSK
vices. Overland Park ... 1913, 491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Lawrence. 841-5716
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling: For free, confidential, 24-hour referees, call KU Info at headquarters at 841-2345. Sponsored by GUSW
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
烹制 within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206. #84-4757
French tutoring. Translations. Paper revisions done on computer. Expert work. 8 years experience. Bob 843-4102.
Quality Tutoring, Economics, Statistics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Demin. 842-1056
TYPING
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality type. 842-363, days or evenings
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-795 or Liza. 841-1915.
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Accurate, affordable typing experienced in form papers, theses, misc. IBM correcting Selectic, spelling corrected 841-9544
Canada Press
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25-black-spaced pic page. East Lawrence.
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Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience. Callen before 10.749-1961.
services. HSM letter quality buffer.
Expert Typist-Reasonable rates Call 842-3203
Pussy-cat Eaters Club
Cpa RJ.I'S Typing Service 815;
Papers, Legal, Thesis, etc. after a PPM
Donna Q' Quality Writing and Word Processing
letters, resumes, applications, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, listers, LISTER
Donna's quality Typing and Word Press. Prints term papers, sheets, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailling lists Laser Print. Speller corrected. 942-7247
EXPERT TYPING Mary Daw 273-419. In Topica. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer
$9.95 each
Buy one for the KU vs. K-State game, Nov. 5th
Expert Typist. Resistance RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back! RENCE is back!
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bookreports, projects, and thesis reports.
Writing papers based on Macintosh Wordprocessing. Format to your specifications with spelled check, all laser printed output.
PEACE TYPING
Wordprocessing, spelling check $1.25/pg. Bid
projects. Sally 841-227. Let me help
balloons-n-More
Pregnant and need help? Call brightest at Confidential help?Fepregnancy testing.
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109 Peace Store: A Peace Forum, 229\
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check\
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RESUME SERVICES professional quality resumes. Formatted to your specifications with laser printed output. Quality, professional service. Completed by Kate's of Kate's 24 hour service. Kurz Call 842-3872.
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dependable service on academic papers. Discounts on large projects $1.25/double-spaced page 843.276
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BROWSER/DBPROCESSING. done on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes.
Letter-Quality Printer Legal exp Laura,
427-3738. Leave Message.
washinr dryer. call 749-5835
Need someone to assume my lease of 1.bdm apt.
at semester. 749-349 after 3:30.
ATLANTIA, Art Siblings
I need a portrait of a Grown Villa painted for x mas gift. Supplies pad & fee neq. Call Rachelle at 271.099 between MF N. ASAP.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
direct processing, typing. Papers, resumes, app-
lications, dissertations. Also, assistance with
grammar, spelling, composition, editing. Have
5 *S* Deerley 841-0507, 841-6244
- *tying at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 8431-019. Four Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday. THEWORDCORDS. Why pay for tying when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these, resumes, commercial, IBM PC, MAC, CFD Daisywell, dot matrix, laser. Since 1883
Vord processing IBM Okidata printer. $1.25/double spaced page. Call before 10 pm. 749-1900, Gathy.
WANTED
at semester end. 79959 after 5.1.
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester.
Call 79959. Leave message.
Drummer and Bassist needed to complete
Jazz/Rock Band. Dan 842-7194
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse. *rent/utilities, bus route, fireplace, pool, washer/dryer* Call 749-9093.
- Policy
Roommate needs to assume lease, orLEASE
Rommate needs to assume lease, orLEASE
10 sharing a room in Harvard Bedroom
Square. Own bedroom. $200
utilities. 841-1780 after 5.
Thirty year old professional needs dependable
housemate to SRB house $165 + 1 $ bills.
844-356, 844-626, Rick.
Roommate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt,
near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne
749-4261.
Second Semester Female Roammate wanted
$180 and t₂ utilities. Walking distance or bus route. Call 842-7895.
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
16
Wednesday, November 2, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Vol. 99, No. 49 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANAKO
Thursday November 3, 1988
Minority task force recommends goals
By James Farquhar
By James Purq
Kansan staff writer
If the Minority Issues Task Force report achieves all of its goals, KU students will incorporate race-related issues into their college education.
After seven months of study, the task force yesterday released a seven page report, setting the agenda to increase black Hispanic participation at the University of Kansas.
Students someday may be required to take a class about race or human relations; or they may attend special orientation sessions; or more cultural diversity may be woven into many classes across the University.
The report also suggested replacing the office of minority affairs with an office of multicultural affairs. If implemented, responsibilities of the office would expand, although the specifics of such expansion were not provided.
Much of the report avoids specifies
Much of the Chancellor Gene A. Budig suggested the University in February in response to concerns about a campus visit by the Ku Klux Klan. The task force brought together 23 members of the University community last spring who formed four subcommittees.
He said the report contained far-reaching goals and left the details until later.
process," he said. "I believe the task force report provides a necessary first step."
The task force's report set forth three broad recommendations to:
- increase the number of minority faculty staff and students
- increase the number of universities in
- The report said administrators now had a coordinated set of recommendations that could effect change at the University. It primarily proposes change at the administrative level, with an emphasis on recruiting and retaining minorities.
- encourage the success of minorities in these positions.
create an atmosphere that values cultural diversity, rather than one that sueschel it
Under those three goals are 25 plans of action. Yet, the report set no quantitative goals for increasing the number of minorities on campus
on campus.
Minority students, including American Indians, Asian Americans, blacks and Hispanics, make up about 6.6 percent of KU students at the Lawrence campus this fall.
The report did not address Asian American students and faculty. In 1987, 7.4 percent of KU faculty were minorities.
KC faculty. Budig said target numbers of minority students might be forthcoming during the implementation of the plan. The next move belongs to Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor and chairman of the task force.
"The next step will be in the form of a implementation plan out of the executive vice chancellor's office." Budig said, "anticipate early action on the program."
For now, the task force will remain in place during the next year to monitor compliance with the recommendations.
Rosita Dorsey, director of minority affairs and a member of the task force, said she was upbeat about the report. The task force differs from five others in the last 12 years because this one would monitor progress for a year.
Report receives various reviews
Please see REPORT, p. 8; col. 5
By Katy Monk Kansan staff writer
Reaction to the Minority Issues Task Force report was mixed among the University and Lawrence communities.
Mohamed EI Hodir, a task force member, said he was pleased the report called for a Universitywide effort detailing the recruitment and retention of faculty, staff and students.
He said he was satisfied that the report had enough human and monetary resources allocations that it would "have teeth."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig also said he was pleased with the report and expected action to be taken toward implementing recommendations within this academic year
But the Rev. Leo Barbee, who had a vocal role in speaking out against the Ku Klux Klan's campus appearance in March, declined to comment after reviewing the report.
Others voiced at least some disappointment with the report.
pollution but he Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, said he had fought racial problems for almost half a century — a perspective that may have made him cynical.
"In the University community, we have a habit of delaying addressing needs by setting something aside for studies," he said.
Some items were missing from the report that he would have preferred to be included.
"In all honesty, there isn't anything here which surprises me or which makes me optimistic," he said. "Great. Here's another report. How many have we had? I see no sanctions or no reward systems enunciated for achieving desired ends."
to be included. "I would have liked to have seen a provision there that says. For every new hire, the policy will be that underrepresented groups will be among finalists, or the position remains open until the hiring authority includes one," Adams said.
He said he also would have preferred requiring administrators to show progress toward making KU a multicultural institution.
Kellie Paris, president of Black Student Union, said she favored many of the task force's recommendations.
She was especially pleased with the proposal for recruiting more minority faculty, in part, because they would be an incentive for minority students to come to KU.
students to Paris strongly favored the report's recommendation of establishing a course about race relations. She said it would help alleviate students' misunderstandings of people with different backgrounds.
carried out.
But Rosita Dorsey, director of minority affairs, said that a provision for the task force to remain in office or a year to follow up its recommendations was a good move toward implementation.
However, Paris said she didn't see anything in the report to make her optimistic that its plans would be carried out.
toward impulse.
She is the task force's role was to down hard and fast rules
"Each area will come up with its own plan," Dorsey said. "Each area needs to make this their own thing for it to work. Everybody has to own it."
I have been very lucky.
Dorsey said that in a year she
would have a better grasp on how
good the report really was.
In the report reality will be
Kansas reporter James Farquhar
contributed information to this story.
Station Bradenham 291
Shipshape
Inspections are a regular part of the Navy ROTC program. Bob Flores, space themselves apart in preparation for an inspection yesterday in Riverdale, Ill., junior, Matt Hogan, Hutchinson junior, John Binder, front of Allen Field House. Ellis freshman, and Darren Glaser, Arlington Heights, Ill., freshman,
Gary Hart may give speech at KU
Bv Craig Welch
By Craig Welch Kansas staff writer
A representative for Gary Hart said yesterday that the former presidential candidate would be visiting the University of Kansas as a guest lecturer — provided that KU's Student Senate finds a way to pay for the $10,000 visit.
Anne Wold, a representative from the Washington ton speaker's Bureau, said that the visit, tentatively scheduled for Jan. 31, had been confirmed.
huge pass a box on the floor. "The speakers we like to get are highly visible and highly recognized, and that costs money," he said.
tively scheduled for sale. Hart, a former hopeful for the 1983 Democratic presidential nomination, withdrew from the campaign after receiving media attention concerning a boat trip with model Donna Rice. He entered the race in December 1987 but withdrew again.
Jeff Bloskey, chairman of the Lecture Series Board, said that Hurt's visit would cost about $10,000 and that the money probably would have to come from Senate. However, before the funds can be released from the unallocated account, Senate must pass a bill in favor of the expense.
Bloskey said that Wold had mailed a contract for Senate representatives to sign. If a contract was signed, Hart would be speaking in Hoch Audito-
said.
Senate's unallocated account has a current balance of about $130,000, but $40,000 must remain as a minimum balance.
rium on the topic of media in politics
issue of media in a cultural affair. Dan Zevitz, the chairman of a Cultural Affairs subcommittee concerned with lecture series, said, "We wanted to get somebody who was involved in media and politics. Who could be better than Gary Hart?"
Hart?
Brook Menees, student body president, said Senate would be interested in finding a co-sponsor for Hart.
or that! "We can an option we're looking into," he said. "We'd like to make this a banner year by bringing in some of these popular speakers. It brings potency to the school."
"But it's going to take a lot of work to continue getting those speakers."
Dukakis backers optimistic; Bush says he's the one
ELECTION
88
PRESIDENT
The Associated Press
helping to elect Bush, the leader in all the polls, said there was a "great divide" separating himself from Dukakis on many issues. He proclaimed that his own election would mean a "mainstream mandate" for the next four years.
George Bush said yesterday that the next president should reflect the hopes and dreams of voters and proudly proclaimed, "I am that man." Michael Dukakis urged supporters to "keep pouring it on" in a drive for an Election Day upset.
The Democratic underdog also ripped into Bush's record on the drug war and said "I'll be
The national candidates made their rounds six days
damned' before giving foreign aid to countries not helping the cause.
GOP vice presidential candidate Dan Quayle, a foe of abortion, said he had no quarrel with a medical procedure he described as aimed at preventing conception after rape. Asked pointedly whether he would expect a rape victim to bear a child that resulted from such an attack, he said: "I would seek medical attention immediately, and under normal circumstances, life and conception would not even be."
Please see POLITICS, p. 6, col.
Offices tight in Strong as elbow room shrinks
Space race begins as departments put in requests
By Mark Fagan Kansan staff writer
Jeff Weinberg isn't sure where the space will come from, but he needs it soon.
"We hope within a few weeks to add another staff member," said Weimberg, associate director of the office of student financial aid in Strong Hall. "The already modest reception area may need to be reduced even more. As it is now, it's already tough for students to get in the front door."
Space is scarce on campus, especially in Strong. And with the math and computer science departments moving out of Strong by Fall 1980, the scramble already has started for the soon-to-bacvated space.
"If something isn't done soon, we may not even have a reception area. We'll have people waiting out in the hall."
be-vacated space.
An ad hoc space committee appointed by Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, has been examining the space situation on campus.
been examining the. Last month, the committee's Strong Hall sub-committee asked departments and agencies on this committee needed space in Strong. Responses are expected by the end of the month, and the committee could be ready to report to Ramaley within a year.
within a year
Student financial aid is one office that officials say will receive attention when the decision of who gets what is made
The office's reception area, in the basement of Strong, is home to 18,000 student financial aid
folders, three receptionists, and a seven-seat waiting area. And it's time to add another assistant director.
tant director) "The money is available to us," Weinberg said. "Our major concern is where to put (the new director) physically. The only answer is to reduce the reception area, which we plan to do."
Weinberg said his office was indeed cramped. Financial aid requires confidential conversations, which are difficult to have when only five private offices are available.
"Students come in the front door and yell their Social Security numbers across the room." he said
Still, Weinberg said he had received support from the offices of student affairs and the executive vice chancellor.
"There is a problem, but it's very comforting that a recognition of the problem exists," he said. "I really feel there will be results. I've never felt that way before."
that way that allows Brower Burchell, chairman of the Strong Hall subcommittee and associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said student affairs in general, and paid particularly financial aid, desperately need more space. The offices of academic affairs and research, graduate studies and public service also are among the most crunched in Strong
Strong
The subcommittee's report will include a list of the candidates for space, ranked by degree of need. ___
Please see STRONG, p. 10, col. 4
KU, NCAA tried to withhold names of guilty parties
Brown discloses violators
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
In a phone interview with the Kansas City Times Tuesday, former Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown named the three people listed as institutional representatives who violated NCAA rules. They were, along with Brown, responsible for making improper recruiting inducements to a prospect, whom Brown said was former Memphis State guard Vincent Askew.
Neither Collins, Light nor Marshall could be reached for comment yesterday.
The three named wore Jerry Collins, who produced the Larry Brown television show at KU and currently shows Brown's TV show for the San Antonio Spurs. Ralph Light, president of RAL construction company in Kansas City, Kan., and Mike Marshall, a former Kansas player who worked in Brown's basketball camp in 1986.
Brown said Collins bought $231 in clothing for Askew and expected Askew to pay him back by working for him, which Askew never did.
Brown said that he had paid for a $366 trip-ticket for Askew to go home and see his grandmother who was ill and later died. Askew stayed in Lawrence during the summer of 1986 and was expected to transfer to Kansas before he returned to Memphis State.
Marshall, Brown said, bought a $183 plane ticket for Askew to return to Memphis after he had left his ticket at a hotel. Marshall was reimbursed by former assistant coach Alvin Gentry who turned in the cost on an expense account.
Brown said that Light was the provider of summer work named in the report. The NCAA said the procto, who Brown identified as Askew, was paid $297.12 for work not performed.
The NCAA report said that the serious violations involved one prospect and occurred within a 10-day period.
The Kansas Athletic Department and the NCAA had attempted to withhold the names of the violators
NCAA Director of Enforcement David Berst said the main reason for withholding names was that it was detrimental to investigations
"In the case of boosters, coaches and student-athletes, if we release their names to the press, they could make a comment that would after our proceedings and the way we would handle the case." Berst said
Bob Frederick, athletic director,
said the University withheld names
to avoid false accusations of people
who might eventually be proven
innocent
"Our reason has been based on the fact that we didn't want to cause any more difficulty for someone who might eventually be found to not guilty of any wrongdoing." Frederick said.
Department officials decided Monday night not to release the names of those involved in the violations although the NCAA had found them guilty.
"I think one of the unfortunate things about (not releasing the names) is, and maybe this is the other side of the coin, that it leads to a lot of speculation. It seems to me (the media) has figured out a lot of the people anyway."
---
Thursday, November 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the RU Weather Service
Forecast
Another pleasant day
High: 72°
Low: 46°
Today skies will be partly cloudy with the high reaching 72 degrees. Tonight the low should fail to 46 degrees.
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
70/37
Partly cloudy
Omaha
65/41
Partly cloudy
Goodland
71/48
Partly cloudy
Salina
69/46
Partly cloudy
Topeka
72/66
Partly cloudy
Kansas City
68/48
Partly cloudy
Columbia
68/48
Partly cloudy
St. Louis
66/50
Partly cloudy
Dodge City
74/48
Partly cloudy
Wichita
72/48
Partly cloudy
Chanute
71/47
Partly cloudy
Tulsa
76/54
Cloudy
Springfield
70/51
Partly cloudy
Forecast by Jeff Garber
Temperature are today's high and tonight's low.
5-Day
Friday
Partly cloudy
71/48
HIGH LOW
Saturday
Mostly cloudy
69/45
Sunday
Chance for rain
60/43
Monday
Partly cloudy
64/46
Tuesday
Partly cloudy
68/47
The nation
Seattle
57/47
Denver
71/42
Chicago
69/43
New York
56/46
Los Angeles
74/60
Phoenix
84/07
Dallas
85/61
WARM
Miami
60/72
Fronts:
coast occluded
www.stationary
Forecast Key
Another pleasant day
High: 72°
Low: 46°
Today skies will be partly cloudy with the high reaching 72 degrees. Tonight the low should fall to 46 degrees.
North Platte
70/37
Partly cloudy
Omaha
64/41
Partly cloudy
Goodland
71/40
Partly cloudy
Salina
69/45
Partly cloudy
Topeka
72/48
Partly cloudy
Kansas City
70/48
Partly cloudy
Columbia
68/48
Partly cloudy
St. Louis
70/32
Partly cloudy
Dodge City
75/48
Partly cloudy
Wichita
72/48
Partly cloudy
Chanute
71/47
Partly cloudy
Springfield
71/31
Partly cloudy
Forecast by Jeff Garber
Temperature are today's high and lowest are...
Seattle 57/47
Denver 71/42
Chicago 69/43
New York 56/46
Phoenix 84/57
Los Angeles 74/60
Dallas 85/61
WARM
Miami 82/72
Fronts: cold
cooled
warm
stationary
MASS·STREET
MUSIC
1347 Mass. 843-3535
1347 Mass.
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Latin American Solidarity will have a planning meeting for spring 1989 at 6 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
On Campus
The Linguistics Colloquy will present George Lakov, from the University of California-Berkeley, speaking on "Effect of Cognitive Science on Linguistic Theory" at 7:30 tonight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union.
Psi Chi will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union. Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett will speak on "How to Get Into Graduate School in Psychology."
Psychology
Tomaz Salamun, a Yugoslav poet, will read his work in English at 7:30 tonight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. An exhibit featuring Salamun's work is on display in the fourth floor of Watson Library.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
CINEMA
The Champions Club will meet at 6:30 tonight in Parlor A at the Kansas Union.
Russell Cham.
Canterbury House will offer the Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7
tonight in the International Room at the Kansas Union. Julie Schoerke, state ballet, will be the guest speaker.
The Baptist Student Union will meet at 5:30 tonight at the American Baptist Campus Center, 1829 North St. Free dinner will be served.
- Campus Crusade for Christ will meet at 7 tonight for Prime Time in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
■ KU on Wheels will have a transportation board meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
An affirmative action workshop will be at 9:30 a.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. For more information, call 864-231-5000.
Daniel Anderson, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, will discuss Vincent Lencero, non-fiction author in Alcacey I at the Kansas Union.
A free computing seminar,
"Looking at Information Management
tools," will be at 1 p.m.
today. For information, call 864-
The Lincoln National Pension Plan presentation for KU faculty and staff will be from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at Kalah Room at the Kansas Union.
VANDALS DESTROY RESTROOM:
Vandals set fire to a restroom in Riverfront Park Monday night, burning the wooden structure to the ground, Jim McMain, Lawrence fire chief, said yesterday.
■ A Faculty Recital featuring Richard Angieletti on the piano will be at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
News Briefs
of the building were discovered Tuesday morning by a Parks and Recreation employee. A fire department investigation determined that the fire had been set, but there are no suspects and leads at this time.
mner, said youre remain McSwan said the charred remains
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Close to .3 percent of college students carry AIDS virus, study finds
The national Centers for Disease Control, along with the American College Health Association, is testing 1,000 anonymous blood samples from each of 20 U.S. colleges as part of a family study of 69 students who the AIDS virus in the U.S. population, CDC spokesman Anne Simms says yesterday.
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Shams have about 5,000 of those samples have been tested, she said, showing a rate of about three cases per 1,000 college students, or 6.3 percent. She said she did not know where the 5,000 samples came from, whether they were from all 20 colleges in the study or just
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Preliminary results of a study of 20 U.S. colleges suggest about three out of every 1,000 college students is infected with the AIDS virus, according to federal health officials who caution that final numbers may be either higher or lower.
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"The only thing we can show from these preliminary results is that there is HIV infection on college campuses. College students are not immune from AIDS," Simms said.
By comparison, other studies indicate infection rates of four out of 1,000 prisoners, or 0.4 percent.
Nationwide, researchers believe the infection rate is between 0.4 percent and 0.6 percent, or perhaps 1.5 million people. The government has estimated that 20 percent to 30 percent of those infected with the AIDS virus will develop AIDS within five years.
"This number was not unexpected," Simms said. "We knew that there was HIV infection among this population. This just confirms what we already knew, and in fact the final results in February may be higher or lower.
ng
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By a Kansan reporter
'Nightflight' to air local video
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A video tribute to beatnik poet William S. Burroughs, Lawrence residence, will be shown early tomorrow morning on "Nightflight," a USA cable network show.
"Rub Out the Word," a three minute, 28-second music video produced in Lawrence, will be shown
Reg. $79.99
SALE $71.99
"It is one of Burroughs' linguistic anarchies that fit into our programming." Wadsley said.
See other specials on our basketball shoes.
Nobody knows the athlete's foot like The Athlete's Foot.
The Athlete's Foot.
about 3 a.m. tomorrow. Pat Wadsley, co-producer of "Nightflight," said that it would be part of the show's "Take Off to Politics" series in honor of Election Day.
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Correction
Because of a reporter's error, user fees to finance highways were incorrectly identified in a story on Oct. 26.
The fees include motor fuel taxes, motor vehicle registration fees and sales taxes on motor vehicles.
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Re-elect Connie HUBBELL STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Experience Knowledge Leadership
Mary E.
dv. Paid for by the Hubbell for St. Bd. of Ed. Comm., Nola Wright, Treas
High marks for school work
In the 1988 Session, a proposal for school finance threatened USD 497 with a loss of more than $1 million.
Jessie Branson's work helped the Legislature produce a better bill.
That bill, now law, provides an increase for USD 497 and most other urban districts.
Jessie Branson does the job.
With legislative know-how. And energy.
Vote Jessie again.
Irish Traveler
Jessie Branson STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Paid for by the Committee to Re-elect Jessie Branson, Ben Zimmerman, Treasurer
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 3, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Forum set to decide fate of administration major
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences recently issued a recommendation to discontinue its largest degree program — personnel administration — but the final word will not come until at least January.
that word will not coincide with a release date.
On Monday, Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, sent the recommendation to the Committee on Academic Procedures and Policies. Yesterday, the committee scheduled an open hearing for 1 p.m. Nov. 16 in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union.
NOV. 16 in the Kansas Room at the hearing should schedule an appointment with Sandra Wick, administrative assistant of the University Senate Executive Committee, before 5 p.m. Nov. 15. Speakers must submit their written comments before speaking and are limited to a 10-minute formal presentation, which will be followed by questions from the committee.
interested persons also may write to the committee instead of appearing at the forum. Letters are due Nov. 15.
Copies of the college's recommendation will be available tomorrow in the SenEx office in 231 Strong Hall.
James Drury, director of the program, said there were 567 personnel administration majors as of Oct. 7. Last semester there were more than 600 majors, but because of the threat to the program, the number decreased.
or the effort to the program. Jim Carino wrote dean of liberal arts and senior associate the college's recommendation. After survey revealed that none of the four departments in the interdisciplinary program were willing to take over the major, the college administration could see no alternative but discontinuation.
The departments in the program are political science, sociology, psychology and communications.
sociology, psychology and allied sciences. Carothers said the college had not admitted any new majors to the program since January. All current majors will be allowed to finish their degrees.
will be allowed to have three years from this May to complete their degrees." Carothers said.
complete their degree.
In November, in Board of Regents staff review report issued that the degree program be discontinued. The board asked the college to submit a plan to decide the program's future.
The process to discontinue the major is long and involved. After the college makes a recommendation, a public hearing by the Committee on Academic Procedures and Policies is the next step.
Lawrence Sherr, Chancellors Club Teaching professor of business and chairman of the committee, said that after the open forum, the committee had until the end of December to make its own recommendation.
December to make its own recommendation. The committee will submit its recommendation to personnel administration faculty, the University Council and Brinkman.
University Council then will have 30 days to submit a recommendation to Brinkman, who will make a recommendation for or against the program to Chancellor Gene A. Budig.
A. Budig.
Budig will have the final say in the fate of the program.
Kevin Hasenkamp, Topeka senior and personnel administration major, said that he hated to see the program discontinued.
I like it because it has to do with business, but it's more of an open field." Hasenkamp said. "In liberal arts, there is more variety of courses."
United Way drive extended
Business sector lacks 61 percent of original goal
KU's United Way Drive
The Douglas County United Way fund drive has been extended until Nov. 15 in hopes that the Jayhawks on signs around Lawrence will be filled with color.
The United Way helps support 25 health and human service organizations in Wasco County. The deadline for the drive has been extended until November 15 to meet its goal. KU's goals and contributions in recent fundraising campaign years are as follows:
The Jayhawk signs are colored corresponding to the amount of money raised by the University of Kansas and Douglas County.
Kansas and Iowa.
The deadline deadline of Tuesday, Douglas County drive had raised 56 percent of its $98,640 goal for this year's campaign. KU had collected $44,911 of that, which is 85 percent of KU's goal.
- Goal
- $ Raised
71,000
69,127
70,000
72,717
84,000
85,769
100,000
85,613
100,000
87,326 *
1984-85
1985-86
1986-87
1987-88
1988-89
Elisa Sneegas/KANSAN
*as of Wednesday, November 2.
The money raised in the Douglas County United Way drive helps support 25 health and human service organizations in the county.
"It is not an unusual thing to extend a drive of this kind," said Howard Hill, chairman of this year's drive. "The extension recognizes that there are a number of campaigns in the business and industry sector that still have a bit of work that needs to be done."
A tabulation Monday estimated that the business and industry sector had raised 39 percent of its $430.39 goal.
Although the business and industry sector is behind in comparison to last year, the KU campaign is ahead, said Carl Lucke, dean of
years longer, however, the number of contributors at KU has decreased. By the close of last year's drive, 618 individuals from KU had participated. This year 467 people have contributed.
Locke said he and the KU United Way committee were considering ways to use the extra time to meet the $100,000 goal.
"I think we will all benefit from the extension," Locke said. "I think people will be more aware of the drive, and we will see a response."
responses
Brook Menees, student body president and member of the KU committee, asked campus organizations and residence halls to help meet the goal by raising funds within their organizations, Locke said.
Hill said that the new schedule might have caused the drive's slow start this year. Last year's Douglas County campaign, which began in October and ended Nov. 30, may have been a better time frame for some businesses and organizations. The dates of this drive, which began in September and was scheduled to end Nov. 1, were set earlier so that the campaign wouldn't have to be completed during the holiday season.
Hill said the United Way board members would consider starting next year's campaign in October instead of in September.
David Brown
Installing a canopy over a door, Steve Moreau, Lawrence resident and foreman for Kansas Canvas Products, 733 Massachusetts St., welds a support brace to an overhang. Moreau was working yesterday afternoon at Nouveau, a private club at 901 Mississippi St., which is scheduled to open Nov. 11.
Hot spot
Faculty hiring helps students
Student-faculty ratio figures best since 1978
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
This fall's 16-to-1 student-to-faculty ratio is the lowest since fall 1978, which can be attributed to increased faculty hiring through the Margin of Excellence, the executive vice chancellor said Tuesday.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that increased faculty hiring was more responsible for the low ratio than was this year's lower student enrollment. Overall enrollment was so high that the decrease in students was negligible in comparison.
This fall, there are about 16.1 fulltime equivalent students for each full-time equivalent faculty member.
The number of FTE students is computed by dividing the total student credit hours by 12.
FTE faculty encompasses all teaching staff, including graduate teaching assistants. The number of FTE faculty is computed by assigning a one to full-time faculty and assigning percentages to other faculty depending on the number of hours they work. Then, the percentages are added.
budget decisions are based on FTE figures.
Student/faculty ratio decreases
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer schools in total financing and to 100 percent of their peers in faculty
The 16.1- to 1 ratio is down from last fall's ratio of 17.5- to 1. The ratio has fluctuated between 16.4- to 1 and 17.5- to 1 since 1978, when it was 15.9- to 1.
Ramaley said Margin of Excellence money allowed the University to fill new faculty positions, which contributed to the lower ratio.
Bar graphs show the rise and fall of numbers of students in comparison to one faculty.
Since 1983, the ratio between students and faculty had been rising. However, this year the ratio has dropped to the lowest in fifteen years. This drop has occurred because of lower student enrollment and an increase in faculty
16.4 16.7 17.0 17.5 17.5 16.1
1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988
Source: University of Kansas Profiles
Other Big 8 schools
- Based on self-reported data from each school. Figures include graduate or assistants.
Dave Eames/KANSAN
salaries.
The University of Kansas hired 76 new faculty members this year, which contributed to an increase in the FTE faculty figure to 1,460.8.
the FED faculty taught
Ramaleday said students were
receiving the benefits of a lower
student-to-faculty ratio.
"We know that people are getting their needs met better this year than last year," she said. "We're able to play catch-up now."
play catch up now.
The benefits can be seen through indicators such as the length of enrollment lines and the demand for courses. Students may not get all the classes and times they want, but "at least you can get a decent schedule," Ramaley said.
Although the lower ratio may contribute to the happiness of students already at KU, Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions, said that he didn't think the figure would matter in recruiting new students.
Lindvall said that high school students often asked universities for their ratios but that they needed to ask what the figures meant.
"You need to look at things well beyond that," he said.
Landvall said that figures such as class sizes and who was teaching the class could be better indicators of the strengths of the University.
strengths of the college. Of the five Big Eight universities that reported student-to-faculty ratios, KU had the lowest. Oklahoma State University had the highest with 19.3-to-1.
K-State University reported a 16.6-to-1 ratio; Iowa State University reported 18.3-to-1; and the University of Colorado reported 18-to-1.
Ron Downey of planning and evaluation services at K-State said that the figures from other universities could differ from those at KU and K-State because their methods of counting faculty members might be different
Kansas is one of 13 states not to allow write-ins for president
By Debbie McMahon
Kansan staff writer
Mickey Mouse has no chance of being a presidential candidate in Kansas unless his name appears on the ballot.
Secretary of State Bill Graves, said he wasn't sure why the law was that way.
name appears on the ballot.
In fact, Kansas has not allowed voters to write in candidates for president or governor for the past 18 years.
the past 18 years.
John Reinhard, press secretary for Kansas
sure why they would guess part of the reason would be to discourage people from wasting votes." Reinhart said. "Also, if people were to vote for Mickey Mouse, it would slow down the process and add to the expense."
He said that even if people were to write in for someone not on the ballot, their votes
wouldn't count.
wouldn't count.
Burdett Loomis, chairman of the political science department, said he wasn't aware of the state election law about write-ins.
"It itseems like a fundamental denial of your right to express your opinions," Loomis said. "In practical terms, it's not very significant. But in ideological terms, it is."
but in ideological terms, he is
Loomis said that because votes in a pres-
Kansas is not the only state that doesn't allow write-ins for president.
identical election didn't go to the nominees on the ballot but to electors, votes for candidates without electors wouldn't count anyway. In state governor elections, however, votes count toward the elections on the ballot.
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Nineteen states, including Missouri, allow write-ins only if candidates have filed with their state election board by the deadline.
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And the 19 other states and territories allow write-in candidates.
D. C., said 12 states with similar laws are Alabama, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas and Virginia.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Sales Representatives of the Month
The Business Staff would,like to recognize the following individuals for outstanding achievement and service to their accounts during the month of October.
Edie Howard Retail Sales Representative
Margaret Townsend Campus Sales Representative
Scott Frager Regional Divisional Sales Manager
Congratulations!
Thank you for all of your hard work!
BUSCH GARDENS·THE OLD COUNTRY
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America's premier theme park in Williamsburg, Va. is conducting auditions for over 250 singers, dancers, musicians, variety artists, actors, technicians, and supervisors. You could be part of the magic that truly makes Busch Gardens an entertainment "experience." So get your act together and 'shine' at our 1989 auditions.
AUDITIONS'89 The Stars Are Out All Dav!
Auditions: 1 to 1/2 mins. For additional information call 1-800-253-3902.
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---
4
Thursday, November 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The enrollment advising system at the University of Kansas is a mess.
The best enrollment help comes from those enrolling
Everyone has heard the horror stories about bad advice that cost unsuspecting students an extra semester or two of tuition. Students tend to blame uninformed advisers for their misfortune, but in the final analysis, students themselves have to be responsible for their own education.
Even though there are advisers who don't know what they are doing, there are many others who do a good job. They try to know students personally and keep up with changing graduation requirements. But even those with the best intentions don't have as much time to devote to a student's education as the student has.
education as the students use.
Students have to take it upon themselves to examine the material they are introduced to in the entrance requirements of the school they plan to enter and for graduation requirements. Students also have to scan the Timetables and have a tentative schedule planned with alternative classes listed in case first choices fill up.
However, the University could do its part by making requirements clearer and more accessible to students. For instance, schools could post requirements, especially requirements that have been changed, so that students can find them easily.
easily. The new computer system being tested by the University could help solve many enrollment headaches. The system will allow students to see their existing graduation requirements and then help them design their schedule on the computer which has its own timetable that is updated twice daily. But even if the computer system is implemented on a wide scale it will be a supplement, not a replacement, for a faculty adviser and a student's own research.
All this must be done in preparation for adviser appointments. Advisers can suggest good classes, but busy professors don't have time to pick an entire schedule for students who aren't prepared.
Florida is famous for its Mickey Mouse attractions, but now it seems that state legislators want the state to be famous for its mickey mouse laws, a new one in particular.
and students have to advise themselves. They must realize that advisers don't always have the right answers. Every requirement should be checked and double-checked because the final responsibility for a college degree rests with the student.
Julie McMahon for the editorial board
Obscenity law is obscene
its mickey mouse laws, a new one. Florida officials saw their new law put into action recently when the state nabbed its first obscene bumper-sticker offender. The unfortunate victim was pulled over by police in Naples, Fla., for having a bumper sticker on his truck that said, "Shit happens."
Florida lawmakers are giving police officers discretion to decide what is obscene. Then the driver has to pay the price.
said, "Suit happens."
The penalty for being convicted of this gross obscenity violation, up to six months in jail and a $500 fine, complements the asiminity and unconstitutionality of the law.
Different opinions on what constitutes obscenity abound. Even the Supreme Court of the United States has not been able to determine exactly what is obscene.
And then, after T-shirts are no longer safe, what will be next? Keychains, knickknacks and posters?
to determine exactly what a law raises several questions. Could a similar law apply to a person who yells that phrase out the window of his car to passing motorists?
If Florida legislators get away with this law, what is to stop them from banning T-shirts with the same saying on it? If Florida legislators get away with this law, what is to stop them from banning T-shirts with the same saying on it?
Ridiculous as that may sound, even today a Topeka high school is restricting the kinds of T-shirts students can wear. T-shirts with references to drugs, sex or rock 'n' roll are strictly prohibited in the school.
The American Civil Liberties Union has said it might intervene to challenge the constitutionality of the bumper-sticker law. For the sake of Americans' rights, the law should be struck down as unconstitutional.
track down as unconstitutional. Obscenity laws such as the one in Florida force people to adhere to standards that are higher than what many would consider fair. Such laws unnecessarily interfere with people's rights to express themselves. Instead of removing bumper stickers, Florida should get to work on removing that law from its books.
Julie Adam for the editorial board
News staff
News start
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jesk ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp ... Business manager
Debra Kropp ... Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper ... Corporate sales manager
Linda Prokop ... National sales manager
Kurt Merrick Smith ... Promotions manager
Margaret Higdon ... Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart ... Production manager
Michelle Garland ... Asst. production manager
Michael Lehmann ... Classified manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
**Write the letter position.**
*The writer should be typed, double-spaced and 700 words. The letter will be photographed.*
*The writer must be sent to retect or edit letters and guest columns. They
**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 affirms that they are affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Letters and columns are the writer's opinion 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 650-840) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuffer-Fint-Hill Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluding June, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday to Friday 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 University Daily Kansan, 118
subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student account.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan, 66045.
YOU SAY YOU HAD TO GO THROUGH ADVISING AT K.U... Well, it ain't too much DIFFERENT DOWN HERE!
KU
KLINe
Sending in the candidates, uh, clowns
The elections may be a circus, but the audience must make sure the show goes on
I've been really unproductive so far this semester. Instead of studying, lately I have been spending time in some of my favorite bars chatting it up with strangers and telling bizarre tales that are too wild to be doubted. My best one is about the greatest show on earth, the fantastic circus of clowns.
I begin my tale by saying that I have been moonlighting at the local circus now for several years. I'm not actually a part of the show, or in the crew, but a very special member of the audience. I have registered with the circus, and I have the grave responsibility of electing the clowns who will be in charge of the circus next season. My task may sound simple, but it really is a challenging exercise in democracy to understand the subtle choreography of their political dance.
choreography of their jointed movements. The clowns rehearse their comedic routines long and hard to give substance and form to the circus as a whole. But in the final acts before the deciding audience, they scurry as frantically as decapitated chickens, assauling each other in mock violence to impress the audience with their maturity and leadership skills.
This year the program is especially extravagant because we are electing the King Clown of the circus, the bigest boo of the show. With all eyes on the center ring, the clowns singled out by the spotlight dance, babble, banter and improvise to impress their captive audience. The candidate-clowns try their best to upstage other to keep the bright lights shining on their side of the circus.
M.
Many clowns are worthy of our highest honors.
Nikolas Huffman Guest columnist
but only the fattest, most influential clowns, close personal friends of the circus owners, receive the essential notoriety of the media spotlight. The two fat boys scuffle playfully for the circus owner's favor, while the other clowns wrestle valiantly in the obscurity to bring their new dances to the attention of the diverted audience.
attention of the spotlight operators pay extra special attention to the two fattest boys, the clown princess most suitable to the desires of the circus owners. Their apparent popularity is actually a function of their intense media presence, not their popular appeal.
The dominance of the two fattest clowns disturbs many people because the choices we are offered are minimal at best. Rather than chasing the style of theater we prefer, we are presented with a pair of pretty smiles, faces with confidence and toothed jaws, the most attractive in the pack. We are allowed to chose not between the best and brightest the circus has to offer, but between the lesser of twin evils.
With each new season the owners get stronger, the clowns get fatter and our choices get slimmer. This once world-renowned circus has degenerated into a well-rehearsed farce on democracy, so futile
in its execution that circus attendance rates are frighteningly low for such a highly educated, free nation. During the last major touring season, nearly two-thirds of the circus tent's reserved seats remained unoccupied, an abhorrent statistic for the model of representative democracy worldwide.
With each new popularity poll reinforcing the two corporate stooges we should be voting for, the prospect of a serious election becomes more like a vanishing dream. The circus is a pathetic joke, I must admit.
But it is a joke that I am a party to nonetheless. As a member of the once-noble circus, I am responsible no matter how ridiculous it becomes. My objections to it are no excuse for me to abandon the entire circus. The circus is my home, and I must cast my vote regardless of the futility and uselessness of my choice.
Thus, I am resolved to crying softly in my beer, waiting for the big day at the circus. Every day I feel the tension mounting, that sense of imminent doom. A friend described it best as that despicable feeling you get when you're underage at the bar and the police come marching in the door. Or maybe its more like the feeling when all the dreams and fantasies have ended and you're lying face-down in the dirt, with a gun pointed at your head.
Nikolas Huffman is a Lawrence senior majoring in geography and philosophy.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Endorsing DuPree
Will you please allow me to respond to your endorsement of Wint Winter for State Senate?
Although I concede that Winter, a Republican, indeed has been a "good friend of the University," Mike DuPre, a Democrat, also would that friend, as any other, advocate to the Kansas Legislature must be. Your endorsement troubles me for two major reasons.
reasons.
First, you endorse Michael Dukakis for his environmental stand, but you too easily dismiss Mike DuPree because his even more fervent environmental stand does not "tap the state's list of priorities at this time." To paraphrase DuPree, if we have no earth upon which to educate, education becomes a moot point. If protection of the earth is not a top state priority, we had better elect those individuals who will make it taps. We need legislators now who have the vision to see what's coming tomorrow in order to make the wisest decisions today. Winter clearly lacks this vision. It was Winter who chose to fund Hillsdale Lake, dubbed the "Johnson County Yacht Club," instead of cleaning up polluted drinking water in Galena at the nation's worst hazardous waste site.
Second, Mike DuPree not only "believes" general fund sales tax revenue should be used for education, property tax relief, reclassification of state employees and programs for the elderly and disabled not highway and prison improvement, Mike DuPree will vote as he believes, unlike Winter. DuPree's basic agenda of protecting the earth first and then building our economic development emphasizes investments in human capital over pavement and buildings.
Winter, however, has voted consistently against additional state aid to education. From 1983 to 1987, during Winter's term in office, state aid dropped from 45 percent to 42 percent. Consequently, Douglas County propped which help pay for schools nearly 60 percent, from 48 to 81 mills! So much for winter's "belief" in education and property tax relief.
refer.
Mike DuPree, however, is on record as fully supporting KNEA's goal of 50 percent state aid to education. Mike DuPree is on record too for working hard for the second and third years of the Margin of Excellence. As far as the state employee's reclassification study is concerned, we need more Democrats in the senate who will act aggressively to break Hayden's hold on the general fund — not Republicans who stand silent before the governor and give lip service to their care for the truly needy.
I'm sorry, but your endorsement of Wint Winter takes into account a very narrow perspective, which in itself lends no credence to the broader, global perspective KU is supposed to
represent and our candidate does represent, which is why KU Democrats fully endorse Mike DuPree for State Senate.
Douglas Johnston Wichita senior President, KU Democrats
A good look at Ambler
The Kansan deserves to be complimented on the section featuring the central administration in the Oct. 26 paper. In an institution the size of the University of Kansas, it is rare for the student body to be offered such a concise and personal observation of some of the University's administrators. I would particularly like to comment on the article featuring Amber, vice chancellor for academic affairs. I feel fortunate to have become personally acquainted with Dr. Amber through my employment with the office of student affairs. Amber's style, personality and professionalism was portrayed accurately in the article. I truly respect his dedication to the university and his sincere concern for the well-being of KU students. I appreciate the Kansan recognizing Ambler's admirable qualities and revealing him as such a valuable asset to this University.
Dionne Scherff
Lawrence senior
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 3, 1988
5
Lawrence groups urge voters to reject census amendment
By Jeremy Kohn Kansan staff writer
Neighborhood leaders and the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce decided last night to join forces to convince residents to vote against the proposed state constitutional amendment on the census and reapportionment.
Neighborhoods, which is made up of the leaders and some members of Lawrence's neighborhood associations, met last night at a member's release a statement to all members that urges them to vote against the amendment.
Gary Foeben, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, explained to the eight people present that the proposed constitutional amendment, if adopted, would lead to a lower population figure for Lawrence. That could mean decreased aid from state and federal governments.
Voters will decide Tuesday, the day of local and national elections.
if adopted, the constitutional amendment would allow the state Legislature to use the most recent state census to determine the number of state representatives and senators that districts could have. Also, the next census would take place in 1992 and then during each 10th year.
dent
It really dilutes our voting powe
as individuals," he said.
Toebben said the chamber would buy advertisements that urged residents to vote against the amendment
Toeben said that if the county government decided that the census was unconstitutional and sued the state, the chamber of commerce
tour year.
The current state census, which was approved by the Legislature, does not count military personnel or students who claim cities other than Lawrence as their home. The final census figures released by the state on Tuesday listed Lawrence at 44,980. The 1979 state census figures listed Lawrence at 58,561 and counted military personnel and students as Lawrence residents.
would be back. Lopes, chairman of the Lawrence Neighborhood Association, said, "If there was ever a black and white issue to support, this is it."
In other business, the association decided to send a noise ordinance proposal to members to vote 5n. A final decision on the proposal will be made at the general members meeting on Dec. 13. If accepted then by the association, the proposal would be presented to the city commission as a possible city ordinance.
would back it up.
not of the business or factories during working hours would not be considered a violation, Lopes said.
possible cry of the residence. The proposal said noise that was audible 100 feet from the residence it originated from should not be allowed. Only noise from people, radios, receiving sets, musical instruments, phonographs, amplifiers or other machines that magnify sounds would be considered a violation of the ordinance.
considered
Proposed punishments include initial fines up to $250 and or imprisonment up to 10 days.
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Also on the agenda, SenEx will receive a letter from Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, who forwarded a Board of Regents memo that compares the admission requirements of other states with
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Thursday, November 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Join the KU Chapter of BACCHUS!
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Join this University organization and help insure that students make informed, responsible decisions regarding the use or non-use of alcohol.
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Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole was going to three states during the day in a bid to help endangered GOP candidates for Congress. Sen. Edward Kennedy countered for the Democrats by campaigning in Minnesota, where Hubert H. Humphrey III is a Senate race underdog.
POLITICS
before the voting while all around them the pace of campaigning ouckkened.
Continued from p. 1
H. Humphrey III Officials in both parties agree Democrats are likely to retain control of both houses of Congress after next week's balloting, although Republicans harbor hopes of winning enough close Senate seats to reduce the current 54-46 Democratic advantage.
Dukakis and his running mate Lloyd Bentsen both criticized Quayle. Bentsen said Bush had shown "real disdain, disregard for our country" by choosing the Indiana senator to jon his ticket.
would be likely for Bush to take a political partner, saying he had "been through the fire and his head is up and his chin is up."
Dakakis said putting Quayle in charge of the drug war would,he risky for United states kids.
President Reagan campaigned in Wisconsin and Ohio, scaffolding at Dukakis' claims to being a Democrat in the Harry Truman mold. "I'll tell you one thing, if he's Harry Truman, I'm Roger Rabbit," said the Republican campaign surrogate-in-chief.
John Howard in Owensboro, Ky., set up a sort of drive-through pull on his Cricketts Classy Car Wash, and said the results were about even. Customers could drive into a bay named for the presidential candidate of their choosing. "It's very scientific," he said. "The margin of error is 100 percent."
percent.
As usual, Dukakis' aides said their private polls were encouraging. As usual, the public polls seemed to be pointing to a Republican victory Tuesday. ABC said its latest Illinois survey was a dead heat, but Bush led in other surveys from Ohio, Arkansas and Connecticut.
At his first stop, at Adial Stevenson High School outside Chicago, he instructed an audience made up largely of students how to make an Election Day choice.
rush campaigned through Illinois and Michigan, two key Midwestern battlegrounds.
"You're not going to make your decision on some television (advertisement) or some sound bite, and what I want you to do is look beyond the charges, get past the shouting and choose as president the person who represents your values, your dreams, your hopes for the United States, and I am that man."
Stephan says he was betrayed by friend
TOPEKA — Attorney General Robert Stephan took the witness stand in his own defense yesterday and said he was betrayed by his best friend when a sexual harassment suit was settled out of court.
The Associated Press
He testified that it was "a big mistake" for him to allow former Attorney General Vern Miller to negotiate settlement of an earlier suit brought by Garcia Tomson Stingley, a former employee in the attorney general's office.
Stingley filed a second suit against Stephan for $5.2 million after he and former state Sen Bob Schmidt, the Republican nominee, filed Oct. 29, 1985, revealing the terms of the settlement.
She alleges Stephan breached a contract because the terms were to remain confidential under a verbal agreement, and that he placed her in a "false light" before the public during the news conference.
the podium. Stingley was a file clerk in the attorney general's office from 1797 to 1822. She was fired in December 1982 and fled suit
against Stephan, alleging sexual harassment, on Dec. 24, 1982.
Stephan said he did not know the terms of the settlement, which included a $24,000 payment to Stingley, until shortly before the news conference was held. Other terms included a letter of recommendation for Stingley. A friend of Stephan's was supposed to purchase her house for $70,000, well above the market value.
Stephan testified that the "single most devastating experience" in his life, other than the sexual harassment lawsuit, was receiving a letter from Miller in November that year. That letter supported the contention of Stingley's attorney that Stephan negotiated the settlement and knew the terms all along.
"I was totally distraught," Stephan testified. "I just didn't dream that anything like that could ever happen to anyone. It was like a nightmare. I had been set up. It was very carefully orchestrated."
Heiress posts bail for Marcos
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Imelda Marcos' quest for a benefactor ended yesterday when tobacco heirs Doris Duke agreed to put up the $5 million needed by the former first lady of the Philippines to secure her bail on racketeering charges.
Duke will post more than $5 million in municipal bonds as bail for Marcos, who is accused along with her husband, former Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos, of looting more than $100 million from their homeland.
to visit Duke.
Lawyers said the bonds would actually be worth between $5.3 million and $5.4 million depending on market fluctuation, although the exact types of bonds were not revealed
completed, another lawyer said she would remain on the East Coast for the weekend to visit Duke.
"It was Miss Duke's idea to help" her
lawyer. Donald Robinson, said
Although Marcos would be free to return to Hawaii as soon as the paperwork was
"Like President Reagan, Miss Duke regrets the indictment," the lawyer said, referring to the president's comment after the Marcoses' racketeering indictment was announced last month.
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Bernie Norwood 46th District
BERNIE NORWOOD says NO to Washburn University as a Regents System.
BERNIE NORWOOD says YES to the Margin of Excellence.
BERNIE NORWOOD says YES to higher salaries for our teachers and student employees.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 3, 1988
Nation/World
7.
Party hopes to form government
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Leaders of the right-wing Likud blie expressed confidence that they could form a government and began coalition talks for four ultra Orthodox religious parties who will decide who will govern the nation.
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's Likud and its allies won 46 of the 120 seats in Tuesday's election. Labor and sympathetic left-wing parties won 49, so either major party could form a government with support
from the religious factions, which won a total of 18 seats
Two parties on the extreme left won the other seven seats.
Although Likud generally is more sympathetic to the Orthodox view, one of the main religious parties said a coalition remained possible with Labor, led by Foreign Minister Shimon Limon.
Demands by the religious parties include strict rules on observing the Sabbath and changes in the policy that extends automatic citizenship to
all Jews, including converts.
Shamir said early yesterday the outcome "commanded" Likud to form a government and expressed willingness to negotiate on any demands of the religious parties. Likud and Labor have been in a fragile coalition since the indecisive election of July 1984.
Yossi Ahimire, spokesman for Shamir, said religious leaders told the prime minister "Likud has natural sympathy to religious demands, and all would prefer a coalition with
After meeting with Peres, however, spokesman Moshe Perez of the Torah Guardians Party said, "We know that it does not rule out talks with any party."
Most religious legislators are closer to Shamir's viewpoint on the Palestinian issue. He vows to keep all the occupied territories, which some Orthodox consider part of biblical Israel, but Peres has expressed willingness to exchange some territory for peace.
Newspaper reports dolphin abuse by Navy
The Associated Press
SEATTLE A Navy program to train dolphins as underwater security guards is in disarray, with four of the animals dead and others blinded or killed as handlers, a newspaper reported yesterday.
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer quoted unidentified sources, including two former trainers who asked that their names be withheld, as saying that the officers who dozen dolphins have died in the past 18 months.
The former trainers said some of the dolphins had been blinded or have suffered crippling injuries as a result of poor training procedures.
The program, which trains dolphins to hunt for mines and enemy frogmen, leaves the animals vulnerable to infection or illness by moving them from water and subjects them to other stress, they said.
In Washington, navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Craig Quigley yesterday denied that animals had been killed.
"We simply do not use negative techniques and browse these mammals into doing what we want to do," Quigley said. "Even the environmental methods are better than our training methods as better than the industry."
upon a close relationship between the trainer and animal. Ultimately in the training, you have to go to the open ocean. If we were mistreatting these animals, why would they return to their trainers?"
A trainer, Rick Trout, who has worked at the Navy project in San Diego since 1985, told a convention of the International Marine Animal Trainers Association in San Antonio, Texas, this year to specific incidents of abuse, weight loss, corpulent physical and damage to animals after transport."
"We use positive reinforcement and we depend
Trainers use "very negative methods, including food deprivation, corporal punishment."
News Roundup
SOVIETS LEGALIZE HEBREW:
After meeting with Soviet leaders, an official of the World Jewish Congress said yesterday that the teaching of Hebrew, once punished in the Soviet Union as a crime, will be allowed again Soviet officials also will allow Soviet Jews to participate in the World Jewish Congress.
REMAINS TO BE RETURNED: A Viennaese official said his nation would turn over to the United States today 23 sets of remains that may be those of U.S. soldiers missing from the Vietnam War. A U.S. Embassy official confirmed yesterday that remains would be sent back but put the number at 21. Sources said Vietnam has given the United States a list of at least nine names associated with the remains.
SALVADORAN REBELS ATTACK! Leftist guerrillas in El Salvador killed six troops when they attacked soldiers guarding a sugar refinery and a bridge early yesterday, hours after a rebel stormed the headquarters guard headquarters left four dead and 37 wounded. On a radio broadcast, the rebels said they were stepping up the urban war in an offensive called "Death to Reagan's Policy, Yankees Out of EI
Salvador.'
IRIANAN EXECUTIONS
REPORTED: A United Nations report on human rights in Iran says a wave of executions of Iranian political dissidents began about the time the government accepted a cease-fire in its war with Iraq. The report didn't say why, but mentioned death, but mentioned groups of executions reported by the media from July through September that included 1,140 political executions
COURT HEARS DRUG CASE: For the first time, the Supreme Court heard arguments addressing drug testing in the U.S. workplace. The court also heard a case questioning the constitutionality of suits against government social agencies if case workers fail to act to protect someone they know is in peril.
SMOKELESS CIGARETTES QUESTIONED: The American Medical Association yesterday sought to halt distribution of a smokeless cigarette by filing legal petitions with state health authorities in Arizona and Missouri where the product is being test marketed, saying it should be removed from shelves until it is judged safe for human consumption.
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Spring '89 Business School Admits
Orientation is Monday, November 7 from 4:00 - 5:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
UNDERCOVER
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TOMMY GREETING THE PEOPLE
Wint Winter speaks for KU Students
"Kansas Students — not just those at KU, but at every institution — recognize you as a foremost Legislative leader for higher education and student concerns. We are particularly grateful for the strong support you and the other members of the Ways and Means Committee provided for university funding. We appreciate all the assistance you have given us over the years."
PETER RUSSELL
Christine Graves
Executive Director
Associated Students of Kansas
May 1987
YOUR VOICE IN THE KANSAS SENATE
WINT WINTER
Pol. Adv. Paid By Winter for Senate Committee
Bongie Wells, Treasurer
"In the past, there was no followup," Dorsey said. "This group is staying together. I think that's a good move."
REPORT
Continued from p. 1
Will Dickinson, a writer for University Relations, said the task force proposals weren't enforceable man- but only a game plan for success.
"The task force is not a law-making body." Dickinson said. "These are not laws; these are recommendations."
Compliance and feasibility plans as well as timetables ultimately will be left up to the administrators named in the report's 25 planks.
"No specific dates are yet tied to the recommendations," Dickinson said. "The University will take the recommendations of the task force and draw up a plan of action."
The report itself calls for rewards to go to departments that have success in recruiting minorities. The report calls for those offices to be “tangibly” rewarded, although again, it provided no specifics.
"Some of the money may come from the Margin of Excellence, and possibly scholarships could come from Campaign Kansas," he said.
Many of the proposals would cost money if implemented. Recommendations, such as those calling for increased scholarships, will need to be written into this year's budget, Dickinson said.
The Margin of Excellence is the three-year plan to increase total financing of Board of Regents universities to 95 percent of their peer institutions and increase faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers. Campaign Kansas is the University's five-year, $150 million fund-raising drive.
Excerpts from the report
The following excerpts are taken from the report of the Minority issues Task Force:
- the campus must increase the number of minority faculty, staff and students through aggressive coordinated recruitment efforts.
Financial support for minority students, especially scholarships, should be increased.
A plan should be developed to work with elementary and secondary schools in Kansas and in large metropolitan areas to encourage academically talented minority students to go to college.
The stipend for the Langston Hughes Visiting Professorship should be increased to be expanded to make it more attractive.
A plan should be developed to reward those academic units successfully recruiting minorities.
- The executive vice chancellor should ensure funding for these activities.
2. "The campus must create an academic atmosphere that nourishes and encourages minority faculty, staff and students to succeed."
The Minority Issues Task Force should remain in place for a year to monitor implementation of its recommendations. Then the affirmative action board should review progress and annually report to the executive vice chancellor.
Campus governance and student groups should be trained to handle racism.
University Relations and the office of affirmative action should
better publicize the role of affirmative action.
- The counseling center should develop a composite portrait of the successful minority student.
- 3. "All members of the campus community must work together to create a culture that values the diversity minorities bring to University life and that responds powerfully and forthrightly to any incidents of racism and prejudice that occur here."
- The office of affirmative action should develop a guidebook on enhancing minority participation and how to handle racism.
- The undergraduate schools and the college should consider requiring a course in race relations or human relations; including material on cultural diversity in appropriate courses;
- Teaching in the student orientation programs, or special orientation programs for minority students.
- Material on race relations and racism should be used in the training of supervisory personnel, both classified and unclassified.
University administrators should consider replacing the minority affairs office with an office of multicultural affairs. The new office would work with the office of foreign student services and have expanded duties.
Each year the executive vice chancellor should meet with the Black Ecumenical Fellowship Council of Lawrence and the Lawrence Law Center to discuss the cooperation with the community in eliminating racism and improving race relations.
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Health
The truth behind hang
overs
SPALDING
COORS
LIGHT
From moderation to hair of the dog
By Terry Bauroth Kansan staff writer
Chris Petrick uses a sure cure for hangovers.
Chris Petrick uses a sure cure for hangovers. "I drink alcohol again in the morning, whatever alcohol is available," said Petrick, Park Ridge, ill. junior. "It levels the effect of the hangover.
Donald W. Goodwin, chairman of the department of psychiatry at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said that many myths surround the hangover but that drinking alcohol the morning after was not just a myth, it did relieve hangovers.
- **marr of the dog really does work,** he said.
* "Alcohol irritates the lining of the stomach causing nausea. The cure for most alcoholic vomiting is the inflammation of the stomach and relieves the nausea.*
"However, drinking to cure a hangover is dangerous. Alcohol is so efficient in relieving a hangover, you can get into the habit, and you are just postponing the hangover."
just postpone.
The cause of a hangover is unknown. Goodwin said. But the elements of a hangover are known and they include nausea, diarrhea, headache, depression, jitters, fatigue and having trouble concentrating.
People react to alcohol in different ways. Goodwin said, and each person will come upon his own treatment and suffer upon it from the suffers from. Myths associated with curing a hangover are created in this way.
Myths of hangovers
- Donald W. Goodwin
Myths of mangoes
Tom Jackson, Overland Park junior, drinks a
1.
It may be that some of the treatments that people have worked out for themselves could be beneficial since no one knows the cause of hangovers. '
Med Center chairman of the department of psychiatry
"People respond to alcohol individually," Goodwin said. "It may be that some of the treatments that people have worked out for themselves could be beneficial since no one knows the cause of hangovers."
"I tried it one time and it just happened to work." Jackson said. "Now I do it every time around."
glass of orange juice and a glass of iced tea and takes two Tylenol after a night of drinking to avoid a hangover.
But Goodwin said that no one could be sure that all hangover "cures" were myths.
"And a lot of it is in your mind. If you think it is going to work, then it will."
Drinking a lot of water before bed to prevent dehydration is a common myth, Goodwin said.
"People think that they are dehydrated because they have a dry mouth," he said. "It is just an effect of alcohol on the lining of the mouth. They cannot drink plain water, or the large volume of fluid they've consumed."
Another myth is the belief that drinking one type of alcohol causes worse hangovers than
another, Goodwin said.
This stems from the reaction some people have to a certain alcohol such as red wine. It is similar to bourbon.
"The red wine releases a histamine which dilates the blood vessels in the brain in some people and causes a migraine headache." Goodwin said.
A common belief is that a person can get a worse hangover from drinking bourbon and scissors.
"The fact is when you drink bourbon and scotch straight, you are more likely to have irritation of the stomach producing nausea the next day." Goodwin said.
There has been a sobering up pill advertised, Goodwin said. But it is not legitimate.
"The theory was that if alcohol went away faster, hangover effects would be less unpleasant and, to the extent that people drink to cure a hangover, they would motivation to drink would be less powerful.
"In fact a case could be made that the hangover would be worse if the alcohol disappeared faster."
Minimizing symptoms
However, there are ways to minimize a hangover, such as resting before you drink.
are ways to relieve a hangover.
"The only thing that counts is the alcohol that gets in the blood and if you eat, it is harder for the alcohol to get into the blood. It takes longer." Goodwin said.
And there are ways to relieve a hangover
It makes sense for us to drink water or
for water to cool the soda water calms the
stomach and the aspirin reduces the headache, Goodwin said.
"The best cure for a hangover is to stay in bed, and take two aspirins." he said.
Mary Altenhofen, nurse health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said, "There is no cure for a hangover but time. And the only way to avoid a hangover is to drink in moderation."
She said that limiting drinking to one serving every hour and a half would keep a person from
The appropriate servings are 12 ounces of beer, five ounces of wine and one and a half ounces of ice.
Other ways to avoid a hangover she said were to;
- eat before and after drinking in order to help alcohol to be absorbed more slowly into the bloodstream.
- stay with one particular drink.
drink one or two glasses of water before you go to bed
To help combat the effects of alcohol the warning of first, close to 10.
get up and eat something such as dry toast
But she warned that there were precautions to take even when going to bed after drinking.
- rest your liver by eating foods that are easy to digest such as fruits, vegetables, breads, cereals
"Try to lay on your stomach or side so if you vomit, it won't aaprate into your lung." Allenboa
Thursday, November 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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"Everybody would like more space, but they'll have to justify it," he said. "They're going to have to convince us that with more space they could greatly improve their service to the University."
STRONG
Burchill said the list would be amended further to show cost estimates. The more it costs to move power on the list the request could go.
Continued from p. 1
Jim Modig, campus director of facilities planning, said many of the vacated rooms could be moved into with a minimum of reconstruction.
"I would say there's a lot of space that can probably be moved into as is," he said. "There are a lot of closet-sized offices over there. These people will be able to move into a little more appropriate space."
Right now, facilities planning has nothing on purpose to provide for space.
"At this point in time, it's not even in our five-year plan," Mogad. said
Meanwhile, math and computer science officials are preparing for their move to Snow. Bill Bulgren, chairman of the department of computer science, said he hoped to be moved in by fall 1990.
He said the department needed centralized classroom and office space. Computer science now is spread out over campus in Malott, Fraser, Learned and Strong halls and Robinson Center.
Vetoes allow Reagan to avoid overrides
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Reagan exercised pocket vetoes yesterday on a bill designating 1.43 million acres of Forest Service land in Montana as wilderness as well as on a measure establishing a corporation to provide development capital to Indian businesses, the White House announced.
By exercising the pocket vetoes after Congress has adjourned for the year, there is no chance of overrides.
The legislation, Reagan said, "would have severely disrupted that balance."
In a statement concerning the Montana wilderness bill, Reagan said, "My administration's National Forest System Land and Resource Management Plans for Montana already strike the appropriate balance among competing economic, environmental and cultural interests in the National Forests of Montana."
The wilderness bill would have affected more than 6 million acres of Montana and was the result of a compromise worked out among competing interests, including conservationists and the timber and lumber industries.
The measure designated about
1. 43 million acres of Forest Service land as wilderness, 360,000 acres as special management areas, and another 20,000 acres as federal study areas. It also released for non-wilderness uses more than 10 million acres in Montana's 10 national forests.
"Enactment of the bill would injure the economy of Montana." Reagan said in the veto statement. "It could cost jobs and eliminate vast mineral development opportunities. It also would reduce the flexibility the federal government needs in managing the nation's natural heritage."
In addition, the president said, the measure would have limited the government's ability "to obtain strategic and critical minerals . . necessary to supply military, industrial and essential civilian needs during national defense emergencies . . ."
Reagan argued that the federal government would have given up revenue-producing land in favor of other areas, thus increasing the federal deficit.
Instead of creating a new institution, Reagan said, better use should be made of existing sources of capital such as the Indian Financing Act.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 3, 1988
Sports
11
Kansas probation evokes sympathy from Big Eight
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
Colorado coach Tom Miller and Iowa State's Johnny Orr responded with sympathy yesterday for the Kansas players and coaches who are facing a three-year NCAA probation.
miter said he was saddened that the Jayhawks would be unable to defend their national championship this season.
"Our team and I think all the teams in the Big Eight feel badly for the kids on the Kansas team." Miller said from his office in Boulder. "None of them had anything to do with the violations. I also feel badly for Roy Williams. Everyone I've talked to has spoken highly of Roy. We've had a lot of fairly played, hard fought games with the kids on the Kansas队. It's really unfortunate."
Miller also said, though, that if Kansas was guilty of breaking NCAA rules, it should be punished.
"I do not condone cheating in any fashion," said Miller, who served as an assistant under Bobby Knight at Indiana from 1977-80. "Coming from my background, I will not tolerate it. If I find that a school is cheating, I'm going to turn them in.
"The reason a kid is going to college is to get an education. Despite what a lot of people think, playing in
the NBA is an unrealistic goal for most kids. Playing college basketball should be complementary to what a kid is doing in school."
Miller declined to speculate on whether Nairobi was being made an example by the NCAA because they are the defending national champions. He said the NCAA rules should be followed by all schools.
oblige the Staten to surprise or
say he was surprised by the severity of the penalty.
rules should be followed,
"I don't care if it's a big name school or a smaller school breaking the rules," he said. "Both are in the wrong. If a brand new Cadillac and an old used Toyota are both driving 10 miles over the speed limit, they should both get the same tickets."
"tally," it thinks like that is unfortunate because of the delayed effect," Orr said, referring to the fact that the coaches and players involved in the violations are no longer at Kansas. "I'm very sorry for the Kansas players and fans. I just don't know what can be done in a situation like that."
like that.
When told about former Kansas coach Larry Brown's remarks about "leaving the program in pretty darn good shape", Orr said, "He certainly didn't leave it in good shape, but Larry Brown is a friend of mine and I don't consider him a cheater."
Game stays the same for KU
KANSAS
BASEBALL
32
Kansas sophomore forward Mike Maddox led all players with 18 points in the Jayhawks intrasquad scrimmage Tuesday at Salina.
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
The intrasquid serimmage Tuesday night in Salina's Bicentennial Center was a welcome escape for the Kansas men's basketball team, which had been placed on a three-year NCAA probation earlier in the day.
"I think it was good for the kids to have a bus ride for a couple hours and get away from everything," Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams said yesterday. "Mentally, I think it had to be good for them to get away from people asking their questions about what had happened during the day. We got down there and did some good things."
did some good talks.
As in Kansas' first exhibition game on Oct 15, senior forward Milton Newton made a three point shot with time running out to give the white team a 57-56 victory over the blue team.
Sophomore forward Mike Maddox and Newton were the leading scorers for the white squad with 18 and 16 points, respectively. Junior college transfers Alonzo Jamison and Freeman West led the blue team with 16 and 15 points, respectively.
and in particular.
Williams said he was impressed by the effort of Jamison, who will redshirt this season because he did not meet NCAA academic requirements for a transfer student.
"Alonzo did some nice things," Williams said of the 6-foot-5, 235-pound Jamison. "He uses his size very well around the basket. He uses his body to seal people away from the ball and does a nice job."
Sophomore Kurt Sinnett and junior Brad Kampschroeder, both members of the junior varsity squad, played in the scrimmage. Both grabbed two rebounds in limited playing time.
Williams said, however, that Sinnett and Kampschroeder were not officially considered varsity members.
"We decided to suit them up (Tuesday) night and we may bring two more up at some other time," Williams said. "We're searching right now for people."
Williams said the Jayhawks had shown gradual improvement during preseason practice.
preseason practice.
"We're not here where I'd like to be."
Williams said. "I'm sure every coach feels that way too. But we're making progress everyday and this is a tough competitive bunch."
Bears' Ditka suffers heart attack
The Associated Press
LAKE FOREST, Ill — Chicago Bears coach Mike Pepka suffered a mild heart attack yesterday after his daily workout at the team's training camp and was hospitalized in serious condition.
hospitalized in sergei bar. The 49-year-old Dikta was alert and conscious and be-
tained by the intensive care unit of Lake Forest Hospital, said Jay Alexander, a staff cardiologist Dikta's wife, Diana, was at the hospital with him.
Alexander said he expected Ditka would recover completely, "barring anything unforeseen." He blocked artery and
pretery, barring anything unseen.
Dikta was given medicine for a blocked artery and Alexander said the coach would require hospitalization for at least a week while doctors determined the extent of the blockage.
Both the players and McCaskey agreed the disruption would be minimal because a game plan was nearly completed and Ditka increasingly has turned over playcalling responsibilities to offensive coordinator Ed Hughes and his defensive counterpart, Vince Tobin.
"We're left in very capable hands," said safety Dave Duerson. "We're a bunch of professionals and we know what our jobs are. Certainly, though, Mike's going to be in the back of our minds, and Sunday will be for him."
Bears president Mike McCakey, who visited Ditka at the hospital, described the coach as being in good spirits and even joking that he had planned to visit a friend yesterday at the same hospital anyway.
"It's too soon to say when he will be back and resuming his duties," Alexander said. "He suggested 48 hours."
10
81
Safety Deral Boykin, left, is tied for the Big Eight Conference lead for tackles for freshmen.
Switch to defensive back the right move for Boykin
By Jeff Euston
By Jen Lusten Kansan sportswriter
When Glen Mason left Kent State in December to become the football coach at Kansas, Deral Boykin, a running back Mason is recruiting, followed him to Lawrence.
Boykin, a freshman from Kent, Ohio, is now the Jayhawks' starting strong safety and the team's second-leading tackler. He switched this fall to the secondary because of Kansas' lack of depth.
secondary decision.
"When I came here, I didn't even want to play basketball. But now I like it," Boykin said. "We had a meeting and he (Mason) said we were weak on defensive back, so we were going to move the running backs over and see how they did at defensive back. I ended up staying there."
ended up staying Roosevelt High School in Kent and, after his senior season, planned to play for Mason at Kent State. Boykin was an all-conference running back in high school.
"They recruited me at Kent State, since they were in my hometown," Boykin said. I got to know him (Mason) pretty well. When they were about to leave I said, "I'd like to play. I'd like to go with you."
salo. I like to play. Even after the switch, Boykin expected to play mostly on special tasks. But injuries to the secondary gave him a chance to play.
him a chance. Boykin has made 70 tackles this season, tying him for second on the team with freshman Dug Terry. Last week at Oklahoma, Boykin stopped two Sooner drives by recovering a fumble and intercepting a Charles Thomas pass.
Charles Hough/personalized
Boykin and Terry both were prime candidates to become Kansas' second straight Big Eight Defensive Newcomer of the Year before Terry suffered a season-ending neck injury Oct. 22 at Iowa State.
Boykin and Terry lead the Big Eight freshman in tackles. Sophomore linebacker Curtis Moore won the award last season for Kansas.
award last season for Kansas.
Boykin said he was not concerned about the honor.
however.
"If the awards come, they come," he said. "That's not really my main priority right now. I'm just trying to do my job."
Kansas defensive backs coach Mitch Browning said Boykin's chances to win the award were good.
"I don't know of any other freshman who has had the impact that Deral Boykin has had on this program," he said. "I guess you could say if Doug Terry were still playing that you could give it to both of them."
Browning said Boykin had the potential for big things in the future.
"Deral Boykin could be as good as he wants to be," he said. "He has a lot of football ability. He has running ability and he will hit people. That's an asset you need at strong safety."
you need at so long ago The amount of playing time Boykin has gotten this season as a freshman would pay off in the future. Browning said.
"He's come a long way," Browning said. "He's been forced to play right away, but when that happens, it forces you to grow up and stand on your own feet and be accountable. But the back side of that is if you play before you're ready, it's sometimes a frustrating experience
"But it will pay off down the road. He gets better every day. Every day, every week, you can see some improvement."
in
Boykin said he realized he was still learning and
maturing as a player.
malfunting you to more and more experience each game," he said. "When you're playing, you have to learn." It real exciting to play against teams you see everyday on television like Oklahoma and Nebraska."
Boykin's family and friends also have been impressed with his success.
"I talk to my cousins once in awhile and they ask a lot of questions about what it's like to play Oklahoma or Nebraska," he said. "My parents have seen me play. They're proud of me."
KU's probation may be costly for other conference schools
By Mark E. McCormick
Kansan sportswriter
The seven other schools in the Big Eight Conference will probably lose money as a result of the ban of the Jawhacks from the 1989 NCAA tournament.
Jayhawks from the 1897 ACA uniform
A school earns a specified monetary amount by
qualifying for the tournament and roughly $230,000 a
game.
Then, if Kansas did make the tournament and won its first two games, it would earn $460,000 for the Big Eight Conference. That money would be divided among the other seven conference teams with each school pocketing about $50,000.
"We certainly would have hoped that KU would have been able to make the tournament and win a couple of games, but while there will be some hurt, I don't think that I'd call it significant," said Bill Hancock, assistant commissioner for the Big Eight. "Obviously, we are disappointed over what has happened."
Under the conference's financial policy, successful programs bring money to all the other conference programs, which will help the Jayhawks' cause.
Member institutions turn money made in postseason and television appearances over to the conference for distribution to the other schools.
in attendance in the case last year, schools that participate in the tournament usually finish with less money than those that don't participate because tournament teams have to pay for the expenses incurred during the competition.
Last year, Kansas brought in about $1.4 million from its tournament appearance, and received $450,000 as its share of the $6.3 million total conference earnings, but finished with only $415,000 after paying expenses.
Public tickets are sold out this season for Allen Field House and 7,000 of 7,500 student tickets are sold out, according to the field house ticket office, suggesting that the University won't be immediately losing money in ticket sales.
KENNEY STILL KC QB: Although Bill Kenney was replaced by Steve DeBerg in the fourth quarter of Sunday's 17-10 loss to the fourteenth Raiders, he'll be in the starting lineup against the Broncos at Denver on Sunday.
sunday.
"There's not enough reason for me to make a change right now," Coach Frank Gansz said yesterday in announcing that Kenney would get the nod for the third week in a row.
"We're close. Closer than we have been. I want to start jumping around."
We good judgment he says.
"We've got two good quarterbacks here," the coach said. "I think both quarterbacks can win for us. We are forced sometimes to
make a change. You have to do what in your judgment is best for the team."
Sports Briefs
BASEBALL FREE AGENTS: Infielder Steve Sax and pitchers Alejandro Pena and Mario Soto of the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers were among 13 players who filed for free agency yesterday.
Other pitchers filling were Tom Niedenfuer of Baltimore, Bob Walk of Pittsburgh, Mike Smithson of Boston and Ed Vande Berg of Texas.
Also filing were second baseman Jim Gantner of Milwaukee, designated hitter Don Baylor of Oakland, outfielder Jim Dwyer of
Minnesota, first baseman Dave Bergman of
Detroit, shortstop Craig Reynolds of Houston
and first baseman Bill Buckner of Kansas
City.
One player who previously filed for free agency, Atlanta catcher Bruce Benedict, reached agreement on a one-year contract yesterday, leaving 63 players who had filed
with two days remaining.
Luis Salazar, a potential free agent, agreed to terms on a one-year contract with Detroit although the Tigers did not announce it. Joe Maena, his agent, confirmed an agreement had been reached.
The Dodgers have seven potential free
agents. Shortstop Alfredo Griffin filed Oct. 31 and outfielders Mickey Hatcher, Mike Marshall and pitcher Jesse Orosco are still eligible to file.
ROCKETS TRADE CARROLL: Center Joe Barry Carroll, the No. 1 pick in the NBBA draft, was acquired by the New Jersey Nets yesterday in a six-panel deal with the Houston Rockets.
The Nets also acquired guard Lester Coner from the Rockets and shipped guards Frank Johnson, Lorenzo Romar, swingman Tony Brown and 7-foot-1 center Tim McCormick to Houston.
---
Carrall, 7-1, was acquired by Houston from Golden State in December, playing in 75 games during the season. He averaged 12.7 points and had 489 rebounds in 2,004 minutes.
TYSON IN ACCIDENT! A bus carrying world heavyweight champion Mike Tyson and promoter Don King was involved in a minor accident in Mexico City, but no one was injured, World Boxing Council president Jose Sulaiman said yesterday.
The bus was carrying Tyson, King,
Sulaiman and several others back to a hotel
after dinner Tuesday night when it hit a taxi.
Sulaiman said.
12
Thursdav. November 3. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
The Electrolysis Studio Permanent Hair Removal
2 Professionals to help serve you.
Free Consultations
15 E 7th 841-5796
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
1033 Mass. Downtown
Quality Haircuts at
Reasonable Prices
Baskers
Venny & Earl
No appt. necessary Kenny & Earl
TOMAŽ ŠALAMUN
Yugoslav poet, reading his poetry in English.
Thursday, November 3,1988 7:30 p.m. Pine Room, Kansas Union
Sponsored by the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, the Soviet and Area Studies Program and the Center for International Programs.
We Love Our Babies
AOTT
PLUSON
MANNING 80
❤
Your Mommies
In touch
Member
KU Alumni Association; League of Women Voters;
Douglas County Historical Society; Trinity Episcopal Church;
Club Life; Lawrence Women's Network;
Lawrence Rotary Club; Lawrence Women's Network;
Lawrence Chamber of Commerce; Professional and Business
Women's Club; Kansans for Highway Safety; Douglas County
Health Care Access.
Health Care Access.
Board of Directors
KU Museum of Natural History; Kansans for Improvement of Nursing Homes; Lawrence Salvation Army; Lawrence First Step House; Lawrence Women's Chorale; Warm Hearts.
Former Leadership Roles
President, Douglas County Association for Retarded Citizens and Kansas Association for Retarded Citizens; Chair, Lawrence United Fund residential drive; Vice Chair, Kansas Coordinating Council on Health Planning; Founder, Lawrence Chamber Players; President, Lawrence Society for Chamber Music; Chair, Lawrence Warm Hearts.
Alumnus of the Year, KU School of Nursing; Distinguishef Service Award, Kansas Association for Retarded Citizens; Woman of the Year, JayCee Jaynes; Woman of the Year, Business and Professional Women's Club; Outstanding Service Award, Kansans for Highway Safety.
Honors
Legislative Appointments
Committees: Education; Taxation; Public Health and Welfare, Ranking Minority Member. Commissions: Vice Chair, Kansas Commission on Access to Services for the Medically Indigent and Homeless; Kansas Advisory Committee on Special Education.
Jessie belongs. Vote Jessie again.
Jessie Branson STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Prof's team to play former pros
Almost every baseball player who has ever laced up a pair of cleats or played in a little league game has wondered what it would be like to compete against major leaguers.
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
against major leaguers:
Max Ultsier, an associate professor of journalism at the University of Kansas, will get that chance today when his senior men's all-star baseball team plays against some former major league standouts.
Rick and Paul Reuschel in college so it won't be the first time for me."
Utsler will play second base for the Kansas City team in the National Senior Men's Tournament today through Saturday in Phoenix, Ariz.
to Kobe. The former major leaguers expected to play in the tournament include: Rico Carty, Juan Marichal, Jim Barr, Al Hrabsky, Luis Tiant and Orlando Cepeda.
"I'm looking forward to the tournament," Utsler said. "But on one hand, it won't be that big a deal. I played against (former major league pitchers)
"I took a few years off and I didn't like it." Utsler said. "I saw an article in the paper about the league. I've been playing baseball since I was eight and I'm still having too good a time to give it up."
Utsler's all-star team will compete along with 37 other teams in the Phoenix tournament. Other teams in his division include teams from St. Petersburg, Fla., San Jose, Calif., Atlanta, Los Angeles, and Ontario, Canada.
Angeles, and Ontario, Canada. The Kansas City senior league competes on weekends in Overland Park. Utlser said the league was highly competitive.
was highly competitive.
"When we put this league together, the objective was to make the teams as evenly matched as possible," Utsler said. "Teams in the league are
evenly balanced and the competition is great.
Usier, 40, said he still was comfortable playing basquet.
evenly balanced and the competition is great."
BASEball.
"The thing that helps me is I was slow when I played in high school," Utsler said. "The fact that I'm slow now really doesn't hurt my game. Maybe its because I wasn't very good in the first place, but my skills haven't really fallen off."
Thinking it might be a suitable substitute for baseball, Utsler said he tried playing softball for awhile.
Utsler said he planned to play in the league again next year.
"I just wasn't able to play into playing softball." Utsier said, "The first game I played in, a guy wearing black socks and a wrist watch got me out. That left a bad taste in my mouth."
we nave six teams in the league right now," he said. "It offers a great opportunity to play baseball. I'm pleased with the direction we are headed."
Jayhawk Series closes fall season
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
When the Kansas baseball team's fall season began, pitching was the biggest question mark for coach Dave Bingham.
DAVE On the final day of the season yesterday, it was pitching that dominated as Kansas senior Craig Mulcahy beat sophomore Steve McGinnis and lead his team to a 4-2 victory in the final game of the intrasquad Jayhawk World Series.
Mulchay won two games in the seven-game series. Senior teammate Craig Houlek had one win and three saves.
Bingham said he was pleased with
Pitching shows improvement dominates intrasquad rivalry
the improvement of the pitching staff, which improved its team ERA from more than six runs a game last fall to a little more than 2.5 this fall.
"That is a dramatic drop in runs scored." Bingham said. "Defense and pitching is a matter of great concentration. Our pitching will have to maintain the same type of concentration in the spring that they had this fall."
Mulechy said he had improved his pitching delivery this fall.
"I had a couple of outings early on that I wasn't satisfied with," Mulcahy said. "But I got my head on straight now. The coaches helped me develop a new motion where I use my legs more.
"I can't wait for the (spring) season to get started. We really have started to mesh together this fall and I think we'll be a pretty good team."
Bingham said he had some goals for his team in the spring season.
or his team in the spring season
"We want to play a fundament$^{10}$"
brand of baseball," he said. "That includes solid pitching and defense. The big holes we had a year ago were our pitching and defense."
Junior center fielder Pat Karlin said the Jahayhawk World Series was a good way to end the fall season and prepare for the spring season.
"We've been playing junior colleges," Karlin said. "But splitting up the team and playing this series was probably the best competition we had all fall.
"We are a pretty young team, but I feel optimistic about this season. Coach Bingham stresses the style of play, not the outcome. Everyone on the team has a picture of his style now. We'll put some numbers up."
STUDENT RUSH!
1/2 off $16 & $10 tickets
half hour prior to performance while they lost.
A
STUDENT RUSH!
1/2 off $16 & $10 tickets
half hour prior to performance while they last.
ALVIN AILEY American Dance Theater
Kansas City Friends of
FOLLY THEATER
THE NATIONAL ARTS GUILLEM PROGRAM
Funded by the National Arts Council and supported by the U.S. Department of Education, this program provides opportunities for students in grades 5-12 to study and develop artistic skills at a national level.
www.naturalartsguillem.org
FOLLY THEATER
Thurs. Nov. 3, 8 pm — Opening Night at the Folly
Sat. Nov. 5, 2 pm — Opus McShann and More
8 pm — Alley Favorites
CATCH US IF YOU CAN
THE LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATRE AND PRESENT PRINCESS WOODS
CLOSE TIES BY ELIZABETH DIGGS
CALL 474-4444 or CATS 756-0123.
1 9 8 8 THURSDAY/SUNDAY
NOVEMBER SIX DOLLARS
3.4,5.6' FRIDAY/SATURDAY
11,12,13' SEVEN DOLLARS
8:00 PM SENIOR CITIZEN
"2:30 PM DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
CALL FOR RESERVATIONS
843-SHOW
1211 NEW HAMPShire LAWRENCE KANSAS
MAJOR COLLEEN KENNEDY 913-491-8640 COLLECT
AIR FORCE
The Air Force has a special program for 1989 BSNs. If selected, you can enter active duty soon after graduation—without waiting for the results of your State Boards To quality you must have an overall 2.75 GPA. After commissioning, you will attend a five-month internship at a major Air Force medical facility. It's an excellent way to prepare for the wide range of experiences you'll have serving your country as an Air Force nurse officer. For more information, call
Find out about our Monday advertising discount today! 864-4358
Place: Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
TAIM HIGH
ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1989.
Refreshments are provided Free and Open to the Public For information call 841-9768
The Islamic Center of Lawrence presents Sister Aminah Al-Silmy
100
an American Muslim who is a media specialist and Associate Editor of the American Trust Publication in Plainfield, Indiana speaking on
"Islam: The Path to Women's Liberation" In this lecture Mrs. Al-Silmy will explain to you how Islam changed her to a committed liberated Muslim woman.
Time: 7 p.m., Friday, Nov.4,1988
ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM A
TENSION HEADACHE NOW?
call Kathy Gorman immediately at Watkins Memorial Health Center (913)864-9595 to see if you qualify for a medication study
FINANCIAL INCENTIVE PROVIDED
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP
4
THE COMIC CORNER
NE corner of 23rd & 1low B4-84294
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 3, 1988
13
THE COMIC CORNER
O
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
TRACY GARCIA
Haircuts. $6.50
For appointments call 842-3699
2323 Ridge Court
TRACEY GARCIA
Looking for ON CAMPUS?
Please see page 2
KANSAN
News 864-4810
Advertising 864-4358
Tired of Searching All Over Town?
Bomber
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Check the Kansan classifiedies for great deals and special events!
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Don't be a TUNKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce your stress and don't forget your GIFT CEREMONY. Don't gobble your budget either, *students* %20 or $15, the actual cost is ECKANAR discussion group for learning. For more
info call 749-1127
Jewish Community Center, Blintz Brunch. Sun.
Nov 6 10:32 8:52 Highland, Lawrence
Mary Kay Cosmetics, Contact Deann Wilks at 841-9407.
Write-in Stan Eckert for the U.S. House of Representatives. You do have a rebuge
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology
Univ. of Kansas
M-Sat
9-5
Sun.
1-5
ETHNIC ARTS & CRAFTS
Events of the Week
Hillel
לְשִיר
Thursday, Nov. 3
General Planning Meeting
Open to All
7:30 p.m., Hillel House
ENTERTAINMENT
For more information call Hillel House, 749.4242
Sunday, Nov. 6
J.C.C. Blitz Brunch
10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
917 High Lane Ave.
GOOD VIBRATIONS: the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call (Brian) 841-8944J.
JOIN G. SINGS Parties, B-days, singing messages. Call (Brian) 841-8944J.
FOR RENT
Available immediately 1-bedroom basement
partition with a walk-in closet to KU and
KBS, (key) month 794-0619
Available Jan. 1. 12 bedroom apartment, new carpet, new kitchen and bathroom. Call for details. Purchase cabs only $300 monthly, utilizes 749-321-3181 or call (855) 321-3181.
Available immediately 1 bedroom apt for male
students between downtown and campus. $42 plus
tuition. (No phone numbers or room reservations.)
Completely Furnished 1 furniture and 4 bedroom apart-
ment 841-1232, 841-1555, 841-1429, or 749-2415.
841-1232, 841-1555, 841-1429, or 749-2415.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-3255, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
Female Koordinator wanted to share beautiful apartment in PeepTree Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes: own bedroom, own bathroom, fireplace, firewood, call 749-3603.
Female roommate wanted to fill 4th bedroom in new Mastercraft Apt. Close to campus. Available now and or next semester. Own room. $^4$ utilities. Call 841-0783
Large 1 bedroom apt. Haven Place. Quire, quiet,
large room with balcony. Lease signed by
legible person. Call 841-6538 or 841-1211.
New Hidden Meadows Townhomes. Two Bedroom and Two Bedroom with Study and Fireplace. 749-1141, 841-3919, 2832 Iowa. Behind Raco Carwash
Crlq Semester @B2 Sublease br. W/D. On bus rt.
Call 714-560-560
Sublease next semester. Nusmoking room $190 m/o * 1) utilities. Near campus. 842 6088
Sub-lease one bedroom apartment. Water paid
Available Now. Call 842 6228, or 843-1116.
Annual fee: $125.
Sublease nice 1 bedroom apartment starting
December 35th @ $90. Electricity paid. Phone:
0842-8288 after 6:30pm.
HILLVIEW APTS
HILLIVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 841-5799
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
- On bus route-near shopping
- Winter paid
- Laundry facilites
- Some with gas paid
- by Thompson-Crawley
- Ample on-street parking
- Rental furniture available
Sublease: Tangwong Studio. Available in December; Furnished, low utilities. 749-628-068
Vacancy for next semester. Own furnished apartment at NEW ELESTHATE townhouse Rent plus 4 utilities. 749-749-783
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
- Newly remodeled
- Great location
- On KU bus route
- Gas heat
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
26th & Iowa 843-6446
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-4
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
FOR SALE
15th & Crestline
in absolutely awesome array of antiques,
tissueware, fine art used and furniture, picnic
boxes, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books,
stores, vintage clothing, books, coins, baseball
vintage, records, vintage clothing, books, baseball
advertising items, clocks, desks, desk具
tools, tool Royal Duston, and so much more stuff
about antiques. **MARKET** 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sat.
and Sun. 10-5. For booth rental info 842-661-9617
181 Blazer Silvered AC, PB, PC, AT, AM/FM
stereo, CB radio, 4" lift with 3" Radial muddies
looks and runs great. After 6:00. 749-5905.
$7000.00
AUTOSALES
*icous books.* Playbys, Penthouses, etc. Max's
*omics.* 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat. & Sun.
For Sale: A Tandy 600 portable computer and one Tandy DMP 105 printer. Call 815-5388.
AUDIO SALE-Cassette deckes, Teac, JVC, Sony from $75 - 180. Must sell. 841-9484
GOVT SURPLUS! * New G.I. Overwhelms, Com-
mendations & milten.* **Gov't Surplus** Floods Jel-
bors & militants. Floods Jelbors, Overwhelms.
Carmenlagh Clothing Also CAHATTIIH
Christmas Christmas Marsy Surplus Sales. S.
Christmas Marsy Surplus Sales.
Why Beer is Better than Women at KU
Go to Miami, Fl for Thanksgiving and/or
Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for a discount price. Call 749 5773 from 6:00 pm for more info.
FREE information on New Ka Police Photo radar. NOW in use also Useable to SAVE KAMAZAKU! We offer KAMAZAKU that will detect all irradiator kits. We can detect all Enterprise. P O Box 274, Laming Ks 66043
FUTONS. Quality cotton mattress from $88.88
New Wave Futons; 842-7378
Leather jackets (new) For $150. Call 841-0359
after 6 p.m.
100% Cotton L and XL Sizes
Only $10 call Tim 842-3606
Trailer: 12' x 65' w & d, shed, deck, AC, stove,
Ref., nice; $4,300. Call Days 749-5240.
1981 Toyota 440 pu 5-pad. S-RS all options red
or blue at #14560 obs Chuck 841-9037
dition, must sell. $1600 GHO 944-8333
Ford Escape S-peed, AM/FM cassette,
Nissan Altima 2.5L, Honda Accord 2.5L,
86 Olds Coul. Coup, power steering, power brakes, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM stereo cassette, new, air, crankshaft, power seats, doorlocks, rear defroster, AM/FM stereo cassette, 19,000 miles, $990. Both cars purchased, new transfer warrant, both in excellent condition.
Mobile DJ system on back sale 1000 watts sound,
lights, lager, 749-1500.
free car get in on sbh in sbh
nice car get in on sbh in sbh
free car get in on sbh in sbh
wood, Stereo, New
10 FOG, GAL, P11, 8212
Government Homes from $1.00 "U Repair". Also tax delinquent property. Call 805-644-9633. Ext. 769 for info.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords. Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevys. Surplus.
Vesse Guide) 1.867-650-400 Ext. S.9758
81 Grand LeMans. Cruise control, must sell. $800.
749-0105.
1981 Toyota Tercel, AM/FM cassette, good condition, no rust, $1350 or best offer. @ 842-2219
It starts. It stops. What more could you want for $350. VW Beetle. ★749-7302.
1985 Honda Accord, Gold, Pioneer Stereo System,
nice car, good car in snow, 842-683.
RED HOT bargains! Drug dealer's cars, boats,
planes repd. Surplus Your Area Buyers
Guide. (1) 875-687-6000 Ext. S-9738
tion, no rust, $1350 or best offer. #842-2219.
EBD EXP Foster Cass. and more. Good con-
tainer.
MAC with dual drive, Imagewriter, mouse, and
software, W12082 0100, OHO, 0234, jnibpu
LOST-FOUND
Rock-n-roll. Thousands of used and rare albums from the 1970s and 80s are available at Quantrill's Fish Market, 811 New Hampshire.
SAE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty and service receipt to see appreciate. Many叮咚响 841-7564
Found·Musical Instrument Case.Call to identify. 841-9701.
lights, lamps. 749-1500
Portable Computer. 640K, 2-3$\frac{1}{2}$ disk drives. 1260h modern, IBM compatible, carrying case; Daisy Wheel Printer. 460x, platen on continuous flow. 2 inches.
Found: Keys by Potter Lake with Elvis key chain
PA15502
modern, IBM compatible, carrying case; Daisy Wheel Printer- 40pcs, platen or continuous flow, print wheels. Must sell, price negotiable 232-2200 or 262-6188 at 259 cents.
LOST Minolta camera on 10/25/88 outside of 3139
Worcester. If found please call 841 4466
HELP WANTED
Found young female tiger cat. Unusual color and markings. Leatherette collar. Found Oct. 29 14th & Ohio. Call 842-6712.
Records Show & Sale Sunday
Nov. 6, 9-5 V.F.W. Hall
9650 Pflumm, Lenexa, Ks.
*AIRLINES NOW HIRING.* Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service
Listings. Salaries to $10KG Entry level positions
1. (85) 695-800 4900 A-7938
RAF Computer needs responsible student to perform computer tasks for 3968 persons please and resume to 3968 persons.
Bakery Sale/Cleaning. Late night weekend position. $4.00 hr after training. Three weeks paid vacation after 1 year. Interviews 5:00 p.m. Tue, 1 nov and Nov 2 or contact Darien Apply
Checker's Pizza has immediate up...
Checkers serve breakfast, lunch and dinner meals. Day and night options available. Order takes $1.45 per hour sandwich maker orders. In person at Checker's 221 Alley Rd. Rd. in person at Checker's 221 Alley Rd. Yale Rd. Rd.
BIOLOGY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Part-time, approximately 20 hours per week. Must be enrolled in a four hour course time, remaining for 5 weeks Monday through Friday, application to inter Research Corp., 2020 W. 21st Street. References and transcript required. Applied to Master's degree. An equal opportunity employer. M-F-H-B.
Checker's Pizza has immediate openings for kids and adults. You can have own car, valid driver's license, and insurance, $17.15 hourly training, and easy to reach the store. Pizza is available at 212 Aylee Rd. between 1 a.m and 8 p.m. or 212 Yale Rd. between 1 a.m and 8 p.m.
Chiropractic Assistant to work 8 am to 1 pm.
MWL.CAW720132.
Christmas Help $8.90 / Hours Flexible
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
(012) 345-9671
EARN EXTRA MONEY and free lodging vacation to Florida, Nassau or Mazatian. Distributor of cassettes, records and compact discs needs campus sales representative. Must be aggressive in meeting deadlines.
and enjoy contact with people (can 16-25 years of age) in your community who are interested in the position) needed for University Publication, news media or press relations.
Full or part time position to fuel, lube and do light maintenance work for heavy equipment. Flexible hours. EOE. Apply in person to R.D. Johnson Excavating Co. 2020 Haskell Suite 120
camera and darkroom skills, also experience with artificial lighting and on-camera flash. Prefer experience with color slide film. Submit portfolio to Relations Center. 864-3256. EO-AA Employer
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Studies.
Civil Engg. in Petroleum Engineering
Park based oil and gas firm. For information and interview please call Argon Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at
412-859-3700.
Gal to clean house, 2 hrs weekly, $5.00 per hour.
Own transportation. 841-0522.
GOVENMENT JOBS. $10,640-$32,900 /r Now
GOVERNMENT JOB 10,640-$32,900 /r Ex
for current Federal list.
NANIES needed to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good communication skills. More information call Janet (K.C. 1-722-490-6380)
Help Wanted. Part time day and evening help, as well as part-time work, including app and per day at Border Park, 125 W. 7th St., only onBorder Park, 125 W. 7th St., only on
On TVs, VCBS, Jewelry, Stereos, Musical instruments, cameras, and more. we honor W/VC/M/AEM C. J-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry, 184 W. B, 6th, 749-1391
Network Support Assistant: (Student Hourly)
Deadline: 11/9/98 $ salary: $345 &hrs. Duties:
work with students within Networking, 2)Take phone messages, etc. Required: 1)types at 45 pm; w/ phone numbers.
follow complex verbal & written instructions;
4)able to schedule time in 3-hour blocks; and
Now hire cards and cashiers for days, evenings,
and overnight shifts. Starting July 1, hire card-
ers #84-2020 Pizza Shuttle is immediately hiring both full-time
and part-time employees who are available
hours available, #84 per hour possibly including
daily pay, mails, and bonuses. Must have own
phone number. Apply in person at Pizza Shuttle
160) 90 W. 32rd
2 current enrollment as a KU student; 3 ability to follow complex verbal & written instructions; 4 ability to schedule time in 3 hour blocks; and 5 ability to complete a job at m. - 5:00 p.m. Job description available. Fill out application at the reception desk at Computer Center, University of Kansas. EE/AA Employer
(*Student Monthly.*) Deakin 11/7/18 $325
*$250/mo. Duines:* Participates in program
assists in the solution of operational dif-
ficulties, provides technical support,
documentation, and preparation of necessary test
materials, high school, or vocational technical,
high school, or vocational technical, 2-current
enrollment as a KU student. Full job descrip-
tion available upon request. Rural Hust, Personnel Coordinator, University of
Rural Center, Lawrence, KS 60045
EO/AA Employment
Student Office Assistant needed in Student Housing Department. 15-20 percent of students need help with their guests, giving visitors $3.50 per hour, depending on experience. Student hubs, 286 McCallum Hall, 844-6564 by New York University.
Join the KU chapter of BACHUSI! Participate in the conference that is concerned with response to bacillus calcoveae by describing alcohol. Come to the organizational meeting Mon.-Fri., Nov. 14, at 6:30 p.m., Lewis-Kansas Union. For more information call
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Opening! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Weymouth, Kalspell, Mt. 59001.
We are looking for two line cooks. Must be able to work nights, Contact Windell at Becerros. 841-1232.
Student Applications Programme 1 / 2 time
(Student Monthly) Deadline 11/7/98 $50%
THURSDAY Dollar Days
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
Young couple seeking Nanny in New York. Call
at 516-365-6988
Are you a student concerned about responsible use or not of alcohol? Get involved in KU's new chapter on alcohol and drug prevention meeting Monday, November 7. 7-8 pm. Regional room, Level 5, Kansas Union Call Center.
C
PERSONAL
Chef's Surprise Cheap! Domestics $1.00 Imports $1.50 Johnny's Up & Under 401 North 2nd
Chris C - Smile! Can last forever if you want, or If not, I'd like to be a fond memory rather than a forgotten face. P. S. Can I still sit to vox in Poli? S. Donna.
Congrats Mary- 1st runner up Miss Northeast Kansas - you're always 1 with your Sig Kap sisters!
Gary, an attractive SWM, 23, fun-loving, active, but not phone used, who likes to teach the telelectual literature and take chances, would like meeting female, 29-35, who enjoys same. We could be friends, may more. Resume to Linda, 186 W. 42nd St., NYC.
MISCELLANEOUS
Happy, happy, happy, happy 21st Ren! Let me know how it feels to be legal. everyone knows I’m still a minor. Love ya tons Hugs & Kisses. Jen Hey Snuggle. Meet me at Prime Time this week.
Aristin, Happy 211! You're the best Mom, rom-
mate and friend. Love your dot, Mindy. K-thanks.
Mariele. Bob Happy 211! How about Havenville
you? Mariele. Bob Happy 211! stuff! Your PDY's are going fast! J-Pob.
Mark and Melissa: Congratulations! The wait is over and you're officially parents now. Maybe you should save saving tuition money for your future Jayhawk. The Godfather.
ML: Don't miss Michael Hedges at Liberty Hall
the event of the year. KF
S. F. Come play in my orchestra. Love you Joe Average.
SWM, 33. Let me meet at Perkins, 5:30 p.m. Nov. 4.
You'll know me by my book, SWF, 33.
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWF. 21:30.
P.O. P. Box 442-043, Lawrence, Ks. 66444.
Photo appreciated
WOLF. Congrats! Heard you lost it in Pittsburg.
BUS.PERSONAL
CAMPERS and FISHERS SUA camping and fishing trip 11.13 For details call SUA
Government Photos. Passport, immigration,
employment, portraits. Slides can be a valuable asset to your portfolio. Slides are a valuable resource.
HEY YOU! Get your car in shape for those cold morning driving sessions. Complete your car care at Philips 46 or buy it now. Card includes oil change, lubber joe, rudlush rotary rotation and gain balance balances out your vehicle's rotation and gain balance out your car's rotation.
you purchase 5 gallons of competitively prized quality gas with each visit. These are the only caches so catch me. Jim, at 424 6185 MWF (8Mw - 12m) - 12m) HT 4pm (12m) OR Weekends.
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
dependent: 2 children with $25 deductible only
$65 16 month. With parent slightly higher, Kansas
Insurance Service #821 1181
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 842-7200.
SERVICES OFFERED
Astrology: Would you like to know about someone special, more about yourself, or what will happen if you have a personal self addressed, stamped envelope to Astro Operations P. Box 324,麻省山 Md 64908
Boulder Portraits are still the great gift idea. Sets include glamorized makeover and full-pass assistance. For more information call Mike or Grace collect 1-299-3789
CUSTOMER SERVICE CLEKRS Several openings for customer service clerks in the Lawrence area, day shifts, phone experience, good transport skills. DUNHLILN, TEMPORARY SYSTEMS 267-3734
ing is in the Lawrence day saints, prenee experience, good transportation, excellent benefits. DUNILL TEMPORARY SYSTEMS 267 2733. DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU *u* students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation
FILE CLERKS Several openings sor file clerks in area,数量 Area. numerical and color coded filing - good transportation. 9-9 pm. excellent benefits - NOW DUNHIL TEMPORARY BENEFITS
French tutoring Transitions Paper revisions
Workshop expert work 8 years experience.
Bob B4-841-602
www.bobb4.com
Leaving Town?
**RIVATE OFFICE Ob Gyn and Admission Services. Overland Park...(131) 491-6878.**
RU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES Atkachrome
RU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES PASSPORT $50.00 Art & Design Building,
www.ru-photographic.com
Airline Tickets at airline counter prices no service charge
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr, 843-9022
(p.m.)
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Lawrence, 841-0716
Quality Tutoring, Economics, Statistics,
Mathematics. All largely Call, Dell'悠聊. 842-1064.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc. IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843.6554
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
ludy.842.7945 or lia.841.1915
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-263, days or evening.
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience. Call evenings before 10:39 [796]
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary. $1.25/double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence. Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Call R.J. S' Tying Service 814-5942 Term papers, theses, dissertations. letters, resumes, application lists. Laser Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters, resumes, application lists. Laser
EXPERT TYPING Mary Daw 723-4118. In Topeka Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer
Maupintour
MAC _ WORDPROCESSING _ papers,
MAC _ WORDPROCESSING _ needs.
Needs all services completed through Macintosh
Wordprocessing. Format to your specifications with started check, all laser printed output
with finished check.
- Pysist - Reasonable rates. Call 842-3900.
IRON FENCE TYPING服务 is back. IBM
synthetic typers or Zeiss hard disk use
printer, fast, fast, fast, guaranteed
printer librarian, fast, fast, guaranteed
DEACE TVDING.
Wordprocessing. spelling check $1.25/pg. Bid projects. Sally 841-2279. Let me help.
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 7289
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check
M-F. 105- *mk* 8223
749-0770
RESUME SERVICES professional, quality resumes. Formatted to your specifications with laser printed output. Quality, professional services. Formatted of Kiskor's 24 hour service Kit Curt 4827 8610
SPEEDTIMM IBM Procession Processing Quality. Customize your speed-timing count on large projects. $1.25 (double-space) per page.
**TYPING/WORKPROCESSING:** Done on comp.
**TYPES:** Litter-Quality printer. Legal exp. Laura,
Letter-Qty printer.
Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 845-0111-9. Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday theWORDCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, theses, resumes, commercial IBM.PC, MAC, CPM, CIM, dot matrix, do matrix, laser. Since 1983. 845-3147
ATTENTION Art Students
Word processing, typing. Papers, resumes. applications, dissertations. Also, assistance with grammar, spelling, composition, editing. Hate M.S. Degree. 841/605, 841/624
WANTED
I need a posture of a German Vital painted for x-
back, using the 45° incline in Rachel at Cellache
at 27:090 between 94' F - MASA
at 19:080 between 94' F - MASA
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Word processing IBM Okidata printer. $1.25/double space page. Call before 10 pm. 749-1900. Kathy.
unities Close to campus. Call 842-5097 after 7:
female roommate named second semester to
assume base of two-bedroom townhouse to
move in. Call 842-5097, fireplace, pool
dryer/duffer (744-6998)
**Administrative:** female warmed for spring semester
**Facilities:** all office spaces, 100+ female utilities paid Call 842-3680. Leave Message
**Campus:** 842-3680
Drummer and Bassist needed to complete Jazz/Rock Band. Dan 842-7194
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom
of the suite of this semester.
Call 749-5072. Leave message.
Roommate needs to assume lease, or sublease
Roommate needs to assume lease, or sublease
Square Apartment own bedroom $200
Square Apartment own bedroom $200
- Policy
*commate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt;*
*appliances. Available immediately. Vyme*
748-4281
748-4281
Thirty year old professional needs dependable
home office. 800-765-2344 HI House $165 * o bille
330-6346, 3344-6182, 6082
Second Semester Female Roommate needs and 1; utilities. Walking distance or use bus.
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Go get 'em, brother."
14
Thursday, November 3, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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r
Vol. 99, No. 50 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday November 4,1988
Johnson expresses frustration
Kansan sportswriter
By Arvin Donlev
Former University of Kansas athletic director Monte Johnson expressed anger yesterday that the University did not invite him to attend the NCAA Infractions Committee hearing Sept. 30, and that former coach Larry Brown had been treated as a scapegoat since the NCAA gave the Jayhawk basketball program a three-year probation Tuesday.
Under the probation, Kansas will not be allowed to participate in the NCAA or NIT tournaments at the end of the season. It will not be allowed paid internships in the NCAA or NIT. A scholarship reduced from its total next season.
In a telephone interview from his home in Lawrence yesterday morning, Johnson said that although University General Counsel Vickie Thomas briefed him about the allegations before the hearing, he was angry that he and former staffers of the university Hunter had not been invited to attend the hearing.
"To be in a position where you're accused of things and not being given the opportunity to respond is not a great feeling," Johnson sad. "And to have a person (Hunter) whose day-to-day responsibility is to overlook the program not invited to the hearing is inexcusable."
Hunter, who is athletic director at University of
KU didn't ask him to NCAA hearing
Idaho at Moscow, said he was not angry about not being invited to the Infractions Committee's meeting.
"Chancellor Budig and Vickie Thomas talked and decided they would be able to pass on the information without my presence." Hunter said. "I didn't want to interfere, and would do a good job in presenting the case."
Thomas said, "The way we've always proceeded is that we invite the Chancellor, the faculty representative, the athletic director and myself."
Cancellor Gene A. Budig said "appropriate university personnel were involved" in the hear-
Athletic Director Bob Frederick refused to comment on Johnson's statements.
Johnson, who served as Kansas 'athletic director from November 1982 to March 1987, said he also was disappointed that the University had sat "idly" over the Larry Brown out to be the culprit in the matter."
"Not one person from the University has defended him, but I kind of expected that," Johnson said.
Johnson said he had no regrets about hiring Brown. Brown, who was hired in April 1983, took the Jayhawks to five straight NCAA tournaments, two Final Four appearances and last year's national championship.
"Larry did more for the basketball program at this University, with the exception of (coach Forrest C.) 'Phog' Allen, than anyone," said Johnson, who played on the 1956-57 Kansas basketball team that finished second in the NCAA tournament. "For him to be pictured as somebody who has hurt the University is totally unfair.
"That the University has done nothing to support him does not surprise me, though. No one has even attempted to defend Larry. I'm so sick of it I could puke."
Johnson said he knew nothing of the rules violations until several months after they had occurred.
"We found out about it after the fact," Johnson said. "Gary Hunter told me what had happened and we self-reported the violations soon after."
Please see NCAA, p. 16; col. 6
KU student,24,dies after liver transplant
Bv a Kansan reporter
A KU student died early this morning after undergoing a second liver transplant operation at a Nebraska hospital.
The student, Rick Castaneda, 24, Kansas City, Kan., senior, died at 5:02 a.m. today from complications following a second liver transplant, according to Tom O'Connor, media coordinator for the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Castenada had been in surgery for six hours last night and this morning for the second transplant. After the surgery was completed.
Both livers were donated through the United Network for Organ Sharing program.
Castaneda had been transported to Omaha on Oct. 24. He waited a week for a donor liver before
undergoing nine and a half hours of transplant surgery Monday morning.
0'Connor said doctors removed the first liver transplant yesterday morning after it was discovered that there was bleeding and that his body was rejecting the donor liver.
Castaneda was born March 28, 1964 in Chicago. He is survived by his parents, David and Mary Castaneda of Kansas City, Kan.; a brother, David of Chicago; and a sister, Elena of California.
Castaneda attended Kansas City Community College before coming to KU. He was a broadcast sales major and worked as a sales representative intern at KLZR radio in Lawrence.
Funeral arrangements have not been made yet.
CAT 953
A house and hay barn are razed and burned by Darrell Robertson, Ottawa resident, one block east of Haskell Avenue and 11th Streets. Dunbar Trucking and Excavating Inc. was contracted by the city of Lawrence to clear the site yesterday.
Emporia wife pleads guilty to '83 murder
The Associated Press
Burning down the house
JUNCTION CITY — Lorna Anderson Eldridge, whose story was featured in a television mini-series last year, pleaded guilty yesterday to second-degree murder in the 1983 death of her husband.
Eldridge, 35, a former Emporia resident, is already serving a term of 5 to 18 years in prison for solicitation to commit murder in an earlier unsuccessful attempt on her husband, Martin K. Anderson.
She was charged last year with first-degree murder in Anderson's death.
Thursday, during an appearance in Geary County District Court for a hearing on a series of motions, she entered the plea of guilty to the lesser charge.
Anderson was shot to death on Nov. 4, 1983, in a farm field in southeast Geary County. He was traveling with his wife and their children and stopped after his wife said he had been hit while man wearing a skirt mask appeared and shot her husband.
In a statement yesterday, she told the court that Thomas P. Bird, the former Emporia minister who was described in earlier testimony as her lover, was the man who shot her husband
She said that she and Bird, for whom she served as secretary, had agreed that she would stop her van on a road or highway in Geary County.
"I would pretend to lose my car keys so that my husband, Martin Anderson, would have to get out of the van to help look for them," she said.
This, she said, "would enable Tom Bird to come up and shoot him."
"I did as we had planned and my husband was killed, Nov. 4, 1983, and I gave Tom the .22-caliber Woodman that he used to shoot my husband."
Eldridge, who re-married shortly before she pleaded guilty to the earlier criminal solicitation charge, had been scheduled for trial Dec. 5 on the charge of first-degree murder.
Stephan evidence fabricated, expert says
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A documents expert testified to evidence that an important piece of evidence introduced by attorneys for Maria Tomson Stingley, who is suing Attorney General Robert T. Stephan for breach of contract, is fabricated.
Louse Marvin of Topeka said a photocopy of 240 $100 bills in eight stacks is not authentic. Marvin testified that a close examination of the photocopy shows the same bills were used in more than one stack.
Attorneys for Stingley introduced the photocopy as evidence that Stephan paid the former file clerk $24,000 in cash to settle an earlier sexual harassment suit and that he knew of the settlement.
The present suit stems from the earlier sexual harassment suit, filed in on Dec. 24, 1982, shortly after Stingley was fired from her job at the attorney general's office.
Marvin said that between 30 and 100 bills, were used to make the photocopy — not 240 bills.
Stingley is suing Stephan for $5.2 million for breach of contract and for placing her in a "false light" before the public because of that news conference.
KU, K-State rivalry may have lost spirit intensity of the past
By Jill Jess
By Jill Jess Kansan arts/features editor
They have shaved cows, painted statues purple, dropped an airplane-load of red and blue underwear on the Kansas State University campus, burned the building, moved the Memorial Stadium and roped in the streets.
But the hate-hate relationship may be waning Jane Demby, Lawrence sophomore, said she felt there was no campus rivalry with K-State.
Riots occurred in Aggleville after the 1984 and 1986 KU — K State games, but many questioned whether rivalry played a role. Law enforcement officials have said they did not care and are credited in the rioting were not students.
"In football, we both know we're not any good, so nobody cares," Demby said.
"Even when we have violence up here after a game, it's not because we beat KU, it's because we won a victory and Sunborn, Arkansas city Senior.
Over the years, KU and K-State fans have done some crazy things to keep up the rivalry between "Snob Hill" and "Moo U."
Chad Sanborn, editor of the Kansas State Collegian, agreed.
football teams drew little enthusiasm in Manhattan, Aggieville, however, was armed with Riley County law enforcement and reinforced what they feared could tackle what they feared could have been Aggieville riot part three.
Sanborn said he thought the rivalry that did exist between the schools was for fun only.
Last year's 17-17 tie between the
And students have been using it to have a good time for decades. In 1951, four K-State students were arrested for trying to steal the KU flag from the top of Fraser Hall. And in 1976, KU students altered a high "KS" on a hill overlooking Manhattan into a huge "KU."
"I think it's more of a rallying point to have a good time," he said.
In the early 1970s, a plane load of red and blue underwear was dropped on the K-State campus with buttons denouncing the school.
The rivalry between Lawrence and Manhattan dates back to the days when Kansas was a territory. Manhattan wanted its Bluemont Central College to be the first university in the state, already established that the University of Kansas would be in Lawrence.
Higher drinking age criticized
Drunken driving cases not reduced project director says
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
Although federal transportation officials said that raising the legal drinking age to 21 was the only drinking and driving counter-measure that has proved to work, the director of Lawrence police's alcohol department doesn't think the measure has reduced drunks driving in the city.
Kansas DUI arrests
The following graphs show the number of DUI arrests made in Kansas over the last eight years.
ADULT
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
9,618 10,059 11,347 12,828 13,188 12,731 14,230 14,068
JUVENILE
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
276 303 241 271 240 219 298 348
After being phased in over three years, the legal age in Kansas to purchase beer containing 3.2 percent alcohol became 21 in 1987. Twenty-one also is the age required to purchase wine and hard liquor.
ADULT
9,618
10,059
11,347
12,828
13,188
12,731
14,230
14,068
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
JUVENILE
278
303
241
271
240
219
298
348
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
Source: Kansas Bureau of Investigation
But Lt. David Cobb, director of the Lawrence police alcohol safety action project, said persons under age 21 were still able to obtain
Dave Eames/KANSAN
"The difference is that we (the police) used know where they were. Now they go out to a park or drive around. I would rather see the age at 18 and not make outlaws of people old enough to vote and make college decisions," he said.
Before the Kansas law was passed July 1, 1985, the National Transportation Safety Board was in the forefront of the movement that resulted in all 50 states raising their drinking age to 21.
Barry Sweedler, director of the board's bureau of safety programs.
However, state and local officials cannot agree on the effectiveness of the Kansas law.
According to figures compiled by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, state arrests for drunken driving have increased steadily for the last
"It is estimated that over 4,500 lives have been saved since 1982 because of raised drinking ages," he said.
said that more than 400 studies had shown that raising the drinking age had a direct effect on reduction of drunken driving.
seven years. In 1980, 9,618 arrests were made, and in 1987, 14,068 were made.
Fred Johnson, captain for research and planning for the Kansas Highway Patrol, said it was impossible to tell whether more arrests meant that there were more drunken drivers. He said that at least five years of statistics after the law took full effect would be necessary before a judgment could be made — at least until 1992.
Please see DUI, p. 8, col. 1
---
Friday, November 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Goodbye indian summer!
High: 67°
Low: 45°
Mostly cloudy skies today with strong north breezes 10-15 miles per hour. Tonight low will be 45 degrees.
North Platte
66/32
Mostly sunny
Omaha
59/35
Mostly cloudy
Goodland
68/37
Mostly sunny
Salina
67/42
Partly cloudy
Topska
66/48
Mostly cloudy
Kansas City
66/43
Cloudy
Columbia
68/43
Shower
St. Louis
61/43
Rain
Dodge City
74/43
Sunny
Wichita
72/47
Partly cloudy
Chanute
68/47
Mostly sunny
Springfield
66/48
Rain
Forecast by Jeff Garber
Temperatures are today's high and tempilees low.
5-Day
Saturday
Mostly cloudy
61/38
HIGH LOW
Sunday
Mostly sunny
54/33
Monday
Mostly cloudy
53/32
Tuesday
Cold and wet
51/30
Wednesday
Cold and wet
50/29
The nation
Seattle
55/745
H
Denver
89/36
Chicago
57/39
New York
84/55
Los Angeles
78/59
Phoenix
90/67
Dallas
88/59
Miami
83/72
Fronts:
cold occluded
warm stationary
North Platte 68/32 Moistly sunny
Omaha 69/32 Moistly cloudy
Goodland 68/37 Moistly sunny
Salina 67/42 Party cloud
Topeka 66/48 Moistly cloudy
Kansas City 65/43 Cloudy
Columbia 68/43 Shower
St. Louis 68/43 Rain
Dodge City 74/43 Sunny
Wichita 79/41 Party cloud
Chanute 69/47 Moistly sunny
Springfield 66/48 Rain
Forecast by Jeff Gartner
Temperate zones are today's high and low values are
Seattle 57/43
H Denver 69/55
L Chicago 65/39
New York 84/55
H Phoenix 90/57
Dallas 88/59
Los Angeles 78/59
Fronts:
wet acclued
warm stationary
Buy One Vistaburger,
Get One FREE!
Vista
DRIVE IN
1527 W. 6th
MANHATTAN • TOPEKA • LAWRENCE • WICHITA
Coupon expires Nov. 14, 1988 Authorization: Daily Kansan
Limit 1 order per coupon. One coupon per customer. Not valid in combination with any other offer. Extra charge for cheese and bacon.
Newspaper replaces 'Cathy' with pro-Bush advertisement
CULLMAN, Ala. — A newspaper owner dropped the comic strip "Cathy" for criticizing George Bush and replaced it today with a pro-Bush ad.
Bob Bryan, publisher and owner of the Cullman Times and the Athens News Courier, said Wednesday that he "just took the panel out that would have been 'Cathy' and right where
The Associated Press
For more than a week, the popular comic strip about a single working woman has been running political campaigns to wize the Reagan-Bush administration.
"Cathy" creator Cathy Guisewite said last week that "it was in keeping with the strip to comment on what that are at stake in this election."
"Cathy' has been, put in big type
Vote For Bush."
■ The Ecumenical Christian Ministries will sponsor a free movie at 7:30 tonight at the ECM building, 1204 Ave. The movie is "Repentence."
■ The International Folk Dance
at St. John's Gymnastics
at St. John's Gymnastics
- Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship brought to the in-
partment, Form of, from (P. 129)
The KU Freshman Open will be held at 6 tonight on the tennis courts near Memorial Stadium. The open is a free mixer for all interested students. There will be a disc jockey, and a chili supper will be provided. If the weather is bad it will be in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
On Campus
W. W. John O'Brien, professor of systematics and ecology, will speak on 'The Role of the Scientist in the Workplace at 3:30 p.m.' (oday in 1005 Haworth Library).
The Astronomy Associates will have an open house from 9 to 11 tonight in Building 1 of the Douglas County Fair Grounds, 2110 Harper St.
T. J. Clark, art historian from the University of California-Berkley, will speak on "Jackson Pollock Theodore Roebuckism," at 7:30 tonight in the Spencer
Museum of Art auditorium.
■ The Campus Vegetarian Society will meet at 1:45 p.m. tomorrow in the Community Building at 115 W. 11th St. A vegetarian pot lunch will be served. Please bring food and place setting or $2.
■ Kansas Editors Day will begin at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow. The program will start at 9:30 a.m. in Alderson Auditorium. Lunch will be in the Kansas Union Ballroom. For more information call the School of Journalism at 664-4755.
Museum or Art adultafilm.
A student recital featuring Gordana Andres, violin, and Robert Andres, piano, will be at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
A symposium on academic freedom with Rev. Charles Caran, University of Southern California, will have its kickoff at Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Because of incorrect information supplied to the Kansan, the time given for the showing on "Night Flight" of "Rub Out the Word," a
Lawrence video tribute to beat poet William S. Burroughs, was not correct. The video will be shown between 1:30 and 2 a.m. tomorrow.
Correction
HUBBELL
Save money with Kansan Coupons
Re-elect Connie HUBBELL STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION Experience Knowledge Leadership
MASS STREET
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including:
Porta 05 4 track
388 8 track studio
and the NEW
328 8 track cassette
1347 Mass. 843-3535
TASCAM DEMO and SALE SAT., NOV. 5th
ONE DAY
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Tascam factory reps and Mass Street Music will be on hand to perform several demonstrations of 4 & 8 track recording equipment.
POLYTECHNICIAN
Every Tascam recorder in stock will be on sale at great prices.
instant financing or 90 days same as cash
Because you love to live
Use Kansan Coupons
Q
AVANI &
LEVELAND
STRING QUARTETS
"... an accomplished example of craftsmanship and wonderfully communicative." The Strad
Performing Octet in E Flat, Op. 20 by Mendelssohn
The Cavani String Quartet
Annie Fullard, Violin
Susan Waterbury, Violin
Erika Eckert, Viola
Merry Peckam, Clello
Also Performing String Quartet (1974) Zwilich
Also Performing
Quartet No. 19 in C Major, K 465
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
The Cleveland Quartet
Donald Weilerstein, Violin
Peter Salaff, Violin
James Dunham, Viola
Paul Katz, Cello
"... String quartet playing doesn't come better than this." Boston Globe
7:30 p.m. Monday, November 14, 1988 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Adv. Paid for by the Hubbell for St.Bd. of Ed. Comm. Note Wright, Tre
Presented by the University of Kansas
School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reservations, call (913)864-3982;
Public: $12 & $10; KU & K-12 Students: $6 & $5; Senior Citizens &
Other Students: $11 & $9.
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association. H16 D49e f.
RU Endowment Association. Half Price for Students
--per person
YOU'LL HAVE THE Time Of Your Life!
V
82. 3% of KU Students read the Kansan
湖
THE YOU FAMILY'S
南
Hunan
Restaurant & Lounge GREAT CHINESE FOOD WITHOUT SPENDING A FORTUNE
843-8222
Carryout Available
Lunch Special...$2.95-$3.75
(Open 11:00-3:00 Every dav)
Family Dinner...$6.95
Served with drink
(ice tea or hot tea)
Soup of the day
(egg drop or hot & sour soup)
Your choice of appetizers
(egg roll or crab rangoon)
Fried rice and Fortune cookie.
1516 W. 23rd St.
Fri. & Sat. 11:00-10:30
(Open Sun. thru Thurs.)
11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
except Monday 11-9 p.m.
PENNYLANE
CASSETTES • COMPACT DISCS • RECORDS • VIDEOS
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EVERY DOG HAS HIS DAY
Independent study to trace development of new music legend Mitch Easter (producer of R.E.M., Game Theory, Velvet Elvis) and his band Let's Active. Aural examination of new Top 2 college radio record Every Dog Has His Day required. Class field trip made to Let's Active's upcoming tour.
LET'S ACTIVE
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 4. 1999
Campus/Area
3
Architecture class learns from experience
VIEW
Students build structure near Marvin Hall
While the rest of the Architecture 323 lab waits to attach the floor, Dan Dilles left. Toneka junior: Mark Grimes. Overland Park junior, and Matt
By Mark Fagan Kansan staff writer
Rankin, Phillipsburg junior, position the floor support. The miniature building is being constructed behind Marvin Hall.
But not at a construction site.
Kevin Berman looked out of place. The third-year architecture student was wearing a yellow cotton argyle sweater, Levi's jeans and Topsiders with no socks. It would have been fine for any other class.
But not at a construction site.
"I forgot I was supposed to be here,
but the weather turned on his index finger. "Most people are smart and dress for the occasion."
Berman and 10 more properly attired students sawed, hammered and moved materials yesterday behind Marvin Hall while working on a project for their Building Technology I class.
The class is building a 16-foot high wood-and-metal structure to gain hands-on experience for the projects they will design when they graduate, said Ken Manaugh, St. Louis senior in charge of the project.
"The class usually requires students to make drawings," Manaugh said. "Now they have to draw it and build it, too."
Nobody is really sure what the final structure will look like because of the cost and availability of materials. Another project would cost about $1,000.
"It'll be 12-by-8-by-16," he said. "It'll have a porch addition if we have enough money, but it'll definitely have a fireplace."
Daniel Rockhill, associate professor of architecture and urban design, said the structure would probably be dismantled after its completion and
used again next year, but there were still other options.
"To sell it would be the best of all worlds." he said.
Most of the funding comes from the 114 students in the class. Tim Woofer, Colby senior, said he had spent $15 so far and expected to spend about $25 more.
That isn't very much, he said, compared to how much he usually spends on regular projects.
“It’s hands-on learning.” he said. “We’re getting a clue about architecture. That’s basically what we’re doing.”
Berman, of Overland Park, looked at the class in a special way. He
worked construction in the summer of 1987.
"I framed houses," he said, observing his classmates working on the structure's floor frame. "So some of us know what's going on here."
Manaugh, who is employed as a grader but acts as a graduate teacher.
ing assistant, said the project was a personal pleasure.
Computer companies offer bargains for students
"Really, I'm selfish and I'm getting 11 students to help me," he said. "It's just sort of a passion people have. That's what architects do — make buildings. And I can't keep myself from making buildings. I'm gonna do it until I die."
Kansan staff writer
By Daniel Niemi
Apple is no longer the only slice of the KU
computer pie competing for the student dollar.
compan
IBM, Zenith and Hyundai computers are
being offered to KU students at savings up to 50
percent off the retail price, but at least one
dealer said too many companies could ruin the
pie.
"We have a spiral of competition spurred by the manufacturers," said Myles Schachter, owner of the Connecting Point Computer Center and dealer of Hyundai computers. "It will become so spread out that no one will have the volume to continue the programs."
However, other dealers said the KU market
could support the discount programs.
"You have new students coming in every year, so I don't think the market is saturated with dealers," said Spike Santee, owner of EZ Comp Computer Center and developer of computer programs that number of discount program cases gave students more choices for their computer needs.
Deborah Ogletree, marketing representative for IBM computers, agreed with Santee's assessment.
"Students are looking at what their requirements are, not only from an academic standpoint but from future requirements. The business world is not limited to one vendor. There are many options as to which they will go
forward with 11
KU students have four options for computer purchase, programs.
First, the Kansas sell Apple Bookstore and the Burge Union sell Apple Macintosh computers at a savings of 33 to 35 percent, depending on the system, said Rhonda Warnke, sales manager of Apple goods at Burge Union. For example, the cost of a Macintosh Plus computer is $1,200, compared with a suggested retail price of $2,199. Students save 46 percent.
Ogletree said IBM was offering a 40 to 50 percent discount on its computers through a program at the Jayhawk Bookstore. For example, IBM's PS/2 Model 25 computer costs students $996, compared with a retail price of
$1,640. Students save 40 percent.
ogietree said the IBM program was limited, but that it wanted to set up a permanent program.
Santee, of EZ Comp, said Zenth offered students discounts of between 40 and 50 percent. For example, the cost of the Zethi Supersport laptop computer to students is $1,299, compared with a retail price of $2,399. Students save 46 percent.
Schachter, of Connecting Point, said students could save 25 to 30 percent off the price of Hyundai compaters. For example, the cost of a Hyundai Super 16 TE to students is $735, compared with a retail price of $1,045.
Tipsy taxi discussed by board
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
Plans to review and possibly discontinue the Secure Shuttle program because of low ridership were discussed at yesterday's Student Senate Transportation Board meeting.
"If the ridership continues at the current level we will have to conclude that it is not a cost effective program," said Scott Russell, transportation coordinator.
Secure Shuttle provides free rides to KU students late at night as an alternative to driving home from a party or bar. It had replaced the Secure Cab program last year, and was restructured for this fall.
At the meeting in the Burge Union, Gordon Woods, assistant director of the organization and activities center, said that the number of riders on the Secure Shuttle may be low because its fixed routes and schedules were not convenient for students.
Brook Menees, student body president, said that the Secure Shuttle was failing in part because the transportation board had not publicized the service effectively.
Russell said the ridership figures would be reviewed at the end of the semester and a decision would be reached at that time.
Until then, Russell said he would try to increase awareness of the program.
He said he planned to visit the residence halls and put up publicity posters in several bars.
The board also discussed a recently completed audit of the board's programs, which also includes the KU on Wheels bus system.
Russell said the audit found that no changes were needed in the system of internal financial controls put in place after a former director of the KU on Wheels program was convicted of embezzling over $200,000 from the program.
Woods said the audit showed receipts of $809,200 and cash outlays of $870,667, leaving a deficit of about $61,000 for the fiscal year which ended June 1.
Russell also reported a favorable response from the parking office concerning the possible removal of two parking spaces in front of Snow Hall to provide more room for buses stopping in that area.
KU grad paints picture of Bailey Hall for Campaign Kansas
By Debbie McMahon
Kansan staff writer
A painting of Bailey Hall will be unveiled tomorrow as part of the School of Education's efforts to contribute to the Campaign Kansas fund.
'Acritical goal is to establish a very strong scholarship program so that we can truly compete in recruiting the best students for the School of Education.'
The watercolor, by Jim Hamil, will be unveiled at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the grass area in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. About 200 alumni and retired professors from the school are expected to attend the unveiling, which will include a brunch in Bailey Hall.
Ed Meyen Dean of education
include a brochure.
The school will be selling prints of the painting at the unveiling. Unframed prints are $35 and framed prints are $70. A special limited edition will cost $100. A written history of Bailey Hall will be included with each purchase.
e included with each pari dean Ed Meyen said the
resources raised by the campaign will help efforts to build excellence in the school's programs. But he said the money raised won't be financed for programs which should be financed by the state' s plans to toward scholarships, fellowships, lectures and special equipment.
"Hopefully at some time we can establish a distinguished professorship to establish a very strong scholarship program so that we
can truly compete in recruiting the best students for the School of Education."
Hamil, who has done many paintings of the University, graduated from the KU School of Fine Arts.
Meyen said they chose a painting because the campus is so beautiful and because Bailey has an interesting history.
"It is something the alumni might value and identify with their years at school," he said. "We
The painting shows Bailey in autumn, but Hamil said he began the Bailey Hall painting last summer.
were fortunate to have an artist like Jim Hamil, who is interested in the University and whose art is recognized."
He said he worked from photographs. Bailey has changed in appearance since it was completed in 1900, and Hamil looked at pictures of it from different eras.
John Scarffe, director of public relations at the Kansas University Endowment Association, said that donations to Campaign Kansas could be carmarked for specific schools or programs. So far, $72.2 million has been pledged toward the campaign's goal of $150 million.
Rollins
Jim Hamil's painting of Bailey Hall will be unveiled Saturday on the front lawn of Stauffer-Flint Hall as part of the School of Education's fund-raising drive for Campaign Kansas.
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Friday, November 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Making English official just builds another wall
In Arizona, Colorado and Florida, a proposal is on the ballots to designate English as the official language of each state, applying primarily to government documents and meetings.
Among the thousands of decisions voters will have to make across the country is a question that puts the very essence of communication on the voter block.
applying *p*-meaning, such action would make it difficult, if not impossible, for thousands of non-English speaking immigrants to integrate into a governmental structure that prides itself on being receptive to all cultures.
being receptive to an education. The worst scenario would be for non-English speaking citizens to be turned away if they sought welfare, applied for a driver's license, filed an income tax return or completed a voter registration card. They could be turned away for not being able to speak English. That is called discrimination.
English to be used. For example, in Dade County, Fla., the ballot that would make English the official language had to be reprinted in Spanish so that the non-English speaking eligible voters could decide. It doesn't take much reasoning to determine on which side those particular voters stand.
And declaring English the official language ultimately would set the stage for bigotry and racism.
the stage for bigotry and racism.
As is every language of the world, English is under constant change through the linguistic version of natural selection;
many English words were originally foreign.
One also has to question how far states would require English to be used.
side those particular people in the United States have the right to speak whatever language they want. The government shouldn't be forced to ignore non-English speakers because of racially motivated fears.
Tony Balandran for the editorial board
One of the hardest and most important choices students make at college is figuring out where to live while they're there. In Lawrence, the overwhelming number of apartment complexes and houses for rent can make the choice even harder.
The Off-Campus Board of KU Student Senate recently discussed establishing an off-campus housing center that would offer access to a computer program that would list available housing.
In addition to listing the larger apartment complexes, it could list smaller complexes that students didn't know existed. Sounds like a pretty good idea, right?
Sounds like a pretty problem. But there's one problem: KU already has something similar to this housing center. It's an office called Residence Life, located in McColum Hall. It offers a computer listing of available apartments and rooms for rent. People call in and ask to have their apartments or rooms for rent put on the list.
The computer program that the Off-Campus Board of Student Senate proposed is different from the services available at the Residence Life office in that it could help students find housing that meets their individual needs through a questionnaire that is included in the program.
right!
But the key is doing it right. Remember Course Source? It was a good idea to list available classes and additional information about them that isn't found in the timetable. But it was also a colossal waste of time and money because of poor planning. It didn't provide any useful information about the few classes it did include in the catalog.
Before Student Senate invests a lot of time and money in its proposal, it should look into combining its ideas with the services already available. The ideas are good, and it would help the majority of students who live off-campus if it is done right.
Looking into combining Student Senate's ideas with services already available and expanding those services is the wisest thing to do. Don't let good ideas — or our money — go to waste because of poor planning, Student Senate.
Christine Martin for the editorial board
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board.
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adkins ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
The editorial board consists of Michael Merschel, Mark Tillford, Todd Cohen, Michael Horak, Julie Adam, Julie McMahon, Christine Martin, Tony Balandran and Muktha Jost.
News staff
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Linda Messerlinthill...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
BradLenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Asst. production manager
Michelle Lehman...Classified manager
Same 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 addressed with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guide columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The letter will be photographed.
The student will edit or edit letters and guest columns. They
can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the view of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
water will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves light to right or edit letters and guest columns. They
will also be photographed to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Finish Hall
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Hart Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday, ban the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, ban 60644 Annual subscriptions to be $50. Student activities are $3 and are paid through the university activity fee to the University Kansas, 118
subscriptions are $2 and are paid through the student POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
KLiNe
Vincent
Askew
The buck stops here!
Bite your tongues, Larry haters He's given us a chance to learn to take probation like real fans
Boy, those people are ruthless. Our basketball team had enough problems already, and then they to go off and do something so vicious to such a time-honored symbol at the University of Kansas.
How dare Roy Williams and others around campus saw such nasty things about Larry Brown?
roor, helpless Larry. He's busy down there in San Antonio counting his millions, and Roy and company mercilessly rip him by implying that the KU program under Brown was not "clean."
The remarks were so vile, Larry went on television to refute them.
television to be "I resent the fact that they can imply that we didn't run a clean program," he said. And well he should.
should.
Where does Williams get off saying something like that? Just because the NCAA found that KU staff had given recruits everything from sneakers to cash to airline tickets, which anybody who knows a backboard from a kickback knows is illegal, doesn't mean that the KU program wasn't "clean."
Larry went on to blast some people who really deserve it, such as Williams and athletic director Bob Frederick, who bear the brunt of the penalties against things that happened while Brown was here.
"The thing that bothers me is that ever since I left KU, the new coach and athletic director have been taking shots at us right from the start, and that has really troubled me because I left the program in darn good shape," he said.
Dark straight he left the program in darn good shape. He was in great shape, especially his bank account. The team was maybe a little weak, but hey, that happens when you get too busy to do real
Michael Merschel
Editorial editor
recruiting
recruiting.
But Larry even tried to make up for that. His donation of $366 out of his own pocket to a recruit was a great attempt to try to attract quality talent to the University. He made sure his staff was similarly generous.
And he frequently attacked those picky academic snobs who insisted that players he brought in be able to cut it academically, or even read and write.
redo it again. But do people respect him for that? Not one bit They can't see that Larry was only doing his job: building a program that stresses "Win at all costs, even if you have to cheat." He must have known that fans only wanted him to make KU join that elite group of schools with similar outstanding traditions, such as Oklahoma and Southern Methodist University.
Methodist University.
I hope Larry gets these people who have been besmirching his good name. I hope he rips more of them.
their.
First on the list should be Milt Newton and other wagers that Larry left behind when he flew south. Milt got all emotional just because his dream of leading the team to post-season glory and hopes for making a strong impact on NBA scouts in the NCAA tournament were crushed.
NCAA tournament were crushed.
Larry should say, "Milt, I resent the fact that
you implied that because of penalties assessed for actions that took place when I was running things, you are upset. I ran clean away from those problems, and you could too."
problems, and you can do it.
Second, I hope he tells off all these limp-wristed,
fair-weather fans who have abandoned him in his
hour of need.
He should tell them, "The thing that bothers me is that ever since I left, you've been whining about the state of the program. Hey, you got your championship. Why are you complaining that those memories are tarnished and that you probably won't have a shot at another one for a decade or so?"
Larry has a right to stand tall. He has given KU a very noble distinction. We'll go down in the record books as the first champions to be prohibited from defending our title. We'll be a shining example to other schools as to the evils of "bad judgment," as he called the violations. We'll be the talk of the national media for weeks.
And Roy Williams gets an opportunity to do something other coaches only dream of: rebuilding a once-noble program from near-destruction. He and other complainers should be ashamed.
everything You said it, Larry. You did a lot for the University of Kansas, and the way things have turned out sure haven't been fair.
"Since the first day we left," Larry said in the television interview, "I don't think it's been fair. I spent five years there with a great staff, and I'm proud of the kids I recruited. I'm proud of the team we set out on the court, and I'm proud of everything we did for the University of Kansas."
Michael Merschel is a Lakewood, Colo., senior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
False teachers
In a day of liberal extremes, why should I be surprised when a "Christian," and I use that term loosely) organization such as the Ecumenical Christian Ministries sponsors an anti-Christian group such as Witches? While this particular group claims to have no connection with Satanism, they use the same terms describing their beliefs as Satanism does. The holiday celebrated by the "Wicca Religion" known as Sanhaim is a Celtic word for "The Lord of the Dead." This is very much a reference to Satan, and I'm sure, disappointing to the witches who believe they follow a goddess. However, if they choose to identify themselves or what sex their deity is, it is the same form of rebellion described in the Bible as witchcraft.
Much of what was said at this meeting by Sue Westwind on the historical background of the
Wicca Religion was disputed by Tim Miller, professor of religion, as speculative at best. Westwind showed a number of slides of ancient art with female figures of ceramics as her proof that the "real" god is a female. Her claims that it predated Christianity may be true only in that Satan was kicked out of Heaven and on to the Earth before the term of Christianity was written for our use.
I wonder if Jack Bremer of Ecumenical Christian Ministries is notifying his support groups of Methodists, Church of the Brethren and others that he is actively promoting such anti-Christian groups with their money? He should be warned that he is in serious conflict with God and His Word. "It would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck and he were thrown into the sea, than that he should cause one of these little ones to stumble," to quote Jesus Christ.
My prayer for KU students is that they can see through these false teachers and come to know the Lord Jesus Christ who came that all may have eternal life that believe upon Him. He gave Himself as the only sacrifice for sin, was crucified upon a cross and arose again on the third day. This great act of love is not to be despaired as the women from the Lawrence
Women's Center did who mocked Jesus in a song as "that dead man upon a cross" at the meeting Oct. 29.
Eric Schmidt
awrence resident
System is fair
Students living in residence halls have to pay a $4 lock-out fee after being let in for free twice. Excuse me while I wipe away a tear. Welcome to the real world, boys and girls. If you lock your keys in you car and have to be let in by a towing service or locksmith you'll pay them a lot more than $5 starting with the first time you do it.
Although I understand the intent of a recent letter to the editor, the argument about duplicate keys was laughable. It doesn't make any difference how many copies of your door key you have made, you need to take at least one of them with you when you leave your room.
The present system is fair. Find something worthwhile to pursue.
Ronald R. Lofgren Lawrence graduate student
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Geraldo's nose broken during guests' brawl
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Geraldo Rivera's nose was broken when a brawl erupted on the set of his talk show yesterday during taping of an interview with young white supremacists and black civil rights activist Roy Imis.
Several chairs and punches were thrown during the minute-long melee involving neo-Nazi "skinheads" from the audience, crew members and security personnel for the studio and guests 'extreme right-wing organizations.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 4, 1988
Rivera was hit in the head by a flying chair, then got
into a fistfight with the burly man who had thrown it. At some point, another chair hit him in the nose, he said.
The show, which was being taped for airing at an undetermined date later this month, resumed after the skinheads and other white supremacists were escorted out of the studio.
The brawl broke out when one of the guests on the show, John Metzger, the 20-year-old leader of the ultra-right-wing group White Aryan Resistance Youth in Los Angeles, Calif., complained about "kikes" and called Innis an "Uncle Tom."
5
News Briefs
LAST DAY TO DROP: Today is the last day to drop a class without petitioning a school dean. Classes that are dropped today will show up as a "W" on transcripts. Drop needs to be taken to the enrollment center, 103 Strong Hall. The office closes at 4:30 p.m.
OBSERVING SESSION TONIGHT:
The Astronomy Associates of
Lawrence will hold a public observance tonight at the Dauphin County Fair Authority in the Dauphin County Fairgrounds.
The entrance is between 19th and 23rd Streets on Harper Street. Those planning to attend should enter through Building 1.
KANSAN ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS: The University Daily Kansan is now accepting applications for the
editor and business manager positions for the 1989 semester. Applications are available in 200 Stauffer Flint Hall; the Student Senate office, 105 Burge Union; and in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities 103 Burge Union. Application for business position is due at 5 p.m. applications for editor are due at 5 p.m. Nov. 11. For more information, call 648-4810 or 648-4358.
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Friday, November 4. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 4, 1988
Nation/World
7
Thatcher promises aid when Solidarity situation improves
The Associated Press
WARSAW, Poland — British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher told Gen. Wojcik Jarzewkejkski yesterday that the West would provide financial aid to Poland when authorities begin "real dialogue" with Solidarity.
Thatcher made the comments to the Communist Party chief at a banquet hours after she honored the memory of her husband, Jack.
Hundreds of supporters of the banned independent trade union movement who had gathered at the church楼梯, attended a rally.
"Here is Poland! Here is Poland!" the crowd chanted as Thatatcher walked into the yard of St. Stanislaus Kostka Church to lay a wreath on the grave of the Rev. Jerzy Ponieluszko
At the banquet by the Polish leader, Thatcher said in a toast that she was planning to go to Gdansk today to hear
the views of Solidarity leaders.
She suggested that Jaruzelski also should listen to Solidarity, which was outlawed after the imposition of martial law in 1981 but is still the focal point of opposition to the communist government.
Thatcher, who is popular in Poland, has said she didn't want to interfere in Poland's internal affairs during her visit, which began Wednesday. Both the opposition and the government have been hoping to gain from her trip.
The government said Wednesday that it was making a new approach to Solidarity leader Lech Weslaa about starting talks with the opposition. Walesa said yesterday that he would not reply to the approach until after a vote in the Lower House, but he would continue to refuse to alter Solidarity's delegation to the talks, which has been the stumbling block.
News Roundup
CREDIT CARD LEGISLATION: President Reagan signed legislation yesterday to give consumers more information about credit cards. The bill would require banks, department stores and other credit card issuers to supply details to their customers about interest rates and other charges.
TAKEOVER ATTEMPT: Foreign mercenaries thought to be Tamils from Sri Lanka tried to take over the Maldives which are islands about 400 miles west of Sri Lanka in the Indian Ocean. Indian paratroopers were sent to stop the mercenaries. At least 12 were killed and 22 wounded in the mercenary attack.
REFUSAL TO ANNEX LAND! Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir refused demands by possible coalition partners yesterday to annex the occupied lands and expel Palestinians from them, but he supports more Jewish settlements, an aide said.
RIOTS IN SEOUL: Thousands of South Korean students demanding the arrest of former President Chun Doo-hwan clashed with riot police yesterday in Seoul in one of the worst street protests in recent months. Police said more than 20,000 students from 80 colleges took part in anti-Chun camp rallies or street protests in Seoul and a dozen provincial cities on yesterday.
BABY STOLEN: A mother whose premature baby was stolen from the her hospital room Tuesday in Little Rock, Ark., pleaded publicly yesterday for the infant to be returned because the baby needed immediate medical attention.
MISSECTION FOR PROCESSING PLANTS: The Agriculture Department on yesterday proposed new rules to target the most troublesome meat and poultry processing plants for close federal inspection, while easing up on those that have good records. The proposal was hailed by the American Meat Institute and criticized by spokesmen for consumers and labor.
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NOTICE
A HEARING CONCERNING THE PROPOSED DISCONTINUANCE OF UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS IN PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION
The College of Arts and Sciences has proposed that the B.A. and B.G.S. programs in Personnel Administration be discontinued. A copy of this recommendation can be obtained through the SenEx office, 231 Strong Hall. In accordance with Article 8 of the University Senate Rules and Regulations, the University Council Committee on Academic Procedures and Policies will formulate a recommendation for or against the proposal. The committee will hold a hearing beginning at 1:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 16, in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union. Persons wishing to present evidence or testimony for or against the proposed discontinuance of the programs in Personnel Administration must schedule a presentation time by contacting Ms. Sandra Wick at 864-5169 no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, November 15. Persons addressing the committee are required to submit a written summary of their comments before they start speaking. Each speaker will be permitted a maximum of 10 minutes for their formal presentation.
Persons wishing to only present written material should submit the material to either Ms. Wick, 231 Strong, or Professor Lawrence A. Sherr, AP&P chair, at the School of Business. Written materials received prior to the hearing will also be taken into account by the committee as it formulates its recommendation.
8
Friday, November 4. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
DUI
Continued from p. 1
he attributed the increases to greater public awareness and changes in public attitudes in the last three to five years.
"People are more likely to report suspicious vehicles now, and officers are better prepared to respond," Johnson said.
Johnson said the number 1-800-332-REDI, for Report Every Drunk Driver Immediately, connected callers to a central dispatch office and increased law enforcement agencies' efficiency.
Demonstrating a portable breathalyzer is Sgt. Ron Dalquest. The Lawrence Police Department has two units equipped with portable breathalyzers, which are used for preliminary breath testing.
Cobb said that in Lawrence, the number of drunken driving arrests nearly tripled, from 132 to 334, after police instituted their alcohol safety project in 1976. The project includes a sobor, a designated duty Wednesday through Saturday nights and responds only to incidents in which alcohol is involved.
Lawrence arrests numbers have fluctuated, reaching a high of 425 in 1987 but dropping to 369 in 1988. Cobb also fell to 327 from a period from 1 to Sept. 31.
About 50 percent of arrests made by the Lawrence police department are KU students, but few students are arrested for second offenses, he said.
DIAL 911
Cobb said that of the arrests made last year, more than 90 percent resulted either in convictions or diversions, in which community service substitutes for imprisonment.
As a result of the more specific tests developed in the late 70s and increased training, we have improved our ability to deal with or
recognize drunken drivers on the street," he said.
But Cobb said he had seen no evidence that the age law was reducing the number of drunken drivers.
On the KU campus, drunken driving arrests have decreased from 80 in 1980 to less than 35 for each of last five years. The KU police Sgt Schueller Bailey.
"I would like to think that that is because people are being more responsible and also because of designated drivers and such programs as Secure Cab," Bailey said.
Growing public concern also is reflected in recent changes in drunken driving penalties.
According to state statute, people are guilty of drunken drivers if their blood alcohol concentration is .10 percent or greater within two hours after operating or attempting to operate a vehicle. People also are guilty if they were driving while under the influence any of drugs that render them incapable of safe driving.
One change, in 1984, made spending 48 hours in jail mandatory for conviction on a first offense of drunken driving, spending five days in jail mandatory for a second conviction and spending 90 days in jail mandatory for third and subsequent convictions before parole is allowed.
Ken Clark, public information officer for the Kansas State Division of Vehicles, said a July 1, 1988 law made it possible to take breath tests at a traffic infraction.
Refusal results in an automatic 180-day suspension of the person's driver's license. A second refusal, in a separate incident, will cause the license to be suspended for one year, Clark said. The suspension can be
appealed.
He said that a person asked to take a breath test did not have the right to consult with an attorney before taking the test.
In contrast, people failing the test may receive a 30-day suspension and be restricted in the purpose of their driving for an additional 60 days, Clark said.
Although Jerry Little, acting city prosecutor, said he thought that raising the drinking age had had some deterrent effect, he said that longer suspensions of drivers' licenses would have an even greater impact.
Cobb said that preliminary breath tests were used only to determine whether there was probable cause to make an arrest. The officer can use
These tests include coordination tests and observation of a suspect's eyes, known as a horizontal gaze test. Cobb said that the eyes of people under the influence of alcohol move in their own direction and would vibrate they looked to the side.
other field tests to make that judgment.
If an arrest is made, the suspect takes an official breath test at the police department on a machine that the state tests monthly. Cobb said. That reading is used in court.
butey said that KU police officers relied on coordination tests and didn't use portable breath test equipment.
"We give people every opportunity to prove that they are not intoxicated."
Watkins tries to break student alcohol habits
By Terry Buroth Kansan staff writer
Alcohol habits that begin in college can lead to a lifetime of problems, a KU health educator said yesterday.
Janine Demo, health educator at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said the health education program at the University of Kansas tried to help students recognize and deal with those habits before they became lifetime problems.
"We're on the other side of the coin." Demo said. "If we can help students recognize it, then we can find a resource to help them, we've done our job."
"I think student alcohol abuse has increased, but I believe students are more concerned about it."
She said that one reason students were more concerned about drinking today could be because of stiffer penalties for drunken driving. Another reason is the students are more minded, motivated and want something on their records to interfere with reaching their goals.
their way. Although many students are concerned, Demo said that some couldn't care less because they thought they knew everything about alcohol.
Feeling that he got there,
"We want them to succeed, and we don't want alcohol to get in their way," Demo said.
"We don't preach to them:
'Don't drink,'" Demo said. "We
just tell students to drink responsibly so they don't end up in trouble with the law or hurt."
She said Watkins officials wanted students to know that they could have a good time without using alcohol.
"Alcohol is an accepted drug in our society," Demo said. "If it is used correctly, you won't suffer consequences."
Health services tries to help identify and prevent alcohol abuse, Demo said. If students need alcohol intervention or treatment t, they are referred to other sources such as the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism
Charles Peterson, substance abuse counselor for the committee, said he didn't preach about alcohol because preaching wasn't effective.
"They need to come to the conclusion that they have a problem." Peterson said. "Then we ask then what can they do about it and what are they willing to do about it."
He said that the committee's counselors would accept information over the phone. If people have a problem, they are encouraged to come in and talk with a counselor.
"It isn't a matter of how much or how often a person drinks, but what happens to them when they do drink," Peterson said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 4, 1988
9
Firms bid for lane construction
By Mark Fagan Kansan staff writer
Bids were opened yesterday for a turn lane on West 15th Street for a facilities operations and parking services complex on West Campus.
Killough Inc. of Ottawa presented the apparent low app at $12,300. LRM Industries Inc. and W.A.D. Dunbar & Sons Trucking and Excavation Inc.,ence, submitted the next lowest bids, at $16,335 and $17,800, respectively.
Jim Modig, campus director of facilities planning, said $20,000 had been allocated for the addition of a barn lane that would serve a parking lot, storage room, pool, garage and landscape and construction buildings on West Campus.
Facilities operations contributed $15,000 of the project allocation, and parking services set aside the other $5,000. Modig said.
Bill Peaslee, state contracting officer for the division of purchases in Topeka, said it was unclear who would be awarded the contract. The project, include two alternates, which could affect the decision.
Construction on a 215-foot long left turn lane should begin in a couple of weeks. The lane is being added to help with safety problems along West Fork Road and the Operations Motor Pool. The lane should be finished by mid-December.
LRM bid $590 on the alternates,
and W.A. Dunbar and Sons bid $605.
15th Street To campus
Facilities Operations
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=
Killough did not bid on the alternates, which cover asphalt and concrete work
"They just crossed them out," Peasele said. "They're pretending they don't even exist, so I'm in a quandary right now."
Motig said he hoped the contract could be awarded soon and the contractor could begin work in a couple of weeks.
"If the weather holds like it is now, we'd like to go ahead and get it started," he said.
The project could be completed by mid-December if conditions remained favorable, he said.
Lt. John Mullens, who is in charge of the traffic safety division of KU police, said the situation was unsafe because motorists' sight distance was cut short by a hill.
because of the safety problems associated with the lack of a turn lane.
"I go home that way every night," Mullens said. "You have to be conscious of the fact that people can be turning either way. I've had to spp out there several times. At the space traveling, it is a little bit abrupt."
Gaylen Liska, physical plant manager of the garage and body shop, said the present gap in the median strip was not enough to make a safe left turn.
Liska said motorists' speed along West 15th was also a problem.
"You can't pull out into the opening without poking out into oncoming traffic, or having your back stick out also." he said.
"I's wide open all the way from Iowa (Street)," he said. "The speed limit is 40, but most people come through there at 45 or 50."
Liska said vehicles now used the lash, which is the fast lane to slow down.
"It's a safety problem simply
because of the hill," he said. "When you're going to pass, you can come over the hill and run right into somebody waiting to turn left."
Liska said about 60 state vehicles a day used the complex.
Don Kearns, director of parking services, said facilities operations was not the only office responsible for the turn lane. Parking services controls let 220, which has 150 yellow permit spaces.
"We're the low contributor," he said. "That's our lot out there, and we enforce it. We use it as much as they do."
The new lane could also serve a proposed new parking lot for most of the more than 200 state vehicles now on main campus, Kearns said.
"We hopefully next year will put a state vehicle lot out there," he said. "Virtually every department on campus has state vehicles. When you start adding it up, it's mind-boggling."
The new lot proposal is now before the parking board.
Modig said the University planned to add a left turn lane when facilities operations moved into the buildings in 1987, but it did not have the money.
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Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said that the entire department regularly worked during home games and that no extra precautions were being taken because K-State would be here.
Local law enforcement officials are expecting the violence connected with tomorrow's KU — K-14 to be limited to the playing field.
"We've never had the kind of problems they sometimes have in Manhattan and have no reason to expect them now." Longaker said. Capt. Nick Edvy of the Riley County police department said better preparation officers had reduced damage caused by crowds after KU — K-State games in Manhattan. The preparation
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"The difference is, we don't have an Aggieville," Mulvenon said. "In Lawrence, the bars are spread out around town. We don't have the combination of large crowds and alcohol."
Lt. Rodney Williams of the Kansas Highway Patrol said that there would be a patrol car at the game and that extra patrols would be between Lawrence and Kansas City, Mo, and between Lawrence and Manhattan.
Lawrence police are not making any special preparations, said Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman.
includes increasing patrols and placing plywood over shop windows.
the KU athletic ticket office said that about 30,000 people were expected to attend the game.
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Seniors, Today is your last day to vote for a Semi-Finalist Candidate for the 1988 H.O.P.E. Award
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Friday, November 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
The organizers of the
The organizers of the "Hash Halloween Bash" wish to thank the following businesses for their help in making it one of the best parties to hit the residence halls in a long time:
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BOOKSHOP
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Cowboys and stockmen from across the United States gathered in Kansas City, Mo., today to kick off the 90th American Royal, one of the nation's largest livestock shows, horse shows and rodeos.
What began as a simple cattle show in 1899, when Kansas City was flourishing as a 'cowtown', has become a full-scale tradition of rodeos and riders. The American Royal runs from Nov. 4 to November 20.
James Taylor, executive vice president of the American Royal, said the event was an opportun
"We want to draw attention to agribusiness and education," Taylor said. "Kids in FFA and 4-H participate and get to see the best breeds from all over the country."
over the Civil War. Jennifer Remsberg, public relations assistant for the American Royal, said the show began with cattle drives after the Civil War.
complex, which includes Kemper Arena and Royal Arena, in Kansas City, Mo. The American Royal rodeo, which will have 13 performances between Nov. 6-12, features more than 600 professional cowboys who compete for more than $75,000 in prize money.
he drives after the CVW. I wrote
"There were a lot of cattle that had been
Horse shows include the Arabian horse show on Nov. 7-9, and the championship competition on Nov. 18-19. The championship shows are "Stake Nights" and feature the finest saddle horses at the American Royal.
Taylor said the first show was held in a tent and included only American Hereford cattle. In the early 1900s, the show became known as the American Royal, named for the similar British Royal in England. Taylor said as the show grew, more events were added, such as the horse shows.
unattended during the Civil War and having a show helped bring a higher price for the cattle." Rembsberg said.
Musical guests include Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton tonight; the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 10, and the Kansas City Symphony, which will play at the Concert for Champions at 8 p.m. Nov. 14. The symphony's performance will coincide with the show of championship horses from the American Royal.
Today, the American Royal also features entertainment, with concerts scheduled throughout the tour.
Although many of the shows at the American Royal are exhibitions, the livestock sale often brings large monetary prizes for the championship trophy. The money was often donated to various charities.
Remsberg said the 1987 American Royal yielded the highest premium in 41 years, with the Kansas City Retail Grocers paying $30,000 for the Grand Champion Market Steer.
the shows are held in the American Royal
Taylor said the American Royal and other related events during the fall generated more than $67 million for Kansas City.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 4, 1988
Arts & Entertainment
11
PORTRAIT OF A WOODEN DUCK
Down under in Lawrence
This mythological Karawak bird is part of an exhibit of aborigine art on display in the Kansas Union.
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Australia celebrates her 200th birthday in
Kingsland and is getting set up in the celebration.
Deemed "A Week Down Under," the past week has highlighted the culture of Australia with cooperation between the University and the city.
Lawrence mayor Bob Schumm signed a proclamation making the Week Down Under official and Kansas Gov. Mike Hayden has hired a new Kansas Gov. 5 "Australia-Kansas Federation Week."
The celebration was held in conjunction with the visit of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, which will give a concert Saturday evening in Hoch Auditorium.
Sonia Baker, education and membership coordinator for the Swarthout Society, said the symphony was scheduled last year when it was announced that the group would tour the United States to celebrate Australia's bicentennial. Baker said the Week Down Under was a way to bring attention to the symphony's visit and make people in Lawrence aware of the significance of the group.
"Lawrence was next to the last on the symphony's schedule," Baker said. "As far as I know, we're the only place that did anything extra to observe the bicentennial."
Promoting the Week Down Under theme incorporated the efforts of the University and the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Cultural Affairs committee. Lawrence merchants highlighted Australian influences in the work culture and culture were set up at University galleries.
The KU Museum of Arthropology has a display of Australian artifacts which will remain the museum throughout Novem-
ber. The artworks honored by Edward Rau-
dher, professor of English.
Celia Daniels, public education coordinator at the Museum of Anthropology, said the exhibition had attracted many students and faculty since it opened and had been especially popular because the Week Down Under focused attention on Australia.
"We're really pleased to have it, and a lot of people have been interested in the artifacts. The bark paintings have been particularly popular," Daniels said.
The exhibition includes Australian musical instruments, boomerangs, bark paintings and warringens. Daniels said the show included only a part of the Ruher's personal collection.
"He has a great collection and he enjoys it. He wants to have to share with it others." Daniele said.
The Museum of Anthropology will sponsor a workshop for children on Saturday with face
painting and a tour of the exhibit.
"We wanted to introduce the kids to aboriginal culture," Daniels said. "We'll get to look at the artifacts up close."
Another exhibition sponsored by SUA will open at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Kansas
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce helped include downtown merchants in the observance of the Australian theme.
Events for the Week Down Under continue this weekend on campus and in Lawrence. They include:
"We liked the idea and the Chamber acted as extra manpower to get people involved," Moore said. "It's really next to be able to get more feedback from students." University together on something like this.
Debi Moore, director of small business and community affairs for the Chamber, said Baker had brought the idea to Chamber when the symphony was first scheduled.
The Australian Consul-General, Jeremy Hearder, will be in Lawrence for the Saturday concert. He will receive copies of the work of some illustrations of the Week Down Under celebration.
- "Road Warrior" at midnight tonight in the Kansas Union.
Schedule of events
■ the Australian movie "The Day My Voice Broke," at 5:30 p.m. today at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
The symphony performance, which also features Russian pianist Shura Kerkassky, will be followed by a public reception for members of the orchestra at the Eldridge Hotel. Tickets for the concert and the receptee are available from the Concert Series office.
"Crocodile Dundee II" at SUA films at 3:30, 7 and 9:20 p.m. today at the Kansas Union.
"Kangaros and Digidours," a children's workshop, at 9:30 a.m. Saturday and at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Anthropology博物馆 in Spooner Hall. The workshop, which features songs, is free for children ages 7 to 13.
- "Pathways to Harmony," an exhibit of Australian aboriginal artwork, on display at Spooner Gallery through Nov. 31.
SUA Australian Bicentennial Exhibition opens at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the Kansas University
Sydney Symphony Orchestra, 8 p.m. Saturday at Hoch Auditorium.
Sydney Symphony concert to cap off Australian events
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Australia conjures up images of the outback, crocodiles, kojalas, kangaroos and boomerangs. But another export from the land down under will be in Australia on Saturday to expose an aspect of Australian culture.
"We are pleased to be able to bring an orchestra of such excellent caliber and high reputation to KU," Baker said.
Sonia Baker, education and membership coordinator for the Swarthout Society, said the orchestra was booked to appear at the University last year. The woman began touring in the United States in October.
The 96-piece Sydney Symphony, which is conducted by Stuart Challenger, is making Lawrence the penultimate stop on its 12-city tour. The orchestra, which also features Russian pianist Shura Cherkassky, is traveling in the United States as part of the Australian bicentennial celebration and will close the tour with a performance at Kansas State University in Manhattan.
The concert, which will be at 8 p.m. Saturday in Hoch Auditorium, is presented by the KU Concert Center.
Jacqueline Davis, director of the Concert Series, said the promotion of the "Down Under" theme helped people recognize the importance of the orchestra's performance at the University.
The Sydney Symphony's visit prompted the declaration of "A Week Down Under" in Lawrence, which highlighted not only the performance, but also other Australian influences.
Davis and Baker said they thought KU was the only place the symphony visited that observed the Australian landscape.
"I was talking to the tour manager and she said he would be able to see what we had said. He said, 'The whole company involved.'"
The Sydney Symphony, the largest Australian musical group, has been conducted by Challenger since August 1897. Challenger also has conducted the Australian Opera and was artistic director of Sydney's Seymour Group, the leading contemporary-music and music-theatre ensemble in Australia. He will be a guest conductor for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra during the 1899-90 season.
Cherkasky emigrated from Russia to Baltimore, Md., and made his debut concert in 1923. He regularly performs at music festivals in Europe and the United States and in 1976 returned to Russia for a performance.
J. C. P. M. S. A. T. 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.
Stuart Challender, conductor, Sydney Symphony Orchestra
Bernie Norwood 46th District
BERNIE NORWOOD
BERNIE NORWOOD says YES to the Margin of Excellence.
BERNIE NORWOOD says NO to Washburn University as a Regents System.
BERNIE NORWOOD says YES to higher salaries for our teachers and student employees
BERNIE NORWOOD says YES to a cleaner environment.
BERNIE NORWOOD is a leader that will stand tough on tough issues for Lawrence and the University of Kansas.
Vote YES for Strong Leadership.
Vote for BERNIE NORWOOD.
On Nov.8
Pd. for by committee to elect Bernie Norwood. Cliff Lafrenz, Treasurer.
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Friday, November 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Symposium plans completed
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee yesterday completed plans for tomorrow's Academic Freedom Symposium.
The Academic Freedom Symposium will be conducted from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. tomorrow in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
It will feature presentations and discussions on the preservation of academic freedom at the university level
Tonight, SenEx will host a wine reception and dinner for the participants of the symposium.
Father Charles Curran from the University of Southern California, and David Rabbain, professor at the University of Texas School of Law, will make presentations at the symposium.
KU's Reginald Robinson, associate professor of law, also will make a presentation. A panel discussion at 10:45 a.m. will include Curran; Rabban; Robinson; Richard DeGeorge, professor of philosophy; Alan Sica, associate professor of sociology; Anw Weck, dean of social
welfare; and Sandra Zindars-Swartz, associate professor of religious studies, who will moderate.
Zindars-Swartz said that Curran would be meeting with faculty around Smith Hall this afternoon.
with faculty around us. The symposium was set up to address questions that were brought up during last spring's Ku Klux Klan visit. Those questions are:
- "How can a university protect and preserve academic freedom in circumstances where that freedom is not afforded equivalent respect by people or institutions outside the university?"
outside the university
■ "To what extent does academic freedom impose corollary responsibilities on members of the university community?"
community
B jerry, SenEx chairman, said that members of the audience who wished to ask questions would be asked to write them down before the panel discussion at 10:45 a.m.
write them dwellers' names. KU's legislative liaisons, Martin Renier and Jon Josserand, spoke to SenEx about their work with legislatures and their impressions of the next session.
Freshmen to have own event
By Janell Good Kansan staff writer
Alumni associations sponsor open tennis tournament
A new tradition could start tonight, giving University of Kansas freshmen the opportunity to have an event just for them.
Through efforts by the Alumni Association and the Student Alumni Association, the KU Freshmen Open will be at 6 tonight on the tennis courts at Memorial Stadium. Free chili and soft drinks will be served, and entertainment will be provided for all freshmen.
Courtney Davis, Colorado Springs freshman and chairman of the event, said it was a great opportunity to meet new people.
She said that locating the event by the stadium had been planned to encourage everyone to go to the football game tomorrow.
Judy Ruudlinger, SAA advisor, said that the Freshmen Open was sponsored by the alumni associations in an effort to have an event just for freshmen.
"By this point in the semester, many freshmen have become involved in the University and established lasting friendships. But for others, this could be a chance to get to know fellow classmates," Ruedeling said.
Ruedlinger said that the alumni associations hoped to increase student involvement during their college years, beginning with the freshman class.
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Fred Williams, Alumni Association executive director, said the event would give students a good idea of what the Alumni Association was about.
"We're not just a fund-raising group, we keep people involved in the University through our programs," Williams said.
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The Alumni Association keeps members informed of activities through a monthly magazine, as well as state and national chapter meetings, he said.
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Any student who purchased an all sports combo ticket ... You and one guest can get in with one ticket and two valid KU ID's.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 4, 1988
Sports
13
Askew says he hopes 'Hawks forgive error
The Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y. — Vincent Askew, who admitted he accepted recruiting inducements from the University of Kansas, said yesterday that he hoped didn't hate him because of their校会的 suspension by the NCAA.
"I hope the players don't feel sour towards me," Askew said. "It's easy for me to say, but I wasn't trying to them. I didn't try to hurt anybody."
Kansas, which won the national championship last season, was placed on probation for three years by the NCAA on Tuesday for recruiting. It was later revealed that Askew was using the player involved in the violations.
As part of the penalty, Kansas has also been barred from postseason play in 1989, meaning the school will be the first NCAA champion in basketball not allowed to defend its title.
"I feel bad, real bad . . . terrible." Askew told the Albany Times Union on Wednesday. "To me, this is all very embarrassing. Some of my decisions during my college I, today, do question.
"It was really all very overwhelming," said Askew, one of 18 players trying out for the Albany Patroons of the Continental Basketball Association. "Everything that happened was at the time. But it was always people like the alumn that offered things . . . it was never the coaches."
Askew told the Times Union on Wednesday that he had accepted an airline ticket, clothing and payment for a utility bill at his home while being recruited by Kansas in 1986. At Memphis State he was entering his junior year at Memphis State but was thinking of transferring.
"If I knew that it would turn out like this, I would never have done it." Askew said yesterday after morning practice. "I feel that you do good for a person like coach (Larry) Brown did, I don't think you should be penalized. But I don't make the rules."
Askew spent the 1986 summer on the Kansas campus but never played for the Jayhawks. He left Memphis State after his junior year and was drafted by the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers
An NCAA report said that an unidentified representative of Kansas's athletic interests paid $183 for an airline ticket for Askew to fly from Memphis to Kansas City. Brown said he personally paid $364 for a round-trip ticket so Askew could return to Memphis to visit his sick grand
mother, who died in December 1986.
Askew also said he accepted $350 from an unidentified representative of the University to pay his grandmother's electric bill. Askew said he eventually decided to return to Memphis State to be closer to his grandmother, who had raised him.
Brown said he; Jerry Collins, formerly in broadcast production at Kansas; Ralph Light, president of a Kansas City construction company; and Mike Marshall, a former Kansas player who worked in Brown's basketball camp in 1986, were responsible for the inducements. Brown now coaches the San Antonio Spurs of the NBA.
"I don't blame it all on the booster's. It was me, too," Askew said. "I feel sad about it. I didn't think the plane ticket was wrong; but as far as paying the utility bill, I know in a way that was wrong.
"If I could do it over, I wouldn't take any of the stuff and I would've gone to Kansas."
But if he makes the Patroons, Askew may get that chance when the team travels to Topeka, home of the CBA's Sizzlers.
How did he feel about the reception he may get?
"I'll probably get booed out of there." Askew said.
Sports Briefs
MANNING STILL UNSIGNED:Danny Manning, chosen No.1 overall by the Los Angeles Clippers, is the only remaining unsigned first-round pick. The former Kansas All-American and his agent, who reportedly turned down a five-year, $10 million contract, have said that they are seeking a four-year deal at $2.2 million per year. Tonight is the opening of the NBA season.
FCA MEETING SUNDAY: Kansas' chapter of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes will meet at 8 Sunday in the Parrott Film Room adjacent to Allen Field House. Wayne Walden, who is Kansas' academic coordinator for academic support, will be the featured speaker.
DU WINS HILL CHAMPIONSHIP: The Delta Upsilon Fraternity defeated
Delta Upsilon won the Greek Hill Championship by defeating Delta Tau Delta 19-13 Monday. The Prime Time Players were the independent champion of the tournament.
the Prime Time Players in a tiebreaker to win the Hill Championship Tuesday. The game was tied at 14 at the end of regulation.
BUCKNER'S FREE AGENCY:
Although Bill Buckner has filed for free agency for the first time in his 18-year major-league career, he says he hopes to be back with the Kansas City Royals next season.
Buckner, whose 2,699 hits are more than any other active major-leaguer, joined the Royals in May after being claimed on waivers from the California Angels. He appeared in 89 games, primarily as a designated hitter and
Buckner, who turns 39 next month,
said he had talked with some Japanese teams and several American League clubs, including the Oakland Athletics, but wanted to return to the Rovals.
If the Royals don't sign Buckner or offer arbitration by Dec. 7, they lose rights to him until the same is written. Jamie Quinn, who filed for free agency last week.
pinch hitter, and hit 256 with three home runs and 34 RBI.
GRAYER OUT TWO WEEKS: Guard Jeff Grayer, drafted 13th overall by the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks, will miss at least the first two weeks of the season after coming down with the chicken pox. Grayer was an All-Big Eight performer at Iowa State last season.
22
Senior Milt Newton guards freshman Sean Tunstall during yesterday's basketball practice. Kansas has received its first verbal recruiting commitment from guard Adonis Jordan out of Reseda, Calif.
Basketball player picks KU
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
Reseda Cleveland High School coach Bob Braswell said Jordan would have signed earlier but wanted to learn the results of the NCAA investigation before making his decision.
"When I first heard, I was really shocked. All I heard it was it three years (of) probation," Jordan said. "But the way coach Williams explained it, it won't affect me in any way."
NCAA regulations forbid Williams from commenting about Jordan until a letter of intent is signed.
Wednesday is the first day high school and junior college players can sign national letters of intent, bind the recruitment to a school.
Adonis Jordan, a 6-foot point guard from Reseda Cleveland High School in California, announced yesterday that he had verbally committed to attend the University of Kansas next year.
Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams landed his first Jayhawk recruit yesterday.
Olorua said he might have changed his mind if Kansas had been restricted from NCAA tournament play for more than one year.
Bob Gibbons of All-Star Sports Publications ranked Jordan 42nd nationally among high school seniors.
"I feel sorry for the seniors," he said.
"He's an excellent floor leader who moves the ball well," Gibbons said. "He has good quickness, and he's a fine passer."
Jordan averaged 17 points and 7 steals per game last year. He shot 58 percent from the field and 40 percent from the free-throw line.
Braswell said Jordan would fit Williams' offense.
“Coach Williams said he would like somebody who could come in and pick the tempo up but who has savvy and court sense,” he said. “Adonis is that type of player.”
Jordan visited Kansas during the weekend of "Later with Roy Williams."
"I liked the support," Jordan said of the midnight practice. "In their community, sports get a lot of back-up."
Jordan, who grew up in New York City, said he liked the college-town atmosphere in Lawrence.
Braswell said Jordan picked Kansas over Providence, DePaul, Texas-EI Paso and Seton Hall.
Kansas' national championship was not a factor in Jordan's decision, he said.
"If they would have come in last, it wouldn't have mattered." Jordan said. "I made my decision basically because I thought coach Williams and his staff could help develop as a person and a player.
"It's nice that they did win it because people will look at them this year to see what they'll have in years to come."
Kansas teams to battle for 7th place in Big Eight Schools fighting long winless streaks
Game
Kansas Jayhawks
Coach Glen Mason
Record 0-8/0-4
Kansas State
Wildcats
Coach Stan
Parrish
Record 0-8/0-4
9
ku
WR-2 Quintin Smith, 5-11, 180, Jr.
LT-77 Chris Perez, 6-25, 270,
LG-53 Smith Holland, 6-3, 250, Fr.
OC-51 Chip Buddie, 6-2, 255, So.
RG-59 Dave Grattan, 6-2, 250, Sr.
RT-76 Bill Hundelt, 6-2, 255, Jr.
TE-86 John Baker, 6-3, 235, Jr.
QB-5 Kelly Donohoe, 6-0, 180, Jr.
BF-34 Roger Robben, 6-0, 215, Jr.
TB-3 Frank Hattchett, 6-10, 190,
WR-1 Willie Vaughn, 6-0, 190, Sr.
PK-93 Brad Fleeman, 6-11, 170, So.
SOL-84丹Newbrough, 6,2,228, Jr.
ST-69 Mark Koncz, 6,3,260, Jr.
MG-mMatt Nolan, 5,6,225, Fr.
RT-82 David Gordon, 6,3,245, Soil
ROL-90 Paul Friday, 6,2,190, Fr.
RIL-99 Tary Barker, 6,3,240, Soil
IL-19 Curie Moore, 6,1,225, Soil
WC-12 Troy Grogery, 5,9,170, Soil
OC-80 Rodney Harris, 5,9,190, Soil
WS-23 Jason Priest, 6,100, 180, Fr.
DS-14 Deral boykin, 5,10,180, Fr.
P9-7B J. Lohsen, 6,3,215, Jr.
TIGER
Probable Starters:
Offense
Probable Starters:
Defense
WR8-34 Frank Hernandez, 5-11, 180, Jr.
OT-64 Russ Strange, 6-7, 260, Sr.
OG-70 Chad Falkuern, 6-2, 270, Jr.
C-G8 Paul Vigneuz, 6-3, 275, Jr.
OG-76 Eric Zabelin, 6-2, 280, Jr.
OT-67 Will McCain, 6-4, 275, Jr.
TE8-4Aian Friedrich, 6-4, 230, Jr.
QB-10 Carl Straw, 6-1, 215, So.
FB-30 Lee Pickett, 5-11, 230, Sr.
TB-27 Tom Dillon, 6-1, 370, Sr.
WR8-42 Greg Washington, 5-10, 150, Jr.
PK-1 Mark Portner, 6-0, 185, Sr.
Series:
Kansas leads the series 57-23-5. Kansas is 5-4-1 in its last 10 games against Kansas State.
DE-36 James Enin Oku, 6, 0-22, Soi.
DE-31 Bobby Lawrence, 6, 34-25, Soi.
NG-55 Mark Young, 6, 2-22, Srs.
DT-98 Doug Blackbourne, 6, 4-250, Srs.
DE-21 Danny Needham, 6, 0-205, Soi.
ILB-53 Vantz Singletary, 5, 11-225, Srs.
ILB-28 Maurice Henry, 6, 0-220, Jr.
LC-18 Emmitt Bradford, 5, 99, 180, Sr.
FS-16 Marcus Miller, 5, 11-175, Jr.
RC-7 Tyrseese Herds, 5, 11-175, Jr.
SS-31 Will Price, 6, 1-190, Fr.
P-2 Shane Pouch, 5, 11-190, Sr.
Kansas' winless streak now stands at 15, and Kansas State has not won in its last 24 games. The last time either team took the field and returned without a loss was Nov.7,1987,when the two teams played to a 17-17 tie in Manhattan.
Kansas lost at Oklahoma 63-14. Kansas State lost at Oklahoma State 45-27 Miscellaneous:
Coverage:
The Kansas-Kansas State game will be broadcast by the Kansas Jayhawk Network. The game can be heard in Lawrence on KLZR(105.9 FM), KLWN(132 AM) and JKHK(90.7 FM). Kickoff is scheduled for 1 p.m.
By Jeff Euston Kansan sportswriter
The winner of this game reaps the benefits — seventh place in the Big Eight Conference.
Whatever it's called, Kansas State and Kansas never have entered the intratase rivalry without a victory between them.
Call it a cage match. Call it the Toilet Bowl. Call it the battle for the Governor's Cup.
Until this year.
K-State, 0-8, will face 0-8 Kansas
tomorrow at 1 p.m. at Memorial
Stadium.
The Wildcats have not won in 24 games and the Jahayhs' winless streak is in
Because of last year's 17-17 tie in Manhattan, this game probably will attract national attention.
Kansas is ranked 103rd in the nation in total defense, second-worst in the nation. K-State is ranked 104th — dead last.
Kansas coach Glen Mason and K-State coach Stan Parr agree that defense will be the key to tomorrow's game.
"We have a lot of the same problems as far as numbers and injuries go," said Parrish, who announced earlier this year that he would leave the team at the end of the season. "Their defense is undersized and injured.
"But (Kansas linebacker) Curtis Moore is a great player. He's the heart and soul of their defense. There's no question the defenses will be the difference."
Mason agreed.
"We're both struggling on defense and are improved on offense," Mason said. "I think they've got more experience."
Parrish announced his resignation during the first week of October but agreed to stay through the end of the season.
"I have no plans (for the future) right now," he said. "I'm just going to work as hard as I can, when it comes up." He's sit down and figure out what I'm going to do.
Mason said Parrish had done a good job of keeping the Wildcats together.
"I thought he'd have a tremendously hard time keeping that team
S. J. PARKER
Stan Parrish
'T
- Stan Parrish
This is our most important game of the year. We always hope to beat Kansas. We'll have some tricks up our sleeve.'
K-State football coach
intact," Masor, said about Parrish.
"The simple thing to do is resign, but he hasn't done that. He's done a great job."
Parrish's team is in the unfamiliar position of being a three-point favorite.
"I don't believe in all that stuff." Parrish said with a laugh. "I just hope we're ahead by three at the end of the game."
The Wildcats took a 14-7 lead in the first quarter before losing 45-27.
Though he is in his first year, Mason said he understood the rivalry.
Parrish said the Wildcats were optimistic after last week's game against 12th-ranked Oklahoma State.
"You prepare like it's just any other game, but it's just not another game," Mason said. "It's a rivalry. There's more interest in it. Everybody who is played on athletic teams — high school, junior high."
"We played well last week," he said. "I'd have to say that was our
best game of the year. We moved the ball well and did a good job on special teams.
"In all phases it was our best game of the year because we played a quality opponent."
KState generated 485 yards of offense against Oklahoma State, the ninth-highest total in its school history.
Wildcats' quarterback Carl Straw attempted 52 passes and completed 26 of them for 270 yards and two touchdowns.
"I think their offense does a good job," he said. "They score a lot of points. When a team passes a lot, we put a lot of five-man secondaries in and drop back. What will determine the game is how our defense stops them."
Parrish also is concerned about stopping the Kansas offense.
"We've thrown the ball all year," Parrish said. "That's been our strength, and we'll continue to do it this week, I'm sure."
Kansas strong safety Deral Boykin said the Jayhawk defense would be ready for the Wildcats' passing game.
"I was impressed with Kansas in the first half of the Oklahoma game," he said. "They played Colorado pretty tough, too."
"Their offense does a good job. They get the ball to Willie Vaughn, and they have some good young backacks. Donohoe has done a good job this year. We're going to have to stop them."
Kansas is not suffering from as many injuries as it has in recent weeks.
Cornerback Peda Samuel is the only starter hampered by an injury. He suffered a groin pull during warm-ups last week at Oklahoma and probably will not play, Mason said.
Mason did receive some good news this week. however.
Inside linebacker Tony Barker, who missed the past two games with an ankle sprain, will start tomorrow.
The winnie streaks have made the long rivalry more intense this year.
"This is our most important game of the year," Parrish said. "We always hope to beat Kansas. We'll have some tricks up our sleeve."
14
Friday, November 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NFL coaches discuss job pressure
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Pro football is a game of big crowds, big expectations and big money. NFL coaches say these factors can combine to generate big stress. This stress can lead to events like the heart attack suffered Wednesday by Bears' coach Mike Ditka.
Some of his colleagues said yesterday that they accepted stress as part of the game.
"Coaching is no more stressful than being in management at a place like Honeywell or 3M," said Minnesota Vikings coach Jerry Burns, who believes Ditka's personality, more
than his job, may have set the stage for the Chicago coach's coronary.
"mike is just more excaution. Burns said. "I don't think it had anything to do with football, really . . . It could have happened to him if he was a car salesman or insurance salesman."
But Gene Stallings, coach of the Phoenix Cardinals, said he could well understand how much pressure Ditka was under.
"It's surprising there are not more of them," Stallings said of the attack that hospitalized Ditka "You hear of the stress all the time. And the bad eating habits. I should know about
that. And you don't get a lot of sleep with a job like this."
Ditka, 49, the Bears coach since 1982, suffered a mild heart attack following a workout at the team's suburban Lake Forest practice complex. His condition was upgraded to fair yesterday, and he was reported o be joking with his doctor and free of pain.
Steve Kazor, an assistant Bears coach, was one of two coaches who brought Dika to the hospital. He said the episode caused him to reflect on how much time and effort goes into the job.
You get here at 4 o'clock in the
morning Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday," Kazor said. "I get home late at night . . . There's the pressure of trying to win a game.
The Bears won two weeks ago on a Monday night, beating San Francisco 10-9, then lost on Sunday to New England 30-7.
Tom Landry, coach of the Dallas Cowboys, said that stress was definitely part of the job — especially when fans get unhappy.
Landry, who has been with Dallas nearly three decades, said he followed an exercise program three to four times a week to keep in shape.
NHL reviews tape, nullifies suspension
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The National Hockey League rescinded the final eight games of a 10-game suspension against Chicago Blackhawks' defender David Manson yesterday, saying it could not determine whether he started a fight after a game against Vancouver.
Referee Bill McCreary originally ruled that Manston instigated the fight with Camucks forward David Bruce after last Friday's
game, which Vancouver won 5-2. That led to the automatic suspension of Manson, who sat out the Blackhawks' next two games.
Manson received a two-minute penalty for instigating, a five-minute penalty for fighting, a match penalty and a game misconduct.
Manson and Bruce each were fined $500. Their teams each were fined $25,000.
SAVE $75 AND WIN AT BodyShapes FITNESS CLUB
Register to win a GT-ALL TERRA mountain bike from GRANSPORT plus other prizes with every new Term memberships.
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601 Kasold 843-4040
THE LAWRENCE COMMUNITY THEATRE AND PRINGTON WOODS PRESENT CLOSE TIES BY ELIZABETH DIGGS
1 9 8 8 THURSDAY/SUNDAY
NOVEMBER SIX DOLLARS
3. 4. 5. 6' FRIDAY/SATURDAY
11. 12. 13' SEVEN DOLLARS
8:00 PM SENIOR CITIZEN
*2:30 PM DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE
CALL FOR RESERVATIONS
843-SHOW
130 NEW HAMPTON, LANDFENCE, KANSAS
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Kansas and Burge Unions
GAME DAY SPECIAL
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT! Frozen Yogurt Stores
50% DISCOUNT on "Crimson & Blue Swirl Cones & Cups" (waffle cones & toppings regular price) This Saturday, Nov. 5, to Everyone Wearing the KU Colors!
Ice Cream
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Frozen Yogurt Shaves
Go Hawks!
OPEN:
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daily
Noon-11 p.m. Sundays
Rep. Charlton Is Endorsed For Re-election by Educators At All Levels.
Louisiana Purchase Shopping Center 23rd & Louisiana·843-5500
She has always supported:
. . more state aid to local school districts and higher salaries for teachers .. increased funding for KU salaries and other operating expenses. .. vocational education and job training.
Betty Jo Charlton
Nicholas
Re-elect YOUR Representative in Topeka
POL. ADV. PAID FOR BY THE COMMITTEE TO RE-ELECT BETTY JO CHARLTON, MARLA D. ADKINS HELJESON, TREAS.
THE BUM
STEER
Fast, Hot DELIVERY!!
$1.00 charge
25
841-7665
"BLUE RIBBON BBQ"
2554 IOWA, LAWRENCE KS 66046
NIKE AIR Basketball Weaponry
A contoured polyurethane footframe midsole keeps the foot positioned securely. Nike's full-length Air-Sole cushionin protects against shock and never compacts or deteriorates over the life of the shoe.
NIKE
SALE $71.99
See other specials on our basketball shoes.
Nike Air Force III
Lightweight high-performance basketball shoe with excellent stability. The AIR-SOLE unit in heel provides unsurpassed cushioning.
Nobody knows the athlete's foot like The Athlete's Foot.
SALE $62.99
Reg. $69.99
Reg. $94.99
942 Mass.
Nike Air Assault
The Athlete's Foot.
Designed for aggressive play. AIR-SOLE cushioning provides comfort and protection from injury, while support straps add stability during lateral moves.
ing
841-6966
SALE $85.99
PRINCESS
Nike Air Delta Force
23rd Annual Blintz Brunch
Jewish Community Center Join us this Sunday! Nov. 6th 10-2 at 917 Highland in Lawrence
Because You Love To Live
SYDNEY SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Australian Bicentennial Tour 1988
Conducted by Stuart Challender Featuring Shura Cherkassky. Pianist
8:00 p.m. Saturday November 5,1988 Hoch Auditorium
A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; all seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982
(Visa.Master(Card accepted for phone reservations)
"This is how great orchestras play!"
Sydney Morning Herald
You'll Have The Time of Your Life!
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
1.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 4. 1988
15
10% Student Discount on Kansan Classifieds*
*Valid with K.U.I.D.
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce
don't bother and don't forget your GPT CER-
TIPATES to help you get the job done. Don't
gibble your budget either; students 2% or
10% remember. Remember you knight! !
ECKANAR discussion group forming. For more info call 749-1127
Jewish Community Center, Blintz Brunch. Sun.
Nov. 6, 10-2, 917 Highland, Lawrence.
Students, faculty, staff and family members. S.A.C.E. is a participant in the annual SCA Arts and Crafts Awards. S.A.C.E. is the SUA office. Deadline: Mon., Nov. 21. For more information call 864-3847. Sponsored by SDA Fine Arts.
Mary Kwj Cosmetics, Contact Deeann Wilks at
841-9407.
TODAY
is the last day to turn in applications for
Graduate Replacement Senators.
Applications can be picked up at the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union, 864-3710.
ENTERTAINMENT
Application Deadline: Today at 5 p.m.
GOOD VIBRATIONS - the most accessible mobile music for any occasion. Call (Brian) 891-8443.
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B-days, singing journals. 817-1874
Sutierez
It's back!
99* Margaritas
Now through Christmas
FOR RENT
Available Jan. 1; 2 bedroom apt, new carpet,
paint and appliances, nice porch, close to cam
pan, cats帐 $350/month • utilities 749-5213 or
749-6566
Available immediately. 1 bedroom apt. for male student between downtown and campus. $240 plus electric and deposit. Call 841-1207.
Available Immediately 1-bedroom basement apartment. Appliances; W/D, close to KU and Downtown. $225/month 749-609
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4-bedroom apart-
ment in immediate & near Kall, Gallo-
941-812-1121; Gallo-941-812-1120;
Complete! Furnished Studios- 1-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, designed and designed with you in mind. Call 841-2121, 841-5252 or 749-2493. Masstarcher.
DOWNTOWN APARTMENT - quiet, clean, new-
historic homepage of drummer. Toni Marlotti
422-707- evenings.
Extra Nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment to subluge second semester. Call 749-3174
riddle roommate wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes: own bedroom, own bathroom, washer, dryer, fireplace, and free water.
Female roommate will to fill 6th bedroom on campus Appt. Close to campus. Available now and/or next semester. Own room, $ utilities. #841 8743
Female roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom
roommate, Overland Park, 2 blocks from bus, 3 great
roommates $125 + utilities. 841-2746.
Fully furnished one-bedroom, apartment. Civilized
Big enough for two. Muni go to Nov. 10th.
Arkansas $340 + utilities 841-7032 or 794-2415.
HILLVIEW APTS
1733 West 24th 814-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units facilities
- On bus route-near shopping
Water paid.
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
- Some with gas parkin
* Ample off-street parking
Large 1 bedroom apt. Hanover Place, Quint, very clean, first half of Nov. Free lease is signed by
Baldwin 6411288 or 8411212
by Thompson-Crawley
The IPCA offers
Lease for spring semester. One space in nice large 2 BD. apt. 5 min walk from campus.
Available Dec. 30. Call 841-6822
LUXIRY 2 bedroom 2 bedroom apartment available starting Dec. J/An. Large rooms, clean, quiet W/D hooks, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, tennis. 842-3025.
New Hidden Meadow Townhouses. Two Bedrooms and Two Bedroom with Study and Fireplace. 749-1141, 841-3919, 2822 Iowa. Behind Racco Carsuit. BWH.
Spring Semester 89' Sublease 18' W/D. On bus rt.
Call 749-4560.
**Sublease next semester:** Nonsmoking roommate 1190/mo + ½ utilities. Near campus. 842-8088.
**Sublease nice 1 bedroom apartment starting**
842-8088 or 842-9088 paid. Phone: 740-8388 or 842-9088 after 6:30pm.
Sublease, one bedroom, January 1, water paid,
$275, 749-1202.
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
15th Ave. Cordova 642-4300
FOR SALE
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, including vintage dresses, fine frame clothing, precious and costume jewelry, and fine tableware. Playbabs, collector, and chepo rock-o-roll records, vintage clothing books, tennis balls, and other collectibles.
advertising items, clocks, watches, desks, anti-theft devices, and security systems it will show you away!" QUANTRILLE'S FLEA MARKET; #81 New Hampshire. Open every Sat. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; both rental info 642-646-6161 or 'Maestras'; Masterclass
AUDIO SALE- Cassette deckes, Teac, JVC, Sony from $75 - $100. Must sell. 841-9484.
Centurion Fromman w/ DH bars. Locked pedals.
Centurion Fromman w/ $350. Wood frame
for Futon, 745-789-369.
Comic books. Playmalls, Penthouses, etc. Comics. 811 New Hampton. Open Sat. & Sun
For Sale: A Tandy 600 portable computer and one Tandy DMP 105 printer. Call 815-5388.
FREE information on New Ka Police Photo
Camera. P.O. Box 6001, Riverside, CA 92758.
$80.00 on the BELL VECTOR 3 radar detector that
will detect all radar including New BaL &BJ
Enterprises. P.O. Box 247, Lansing, KS 60043
FUTONS Quality cotton mattress from $88.88
New Wave Futons. 842-7378.
GOVT SURPLUS! New G.I. Overseas Com-
mune, & supports 100. New Field Jobs, oversee-
sure operations & mailments. Field Jobs, oversee-
sure operations & mailments. WORKHWRE Mon. Sat. 9:30 a.m. (Open Sundays to
Christmas 11:30 a.m. Marys Surplus Sales. St.
Marys Surplus Sales.
Go to Miami. Fl for Thanksgiving and/or Christmas. Two trip ticket available for a discount price Call 749 5773 after 6:00 pm for more info.
Leather jackets (new) For $150. Call 841-0359
after 6 p.m.
MAC with dual drive, Imagewriter, mouse, and
software, $1200 OBO, 980.3243 nights
T-SHIRTS
Why Beer is Better than Women at KU
Found young female tiger cat. Unusual color and markings. Leatherette collar. Found Oct. 29 14th & Ohio. Call 842-6712.
100% Cotton L and XL Sizes Only $10 call Tim 842-3606
Trailer 12 x 85, w & d, shed. deck, AC, stove.
Rifle, nice. #430, Call Days 749-5240.
Found - Musical Instrument Case. Call to identify.
841-9701.
Michelle, I found your keys, 10th & Tenn. Eric
Winchester 30/30 rifle, accessories, ammo, $160
PQ rowing machine w/timer, w/machine.
adjustable drafting table, $5. Techs turntable, $5. OBS. BQ2-4228晚宴 and weekends.
HELP WANTED
Mobile DJ system back on sale: 100£ its sound lights, sales. 749-1500
Records Show & Sale Sunday
Nov. 6 9-5 V.F.W. Hall
Rock-n-roll Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ever Saturday and Sunday
Blazer Silverizer AC. PC, PS. AT, AM/FM
stereo, CB radio, 4" lift with 35" Radial muddels
looks and runs great. After 6:00 749-5903
$700.00
SAE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $450 sell $200. Must see to appreciate. Many functions.
841-7564
AUTO SALES
1981 Toyota 440 x4 pu-5.spd. S-RS all options red
must sell $4350 obu Chuck 814-9932
After-school caregiver for 2nd grade boy. 2 nights a week. $5/nr. Hillcrest area. Call 843-3591 evening.
it starts. It stops. What more could you want for $350. VW Beetle. #749-7302
1985 Honda Accord, Gold, Pioneer Stereo System, nice car, good car in snow, 842-8381
76 Mazda RX4 (5-speed), Runs good, stereo. New
81 Grand LeMans. Cruise control, must sell $900,
749.0105
86 Olds Forenza Corm, power steering, power brakes, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM stereo systems, power seat, 360° Cougar air, tilt, cruise, power seats, windows, doorlocks, rear defroster, AM/FM stereo cassette, 190 miles, $900. Both cars purchased new, transferable warranty. Both in excellent condition.
1981 Toyota Tercel. AM/FM cassette, good condition,
no rust, $1350 or best offer. **@** 842-2219.
1982 Ford EXP Stereo Cass. more. Good condition, must sell. $1600 OBO. 864-6533.
Honda Accord GOLD, Pioneer System.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100.
Mercers, Fordes, Corvettes, Chevys, Surplus.
Burger King (1) 805-640-6000 Ex. S-9758
nice car, good car in snow, 842-9383
78 Mazda RX4 (5-speed), runs good, Stereo. New
battery, 840-6500. Call 841-3842
LOST—FOUND
Mirtan is a beautiful black 1865 Manta RX-7. She needs a new home. For more info call 864-3078 or leave message for Geri at 864-4750.
RED HOT bargains! Drug dealer's cars, boats,
boats repo'd Surplus. Your Area. Buyers
Guide. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. S-9784.
BAE Computer needs responsible student to represent our computer. Involvement students with the resume to 356 Rydstreet Santa Garza, CA 95015.
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight Attendants.
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service
Listings. Salaries to $10K. Entry level positions
1. (616) 756-9000 F3L A-7538
Found: Keys by Potter Lake with Elvis key chain.
964-2552
Banquet positions are now open at the Adams Alumni Center. Applicants must be available to participate in the banquet, bartenders, & hostesses are needed. Above Apartment 1296 Bedford Ave. E. 80th St. applies at 1296 Bedford Ave. E. 80th St.
Cheeker's Pizza has immediate openings for orders, makers, and pizza makers/sandwich makers. Order takes $145 per hour sandwich makers in person at 618-723-2142 in Yale Rd. Bet in person at 618-723-2142 in Yale Rd.
BIOLOGY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Part-time, approximately 20 hours per week. Must be a high school graduate or equivalent or be 8 to workday, Monday-Friday. Submit application to Intertrory Research Corp. 2301 W. 12th Street. References and transcript required. Application钟, June 50. An equal opportunity employment agency.
Checker's货车 has immediate openings for the delivery drivers. Must be 18 years old or older, have own car, have driver's license, and insurance $45 / hour, tip commission, and easy to pay. Please call KPZ214A Yale Rd. between 1 a.m and 8 p.m. "Hirarimatic assist to work by 8 am to 1 p.m."
Christmas Help $8.90 (Hours Flexible)
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
(913) 345-9675
EARN EXTRA MONEY and free lodging vacation to Florida, Nassau or Mazatlan. Distributor of cassettes, records and compact discs needs campus sales representative. Must be aggressive
and enjoy contact with people. Call 316-263-3885.
Experienced Photographer (hourly student)
Experience in digital media and magazine style photography. Must demonstrate camera and darkroom skills, also experience with artificial lighting and on-camera flash. Prefer experience with color slide film. Submit portfolio.
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students
Bachelor's in Earth Science or a related field
Park based oil and gas firm. For information
and interview please call Arion Resources Corp-
ratory and Production Division at 943-120-1232.
Gal to clean house, 2-3 hrs weekly, $5.00 per hour
Own transportation: 841-0522.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,490-$59,230/yr. Now Hiring. Your Area. (1) 805-887-4000 Ext. R-9758 for current Federal list.
NAMIES need to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, honest, responsible with children. Good salary and benefits. For more information call: Janet (K.C. 1-722-4980).
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening be-
driver drivers. Start at $60 per hour. Apply in
person only at Border Bandoid 1528 W. 23rd.
---
5 Bainty To work 10 hours per week. M-F: 8 a.m - 5 p.m. Job description available at the reception desk at the Computer Center, University of Kansas. EOA/FA Emplover
duties within Networking 2Takes phone messages, etc. Required: 1 types at 45 mpm; messages with required fields follow complex verbal & written instructions; 4 able to schedule time in 3-hour blocks; and 6 able to send an email.
Network Support Assistant (Student Hourly)
Network Support Assistant (Administrator)
1) Types, files and performs all assigned electrical
Pizza Shirt is immediately hiring both full-time and part-time driver services. Day and evening hours are available daily paid mileage, and bonuses. Must have own car insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shirt office or contact us online.
Now hire cooks and cashiers for days, evenings,
and over-night shifts. Starting pay $4.00-$4.50.
Apply anytime. Hardely on the turnipke 843-6203
Part-time job at our store. No more than
days per week. per person be dedicated,
dependable, and a self-starter. Computer exp-
ressions required. 185, 119
JuiceFruit Hall Lunch. K 6645
Student Office Assistant assigned in Student Housing Department. 15-20 hrs/wk. General office assistant required. Job duties: $3.50/hr, depending on experience. See Debbie Skipman. 205 McColm Hall. 844-6500.
SUMMER JOB OUTDOORS Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kaiserspalt. MT. 98001.
Student Applications Programmer I / 1/2 time
(Student Monthly). Deadline 11/7/88 $25
/des/mo. Duties Participates in program
design, implementation of modules,
facilities, assists in preparation of program
coding; assists in the solution of open...
documentation, and preparation of necessary test data. Required 1 a course from college or university 2 current enrollment as a KU student. Ful job description Ruth Hurt, Personnel Coordinator. University of Illinois at Chicago Center. Lawrence, KS 65083. KOE AA Employ.
With the holidays coming up, you use some
extra cash for opening for data entry
cardsters starting soon. You can use
keyboard skills and can work 5-pm Mon-Fri.
please contact us to T O D A
You are a student concerned about responsibility for your actions. Please attend the chapter of BACCHUS. Come to the organizational meeting Monday, November 7, 7-8 pm Call 843-260-9111 Kansas University 844-894-4 more information
We are looking for two line cooks. Must be able to work nights. Contact Windell at Becerros 841-1323.
PERSONAL
MISCELLANEOUS
FRIDAY
Young couple seeking Nanny in New York. Call
collect at 516-369-5689.
Happy Birthday! Rebecca R ! What's your last name? Social Controller? The world's in trouble! Krissie.
Gary, an attractive SWM, 23, fun-loving, active,
friendly, and with a warm smile, conversation, the outdoors, and taking chances, would like meeting female, 20-25, who is interested in books, e-book, say "拜盒7, 119 Staffer Flint Hlth."
Jrische C. Smile: Can last forever if you want, or if not. I'd like to be a fond memory other than a forgotten face. P.S. Can I still sit to you in Poli Se? Donna.
Kamikazees & Schnapps 754
Johnny's
key Slegues: Meet me at Prime Time this Thursday in the Kansas Union! Your Hygmfunff Jeannine HID. Remember, Hope and Love spree. Slowly know the skooes. Enjoy The Hippe
Hors D'oeuf
at the Up & Un
Karan
& '
The KU chapter of BACCHUS* Participate in the meeting that is concerned with response be decision made. The KU chapter of BACCHUS*醉 alcohol come to the organizational meeting Monday February 14, 2008 at 10 a.m. Level I: Kansas Union. For more information call 312-795-8480.
ML, I'm working myself into a frenzy: Michael Hedvig, Nov. 9, Liberty Hall! KF
Hors D'oeuvres at the Up & Under
On TVs, VCIs,珠宝, Stories, Musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Visu/MCA.M.EX. J-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1800 W. 648-7919
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
SWM, 33. Let's meet at Perkins, 5 30 pm, Nov. 4.
You'll know me by my book SWF, 33.
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat妩,
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWF, 21.30.
P.O. P. Box 422 043, Lawrence, Ks. 60444.
Photo annotated
NOID= Good Luck in NYC this weekend. Beth.
Beth.
NOID: Good Luck in NYC this weekend. Beth.
Would..Be..Proud! The Phi Taus.
To a Hideous Little Sherri!
WOLF- Congrats! Heard you lost it in Pittsburg.
BUS. PERSONAL
Love Your Roomie, Nat
CAMPERS and FISHERS. SUA camping and fishing trip November 11-13. For details call SUA Office at 864-3477.
Government Photos. Passport, immigration, visa modeling, theatrical. Advanced fine art portraits. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artificial future. Tum Swells 749-1611.
HEY YOU! Get your car in shape for those cold winter months • only $10 will cover a complete maintenance card at Philips 66. I have only 10 shift covers (for a large truck) (very important for winter), battery charge, tire rotation and spin balance *smooths out your vehicle* and maintains all of its components to must sell all now. Card good in any vehicle and
must sell all you. Card good on any vehicle and
must sell all you. Card good on any vehicle and
you purchase 5 gallons of competently priced
quality gas with each visit. These are the only
cars at 12am, 1pm, 2pm, 8pm, 12am or TH (8pm, 12am) or
8pm, 12am or TH (8pm, 12am) or
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for dependents. 2 children with $250 deductible only. $65 66 month. With parent slightly higher. Kansas Insurance Service $118-141.
SUNLEWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
SPRING BREAK 89 Trins Available Now
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SERVICES OFFERED
Astrology: Would you like to know about someone special, more about yourself, or what will happen if they are sent addressed, stamped enveloped to Astral for services 344, 531st Smith M. Mc4080 list of services.
Boulder Portraits are still the great gift idea.
Setting includes glamorized make-up and full
possession assistance. For more information
call Mike or Gracie collect 1-299-3789
CUSTOMER SERVICE CLERKS Several openings for customer service clerks in the Lawrence area, day shifts, phone experience, good transparency, and integrity. DUNNILT TEMPORARY SYSTEMS 367-4773
DRIVER EDUCATION offer thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
FILE CLERKS Several openings for File clerks in the Lawrence area. Numerical and color coded filing - good transportation. 5.9 m, excellent. TEMPORARY SYSTEMS 2677-0773
French tutoring. Transitions. Paper revisions done on computer. Expert work 8 years experience.
Trick or Treat Specials
Halloween
Don't let your vehicle trick you this fall.
treat it to a service of your choice.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building. Room 206. 864-4757
Quality Tutoring. Economics, Statistics.
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis. 842-1055.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy, 842-7945 or Lisa, 841-1915.
TYPING
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park. (913) 491-6878
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Laumiere, 841.5716
letter-quality type. 843-2063, or evenings
+1 typing. Letters, resumes, thesis, law
typing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754
or 843-2071 and weekends.
Oil Change Service
* -Genuine Toyota filter,
up to 5 quarts
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of her work.
$14.95
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc., IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-6554.
$14.95
Toyota Vehicles Only, coupon required
Expert Typist- Reasonable rates Call 842-3033
IRON KEY TENSE service is back!
10% Off Coupon
Any repairs or maintenance
performed in our shop.
Expires 11/1/88
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary,
$1.25/double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence
Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
EXPERT TYPEING. Mary Daw 273-4191. In Teoka. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer.
IRON FENCE TYPING SERVICE is hard hk
electronic typewriters or Zionhard disk bread
word processor with spellcheck and Daisy wheel
fast, fast, fast, reasonable, guaranteed
work 841-8883
TOYOTA QUALITY
ELLENA
TERM TOYOTA
Wordprocessing, *spelling check* $1.25/pg, Bid
projects. Sally B41-2279. Let me help.
MAC _ WORDPROCESSING
papers,
book reports, thesis, projects and all other typed
materials. Format to be used with Wordexpressing
Wordexpressing. Format to your specifications.
Check marked, all laser print output.
Call Kurt 610-328-5749.
RESUME SERVICES - professional, quality resumes. Formatted to your specifications with laser printed output. Quality, professional service. Formatted to Kinka's. 24 hour service. Kurt Cairn 827 965-2140.
842-2191
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9023
(p.m.).
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 729a
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
M.F. 105, #841-9223
SPEEEMTIM Word Processing Service. Quality
dependable service on academic papers. Discounts on large projects $1.25/double-spaced page 843. 237-276
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TYPING/WORD PROCESSING. done on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes Letter Quality legal. Printer exp. Laura, 542378 Leave message
***Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 8431-911-04. Thursday and 9 on Friday. THEWORDSTORIES. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing*. Legal, theses, resumes, commercial. IBM-PC, MAC, CDP. Dot matrix, dot matrix. Since 1983. 8431-347.
Word processing, typing, Papers, resumes, ap-
plications, dissertations. Also, assistance with
grammar, spelling, composition, editing. Haves M.
Duret, 814-0972, 814-6544
Word processing IBM Okidata printer. $1.25/doub-
ble space page. Call before 10 pm. 749-1300.
Kalty.
WANTED
Policy
Drummer and Bassist needed to complete Jazz/Rock Band. Dan 842-7194
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester.
Call 749-3075. Leave message.
Roommate needs to assume lease, or subsale from January 1 on. Sharing a 2 bedroom Harvard Square Apartment. Own bedroom. $200 • utilities 841-730 after $5
Female roommate wanted for Spring semester. House on Ohio - 1 bedroom for $210.00. All utilities paid. Call 842-3989. Leave Message
utilities. close to campus. Call 842-9590 after 7.
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse. **pool/ rent/utilities. fireplace, fire炉.**
Thirty年专业赖务 dependable housemate to share HRH house $165 ½ bills.
Roommate needed to share large 2 bed apartment near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne
Roommate wanted Gorgetown Apartments B 4820 a month + 1 months. Call Tim at 841-1966 Second Semester Roommate wanted Roommate wanted Walking distance or bus route Call 841-1965
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
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Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements.
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Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only.
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Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
001 announcements
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26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00 21.30 26.35
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 16.45 22.95 28.35
usts 300 for sale 400 help wanted 800 services offered
tst 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
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By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Don't encourage him. Sylvia."
16
Friday, November 4, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Monopolies are illegal, even in Republican tactics
By Barbara Joseph Kansan staff writer
A Republican campaign tactic designed to monopolize voters' attention recently has angered both political parties.
The College Republican National Committee, parodying a game piece from the Parker Brothers' Monopoly game. (Courtesy Dukakis, prison [urlough program]
The "Get Out of Jail Free" card features a man with wings and a cane flying out of a cage. It also has the license registered trademark, a circled "R."
On the front, the card reads, "Get out of jail, free... compliments of Michael Dukakis." On the back was an attack on Dukakis' prison furlough program, with reference to Willie Horton. The card said Horton was a convict murderer who had been beaten and beaten her finance while on furlough.
GET OUT
OF JAIL, FREE
COMPLEMENTS OF MICHAEL DUAKIS
DISTRIBUTED BY COLLEGE DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL COMMITTEE
The problem started with a letter
from the Dukakis/Bentsen campaign to all Democratic campus coordinators, including the Jayhawks for Dukakis. Included was a letter from the College Republican National Committee to Parker Brothers.
Committee 104 The Dukakis/Bentsen letter said Parker Brothers had threatened the committee with a lawsuit because of its illegal and fraudulent activities in distributing copyrighted material on campuses. The Dukakis/Bentsen letter also said that Parker Brothers had allowed the Democratic campaign to use the letter publicly.
patag to use the server paragraphe
The committee's letter to Parker
Brothers, dated Sept. 28, was written by Stockton Reeves, chairman of the committee.
committee.
In the letter, Reeves said "... We are not interested in contesting this matter with your company. There fore, as of this date, we have discontinued distribution of these cards."
Eric Levitt, co-coordinator of the Jayhawks, gave the letters to the Kansan. Levitt said he thought the use of the card went deeper than just a campaign tactic.
a campaign officer.
"My question is, if the Bush campain is going to ignore the law while campaigning, what are they going to do in office, if they win the election?"
Levitt asked.
Douglas Johnston, KU Democrat's president, was angry and vowed action.
"The card itself was a distortion of Michael Dukakis' record," Johnston said. "They were misusing copyrighted material for their own selfish purposes."
Johnston said he would speak to the legal counsel at Dukakis' headquarters about the possibility of further action.
He said the KU College Republicans were still standing out the cards yesterday at the Kansas Union.
Brett Frazier, chairman of the College Republicans, said the cards probably were handed out yesterday to get rid of extras and probably to be made available today. He said earlier he thought the whole issue was no big deal.
Although delighted with the success of the campaign device, Reeves was angered over use of the committee's letter, which he said sounded like the one he wrote.
"I consider my correspondence with another group private," he said from his headquarters in Washington, D.C. "The Democrats are claiming the Republicans have run a sneaky campaign. This just shows there is no copyright on sneaky
campaign tactics."
The one party that did not seem concerned over the issue was Parker Brothers in Beverly, Mass. Judy A. Willis, vice president, law, said there had been no threat of a lawsuit. She called the use of any copyright technically illegal but didn't know about calling it fraudulent.
"We wouldn't sue someone immediately," she said. "We put them on notice with a polite letter because they might not have been aware of the problem. We don't want Parker Brothers to be seen as endorsing a candidate."
Willis said there was no point in a lawsuit so close to an election because use of the cards would stop soon. She said she had no problems with Democrats using the committee's letter for campaign purposes but did not remember a request to use it.
Vote
Louie McElhaney for Douglas County Commissioner November 8th
P. M. BERNSTEIN
Rudy's PIZZA
Taste the Rudy's difference
Every day specials! No coupons necessary!
Every day specials! No coupons needed!
3 small pizzas: (two toppings) & 1 qt. pop - $9$^{99}$ + tax
2 small pizzas: (two toppings) & 1 qt. pop - $6$^{99}$ + tax
1 small pizza: (two toppings) & 1 qt. pop - $3$^{99}$ + tax
one large 16" supreme: $9^{99}$ + tax
one large 16" pizza: (two toppings) & 1 qt. pop - $6$^{99}$ + tax
Delivery Begins
at 11:00 A.M.
749-0055
620 W. 12th
Behind the Crossing
Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 11-0
Sunday 11-10
CABLE KNIT SWEATERS $1690 originally $3800
HARPER'S
HARPER'S FASHIONS 45 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence
RINGS
sized, repaired, cleaned
Kizer Cummings
jewelers
800 Mass. 749-4333
Commonwealth
Bargain Mailinness & Senior Citizens $2.50
Showtimes for Today Only
MOVIE INFO: 841-7000
Granada 1020 Mass.
843-5788
PUNCHLINE (R) 7.15, 9.35
Varsity 1015 Mass.
843-1085
ACCUSED (R) 7.30, 9.30
Hillcrest 9th & Iowa
842-8400
MYSTIC PIZZA (R) 4.30,7:15,9:25
THEY LIVE (R) 4:50, 7:10, 9:30
HALLOWEEN IV (R) *4.45, 7.25, 9.35
RAT 21 (R) '4.40, 7.20, 9.20
*4:40, 7:20, 9:20
Dickinson
5250 POME-TIMER SHOW (**) SR. CTF. ANTEM
THE GOOD MOTHER (R)
Dickinson 23rd & IOWA 841-8600
U2 Rattle & Hum
evenings: *4:45, 7:10, 9:15*
Sat & Sun: *7:15* *4:45*
Cinema Twin 31st & Iowa 842-6400
Platoon Leader
evenings: *4.35, 7.05, 9.05*
Sat & Sun: *2.05, *4.35*
Gorillas in the Mist
evenings: **4:30, 7:00, 9:30**
Sat & Sun: **2:00, 4:30**
Alien Nation
evenings *:4:55, 7:15, 9:10
Sat. & Sun: *:2.25, *:4.55
456-5000
DONNICK &
GIBBEN (R)—13
7.20; 9.30
EVERYBODY $
ALL AMERICAN (R)
7.15; 9.25
Feds
evenings: *4:50, 7:25, 9:20
Sat. & Sun.: *2:20, *4:50
Cocktail
evenings: *4:40, 7:20, 9:25
Sat. & Sun.: *2:10, *4:40
NCAA
Continued from p.1
Johnson said although he was athletic director at the time, he could not be held responsible for the actions of every person working in the athletic department.
He used the same analogy when asked whether Brown should be responsible for those who worked under him.
"If you're the president of a bank," he said, "and somebody under you embezzles money, does that make him a disresponsible) responsibility for the action?"
Johnson said the NCAA allegations had no bearing on his decision to leave his position as athletic director.
Johnson said the NCAA's penalty was too severe considering the rules that were broken.
"If there is a better system (to determine penalties) we've got to find it," he said. "The NCAA has an impossible job. They're too poorly staffed to deal with the problems in college athletics. They've got too few people to deal with too many problems."
"I left with the feeling that I had done as much for the program as I could possibly do," Johnson said. "If I'd had total confidence of the people around me, I probably would not have left."
Johnson refused to comment on the people he was referring to.
LOREN
ANDERSON
for
Sheriff
Adv. Paid by Loren Anderson for Sheriff
jeff feeb, Chairman, Gina Baum, Treasurer
LOREN
ANDERS N
for
Sheriff
Adv. Paid by Loren Anderson for Sheriff,
Jeff Hebb, Chairman, Gina Baun, Treasurer
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Films presents...
Friday and Saturday
3:30, 7:00 and 9:30
Crocodile Dundee II
A classic among the high-adventure
films of the 80s.
Midnight
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Fall'88
Mel Gibson defies death and humanity to nd the world of his enemies.
Experience
Business Manager
University Daily Kansas
Your Key to the Future is Past Experience.
University Daily Kansan
Highest student position. Responsible for day to day operations of the advertising staff of the sixth largest paper in Kansas, including directing the hiring and training of a 40-person staff, sales management, newspaper production and client relations.
Spring'88 National Sales Manager University Daily Kansas Responsible for all national sales efforts,including advertising placement,sales calls, interaction with advertising agencies and rep firms, development and management of a regional sales force and implementation of cooperative advertising programs.
Fall '87 Production Manager University Daily Kansas Responsible for all aspects of the production department, including the logging of insertion orders, coordination of advertising, news and printing services interests, and layout of the newspaper.
Summer '87 Advertising Director University Daily Kansan Solely responsible for coordinating all facets of production and directing all related problem-solving efforts as well as management of sales representatives.
Campus Sales Representative University Debby Kenson
University Daily Kansas Responsible for sales, including planning, budgeting and campaign presentations to more than 40 active accounts. Exceeded semester quota, participated successfully in staff programs, maintained productive client relationships and expanded account list.
The University Daily Kansan Staff will soon be taking applications for sales positions.
Watch The Kansan for further information concerning application deadlines and interviewing dates.
Vol. 99, No. 51 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday November 7,1988
Police modify procedures
Internal investigation leads to KU personnel, office changes
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
As the result of an internal investigation, the University of Kansas police department has made changes in both personnel and in office procedures, director Jim Denney said yesterday.
The internal investigation began in late September after it was discovered that copies of confidential documents and an unsigned cover letter, charging that KU police had improperly conducted investigations, had been delivered to persons outside the department.
"I believe we know who took the documents and how," Denney said. "A great deal of effort has been expanded, and actions taken."
Denney said he could not comment on the specific actions taken because Kansas civil service regulations prevented him from discussing personel matters.
Last Friday, while discussing the implementation of a state drug testing program, KU Police Major Rollo Oliver corrected a discrepancy in state and KU police personel figures by explaining that KU police had two vacant positions.
Denney said yesterday that the department did have some vicariousities, but said that a certain amount of the people were too young.
Recommendations for the dismissal of a KU police officer can be made by a police officer with the rank of sergeant or above, Denney said. He said any recommendations made by his subordinates would be reviewed by the director. If the director agreed, or made his own recommendation, the recommendation would be passed on the personnel service department of the University.
Denney said any civil service employee had the right to appeal to University personnel services department, and then to the state division of personnel services.
Denney said he did not know whether any KU police officers had filed such appeals, and would not be able to comment if he did.
While Denney said he thought the primary work of the investigation was finished, he could not say that the investigation had been completed.
On August 25, the Chancellor's office asked the Kansas Attorney General's office to investigate the allegations made in the cover letter which accompanied the confidential documents. That investigation, which ended the first week of October, found that procedures of the police department were not improper, Vickie Thomas, University general counsel said at the time.
Thomas said the original documents had been returned but that she did not know how many copies had been made and did not identify the people who had received copies.
Sakharov making first trip to West
The Associated Press
BOSTON — Human rights activist Andrei D. Sakharov, the father of the Soviet dissident movement, arrived late last night in Boston for a two week visit in the United States, his first trip to the West.
Sakharov, who won the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize for his human rights activities, told reporters before leaving Moscow's Sheremeyevo airport that he was pleased to be going to Washington for a
meeting of the International Foundation for the Survival and Development of Humanity.
While in Boston, he is expected to visit his stepson Alexen Semyov, his wife Liza Alekseyeva and their 4-year-old daughter Alexandra, whom he never has seen. He will be on a medical treatment in the United States.
In Moscow, Sakharov, 67, kissed his wife, Yelena Bonner, in a diplomatic lounge where they had waited, smiling and holding hands, and then headed for the New York-bound plane. Reporters who went to the airport were not allowed in the lounge.
KUPSIS
TOP: After Saturday's KUK-State game, fans tore down the goal post at the south end of Memorial Stadium. ABOVE: An estimated crowd of 5,000 people loyed on the hill south of the stadium.
Fans topple posts after rare victory
Karan sportswriter
ByMark E. McCormick
ron Myrick struggled beneath thweight of a portion of the goal pd and the hordes of students ut relentlessly piled on top of it
After the Kansas Jayhawks
named arch-rival Kansas State
Lecats 30-12 Saturday to claim
Governor's Trophy and bragging
rights, excited fans swarmed
out of the stands and toward the
goal posts.
In the rare post-game celebration that saw the team carry Kansas coach Glen Mason off the field, both players were toppled. both go under it.
"I can't explain the kind of pressure that was on my body." Myrick said of his dilemma. "I couldn't really scream because the post took my breath away. I was
suffocating. I was hollering, and I couldn't really hear myself."
Seconds before the Jayhawks' victory, Meryrick said he stood ready to rush onto the field and tear down the south side of Memorial Stadium.
Although out of breath, Myrick said he yelled for help and eventually the layers of people peeled off of him.
Myrick, Chicago sophomore, was treated at Watkins Memorial Health Center for a brushed rib and received stitches in his side.
"I was up on it, and it just fell down on me," Myrick said. "I just thrashed down on my stomach and people started piling on."
But he then soon found himself pinned beneath the goal post and a mass of excited students.
Please see VICTORY, p. 9, col. 1
Saint James Worthing ANSAN
Election time finally arrives
Polls open tomorrow at 7 a.m.
Stephen Wade/KANSAN
By Barbara Joseph and Deb Gruver Kansan staff writers
An informed choice. It's what the U.S. democratic system is built upon.
To help voters make informed choices at the polls tomorrow, the Kansan has developed this summary card that identifies who will be on the 1988 ballot.
will be on the job besides electing a new president of the United States, voters will elect a wide array of other candidates.
Lawrence, which is in the 2nd Congressional District, will be electing a congressman. Voters also will pick delegates to the state Senate and House of Representatives. Douglas sheriff and two new commissioners.
Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. To determine where to vote, see page 10, or call the county clerk at 841-7700, extension 281.
U.S. House/2nd District
Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Topeka (incumbent):
The congressman said he enjoyed helping constituents. He said he would work to reduce the federal budget deficit, improve rural health care and develop a farm bill. He also wanted to increase student financial aid and help develop a state telecommunications policy.
Phil Meinhardt, R-Topeka:
1. the retired Air Force officer said he had experience in defense, space and missile technology and economics. He is against new taxes and subsidies to fund federal budget deficit. He also would protect Social Security benefits and federal farm subsidies. He supports student financial aid programs.
A third candidate, Stan Eckert of Lawrence, offered himself as a write-in candidate recently. Eckert, who has lost the Republican nomination for Congress three times, says he will be writing to the party that ouret he most important issues. Eckert is working on a master's degree in political science at KU.
Jr 2012
■ Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence
(incumbent)
The senator said his prioities were equalized education for all Kansas children and continued support for the Margin of Excellence. He favors reclassification of state employees, property tax relief and programs for the elderly and disabled.
Mike DuPree, D-Lawrence:
Bush Dukabi
The KU graduate said he wanted economic development to work hand in hand with a clean environment He favors recycling programs and development of organic fertilizers and biodegradable packaging. He also supports education, including theMargin of Excellence.
Cansas House/46th District
Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence (incumbent):
The KU graduate and former graduate teaching assistant said she would fight for the Margin of Excellence. She is against including Washburn University in the university admissions. Other priorities are fair reapportionment and money for public schools and highways.
Bernie Norwood, R-Lawrence:
A paralegal, Norwood said he would propose legislation for malpractice victims. He supports affordable housing, improved childcare and better education. He wants job training programs and more assistance for the elderly. He supports the Margin of Excellence, is against including Washburn University in the system and favors open admissions.
Kansas House/44th District
Kansas House, 4th District
- Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence
(incumbent);
Rep. Branson said she would continue to fight for improved health care, adequate money for public education and financing of theMargin of Excellence She wants objective criteria for deciding on new highway programs.
Rebe McCormie, ROWL District
The KU graduate student who served in the Student Senate said she would better represent young voters. She supports the Margin of Excellence and would increase salaries for classified employees and faculty. She favors qualified admissions, prison reform and capital punishment.
Kansas House/43rd District
Emil Earles, D-Baldwin City.
Although Earles' name will be on
Ralph Earles, D-Baldwin City
Please see ELECTION, p. 10, col. 3
Iowa university sees success in minority program
By James Farquhar
Minority participation at the University of Kansas won't be increased unless support comes from the entire University community, an official from the University of Iowa said Friday.
Kansan staff writer
"If the different departments don't make it a priority, if the students don't care, if your town doesn't even know what you're trying to do, then administrative programs won't amount to much," he said.
said Friday, "It taken commitment from top to bottom that Michael Barron, UI director of admissions, said of the recently released KU Minority Issues Task Force report
Barron speaks with the voice of experience.
Last year, officials at the three state universities in Iowa implemented a program
called Opportunity at fowa, which was aimed at increasing their minority students, faculty and staff.
Hawaii and Iowa share a similar racial makeup. Officials from KU and Iowa have fought their schools' tendency toward ethnic uniformity. Iowa, like KU, has had several programs with good intentions which never got off the ground.
The initiative is similar to the one proposed Wednesday by KU's task force report.
Rosita Dorsey, KU director of minority affairs, said that five task force reports in the past 12 years had done little for overall change in KU's representation at KU because of a lack of follow-through.
"This task force will remain in operation to follow up on the recommendations that we make," she said. "That has never happened in the past."
In the first half of the 1980s, IU minority figures remained relatively static. The percentage of minority students fluctuated within tenths of a point from year to year, slightly inching its way up more than a full point from 1980 to 1986.
Barron said that a follow-up committee had worked well at IU. And after a year and a half, Opportunity at Iowa has yielded positive results.
But since the program was first implemented in fall 1987, the percentage of minority students has increased more than a full decade. The percentage of IU's 29.230 students are minorities.
"And since last year, the school hired 16 new minority faculty members," Barron丝飞
If Opportunity at Iowa's goal is reached, minorities will compose 8.5 percent of Iowa's
Philip Hubbard, IU dean of academic affairs and co-director of Opportunity at Iowa, said the program was far-reaching in its scope, but that it had specific goals and concrete action.
three Regents school populations by 1991.
"We're doing things like going into minority communities in Iowa and working with schools and churches to encourage college as an option." Hubbard said. "We're taking detailed information about admissions and scholarships to high schools.
"We want to make sure we extend ourselves to Iowa's black, Latino and Native American communities."
Barron said the perception of a sincere effort could be a catalyst for success. He said that when IU made a visible effort and public
"What KU needs to do is to bring the
community together and make
and make up the effort." Barron said.
He said that one of the planks in the KU task force's 25-plan agenda calling for the consultation of local church and human rights leaders was a good idea, but that it was not taken far enough.
sentiment got behind it, the tide began to turn.
"What about the shop owners? What about the chamber of commerce? What about the restaurateurs?" he said. "When minority faculty are considering IU they don't just look at the school, they look at the town," he said.
"They look at the overall package, and they often what needs the most improvement."
---
2
Monday, November 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Mild week ahead
High: 62°
Low: 36°
Today's high will reach 62 degrees under partly cloudy skies. Tonight's low will fall to around 36 degrees.
North Platte
55/27
Mostly sunny
Omaha
56/32
Partly cloudy
Goodland
57/32
Mostly sunny
Salina
60/35
Partly cloudy
Topeka
60/44
Partly cloudy
Kansas City
61/39
Partly cloudy
Columbia
60/38
Sunny
St. Louis
58/36
Sunny
Dodge City
60/34
Partly cloudy
Wichita
63/38
Partly cloudy
Chanute
64/38
Partly cloudy
Springfield
63/40
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Leigh Anne Stout
Temperature are today’s high and tonight’s low.
5-Day
Tuesday
Mostly sunny
60/35
HIGH LOW
Wednesday
Partly cloudy
62/36
Thursday
Partly cloudy
60/36
Friday
Mostly sunny
58/34
Saturday
Mostly sunny
56/33
Tuesday Mostly sunny 60/35 HIGH LOW Wednesday Partly cloudy 62/36 Thursday Partly cloudy 60/36 Friday Mostly sunny 58/34 Saturday Mostly sunny 56/33
Seattle 53/33
Denver 50/32
Chicago 50/36
New York 53/38
Los Angeles 70/59
Phoenix 80/59
Dallas 80/52
Miami 77/53
Fronts:
cold
occluded
warm
stationary
By Deb Gruver Kansan staff writer
KU student found dead in McCollum
An 18-year-old KU student was found dead Friday morning in his room in McCollum Hall. The coroner ruled the death as an accidental hanging.
hanging.
The student, Thomas P. Lewis Jr.
Stinwell freshman, was found hanging from the water pipes in his room at 10:13 a.m. Friday. A resident assistant found Lewis after responding to a complaint about an alarm clock going off in the room, KU police said.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said the hanging originally was thought to have been suicidally cut out after the coroner's examination.
Longaker said that no suicide notes had been found and there was no indication of suicide. Lewis had a single room.
Patronize Kansan
single round Douglas County coroner Alan Sanders said that he had been dead for at least 12 hours.
Sanders said that Lewis apparently had been engaging in auto-erotic behavior when he suffocated. Autorotic behavior involves an induced
state of asphhyxiation to heighten sexual climax during masturbation
Dennis Dailey, KU professor of social welfare, said that auto-eric behavior was not uncommon. He said the officer's suffocation, is usually an accident.
"This has been happening for an awfully long time," Dailey said. "It is certainly not a new phenomenon. If you're going to do this, be safer."
Sanders said that one other such case had occurred several years ago in Lawrence.
Counseling will be available for McColum Hall staff members and residents in the hall's academic resource center. The University Counseling Center, the Mental Health Center, the Student Health Center and the Student Assistance Center also will offer counseling.
Lewis is survived by his father, Thomas Lewis Sr., Stilwell, and mother, Alyse Lewis, also of Stilwell.
Funeral arrangements, to be hand-
drawn. Louisburg, have not yet been made.
Louisburg, have not yet been made.
worked as a sales representative intern at radio station KLZR in Lawrence.
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Lawrence. Castaneda was a 1982 graduate of J.C. Harmon High School, in Kansas City, Kan.
The family suggests donations be sent to the Rick Castaneda Memorial Fund, Liver Transplant Team of the University of Nebraska Medical Center, attention Robert Knott, Grants Accounting Office, Administration Building, 42nd and Emily St., Omaha, Neb., 68105.
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Funeral services for Rick Castaneda, 24, will be at 10 a.m. today at St. John the Divine Catholic Church, 2511 Metropolitan Ave., Kansas City, Kan. Burial will be in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, Kansas City, Kan.
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KU Advertising Club Presents:
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Four Informative Workshops for Students in All Majors
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Portfolio Review and Analysis Featuring James Kandt, Art Director of Sullivan Higdon and Sink Advertising Agency
Resume Form and Content Featuring Dr. Patrick O'Malley and Lynn O'Malley of Career Dynamics
Tuesday, November 8 Room 100, Stauffer-Flint Hall 6:30 p.m. (Membership) 7:00 p.m. workshop begins)
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We encourage all students to bring examples of their portfolios and resumes for constructive criticism
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 7, 1988
Campus/Area
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A 'Royal' rodeo opens in Kansas City
WESTERN COAST RIDING
Staton Breidenthal/KANSAN
TOP: A professional rodeo contestant tries to stay on bull for the eight-second ride. The event took place yesterday during the American Royal Roode at Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo. RIGHT: The color guard from Kemper Military School and College, located in Boonville, Mo., march in the American Royal Parade. The parade opened the American Royal Rodeo Saturday morning.
MILITARY
Kathy Wismer/KANSAN
Bust reaps $40,000 of raw cocaine
By a Kansan reporter
Gregory A. Gibler, 31, and his wife,
Julie Gibler, 25, were arrested at
their house at 318 California St.
More than a pound of raw cocaine and a stolen handgun were seized Thursday evening and three people were arrested, Jim Flory, Douglas County District Attorney said Friday.
In Douglas County District Court on Friday, Gregory Gibber was charged with two foley counts of attempting to deliver cocaine, and single felony counts of possession of cocaine, conspiracy to deliver cocaine and not possessing a state-issued tax stamp.
taken out of the stamp
Julie Gibler was charged with one felony count of possession of cocaine.
Flory said that formal charges had not been filed against the third person arrested in the raid.
Douglas County Undersheriff Loren Anderson said a handgun which had been reported stolen in Lawrence was found in the house, and other handguns were in the house. He also resisted the arrests. He estimated the value of the cocaine seized to be at least $40,000.
Secure Shuttle called inefficient
Flory said the arrests were the result of an eight-month long investigation carried out by the Douglas County Special Investigations and Drug Unit, which is made up of Lawrence Police and Douglas County Sheriff's officers.
Bus system costs more than Secure Cab
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
A member of Student Senate said last week that the Secure Shuttle, which was costing the University of Kansas about $37.50 per rider, needed to attract more riders.
Chris Shirling, administrative assistant for Senate, said the shuttle. "We've got a lot of students after they we've been drinking, had too few riders to be cost efficient.
“There are lots of reasons for not having enough riders.” Shirling said. “Some people may not know about it, but they need encouragement because you’t call it up.”
Shirling said the cost of running the shuttle was greater than the cost of running Secure Cab, the shuttle's predecessor. The cost of the shuttle was $17.25 per hour and the cab cost was $2.50 per rider. With few riders on the shuttle each week, the average cost was $37.50 per rider.
Secure Shuttle replaced the Secure Cab, known as "Tipsy Taxi," last year. The cab company, which could be called from anywhere in Lawrence, picked people up from local bars and took them home. It eventually was discontinued because students had to wait too long for the car to arrive and because many students abused the program by using the wrong license. Then off at other bars. Also, the cab company gave the cost charged to Student state for each ride from $2.50 to $4. The shuttle follows a specified route and stops at area bars and campus locations about every half hour. It also can hold more people at the time. The shuttle, owned by corporate Coach of Lawrence, seats 12 people.
"But, if you're at a bar, you're not going to say, 'Oh hell, the Secure Shuttle is here so let's go.' '" Shirling said. "You're going to leave when you're ready."
"You see, it doesn't matter if the shuttle has zero riders or if it's full, it runs anyway."
The shuttle runs from midnight to 3 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday.
Scott Russell, transportation coordinator for KU on Wheels, said that about 11 to 15 riders per week took the shuttle home. But, if ridership does not increase within the next month to month and one half, some changes could be made.
Russell said that he planned to increase advertising and general public awareness of the shuttle. He also planned to be developing weekly rideship reports.
"We're going to watch it really closely," he said. "If things don't change we may have to cancel the program and look for alternatives, but we want that to be the last thing we do."
Beginning at Johnny's Up and Under, 401 N. Second St., the shuttle stops at Bogarts of Lawrence, 611 Vermont St.; the Eldridge Hotel 701 Massachusetts St.; the corners of Seventh and New Hampshire, 10th and Massachusetts, 14th and Tennessee, 14th and Ohio, 12th and Oread; and at the Kansas Union and Watson Library. The shuttle then stops at Gammons, 1601 W. 23rd St. It then takes the students home.
A mix of music Symphony celebrates Australian birthday
Bv Katv Monk
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
The Sydney Symphony Orchestra celebrated Australia's 200th birthday with its first-ever trip to the United States, and Lawrence celebrated the orchestra's appearance at KU by proclaiming last week the "Week Down Under."
The orchestra played Saturday night at Hoch Auditorium in a performance sponsored by the University of Kansas. The orchestra headed for their home base at the Sydney Opera House.
Lawrence was the next-to-last stop on the orchestra's 12-city tour, which included a percussion section.
the KU audience of more than 2,000 rose for the orchestra's opening works: the American and Australian national anthems.
The third work of the performance was of particular interest to one member of the audi-
Australian composer Carl Vine, touring with the orchestra, wrote "Symphony No. 2" in Paris in 1940.
it only seven times.
The work started with a collective pluck from the orchestra. It proceeded with rhythmic undertones from the string section, changing moods abruptly from contemplative to driven and sometimes even humorous.
At a reception at the Eldridge Hotel later that night, Vine said he was happy with the perform-
"It's been getting better each time I hear it," he said.
Also touring with the orchestra was master pianist Shura Cerkassky, whose performance in a piano and orchestra concerto by Camille Poulenc drew cries of "Bravo" from the audience.
The final work of the night was "Symphony No. 5," by Dmitri Shostakovich. The orchestra's large string section was well represented in the symphony, which sometimes moved into a marchette tempo that had bows advancing and cadence like cadence like columns of stick figure soldiers.
Although one or two pianissimo moments
were lost amid Hoch's notoriously bad acoustics, conductor Stuart Challendar later had no complaints about the auditorium.
Challendar said that acoustics in the United States were not what the orchestra was used to, but he thought the performance had gone well.
The United States tour had been built around an invitation by the United Nations to perform in honor of the bicentennial, orchestra manager Ann Hoban said.
State and city officials recognized the orchestra's role in assisting the country and to Kansas with a good report on its activities.
At the opening of the performance, Judith Ramaley, KU executive vice chancellor, read a proclamation by Gov. Mike Hayden declaring Nov. 17 "Australia-America Friendship Week." Mayor Bob Schumm was at the performance to declare Lawrence's "Week Down Under."
Concertmaster Donald Hazelwood accepted the honors with humor, saying, "It's a delight to know that even if we're not the flavor of the month, we are the taste of the week."
Oingo Boingo concert draws crowd of all ages
By Deb Gruver Kansan staff writer
Oingo Bongo welcomed Lawrence to their concert with their song "Dead Man's Party" as a crowd of all ages rushed the stage after the lights went off.
Danny Elfman, lead song writer for the band,
screamed "Welcome to the dead man's party."
to the crowd of about 1,000 people in Hoch
Auditorium to begin the concert.
The concert was sponsored by Student Union Association, New West Presentations and radio station KY-17.
Susan Levinson, director of SUA special events, said it cost $8,500 to bring Oingo Boingo to Lawrence.
Levinson said that it cost $5,000 to hire the band and $3,500 to rent the lighting and sound
equipment that was brought by the band. The total fee was split by New West and SUA.
Sitting in the second row, Rick Rhoads, adjunior at Emporia State University, traveled to see the band with a group of friends from Emporia.
"I've been a fan for about eight years, really when they first came out," Rhohsad said. "This is the second time I've seen them — saw them in Davenport, (Iowa) too."
This year marks the Los Angeles-based band's 10th anniversary. They have recently released a compilation of their songs called "Oingo Boingo Alive: A Celebration of a Nine Songs" on cassette and album have 21 songs. Nine songss have been added to the compact disc.
music, including rock'n'roll, jazz, West African
reggae and other types of multi-ethnic sounds
It was a family affair for Kris, Joe and Ellie Gillespie.
The eight-member band plays a variety of
Glaspee.
Kris, a senior at Lawrence High School, said he brought his younger brother and sister to see the show.
"I've always been a fan," said Joe, 9, who mouthed the words to the opening song.
His sister Ellie, 13, said that Joe was probably the family's biggest fan.
The Gillespies were standing in front of the stage barrier. KU student volunteers manned both the doors and the stage.
Charles Walther, a Pittsburgh sophomore wore a white shirt and thought about 1,080 people attended the show.
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2. User Interface
- **Menu Bar:** Menu Bar
- **Toolbars:** Toolbars
- **Dialpad:** Dialpad
- **Keypad:** Keypad
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3. Features
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- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
4. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
5. Security
- **Password:** Password
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- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
6. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
- **FAQ:** FAQ
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7. Accessibility
- **Diagnostic:** Diagnostic
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8. Features
- **Memory:** Memory
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- **CPU:** CPU
- **RAM:** RAM
- **GPU:** GPU
- **Video:** Video
- **Audio:** Audio
- **Speaker:** Speaker
- **Microphone:** Microphone
9. User Interface
- **Menu Bar:** Menu Bar
- **Toolbars:** Toolbars
- **Dialpad:** Dialpad
- **Keypad:** Keypad
- **Swipe Pad:** Swipe Pad
10. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
11. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
12. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
13. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
14. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
15. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
16. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
17. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
18. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
19. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
20. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
21. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
22. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
23. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
24. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
25. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
26. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
27. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
28. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
29. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
30. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
31. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
32. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
33. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
34. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
35. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
36. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
37. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
38. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
39. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
40. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
41. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
42. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
43. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
44. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
45. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
46. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
47. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
48. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
49. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
50. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
51. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
52. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
53. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
54. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
55. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
56. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
57. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
58. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
59. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
60. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
61. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
62. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
63. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
64. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
65. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
66. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
67. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
68. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
69. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
70. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
71. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
72. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
73. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
74. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
75. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
76. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
77. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
78. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
79. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
80. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
81. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
82. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
83. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
84. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
85. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
86. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
87. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
88. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
89. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
90. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
91. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
92. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
93. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
94. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
95. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
96. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
97. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
98. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
99. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
100. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
101. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
102. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
103. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
104. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
105. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
106. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
107. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
108. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
109. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
110. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
111. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
112. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
113. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
114. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
115. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
116. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
117. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
118. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
119. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
120. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
121. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
122. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
123. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
124. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
125. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
126. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
127. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
128. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
129. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
130. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
131. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
132. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
133. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
134. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
135. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
136. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
137. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
138. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
139. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
140. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
141. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
142. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
143. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
144. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
145. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
146. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
147. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
148. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
149. Support
- **Customer Service:** Customer Service
- **Online Help:** Online Help
150. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
151. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
152. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **User ID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
153. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
154. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
155. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
156. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
157. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
158. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
159. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
160. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
161. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
162. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
163. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
164. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
165. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
166. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
167. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
168. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
169. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
170. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
171. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
172. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
173. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
174. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Camera:** Camera
- **Wifi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
175. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
176. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
177. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
178. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
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179. Connectivity
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180. Security
- **Password:** Password
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181. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
182. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
183. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
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- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
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184. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
185. Support
- **Customer服务:** Customer服务
- **Online Help:** Online Help
186. Features
- **Calling:** Calling
- **Fax:** Fax
- **Email:** Email
- **Internet:** Internet
- **GPS:** GPS
- **Smartphone:** Smartphone
- **Tablet:** Tablet
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
187. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
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188. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update:** Firmware Update
189. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
- **Wi-Fi:** Wi-Fi
- **Ethernet:** Ethernet
- **Bluetooth:** Bluetooth
- **MicroSD:** MicroSD
- **SD Card:** SD Card
- **Flash:** Flash
- **Remote Control:** Remote Control
190. Security
- **Password:** Password
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update**
- **UserID:** User ID
- **Firmware Update**
191. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
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192. Connectivity
- **Modem:** Modem
- **Router:** Router
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193. Connectivity
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194. Connectivity
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195. Connectivity
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196. Connectivity
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197. Connectivity
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198. Connectivity
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199. Connectivity
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Monday, November 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Once more, endorsements for election-day contests
As election-eve food for thought, here are summaries of the Kansan editorial board's candidate endorsements:
PRESIDENT: Michael Dakakis
Vice President George Bush has tried to label the Massachusets governor as a dangerous radical, but it is Bush who has made the decision potentially most dangerous to the nation. He chose Dan Quayle as his running mate. Bush also has been part of an administration that has run up a tremendous deficit, ignored vital social issues and made "government" synonymous with "unethical."
U.S. HOUSE: Jim Slattery
Dukakis, on the other hand, has a strong running mate in Lloyd Bentsen, has run a clean campaign. He has made himself easily accessible to the public and has shown through his proposals on health insurance, daycare, student loans and other issues that he has his priorities right for leading the United States for at least the next four years.
U. S. HOUSE: Jim Houser, for Senate, has an impressive record in southeastern Kansas. He has worked to help rural Kansans, promoted innovative business options for the state and labored to keep Haskell Indian Junior College open.
Keep Haskell Indian Junior college in comparison, Phil Meinhardt, the Republican candidate, has a career serving the Air Force around the world. But that hardly prepares him to be a servant to the people of northeast Kansas. Also, some of his campaign tactics cause his competence to be questioned.
Wint Winter, Republican, has been a good friend of the University of Kansas. KU needs such a strong ally as the battle for the second year of the Margin of Excellence gets underway.
tence to
KANSA SENATE: Wint Winter
His main challenger, Mike DuPree, Democrat, has some interesting ideas regarding the environment. Although those ideas warrant attention, they aren't the biggest concerns facing the state and KU now.
KANSAS HOUSE: Jessie Branson, Betty Jo Charlton
KINGSBAS HOUSE! Jessie Branson, Betty Branson, in the 44th district, incumbent Jessie Branson, a Democrat has four terms of experience fighting for KU and important social issues. Her opponent, Renee McGhee, is a master's degree candidate at KU and has experience on Student Senate Branson deserves her fifth term.
In the 46th District, Betty Jo Charlton, a Democrat, has 12 years of legislative experience, an excellent record on environmental issues and has supported the Margin of Excellence. Her Republican opponent, Bernie Norwood, has no comparable experience and has not promised extensive support to KU. STATE: Anderson
SHERIFF: Loren Anderson Loren Anderson, Republican, has been with the Douglas County Sheriff's office since 1965. In that time, he's proven his dedication to law enforcement. He was a charter member and is director of the Capitol Area Major Case Squad. He also has supported having additional officers on patrol expanding the HELP identification system for rural areas.
Gale Pinegar, Democrat, has criticized the Anderson's department using confusing statistics, but he hasn't said how he'd solve those problems.
COUNTY COMMISSION: Tom Pyle, I.J. Stoneback
These races have been uninspiring, but Tom Pyle and I.J.
Stoneback come out as the lesser evils in their respective
races. In the 2nd District, Pyle is preferable to opponent Mike
Amyx because Pyle has been a leader in Eudora for 12 years
as a member of the city council, whereas Amyx has been part
of a Lawrence city commission that hasn't been able to show
leadership on several important issues.
leadership on several important issues. In the 3rd District, Stoneback is the choice over Louie McElhaney because of his county commission experience and strong stands in favor of a south Lawrence trafficway. McElhaney lacks government experience and has taken no formal campaign platform.
VOTING
Finally, the Kansan encourages everybody to vote tomorrow, regardless of whom they support. May the best candidates win.
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board
The editorial board
The editorial board consists of Michael Merschel, Mark Tilford, Todd Cohen, Michael Horak, Julie Adam, Julie McMahon, Christine Martin, Tony Balandran and Mukha Jost.
News staff
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Jule Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Ill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Business star
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Kurt Messersmith...Promotions manager
Sarah Hidden...Marketing manager
Brad Leenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Asst. production manager
Michael Lehman...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
recruity or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
You receive the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They
The Kansan reserves the right to re edit or edit letters and guest columns can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editor board.
**Letters** should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the student's name, address, name and telephone number. If the writer is the university's President of University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 605-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart-Finn Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, daily during the regular school year, excluded Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday, the summer session. Second-class students is paid $200, Kan. 6044. Annual subscription are $60. Student descriptions are $3 and are paid monthly changes to the student activity fee.
POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
Partisan picks for president
ALEXANDRA M. LEE
awt Eames/KANSAN
Bush knows how best to lead the U.S.
When we set aside all of the accusations and innuendos, the charges of racism and lack of patriotism, the negative advertisements and made-for-TV sound bites that have been the product of both parties during the 1988 presidential campaign, the voters of this nation still are left with a fundamental decision between two very different ideologies which would guide the United States into the 1990s.
continually.
George Bush has been prepared for the challenges that face this nation as we head for the year 2000. As the Western world witnesses unprecedented change occurring in the Soviet Union under Mikhail Gorbachev, it is vital for
Brett Frazier
At one time during the presidential campaign, the Democratic nominee tried to tell this nation that competence was the key to the future, and that ideology and a sense of direction was not needed to govern America. As I get ready to join the working world in a few months, I emphatically reject this notion. Competence is what makes the whistle blow every hour to signal the end of classes, but it has no idea which class I'm going to attend next. Competence makes the KU buses run up and down the Hill on schedule, but without any idea where their passengers will be going, or what is taking place in the University community.
KU Republicans
Now is not the time for on-the-job training. We need a president who understands the complexities of foreign policy, and one who knows that you sometimes have to deal with enemies and adversaries in order to advance the long-term interests of this nation. We don't need a governor whose idea of national security and foreign policy is unilaterally withdrawing the state's National Gaard troops from military maneuvers.
the United States to show stability and a willingness to meet whatever challenges the Soviets might hand us.
When I think about bringing home my first paycheck after college, the thought of increased tax rates concerns me. When George Bush pledges not to raise taxes, it is a symbolic way of telling me that as president, runaway government spending will be his first target, not my billfold.
transmission.
As I interview for jobs and think about buying a new car, it strikes home when I look at the low interest rates, low inflation, low unemployment, and the high rate of job creation that has been trademarked of the past eight years. To use a cliche: If it's not broke, don't fix it. George Bush will provide the necessary repairs to those areas that need it, but this nation doesn't need a new
buffalo
Considering that I'm a student, George Bush's plan of an IRA for my education, with tax-free status, makes more sense than treating the program like the present Social Security system, which would have me paying for someone else's education, as the Democratic nominee proposes.
There are many other issues that are of great importance to this nation, and I'm not going into the voting booth with blinders affixed. I realize that the past eight years have not been all milk and honey, but it is clear that this nation, though not following the straightest of paths, is not headed in the wrong direction.
George Bush provides both an ideology and a high degree of competence to lead this nation into the 1990s. The choice for president is clear.
Brett Frazier is a Pratt senior majoring in economics and chairman of KU College Republicans.
Bush would lead in the wrong direction
10
This year's presidential election has not fueled the passions of the American people. Many have already decided to not make a decision on Tuesday. They feel that the issues discussed by the candidates do not relate to them or have any effect on their lives. This assumption is absolutely false.
assume that the next president will lead us in the direction that we move as a society. Are we going to be a society in which each individual is concerned only with his own welfare, or are we going to be a society that cares about the welfare of each member?
Today, more than 38 million people live below the poverty level. The number is rising slowly each year. The majority of the poor are not unemployed; on the contrary, they do work, but still are unable to work their way out of poverty. What message do we want to send to the people? Do we tell them just to salute the flag, say their Pledge to be good used to being poor, or do we send the message that our employment and society will help them become productive citizens? Although George Bush claims he is concerned about the poor and the homeless, he has not addressed these issues.
MOTOR CENTER
George Bush has run a campaign based on labeling $\clubsuit$ The Republicans have labeled Gov. Michael Dukakis as being soft on crime. The Bush campaign has hashed and rehashed the Massachusetts furghold program without giving
Debbie Bengston Namyon Kim
KU Democrats
George Bush, while using this as an issue against Michael Dukakis, has neglected to mention that he supported a federal furlough program that furloughed a convict who raped and murdered a minister's wife during his furlough. Bush, in fact, awarded a medal to the program one year after the incident.
all facts, Dukakis inherited the furlough program in 1972 from Republican Gov. Francis Sargent; Dukakis actually signed legislation to make the program more restrictive.
program one year later.
George Bush has been hiding behind such non-issues because he has no real plans or programs to help improve this nation. He says he will not raise taxes and will balance the budget, but he has no workable plan to accomplish this goal. He says that he wants a kinder and gentler nation, yet for the past eight years he has stood by while massive cuts in programs vital to the nation have been made.
Employment and training programs have been cut by 52 percent under the Reagan administration. Funding for education has been cut by 8 percent. Such programs are essential to
many who are trying to escape from poverty. The money saved from these programs did not help balance the budget; instead, it went towards increasing our military spending 55 percent. If George Bush cares so much about the "little" people, where has he been these past eight years?
In his only major decision as a presidential contender, George Bush has chosen Sen. Dar. Quayle of Indiana as his running mate. Before the announcement of his running mate, George Bush said, "Watch my decision, and that will tell all." Conservative columnist William F. Buckley has been quoted as saying that Dar Quayle's question is as Eisenhower drunk? "Yes, we should丘pray for the good health of George Bush." George Bush has not exercised good judgment in his most important decisions thus far. Can we trust him with future judgments that will affect all of us?
Through negative campaigning, George Bush has become his party's nominee. Kansas Sen. Bob Dole told the truth about George Bush "Stop lying about my record." Dole said in frustration after the New Hampshire primary. But the lies continued, and then he didn't let George Bush do to Michael Dukakis what he did to Bob Dole. Don't listen to the lies.
- Debbie Bengtson is a Junction City senior and chairman of the Dukakis campus committee. Namyon Kim is a Junction City senior.
BLOOM COUNTY
WHO IS IT?
WALTER MONDALE.!
© 1998 Washington Post CO
GUESS WHAT ?!
HE KNOWS WE'RE DOWN
NINETY POINTS IN THE
POLLS. SO HE'S OFFERED
TO JOIN THE TICKET FOR
A MUCH-
NEEPED
BOOST!!
by Berke Breathed
ISN'T THAT SUPER?
IT'S A GO!
BRING SOME
FRITOS!
WHY
NOT.
---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 7, 1988
5
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BERNIE NORWOOD says YES to the Margin of Excellence
46th District
BERNIE NORWOOD
BERNIE NORWOOL says NO to Washburn University as a Regents School.
says YES to higher salaries for our teachers and student employees.
says YES to the Margin of Excellence
BERNIE NORWOOD says YES to a cleaner environment.
BERNIE NORWOOD is a leader that will stand tough on tough issues for Lawrence and the University of Kansas.
Fredrick T. Washington
On Nov. 8
Vote YES for Strong Leadership.
Vote for BERNIE NORWOOD.
Pd. for by committee to elect Bernie Norwood, Cliff Lafrenz, Treasurer.
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
CITYSCAPE
Monday
eign student services is sponsoring the event.
An Immigration Options Workshop will be from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union. Howard Eisberg, attorney, will speak on temporary or permanent career employment in the United States after graduation. For
- The KU Undergraduate Anthropology Association will meet at 4 p.m. in 617 Fraser Hall.
Tuesday
8
Maranatha Christian Ministries will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
- The Hispanic American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
- Environers will have information on recycling and other environmental issues from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the east lawn of Wescoe Hall.
"Epilogue. The End," a biblical seminar, will begin at 3:00 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread.
■ Bernard Bailyn, Adams University Professor, will speak on "The Ideological Fulfillment of the American Revolution Interpreting the Constitution," at 8 p.m. in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union
Wednesday
9
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will meet from 6 to 7:30 p.m. room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the east lawn of Wescoe Hall.
Communicating in loving relationships, a workshop sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union
Environs will have information on recycling and other environmental issues
The University Forum will feature Beatrice Wright speaking on "Psychological Mission to China. Two Goals, Two Puzzles," at an hour at the ECM building. To reserve a hot lunch call 214-9339 or Tuesday. Lunch line open at 11:40.
The KU Chess Club will meet at 7 p.m. in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
Thursday
The Baptist Student Union will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the american Baptist Church.
10
The KU American Chemical Society Student Affiliates will meet at 7 p.m. in 2017 Malott Hall.
KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. in
the Catherine Building.
Psi Chi will meet at 6 p.m. in 547 Fraser Hall
Latin American Solidarity will host speaker Mary Kaye Mayer at 6:30 p.m. at m.
Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Parair A of the Kansas Union.
Canterbury House offers the holy eucharist at noon at Dartnorth Chapel.
the ECM building, 1204 Oread. Meyer will speak on her accompaniment of Salvadoran refugees struggling to relocate from the Mesa Grande camp in Honduras to their original home areas in El Salvador. A rice and beans dinner will
Sunday at noon at Danforth Chapel
GLSOK will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
11
Friday
**Inter-Versity Christian Fellowship**
will meet at 7 p.m. in the Flower Room
at the Burge Union.
A **white elephant sale** sponsored by the KU Undergraduate Anthropology Association will begin at 9 a.m. at 1231 Oread, next to Fraser Hall.
Ecumenica Christian Ministries is sponsoring a free movie at 7:30 p.m. on the ECM building, 1204 Oread. The movie will be "Gaby A True Story."
Sara Paretsky, novelist and feminist activist, will speak at 4 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium. Paretsky will speak on the topic "From Angel to Witch: The Moral Decline of American Women in 20th Century Detective Fiction." The Women's Studies Program is sponsoring the event.
Saturday
12
The International Fok Dance Club will meet from 7:30 to 10 p.m at St John's Gymnasium, 12th and Kentucky.
■ Round Up for Hunger, a service project of the United Methodist Church, will begin at 9 a.m. at the ECM center, 1204 Oread.
The white elephant sale sponsored by the KU Undergraduate Anthropology Association will be at 7 p.m. at 1231 Oread, next to Fraser Hall.
Sunday
13
**KU Bible Study** holds worship servi-
at the Kansas Union con-
sents at 10:30 a.m. in the Jawhawk Room
KU defeats K-State in senate basketball
By Craig Welch
By Craig Weich Kansan staff writer
With a last second three-pointer, Kyle Whetterspoon and the KU Student Senate basketball team beat Kent State in a 36-47 yesterday in Allen Field House.
Witherons, Nuneman senator, led the newly formed Senate team to its first victory against rival Kansas State University. The two schools were defeated, although they had been trying to schedule a game for three years.
Jane Hutchinson, KU student executive committee chairman, said, "It just never worked out before. We've been trying for three years. It was a challenge to be the first KU team out. We work a lot together on Senate stuff. We just
thought it would be fun."
Doug Folk, K-State student body president, said before the game, "The object of the game is to have fun. After yesterday's fluke (KU) victory against K-State in football), we're ready to get even."
The rules, agreed upon by both teams, stated that a minimum of two females must be on the court at all times. For K.State, that meant that their two women had to play the entire game.
Despite their smaller numbers, K-State led the game until the final seconds. Witherspoon's last second shot broke a 47-47 tie which marked the first time KU led during the game.
State's largest cocaine bust reported; 3 jailed
The Associated Press
WICHTTA — Federal agents confiscated nearly 12 pounds of cocaine last night in a Wichita restaurant, authorities said in Kansas history, authorities said.
Three Texas residents were arrested, said Otto Privette, head of
1.
the Drug Enforcement Agency's Wichita-based task force.
Agents confiscated $11\frac{1}{4} pounds of cocaine that could have a street value of nearly $1.4 million. Privitee said. He said the bags contained nearly pure cocaine that had been brought into the country direct from Colombia.
6
Monday, November 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Quayle hunting republican votes
The Associated Press
CHARLES CITY, Va. — Sen.
Dan Quayle bristled yesterday
over suggestions he is being used
sparingly by the Bush presidential
campaign, and a Bush spokesman
called such speculation a "phony-
baloney argument."
even before Quayle, the Republican vice president nominee, went on a tour of the historic Berkeley Plantation here, the senator was hit with questions about why he was spending the day visiting Virginia, a so-called "sate state" for the GOP ticket, with Election Day rapidly approaching.
As he boarded the "Hosier Pride" campaign plane near Washington for the 45-minute flight to Richmond, Quayle was asked whether the Bush campaign was limiting his appearances to areas already considered in the GOP column.
GOF column.
"Yeah, we're in safe states for the Republicans, like West Virginia and Maryland, and states like that," he cracked sarcastically. "They're very traditional Republican (territory) and that's why we went there." Maryland and West Virginia traditionally have been strongly Democratic.
strongly asked. Quayle was asked the same question as he and his wife, Marilyn, emerged from a Baptist church in suburban Richmond where they attended services.
Quayle called his outing "a great schedule" and said "we'll get the message out because national television will put on great smiling faces."
He spent over an hour at the
plantation site, greeting visitors and giving a short speech. Quayle was returning to Washington later in the day.
The Indiana junior senator had complained about the Bush campaign scheduling last week, although his objection was to sudden changes in schedules, rather than to the sites selected for him.
Officials of the Bush and Quayle campaigns have sought to minimize speculation in recent days that the senator has been sent to smaller, strong-GOP bastions, in an attempt to keep Quayle out of the limelight and minimize any Election Day losses stemming from polls showing public doubts about his fitness for the high office.
Yesterday, Bush campaign spokesman Mark Goodin accompanied Quayle on the trip to Virginia. Goodin said he came along because he has relatives in Richmond, but the spokesman also took pains to deny to reporters that the Bush campaign was trying to keep Quayle hidden as Election Day draws near.
"He came to Virginia because Sen. (John) Warner asked him to." Goodaid said.
The Bush spokesman said that Quayle's value to the ticket has been as "an anchor" to the GOP's strong base in the South, border states and the Indiana senator's native Midwest.
Goodin also said that in recent days, Quayle has been assigned principally the responsibility of keeping GOP faithful from becoming complacent.
CHICAGO — Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen said yesterday that the presidential campaign, would not leave the next president with a mandate, no matter who won.
ELECTION
88
PRESIDENT
The Associated Press
No mandate for president, Bentsen says
"That means more work and a lot more swabbing that has to be done, and I think Mike Dukakis can do that," he said.
of his party's standard bearer.
of his party's leaders on both NBC-TV "Meet the Bentonism incident on CBS-TV" "Face the Nation." NBC said Republican Dan Quayle had also been invited but turned down the invitation, and journalists on the show said Quayle had appeared on no national television interview shows during the campaign.
On CBS, Bentsen predicted that congressional Democrats would not gang up on Bush if Bush was elected.
"Not gang up, no, but I don't think he gets any brownie points (from) the kind of campaign he's run. It's been an extremely negative one." the Texas senator said.
Benten reiterated his indignation at the Republican's negative advertisements.
"They've had an effect, and they've hurt and they demean the process," he told NBC.
Bush's wife and one of his sons defended the vice president on CBS.
"You can persuade me that George has run a dirt campaign." Barbara Bush said. "He hasn't a runny head."
Jeb Bush said Dukakis was fair game, and he didn't expect his father to face resentment if
"My dad has a great ability to heal wounds." he
said.
Bentsen, asked if Bush would find a stalemate greeting him because of a lack of a mandate on specific issues, said: "Frankly, I don't think either candidate at this point has a serious mandate."
Afterward, he told reporters, "Michael Dukakis will not have as much of a mandate as he deserves because it was difficult to get the issues across with all the clutter of negative advertising. But I also believe the two of us together, with me as vice president . . . that we will be able to get our legislative program through better than George Bush and Dan Quayle would."
Hensen said that if he returned to his post as chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, he would not try to use that forum to wreak vengeance on Bush.
"We have too much at stake in this country to try to seek revenge or something like that," he said.
Campaign Roundup
JACKSON MAY RUN AGAIN: Jesse Jackson, twice defeated for the Democratic presidential nomination, says he "was a heartbeat away from the presidency" this year and suggests he will run for the White House in 1992 if Dukaiks loses. "If Michael Dukaiks loses on Tuesday, the next political season will begin on Wednesday," Jackson said in an interview published in yesterday's Chicago Sun-Times. In the interview, Jackson said he feels Dukaiks can still defeat Bush, but if he doesn't, the Chicagoan is looking at a third run for the White House.
KANSAS PAPERS FOR DUKAKI: In something of a political irony, more daily newspapers with circulation in Republican-dominated Kansas have endorsed Michael Dukaki for president than those who gave their editorial nods to George Bush. A survey of 21 dailies who had published presidential endorsements through yesterday showed 11 for Dukaki, seven backed Bush and three said they could not endorse either candidate. The newspapers with the largest circulations in Kansas, the Wichita Eagle-Beacon and the Kansas City Star and Times, endorsed Dukaki, along with the Hutchinson News, Kansas City Kansan, Salina Journal, Olathe Daily News, Atchison Globe, Ottawa
Herald, Junction City Daily Union, University Daily Kansan and the Kansas State College. On the other side, the Topeka Capital Journal, Lawrence Journal-World, Emporia Gazette, Iola Register, Manhattan Mercury, Parsons Sun and Garden City Telegram endorsed Bush.
VOTING TIME LIMITED: A federal appeals court in San Francisco yesterday allowed county election officials may use a law limiting people to 10 minutes in a voting booth, saving there was no evidence it would be strictly enforced. "The court has rightly recognized that this standard that has been in use for nearly 100 years is an appropriate reminder to the voter," said Chief Deputy Secretary of State Tony Miller. He added that "no elections official is going to reject any bodies from the booths," but many instead could now diplomatically remind voters to complete ballots as quickly as possible.
BUSH WIDEN'S LEAD IN KANSAS: Vice President George Bush has widened his lead over Gov. Michael Dukakis in the final Kansas Poll published yesterday in the Topeka Capital Journal. The poll of 1,000 registered voters who said they intend to vote gave Bush 49 percent to 35 percent for Dukakis, while the remaining 16
percent had not made up their minds — an unusually large block of undecided voters this close to an election. However, when it projected how the vdecidedes would go, Central Research Corp. of Topea, predicted Bush would win Kansas by a 55-44 margin. In the four congressional races, the final poll showed incumbent Democrats Jim Slattery and Dan Glickman and Republicans Jan Meyers and Bob Whittaker with large leads over their challengers.
LOW VOTER TURNOUT EXPECTED: Arkansas Republicans are concerned about voters who would rather hunt deer than go to the polls. In California, officials worry that the lengthy ballot will keep people away, and Oklahomaans think the negative tone of the presidential race has simply turned voters off. With only half of eligible voters expected to turn out for tomorrows' balloting when a new Republican, 33 senators and House members will be elected, Oklahomaians and Democrats alike are keenly aware that getting people to vote will be their No. 1 challenge. But nationwide, public-interest groups predict that only 50 percent or less of the eligible voters will turn out, one of the lowest percentages this century and down from the 1984 figure of 53 percent.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 7, 1988
Nation/World
7
Germans reminded of a night of terror
Day to be spent remembering Holocaust
The Associated Press
KOENGISTEIN, West Germany — West Germans began a solemn remembrance yesterday of the Nazi Kristallnacht, the brutal night of terror a half-century ago that led to the Holocaust.
Residents of this picturesque town north of Frankfurt placed a wreath at the site where the synagogue was burned down Nov. 10, 1938.
During the next few days, hundreds of local gatherings, panel discussions and expositions will be held throughout West Germany. The national day of observance takes place in Frankfurt on Wednesday, 50 years to the day after the massacre began.
In Austria, Jewish leaders and city officials unveiled five plaques to commemorate the destruction of 49 German syagmagues by Nazi terror squads.
East Germans have been staging Kristallnacht ceremonies for weeks, emphasizing how Communists and Jews were persecuted by the Nazis.
Peter Kirchner, the head of East Berlin's small Jewish community, said his nation appeared to be learn- ing from lessons of the past than West Germany.
The terror began Nov. 9, 1938, when Nazi烟 burned synagogues, destroyed Jewish businesses and beat up Jews.
Limits on TV ads vetoed
The Associated Press
Children's TV activists said yesterday that they were outraged by President Reagan's veto of a bill to limit advertising during children's sports events, an ecological child abuse" and promising to revive the legislation next year.
Despite lopsided passage of the bill by Congress, Reagan vetoed it Saturday night on the grounds that it would constitute institutional guarantees of free speech.
has put commercialconsiderations and ideological precepts ahead of children's interests," said Rep. Edward J. Markev, D-Mass.
"Consistently this administration
The bill would have reimposed advertising limits scrapped by the Federal Communications Commission four years ago under the theory that an open marketplace would best regulate commercials for children.
The measure also would have required TV broadcasters to provide educational and informational programming for children
South African blasts foreign press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — In a bitter shouting match with journalists, Foreign Minister Pik Botha described the foreign media as "thieves and enemies" who know "absolutely nothing" about South Africa.
The Associated Press
Both criticized the journalists during a hostile question-and-answer period after his speech at a Saturday night banquet put on by the Foreign Correspondents Association.
Correspondence Among other issues, questions touched on the closing of an anti-apartheid newspaper and on detentions of anti-apartheid activists.
I am sick and tired of a lot of foreign representatives descending on my country and picking up on all the dirty work they were doing in my country will. Both said after an argumentative exchange with one journalist.
"You don't understand Africa. You don't understand African aspirations. You don't understand African history," he said.
The 400 people attending included foreign and local journalists and their guests, such as U.S. Ambassador to China, Jeffrey L. Reed.
"Blacks don't want a Westminster-style democracy," he said. "Even if you could remove all the whites from South Africa tomorrow ... what you put here will not work."
"Will you just sit down and listen to a man who has traveled through Africa?" Botha told another person, Irene.
Both said he supported last week's government suspension of the anti-apartheid Weekly Mail newspaper. He described the newspaper as one of the few in the world to address around the world, and said it contributed to
violence in South Africa.
Asked why members of an extreme right-wing white group were not detained as frequently as anti-parteid activists, Botha said, "Don't be stupid. It's not a question of arresting a few people and that's the end of it."
The African National Congress is the main group fighting South Africa's white-led government and its system of apartheid, under which the black majority has no voice in national affairs.
At the end of the hour-long impromptu debate, the host offered to thank Botha, but the foreign minister refused to accept. Instead he returned from his seat to the podium and quoted a speech by Paul Kruger, a 19th century South African politician.
News Roundup
SOLIDARITY THREATENS STRIKES: Solidarity leaders yesterday threatened broad protests, including strikes, if the government does not reverse its decision to close the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk. The statement was the strongest yet by the banned trade union movement on the planned closing of the yard, where Solidarity began. Solidarity, which in August helped end Poland's worst wave of strikes in seven years, now appears to be on a collision course with the communist government.
BRITISH INTELLIENCE EMPLOYEES FIRED: Four men have been fired for flouting a 1984 ban on unions at Britain's top secret intelligence-gathering headquarters, provoking new charges that Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government is undermining civil liberties. The four are among a handful of holdouts at the Government Communications Headquarters, which eavesdrops on the Soviet Union and whose work Thatcher maintains is too sensitive to risk disruption by strikes.
WEST BANK VIOLENCE: Israeli troops fired on stone-throwing youths during a raid of a West Bank village yesterday, killing an 18-year-old Palestinian. Twelve more people were reported wounded in clashes across the occupied territories. An Israeli newspaper reported that Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir's Likud bloc has a plan to end the Palestinian revolt by breaking up the refugee camps that have been at the center of violence.
QULF TRAINING MANEUVERS: The six states of the Gulf Cooperation Council have launched their largest-ever joint air force maneuvers, involving 44 warplanes, a government spokesman said yesterday. The 10-day exercises aim to train pilots and officers on how to deal with the different types of aircraft used by the Gulf Cooperation Council, said Maj. Bader Saleh, a spokesman for the Kuwait Defense Ministry.
SOVIETS HALT WITHDRAWAL: Afghan rebels fired three rockets into Kabul yesterday, the official Soviet news agency Tass reported. It did not say if there were any casualties. The Soviet Union announced Friday it was stopping the withdrawal of more than 100,000 Soviet troops from Afghanistan because of increased attacks on government positions by Moslem rebels.
NEWSPAPERMAN DIES: Norman N. Newhouse, a "shirtleaves newspaperman" who helped his family build the world's largest privately held communications empire, died yesterday after a long illness. He was #82. The empire is run by S.I. Newhouse's two sons, Samuel I. Jr. and Donald. It includes Vogue, Gourmet, Vanity Fair, HG, GQ and the New Yorker magazines, the Parade Sunday newspaper supplement, the Random House book publishing group and cable television systems.
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County voters face tax issue Resolution would allow commissioners to increase mill levy
By Barbara Joseph Kansan staff writer
Voters in tomorrow's election will be asked to say yes or no to a resolution that would allow Douglas County commissioners to raise the mill levy for the county general fund.
Charter Resolution No. 88-61-1 would allow commissioners to increase the mill levy up to 10.5 mills, if needed. The current mill levy is 8.5 mills.
A homeowner with whose house has a market value of $50,000 has an assessed value of approximately $4,000 and would pay an additional $3 proper in the will levy was increased to the return, 10.9 mills.
mAx a mill is a tax rate of $1 per $1,000 of assessed valuation.
A yes vote means the commissioners would be permitted to raise the levy. A no vote means the commissioners would not be permitted to raise the levy.
levy The resolution will be proposed to voters countywide. It would not automatically raise taxes.
It would not have happened. The resolution was placed on the ballot by a voter's petition about two months ago. Before the petition, the commission had requested an increase of two-tenths of a mill, which would have raised $43,000 in revenue.
raised $43,000 in revenue.
According to information provided by The League of Women Voters of Lawrence-Douglas Co., the increase allowed by the resolution would have no effect until 1990 when the 1991 budget is prepared.
It would allow commissioners to raise an addi
tional $462,000 in revenue, for use in emergency funding for state-mandated programs. Such programs include community college tuition and legal defense services for juvenile offenders, child abuse victims and criminal defendants.
adobe victims and criminals The resolution also would allow financing of economic development, such as that at East Hills Business Park.
BUSINESS PKR
Support of the resolution have argued that backbacks and loss of federal revenue sharing in social services make additional taxing authority necessary.
necessary. They also have said that it was the duty of the county to promote industrial development as a way to provide jobs for young people and keep them in the county. Job opportunities would increase the tax base.
increase the opportunities of the resolution have said that commissioners needed to establish better spending priorities and use current resources for these programs
They say that the county shouldn't be in the business of subsidizing private economic efforts or economic growth. Rapid growth could lead to increased taxes due to more demands for government services.
ment services.
The county general fund is one of 25 county funds. It is primarily supported by property taxes.
A survey of county commission candidates on the issue produced two yes votes, one no vote and one refusal to give an opinion.
"I would be in favor of allowing commissioners to raise, the mill levy to the limit," said I.J.
Stoneback, Democratic candidate for the 3rd District. Stoneback is running against Republican Loue McEhlanney for Commissioner Warren Rhodes 'seat'.
Robbins seat.
Another who would vote yes is Tom Pyle.
Republican candidate in the 2nd District, who is running against Democrat Mike Amyx. Pyle and Amyx are seeking Commissioner David Hopper's seat.
"It's (the referendum) only to give commissioners the opportunity to raise the mill levy; it doesn't mean they will." Pyle said. "I think it's terrible to handcuff the commissioners. The resolution amounts to providing emergency money they can get to if they need to."
get to it they need. Pyle said he did not believe in government by petition, believing petitions are favored by those who are not willing to run for office and deal realistically with the problems. He said the petitioners were also against economic growth.
"You have to have faith in the competence of the commission," Pyle said. "People have lost confidence in the current commission, but this will handcuff the new one."
Amyx said he was not in favor of allowing commissioners the option of raising the mill levy. "I felt they could have found $41,000 already in that budget somewhere without raising the mill levy." Amyx said.
McElhaney said he could see positive and negative sides to the issue. He would not give a definite opinion.
"Remember the old saying'the rich get richer?' Well, Mr. Bush wants to make that the law." — Michael Dukakis Honor the Tradition VOTE A Repressive Regime James Buchanan
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 7, 1988
9
Yoko Ono brings her performance art to Kansas City
By M. Meredith Relph
Kansan staff writer
Yoko Ono
In 1966, Yoko Ono presented a show of conceptual art in London where one of the exhibits, "Nail It," consisted of a board into which visitors were asked to pay five schillings to pound an imaginary nail.
A man named John Lenon asked her if, since the nail was imaginary, could
he pay her an imaginary five schillings?
That meeting provoked one of the most highly-publicized musical, artistic and marital collaborations in the 20th century. Much has been written about the Japanese woman and the former Beatle, but Yoko Ono is an artist and musician in her own right.
Although her own career has been set aside for several years because of her collaboration with Lennon, Ono was at the University of Missouri-Kansas City on Friday to promote her first major art show since 1972 with a press conference. She supervised the set-up of the
UMKC exhibit, titled "Yoko Ono: Three Events"
The show, which is free to the public, opened yesterday and will run through Dec. 16.
UMKC Gallery director, Craig Subler said Oone's show had been financed by the university department of contemporary art and the Missouri Arts Council.
Subler introduced Ono without elaborating on her artwork, simply saying that the pieces required participation by the viewers.
"It's up to Yoko to explain the pieces," Subler said.
said.
Ono's "Three Events" consists of a white-lacquered chess set on a white board, titled "Play It With Trust," a white broken teacup exhibit, "Mend," and a new version of Ono's "1966' Nail It' exhibition. The 1888 version does not have a fee and has real nails, of which Ono hammered the first into the exhibit.
"I needed the money then (in 1966)." Ono said.
"It was a long time ago and this version is a totally different experience. It's not just exhibited, it grows."
While "Nail it" required physical participation, the other two pieces in the show used
mental and emotional energy, Ono said.
She said the chess set had been called "Play it With Trust" because all the pieces were the same color and opponents had to trust one another to keep track of the right pieces.
Ono said her art pieces spoke for themselves. "I don't have to make a statement about them," she said.
Ono's work is called conceptual or performance art, and she said that while these types of exhibits were avant-garde in the 1960s, they were experiencing a growth in popularity during the 1980s.
the 1980s.
"The 60s were very exciting." Ono said.
"There is still a lot to do today. This generation of children is very interested in the 60s. My son (Sean) is always asking me, 'What was it like then?' "
then? Ono said that many people would be interested in seeing her work because of her association with Lennon.
with Lebanon.
"But that doesn't matter. He would be right here," she said, indicating the seat next to her. "That was the beautiful thing about our relationship. We were both in love with each other's work."
图文
Yoko Ono, conceptual artist and widow of John Lennon,hammers in the first nail of her sculpture "Nail It." Ono was in Kansas City Friday to promote her art show.
Station Breidendahl
The hill overlooking Memorial Stadium offers a different atmosphere for a Saturday afternoon football game. Steve Gosling, Los Alamos, N.M., junior, and Amy Gustafson, Lenexa sophomore, had a barbecue before the K-State game Saturday.
VICTORY
Continued from p. 1
Myrick said he felt slightly disoriented after he was free and had to dodge a hoard of students bolting for the opposite goal post.
mug of the open cup."
"I had to get up and run because."
I didn't want to get stamped," he said. "I was lucky."
Lawrence Memorial Hospital reported treating one student with a head injury. Watkins said injury figures were not available.
figures were the wrecks. Security didn't try to control the fans that ran onto the field, Myrick said.
"They let them (tear down the goal posts)," he said. "They didn't try to stop anyone."
KU athletic director Bob Frederick said he felt badly for the injured students.
"That's always a concern." Frederick said. "That's one of the reasons that the goal posts have gotten lighter and lighter, and they go down a little easier.
"It's not something I'd like to have as a regular occurrence because it's expensive, but under the circumstances, I was as excited as the students. I hope we can get an equally enthusiastic response for the Missouri game."
A portion of the goal post was carried out of the stadium and thrown into Potter Lake where another student was injured. The name of the student was not released.
released. "There was a guy lying on the ground with a bad cut on his
torehead," said Mike Diggs, Wichta senior. "He was bleeding pretty bad.
"Someone was holding a shirt on his head, and it looked as if he didn't seem about his senses. I was worried that this guy might go into shock."
As the crowd of students carried the post to the lake, they maneuvered it through the trees, and the injury occurred as the post was
being turned, Diggs said
He said he wasn't surprised that someone was injured.
"Everytime you hear about some goal posts being torn down, you hear about someone getting hurt," he said.
Diggs said the attitudes of onlookers also discouraged him.
"Someone said, 'He's got a victory scar,' Diggs. "It's great to win a game, but you hate
to see someone get hurt when they don't have to, and to trivialize it by saying he got a victory scar was bad."
The students' wild antics, however, weren't enough to ruin the Jayhawks' first victory of the season.
"How can you not be in favor of seeing some students excited about a football victory?" Diggs said.
KU, city leaders plan to bolster interaction
By Craig Welch
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas administrators, city leaders and members of Student Senate agreed Friday to increase communication between the University and the surrounding community.
Sherri Sweers, holdover senator, arranged a breakfast at 7:30 a.m. Friday in the English Room at the Kansas Union for about 20 city, county and University location to get breakfast well about issues that con-[ed both KU and Douglas County, she said.
she said.
Sweers opened the discussion by suggesting that regular, structured meetings between the three groups should be scheduled more often than once per semester.
Jane Hutchinson, Student Senate executive committee chairman, said that she thought there was a need for more interaction between students and the community.
"Often, the only real contact students have with the Lawrence community is negative," she said. "That's partially our (students) fault, but I think there is a lot that can be done."
Bob Schumm, Lawrence mayor agreed.
"I think it's a great idea," he said
"It's hard to know what the people of Lawrence want. I think meeting a couple of times a semester would be a great help. You can gain a lot of information during an hour-long breakfast."
breakfast. Sweers also mentioned that many students would like to become more involved in the community. She said that many students were interested in gaining experience by contributing to the community through volunteer service.
Brook Menges, student body president, said that communication between the city and the University was important in this area.
names. Menees said that he had worked with organizations in the Lawrence area that didn't know where to get student help. He said, "They know there are warm bodies out there, but they don't know where to go to find them."
Schumm said that he and David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, would work out a schedule for future meetings.
Another topic was a proposed amendment to the Kansas Constitution that would exclude college students from receiving information in their school's city.
The group unanimously agreed that it should vote to reject the amendment which will appear on the ballot tomorrow.
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10
Monday, November 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
M. A. P. M.
DuPree Winter Norwood Charlton McGhee Branson McElihaney Stoneback Anderson Pinegar Pyle Amyz
ELECTION ★
Dukeon Winston Norwood
MARGARET BURKMAN
Winter
P
WILLIAM B.
PETER B. KAUFMAN
Danielson Anderson Daney
PETER WILLIAMS
PETER BURGESS
(2)
PETER H.
M. D. ROGER
Where to vote in Lawrence
* 2nd Ward, 1st Pct.
** 3rd Ward, 2nd Pct.
*** 3rd Ward, 4th Pct.
**** 3rd Ward, 5th Pct.
**** 2nd Ward, 4th Pct.
1st Ward, 4th Pct.
1st Ward, 5th Pct.
2nd Ward, 7th Pct.
2nd Ward, 12th Pct.
2nd Ward, 6th Pct.
2nd Ward, 9th Pct.
15th Street
1st Ward, 1st Pct.
1st Wd, 2nd Pct.
1st Wd, 3rd Pct.
2nd Wd, 3rd Pct, Nealsmith Drive
2nd Wd, 2nd Pct.
3rd Ward, 1st Pct.
3rd Ward, 3rd Pct.
19th Street
Massachusetts Street
2nd Ward, 10th Pct.
Iowa Street
Clinton Parkway
2nd Ward, 11th Pct.
2nd Ward, 8th Pct.
3rd Wd, 6th Pct.
3rd Wd, 7th Pct.
4th Ward, 2nd Pct.
4th Ward, 4th Pct.
4th Ward, 5th Pct.
Key:
W...WARD
Location of polling sites:
2 W, 7 P. 6th and Kasold, American Legion
2 W, 6 P. 1330 Kassold, First Baptist Church
2 W, 10 P. 3200 Clinton Parkway, Assembley of God Church
2 W, 10 P. 3705 W. 23rd Street, Elka Lodge
2 W, 8 P. 2415 W. 23rd Street, First Presbych. Church
2 W, 8 P. 2518 Ridge Court, Valleyview Care Home
2 W, 6 P. 22nd And Ousdahl, Schweg. School
2 W, 6 P. 21st and Louisiana, Lawrence High School
2 W, 4 P. Allan School
2 W, 3 P. 1045 Hilltop, Hillcrest School
2 W, 3 P. 2312 Harvard, Good Sheep Church
2 W, 12 P. 6th and Kasold, JLG Grocery
2 W, 5 P. 2700 Harroad Road, West Junior High
1 W, 5 P. Princeton and Lawrence Avenue, Deerfield School
1 W, 5 P. 2nd and Iowa, National Guard Armory
1 W, 1 P. 6th and Mississippi, Public School
1 W, 5 P. East 23rd Street, India School
Source: Douglas County Clerk's office
1 W, 2 P. 707 Vermont, City Library
1 W, 3 P. 9th and Vermont, Lawrence Arts Center
2 W, 1 P. Plymouth Church
2 W, 2 P. South Park Recreation Center
3 W, 1 P. 15th and Massachusetts, Central Un. Methodist Church
3 W, 2 P. 19th and Vermont, Cordley School
3 W, 4 P. 22nd and Louisiana, Central School
3 W, 5 P. 23rd and Louisiana, Checker's Grocery
3 W, 7 P. 27th and Louisiana, South Junior High
4 W, 2 P. 1700 Massachusetts, Babcock Place
4 W, 1 P. 15th and Massachusetts, Central Junior High
5 W, 2 P. Judicial Building
5 W, 1 P. 10th and New York, New York School
6th Ward 5th and Elm, Woodland School
4 W, 3 P. 15th and Brook, East Lawrence Center
4 W, 4 P. 1605 Davis Road, Kennedy School
KANSAN graphic
Continued from p. 1
ELECTION
the ballot, he is no longer running for office. A family member said he started campaigning too late to have a chance in such a conservative
▪ David G. Miller, R-Eudora (incumbent):
(Innumber)
Miller said he wanted to ensure equal distribution of funds under reapportionment. He also wants a new public school finance law that takes into account the effects of property reappraisal and classification. Heinks there is a need for a new macrosecurity prison. He favors a highway maintenance program financed by user fees. Although generally a supporter of the Margin of Excellence, Miller said he thought KU should also look to tuition and research grants for financing.
Douglas County Sheriff
Loren Kenner, R.L.
The undersheriff said he would add one patrolman to each shift and one officer to the drug squad. He would improve the 911 and HELP emergency systems. He emphasizes his more than 20 years of experience.
■ Gale Pinegar, D-Lawrence:
Bougain County
Loren Anderson, R-Lawrence:
the owner of his own security company, Pinegar said he would take a tough stand against drug criminals, would increase patrolmen to as many as three per shift and would improve patrols of rural areas. He would also deputize KU police and Lawrence police so they have authority throughout the county. County Commission
3rd District
L. J. Stoneback, D-Lawrence
I. J. Stoneback is running for Douglas County Commission on the platform of firing Chris McKenzie, county administrator.
A former county commissioner, Stoneback said he thought that the position was wasting money and was unnecessary.
He would also encourage decreasing commissioner salaries. He said, "We only got $6,000 a year when I was a commissioner."
He is a pro-growth candidate for the 3rd District and is against the commission's opposition to mall proposals for Lawrence. He said that the commission should be pro-growth
Stoneback is also against any increase in the sales tax. He said that growth would increase the tax base so that sales taxes would not have to be raised.
Louie McElhaney, RLawrence:
While Louie McElhaney, Republican candidate for Douglas County Commission does not have a formal platform, he has expressed opposition to a portion of his competitor's platform.
patron.
McEhlaney is against firing
McKenzie. McEhlaney said that he
was interested in looking at McKenzie's job description but would not fire him.
He is in favor of a southern bypass and said he thought that state and federal government had the responsibility for maintaining county roads and highways.
He would also attempt to maintain the tax levy and still keep up the current level of social services. County Commission
2nd District
21st BICON
Mike Amvy, D-Lawrence:
Lawrence City Commissioner Mike Amyx wants to make the switch from city to county politics and serve on the Douglas County Commission for the 2nd District.
The candidate would also move one of the county commission meetings to the evening so that the public would have better access to the commission. It currently meets three mornings a week.
Amyx said he would take a $4,000 voluntary cut in his commissioner salary and would use that money to create 16 $250 scholarships to junior colleges and universities. He said he would take recommendations from the townships and Lawrence.
Amyx's biggest concern is people's interests. "People have to be treated fairly and equally," he said.
■ Tom Pyle, R-Eudora:
Tom Pyle, Republican candidate for Douglas County Commission, said that he thought everyone should give something back to the community.
The candidate said that he believed in a government in which people were consulted about major issues. He said that citizens should have been consulted before the position of county administrator was created.
Pyle has been going door to door to registered voters in his district. He said several voters asked about gun control. Pyle is against gun control and says that it is a person's right to own a gun.
He was also concerned about the condition of county roads and would work directly with townships to improve county roads, bridges and culverts.
THE PRESIDENTIAL RACE
- Foreign policy: Bush said he would continue the Reagan foreign policy of "peace through strength" and press forward on strategic-arms-reductions talks with the Soviets. Bush favors a total intera-
tional ban on chemical weapons and U.S.-Soviet-Chinese effort to stop the spread of ballistic missiles. Bush urges the contra rebels in Nicaragua.
Dukakis supports the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty with the Soviets and proposed strategic arms cuts. He favors wider use of international organizations such as the United Nations to resolve conflicts in the former "United States" allies must bear a bigger share of the costs of defending freedom around the world Dukakis opposes military aid to the Contras.
■ Environment: Bush has campaigned as an environmentalist, while Dukakis has campaigned against the environmental record of the Reagan-Bush administration.
Bush supports a recently passed law banning ocean-dumping of wastes by the end of 1991. He would set a goal of "no net loss of wetlands" and he would delay offshore oil production in new, unspecified limits on emissions causing acid rain, and he supports nuclear power.
Dukakis vows to beef up the Environmental Protection Agency and "make the polluters pay." He says he will press for stricter standards for air and water quality, ban offshore drilling in sensitive areas, and halt below-cost timber sales in national forests. Dukakis also opposes building nuclear power plants until a safer generation of reactors is designed and safe ways are found to dispose of waste.
**Drugs and crime:** Bush favors the death penalty for cop-killers and drug-related killers, as well as treason and espionage. Dukakis opposes capital punishment regardless of the crime.
Dakaki favors tighter controls on guns, including a mandatory, nationwide wait period for gun punishment. Bush opposes tighter gun controls.
Dukakis advocates the cutoff of aid to countries that fail to cooperate in fight against drugs. He also supports the use of U.S. armed forces 'under appropriate circumstances' to help crop farmers dug crops and labs. He also supports hires 600 more Drug Enforcement Administration agents.
Bush says he will make "the war on drugs a top priority," and says it must be attacked "not only by stopping, but also by stopping the demand."
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 7, 1988
11
Election may affect abortion law
By Donna Brown Worley Special to the Kansan
Special to the Kansan
Both supporters and critics of a woman's right to have an abortion believe the outcome of the presidential election this year will be that the Supreme Court's position on abortion.
Philip Kissam, KU professor of law, said that if vice president George Bush was elected, the possibility of a reversal in the abortion law would increase.
The constitutional right to an abortion was established by the 1973 Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision giving women the right to terminate a pregnancy within the first three months and giving states the right to incarcerate second and third trimester abortions.
"If Bush were elected, the conservative judges might feel more comfortable overruling (Roe vs. Wade)." Kissam said. "No justice, I would assume, likes to vote for a decision that will be overruled in further years. But, if George Bush appoints new conservatives to the court, current justices would see an overruiling of Roe vs. Wade lasting longer and be influenced to vote for overrule."
Ann Ryun, vice president for Lawrence Kansans for Life, an organization loosely tied to National Right to Life in Washington, D.C., said that Bush was the obvious choice for pro-life supporters.
"We're sending out a mailing to members next week saying that we support Bush, because, except in cases of incest and rape,
1.
- Philip Kissam professor of law
If Bush were elected, the conservative judges might feel more comfortable overruling (Roe vs. Wade).'
he is for life and prefers adoption over abortion," she said.
In contrast, Gov. Michael Dukakis was clearly a pro-choice supporter, Ryun said.
"The pro-life movement members will be voting one issue because it's so black and white as far as Dukakis being for and Bush being against," Ryan said. "We have to vote single-issue this time because we leave us no choice."
Betty Armstrong, director of community relations at Comprehensive Health Care for Women, in Kansas City, Kan., agreed the elections will influence the outcome of the abortion issue.
what scares me the most about the election is that people just don't understand the Supreme Court's vulnerability," she said. "I talk to people all the time who aren't going to vote for Dukakis but are pro-choice. They don't know that the pro-choice justices have been hanging on for four or eight years and they are not young men."
they are not young.
"I also think you've got a lot of people who were not very old when abortions were illegal," she said. "It's something we take for
granted. Also there are those who don't think about abortion, or are against it until they are faced with it in some personal way."
Armstrong's agency provides a variety of gynecological services for women including about 400 abortions a month, many for college-age women.
"We get a fair amount of KU students, and not just from out, but from colleges all over the country."
Erika Fox, attorney and director of public affairs for Planned Parenthood of Greater Kansas City agreed the election would make a difference.
"There is the potential with a Bush presidency that he will appoint more justices," Fox said. "And the balance of the Court already is very precarious. Roe vs. Wade could be overturned right now should a case challenging the ruling come before the Court."
A recent Missouri case could cause the Supreme Court to review or modify the Roe vs. Wade ruling sometime during the 1989-90 term. Fox said.
"There will be time for Supreme Court appointments between now and then," she said. "And three of the majority opinion justices are over the age of 75."
Fox said pro-choice supporters were concerned about a wide spectrum of issues and wouldn't automatically vote according to a candidate's view on abortion.
"We have to get serious about convincing politicians that we too can be single-issue voters if it involves losing an important constitutional right," she said.
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
Census amendment on ballot
A proposed amendment to the Kansas constitution that would include counting students and military personnel at their permanent legal address for reapportionment will appear on tomorrow's election ballot.
The amendment also would exclude non-resident college students and military personnel from the federal census, which would be used under the proposal.
According to an informational filer put out by the League of Women Voters, the amendment would change the year in which the legislature must reapportion its state representative and state senator positions, a requirement required by current Constitutional provision would still be carried out if the amendment passed.
After that, reapportionment would be required in 1992 and then every ten years. From 1992 on, federal census data would be used in place of state census data.
The federal census now is conducted every 10 years at the beginning of each decade, and counts students where they reside during the census, regardless of their permanent legal residence. With the proposal, the federal census would be altered to count students according to their permanent legal address.
State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, said he opposed the amendment primarily because it did not count students.
"This amendment would mean that when we draw districts, people who live here, who have a lot of political ties to this community, would have less voice and less influence," he said.
Winter said that there was one state representative for every 18,000 - 20,000 people in a district and one state senator for every 60,000 people.
If students are not counted in the census, then Douglas County's district may be enlarged, which could delete one seat in the legislature, Winter said.
But, State Rep. David Miller, R-Eudora, said that since the reapportionment for 1983 would take place using state census figures — regardless of whether or not the amendment passed — then the amendment would not be a factor in the possible reduction of seats in the legislature for the next three years.
"I voted in favor of the amendment," Miller said. "I don't want to continue to use the state census."
State Sen. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said that he thought the amendment was acceptable except for the exclusion of students and military personnel.
"I don't think this should even be an amendment," Solbach said. "It could be taken care of statutorily. It's there only to bolster some communities who are losing population."
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Regionalist Room
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Thank you for attending the two meetings. Your attendance is worth more than your care and concern because they are not just a butorator conference. B
for all to see
the political
a critical
your results
a boost
**pretence school**
**intraviral official**
May, 1987
I've heard of your honor on behalf of our SOS staff and services you will be among I'm calling you to meet our strong friends of all your term for being worthy of all.
Local Law Enforcement
May 1988
to good leaving you need
to be on Sunday and want to
be there with your family.
take a leave from you caring
about someone else and do
what you do best.
Please do know again how now we
know it and I have our president,
Toukea I have our state house
community and the state house
classified employee
KU Classification Employee
Association, Oralist
March, 1987
"Once again, I want to thank you for taking such an interest in Leccombe. And your efforts are certainly valuable the call of duty and bring relief to our staff."
"So many of us have we how fortunate all of these hours as you all State Senator. Thanks to you as a state senator that you spend supporting this time you spend gluing"
"community."
We often have very
for our discussion that our
and the CAT exam
Diagram.
Since you can speak for the entire
team, please make your visit as
impressive as possible and grateful
for your classmates and grateful
to your classmates. Please
classify employees:
U Classified Employee
O Office Of
Management
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ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
County Mental Health Facility Official February 1985
We work in organized labor union groups throughout the state having trained high levels of skill and know how to manage all aspects of their business. We help men and women find job opportunities and for women it has a positive effect on their health. We have trained more than 20,000 union members who are working in our organization with assistance.
Douglas County Medical Health
Facility Other
February 1985
just when I was beginning to
define myself the safety guard
the university taught me.
Patriotism and kind of
patriotism. And I and my
communities you must support
you community to support the
Mind of KU
Fulfillment. You
KU administration.
4048
Lawrence Lathor Officer
August, 1988
I'd wish to thank you to
doing nice jobs in helping
my dad and I in nursing
here, where we were held.
Great dishes. Help you
with your homework.
Lawrence citizen
February 18, 2006
registrate one of the departments
one of the classes you are enrolled
in your school or class of
your support group
On behalf of the Legion,
classified out of service, classify
express our attitude. Classify
employees that support them
KU Employee and unclassified labor
RV Rev 1896 June, 1896
Thank you your team for your hard work and help in our job. We will be happy to thank you every time we meet with your team. Please help us to improve our product design and to build our business. You are very important to us.
"I would like to thank you for your
work," I know a lot of people who
work for this organization by the
workforce for their efforts.
Douglas County Advocates for
Working People and Job
Development
March 18, 2016
WINT GETS THE JOB DONE
I want to take this opportunity to thank you for your service and support to our community. Even though you had many other students that read many of our books, you always attended the three time you were admitted to the public schools.
Public school official
April 1986
On behalf of the Sierra Club, it is a
pleasure to thank you for our
environment that Thank You will
support this award.
Kansas Sierra Club Officer
September 1989
momoting toIGHT properly from the source and the base, and not recording the same message that you received the parent sent.
I would like to thank you for all
you made to me. You were very
supportive. This call you
are the kind of people who
works are consistent with what
Your bill to limit access
trafficway is a **
offered.
You list to limt access on
trafficways as a wishing to
appreciate your willingness to
introduce some good planning
and thus the Lawrence Citizen.
EXPERIENCE REALISM EFFECTIVENESS LEADERSHIP
You're leadership Kansas to be care mentally ill population
Lawrence M
As we form team activity to achieve your mission, we first need to know what things are important to you. Our team will help you work very hard but you prefer not to be penalized for not being helpful, responsible and honest on our behalf. You are required to know your own abilities and your team's requirements with the help of our committee. A short period of time may be needed.
really appreciate your att-
tention to see their photos. That really
makes a difference for all kennels.
Lawrence school administrator
*University School Administration*
May, 1988
FROM T
KNOW
FROM THOSE WHO KNOW HIS WORK.
On behalf of individuals in Kansas women's mental health and developmental disabilities and their associated organizations, he thanked the organizations for our support during the 1986 season. Again, thank you to Kansas Related Care Association
FROM THOSE WHO KNOW HIS WORK.
WINT WINTER
FAID POL. ADV. WINNER FOR SENATE COMMITTEE; BORNE DELLA, TREASURY
"Just a note to say thanks for all the consideration you gave to the concerns of the Lawrence Park Schools. We are paying our year of funding and your care is certainly advenient."
Thank you for your support and conc employees (how invaluable you have) KU Ee
Vote
Louie McElhaney
for
Douglas County Commissioner
1.
November 8th
A. M. P. H.
THE CLASS OF'52 COULDN'T SEE INTO THE FUTURE
The chance to meet with a recruiter from the National Security Agency.
SEEING THE MOVE
Folks here are still talking about "The 1952 Incident." For some reason still unknown, a certain graduating class at a certain university missed what was certainly the opportunity of a lifetime.
Now you've got the same chance. Our recruiters will be visiting campus soon in
search of talented mathematicians,computer scientists, electrical engineers and linguists. We're looking for people who want to work on important hands-on assignments,right from the start.
NSA is the agency responsible for producing foreign intelligence information, safeguarding our government's communications and securing computer systems for the Department of Defense.
And we're equally committed to helping you make your future strong. So do yourself a favor and meet with us. You don't need 3-D glasses to see that it's a great opportunity.
NSA will be on campus November 30 interviewing seniors majoring in Computer Science, Math and Language (Slavic, Near Eastern, Asian and Spanish).
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY
Atn: MS28 (AAM), Fl, Meade, Maryland 20758-6000
employer: U.S. citizenship required for applicant and family members
National Security Agency
---
12
Monday, November 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
FLEEMAN 97
Kansas placekicker Brad Fleeman celebrates after making a 54-yard field goal, the second-longest in KU history.
Cats
19
Kansas defensive tackle Dave Walton towers over K-State quarterback Carl Straw. Although Straw escaped the rush, the Jayhaws sacked the
Football coach Glen Mason gets a ride off the field from offensive tackles Chris Perez and Bill Hundelt.
76 97 76
Wildcats 30-12 Saturday at Memorial Stadium. It was KU's first victory this season.
'Hawks finally feel the thrill of victory
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportswriter
Before the locker room celebration began in earnest after Kansas" 30-12 victory over Kansas State on Saturday, the Jayhawks gathered to continue a school tradition.
"We sing the Rock Chalk Chant after each win," said sophomore center Chip Budde. "I think most of the guys forgot the words to it because it's been so long since we've won a game. But it feels good. It feels great."
The victory not only improved the Jayhawks' record to 1-3, it stopped a 15-game winless streak, which dated back to the 2006 Cincinnati Bombers defeated Southern Illinois 16-15.
The Jayhawks weren't singing after playing the Wildcats to a 17-17 last year in Manhattan. But as the final seconds ticked off the clock on Saturday, the frustrations of what had been a long season were forgot-
As fans swarmed onto the field to tear down the goalposts, Kansas coach Glen Mason was doused with water by some players.
The celebration was sweet for Mason wet clothes and all.
"If you find out (who did it), let me know." Mason said. "If you don't think that stuff is cold, let me tell you, it is. The last time I played in this stadium I got water dumped on me, too."
He was carried off the field by his players, just as he was when his Kent State team defeated Kansas at Memorial Stadium last September.
"that's what a rivalry is all about," he said. "Rivalries are between two teams and two schools. Two sets of people and two sets of college kids get excited. That's what it's all about. I love college football."
The Kansas running attack had much to do with the Jayhawks taking control of the game early on. The ground game accounted for 344 of the
Jayhawks' 457 yards of total offense. Kansas originally had planned to throw the ball often against Kansas State, but a wind gusting from 20 to 35 mph made Mason emphasize the running attack.
The Jayhawks scored on their first two possessions of the game on 80-yard drives that were led by the Kansas running backs.
"I can't remember a time when we so effectively ran the ball," said junior quarterback Kelly Donoho, savoring his first victory as a starter at Kansas. "It goes back to the play of our offense and the talented tailbacks and they finally got to show their talent today."
Sophomore Frank Hatchett rushed for 78 yards on five carries during the first drive before leaving the game with a mild concussion.
During the touchdown drives, senior tailback Arnold Snell rushed for 48 yards on nine carries, and Jake Brewster had Robinson ran for 20 yards on five carries.
"We haven't had two drives like that all year," Snell said. "The way that we drove down the field on them was like the way we practice. It carried over to the field. We executed like we should and we didn't let up."
The Kansas defense did not let up, either.
The Jayhawks held the Wildcats scorele for the first half, marking the first time Kansas has shut out an opponent for a half since 1986.
Freshman strong safety Deral Boykin said the success of the offense early in the game inspired the defense to play well.
"That was really important," said Boykin, who stopped a K-State drive with his second interception of the season in the second quarter. "It built up our confidence. Since they were playing well, we had to play well. We don't want to let our team down because this was a really big game for us."
“That’s one big thing this ball game meant to us,” he said. “We knew everyone was down on the athletic program because of the probation. We wanted to shed some positivity in our lives and move on. We knew it was up to us. I hope everyone around here feels a little better now.”
K-State's losing streak has now reached 25, and the Wildcats' best opportunity for a victory this season may have passed them by.
Everyone in Lawrence may feel a little better, but the suffering continues.
"It hurts the most," said K-State tailback Tom Dillon. "This was our best shot. To be honest, I really
thought we could beat them. It was a big disappointment."
K-State coach Stan Parrish said the loss was frustrating.
"We didn't make the plays," he said. "They did. They beat us, straight up, fair and square."
"It's been an incredibly tough season. We held them amazingly well. We weren't on top of our game today."
But for the Kansas players, the long drought was over.
"Everyone was extremely up after this," said Kansas kicker Brad Fleeman, whose 54-yard field goal just before baltimore time was the second-longest in school history. "We're used to going in there and sitting down and taking off our pads and leaving, but today, everyone's hanging around, slapping each other on the back and waiting for the party."
KU rushing game best in eight years
By Craig Anderson Kansan sports editor
Kansan sports editor
Kansas' first team tailback Frank Hatcht heft down with an injury after just five plays. Second team tailback Arnold Snell went down in the third quarter because of a bruised leg.
then it was 5-foot-7 freshman tailback Tony Sands who brought Kansas State down in the Jayhawks 30-12 victory over the Wild.
Sands rushed for 78 of his 122 yards in the fourth quarter as Kansas controlled the ball for more than 11 minutes, and the game was a one-yard dive that gave Kansas its last touchdown.
The Kansas rushing game pounded Kansas State for 344 yards — the Jayhawks highest total in eight years. Besides Sands' career-best rushing day, Hatchett and tullback Roger Robbon also set career marks. Snell's 94 yards was his best total of the season.
"I was always taught when you're called to duty, don't let your team down," said the Fort Lauderdale Fla. native. "The line was opening big holes. I could have taken one of you cameramen in with me and gained 20 or 30 yards. That's how big the holes were."
After the game, Sands was dressed in his customary game day white tuxedo with a black bow tie.
"Coach always tells us to dress nice." Sands said. "Look nice.
I was always taught when you're called to duty, don't let your team down. The line was opening big holes. I could have taken one of you cameramen in with me and gained 20 or 30 yards. That's how big the holes were.'
Tony Sands Kansas football player
Play nice. You'll be nice."
The hard-luck award went to Hatchette, who rushed for 78 yards on the first five plays of the game. On his fifth carry—a 40 yard run to the two yard line Hatchette was hit near the middle of the kick-sight concussion that would keep him for the rest of the game.
"I never saw the guy. I was just running and the next thing I knew I was on one knee trying to get up." Hatchett said. "I was on the moon after he hit me. I really didn't know what was going on."
Hatchett learned at halftime that he wouldn't return to the game.
OSU's upset bid falls short as Sooners win 31-28
"I could go and I wanted to go." said the El Dorado sophomore. "I feel like I kind of let the team down."
The Associated Press
Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones didn't want anyone to blame his players after the 19-ranked Cowboys lost in heartbreaking (fashion to No. 8 Oklahoma on Saturday
Bowl scouts watch Colorado clobber MU; Cornhuskers drop Cyclones in snowstorm
Big 8 Roundup
"The difference between winning and losing is a fine line, and we saw a prime example of it here this evening." Jones said after Oklahoma scored with 2:33 remaining to win 31-28.
sard.
The Cowboys fell behind 14-0 before the game was five minutes old, then fought back and eventually took a 28-24 lead when Barry Sanders scored on a one-yard run with 8:45 left.
Oklahoma answered with an 80-yard, 13- play drive that resulted in a touchdown at the 2:33 mark. But the Cowboys weren't finished.
to win 3-28.
"We had ample opportunities to win the ball game, and we didn't get it done," he said. "That is my responsibility."
Quarterback Mike Gundy led Oklahoma State from its 10 to Oklahoma's 20 yard line. Then, on third and with less than a minute to play, Sanders gained one yard to
Oklahoma's 19. But a dead ball foul against Cowboy's fullback Garrett Limbric pushed them back to the Oklahoma 34.
On fourth down from the 34 yard line, Gundy tied to his right and found split end Brent Parker in the end zone. Safety Kevin jumped to deflect the ball, but missed
"I don't know what it was," said Jones. "I never annotated an explanation."
Limbrick said the penalty was called when he cursed at Oklahoma linebacker Richard Bichah.
"I thought he wasn't going to throw it (the flag) just because he (the official) was back."
And so did Parker
"I saw it real well," said Parker. "He (Thompson) didn't get a hand on the ball, I just took my eye off it. It was a great throw." Gundy said the play was designed to get the ball to Hart Lee Dykes, who had caught three passes for 53 yards on the drive and
nine for 123 on the day.
hint to 125 so that he could use it.
"But they double-covered Hart, and I basically had no chance to get the ball to him," said Gundy. "So I looked for other receivers and saw Brent behind his guy, so I threw it to him."
The missed pass gave Oklahoma its 12th straight victory over the Cowboys, who were held to less than 40 points for the first time this season. Oklahoma State is virtually out of the Big Eight Conference title picture with a 3-2 league record, and is 6-2.
"I didn't think we'd be able to hold them like we did in the second half," said Jones. "That was a very courageous effort by our defense."
Oklahoma, 7-1 and 5-0 in the Big Eight,
finished with 424 vards rushing.
Sanders, the nation's leading rusher with 210 yards per game coming on, carried 39 times for 215 yards. He now has scored at least 68 points in eight straight games, an NCAA record.
"He's a great player. He's really a great player." said opposing coach Barry Switter.
"It's a team sport, and now we have to go out and try to win the rest of our games."
Colorado 45
Missouri 8
Representatives from three bowl games were watching Colorado on Saturday, and then watching Texas on Sunday.
"If the bowls want to take us, they will take us." Colorado halfback Bieniemy said after the Buffaloes romped to a 45-8 victory over Missouri in front of scouts from the Freedom, Sun and Holiday Bowls. "If not, they'll be missing out."
Colorado coach Bill McCartney echoed those sentiments.
"I would think we are going to get a bowl of some kind," he said. "But) we weren't trying to score points for the bowl people. We really weren't."
Nebraska 51
Iowa State 16
Steve Taylor rushed for 154 yards and three touchdowns and passed for another Saturday, leading No. 7 Nebraska past Iowa State 51-16 in a snowstorm in Ames, Iowa.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KJHK FM 90.7
TOP COLLEGE TEN
FOOTBALL
Points
1 Notre Dame (14) 9-0-0 176
2 USC (3) 8-0-0 155
3 Miami(Fla.) 7-1-0 139
4 Florida State (11) 8-1-0 111
5 West Virginia 9-0-0 107
6 Nebraska 9-1-0 93
7 UCLA 8-1-0 91
8 Auburn 8-1-0 47
9 Oklahoma 8-1-0 30
10 Wyoming 10-0-0 16
10a Kansas 1-8-0 10
( ) number of first place votes
The weekly top 10 poll is no
the sports staffs of the Li-
I do
---
r
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 7, 1988
Sports
13
Turnover-prone Chiefs fall to Denver
The Associated Press
Elway John three a sixyard touchdown pass to Vance Johnson, and Sammy Winder added another score on a short-yardage run as the Denver Broncos overcame penalties to defeat the turnover-prone Kansas City Chiefs 17-11 yesterday.
The Broncos, snapping a two-game losing streak, climbed into a first-place tie with Seattle in the AFC West at 5-5. Kansas City, the team's season came over Denver, dropped to 1-8-1.
Kansas City Coach Frank Gansz said the Chiefs "had our opportunities, but we didn't take advantage of them. Ball security — that's what cost us the game. We gave them seven points. You can't expect to win when you have a good old position and don't take care of the ball."
The Chiefs drove inside the Denver 10-yard line twice, but came away with no points. With a second-and-goal at Denver's eight in the first quarter, Bill Kenney threw into coverage and was intercepted at the goal line by Denver safety Mike Harden.
Harden was down at the one yard and, Kansas City got a safety on the next play when Tony Dorsett was tackled on a pitchout in the end zone by linebacker Dino Hackett.
The Chiefs squandered their other scoring opportunity early in the third period. With second-and-six from the eight, Palmer Pulmur broke into scoring, and the ball towled to刃backer, Rick Pennin
Elway *T* DP ass and Winder's run staked the Broncos to a 14-2 lead, which the Chiefs whittled to 14-5 at the half on the first of three Nick Lowery field goals.
Kansas City got within 14-8 with a third-quarter field goal, but the two teams traded kicks in the final-period.
Ditka views victory from hospital
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Mike Ditka and his beloved Chicago Bears came through their first separation in six years with flying colors.
"He did great," Diana Ditka said yesterday after leaving her husband's bedside at Lake Forest Hospital, where the 49-year-old was found in a mild heart attack suffered Wednesday.
"He didn't do anything different than if he were watching another (team's) game. If we were watching a game after our game were over with, he would always yell, 'Catch
the ball. He just gets excited a few times when somebody makes a mistake.
The Bears took most of the suspense — not to mention stress — out of the contest by bounding Tampa Bay 28-10.
Phoenix 24
The Bears did precious little to disturb Ditka's lunch of roasted chicken and iced tea.
"Mike Ditka's going to be watching it on TV," offensive guard Thayer said before the game. "To me, that's almost scarier than having him on the sideline. Because, if you screw up, you know it's coming through — that he saw it."
Phoenix 24 San Francisco 23
Neil Lomac hit Roy Green with a nine-yard touchdown pass with three seconds remaining and Al Del Greco boooted the decisive extra point to give Phoenix a 24-23 victory over San Francisco. The Cardinals, who trailed 22.0 in score, scored 17, fourth-quarter points.
Philadelphia 30 Los Angeles Rams 24
Philadelphia quarterback Randall Cunningham threw three touchdown passes, two to rookie tight end Keith Jackson, as the Eagles defeated the Rams 30-24 Cunningham, who had a game with a sore right wrist. He completed 22 of 39 passes for 423 yards for Philadelphia, 5-1.
Buffalo 13 Seattle 2
Rob Riddick scored a touchdown on a 1-ayard run, and Scott Norwood kicked field goals of 27
and 23 yards as Buffalo beat the Seahawks 13-3 for their fifth straight victory.
Washington 27 New Orleans 24
Chip Lohmier kicked a 23-yard field goal with 47 seconds left yesterday to cap a fourth-quarter rally that gave Washington a 27-24 victory over the Saints.
Indianapois 38 New York Jets 14
Mouse quarterback Chris Chandler passed 44 yards to Clarence Diver and ran 29 yards for another touchdown during a third-quarter interception against a 38-14 victory over the penalty-placed Jets.
Cincinnati 42 Pittsburgh 7
Boomer Esiason three three touchdown passes — his first in three games — and Eddie Brown set a club record with 216 yards receiving. He scored the Steelers 42.7 with a big-play offense.
Atlanta 20
Green Bay 0
Chris Miller passed for 177 yards, including a 45-yard scoring strike to Gene Lang, as the Falcones snapped an eight-game home field losing streak with a 20-0 victory over the
Chicago 28 Tampa Bay 10
New England 21 Miami 10
Mike Tomczak, making his first start of the year in place of injured Jim McMahon, passed for two touchdowns and set up two others, leading the Bears to a 28-10 victory over the
Rookie John Stephens broke the 100-yard rushing barrier for the third straight game as he ran for 104 yards and one touchdown and he scored in the final frame to comeback for a 21-10 victory over the Dolphins.
New York Giants Dellee 21
Dallas 21
Phil Simms threw two touchdown passes to Stephen Baker and Lawrence Taylor forced two turnovers that led to scores as the Giants gave a brief glimpse of their 1986 Super Bowl form and defeated Dallas 29-21, handing the Cowboys their sixth straight loss.
Minnesota 44
Detroit 17
Anthony Carter caught eight passes for 188 yards and Wade Wilson passed for a career-high 391 yards and two touchdowns yesterday, leading the Vikings to a 44-17 victory over the
Los Angeles Raiders 13 San Diego 2
San Diego 3
Steve Beuerlein threw a fourth-quarter touchdown pass to Trey Junkin and Chris Bahn kicked a pair of goal goals as the Raiders beat the Chargers 13-3.
'Hawks to play exhibition game
Williams to use game to check progress
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams said he would use tonight's exhibition game against the Spirit Express to gauge the progress the Jayhawks had made and the first three weeks of practice.
"This gives us an opportunity to play in front of a crowd in a game-like situation." Williams said. "It will show us how far we've come in three weeks of practice and how far we have to go."
For senior center Sean Alvarado and sophomore forward Mark Randall, who were redshirted last season, tonight's game represents their first outside competition since the 1986-87 season.
"I'm ready to play." Randall said. "It was tough to sit out and watch last year. This game will tell me where I'm at and what I have to do to improve."
having played two intrasquad scrimmages so far this season, junior guard Kevin Pritchard said he was not disappointed. Somebody besides his teammates
T
"It gives us a different feel than we get in practice," Pritchard said.
Williams has not decided on a starting lineup, but Alvarado, Randall and sophomore Mike Maddox are expected to see the most action at the front-court positions since they are the only Jayhawk players who are 6-foot-7 or taller.
At guard, however, the Jayhawks are blessed with depth. Returning lettermen, Scooter Barry, Lincoln Minor, Jeff Guelier, Milt Newton and Pritchard are fighting for starting
His gives us an opportunity to play in front of a crowd in a game-like situation. It will show us how far we've come in three weeks of practice and how far we have to go.'
Roy Williams Kansas basketball coach
positions along with junior college transfer Freeman West and freshman Sean Tunstall.
Newton, who is 64, along with West and Guelder, who are 65, are expected to play both the offseason and small forward positions.
The Express has only two returning players from last year's team that was 25-8 and 8-8 against college competition.
The Express was established in 1983 and has compiled a 165-46 record. Its competition has included universities, AAU tournaments, international teams, prison teams and military teams.
The game is not included as part of the season ticket package. Tickets are $5 for adults and $2 for students and children may be purchased at the KU ticket office or east lobby of Allen Field House.
Tip-off is at 7:35 p.m. at the field house.
Kansas athletic department officials announced student and public season tickets have sold out for the fourth consecutive season. Last season, Kansas ranked 11th nationally in home attendance.
IANSAS
11
Senior guard Lincoln Minor and the rest of the Jayhawks open their season with an exhibition game tonight against the Spirit Express in Allen Field House.
KANSAN file photo
Two titles on the line Leonard, Lalonde to battle tonight
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS, New — Sugar Ray Leonard returns to the ring for only the third time in nearly seven years tonight, moving up in weight once again to take on Canada's Donny Lalonde for two different titles.
Leonard is a 3½-1 favorite to beat Lalonde in the scheduled 12-round fight that has a contract limit of 188 pounds but will be for both Lalonde's 5'6" and 6'0" heights, weight title and the WBC's newly created super middleweight crown.
The fighters stand to make the biggest paydays of their careers*, with Leonard expected to earn up to $15 million and Lalonde about $3 million in a fight that has attracted curiosity but lacks the excitement of Leonard's April 1987 comeback against Marvelous Marvin Hagler.
"People ask how much longer I can fight," Leonard said. "I don't know. This may be in fact my farewell performance, I don't know."
Leonard, who has lost only once in 35 professional fights, expects to weigh the heaviest of his 11-year professional career at about 163 pounds, while Lalonde plans to come in near thir 168-pound limit.
The fight in the 15,388 seat outdoor arena at Caesars Palace is expected to start about 6 p.m. It is being sold nationally on pay-per-view cable at $29.95 and in selected closed circuit locations.
On the surface, the flight offers an intriguing matchup of speed against power, with Lalonde packing the punch of a light heavyweight and Leonard famous for his ability to slip and move inside the ring.
But the 32-year-old Leonard isn't the same fighter who dazzled crowds and dominated opponents as a wetherweight before retiring for the first time in 1982. He showed flashes of his power, and he was given decision over Hagler, but another 19 months of inactivity and another five pounds may slow him further.
"People say Ive lost a step here and there," Leonard said. "But those are the same people who said Spinks would best Mike Tyson."
Lalonde, on the other hand, has demonstrated ability as a hard puncher, but many boxing observers believe he is a one-armed fighter whose ring talent is not only limited, but questionable.
"Ray is headed to the boxing hall of fame and Donny is not," admits Lalonde's manager, Dave Wolf. "Donny is a fighter who became a world champion through punching power and tenacity, but he'll never go down in history as one of the great ones."
Lalonde has 26 knockouts in winning 31 of 33 pro fights, but critics say he has no effective left job or left hook and that he can beat Leonardo on right.
Lalonde, who first separated his left shoulder while playing hockey at age 17, has had two operations on it. He then inserted a metal pin inserted to hold it together.
"My personal belief is that I'm the hardest punching light heavyweight in the world and I am fighting a wetterweight, an old wetterweight." Lalonde said during Saturday's final press conference.
"He's right," Leonard shot back sarcastically. "I'm slow and I'm old."
The 28-year-old Lalonde was a self-managed fighter much of his career and is now beginning a drive to become ranked as a light heavyweight.
Lalonde said he had studied video tapes of Leonard's fight against Hagler and thought he would be able to get his right hand across in the fight.
Sports Briefs
NEW YORK CITY MARATHONS
Jones, 33, in his New York marathon debut, took the lead near the 12.4-mile mark. He was caught briefly at 15 miles by Salvatore Bettoli of Italy, then moments later took command, completing the 26-ilem 385-yard course in 2 hours, 8 minutes, 20 seconds.
NEW YORK CITY MARATHON:
Steve Jones of Wales won the New York City Marathon yesterday, redeeming himself after three years of sub-par marathons, and Grete Waatz of Norway led all the way in winning the women's division for a record ninth time.
minutes.
It was the second fastest New York City Marathon ever run, only seven seconds behind the course record of 2:13 set by Alberto Salazar in 1981. Salazar's time was not recorded as an American record because it was found that the course was 43 yards short.
short
COLLEYBALL TEAM SPLITS: The
knee volleyball team split its
matches over the weekend, losing to
the University of Colorado and
KU men's soccer team beats Huskers
defeating Colorado College
TUCSON OPEN TOURNAMENT:
South African David Frost, unchallenged by ailing Mark Wiebe, compiled a 5-under par 67 and coated to a five-strike victory yesterday in the Tucson Open Golf tournament.
Yesterday, the Jayhawks defeated Colorado College 15-13, 11-15, 13-15, 15-12 and 15-11 Saturday, the Jayhawks were swept in three games by Big Eight Conference foe Colorado, 15-3, 15-3 and 15-4.
Frost won his second title of the season and of a four-year PAU Tour career with a 266 total, 22 shots under on the PTC course at StarPass
Kansas' next competition is Friday against Oklahoma at Allen Field House.
The Jayhawks' record is 5-20 over all and 1-7 in the Big Eight.
The victory was worth $108,000 from the purse of $600,000 and lifted Frost into sixth place on the money-winning list with $621,000 going into next week's season-ending Nabisco Championship.
Forward Kramar Mosavavi had two goals and an assist as the Kansas men's soccer team closed out its regular season Saturday with a 5-victory over Nebraska in Lincoln, Neb.
By Ken Winford
By Ken Winters
Kansan sportswriter
For the Jayhawks, 18-2-3, it was the final tune-up before this week's National Collegiate Club Soccer Association Championship.
Kansas, winners of the Midwest Collegiate Soccer League title, will be seeded second at the national tournament this weekend in Anmes, Iowa.
Kansas coach Glenn Stilfried said the Jayhawks strong show against Nebraska indicated Kansas was ready for the national tournament.
"Our players showed they were sharp and really ready to play." Shirlrtle said. "Right now they are very eager to get to Ames. It probably will be the longest vexe of their lives in terms of waiting to play."
The Jayhawks, slowed recently by nagging injuries to several key players, were back to full strength Saturday. Kansas scored three first-half goals to take control.
Eleven minutes into the game, Moosavi scored on a pass from midfielder Sean Holmes. Two minutes later, forward Ed Nelson scored a goal. Holmes again got the assist.
Nebraska narsacked the lead to 2-1 but a penalty kick goal by Holmes with 10 minutes left in the half gave Nebraska their two advantage back.
Moosavi said the good outing
Kansas' final two scores came with less than 10 minutes left in the game. Moosavi scored on an assist from forward Dan Stoke with seven minutes remaining. Stake scored a goal four minutes later off an assist from Moosavi.
against Nebraska was important for the Jayhawks going into the national tournament.
Shirtlife said having the majority of the team healthy made a difference.
"Everyone is trying to get ready for the national tournament," he said. "We played very well Saturday, but the last four or five games before that we had our problems. Everyone on the team wants to be national champions badly. I'm confident we'll play well."
Eight teams will participate in the national tournament. The round-robin tournament consists of two divisions. Kansas is the top-seeded team in a division with Minnesota,
"It was nice because we were able to get players back to their normal positions," he said. "Against Nebraska, everything was back to the way it was when we were winning a lot of games."
Illinois, the top-seeded team in the tournament, heads the other division, which includes Iowa State. Mankato State and Wisconsin Steven Point.
Wisconsin-Eau Claire and Wichita State.
The Jayhawks will play Minnesota at noon Friday. The Golden Gophers, who are seeded second in Kansas, shuffle to be a tough opponent. Shurflet said
Each team will play the other three teams in its division. The two teams with the best records from each division will advance to the the semifinals.
Kansas will play Wichita State in the preliminary round. Shirlife said the Jayhawks had extra incentive to beat the Shockers.
---
"Wichita State is the only team to beat us this year." Shirtlife said. "So we still have a score to settle with them. We'll be ready."
Monday, November 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
14 Monday, November
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Member
KU Alumni Association; League of Women Voters;
Douglas County Historical Society; Trinity Episcopal Church;
Brian Clarke, Lawrence Women's Network;
Lawrence Rotary Club; Lawrence Women's Network; Lawrence Chamber of Commerce; Professional and Business Women's Club; Kansans for Highway Safety; Douglas County Health Care Access.
Board of Director $ ^{e} $
KU Museum of Natural History; Kansans for Improvement of Nursing Homes; Lawrence Salvation Army; Lawrence First Step House; Lawrence Women's Chorale; Warm Hearts.
Former Leadership Roles
President, Douglas County Association for Retarded Citizens and Kansas Association for Retarded Citizens; Chair, Lawrence United Fund residential drive; Vice Chair, Kansas Coordinating Council on Health Planning; Founder, Lawrence Chamber Players; President, Lawrence Society for Chamber Music; Chair, Lawrence Warm Hearts.
Honors
Alumnus of the Year, KU School of Nursing; Distinguished Service Award, Kansas Association for Retarded Citizens; Woman of the Year, JayCee Jaynes; Woman of the Year, Business and Professional Women's Club; Outstanding Service Award, Kansans for Highway Safety.
Legislative Appointments
Committees: Education; Taxation; Public Health and Welfare, Ranking Minority Member. Commissions: Vice Chair, Kansas Commission on Access to Services for the Medically Indigent and Homeless; Kansas Advisory Committee on Special Education.
Jessie belongs. Vote Jessie again.
Jessie Branson STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Pad for by the Committee to Re-elect Jessie Branson, Ben Zimmerman, Treasurer
Free speech for everyone, KU panel says
The forum, sponsored by University Governance, was conducted Saturday morning in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union. About 60 people listened to six panelists discuss freedom of speech and academic freedom in the university community.
Panelists at Saturday's Symposium on Academic Freedom agreed that the University should allow groups such as the Ku Klux Klan or Nazis to speak on campus.
commonly Richard DeGeorge, professor of philosophy, said that the University should have an outlet where groups could be allowed to speak.
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
ity. He said that although the short-term effect might be that the university seemed to legitimize a group's views, the long-term effect was better education.
"But that's not an invitation," DeGeorge said. "When it comes to an invitation, criteria should be worked out by the university community."
Most panelists agreed that the criteria should include the educational value of the group.
The Rev. Charles Curran is a Catholic professor at the University of Southern California who was barred from theological teaching because of his teachings on artificial conception and homosexual-
Alan Sica, associate professor of sociology, said that faculty also benefited from campus visits by radical groups. For instance, he said, a display of Nazi paraphernalia on campus would give academics a chance to talk about Nazism in the 20th century.
Ann Weick, dean of social welfare, agreed "Debate is to enlighten us, and hopefully to further our understanding."
"If we can't get them to critically and intelligently about values, issues and so on, and they are so persuaded by the oddness that they might hear in Hoch, then we aren't doing our job."
"I think our students should be allowed to hear any and of courses outside the classroom, within the school."
Sica was referring to Hoch Auditorium, the site of last spring's forum at which Ku Klux Klan established.
most venal and awful aspects of humanity, the better it is, to a point. Sica said.
The more students can be acquainted with the
David Rabban, professor of law at the University of Texas, said that although a university was not obligated to have non-university groups on campus, it was not fair to stop people from speaking.
But Rabban said the issue of campus visits dealt more with freedom of speech than with academic freedom, which guarantees faculty the right to teach and research its own way.
However, DeGeorge said that professors should not hide behind academic freedom by not allowing anyone but students into the classroom.
Reginald Robinson, associate professor of law, said that academic freedom did not give faculty any rights in addition to the rights of a U.S. citizen.
anyone but me. "Academic freedom then becomes a cloak for not letting our peers know how few original ideas we have, how safe and conservative our thinking is, and how mundane our class lectures are," DeGeorge said.
Sandra Zimdars-Swartz, associate professor of religious studies, moderated the panel discussion.
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Rep. Charlton Has Been An Effective Advocate On Environmental Issues.
She has:
... An endorsement from the Sierra Club.
... a 100% rating from Kansas Natural Resource Council.
As a member of the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Rep. Charlton has sponsored legislation .. to prevent construction of a hazardous waste facility in any community without a vote of the people. ...to protect the water supply and water quality for present and future generations.
1
Betty Jo Charlton
Re-elect YOUR Representative in '
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ANNQUNCEMENTS
ECKANBAR MURSAGE group forming. For more info call 749-1127.
Mary Kay Cosmetics, Contact Deeann Wilks at 841-9407.
Adult Children of Alcoholics meets from 3:30-4:30 today at Watkins Memorial Health Center, Room 7.
Write-in Stan Eckert for the U.S. House of Representatives. You do have a choice.
10
Don't be a TURKEY, try MASSAGE! Reduce your stress and don't forget your GIER CERTIFICATES make holiday either, either students 3 won't get the gift they need, students 6 won't 10062. Remember, you kneel!!
---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 7, 1988
15
KU Students, faculty, staff and family members.
You are invited to participate in the annual SUA
festival on Friday, April 18th from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. the SUA office: Deadline: Men., Nov. 21.
For information contact 684-347-5947, SPU or
Fire Ats.
MONTANA WILDLIFE RESERVE
MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History UNIQUE GIFTS
Hillel
לא
Events of the Week
Wednesday Nov. 9
Soviet Jewry Letter-writing
All Day
Kansas Union
Wednesday Nov. 9
Friday Nov.11
Tuesday Nov. 8
Tuesday Tunch
11:30-1:30 p.m., Alcove C
Union Square, Kansas Union
Shabbat Dinner & Kristalnacht Service
6 p.m. Hillel House
RSVP by Wednesday, Nov 9
For more information call Hillel House, 749-4242
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVES Metropolis Mobile Sound, Sup.-sound and sound, Professional club, radio DJ's, Hot Spins Maximum Party Thrills DJ, Ray Velayang 841-7083
GOOD VIBRATIONS the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call: Brian 841 9844
JOIN G. SINGS Parties * B-days, singing messages, 841.1874
Gutiérrez
It's back!
99¢ Margaritas
Now through Christmas
Late night munchies
Open:
10 a.m.-midnight
Sun - Tues:
10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
Wed - Sat.
ic
Johnny's
Classic Burgers 9th & Illinois
FOR RENT
Available immediately. 1 bedroom apt. for male student between downtown and campus. $240 plus electric and deposit. Call 841-7827.
Available Jan. 1, 2 bedroom apt. new carpet, nail
paint, and appliances, nice porch, close to
campus, cat okay. $550/month + utilities. 749-5213 or
749-6320
Available January thru May Two bdm apartment w/ fireplace Sunrise Place 837 Michigan Call 843-9064
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4-bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call to duty 841-1212, 841-5253, 841-1429, or 749-2415.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you. Call 841-1212, 841-325, or your 749-2415. Mastercraft
FEMALE roommate needed. Very close to campus, extremely spacious. Laundry facilities, off-street parking. Call Beth 843-1906.
Extra Nice 2 bedroom. 2 bath apartment to sublease second semester. Call 749-3174
Female Roombard wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Available immediately. A apartment includes own bedroom, bathroom, fireplace, and free water. Please call 749 6983.
Female roommate wanted to fill 4th bedroom in new Mastercraft Apt. Close to campus. Available now and/or next semester. Own room. ts utilities. Call 841-0783.
Female roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom duplex. Two bedrooms, 3 floors from bus, 3 great kitchens, 2 baths, 2 garages.
For sublease: spacious upstairs apt. $550/month.
Washer/dryer: Great location! Call 749-2545 or
842-2323.
Fully furnished one-bedroom, apartment. Civiliz-
ity bit enough for two! Must be in Nov. 10th
& Arkansas. $340 + utilities. 841-7032 or 79-2415.
January Sub-lease. $165 + utilities. Own room.
On route. Call Mary 841-3375.
Large i bedroom ap. Haven Place. Quilt, very clean, first half of Nov. Free if lease is signed by the ard. Call 841-5628 or 841-1212.
Lease for spring semester One space in nice large 2 BD. apl. 5 min. walk from campus.
Available Dec. 20. Call 614-8828.
Lease for spring semester; furnished 2 large
bedrooms; located near locations. Call 841-9253 NOW
LUXURY 2 bedroom 2 bathroom available
starting Dec./Jan. Large rooms, clean, quiet
D backups, freeplex, patio, wet bar, pool, ten-
ers. FP-305.
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
Sublease next semester. Nonsmoking roommate.
¹⁹⁰/mo. + ½ utilities. Near campus. 842-6088.
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place immediately. $300/mo, water paid, and furnished.
Call 841-1212 or 843-3969.
A-F 8-5
at. 8-5
un. 1-4
meadowbrook
ib & Crestline 842-4200
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 841-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
- Laundry facilities
- On bus route-near shopping
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
- Ample off-street parking
- Ample on-street parking
- Rental furniture available by Thompson Co.
by Thompson-Crawley
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Newly remodeled
- Great location
- On KU bus route
- Gas heat
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
26th & Iowa 843-6446
FOR SALE
10-speed bike for sale. Call 843-4638 after 5:00 pm.
£45.00
1979 Ford Pinto. Excellent condition. Call: Ray
8am-5pm 864-4956, after 7:30 842-9647.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware fine antique and costume jewelry, handmade quilt, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playbies, collector and cheep rocks-rock-a-mole cards, plush toys, card cards, machines, Maxfield Parrish, art deco, advertising items, desks, antisocial buttons, Dionuton and it will blow you away! QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET. 11 N.New Hampshire
it will flow you away! QUANTILLE'S FLEA MARKET B11 New Hampshire. Open every Sun and Sat. In 30. For both rental info call 842-6616. Visa/ Mastercard welcome!
AUDIO Sale: CASSETE decks. Teac, JVC, Sony from $75 - $150. Must sell. 614-9844.
Centurion fromman w/ DH bars. Look pedals. 3 months old pedal condition. $350. Wood frame kit.
Comic books, Playbies, Penthouses, etc. Mays
Comics. 11th New Hampshire. Open Sat & Sun
For Sale: A Tandy 600 portable computer and one TDAmp DMP 109 printer. Call 814.5388
FREE information on New Ka Police Photo radar. NOW in use. also Special offer to SAVE $80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 radar detector that will detect all radar including New ka BaL. BEL VECTOR 3 radar detector.
GOVT SURPLUS! All G. New I失翼s. Combat boots, and safety-toe boots on the airplanes. GoVTA Overcamlion Camouflage Clothing Also CARHARTT
Go to Miami, Fl. for Thanksgiving and or Christmas. Two trip tickets available for a discount price. Call 749-5737 after 6:00 pm for more info.
Mac with dual drive. Imagewriter, mouse, and
software. $1200 OBO. 864-2343 nights.
Men's 10 speed bike 80. Acoustic guitar with case
80. Both excellent condition 842-2482, keep
clean.
Mobile DJ system back on sale. 1000 watts sound,
lights, lamps. 749-150.
Rock-n-roll - Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on either Saturday and Sunday.
*bantrill's Fleet Market*, 811 New Hampshire.
|AE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty. |
|New $450 sell $200. Must see to appreciate. Many unctions. 841-7664 |
Trailer 12 ' x 65, w & d, shed, deck, AC, stove,
Rif. pice. 84-300, Calm Days 749-5240.
Winchester 30-20 rifle, accessories, ammo, $160
IPD rowing machine w/timer, w/ $60, Adjustable
drafting table, $50. Technics turntable, $50. OBO
824-230 evenings and weekends
AUTO SALES
Banquet positions are now open at the Adams Alumni Center. Applicants must be available to work in research & hostess & hostesses are needed. Above average pay & professional working conditions. Call 516-432-7800.
181 Blazer Silverado AC, PB, PS, AT, AM/FM
stereo, CB radio, 4' lift with 35" Radial muddles
looks and runs great. After 6:00 749-593,
$7000.00
HELP WANTED
1981 Toyota 4x4 su p-5 ud. S-Rs all options red
must sell $3450 obu chuck BK41-9922
Mirian is a beautiful black 1983 Mazda RX-7. She needs a new home. For more info call 864-3878 or leave message for Geri at 864-4750.
BIOLOGY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Partime, approximately 20 hours per week. Must be available for 3-4 hour time during the day from Monday through Friday. Apply to Interscience Corp., 2001 W. 31st Street, References and transcript required. Applied to M-F-H-R. An equal opportunity employer. M-F-H-R.
After-school caregiver for 2nd grade boy 2 nights a week. $5/hr. Hillcrest area. Call 843-3591 evenings.
RED HOT bargains! Drug dealer's cars, boats,
planes repd. 2 Surplus. Your Area. Buyers Guide
(1) 856-8700-600 Ext. S-9798
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords, Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevys. Surplus.
Buyers Guide (1) 805-687-600. S-9758.
LOST-FOUND
ABILINES NOW HIRING. Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Lettings, Salaries to 10K/hr. Entry level positions.
Call (855) 497-8000. Fax A. 9738
tion, no rust, $1500 or best offer. #842-2219
*76 Mazda KX4 (5-speed). Runs good, Stereo, New brakes, 850 OBO. Call 841-3942
Found: Keys by Potter Lake with Elvis key chain
Pizza Shuttle is immediately hired both full-time and part-time driverneys. Day and evening hours are limited to 10, 20, or 30 minutes and insurance. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shutl.
Cheeker's has immediate openings for the delivery Drivers. Must be 18 years old or older, have own car, provide driver's license, and insurance at 81.7$/hour upfront. Please contact person at Checker's 2124 Yale Rd. between 11 am and 8 pm. "Christmas Hike 80" (Hours Flexible).
Part-time data audit/udit person needed 8 a.m.
to noon 6 days per week. Must be dedicated,
dependable, and a self-starter. Computer
experience a must. Send resume to 165, 119
BAE Computer needs responsible student to
provide resume for the job offered. If 550
trained persons please send resume to 550
(866) 329-1477 or email resume@bae.com
Cheeker's Pizza has immediate openings for order takers, and pizza makers/sandwich makers. Day and nighttime positions available. Order takers 3.45 per hour and sandwich makers 2.75 per hour. Apply in person at Cheeker's Pizza 2214 Yale Rd. Between 11 a.m. and 8 p.m.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews. Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59901.
EARN EXTRA MONEY and free lodging vacation to Florida, Naurau or Mazatlan. Discuss of casefiles with staff representative. Must be aggressive and enjoy contact with people. Call 361-285-3885
- No experience necessary
- Christmas Help $9.90 (Hours Flexible)
* Entry level openings
- Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
PART-TIME
Furniture Delivery Personnel
Apply in person Thompson Crawley
520 East 22d. Terrace.
Experienced Photographer (student hourly position) needed for University Publication, news & magazine style photography. Must demonstrate camera and darkroom skills, also experience with digital media, including experience with color slide film. Submit portfolio and application by $pm. Nov. 4 to University Press.
Freshman, sophomores, and juniors; train in the graduation. Availability based on grade. Graduation. Availability based on grade.
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students part-time position is available. For information and interview please call Arqon Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at 212-637-9200.
Gal to clean house, 2.3 hrs weekly, $5.00 per hour Own transportation. 841-0522.
GOVERNMENT JOB. $16,040-$18,250. yr. Now
Hiring. Your Area. (1) 805-697-6000 Ext. R-9758
for current Federal list.
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening help and delivery drivers. Start at $3.60/h. Apply in person only at Border Borderd 1528 W. 23rd
Now hiring cooks and cashiers for days, evenings,
and over night startups. Starting pay $4.00-$4.50. Apply
anytime. Hardies set up the turnaround $832.
Business Manager/ Editor Applications
NANNES needed to live and work in the excitement
NANNES needed to live and work in the excitement
D.W.C. D.C. area. Must be responsible,
mature and enjoy working with children. Good
knowledge of English or more information
in JAPAN. In G.C. 17224906
The University Daily Kansas is now accepting applications for the Editor and the Business Manager positions for the 1989 Spring Semester. These are paid positions and require journalism experience. Interested persons may contact the University in connection with Hall, the Student Senate office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
Business Manager applications are due Tuesday, November 8th at 5 p.m. in 200 Staffair-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Wednesday, November 9th. Applications for Editor are due Friday, November 11th at 5 p.m. in 200 Staffair-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held November 14th.
The Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/
Affirmative Employment. 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
We are looking for two line cooks. Must be able to work nights. Contact Windell at Becerros 81-1232
On TVs, WBs, Jewelry Stores, Musical in cinemas, and restaurants. Call MCA/MAC A/E (800) 254-7140 or J-Hawk Paw & Jewelry.
MISCELLANEOUS
Join the KU chapter of BACHUS! Participate in an organization that is concerned with response to a public health crisis. Respond to a chemical. Go to the organizational meeting Monday, September 27th at Level S. Kansas Union. For more information call (801) 459-3210.
With the holidays coming up, you use some extra cash *you could* open for data entry computers or keyboard skills and can work 5-mon- Fri. please contact us **TO DAY**
BUS. PERSONAL
Government Photos. Passport, immigration,
visa. Modeling, theatrical, advanced fine art
portfolio. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
articulation. Tum Towers 795-1611.
Hunstan, God was there when I met you. Now it's a year and you call me love Loye Love. Ask us what you're thinking. Buy your ticket it's going to sell out. Michael Hughes, Nov. 9; Liberty Hall. KF. SwGr. Grad student, nice looking, somewhat妩丽. Email: M.Hughes@libertyhall.kf. Write: P.O. Box 42454, Lawrence. Ks. 60441.
Young couple seeking Nanny in New York Call
at 816-965-5609.
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat kidy,
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWF, 21-30
P.O. P. Box 422-043, Lawrence, KS. 66044.
Photo appreciated.
CAMPERS and FISHERS. SUA camping and fishing trip November 11-13. For details call SUA Office at 864-4477.
WOLF- Congrats! Heard you lost it in Pittsburg.
Monday & Tuesday
PERSONAL
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
HEY YOU! Get your car in shape for those cold winter months. Only $10 will cover a complete maintenance card at Philips 60. I only have 30 left ($99). The warranty is valid (very important for winter), battery charge,
Johnny's
Chris C - Smiley. Can last forever if you want. Or if not, I'd like to be a fond memory rather than a (orgonhet face) P.S. Can I still sit next to you in Poli Sq? Death.
Delahaye 1-year since our first kus! We've had the best of times since then. Lunch on Lake Michigan, the football field, our tree, and more. Thanks! Love your hovybunny. Loren.
5 p.m. — 11 p.m.
Cheeseburger
Gary, an attractive SWM, 25, fun-loving, active, sensitive, not phony, likes trying new things, prefers quiet, and is willing to change chances, would like meeting female, 20-28, who enjoys sage. You might be maybe more mature than Gary,
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for dependent$2 children with $25 deductible only $65 $66 month. With parent slightly higher. Kansas Insurance Service #81-161.
ride on the highway, flat tire repair plus more! I must sell all now. Card stock any on any vehicle and exp Dec. 15, 1980. Al Philpheus 64 is asking that you buy a card from us to qualify gas with each visit. The only cats on scache to catch me, Jim, at 842 4154 MWF 18wm; 12pm; 8pm; OR 14pm; OH TN (12pm; 14am) OR
Cheeseburger,
SKI Christmas break! Triple are filling fast for 4 great locations! Call me. Ann • **912-800-3000**, your Sunshine Tours rep, for details before it’s too late!
Monday
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 941-2316
trey Snugles: Meet me at Prime Time this
thursday in the Kansas Union. Your Mugfaffin.
pmi
Chicken Fried Steak
dear, happy one year today, you Po T'ing! I love you more than anything! Pjetet.
Melon Balls 75 $ ^{4} $
Pitchers
$2.50
Melon Balls
STAR WARS
lohnny's
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT, CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
SPRING BREAK '89 Trips Available Now
Don't Wait Until It's Too
JEWELRY
THE BEACH HOUSE
9 EAST 8TH
LAWRENCE, K
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
1-800-321-5911
HARPER
HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass.. Suite 201, 749-0123
SERVICES OFFERED
Astrology. Would you like to know about someone special, more about yourself, or what will happen if you ever face a situation addressed, stamped envelope to Astral Operation P O Box 34, Smithville Mo. 64089
Boudart Portraits are still the greatest gift idea.
Settins include glamourized over and full-pursuit assistance. For more information call Mike or Gracie collect 1-299-3789.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
French tutoring. Translations Paper revisions done on computer. Expert work. 8 years experience. Job 843-4102
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling: For free, confidential, 34-hour referrals, call KU info at 845-356 or Headquarters at 841-234. Sponsored by SCC.
PHOTOGRAPHARY SERVICES: Ektachrome
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $60.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 936.844-6077
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.)
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
Math tutor - Master's in math and MK years teaching experience. Call Alex at 841-7661.
Need a babysitter?? Experienced girls can help.
(p.m.)
Math tutor Master's in math and six years
Need a baby sitter?** Experienced girls can nap**
No job too big or small. Call 841-6678
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-3716.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park...431) 691-6878.
TYPING
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and afferable typing and wordprocessing.
July, 842-7945 or Lias, 841-1915
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former edita-
transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled
and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of
letter-written true. 843-363, days or evenings
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, these, IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 845-954.
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
Call evenings before 10:30-7:49 pm.
Toyota Quality Service
Rail R.J.'s Typing Service 8419-5942
Papers, Legal, Thesis, etc. by thesis price $1.99
paper prices, dictionaries, term papers, clues, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailing list
Lester H. Baird
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25(double-spaced pic page) East Lawrence.
Mrs. Matilla 841-1219.
C
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-4119. In Topek. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer.
Oil Change Service
$14.95
expert TYPPI - Reasonable rates. Call 812-303-230
IRON FENCE TYPPI service is based IBM
typifiers or Zelum typeifiers in a
processor in the IBM and Daisy轮
printer, flexible, fast, reasonable, guaranti
nderance.
MAC - WORDPROCESSING papers,
bookreports, materials, through proccessing.
Macintosh Wordprocessing Format to your specifications
Wordprocessing Format to all laser printed output.
Call Kurt 8427-3150. All laser printed output.
Toyota vehicles only, coupon required
10% off Coupon
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 2291
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
M-F: 10-5. *841-9223*
TOYOTA QUALITY
Any repairs or maintenance performed in our shop.
exp 12/1/88
RESUME SERVICES - professional, quality resumes. Formatted to your specifications with laser printed output. Quality, professional services at it’s the cost of Kindle’s 24 hour service.
THEWORLDOCORS- Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Logical, these, resumes, commercial, IBM PC, MAC, CDP Daisyheel, dot matrix, lasers. Since 1883.
ELLENA
TEAM TOYOTA
*TYPINGWIDDINGPROCESSING*. Done on computer, saved data for easy corrections (changes Letter Quality Legal. Printer Exp laura. 542.3738. Leave Message.)
29th & lowa 842-2191
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne, 842-7708.
Handwritten作业:Rangers
Word processing IBM Okidata printer $1.25/dole
blade spaced page. Call before 10 pm. 749-1300
Kathy.
WORD PROCESSING CALL Anne M. 847-7768
Word processing, typing, Papers, resumes, applications, dissertations. Also, assistance with grammar,拼写, compensation, editing. Have access to Microsoft Office.
WANTED
DESPERATELY Seeking guitar or keyboards amplifier. Steve 841-5945.
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1. You will have your own bedroom and your own bathroom on bus route $900.00 * + utilities. Call 842-3719, roommate for next semester. $125.00
Need someone to assume my lease of 1-bdrm apt.
at semester end. 749-3407 after 3:30
Drummer and Bassist needed to complete Jazz/Rock Band. Dan 842-7194.
Female roommate wanted for Spring semester
House on Ohio 1 bedroom for rent $210 a month
all utilities paid 642 989-2808 Leave message
- Policy
utilities a month, ten minute walk to campus.
841-7085 let ring.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female Roommate Immediately $160 and
utilities close to campus. Call 842-3599 after it
has been reserved.
Assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse;
rest (utilities, bus route, fireplace, pool,
garage).
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadswbrook. At end of this semester. Call 749-5857. Leave message.
Roommate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt.
near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne
294-4261
Roommate wanted. Georgetown Apartments B 487 $A + month + 1/2 years. Call Tim A 841-1965 Second Semester Female Roommate wanted $18 and 1/2 years. Walking distance or Bus
roommate needed to assume lease, or sublease from January 1. On sharing a room in Harvard Square Apartment. Own bedroom. $200 - utilities. 841-1780 after 9am.
Spring Semester. Quiet, studious roommate wanted. $145 mo. plus *utilities*. Close to campus. Call 842-1626
Will pay anyone who recorded the Robert Bork speech. Need to make a copy. 841-9648.
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---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Christiane Rebens
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Yeah, Sylvia . . . my set too . . . and in the middle of
'Laverne and Shirley.'"
16
Monday, November 7, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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1
1
VOTE TODAY ★ POLLS OPEN 7 A.M. - 7 P.M.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 99, No. 52 (USPS 650-640)
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday November 8,1988
Candidates wrap up campaigns
The Associated Press
George Bush sent his case to the voters yesterday, leading in the polls as he pledged a "steady hand" to build on the accomplishments of the Reagan years. Michael Dukakis campaigned over intotime, promising a "November surprise" that would land him in the White House.
Some polls suggested Bush's support might be eroding as both men raced across the United States in a final-day search for votes. Both campaigns spent nearly $1 million apiece on competing half-hour
appeals on network television, and the vice president also aired a new five-minute commercial that sharply attacked his Democratic rival.
"It's in the hands of the gods and the American people," the vice president said before heading for Houston and the final rally of his candidacy
"I'm going to do my best to be a fine president and a good leader and somebody you can be proud of." Dukakis said.
Dakaiks was on a 48-hour campaign blitz through 8,000 miles that wouldn't end until
election morning in Boston. He told a crowd of 20,000 in California that Democrats would kick Bush "right out of our future."
Both presidential campaigns relied on their 30-minute network commercials to reach the millions of voters that the pollsters said hadn't yet chosen a candidate.
Bush's blended snippets of biography, family tenderness and praise from Reagan with a final taped appeal from the vice president. "Americans are better off than they were eight years ago, and if you elect me president you will be better off four years
from now than you are today." he said.
Democratic vice presidential candidate Lloyd Benten appeared on stage in Texas with a caged quail — an obvious dig at his Republican rival, Dan Quayle.
Bush threw a singing jab at Dukakis, saying, "We don't want to return to my opponent's favorite song: 'For all you do, this recession is for you.'"
The Democratic nominee campaigned without letup on his pledge to stand up for "average working families."
Not all precincts are created equal
By Barbara Joseph Kansan staff writer
Undecided voters casting their ballots at Checkers Low Food Prices today might take their cue from the Busch beer behind the voting booths.
However, no beer will be sold while the polls are open, according to state law. The polls are open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Checkers, 2300 Louisiana ST., is one of 33 polling places in the City of Lawrence. said Patty James, Douglas County clerk.
"In Kansas City, they have used individual garages," she said. "The most unusual place we've ever used is a grocery store."
At Checkers, the 10 voting booths are in front of the beer cases, across from the frozen burtons and the Blue Bunny ice cream.
Jim Lewis, store owner, said the tradition of using the store as a polling site started with Rusty's Food Center, which once was located on the same corner where Checkers is now.
"It's a patriotic thing to do." Lewis said. "I'm a red, white and blue idiot, as you can tell by the flag outside." A large U.S. flag flies above the store's parking lot, at 23rd and Louisiana streets.
Lewis said Election Day didn't particularly help business.
Across town, at Babcock Place,
1700 Massachusetts St., the public is voting in the hobby room, where the senior citizen residents have parties and play cards. The 130 residents are voting in the lobby
"People take the prime parking places," he said. "They usually just vote and leave. They might pick up a few items."
"It's exciting to have a lot of 'it's people in and out,'" said Ascension "Toots" Schultz, manager. "The residents come and visit, especially those who don't come down often. It's something differ-
One of those residents, Dulin Robert, was sitting in the lobby.
"It's going to be quite an election," he said. "People don't know who to vote for. I don't. You can't believe what the candidates say."
At First Presbyterian Church, 2415 Clinton Parkway, voting is in the Fellowship Hall, used mainly for wedding receptions, classes and dinners.
Behind the booths hang appliques honoring Christ's disciples. Voters may stand next to a cross and keys applique honoring Simon Peter or a fish and Bible appliple symbolizing the ministry of Simon the Zealot.
The church has been a polling site for more than 15 years, said Cheryl Harmon, director of Christian education.
"We do nothing but open the doors," Harmon said. "The city delivers the equipment, sets it up and takes it down. We just need to have the building open a little earlier than usual."
KU's Allen Field House is another polling site. The booths are just off the running track in the east lobby. Voters can peruse the KU Hall of Fame and relive the Jayhawk's victories as portrayed in the trophy case area.
"They've voted for as long as I can remember," said Floyd Temple, assistant athletic director.
SOLRA
State
Representation
45th District
Called to vote
William Scott, Lawrence Democrat, makes last minute calls to voters on the eve of the national election. Several Douglas County Democrats worked last night at their headquarters in the Southern Hills Mall shopping center.
Foreign students frustrated with U.S.election
Kansan staff writer
By Debbie McMahon
The 1988 presidential election has been shallow, and without much voter interest, some KU foreign students said yesterday.
She said she thought it was strange that a campaign could be run on a few seconds of negative commercials.
"My impression of the campaign is that the level of discussion is really, really low." said Annette Kuhlmann, Hamburg, West Germany, graduate student. "People have lost a lot of faith in the process."
Bolin Mamudain focused on the positive aspect of the United State's political system.
"This is a wonderful system you have here," said Mainuddin, assistant instructor in political science from Dhaka, Bangladesh. "Every system has its flaws, and every system has its merits. But in spite of its flaws, it has worked for 200 years or more. And it has ensured a systematic and a peaceful transition."
practice.
Even so, not all eligible voters will exercise their right today, despite systems of communication and transportation that make voting easier for U.S. citizens than for citizens of other countries, he said.
"For Americans, voting is just one normal aspect in life." Maddaind said. "In other countries, developing countries, people take it more seriously because they don't often get the chance to and don't know when they will again."
Whatever the reason for low voter turnout, Heinrich Nissen, Gelting, West Germany, junior, said such apathy bothered him.
"It's scary to me, the disinterest in the United States of America." Nissen said. "Many of my American friends don't really care and feel they have no choice."
he said personalities and prestige were more important here than in West Germany, where the candidate's party had more influence.
engage.
"I think Dukakis is more concerned with the people in the United States." Omar said. "Bush only cares about capitalism and the rich get richer. I think it is always this way between Democrats and Republicans."
with the issues.
Nayef Omar, Sareh, Jordan, senior, said he would vote for Michael Dukakis if he were eligible.
"It's much more of an issue of how good looking your president is than of concern with the issues." Nissen said.
Omar said the U.S. electoral process did not allow just anyone to be a candidate.
"They have to be known in Washington, (from holding other political offices)," he said. "It's just like acting. They are not from the people."
If Tainishing Ma, Taipei, Taiwan, graduate student, were eligible to vote, he would have voted for Dukakis, too.
"George Bush is too conservative," Ma said. "I saw him on television, and he was saying bad things about Dakis. That's not the way I think a president should act. He's so negative."
Ma said that because Dukakis' parents were immigrants, the Massachusetts governor would be able to deal with foreign countries better.
Stephan guilty of breach of contract
Jury awards $200,000
in harassment suit
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — A federal court jury yesterday awarded $200,000 to Marcia Torsonon Stingley, finding that Attorney General Robert T. Stephan breached a contract when he disclosed terms of the settlement of a sexual harassment suit she brought against him six years ago.
However, the jury rejected Stingley's arguments that publicity generated by the Oct. 29, 1985, news conference at which the terms were disclosed had shown her in a "false light." At the news conference, Stephen and a political adviser of Bob W. Storey of Topkea, said that Stingley was paid $24,000 to settle the 1982 sexual harassment suit.
Stingley, a file clerk in Stephen's office for three years until she was fired in 1982, was seeking $5.2 million in the breach-of-contract lawsuit. The jury's award was for actual damages only. It awarded no money for punitive damages.
The jury's verdict after less than hours of deliberations yet remains unchanged.
Stephan declined comment follow ing the verdict, but $ \textcircled{s} $ scheduled a news conference for 2 p.m. today.
Stephan sat at the defense table impassively as the verdict was read just before 5 p.m. in U.S. District Court.
The attorney, general bowed his head and stared downward as Judge Dale E. Saffells dismissed the jury. The assistant attorney general who helped with his defense, Carl Gallagher, comforted Stephan, patting him on the shoulder.
Asked for his reaction, Stephan said, "I don't have any comments — not right now."
storey also declined to comment after the verdict was read, but bulged his attorney, Deanne Hay, and smiled broadly.
Stingley sued Storey for placing her in a false light with his statements at the news conference, but the storey found Storey did nothing.
Stingley declined to say much about the trial or the verdict, although when asked by reporters, she said she was not unhappy about the outcome. She also said she would move back to England after completing until returning for the trial. Stingley filed the suit when she went by the name of Tomson
Defense attorney Gerald Michaud said he assumed the judgment would be appealed, but said he had not asked whether to handle any appeal.
Asked who would pay the judgment, Gallaher said it was too early to discuss the point. The state paid all of Stephan's legal bills in the first lawsuit, but not the $24,000 paid to settle it. That money was raised through donations by friends of the attorney general.
The jury found only that Stephen had breached a contract and set actual damages at $200,000. It said neither Stephan nor Storey held her in a false light, and awarded no punitive damages.
KU requests $5.7 million budget increase for 1990
By Mark Fagan
The University of Kansas is asking the state for a $22.7 million budget for fiscal year 1990, a $5.7 million or 2.6 percent increase over this year's budget.
Kansan staff writer
increase.
The proposal, currently under consideration by the state budget office, calls for a 7.6 percent increase in the total allotted for faculty salaries and the creation of 41.6 new teaching positions. It also covers several mission-related enhancements, with much of the money going toward instruction, libraries and student services.
and student services.
The state budget director's recommendations will be sent this month to Gov. Mike Hayden, who will present his state budget in January to the Kansas Legislature for approval. The budget will go into effect July
Most of the increases come under the Margin of Excellence, the three year plan to
Under the Margin portion of the proposal, the total allotted for faculty salaries would increase by 7.6 percent. Five percent of that would be a base increase to keep pace with the peers, and 2.6 percent would help bring salaries closer to peer levels.
increase total financing of Board of Regents schools to 95 percent of peer institutions and faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
The increase would not be across-the-board; individual faculty salary increases are determined solely on merit.
Sid Shapiro, chairman of KU's Planning and Resources Committee, said that the second year of the Margin was essential.
"There's simply no way to reach those levels without continuing funding of the Margin of Excellence," he said.
In fiscal 1989, which ends June 30, the average salary for an unclassified KU faculty member is estimated at $40,400, or 90.8 percent of peer earnings. In fiscal 1988,
Shapro said that not enough of the money allocated for the Margin in fiscal year 1989 went to faculty salary increases.
the average KU salary was $37,645, or 88.5 percent of the peer average.
"Almost all the money from the first year was spent on needs created by increases in enrollment," said Shapiro, professor of law. "Thus, we really haven't had an opportunity to use the Margin. At the moment, we're trying to use it to hold our own."
brying to ask it.
"We're not talking about building any excellence yet. We're talking about recovering from the catastrophic effects of the addition of hundreds of students to the University."
Several mission-related enhancements also would receive special consideration under the Margin Instruction, which includes interdisciplinary programs, scientific equipment and research, would receive $560,000.
$^{8217, 8218}$ The budget proposal itself is separated into three different proposals based on different levels of state financing.
Libraries would receive $250,000, largely to strengthen buying power for acquisitions.
Student services, including basic services, recruitment and retention, would receive $217,000.
The other two proposal levels are based on May 31 state budget office planning estimates.
The highest level, which includes the Margin, is based on figures approved by the Regents at its June 23 meeting. The $229.7 million proposal is what KU officials want and hope they will get, said Keith Nitcher, University director of business affairs.
"We're optimistic. You have to be optimistic," he said. "It's not just a wish list. The state is in good financial condition, and we has been endorsed by our leadership."
"The B-level really just provides marginal base increases," he said. "In real terms, it would cause a reduction in some levels of service."
The middle level calls for $220.7 million, which could force cuts in University programs, said Michael O'Keefe, state budget director.
The lowest level calls for $12.17 million O'Keele said the state budget office would not consider this proposal because the state was in good financial shape.
("The state) has been that way for a long, long time," he said. "All we need is for the Kansas economy to keep growing. If it does, a lot of good things can happen."
O'Keele would not say which proposal he expected to be approved. Hayden, he said, supported the Margin and would most likely try to approve much of it.
---
it. 'It's not a question of whether he supports it,
it's a matter of whether he can finance it.'
2
Tuesday, November 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Sunny and mild
High: 59°
Low: 40°
Skies will be mostly sunny today with a high of 59 degrees. The wind should be out of the east at 5-10 miles per hour. Tonight, clouds increasing with a low of 40 degrees.
North Platte 57/43
Partly cloudy
Omaha 80/36
Sunny
Goodland 57/14
Partly cloudy
Salina 60/43
Partly cloudy
Topeka 59/40
Sunny
Columbia 58/39
Sunny
St. Louis 57/18
Sunny
Dodge City 52/14
Partly cloudy
Wichita 61/44
Partly cloudy
Chanute 60/41
Sunny
Springfield 60/41
Sunny
Foreword by Dan Wilkins.
Temperature we are today's high and tonight's low
5-Day
Wednesday
A.M. showers 59/38
HIGH LOW
Thursday
Partly cloudy 55/37
Friday
Mostly sunny 59/37
Saturday
Mostly sunny 60/36
Sunday
Partly cloudy 61/38
The nation
Seattle 50/43
L
Denver 61/34
Chicago 54/51
New York 60/42
Los Angeles 69/53
Phoenix 56/30
Dallas 79/56
Miami 81/87
Fronts:
cold occluded
warm saturation
North Platte 65/43 Partly cloudy
Omaha 88/28 Sunny
Omaha 88/28 Sunny
Goodland 67/47 Partly cloudy
Salina 60/43 Partly cloudy
Topeka 69/40 Sunny
Kansas City 58/39 Sunny
Columbia 88/40 Sunny
St. Louis 57/38 Sunny
Dodge City 69/46 Partly cloudy
Wichita 61/44 Partly cloudy
Chanute 60/41 Sunny
Springfield 60/41 Sunny
Forecast for Dan Wilkus Temperature is today's high and tonight's low
Tulsa 63/45 Partly cloudy
Wednesday
A.M. showers
59/38
HIGH LOW
Thursday
Partly cloudy
55/37
Friday
Mostly sunny
59/37
Saturday
Mostly sunny
60/36
Sunday
Partly cloudy
61/38
Seattle 50/47
L Denver 61/34
Chicago 54/39
New York 60/42
Los Angeles 69/53
Phoenix 56/30
Dallas 79/56
Miami 81/67
Fronts:
cold included
warm stationary
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**Maranatha Campus Ministries meets at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.**
On Campus
Environs will provide information on recycling and other environmental issues from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today and will show on the east lawn of Wescoce Hall.
■ The Hispanic American Leadership Organization meets at 6:30 tonight in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
■ Bernard Bailyn, Adams University professor, speaks on "The Ideological Fulfillment of the American Revolution: Interpreting the Constitution" at 8 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
■ "Epilogue: The End," a biblical seminar, begins at 4:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
KU Students Against Hunger meets at 7 onight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
Orthodox Christians on Campus meets at 7 tonight in the Oread Room at the Kansas Union. John Platko
from Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in Kansas City is the guest speaker. Representatives from the Saint Paul School of Theology in Kansas City will give a dinner for students interested in theological graduate study at 6 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Ave.
University Singers has a fall concert at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
The Physics and Astronomy Colloquium is featuring Edward McCliment at 3:30 p.m. today in 3065 Malott Hall
A graduate seminar on "The Cloning of a Cell Division Gene from Bacillus subtilis" is at 12:30 today in 6013 Hallworth Hall.
■ University Forum will feature Beatrice Wright speaking on "Psychological Mission to China: Two Teams, Two Puzzles" at noon tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. To reserve a hot lunch, call 843-4933 by today. Lunch line opens at 11:40 a.m.
Police Record
WOMAN HELD AT KNIFEPOINT A 27-year-old Lawrence woman was held at knifepoint and forced to drive a man to Topeka where she was released uninjured early yesterday morning, Lawrence police said.
Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said the victim was getting out of her car near her apartment in the 1600 block of West Eighth Terrace when the man approached her and asked for a cigarette. She gave him one, and the man then said he needed a ride to Topeka. When the victim declined to give him a ride, the man pulled a knife.
The victim then drove the car to the east side of Topeka on U.S. Highway 40. The man got out of the car on Croco Road, took about $40
from the victim and left on foot. The victim reported the incident to Topeka and Lawrence police.
Mulvenon described the man as a 6-foot black male in his 30s, with a short aro, black slacks and a hip-length camouflage jacket.
STUDENT ASSAULTED A 26-year-old female KU student was sexually assaulted in her apartment in the 1500 block of Kentucky Street early Sunday morning, Lawrence police said.
Mulvenon said the victim awoke when the unidentified assailant, who had apparently entered through an unlocked door, grabbed her throat. He said the victim was threatened both verbally and with an unidentified sharp object.
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Chimeca Product Group Inc. Presents:
"REUNION"
Fourth place honors at the Houston International Film Festival.
November 9th,1988 8:00 pm
Downs Auditorium. Dyche Hall
The University Of Kansas Theatre Presents A Searing Look At Contemporary Medical Ethics
WHOSE
JESUS?
IS IT ANYWAY
BY BRIAN CLARK
8:00 P.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY,
NOV. 11-12 & 18-19, 1988
CRAFTON-PREYER THEATRE
Tickets On Sale In The Murphy Hall Box Office. All Seats
Tickets On Sale In The Murphy Hall Box Office. All Seats Reserved/For Reservations. Call (913)864-3982. VISA And Mastercard Accepted. Special Discounts For KU Students And Senior Citizens. Partially Funded By The KU Student Activity Fee. This Production Is An Associate Entry In The 1989 American College Theatre Festival XXI.
V
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 8, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Engineering dean develops plan
Equipment costs may raise tuition
By Katy monk
Kansan staff writer
A proposed $10 fee for each engineering credit hour has found students unwilling to reach into their student records to signator said the charge is necessary.
Carl Locke, KU dean of engineering and the plan's developer, said recently that the school's equipment maintenance costs far exceeded funds provided by the University or obtainable elsewhere.
The solution, as he sees it, is to turn to those benefiting from the school's computers and laboratory equipment.
The fee would affect not only KU, but Kansas State University and Wichita State University. The Board of Regents tabled the idea at an Oct. 20 meeting, but is expected to act on it at a meeting Nov. 17.
Under the proposal, a student who enrolled in nine credit hours of engineering during a semester would pay a $90 equipment fee in addition to regular tuition.
Locke said the fee would raise more than $300,000 a year for KU's engineering school. His written proclamation came in time frame for implementation of the fee.
A study by the American Society for Engineering Education indicated that KU needs about $1 million a year for acquisition, replacement and maintenance of engineering equipment, according to the proposal.
Because Campaign Kansas money almost never is donated for maintenance, sources for the necessary funds are scarce. The University contributes $90,000 for school-wide maintenance, with some additional money to different departments. Locke said the school was using money allocated for other uses to help pay for equipment maintenance.
The dean noted that many other universities, including the University of Michigan and the University of Missouri, had some form of specific fee for engineering students.
But Brook Menees, student body president and member of the Board of Regents Student Advisory Committee, said his committee rejected that argument. And a petition against the proposal garnered about 300 KU student signatures.
Locke acknowledged that student reaction was mixed. But after hearing his explanation, most students recognized the need for more funds, he said, although many still objected to the means of raising them.
Meeces argued that the school, not the students, should be responsible for financing equipment. The engineering school should show the University and the state that the school's equipment should be a priority item.
But Locke said that the University and the state could not meet the engineering school's massive financial needs when many other departments had dire needs, too. Thus the specific fee is necessary.
In the past, specific fees have been widely used at Regents schools — so much so that the state Legislature protested.
In 1984, the Legislature voiced disapproval of extensive use of the fees and asked that the Regents stop approving them. Menees said approving such fees now could jeopardize the Regents credibility with the Legislature and reduce chances of increased funding from that body.
Menees said he also was concerned that if the engineering school instituted a specific fee, which amounts to a tuition increase for engineering students, other programs would be encouraged to follow that precedent.
Police improving in-house security
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
Assigning KU police officers to different shifts, moving copy machines to more secure areas and chaining locks on certain doors were some changes made as a result of an ongoing internal policy change. [Ma], Ralph Oliver, assistant director of KU police, said yesterday.
Oliver said the actions were taken in order to ensure the security of documents and overall security. The internal investigation began in late September after it was discovered that copies of confidential police documents had been delivered to persons outside the department.
The people who took the documents would not normally have had access to them, he said.
Vickie Thomas, University general counsel, said she didn't know whether criminal charges would be filed in connection with the incident. She said that the decision probably would be made by Denney.
Jim Denney, KU police director, said Sunday that the investigation had discovered who took the documents, but he wouldn't reveal the name of the persons or how many people were involved.
would be made by Neither Denney nor Oliver would comment on the possibility of criminal charges
Oliver said that in addition to civil service regulations that restrict officials from discussing personnel matters, the department had been cautioned by the University general counsel's office not to comment on changes because of attempts within the department to form a union.
Both Denney and Oliver emphasized that no personnel action had been taken as a result of employees' unionization or organization efforts. Talk of forming a union has increased since September 1987.
David Lewin, director of personnel services, said that no formal discussions concerning police unionization had taken place. Before formal talks can occur, three steps must be followed to form a state-certified union.
First, the state Public Employee Relations Board, when requested, determines what type of employees belong together as a bargaining unit.
an idea go out declined to comment Second, organizers must show the board that 30 percent of the affected employees are interested in being represented by a specific organization
Lewin said this step had been taken and a decision rendered about a month ago but declined to comment
Third, an election must be held, and the organization must receive more than 50 percent of employees votes.
Citizenship process difficult
By James Farquhar Kwanen staff writer
Foreign students learn how to apply for visas and residency
Kansan staff writer
Sohail Mohammed came to the University of Kansas from Bangla desh and says he wants to stay in this country after he graduates with an aerospace engineering degree.
"The main reason I want to stay is because they really don't have any job opportunities in my field in Bangladesh," the Dhaka, Bangladesh, sophomore said. "I would prefer to stay."
But it's not going to be easy.
lawyer from Kansas City, Mo. spoke yesterday about how foreign students could begin the long and costly process of applying for temporary work visas and permanent residence in the United States.
Because Mohammed is from another country, he will encounter a thick web of laws designed to disqualify most foreigners from gaining permanent residence in this country. Fisherman, an immigration
Howard Eisberg, an immigration
More than 80 people crowded into the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union to hear the workshop sponsored by the office of foreign student services.
The process can take up to five years, he said, and there is no guarantee of success. Lawyer fees for permanent residence can range from $2,500 and up, while fees for temporary work visas can cost between $500 and $1,000.
To stay in the country permanently,aliens must meet three qualifications.
First, people must have at least a bachelor's degree in a professional field. Eisberg said, although the definition of such a field is narrow. Second, they must show that their job requires the degree they have. And third, the job they possess while awaiting approval from the U.S. Department of Immigration must be temporary, although in some cases an alien can hold a job with permanent intentions.
Further, when an alien applies for a permanent job, the employer must spend 30 days advertising the position and show that no equally qualified U.S. citizen wants the job.
"The U.S. labor department is there to protect American jobs."
Eisberg said, adding that foreign workers are seen as a threat to U.S. employment. "Sometimes it seems like they are looking for things that are wrong with your application so they can say 'A-ha, we can't let you in.'"
The complicated immigration laws constantly change, he said. And political pressure sometimes relaxes laws temporarily.
laws compel
"Following the elections, the opportunities may not be as available as they are today," he said. "What I tell you today may not be true six months from now."
"But whatever you do, don't rely on hearsay or rumor. Check it out before you make any decisions you may regret."
THE CENTER FOR COMPUTER ENGINEERING
Chris Kahn, Shawnee senior, waits to see the recruiter from Roche majoring in organizational communications and personel administra tion, will graduate in May. Laboratories at the University Placement Center, Kahn, who is double
Placement Center supports students searching for business opportunities
Kansan staff writer
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
The University Placement Center can help students in what is often looked at as the worst part of the job search - getting started.
"There is no doubt about it— the single most important thing the placement center does is help students begin the search," said Vernon Geissler, director of the center.
Geissler said that for students who commit time and energy to the job search, opportunities abound. But students often procrastinate, beginning their searches only weeks before they plan to graduate.
"You have to start; that's the key thing." Geissler said. "You can put it off and off, but you have to start to get any results."
but you may have. Geissler and the assistant director of the center urge students to begin the job search early. James Henry, assistant director of the center, said that the search took about seven months.
"it there is anything I can emphasize, it is to start early," Henry said.
Terry Glenn, assistant director of the center,
said that students shouldn't confuse the center
To begin the job search, students, or even alumni, can go to one of six placement centers in the University. Geissler said. The professional schools have their own placement centers, and the University Placement Center is open to all majors, especially those in liberal arts and sciences and education.
Geissler recommended that students make an appointment with a staff member to discuss launching a job search.
The next step is to compile a resume, Geissler said. The placement center offers workshops on resume writing, and its bookbook, "Placement Manual," outlines the resume-writing process
Mantuan, obtains the necessary Then students should go to area libraries and placement center libraries to research companies.
Next comes the actual interview. Companies from around the country and even the world currently are interviewing students at the
Education majors go through a more complex process because they must establish a credential file. Glenn said. A credential file is a more extensive record of the prospective employee that includes a resume, letters of reference, grades and transcripts.
with professional placement agencies. Those centers specialize in placing clients in a job, whereas the placement center takes a more holistic approach to the job search.
center. To be eligible for the interviews, students must register, which consists of filling out necessary forms and a resume file and paying a fee. The fee is $10 to interview and be entered on the center's computer data system. For that and a bi-weekly bulletin of job vacancies, the fee is $15.
Students who go through the center may register at any time. The initial registering process is valid for one year, which runs September through September, regardless of the month registered.
To help students with the all-important interview, the center conducts mock interviews. Students schedule an appointment to meet with a staff member, who will act as an interviewer. The tap interviews are played back to the students and critiqued by the staff member on the quality of the students' answers, eye contact, body language and dress.
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Rep. Charlton Has Been An Effective Advocate On Environmental Issues.
She has:
. a 100% rating from Kansas Natural Resource Council.
. . . An endorsement from the Sierra Club.
As a member of the House Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Rep. Charlton has sponsored legislation
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Betty Jo Charlton
Re-elect YOUR Representative in 10
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4
Tuesday, November 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Minority task force report doesn't say nearly enough
The Minority Issues Task Force report released last week by the executive vice chancellor's office is a weak presentation on the vital issue of racial discord at the University of Kansas.
The report's basic flaw is its inefficiency in pinpointing problems and suggesting practical goals. For the most part, the recommendations state the obvious and consistently avoid any plans for specific action or timetables for when such plans should be developed.
The task force first met April 7. It was divided into four subcommittees that investigated previous task force reports, the campus climate for minority participation, and student, faculty and staff issues.
After seven months, the task force has produced a report that is slightly more than six pages long: three pages of introductory material and three pages and a few lines of recommendations.
None of the recommendations has any background or follow- up plan.
- Several recommendations stress the all-to-familiar need to increase financial support for minority students and staff. The focus is on the general need rather than the specific plan. The task force has failed to identify the potential financial resources that are waiting to be tapped merely with a good grant proposal.
In another recommendation, the task force suggests that "as an incentive to recruitment, the executive vice chancellor and vice chancellor for academic affairs should develop a mechanism for tangibly rewarding those academic units that successfully recruit minority faculty." What do they mean by tangible reward? A pat on the back? More scholarships? Cash prizes?
For instance, the Minority Engineering Program, independently run by the School of Engineering, receives an annual average of $40,000 from corporations. This year, the program has received $50,000 from one corporation alone to start its early entry summer program. The time is right to solicit for corporate contributions. The report makes no recommendation for such a plan.
The report also suggests that race relations, history and experiences of minority groups in American life be included as curriculum material in a required course on race relations for all students. If 26,000 students need to complete a course on race relations, is it possible to recruit or train faculty for this course? KU might set a precedent by attempting this, but how could finances be arranged?
could finance be arranged.
Other recommendations leave readers guessing. For instance, the report suggests that "core curriculum required courses should especially try to recruit minority faculty and graduate teaching assistants as well as other individuals sensitive to minority concerns." Why? Is it to present role models for minority students or to increase awareness of minority culture among non-minority students? How can the University identity "individuals sensitive to minority concerns"?
certis
■ The task force suggests training and educating several campus groups to handle minority concerns. What ought to be the nature of this training?
How can the chancellor and executive vice chancellor regularly reaffirm our institutional commitment to the improvement of race relations and to the value of diversity"? What is the reason behind establishing an Office of Multicultural Affairs administered by a vice chancellor? Apart from cooperating with the Office of Foreign Student Services and replacing the Office of Minority Affairs, what are the plans for the new operations? At present, the Office of Minority Affairs is administered by a vice chancellor and aims to serve students belonging to all minority groups. Will this suggestion result in just a name change?
The report does not address a real problem at KU, that of strengthening and coordinating several minority programs that already exist. Instead of using existing programs such as the Minority Affairs Outreach Program, Upward Bound, SCOrMEBE (the minority engineering program), BALSA (the minority law program) and others as a background, the report gives the impression that KU needs to start from scratch.
The task force's best recommendation is the suggestion to keep the task force in place for a year to monitor the implementation of its recommendations. Perhaps that would allow sufficient time for the task force to start and complete its homework.
Muktha Jost for the editorial board
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board
News staff
Todd Cohen...Edito.
Michael Horak...Managing editor
Julie Adam...Associate editor
Stephen Wade...News editor
Michael Merschel...Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes...Campus editor
Craig Anderson...Sports editor
Scott Carpenter...Photo editor
Dave Emmes...Graphics editor
Jill Jess...Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Draca Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Kurt Messermanith...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Assist production manager
Jae Lishenhua...Classified manager
Iain Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
faculty
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ELECTION`88 UPDATE,
FINDING OUT HOW YOU
VOTED AMERICA!
HOW DARE YOU ASK ME WHO
I VOTED FOR! I PLEAD THE
5TH AMENDMENT! I...I WAS
UNDER PRESSURE, I WASN'T
IN CONTROL!!!
SNIFF!
WHAT HAVE
I DONE?
BACK TO YOU.
SAM!
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
A vote for Quayle
By now we have all heard what the Democrats think of the Republican nominee for vice president. The Democrats are convinced that Dan Quayle does not have the qualifications to hold such an important job. It is my belief that the Democrats' anti-Qaukai campaign came about solely to cover up Michael Dukakis' own lack of qualifications.
Dan Quayle's many years in the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate have given him invaluable experience in the areas of agriculture, domestic spending, foreign policy and many other areas. In my opinion these experiences are crucial to a possible chief executive.
Michael Dukakis has not had the experience needed to become vice president, let alone president. Dan Quayle has. Michael Dukakis knows this to be true, especially in foreign policy. How does he compensate? He takes a ride in a tank. Now he can say he is an expert on national defense and foreign policy.
I would like to suggest to Mr. Dakikas that he step aside and allow his running mate, Lloyd Bentsen, to become the Democratic nominee for president. Bentsen is eminently more qualified to become the leader of the free world than Michael Dakikas. If the Democrates would like a word of friendly advice, I want you to take the man at the top of the ticket. A Bentsen/Dakikas ticket would have a better chance of winning than the one with Dakikas at the top.
As for me, I am one concerned American who looks at qualifications. George Bush and Dan Quayle have qualifications. Michael Dukakis does not. The Democrats have no room to talk about Quaile. I'm voting Republic!
Jonathan D. Beeker Prairie Village junior
As one of a series of programs on alternative religions, the forum on witchcraft that took place at ECM was part of an exploration of other religious traditions in today's pluralistic society. The open discussion led by Sue Westwind, Tim Miller, assistant professor of religious studies, and Lt. Mike Hall of the Lawrence Police Department was a thoughtful and insightful experience for the 230 KU students and local residents present.
Faith seeks understanding
Eric Schmidt's note of concern in the Nov. 4 Kansan about the alternative religion forum at Ecumenical Christian Ministries on witchcraft may well-intentioned, but completely misses mark
Jesus spoke of the great commandment to
The Rev. Jack Bremer Director/campus pastor Ecumenical Christian Ministries
"Love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind (Matthew 22:37)." Our minds are talents given by God to be used, not to be buried in the ground. Persons of significant Christian faith need have no fear of open discussion of anything, especially in the marketplace of ideas on the University campus. One of our motts at ECM is St. Anselm's fides quarrens intellectum, faith seeks understanding. A narrow, self-righteous, fearful, anti-intellectual attitude is not representative of healthy Christianity.
Nikolas Huffman joins the many "get out the vote" pleas of election years, which range from absurd "plea, we could end up with Hitler," when in fact Hiller was voted in to disgust (John Kenneth Galbraith proclaiming that "individuals don't matter unless they contribute to society") to elementary school logic ("If you don't vote, you can't complain" — what is that, Amendment XXX of the Bill of Rights?). I am a non-voter by philosophical belief, and I believe that refusing to vote is just as sacred a right and just as moral a choice as pulling the lever for some bozo.
Not voting a choice
So long as I am free — because I am free — I will not be soothed by the state's "bread and circuses," I will not ignore their mockery of the rights I cherish, and I will not join the election-day farce of affirming that, yes, the emperor's new clothes are beautiful, when I know he is naked. My obligation to the principles of freedom is not narrowly defined by the safe curtain of a voting booth. Rather, I cling to the archaic belief that my individual rights are mine by right and not conferred by fiat of the state. That revolutionary belief (shall we say, American Revolutionary belief?) leaves me with the onerous responsibility of effecting change by the
In a society that practiced democratic ideals, non-voting would be a viable alternative, for lack of a majority would indicate lack of support for the ruling group, which inevitably would translate into a reduction of power for those in control. In a state that calls itself democratic, there is no parallel consequence. The state's power is never dimmed but grows exponentially with the willingness of its subjects to fund it. Thus, non-voting is unacceptable, because the state, having usurped the real thing, requires the semblance, the trappings of freedom, as its sanction. Hence the "vote to make your voice heard" is only the state saying, "If you now don't bother with our government at work, and I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that my voice doesn't mean a damn to those who steal my money, whittle away at my rights and then tell me I have an obligation to sanction what is done in the name of "democracy" when the real beneficiaries are the entrenched bureaucracy, the liberal panderers, the corporate sophphants, the whole metange that nourishes and is fed by the state at my expense.
exercise of speech, resistance, and the printed word, and not by a sanitized vote for a state-approved "candidate of my choice."
Cynthia Ingham publications editor School of Business
Support for Charlton
I would like to reply to the letter of Hicks and Gladabach about the election campaign in the 46th District of the Kansas House of Representatives.
I worked for Rep. Betty Jo Charlton as her legislative intern during the 1988 session of the legislature, and I am coordinator of her campaign for re-election. I know Rep. Charlton is responsive and responsible. She serves all the seats she represents in Congress. She drives home every night when she is working in Topeka. She is more accessible to constituents than most legislators.
Rep. Charlton is dedicated to higher education. She is a life member of the KU Alumni Association. Both her sons are KU alumni. She taught Western Civilization without pay for 14 years. She supports the University wholeheartedly in the legislature.
Perhaps Rep. Charlton's opponent would not be "irresponsive" (as the letter writers called Rep. Charlton), but he is certainly irresponsible. He has brought national campaign tactics to Lawrence.
Vote today. Vote for Betty Charlton in the 46th District.
Clint Burnette
Topeka senior
As a player for the Kansas men's soccer team, I can attest to the feelings surrounding our team these days. We've had a successful season (18-2-3), winning two tournaments, and are preparing for the National Club Soccer Championship in Ames, Iowa, Nov. 11-13. Everything that has become a reality for the team this season never could have developed without the determination and hard work of our coach, Glenn Shirtliffe. I could write forever detailing the things he does for us.
Bittersweet success
What is a shame to me, as well as my teammates, is that this hard work put forth by coach Shirtliffe and the team is virtually unnoticed by the school. Our program is run on a twostring budget. Kansas soccer's budget for one year is less than a single football player's. Kansas soccer, without question, should be a varsity sport, and coach Shirtliffe can win. It makes me sick to watch coach Shirtliffe do what he does for KU and the soccer team for nothing. Glenn Shirtlife is the heart and soul behind Kansas soccer, and he deserves a lot more than he's receiving now.
David Stoneburner Overland Park junior
BLOOM COUNTY
GOOD MORNING,
MADAM! HAVE YOU
VOTED? AH... WELL, WE'D
LIKE YOU TO CONSIDER
THE BILL / MONDALE
ALTERNATIVE...
BILL
MONDALE
11-13
WHY?
UH...
GIMME.
by Berke Breathed
BECAUSE IF YOU DON'T.
WE'LL COME TO 37 ELM
STREET AND SHOT
YOUR HUSBAND, LAMAR.
NATURALLY, MADAM,
YOU SHOULD TAKE
THAT IN THE SPIRIT
OF ALL CAMPAIGN
PROMISES...
I'M THROUGH
FOOLIN'
AROUND!
ILL
DALE
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 8, 1988
5
Glimpse
Compelled to conduct
CITY
Conducting a practice in the St. Lawrence Catholic Campus Center, Ralston uses as much arm span as possible.
SCHOLASTIC THEATRE
Ralston uses all his concentration and strength to conduct the choir in the climax of a requiem.
The teacher is holding up a document and speaking to the class.
ABOVE: Ralston looks proud in class the day after the concert as the choir begins rehearsing Christmas music. RIGHT: During a moment by himself, Ralston reviews his music while listening to the pipe organ, in the background.
[Picture of a man sitting at a lectern, reading from a book or notes].
A love for 'legitimate music'
James Ralston, who calls himself a lover of great music, doesn't spend his spare time watching MTV.
Ralston, the director of the University of Kansas Chamber Choir, is more attuned to Mozart, Brahms, Schubert and Durufle. He listens to what he calls "legitimate music" — classical music with 19th century roots, jazz and choral music.
Ralston he loved directing KU's most select choir.
"My job is to instill the desire to perform great music," Halston said. I try to help give young people the opportunity to grow young, with the monuments of our heritage.
Balston has been the director of choir activities since 1906. He received bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees in music education at the University of Kansas.
He has used his education to teach •
performance. On Sunday, he led the
chamber choir in a performance of
the Worship of God at the St.
Lawrence Catholic Center.
"It is a great opportunity for the choir to tackle the Requem," Alston said. "I feel very fortunate to even be able to wrestle those materials."
usy the end of this semester the choir will have given four performances. The choir has some lighter material that is not from the 19th century, but the bulk of its repertoire came from the 'great music'. Raston said.
Recently the choir has been singing
The 26 chair members receive class credit for their work. They rehearse about five hours a week. Auditions are held every semester to replace members who graduate or choose to not continue with the chair.
many selections in Latin. The choir has also performed works in German, French, Russian, Spanish, Hungarian and Romanian.
Although Raiston said that he some times left rehearsals frustrated and wondering whether a performance would work out, he is compelled to teach his students to recognize musical masterpieces.
"He expects and demands quality from us, and gets it," Brookman, an Overland Park senior, said. "That is the most satisfying part of being in the choir. The end result is the end of a career associated with it until it’s been completed."
"Good heavens!" he said. "Mozart is a genius. There is just so much of the human spirit in his Requiems." One of the chair members, Harriet Brockman, said that Ralston inspired and encouraged her in the choir.
Brockman, an alto, said that her favorite selection the choir had performed was Brahms "Love Songs," which the choir did last semester.
Ralston said he was concerned about too much reliance on the work of 19th-century composers such as Brahms.
"who will be the geniuses of the 20th century?" Ralston asked.
CARLOS MAYOR
While singing a Mozart requiem, Brian McCalpin, St. Louis senior, and Sarah Young, Dodge City graduate student, work to attain perfect pitch.
Photos by Laura Husar Story by Deb Gruver
6
Tuesday, November 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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By Daniel Niemi
Kansan staff writer
Business park woos business Douglas County offers tax incentives for light industrial use
The first phase of Lawrence's newest industrial park is open for business, complete with tax incentives to lure companies to town.
Bill Martin, director of economic development for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said the infrastructure of the first phase of the East Hills Business Park was virtually complete. The industrial park is at Kansas Highway 10 and Noria Road, east of Farmland Industries Inc.
The first phase comprises 230 of East Hill's 300 acres. Martin said there were preliminary plans for the project.
"The streets opened about two weeks ago and any company that wants to break ground can."
East Hills is owned by Douglas County and land is sold as needed to Douglas County Development Inc., a non-profit landholding corporation overseen by city, county and business leaders.
Martin said county cooperation was needed because it would cost a private company too much to maintain.
Although no company has broken ground yet, Harris Construction, of Kansas City, Mo., has purchased a 5-acre site for a 55,000 square-foot industrial building, said Twila Rist, vice president of Jones and Company, the leasing agent for East Hills.
KU
Massachusetts Street
Haskell Avenue
15th Street
AT & SF
Railroad
19th Street
23rd Street
Nortia Road
The East Hills Business Park is located in east Lawrence between
19th Street and 23rd Street.
Martin said East Hills was designed for light industrial and warehouse use and that both the Chamber of Commerce and Jones and Company be working with prospective clients over the winter.
"We've geared up 1989 as the big marketing year," Rist said. "We're marketing heavily outside of the state of Kansas and we're negotiating with several businesses right now."
Rist said East Hills would be attractive to many companies.
"It will be able to attract some larger users that would like to go to Johnsons County but can't afford
the land prices.
"Also, using the buzz words of the industry — transportation and labor — the east and west coasts don't have them. The Midwest then becomes very attractive. The Kansas City area has an excellent highway system and we have a tremendous labor force," she said.
Rist said that Kansas had one of the highest qualities of life, another selling point in attracting new business.
In addition to transportation, labor and quality of life. Rist has tax incentives to offer.
East Hills is in a Kansas Enterprise Zone, which means the city can extend tax credits and refunds to businesses.
Incentives include state income tax credits of $350 for each new employee who resides in Kansas and $350 for each $100,000 in investment. However, the company's state income tax bill.
Also, the business may be entitled to a refund of sales taxes for the construction or remodeling of facilities in the enterprise zone.
Rist said that East Hills, along with the Intech Business Park in Fudora and the Cedar Creek Development in Olathe, would create a corridor of new development along Kansas Highway 10.
"We're looking at 15 to 20 years; it doesn't happen overnight, but it's a definite area of growth," she said.
Speech focuses on basis of prejudice
By Laura Woodward
Kansan staff writer
Skip Turner's message is this: People need to value diversity in the workplace.
Turner, director of the office of affirmative action, yesterday led the first of a three-part series that offered solutions to curb racism, and added other forms of prejudice in the workplace.
The seminar was at 2 p.m. in the Kansas Union. Four people attended.
"The theme is recognizing that our population is ever-changing, which affects our workforce," he said. "We need to recognize that there are differences among people and that these differences are
At the beginning of the seminar, all participants received a sheet listing eight people with a brief description, including age, race and religion.
The participants had to choose five of the eight to live with in a small shelter in the event of a nuclear attack.
The purpose of the exercise, Turner said, was to evaluate how people can that can influence the people people can make.
This is the third time this semester that Turner's office has sponsored the series.
"Diversity is an external ingredient," he said.
But the value is that we need to look inside one.
The participants then watched a film that staged scenarios on how a manager could work with diversity. They also received a questionnaire to test how well they could manage diversity.
Bryant said it was important for people to be sensitive to cultural differences.
program. "This has been a test of some of my own assumptions and a critique of the ways in which I handle diversity in terms of hiring and written communications."
Turner said this was the first year his office had sponsored the series but that it was not his first effort to heighten awareness about stereotypes on the University of Kansas campus.
"Diversity is a part of our lives," said Sally Brant, director of the new student orientation
"Last year, I held sessions called the Tale of O." he said. "These also dealt with relations in the workplace."
--at Cordley School Gymnasium, 19th e Vermont on 12 $ ^{th} $ November 1988 at 5:30 pm
Turner said the second seminar in the series would be next week. The film next week will focus on diversity in the office and how co-workers can avoid making assumptions about each other.
Rx
Interested in learning about a pharmaceutical sales career?
Visit with representatives from Merck, Sharp & Dohme on Tuesday November 8. Open to all classes with science or business backgrounds.
6:30 p.m.-Reception (Informal)
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University Placement Center, Level three, Burge Union.
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PANAMA CITY BEACH, FL.
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Visit the "World's Most Beautiful Beaches" on the Gulf of Mexico. Crystal clear water and brilliant white beaches make Panama City Beach a beautiful resort setting. Join students from over 450 college campuses in enjoying the action of The Miracle Mile, the center of Panama City's nightlife. Receive 8 full days on the beach with 7 nights accommodations at The Miracle Mile Resort, roundtrip deluxe motorcoach transportation from Lawrence, 8 pool parties at The Miracle Mile Resort, 8 beach parties at the Spinnaker Beach Club, 2 evening barbeques, a Pepsi beach volleyball tournament, and a Pineapple Willies 2 person beach volleyball tournament for just $225. Sign up now to reserve your spot!
Visit the SUA Office in the Kansas Union for details or call 864-3477. Visa and Mastercard are accepted !!!
10.4
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. November 8, 1988
Nation/World
7
377 arrested in rally for homeless
Protest, march on Capitol Hill attracts Benjamin Spock
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Police arrested 377 people yesterday, including prominent pediatrician and social activist Benjamin Spock, in the culmination of a long series of protests on Capitol Hill called to focus attention on the plight of the homeless in the United States.
"We're here to show the politicians that there is a crisis in America, a crisis that they are not responding to, a crisis that we want answers for," said Mitch Snyder, a Washington advocate for the homeless and organizer of the protests.
Snyder led a march and a 90-minute rally across Constitution Avenue from the Capitol building, enabling the event with his exhortation to the crowd to sit down in the middle of the street and be arrested as a way of showing concern for the homeless.
homeless. About 377 people followed Snyder's appeal and were arrested by police on charges of disorderly conduct and obstructing traffic on Capitol grounds, said Dan Nichols, a spokesman for the Capitol police.
The protest and arrests had been coordinated
with Capitol police and were generally quiet. About 2,000 persons attended the rally, Nichols said.
Snyder organized a series of protests that began Sept. 26.
sep. 19. The rally took on the trappings of a political gathering, with dozens of people in the crowd sporting "Dukakis-Bentsen" buttons and signs in support of the Democratic presidential ticket. No signs in support of Vice President George Bush, the Republican presidential nominee, were apparent.
No takers yet for needle swap program
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — New York City yesterday began a pilot program to stem the spread of AIDS by providing new hypodermic needles to drug addicts in exchange for their used ones.
The program aims at reducing needle sharing among addicts. Although the program intended to serve as many as 200 intravenous drug abusers, by early afternoon no applicant had appeared at Health Department headquarters in lower
Manhattan.
"Today, we're going to have only a handful," said health commissioner, Dr. Stephen Joseph. "We're going to build slowly up over a period of weeks or months."
Under the $240,000 program, which has drawn heated opposition from conservatives and some minority group organizations, addicts also will receive counseling on AIDS and drugs.
The program is open only to addicts over age 18 who have applied
for drug treatment and have been denied immediate admission to the city's overcrowded programs.
Applicants would be asked to fill out a consent form, learn about the program and take a blood test. They would receive a kit including a condom, sterile water and pamphlets about safe sex and needle hygiene.
An addict who tries to get a new needle without returning the old one will be expelled from the program, Joseph said.
joseph said City officials said the program was
believed to be the first of its kind in the United States, although similar programs have been operated in Europe.
News Roundup
In Boston, Mayor Raymond Flynn had backed a similar proposal, but it was rejected by the city council earlier this year.
Two prominent black city officials, Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward and Special Narcotics Prosecutor Sterling Johnson, criticized the program, as did the city council's Black and Hispanic Caucus.
EARTHQUAKE KILLS 600: a powerful earthquake struck just inside China's southern border, killing 600 people and nearly wiping out the Yuan province, two official radio stations reported yesterday. The quake registered 7.6 on the Richter scale.
TYPHOON HITS PHILIPPINES:
The second typhoon in two weeks pounded the central Philippines with 108 mph winds and torrential rains yesterday, causing floods and mudslides that forced thousands from their homes. A radio station reported that six children and four adults were killed in a mudslide in a city 210 miles NW of Manila.
southeast of Manila
COURT TO DECIDE ON ASSETS:
The Supreme Court said yesterday it would decide whether the government will seize money and impose that criminal defendants use to pay their lawyers. The Reagan administration urged the justices to uphold the government's power to take a defendant's assets even if it meant that the accused would be unable to hire the lawyer of his choice.
TWO DIE IN WAGE DISPUEST: A Palestinian worker angry over unpaid wages killed a soldier on duty at a Jewish settlement yesterday and an Israeli farmer shot the assassin to death, witnesses.
ses reported.
FORMER HAITIAN ARMY COMMANDER DIES: Former Haitian army commander Jean-Claude Paul died under suspicious circumstances after eating a bowl of soup yesterday. Radio Haitier-Intered reported that Paul had died of a heart attack, but the independent station said police considered the death suspicious. The prime minister Ponton Maucoutes, the private army of the Duvalier dictatorship.
TURNOUT LOW FOR ANNESTY PROGRAM: Turnout was light yesterday for the first day of the second phase of the government amnesty program for illegal immigrants, who could begin applying for permanent residency. Permanent resident status brings applicants a green card, which allows them to leave and enter the country at will and to eventually apply for citizenship.
PRESS CRITICIZES WALES'A STRIKE THREATS: The official press criticized union leader Lech Walesa for threatening strikes to save the Lenin shipyard in Gdansk. Solidarity-sponsored rallies at the Ursus tractor factory in Warsaw and at the Andaluzja coal mine in Piekary Skillie were staged to protest the planned Dec. 1 closing of the shipyard.
Legal Services for Students
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Call or drop by to make an appointment.
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The Following Organizations Want You to
VOTE
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Associated Students of Kansas KU Democrats Black Student Union Panhellenic Association Commission on the Status of Women Student Alumni Association KU Students Against Hunger KU Honors Student Association Interfraternity Council
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A Service of Associated Students of Kansas and Student Senate.
8
Tuesday, November 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
10% Student Discount on Kansan Classifieds*
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Prof studies Soviet medicine
While doctors in the United States struggle to answer ethical questions raised by euthanasia, doctors in the Soviet Union don't hesitate to sustain life on support machines.
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
Because of differences in technology and in doctors' roles, the United States and the Soviet Union approach the topic of prolonging life using life support systems from differing perspectives, said Richard De George, University distinguished professor of philosophy. He is also a professor of Soviet and East European studies.
Kansan staff writer
Soviet and russia, the Moscow Union, it is the doctors' responsibility to keep people alive as long as possible." De George said. "They keep people on life support until they are dead."
In the United States, doctors don't take as much responsibility for patients' lives. De George said.
responsibility.
De George recently returned from an exchange with the United States and the Soviet Union on the ethics of terminating life support for the terminally ill. De George led the group of six U.S. philosophy professors, which met with Soviet doctors and philosophers.
The conference marked the first time Soviet philosophers and doctors have convened to discuss
De George said that in the Soviet Union, doctors take full responsibility for patients, acting as the patients' parents. This paternalism, he said, allows Soviet doctors to make life-affecting decisions for patients.
medical ethics, De George said. The meetings were the second official philosophical exchange since 1985 between the American Council of Learned Societies and the Soviet Academy of Sciences.
Until 25 years ago, the rest of the world practiced paternalism also. Since then, the United States and other countries have given the responsibility of treatment to the patients, De George said.
In the United States, patients have the right to write a living will, or a statement of care in case they are suddenly made incapacitated, for example, by a car accident, De George said. To make a living will, people should submit to their doctors a written statement.
If U.S. patients are competent, they are given the right to determine their own medical care, or lack of, by the Doctrine of Informed Consent.
Poorer technology in the Soviet Union also distinguishes the two countries' views of euthanasia, De George said. Because medical technology is more advanced in the United States, U.S.
patients live much longer on the life support systems.
systems.
As the Soviets advance in technology, they will have to consider all effects of euthanasia, especially its economic impact. De George said.
early its economy. "At the present time, the drain on the economy is not large." De George said. "If they continue to hold their present views and get more expensive life support systems, they must ask that question. In the U.S., it is a question."
Another medical issue brought up by U.S.
philosophers was abortion.
Aorton is not discussed in the Soviet Union; it is simply accepted," De George said. "It is their primary means of birth control."
De George said that abortion was so widespread because of the Soviet Union's lack of acceptable birth control. It is just one aspect of the shortage of consumer goods there, he said.
De George said that he was selected to lead the group because he was on the board of the American Philosophy Association, which chose the participants, and because he is a specialist in both Soviet studies and philosophy.
Lockout key policy will be changed
"I am the only American philosopher who has written on Soviet biomedical ethics," he said.
By Jeremy Kohn
Kansan staff writer
Residence hall students can expect a more lenient lockout key policy next semester, a housing official said yesterday.
Fred McElhennie, associate director of housing,
said that the student housing department had decided about two weeks ago to allow five free room openings for each student next semester. Students will be fined $5 each time after the first five.
The current policy is two free room openings for each student and then a $5 fine for each additional
room opening.
McEllenie said the housing department would decide at the end of next semester whether the new policy will continue based on the number of lockout key requests.
"It depends on how the arrangements work out," McElhenie said.
Last year, each hall had its own lockout policy and each policy included fines or some form of discipline for abusing lockout privileges
policy AURH had proposed in September that each student be allowed five free room opening
According to the AURH proposal, five additional lockouts after the first five would have cost students $2 each. If lockouts continued another five times, students would have been added to the additional lockouts and would have cost $10, or an assistant residence hall director could have disciplined the students.
Representatives from the Association of University Residence Halls had asked housing officials in September and October to change the current
have discharged from Larry Burgess, AURH housing and contracts officer, and other residence hall students said next semester's policy would be a welcome change.
estemester's policy would be a well-fitted "The former rules were too stiff," Burgess said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 8, 1988
9
KU holds off Express rally in 91-72 victory
Jayhawks overcome scare in second half
Kansas junior guard Kevin Pritchard scored seven points and had four rebounds in the Jayhawks 91-72 victory over the Spirit Express last night in Allen Field House.
PRICE
1
K
ANSA S
52
INDIANA
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
Despite a scare early in the second half, Kansas defeated the Spirit Express 91-72 last night at Allen Field House in front of a crowd of more than a hundred fans first outside competition this season for the defending NCAA champions.
Kansas led at halftime 39-26, but the Express outscored the Jayhawks 17-4 during the first six minutes of the second half to tie the score at 43.
The Jayhawks finished with 21 turnovers in the game, a statistic that Williams said the team would have to improve if they wege to be successful this season.
"Basketball games have their ups and downs and we just have to hope we have more ups," Williams said. "During that stretch we had some pretty good shots and were hustling, trying to score and that concerns me because we have to take better care of the basketball."
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was not concerned about the Jaya-hawks' chances of winning at that point.
A bright spot for the Jayhawks was the play of sophomore forward Mike Maddox, who played only 22 minutes and was the game's high scorer with 25 points on 9 of 15 shooting from the field and 7 of 8 from the free throw line. The 6-foot 7 Maddox and 6-5 junior forward² Freeman West, who played 16 minutes, were the leading rebounders for the game with 10.
Sophomore forward Mark Randall said, "Early in the second half we weren't executing like we were in the first half. In the first half, we executed and got the big lead. We came out at the beginning of the second half and were kind of lackadaisical and they got close."
Senior forward Milt Newton con
tributed 23 points for the Jayhawks
while Randall added 15.
Overall, Williams said he was pleased with the Jayhawks' effort on defense, but said the execution on offense would have to improve in the future.
"I was extremely pleased with the effort," Williams said. "I was pleased with the defense, but it's going to have to get a heck of a lot better. (On offense) we did some things, but on the whole, we have to execute much better."
The Express jumped out to a 7-2 lead with 17:38 left in the first half, but the Jayhawks outscored the Express 17-7 during the next $9_{1/2}$ minutes to take a 19-14 lead.
During the last 2-25 of the first half, the Jayhawks widened a five-point lead to 13 on two jump shots by Newton, a follow shot by Randall and layup by junior guard Kevin Pritchard to take a 39-26 lead at halftime.
The Jayhawks came out sluggish in the second half and Spirit Express went on a 17-4 run that tied the game at 48. But the Jayhawks also won a victory, 55-48 lead and never looked back, outsourcing the express 36-29 the rest of the way.
Both Williams and his players said nervousness contributed to the Jayhawks' slow start.
"Early on we were so anxious that we were tight," Williams said. "We were missing a lot of close in shots the first three or four minutes and missed a lot of free throws because we wanted to do so well, so badly."
"Two things we'll have to do better is execute offensively and boxing out. We had a little trouble with that with the Express, and they aren't that big. Against the Russians we have to do a lot better boxing out. And also we'll have to take care of the basketball a little better."
Newton said, "I think the whole team was fairly nervous and tight. You could tell by the way we shot free throws in the first half. I felt really tight and coach just told me to go out and play hard, first to the season and I wanted it to be a good one, and I wanted to perform well."
The Jayhawks will have 12 days of practice before they play the Soviet
National team, which won the Olympic Gold Metal in Seoul, South Korea. The Jayhawks play the Russians, Nov 19 in Allen Field House.
During the practices, Williams said several things would be stressed.
Maddox scores 25 in exhibition game win
By Tom Stinson Associate sports editor
Mike Maddox always knew he was an accurate shooter, he just never had combined the confidence and playing time to prove it.
"I feel confident about my shooting ability." the Oklahoma City sophomore said. "I was a fairly good shooter in high school and a fairly decent offensive player. That's probably the best part of my game."
The best part of Maddox's game provided the offensive high in last night's Kansas-Spirit Express exhibition basketball game. Maddox scored 25 points and added 10 rebounds in a 91-72 Jayhawk victory. Both totals were career-highs.
"It itt good to get in there tonight and be able to do what I can offensively," said Maddox, whose former career-highs were 12 points against Kansas State and five rebounds on two occasions. "I got to shoot a lot in high school and it was my turn tonight. The next time, when we play the Russians (on Nov. 19), I'm sure it'll be somebody else's."
"But, if the shot's open, I want to step up and knock it down."
At Putnam City North High School, Maddox set the Oklahoma high school career-scoring record by averaging 23 points a game in three seasons, and he was named Oklahoman's 1967 Player-of-the-Year in 1967.
But last night, Maddox regained his offensive form, going seven of eight from the free-throw line and nine of 16 from the field, scoring from virtually everywhere on the floor. Maddox is still between height and coach Roy Williams' constantly moving, "free lance" offense enabled him to play
Last season, as a freshman, Maddox averaged 2.5 points and 1.6 rebounds a game in 24 appearances as a reserve.
1,
like having the flexibility to play inside or outside, just depending on what kind of player you have guarding me.'
— Mike Maddox Kansas sophomore forward
he entire floor.
"I like having the flexibility to play inside or outside, just depending on what kind of player you have guarding me," said Maddox, who gained 20 pounds on the off-season to increase his strength. "If I have a bigger guy on me, which will happen a lot, it might be easier for me to take him outside and use some quickness on him.
"On the other hand, if I have a smaller guy guarding me, I can go inside and post him up."
Williams, coaching his first game in Allen Field House, praised Maddox's shooting ability.
"Mike Maddox has a good touch on the basketball," he said. "And when he gets in close, he's hard to stop unless you're a lot bigger than him. And I think he knows the team we were playing tonight was not a lot bigger than he was."
Only two Spirit Express players were over 6-6.
But, despite the size advantage, Maddox said he was pleased with his performance, but he didn't expect to see his score in double figures this season.
"I don't think it'll be quite that easy once we start playing better teams," Maddox said. "I'm not necessarily going to go out and try to score 20 points a game. This year, I think it's going to be a lot more balanced scoring. I'm just going to go out and try to do what I can to win."
Leonard KO's Lalonde
The Associated Press
The sensational victory gave Leonard the World Boxing Council light heavyweight title held by Lalonde WBC super middleweight title.
LAS VEGAS — Sugar Ray Leonard got up from a fourth-round knockdown to knock out Donny Lalonde in the ninth round and write boxing history last night, becoming the first fighter to win titles in five weight classes.
After Lalonde went down for the second time in the ninth round, referee Richard Steele didn't even bother to court, but rushed to Lalonde's aid as Leonard threw his arms high in triumph.
Lalonde seemed to have Leonard in trouble earlier in the ninth when a flurry of punches backed Leonard up. But Leonard fought back and suddenly nailed Lalonde with a right hand and followed with a flurry of punches that put the defending champion down.
Lalonde struggled up at two and took a mandatory 8-count. Then Leonard resumed the attack and smashed the Canadian to the floor, where he remained for several seconds. The time was 2:30 in the ninth.
"I knew the guy could fight," he said. "He's a champion. 'Hell, I fought like a champ.'"
Lalonde did give an estimated crowd of 12,000 in the outdoor arena at Caesars Palace their money's worth.
"He's a hell of a fighter," Lalonde said. "He was a better man tonight." For Leonard, the victory was his 25th knockout. He has lost once.
Lalonde now is 33-3 with 26 knockouts.
Leonard earned a minimum of $15 million from the match, which was shown on pay-per-view and closed-credit. Lalonde earned about $5 million.
Leonard, 32, went down at 1:27 of the fourth round from a left-rib
combination to the head, with the right being the big punch. Leonard got at up two and took a mandatory 8-count. Lalonde landed several more头 shots but Leonard escaped further damage.
Leonard moved to the attack in the fifth round, when he scored with several left jabs and a couple hard rights to the head. In the sixth round, Leonard continued his assault. The fourth punch combinations to the head. The 28-year-old Lalonde scored with several punches late in the round.
Leonard hurt Lalonde with a right and then followed with six punches to the head that had Lalonde holding on in the seventh. Lalonde fought back in the eighth, with four good lefts to the head that sent Leonard back to the ropes, where Lalonde scored with four more punches.
Then came the ninth, and it looked as though Lalonde might have Leonard in serious trouble, but Leonard called on his champion's heart to turn the tide.
Coaches looking for recruits to play center after Alvarado
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
Kansas may have to wait for the center it needs to replace graduating senior Sean Alvarado next season.
The Jayhawks are still in the running for a couple of good recruitment prospects, but neither will make his college choice this week.
Cornelius McNary, a 69-2, 900-bound center-forward from Ritch High School in Richton Park, Ill., will visit the McKenna Elementary Robinthene said yesterday.
Chris Heller, a 6 to 10 center-forward from Rockhurst High School in Kansas City. Mo., may not decide until second signing period in the spring.
The first national letter-of-intent signing period begins tomorrow.
Bohnenstehl said McNary had visited Purdue and Xavier. He said he didn't know if McNary had a preference.
"I'm not real sure. I haven't talked to him at length about it," said Bohnenstienhut, a Big Eight Conference selection at Kansas in 1967. "The original plan was that we'd wait until all three schools had been
He said McNary won't decide before Monday.
McNary averaged 14 points, nine rebounds and four blocked shots per game as a junior. His coach said he was quick and a strong inside player.
"His strength is his defensive game," Bohntenshi said. "He's works very hard at what he does, and he has a lot of pride."
Bob Gibbons of All-Star Sports Publications said McNary probably would not be able to start as a freshman.
"It's going to take him a while to develop." Gibbons said. "Ideally,
teller has visited Kansas, Missouri, Kansas State and UCLA. Rockhurst coach Doug Bruce said Heiler phraser taught us Island Methodist she wasekerd
"I'm not sure if he'll sign early or wait until after the season." Bruce said. "Some of the schools have first-year coaching schools. Chris might want to wait and see how their first season goes."
they'd like to groom him for a year. Down the road, he's going to be very good."
Two Oklahoma high school players who were considering Kansas have eliminated Kansas from their lists.
Jeff Webster, a 6-8 forward from Midwest City, Okla., will decide between Kansas State and Oklahoma. Charles Crane, a 67 forward from Oklahoma, a 6ka., will choose between Wichita State, Colorado and New Orleans.
Starting job suits freshman fullback
By Jeff Euston
By Jeff Luster
Kansan sportswrite
sitations. The lack of speed has forced Roben to run straight ahead and lower his head when he carries the ball.
Redshirt freshman Roger Robben doesn't get much attention as the starting fullback for Kansas, but he doesn't mind. He's just happy to be playing.
Hobben has started all nine games for the Jayhawks at fullback this season — quite a change from last season when he was not able to play in games as a redshirt.
"I think as a fullback you have to be tuned in to running that way," he said. "You just have to lower your shoulder and run over people. At fullback you're
"It was really difficult at first. I think I was in a trance for awhile the first couple of weeks after I found out I was going to be redshirted. I thought I could handle it really well, but it wasn't that easy. I wished I was out there playing."
"Roger does everything you could ask of a full back," said running back coach Vie Adamle. "He's not counted on to do much carrying of the ball. But he does a great job when he is called on. He's a hard runner, and he protects the football. And he never complains."
was out there playing.
With last year's starter Mike Rogers gone, Robben has been given the opportunity to play this season, and he has made good use of it.
40. Robben had his longest gain of the season, a 14-yard run. Robben rushed for a career-high 41 yards on 10 carries.
Saturday's 30-12 victory over Kansas State, Robben had his longest gain of the season, a 14-yard run. Robben rushed for a career-high 41 yards on 10 carries.
read shirt.
"I think we had four or five fullbacks last year," he said. "They came to me and said I was going to
The game against the Wildcats was in contrast to much of the early season where Robben usually found himself blocking for the Jayhawk tailbacks. When he does carry the ball, it usually is in short-yardage situations.
not going to be the type of guy to make a lot of moves or try to joke somebody to get around the outside. I don't have the speed to outrun anybody."
In nine games this year, he has carried the ball just 40 times for 145 yards, an average of 3.6 yards per carry.
"It was great," Robben said of the run. "Especially against OU because when you think about it, not many people score on the ground against Oklahoma. I have to give a lot of credit to the offensive line because if they wouldn't have gotten the holes for me, I wouldn't have gotten in."
The second touchdown of Robben's career, another one-yard run, came in Saturday's victory over Kansas
Robben scored his first touchdown as a Jayhawk two weeks ago against Oklahoma on a one-ward run.
"My confidence level is higher than it was last year," he said. "I feel that I've matured a lot in many ways — not just on the field.
"It's great to be starting but I know that like coach Mason says, 'On this team, you've got to battle every week.'"
Robben, whose father Robert was an end at Kansas from 1962 to 1964, chose to come to Kansas as a fullback rather than play at Missouri as a linebacker.
"In high school, I was really a better linebacker than I was a fullback," he said. "I don't have a lot of speed or a lot of agility KU just seemed like the school I played in." He also added that he just wanted to play where I could help the team."
The victory over Kansas State has given the team added confidence going into the last three games of the season.
“To win our first game Saturday was the highlight (of the season) for me,” he said. “I can see our team getting fired up and really playing hard the last three games.” He added, “We’re great to be great to finish on a three-game winning streak.”
43
LAWREN
Kansas redshirt freshman fullback Roger Robben rushed for a career-high 41 yards on 10 carries Saturday against Kansas State.
---
10
Tuesday, November 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Campus asbestos is not a danger Officials say insulation can be removed without health risks
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
Although asbestos insulation has been found during renovations and repairs of Snow Hall and other University of Kansas buildings, no health threat exists, campus and health officials said.
Howard Saiger, acting chief of asbestos control at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said that asbestos didn't pose a threat unless someone disturbed and fibers were released.
New use of asbestos has been prohibited by federal regulation since late 1972.
Asbestos is used in insulation and fireproofing. If the fishhook-like asbestos fibers are inhaled, they can cause lung diseases, or possibly lung cancer, Saiger said.
Asbestos insulation also has been found in buildings razed to build the Robert Dole Human
Development Center and on the second, third, and fourth floors of the Kansas Union, said Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance. He said the asbestos had to be removed prior to tearing down the buildings and before renovation work began.
"It's for the protection of everybody," Porter said. "It's for the protection of the workmen and also the University, because the asbestos can get into the air."
Porter said the University didn't have a complete record of buildings on campus containing asbestos insulation. However, when asbestos is found during building repairs, facilities operations employees record where it is. The employees, who are certified each year by the state to inspect asbestos insulation in buildings, also recommend whether to remove the asbestos.
Because of the high cost of removing asbestos
insulation. Saiger said that in some cases it was more practical to leave the asbestos in the building. If repairs are minor and asbestos fibers aren't stirred up and allowed to circulate, the asbestos can be safely left intact.
Saiger said that state regulations didn't directly concern the University. Public and private schools for grades kindergarten through 12 must hire a qualified person to locate and assess asbestos insulation for the likelihood that fibers would be released. However, the University is not required to identify areas containing asbestos.
Jim Modig, campus director of facilities planning, said asbestos was removed from some areas of Snow Hall before the first phase of renovations. A new environmental process took from December 1986 to May 1997.
CLINTON LAKE
CAMPING/FISHING TRIP
NOVEMBER 11-13
$15.00
(includes camping gear and food)
Deadline-Wednesday, Nov. 9 - 5 p.m.
Call the SUA Office at 864.3477 for more information
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FIFTY YEAR ANNIVERSARY
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If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help
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COMPUTER
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STADIUM BARBER SHOP
Please support the AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY*
Wagon Wheel Cafe
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50
Mon: Hamburger Steak
Tues: Mexican Special
Wed: Chicken Breast & Fries
Thurs: Chicken Fried Steak
Fri: French Dip
Daily Lunch Specials 11:00-2:30
We are winning.
You don't need your parents' money to buy a Macintosh.
PEN
Just their signature.
It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh* computer at school.
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether. Which is why Apple created the Student Loan to Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buvimg a Macintosh as easy as using one. Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800 831 LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
and send it. If they qualify, they'll receive a check for you in just a few weeks. There's no collateral. No need to prove financial hardship. No application fee.
Best of all, the loan payments can be spread over as many as 10 years. Which gives you and your parents plenty of time to decide just who pays for it all
*Offer open only to full-time KU students
APPLE
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Introducing Apple's Student Loan to Own Program Loan applications are available in the computer store at the Burge Union. 1988 Apple Computer Inc., Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer Inc.
Come by and talk to us about your computer needs today!
Burge Union 864-5697
Wint Winter
state senate
Pol. Adv. Winter for Senate Committee, Bonnie Wells, Treas.
10.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 8, 1988
11
KU students spend over $4 million a month on miscellaneous expenses
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce your stress and don't forget our GIFT CIRTIFACES make holiday shopping easy We use a custom school bag, students #2 call! B41-062 - Remember, you know!! ECKANMAN MARRUSON group formuring. For more info call 749-1127.
Mary Kay Cosmetics Contact Deeann Wilks at 841-9407
KU Students, faculty, staff and family members: You are invited to participate in the SAU Online Fill-in. Fill out an application in the SAU office Deadline: March 10. Nov. 21 for the information call 844-3477. Sponsored by SAU FUND.
Write-in Stan Eckert for the U.S. House of Representatives. You do have a choice.
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
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Deluxe condominium with fireplace, jacuzzi,
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Hillel
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Events of the Week
Tuesday Nov. 8
Tuesday Lunch
11:30-1:30 p.m. Alcove C
Union Square, Kansas Union
Wednesday Nov. 9
Soviet jewry letter-writing Table
All Day
Kansas Union
Friday Nov.11
Shabbat Dinner & Kristalnacht Service
6 p.m., Hillier House
RSVP w/ Wednesday, Nov 9.
For more information call Hillel House, 749-4242
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROVE . Metropolis Mob'lb-
Sound Superior sound and lighting. Professional
radio, club DJ. Hot Spins Maximum Party
'RJ Duv Vel Awaji 841-7083
GOOD VIBRATIONS the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call (Brian) 841-8944
JOHN G. SINGS Parties. B-days, singing messages. 841-8944
Late night munchies
Stop by Johnny's Classic Burgers!
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Open:
10 a.m.-midnight
Sun. - Tue.
10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
Wed. - Sat.
Classic Burgers 9th & Illinois
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2 BR Apt Wasther/Dryer, Micro Dispail, Close to Downtown/Campus $435 mo $1 96-6254
2 bedroom apt. on 24th & Iowa. Close to the bus route.
Bake 842-976-800. Rent $135
2 bedroom duplex with one car garage available next semester on KU bus route. Phone 841-207-62.
2nd Semester Sublease - Nasmith Place Apts. 2 - 239-479-8222, nasmith.bathroom, or unifarmed or unfurnished.
749-449
Available午. 1, 2 bedroom apt. new carpet, new
paint, and appliances, nice porch, close to
campus. cats okay $50/month • utilities 749-5213 or
749-5636
Available January thru May: Two bdrm apartment w /restore. Sunrise Place 87 Michigan. Call 842-9604
Completely Furnished 1,3, and 4-bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call to 841-1212, 841-1525, 841-1429, or 749-2415.
available immediately 1 bedroom apt. for male tudent between downtown and campus. $240 plus electric and deposit. Call 841-1207.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-325, or 749-1491. Mastercraft
FANTASTIC NEW APIRMITE one bedroom,
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Bus Route. Just what you are looking for! !! 841-8271.
843-1971.
FEMALE roommate needed. Very close to campas, extremely spacious. Laundry facilities, off street parking. Call Beth 843-1008.
Female Roommate must: to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Available immediate! Apartment includes: own bedroom, kitchen, and fireplace, and free water. Please call 749-6036.
Female roommate wanted to fill 4b bedroom in
a renovated building. She will be now or next
or new & recent owner. Room, " utilities
required."
Formale female wanted for nine 4 bedroom duplex, Overlook Parks, 2 blocks from bus, 3 great roommates. $125 + utilities. 841-2746
Free custom orders and $50/month
great location
for sublease. spacious uplift apart $550/month
Waherder / Great location! Call 749-2545 or
842-2532
Fully furnished one-bedroom, apartment
Civilized. Big enough for two. Must go to Nov.
10th & Arkansas. $340 - utilities. 841-0732 or 749-2415.
Jamette.
January Sub-lease. $165 + 7 utilities. Own room.
On route. Call Mary 841-3375.
large 1 bedroom apt. Hanover Place, quiet, very clean. first half of Nov. Free if lease is signed by the 3rd. Call 841-9280 or 841-1212
Lease for spring semester One space in nice large 2 BD. apt .5 min walk from campus. Available Dec. 20. Call 841-6802.
Lease for spring semester, furnished 2 large bedrooms, bath, laundry, close to campus with many great locations. Call 841-9792 NOW!
LAUNCH 2 hredroom 2 bath apartment available starting Dec./Jan. Large rooms, clean, quiet WD. locks; fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, fens. 842-3025
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1733 West 24th 841-5799
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
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- On bus route-near shopping
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- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available
- Some with gas paid
by Thompson-Crawley
New Hidden Meadows Townhouses. Two Bedroom
and Two Bedroom with Study and Fireplace.
749-1141, 841-3919, 2832 Iowa. Behind Raco
Carwash.
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place immediately. $330/mo, water paid, and furnished. Call 841-1212 or 843-3866.
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
FOR SALE
10-speed bike for sale. Call 843-4638 after 5:00 pm.
$45.00
1979 Ford Pinto. Excellent condition. Call Ray
9am-8pm 548-4906, after 7:30 8:424-942.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, including fine china and leather frame framing, precious and costume jewelry, brassware, fine pottery, playbabs, collector and chess rok-n ball records, vintage clothing books, coin box, balls record, miniature playsets.
advertising items, clocks, watches, desks, anti-
bite kits, nail clips and more. We will show you away! QUANTILLH'S FLEA
MARKET! 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sat.
and Sun. 10am. For both rental hours 842-646-6161.
Apple He computer with expanded memory (64GB) and 1TB of storage. Various programs, $80 or ORO. Elan Sis 17cm, poles and pyls 19 long boots, $125 or ORO. 84/8727 AUDIO SALE: Cassette deck, TeeKos. JVS Sony 32GB. Laptop with touchscreen.
Beautiful, big 3-piece drum set. Zidjian jyman
Calls: Bali 841-421 weeknights 10pm-11:30pm
Cannonade Mtn. Bike. White. Month old. Jeff
841-297.
Centurion Tromnan with DH vh bars. Look pockets t.
Bellows included. £50. Wet frame for
Futon, $49.74 - 789-869
Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat & Sun. 10-5.
CRX rear deck 8x9 Yamaha 8-inch Alpine Subs.
Jeff 841-2978.
Jeff 841 2978
For Sale: A Tandy 600 portable computer and one
Tandy DIMM 165 printer Call 841-3298
For sale: a round-trip to any city in the U.S. Best offer.
Call BK before 3:30 p.m at 842-1757.
FREE information on New Ka Police Photo radar. NOW in use. also use information to SAVE $80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 RADAR detector that detects explosives, ammunition, or other threats. ENTERPRISES, O.P., 247 B, Lansing, KS 60431
GOVT SUPPLUS! **New** G.I. Oversees, Combat boots and safety-tie boots. Wool (blankets)
not oats, and安全地书 book. Wool! blankets, gloves, socks & mittens. Field jkts. Overcaps, overpiles. Hoodie. Hoodie. Workwear M. Sat-9 5: Open Sundays tl Christmas 12-4 St-Mary Sales Surprise. Sales 12-4
To go to Miami, F1 for Thanksgiving and/or
the Grand Slam. For Miami, a discount price
of call 749-5757 after 6 o'clock on the
discount price. Call 749-5757 after 6 o'clock on the
MAC with dual drive. Imagewriter, mouse,
and software $1200 OBO. 864-2343 days.
Men's 10-speed bike bike 80. Acoustic guitar with case
Both excellent condition 842-2486, keep out of sight
MCAT study material from G.A.P.S. Improved my score dramatically. Originally $500 Best in Best
Cheeker's Pizza has immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 18 years old or older, have own car, valid driver's license, and insurance $1.75/hr fee (plus $20 per person at Cheeker's Pizza 2124 Yale Rd. between 11 am and 8 pm). Christmas Holiday Bills $8.99 (Hours Flexible).
Mobile DJ system on sale. 1000 watts sound, lights, lasers. 749-1500.
Naisimh Hall contract for sale. Private room or for two. Call 841-8487.
Trailer. 12' x 6'5", w & d, shed. deck, AC, stove,
refice. nice #4,300. Call Days 794-5240.
SAE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty
New $450 sell $30. Must see to appreciate Many
functions. 841.764
Winchester 30/35 rifle, accessories, ammo 150
Winchester 30/35 rifle, accessories, ammo 150
drafting table $9. Techs turret pallet $0.060
drafting table $9. Techs turret pallet $0.060
1981 Toyota 4x4 p-u s-pd. S-RG all options red
must1 sell $3450 obu Chuck B14-9923
Rock-n-rail: *Thousands of used and rare垒
10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on earrend and Sunday*
*Monday through Saturday.* ASE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $45 sell $20. Must be appreciable. Many
**LED HOT bargains!** Drug dealer's cars, boats, lanes repo'd Surplus Your Area Buyers
(1) 805-687-6000 Ext. S-9738
HELP WANTED
76 Mazda RX4 (5-speed). Runs good. Stereo. New brakes. $650 OBO. Call 841-3942
1981 Toyota Tercel, TERCel FM cassette, good condition,
nust, r1350, or best offer. @#242 2219.
AUTO SALES
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Porsche. Fords. Corvettes Chevys. Surplus
Buyers Guide. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. S-9758
**AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight Attendants.**
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $10K. Entry level positions.
Call (1) 835-877-6900 Ex. A9738
Attention: Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above avg, starting salary: Apply between 2-5.168 W. 23rd
after-school caregiver for 2nd grade boy, 2 nights
1 week. $5/hr. Hillcrest area. Call 843-3581
evenings.
Banquet arrangements are now open at the Adams University Center. Applicants must be available to the university. Clerks, barrenders, & hostesses are needed. Above average pay & professional working conditions. Applicants must be a resident of New York City.
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students part-time position is available. Please contact us for information and interview please call Argen Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at 212-678-3450.
Miran is a beautiful black 1983 Mazda RV-7. She needs a new home. For more info call 1634-6378 or
(800) 251-2755.
Cheeker's Pizza has immediate openings for
Saturday and Sunday. Applicants must be
days, night and midnight positions available.
order latekers R4.5 per hour on job
person in person at Cheeker's Pizza 2124 Valley Rd
Retail Center.
- Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
(913) 345-9675.
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$59,230/yr. Now
Hiring. Your Area. (1) 803-687-6000 Ext. R-9758
current for federal List.
bIOLOGY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Part-time, approximately 20 hours per week. Must be available for 24 hour blocks of time during lab days. Required application to Intersect Research Co. 2501 W. Jillian St. Reference and transcript required. Applicant must have an equal opportunity employer. M-F-H-R.
oerest SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Colora-
ron near Estes Park as campers, cooks,
nurses, office wrangers, drivers, unit directors,
children. Room and board plus salary and
admission fees for summer camp will
19 to apply. Interviews on campus in
January. W write CHLEY COLORADO CAMPS.
D: Dex 652. Denver. Colorado 80386.
FOR THE SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE!
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening help and delivery drivers. Start at $3.60 hr. Apply in person only at Border Border 1528 W. 23rd
Kansas and Barge Union Bookstores hiring temporary help. Jobs posted Level 5, Kansas Union Personnel Office. Come in to apply to
NANNEES need to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good communication skills are information call-in (Jacqueline 7-122-4080).
Up to $40 per week. Positions nationwide. East, West, South, Midwest, 1 year commitment. 1-499-722-4338. National Nanny Resource and Referral.
New hiring cooks and cashiers for days, evenings,
and over night shifts. Starting pay $4.00 + $4.50.
Apply anytime. Harden is on the turnip. 862-750-9000.
Business Manager/
Editor
Applications
The University Daily Kanza is not accepting applications and the Business Manager positions. These are paid annual and requir
Business Manager applications are due Tuesday, November 8th at 5 p.m. in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Wednesday, November 9th. Applications for Editor are due Friday, November 11th at 5 p.m. in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held November 14th.
are paid positions and require journalism experience. Interested persons may pick up applications in the Student Senate office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
The Kanasi is anEqual Opportunity/
Affirmative Employment. 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
Part-time data entry audit person needed 8 am to noon 6 days per week. Must be dedicated, dependable, and a self-starter. Computer exp. 199, Flatland Hall, Law. Ks. 66453. Staffer-Flatland Hall, Law. Ks. 66453.
PART-TIME Furniture Delivery Personnel Apply in person Thompson Crawley 520 East 2nd. Terrace.
Pizza Shirt is immediately burgling both full-time and part-time use. It is available for $8-$18 per hour possibly including daily mileage, and bonuses. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shirt.
Part-time Child Care Worker to work 4 M T in residential treatment facilities. Requires a license and pass KBI check. Salary nego depending upon education and experience. Two positions open in the department.
Pre-law Sermons, first and second year law
Monsignor Corp. Judge Advocate after passing the
Monsignor Corp. Judge Advocate after passing the
**SELLTOWN.COM**
On TVs, VCRs, WIFI. Musical instruments, cameras, and more. We invite Visa/M.C.A.M.E.X. J. Hawk Pawn & Jewelry. 1848 W. 6th, 749-1391
With the holidays coming up, could you use some extra cash? We have 7 openings for data entry operators starting soon. If you have basic keyboard skills and can work 5-8pm Mon-Fri.
Lad & Stuff has immediate openings for Day & late staff. Above all, want a starting salary of $30K.
RESORT HOTELS. Crusineshers, Airlines, &
careers for summer jobs, internships, and career positions. For more information and an application: write National College Recreation Service: PO
425 730-8000.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kailspell, MT 39901.
Monday & Tuesday
舞蹈动作
Manpower Temporary Service 211 E.8h.749-2800
MISCELLANEOUS
1 p.m.
Young couple seeking Nanny in New York, Call collect at 516-363-5698
PERSONAL
And, you're such a had seed! Actually, your a great room. It's not often one can find a room mate who says "Good Morning Sunshine" to her at 2:30. Cl. May.
5 p.m. - 11 p.r Cheeseburger
Johnny's
Gary, an attractive SWM, 2), fun-loving, active, sensitive, not plenly, like trying new things, inexperienced, has a wide range of chances, would like meeting female, 20-25, who enjoys same. We could be friends, maybe more intimate. Gary is a man.
Up & Under
401 North 2nd
Happy 22nd. Your desire to see me is eternally roused or what meaning could there be in the stars?
Hey Sunguels, Meet me at Prime Time this Thursday in the Kansas Union! Your Huffgummi J.D.S. Rests are Red, Violents to Wear, I hear you 20. Happy Birthday To You, Signed M.
DANCE! DANCE! DANCE!
at the Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Saturday Nov. 12
$3
MAX U.: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
ML: It has become an obsession. Michael Heiden.
Nov. 9, Liberty Hall KF.
Brazilian Fall Party
DANCE! DANCE! DANCE!
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWF, 21-30:
P.O. P. Box 422-943, Lawrence, KS. 66544
Photo appreciated.
VANDE. YOU ARE A MAJOR STUD! HOPE
WHO AID WICK (sait it right) BIRTHDAY.
HOW MANY DUCKS EE DEAD? LUNCH WED.
@M!
$3
Featuring DJ Ray Velasquez
BUS. PERSONAL
Sponsored by the Luso-Brazilian Club
Government Photos Passport, immigration, visa modeling, theatrical, Advanced fine art portfolios. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Tom Swells 749-1611
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
$65 per month. With parent slightly higher Kara
$65 per month. With parent slightly higher Kara
KRI Christmas break: Trips are filling fast for 40 percent of the room capacity. Sunshine Tour蓄v for details before it's too late.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL Get your
hard work in progress with a
complete completion. Transportation provided
SPRING BREAK 89
Trips Available Now
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT, CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
Don't Wait Until It's Too
Late!
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Break
1-800-321-5911
1-800-321-5911
Tuesday
12 oz. Rib Eye
Well Drinks
$1.00
Watermelons
Iohnny's
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
French tutoring. Translations. Paper revisions done on computer. Expert work 8 years experience. Bobh 843-4102.
Astrology - Would you like to know about someone special, more about yourself, or what will happen if your self-address is not addressed, stamped envelope to Astral Operations P. O. Box 344, Smithville M. Mo. 64089
SERVICES OFFERED
Bondar Portraits are still the greatest gift idea. Setting includes glamorized wear and full-pass assistance. For more information call Mike or Grace collect 1-299-3789.
G PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES : Ektachrome
curating within 24 hours. Complete B/W
services. PASSPORT $60.00. Art & Design Building,
room 206. 844-7677.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9023
(p.m.).
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
and Washington, driver license
worthy, driver's license attainable, transportation
needed.
PRIVATE OFFICE Obj Gcs and Abortion Services
PRIVATE OFFICE Pag Gcs 1141-9272
Math tutor. Master's in math and six years teaching experience.Call Alex at 841-7661.
Need a babysitter? Experienced girls can help.
No job too big or small. Call 841-6678.
vices. Overland Park... (913) 491-6878.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at
843-4821. Confidential free/pregnancy
TYPING
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctuated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-265, days or evenings
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Juni. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915.
Accurate, affordable typed experienced in term papers, theses, misc., IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-654.
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets at airline counter prices no service charge
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary. $1.25 double-spaced pic page. East Lawrence.
Mrs. Matilla 841-1219.
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
Call evenings before 10, 749-1961.
ON CAMPUS
LOCATION
Call R.J.'S理服务 Service 845-942 Term,
Papers, Legal, Thesis, etc. calls after P.M.
Term papers, writing and Word Processing,
term papers, applications, mailing list.
resumes, applications, mailing list. Laser
Expert Typist- Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203.
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-4119. In Topeka. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer.
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
Word processing, paper; Types, resumes, ap-
plications, dissertations. Also, assistance with
grammar, spelling, composition, editing. Hive M.S. Degree. 841-0697, 841-6254
EXPERT typewriter PNINGER service is back. HYDIC typeprinters or Zionh hard disk word processor with spelleckel and Daisy wheel printer, reliable fast, reasonable, guaranteed
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 7291
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
M.F. 10.5. *841-9223*.
Word processing IBM Okidata printer: $1.25/double spaced page. Call before 10 pm. 749-1300. Kathy.
TYPING/WORDPROCESSING. Do more on
typing, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes
Letter-Quality Print. Legal exp. Laura
542.3738. Laure Message.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Quality Tutoring, Economics, Statistics, Mathematics. All levels. Call Dems. 842-1055
**"Ttyping at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 843-011-911 Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday THEWORLDOCRTs- Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing" Legal, these, resumes, commercial, IBM-PC, MAC, CDP Daisleyphone, dot matrix, laser. Since 1983
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne, 842-7708.
WANTED
DESPERATELY Seeking guitar or keyboard amplifier. Steve. 841-5945.
Drummer and Bassist needed to complete
Jazz/Rock Band. Dan.842-7194.
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1. You will have a car, bus, or bike route to Call 321-769-5000, bus route 191.000, .491.311. Califonni 175. Male roommate for next semester. $175 - utility a month, ten minutes walk to campus
Policy
Male roommate for next semester. $175 + utilities a month, ten minute walk to campus 841-7085 let ring.
Female roommate wanted for Spring semester
House on Ohio. 1 bedroom for rent. $210 a month.
All utilities paid. Call 842-369-2887. Leave Message
Female Roommate Immediately $100 and %
$100. Female Roommate immediately $100 and %
Female Roommate wanted second semester to assume base of two-bedroom townhouse; %
$100.
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester Call 749-5075. Leave message.
Need someone to assume my lease of 1-bdrm apt at semester end. 749-3407 after 3:30.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Roommate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt. near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne 749-4261.
Roommate wanted. Georgetown Apartments 8-D $12 a month + $2 utilities. Call Tim at 441-1566. Second Semester Roommate wanted. $10 and $12 utilities. Walking distance or bus
Spring Semester. Quiet, studious roommate made $140/mo plus *utilities*. Close to camps. Call 842-1630.
Will pay anyone who recorded the Robert Bork speech. Need to make a copy. 841-9648.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Prepaid Order Form Ads
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.
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No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Blund box ads-lease add $4.00 service charge.
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26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00 21.30 26.35
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Make a booklet to:
University Daily Kansas
119 Staffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By
By GARY LARSON
14-8
"Andrew, go out and get your grandfather . . . the squirrels have got him again."
12
Tuesday, November 8, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
You Want The Best PC Values on Campus?
DONE
REGIONAL STATISTICS
Get Terrific Student Pricing At The Zenith Data Systems OPEN HOUSE!
SUPERSPORT
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suggested retail price: $2399.00 Special Student Price: $1299.00
Great news! Zenith Data Systems is headed your way with a special campus extravaganza! It's your chance to enjoy unbelievable student values on Zenith Data Systems' family of personal computers and monitors. From laptops...to desktops... to super-advanced systems. All complete with PC compatibility and MS-DOS. $ ^{ \textcircled{8}} $
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So stop by this special event from Zenith Data Systems. And get fantastic values on the PCs that can take you all the way from college to career!
Stop by the Zenith Data Systems special campus celebration at:
International Room KU Student Union Level 5
November 8 & 9 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
For more information call:
EZ Comp Computer:
841-5715
ZENITH
data systems
THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON* $ \textcircled{c} $ 1987, Zenith Data Systems
174
4
EXTENDED ELECTION COVERAGE ON PAGES 6 - 10
Vol. 99, No. 53 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wednesday November 9.1988
Bush has Super Tuesday
Vice president takes race with 40-state sweep
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — A triumphant George Bush hailed his solid victory yesterday over Michael Dukakis and vowed to work to heal wounds opened by a harsh, negative campaign, saying an election clears "the way for harmony and peace."
"I know that we'll come together, as we always have," the president-elect told several thousand cheering supporters at a victory party where he also pledged to reach out and work constructively with the Democratic-controlled Congress.
ELECTION
88
PRESIDENT
Bush, who will become the nation's 41st chief executive on January 20, defeated Dukakis witf
40 percent of the popular vote, while Dukakis received 40 percent of the popular vote. Bush won 40 states for 426 electoral votes, to Dukakis' 10 states and 112 electoral votes.
Bush's sweep of 40 states mirrored his 20-state blowout in the Super Tuesday primaries in March, which knocked out Republican rival Bob Dole and insured Bush's nomination.
It was the Republicans' third consecutive presidential victory. However, the Republicans lost seats in the House and Senate to the Democrats.
House and Senate
"A campaign is a disagreement and disagreements divide, but an election is a decision, and decisions clear the way for harmony and peace," Bush said.
"I mean to be a president of all the people," he said. And to those who did not vote for him, Bush said: "My hand is out to you. And I want to be your president, too."
Bush added: "Thank you, New Hampshire," referring to his comeback Republican primary victory last winter that put him on the path to becoming the first sitting vice president to win the presidency in more than a decade.
Bush, surrounded by nearly two dozen family members, told the campaign workers who filled a convention center that he had received a call from Dukakis.
Douglas:
"I want you to know he was most gracious. His call was personal. He was genuinely friendly and in the great tradition of American politics," Bush said.
"He is certainly one of the most decent men I have ever met." Bush said.
Bush voiced special praise for the man he will succeed. Ronald Reagan, for "turning our country around and being my friend, and for going the extra miles on the hustings."
Repealing a favorite campaign theme. Bush told his audience, "When I said I want a kinder and goner brother," he said.
"This is a moving night for all of us," Bush said. "And you can't help but be moved when your country endorses your hopes and your candidacy, and the feelings are so personal that the decision is larger than that."
Please see BUSH, p. 8, col. 4
President-elect George Bush.
Lawrence residents react to election
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
For Betty Parks, den mother of Den One. Pack 3059
Lawrence, Election Day meant bringing seven Cub
Scouts to the courthouse to see where all the ballots go
Election Day. For different people it means different things, from listening to the radio to see if dad still has his job to deciding whether you're still friends with the Democrats downstairs.
"We had a mock balloting before our den meeting today," she said. "I thought it might be nice to come down here and see the whole process."
The result: Bush sweeps the Cub Scouts, five to two.
Cub Dustin Potter, 4, son of Lymn and Nancy Potter,
and a third grader at Schwegl Elementary, voted for
Bush.
"I think he's the better guy," he said. "He answers questions better and wants to make peace."
Roger Aeschhman, director of communications for the state Republican Party, thought Bush was the better guy, too.
Aeschilman watched Michael Dukakis' concession speech at a party in Topeka. He laughed at Dukakis' comment that running mate Lloyd Bentsen had been
an asset in the campaign.
"Not much of an asset, you moron!" Aeschilium
shouted. "You lost!"
Laz Maggard, Lawrence resident, might have saved her genthics, for the new president-elect.
She said she was thinking of doing something radical in light of the election results
Maggard, who has a family connection in Canada, said, "I'm thinking about moving out of the country for four years."
Please see ELECTION, p. 9, col. 2
Incumbents retain seats
State has record turnout; congressmen win easily
From staff and wire reports
It was a good election for most incumbents in Kansas and Lawrence yesterday. The state's five congressmen easily won re-election and Lawrence voters retained all four local legislators.
Meinlhardt
In Lawrence, only State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton had a tough start, beating back a strong challenge from Republican Bernie Norwood, 54 to 46 percent. Democratic Rep. Jessie Janson and Republican State Sen. Wint Winter enjoyed landside victories. Democratic State Rep. John Solbach was unopposed.
In the Dallas County county sheriff's race, Republican Loren Anderson, the current undersherif, knocked off Democrat Gale Pinegar 72 to 28 percent. Voters also sent Lawrence City Commissioner Mike Amyx, a Democrat, and Louie McElhaney, a Republican, to the county commission
volunteer.
In an election that saw a record voter turnout in the state, Democratic Rep. Jim Slattery won his fourth term representing the 2nd District, coasting past Phil Meinhardt to 73 to 27 percent.
County commission Kansas voters also passed a reapportionment amendment that allows census officials to not count college students as permanent residents of Lawrence, a move that might cost Lawrence representation in Topeka.
The makeup of the Kansas House and Senate remained uncertain early this morning as several incumbent senators were upset or trailing, according to early returns.
David Brandt/KANSAN
COLL
Celebrating his victory, State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, hugs Marlys Murphy, Lawrence resident.
Democrats retain lock on Congress
Party also gains one governor's chair
The Associated Press
For the first time in 28 years, the party losing the presidency still managed to gain ground in the U.S. House of Representatives, an indication that George Bush's coattails were nonexistent.
In the Senate, the Democrats appear headed for a one- or two-seat gain in their 54-46 Senate majority. Late returns indicated in two tight races that the Republicans would win in Washington, but the Democrats would retain their seat in Florida.
In the governor's races, the Democrats also won a net gain of one seat. Please see details on page 9.
Early returns today indicated that the Democrats had won 253 seats in the House and led for eight others, compared to 17.0 Republican victories and four GOP leads.
Nebraska voters decide not to reject waste pact
Kerrev defeats Karnes for Senate
Nebraska voters defeated an initiative last night that would have removed the state, the selected host for a waste depository, from the Central Interstate
Low-level Radioactive Waste Compact. Details on page 10.
They also sent former Gov. Bob Kerrey to Washington. Please see page 4.
Wednesday, November 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Showers ending by P.M.
High: 58°
Low: 32°
Expect morning showers ending by noon with a high of 58 degrees. Tonight clouds will be clearing, giving way to mostly clear skies and a low of 32 degrees.
North Platte
52/22 Cloudy
Omaha
51/26 Cloudy
Goodland
54/29 Cloudy
Salina
58/31 Cloudy
Tapoka
58/34 Cloudy
Kansas City
80/35 Cloudy
Columbia
80/39 Cloudy
St. Louis
80/41 Cloudy
Dodge City
80/33 Cloudy
Wichita
80/35 Cloudy
Chantelle
64/31 Cloudy
Springfield
66/41 Cloudy
Forecast by Mike LaPoint
Tulsa
88/42 Cloudy
5-Day
Thursday
Clearing
54/33
HIGH LOW
Friday
Partly cloudy
57/35
Saturday
Sunny
60/35
Sunday
Partly cloudy
65/37
Monday
Mostly sunny
64/36
The nation
Seattle
54/38
H
Detroit
52/28
Phoenix
79/57
Dallas
81/55
New York
57/38
Los Angeles
72/56
Fronts:
cold
included
warm
sakery
Weather Service
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
Seattle 47/38
H Denver 52/28
Chicago 59/39
New York 57/38
Los Angeles 72/56
Phoenix 79/57
Dallas 81/55
Miami 82/70
Fronts:
cold cold
warm warm stationary
Bush wins in mock election
By Jeremy Kohn
Inauguration Day:
Food service employees and residence hall staff members sponsored a mock election during dinner in all the residence halls yesterday.
Kansan staff writer
Deb Stafford, assistant director of residential programs and coordinator of the mock election, said students could vote for either Bush or Gov. Michael Dukakis for president, and a "liberal" or "conservative" menu to be served on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20.
Residence hall students chose Vice President George Bush as president in a mock election last night, but split the ticket and picked a "liberal" menu to be eaten on his inauguration Day.
in that game and will promote the election." Stafford said.
Bush won by 607 votes to 554, or by about 4 percent. The liberal menu of fajitas and Cajun baked fish defeated the
conservative chiliidogs and cheeseburgs by 734 votes to
550, or by about 14 percent.
Dan Simon, Council Bluffs, Iowa, sophomore and an Oliver Hall resident, said last night that he was happy with the menu choice, but disliked the idea of a Bush presidency.
"I think the Duke would have done more for the college student." Simon said.
But the fajita vote had strong pull in both parties.
Heather Craven, Carbondale, Colo., freshman and a Hashinger Hall resident, said she supported Dukakis. However, she abstained from the menu vote.
But the culprit voted to strong-pen Michelle Olson, Topeka freshman and Hashinger Hall resident, said, "Even if I was a Bush supporter, I still would have voted for the fajitas (literal menu). To be truthful, chicken fajitas are very important to me, and to the hall in general."
"They were all meat and I'm a vegetarian." Craven said.
- Enviros will have information on recycling and other environmental issues from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. today on the east lawn at Wescoe Hall.
The Retirees Club will have coffee at 10 a.m. today in the Adam Lounge at the Adams Alumni Center.
An Affirmative Action Worksheet titled "Search, Screening, Selection and Support," will be at 9:30 a.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas
1243 ORBITAL computing seminar on "Hardware Purchasing Guidelines," will be at 1 p.m. today. For more information call 864-0403.
On Campus
■ Donald Kelley, former chairman of Beatrice Co. Inc., will speak at 2 p.m. today in the Pioneer Room at the Kansas Union. Kelley will speak on "Reconstructing Corporate America."
The University Forum will feature Beatrice Wright, professor emeritus of psychology, speaking on "Psychological Mission to China: Two Goals, Two Puzzles," at noon today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministry
■ The screening of entries for the Kansas Film and Video Festival will be at 4 p.m. today in 308 Dyche Hall. Screening will be at 4 p.m. daily through Friday and at 9 a.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Anorexia Nervosa and Associate
1204 Oread Ave.
- "Communicating in Loving relationships," a workshop sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, will be from 7 to 10 ontight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
- The KU Chess Club will meet at 7 ontight in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
Disorders will meet from 6 to 7:30 tonight in room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
■ Jazz Singers will give their fall concert under the direction of Ron McCurdy at 8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall.
SUA will present the film "All the King's Men," at 8 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
SMOKESTACK PLACED: A new 109-foot smokestack was placed on the roof of the KU facilities operations power plant yesterday, and will be ready for use in about three weeks.
Because of a reporter's error, Doug Folk, student senate chairman at Kansas State University, was misidentified in Monday's Kansan.
Correction
Use Kansan Coupons
News Briefs
The smokestack, which will be connected to two power-plant boilers at the facilities operations area south of Stauffer-Flint Hall on Sunflower Road, was built to meet state and national air quality standards.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
UNIVERSITY OF KANASAKI
C
Films presents...
Wednesday 8:00 $1.50
All the King's Men
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
This film of dazzling energy is a tour daily life which recreates the rhythms, smells and sounds of the black townships. Riotously funny, deeply moving, and at times shocking, a must for those who claim to understand the effects of Apartheid.
Friday and Saturday 3:30 and 8:00 ONLY Unbearable Lightness of Being
A documentary about Rev. C.F. Beyers, formerly a pillar of the Afikaren regime, presently a staunch supporter of the freedom movement. A clear concise explanation of the issues of Aparthet an an impassioned plea for justice.
Woza Albert
TRACEY GARCIA
Haircuts... $6.50
For appointments call 842-3699
2323 Ridge Court
NEW
Adapted from Robert Penn Warren's novel about the rise and fall of a ruthless Hughey Long-like politico. Winner of three Academy Awards this is a stunning drama of the corruption of power.
A playboy finds himself in a new relationship which makes him question the virtues of non-obligation. New schedules available at SUA
Pumpkin Pie!
Pumpkin
Free Samples!
Take us home for the Holidays
Louisiana Purchase
Shopping Center
843-5500
I Can Believe In YOGURTI
Unit Store, Nature
Thursday 8:00 $2.50
South African Double Feature
Crv Reason
PUNCHLINE (R)
Commonwealth
Bargain Makers & Senior Citizens $2.50
Showtimes for Today Only
MOVIE INFO: 841-7000
Granada 1020 Mass.
843-5788
Varsity 1015 Mass. 843-1065
THEY LIVE (R) *4.50, 7.10, 9.30*
MYSTIC PIZZA (R) *4.30, 7.15, 9.25*
HALLOWEEN IV (R) *4.45, 7.25, 9.35*
BAT 21 (R) *4.40, 7.20, 9.20*
THE GOOD MOTHER (R) *4.35, 7.30, 9.40*
Hillcrest 9th & Iowa
842-8400
Child's Play (R) 7.20, 9.30
EVERYBODY'S
ALL AMERICAN (R) 7.15, 9.25
Cinema Twin 31st& Iowa
842-6400
You don't need your parents' money to buy a Macintosh.
Just their signature.
It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh* computer at school.
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether.
another thing altogether.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan to-Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one.
Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800-831-LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
and send it. If they qualify, they'll receive a check for you in just a few weeks.
There's no collateral. No need to prove financial hardship. No application fee.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
*Offer open only to full-time KU students
Best of all, the loan payments can be spread over as many as 10 years. Which gives you and your parents plenty of time to decide just who pays for it all
APPLE
Introducing Apple's Student Loan-to-Own Program Loan applications are available in the computer store at the Burge Union.
© 1988 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple; the Apple logo and Macintosh are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
Come by and talk to us about your computer needs today!
Burge Union 864-5697
MADHATTER
THE MAD HATTER NIGHTLY SPECIALS!!
WEDNESDAY
MADHATTER
25c Draws!
and
75c Shots!
75¢ Shots!
THURSDAY
"The Usual"
10c Draws!
—and—
FRIDAY
75 Shots!
$1.50 Well Drink
—and
50¢
Shots
SATURDAY
50c Draws 75c Shots
1. 下列对图中实验现象的说法,正确的是( )
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 9.1988
Campus/Area
3
Jeffrey
Divers Tom Koenig, left, and Cliff Woodsmall, of Midwest Marine Contracting Inc., test their equipment at Clinton Reservoir. The Army Corps of Engineers hired the divers to inspect the dam. No flaws were found in the dam yesterday.
Dam divers
Campus police group trying to form union
Elections to decide whether a group of KU police officers will form a union may be held before the end of the year, an attorney who represents the Kansas University Police Officers Association said yesterday.
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
Steve Bukaty, the attorney for the group, said that next week he would submit signatures, addresses and Social Security numbers of more than 30 percent of about 35 eligible employees to the state Public Employee Relations Board in Topeka. This would meet the "showing of interest" requirement needed to hold an election to decide whether a union would represent the employees.
tration for the state department of human resources, said yesterday that the employee group requested a hearing last spring to determine which employee positions would be included in a union. The hearing was March 8 and 9 and April 8.
ees.
Ray Siehndel, director of adminis
Siehdel said the hearing was conducted before Paul Dickhoff, a representative of the board, whose recommendation was accepted Sept. 21.
Mary Prewitt, assistant University general counsel, represented the University of Kansas in the hearing. She said the board ruled that the positions of police officer, detective and security officer I would be included in the bargaining unit. The positions of sergeant, lieutenant, security officer II and communication operator
(dispatcher) would not.
She said the University opposed the inclusion of sergeants in the unit because they were supervisors. She said the University had also opposed the inclusion of detectives.
Bukaty said that an appeal to include sergeants in the unit had been filed the third week in October in Shawnee County District Court.
Prewitt said that she had received notification of the appeal and that the University had not responded yet. The University has until about Nov. 23 to respond.
The University can neither oppose nor encourage the forming of a union, but can present its views concerning the make-up of the bargaining unit. Prewitt said.
KU alum to be honored at Kansas Film Festival Competition, movie showings begin tonight
By David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
The lights are off, and the cameras are in storage, but the action begins tonight.
Action begins tonight.
The sixth annual Kansas Film and Video Festival begins at 8 tonight. Downs Auditorium at Dyche Hall which was premiere of the feature film "Reunion," which was shot primarily in Lenexa. The film is about a 15-year high school reunion at a small-town bar in Kansas.
Vicki Vodrey, a producer and actor in "Reunion," said that the film won fourth place out of 70 films at the Houston International Film Festival this year.
Houston International Film Festival this year. The festival at KU features five days of film showings and competition in Dyche. It will end on Sunday, when the Kansas Film Institute will present its 1988 Grand OZZI award to Stephen Johnson, a 1978 KU graduate and director of Peter Gabriel's "Sledgehammer" video and former director of the CBS show "Pee-Wee's Playhouse."
house." The Institute will present its 1988 Life Achievement OZZI award to Herk Havey and John Clifford, both Lawrence residents. They produced the 1962 feature horror film "Carnival of Souls," which was shot partially in Lawrence.
Roger Holden, president of Magic Visions studios, 745 New Hampshire St., will present the OZIs.
New Hampshire ST., will present the OCL "I encourage KU students past and present to come and pay homage to Stephen, Past and John," Holden said.
Some KU student films also will be featured during the festival. Mark Syerson, executive secretary of the Kansas Film Institute, said, "We have student entries in virtually every category" of film and video competition.
The categories include long non-fiction, short non-
fiction, long promotional, short promotional and public
service announcements and commercials. Those
categories will be shown from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday.
"Long narrative and short narrative films will be screened for competition at 8 p.m. Saturday.
screened for competition and practice
Long experimental, short experimental and music
video films will be screened for competition at noon
Sunday.
Syverson said 70 films were entered for this year's competition.
competition.
Holden said that since the event began in 1983, the interest in competition has grown.
"We had just below 30 entries in 1983, and it just gradually increased," he said.
Other events at the festival include the Kansas premiere of "Hoxsey — Quacks Who Cure Cancer?" at 8 p.m. tomorrow.
Holden said that the film was used as testimony to Congress to show that a cheap herbal cure for cancer had been suppressed by the American Medical Association
Also, a panel of people with professional film experience will speak and answer questions from 4 to 5 p.m. Friday.
List for HOPE narrowed to 10
By a Kansan reporter
Seniors have chosen 10 professors as semifinalists for the Honor for Progressive Educator (HOPE) award. The HOPE award has been presented annually to a KU faculty member by KU's senior class since 1959.
of health, physical education,
Seniors may vote on the finalists Nov. 16 and 17
at 106 Strong Hall or in the dean's office in each
professional school.
Lawrence to issue bonds
KU's seminare
The professors are Mathias Mertes, professor of chemistry and medicinal chemistry; Valentino Stella, professor of pharmacy; Lonn Beaudry, associate professor of design; Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare; Herman Leon, professor of social welfare; Steve McCabe, assistant of civil engineering; Chip Howat, associate professor of chemistry and petroleum engineering; Tim Bengtson, assistant professor of journalism; Dena Linville, instructor in journalism; James LaPoint, associate professor of health physical education and recreation.
Senior may vote on the finalists Nov. 16 and 17. Strong Hall or in the dean's office in each
professional school. The winner of the HOPE award will be announced at the Nov.19 football game.
Bv Derek Schmidt
By Derek Schmid Special to the Kansan
The Lawrence City Commission last night approved a letter of intent to issue up to $10.5 million in industrial revenue bonds to be used for tax relief by the developers of the Lawrence riverfront project.
The commission approved the letter of intent by a 41 vote.
a 4-1 vote.
John Lungstrum, an attorney for the Chelsea Group, asked for the revenue bonds because the developers underestimated the amount of property taxes they would have to pay. He said the bonds were needed for the project to proceed.
were The Chelsea Group, an East Coast-based company, is the developer for the project. No bonds will be issued without another request from the group.
The request to authorize the bonds came during last week's meeting, but the commission said then that it needed more time to decide. Mayor Bob Schumm said that it looked as if the project cost more than $21 million. The city has already allocated $3.5 million in general funds to the Chelsea Group.
Chelsea Group:
Commissioner Dennis Constance opposed the move.
"I don't think we should be giving away taxes." Constance said. "Before we abate something, I think we ought to satisfy that the community in other ways was recovering full value."
Schumm said that information from previous meetings showed that the project would pay for itself.
Barry Shalinsky, a Lawrence resident, said the commission had repeatedly rushed consideration of the riverfront project.
of the lives in this city had a bad night to consider this item." Shalinsky said. "It is an election night. Most of the people have other things to do besides consider industrial revenue bonds."
Schumm said he was going to keep the election night meeting as short as possible because everyone wanted to watch the election race and because Commissioner Mike Amyx was a candidate in the county commission race.
"Just look at those hands," Constance said of Amely, "Steady as a rock."
Amyx. "Steady as a rock."
In other business, the commission:
In other business," the firm authorized the installation of a priority traffic ignition to allow fire trucks to change the code of traffic lights by remote control. The system would keep fire response times under the city's five-minute goal, said Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief.
If Senate submits a bill, it must first pass through the Finance Committee meeting on Nov. 16. Menees said that the committee could have called an emergency meeting but decided against it.
presidential candidate
Brook Menees, student body president, said yesterday that a bill to finance the $10,000 visit to KU would not be heard during tonight's Senate meeting. Hart, a former Democratic presidential candidate, is tentatively scheduled to appear Jan. 31 in Hoch Auditorium.
MARLENE MCCOY
meeting but decide to follow the I think we need to follow the
basket pills are the following: a $1,200 bill to maintain the Student Senate typing room in Watson Library for eight months: a $1,092 bill to cover an increase in monthly telephone charges for 11 student organizations; an $885 bill to buy new equipment for the KU Sailing Club; and a $197 bill to duplicating and advertising for the Campus Vegetarian Society.
Senate will consider bill for Hart speech
In other business, Senate will debate five bills during tonight's meeting, including a $2,040 bill to help finance the University Dance Club. The club asked Senate for money to make costumes and posters and to mail fliers for a ballet performance.
Nov. 30 would be the earliest day that Student Senate could consider a bill to finance a visit by former presidential candidate Gary Hart.
By a Kansan reporter
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4
Wednesday, November 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
University needed a boost and KU football was there
It was fun to be a Jayh.
It was fun to be a Jayhawk football fan Saturday. It had been a long time since fans watched the final seconds tick away on the scoreboard with Kansas in the lead. As time ran out, students raced onto the football field to celebrate KU's first victory of the year. A victory had been a long time coming.
colling.
Bass was reminiscent of 1984 when underdog KU upset Oklahoma and, like Saturday, both goal posts came down. The fact that the 30-12 victory came against state rival Kansas State made the win all the more sweet.
made the win on the show.
Fans on both sides of the field agreed that this year, the cross-state rivalry had to have a victor. The jokes about last year's 17-17 tie never stopped. The national media flocked to Memorial Stadium to write their humor pieces about the game they called the "Toilet Bowl."
But the media did not find much to laugh about. Instead they saw an outstanding game. Cognizant that the loser would have to endure a year of ribbing, both teams played their hearts out. It showed
It was a symbolic fresh start.
it showed.
The victory for KU cannot not have come at a better time. It gave students a chance to feel good about KU athletics after the announcement of the NCAA probation.
If was a symbiont embarrassed by the NCAA violations that left a very dark cloud over the University. Saturday's victory provided a much needed boost. Our new football coach earned his first victory at KU. We know there will be more to come.
The game also showed that the strong rivalry between Kansas' two largest universities continued. More than 5,000 students, clad in sweatshirts of purple, blue and red gathered on the sloping hill outside of Memorial Stadium. Jokes about Silo-tech and Snob Hill were common. "Just wait until we play you in basketball" was a common farewell.
you in basketball was better. But the rivalry, this year did not turn ugly as it has in the past. The antics of rowdy, drunken fans that have tarnished the matchup for the last few years did not develop.
Both on and off the field, the game was a class act for KU. The football team and the fans reminded us that you don't have to go undefeated to be, act and look like winners.
Michael Horak for the editorial board
Other Voices
Setting standards for cancer tests
A new law tightening controls on the Pap smear test will improve the chances that women with cervical cancer will get proper treatment in the disease's early stages.
The bill, which was approved by Congress two weeks ago, sets higher standards for the test and requires civil and criminal penalties for laboratories that violate these regulations. The penalties are necessary, because women place a lot of trust in these laboratory tests.
Women who are diagnosed with cervical cancer and are treated in its early stages have an 80 to 90 percent chance of surviving. Although the onset of the disease usually does not occur until the woman reaches 50 or 60 years of age, it can be diagnosed at ages as early as 20 or 30. When it is detected and treated at this pre-cancerous stage, the chance of survival is almost 100 percent.
or adjuvant. It is important that the Pap smear test, which is the only way of detecting cervical cancer in the early stages, must be as reliable as possible. Women who undergo these test must be guaranteed that the tests are performed with the most care possible.
In some cases, an absolute guarantee has not been possible. But due care has been manifestly lacking in the practice of some laboratories that have paid lab attendants performing the tests per slide processed, rather than by the hour. This leads to possible sloppiness by lab attendants trying to crank out as many slides as possible.
attendants trying to "meet" the students. This "assembly line" mentality is not conducive to accuracy in the tests, and false diagnoses have resulted from it. Congress made the right choice by prohibiting payment-by-the-slide in Pap tests. Fixed salaries will encourage lab attendants to take more time and care with each test.
each test. Because of the new legislation, the Pap test will be more reliable. It is to be hoped that more women will take advantage of this and avoid cancer by having the test done.
cancer by nursing women. Women, particularly those in high-risk categories, should take the Pap test; they have a cervical examination annually, and women in the University community may fit into those categories. The high-risk group for cervical cancer include those who have had more than three sex partners, those who have had sex before age 18, smokers, and those who have had previous abnormal Pap smears.
And as Dr. Gordon Harden, pathologist at Centre Community Hospital, said, "One missed case of cancer is a bad job."
The Daily Collegian Pennsylvania State University University Park, Penn.
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The End
We think your presidency was . . .
We offered Kansan readers the chance to comment on Ronald Reagan's legacy during his last 100 days in office. Here are some of the responses. Thanks for writing.
There when needed
My first recollection of Ronald Reagan was in 1981, my fifth-grade year. I remember entering my elementary school library and hearing that President Reagan had been shot and could die. It was a terrifying event that tore apart some of my childhood innocence. As we all know, he soon recovered and has now completed two terms as president. His critics of his decision him for功, he has conservative views on the school prayer and Central America. He also has been criticized for letting the environment erode and the deficit explode. All of these accusations and many others are true.
But it is also true that he has been a larger-than-life president, almost a grandfather figure to many. He has given us eight years of general prosperity, the INF treaty and increased patriotism. Ronald Reagan should be remembered for being in the right place at the right time.
Jeff Napshin
Prairie Village freshman
The message of the Reagan years was: Solve problems by pretending they don't exist. Children of the 1980s learned that it's OK to advance through illegal means — just don't get caught — and to be conscious of your own happiness while blinding yourself to others' misfortunes.
Smile now, pay later
The smiles of the Reagan Era will turn to lingering frowns when it's realized that life based on illusion and self-absorption offers no lasting fulfillment and that problems don't go away until you deal with them.
Tim Brownlee
Office assistant
Watkins Memorial Health Center
Plastic horror
Ronald Reagan is "likable?" Nonsense. He may read scripts well, smile and frown on cue well, and give great photo opportunities, but
David Charlson
otherwise he is a plastic, ignorant horror. Without remorse he has stifled civil rights, killed the environment, and, figuratively and literally, paid for our supposedly pleasant vacation from reality by selling the farm. Worst of all, he has made selfishness a national vocation. I wish I were completely wrong.
iowa City, Iowa, graduate student
Missed opportunity
Reagan entered the presidency with what could have been a mandate to reverse a generation of liberal drift toward military weakness, economic stagnation, and whittling away of domestic freedom. After some initial effort, much of it misconceived, Reagan instead chose to be lazy, uxorious and popular. The opportunities that this frivolous man and his wife squandered are unlikely to be repeated for another generation.
Arthur L. Thomas
Arthur Young Distinguished
Professor of Business, Emeritus
Crumbling smiles
The Reagan administration has followed the advice of pop psychologists: "Only you can make you happy." So as America sits smiling before the mirror, we do not see the crumbling house around us, the lawn dying outside and the neighbors who wonder who we are.
Jonathan Plummer Rayton, Mo., junior
A great president
President Ronald Reagan, without a doubt, is one of the "great" presidents of this century. He gave our country a desperately needed dose of confidence and self-respect while rejuvenating our power domestically and abroad. President Reagan rebuilt our national defenses, vigorously promoted democracy, stopped communist expansion, lowered interest rates, created jobs, whipped inflation and signed the first treaty
eliminating nuclear weapons. I'll be sad to see him go, but I will always be a Reagan Republican.
Christopher Wilson Olathe senior
Four years, one word
After years of a style-over-substance presidency, and after years of a government which initiated a new tax on scholarships after promotion not to raise taxes while cutting federal aid to education; and after years of a government that promised it would not negotiate with terrorists, allowed Iran to acquire our valued defense weaponry and to use that weaponry against us in the Persian Gulf; and after pensively reflecting on the long, corrupt, and regrettable Reagan years, I have but one word in summation: pathetic.
Michael Diggs Wichita senior
Misarmed nation
In the video age of the 1980s, image is an important part of the presidency of the United States. Ronald Reagan can be called the image president. He has been the most image-oriented president in our nation's history. In the arena of world politics, he has tried to project strength and an unwillingness to succumb to foreign pressure of any kind. He has succeeded only in projecting an image of aggression and militarism.
ish.
In an era of sensitive political politics and imbedded military buildup, is such a mentality safe? Is it proper considering our own economic concerns domestically? According to Reagan, we must appear strong to our adversaries to insure world peace. Shouldn't we work for world peace through disposing of this militaristic attitude? We are arming ourselves beyond all reason. It's disturbing to wonder what we are arming ourselves for.
Scott B. Achelpohl Overland Park senior
BLOOM COUNTY
HELLO ?
CBS NEWS ?
e 1985 Washington Post Co.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 9, 1988
Nation/World
5
Rescue parties reach quake-stricken areas
BEJIING — Army rescuers and medical teams finally reached crumbled villages in a remote area near Burma yesterday where China's worst earthquake in more than a decade killed at least 930 people last weekend.
The Associated Press
weekio.
Official Beijing radio said that more than 100 people had been rescued from the rubble of collapsed buildings but many more were believed to be trapped.
It said that 1,000 soldiers were involved in the rescue operation and that the central government had allocated $53.6 million.
nucleated $900 million Sunday night's temblor registered 7.6 on the Richter scale, indicating a quake of tremendous destructive force. It was centered in Lancang and Menglian counties of Yunnan province, about 240 miles southwest of Kunming, the provincial capital.
More than 170 aftershocks had been felt by yesterday afternoon but
heir strength was declining, said Li Xianhou of the State Seismology Bureau in Beijing.
About 14 counties were affected, covering 16,000 square miles in a long corridor near Yunan's southwestern frontier with Burma. Officials said they did not know the population of the mountainous, jungle-covered region, most of whose residents are farmers of the Lahu, Va and Dai minorities.
Lancang county alone has 400,000 people,the Civil Affairs Ministry said.
Information on casualties and rescue work was sparse and most government offices refused to answer reporters' questions, but the Civil Affairs Ministry told the U.N. Development Program and World Food Program offices in Beijing more than 890 people were killed. The two agencies said the ministry did not request assistance.
FBI continues search in virus investigation
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - A lawyer for Robert Morris Jr., the Cornell University graduate student who has become the focus of a computer virus investigation, said yesterday that he probably would not decide this week on whether his client should talk to the FBL.
the FBI. The FBI pressed forward with its criminal investigation, and the Justice Department is considering obtaining a search warrant or grand jury subpoenas for documents at Cornell, which could help shed some light on the computer virus incident, federal law enforcement sources said.
Charles Steinmetz, an FBI spokesman, said Monday that the preliminary inquiry of the computer virus incident was being upgraded to a full-scale criminal investigation and that the bureau was examining possible violations of the Computer Fraud
and Abuse Act of 1986.
and Alabama.
The law carries a one-year maximum prison term on conviction for intentionally gaining unauthorized access to a computer used by the U.S. government and affecting the operation of the computer. The law also carries a five-year maximum prison term for intentionally gaining unauthorized access to two or more computers in different states and preventing authorized use of such computers or information.
computers of more than The virus paralyzed more than 6,000 university and military computers nationwide last week.
ters hardwired.
A computer virus is a tiny program that invades data processors and disrupts the normal operation of the machines. A virus duplicates itself, spreading into other programs in the computer. The virus infects one computer after another as users share floppy disks or link up over telephone lines.
Services break air safety records
WASHINGTON — Despite a series of crashes involving high-performance jet fighters, the armed services enjoyed their safest aviation year ever in fiscal 1988, the Pentagon said yesterday.
The Associated Press
ng $5000. The previous record for aviation safety was set by the four services a year ago, when they reported a combined rate of 2.21 per 100,000 flying hours based on 164 serious mishaps.
The current performance reflects a 35 percent reduction in major accidents since 1982, with an increase of 4.9 percent in flying hours, from 6.9 million to 7.27 million hours, the Pentagon said.
yesterday. The Navy, Marine Corps and Army each set individual records for aviation safety, and the Air Force came close to matching its all-time best, the Pentagon said.
Combined, the four services flew almost 7.3 million hours during the year ending Sept. 30, experiencing 137 so-called Class A accidents. That amounts to a rate of 1.88 mishaps per 100,000 flying hours, the standard military measurement.
A Class A mishap is one in which there is a fatality or damage exceeding $500,000.
entagon said.
The number of fatalities reported
B-1 bomber crashes; entire crew ejects safely
The Associated Press
ABILENE, Texas — A B-1 bomber crashed yesterday, and all four crew members ejected safely, one man getting out seconds before the crash, the Air Force said.
said.
"All of them were taken to the Dyess hospital and are in good condition," said Air Force spokesman Linda Gellnerne of Dyess Air Force Base, where the long-range military bomber was based. The plane crashed about 3:30 p.m., roughly eight miles northwest of here.
Lou Paules of Abilene, Texas, who witnessed the crash, said the plane appeared to be making a normal flight away from the base
when smoke started coming out a left engine as the craft was circling.
by the Air Force, Marine Corps and Army declined from 119 in fiscal 1987 to 103 in fiscal 1988.
"At first there was just a puff of smoke, then fire," said Paulsen, who was about two miles away. "It looked like it started to go out, then it flared up big."
to 183 in fiscal 1968.
The Navy could not say how many aviators died in fiscal 1988, said Lt
it flared up bp.
When it hit, the plane exploded in a fireball 10 stories high. White smoke could be seen for more than 20 miles, filling the sky west of Abilene, witnesses said.
Ambiente, Whitworths. The crew's dramatic escape was captured by a television film crew.
The plane went down a couple of miles north of Interstate 20 in an open field. Emergency and rescue vehicles were at the scene less than half an hour after the crash.
just a few years ago. The new fiscal year statistics were ballyhooed at the Pentagon yesterday about the same time that an Air Force B-1B bomber crashed
near Dyess Air Force Base, Texas. The crash was the second involving a production model of that new long-range bomber.
Janet Mescus
While the news was good, the Navy and Air Force each reported some problems in fiscal 1988 with one of their jet fighters. The Navy lost five F-14 Tomcats during the month of September alone and at least six for the year, although the Air Force lost 23 F-16 Fighting Falcons.
Service officials said a month ago there was no common thread among those accidents.
On a service-by-service base, the Pentagon said the Army set a record safety rate of 1.84 serious mishaps per 100,000 flying hours in fiscal 1988. The Navy's set a record of 2.08 per 100,000 flight hours, and the Marine Corps' set a record of 3.18 per 100,000 flying hours.
The Air Force experienced 1.63 serious mishaps per 100,000 flying hours, slightly worse than its all-time best of 1.53 set in fiscal 1986.
Setting aside the statistical rates, the Army experienced 32 serious aviation accidents in fiscal 1988 compared with 38 in fiscal 1987; the Navy had 37 compared with 49 the year before; the Marine Corps had 14 compared with 20 and the Air Force had 54 compared with 57.
News Roundup
POLISH WORKERS STRIKE: Workers in two shipyards in Gdansk, Poland, went on strike yesterday in support of the doomed Lenin Shipyard, and they defied an appeal by Solidarity leader Lewa. Lewa to go back to work. Wales, meanwhile, said he might begin talks about the government even without receiving a guarantee by the authorities for the continued operation of the yard — the birthplace of the banned trade union.
baned trade union.
IRAQ, IRAN EXCHANGE PRISONERS: Iraq joined Iran yesterday in offering to begin immediately the exchange of sick and wounded prisoners captured during their 8-year-old war. But the foreign ministers of both countries made it clear after another meeting with N.U. mediator Jan Eliasson that there was no progress in efforts to consolidate the truce that took effect Aug. 20.
ISRAELI MILITIA KILLS PALESTINIANICS: Israel's surrogate militia killed three Palestinian guerrillas Thursday in south Lebanon and pro-Syrian leftists said they expected Israeli
retaliation for an attempt to assassinate the militia's commander. Police said the dead guerrillas were members of the Fatah-Revolutionary Council led by terrorist Abu Nidal.
tionary Court.
JUSTICE EXCUSES MARCOSES:
A Supreme court justice yesterday temporarily excused former Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos and his wife, Imela, from obeying the grand jury subpoena. Justice Thurgood Marshall granted an emergency request by the Marcoses, who are seeking to stay out of jail on account of court charges.
contempt-of-court charges:
SAKHARO UNDERGEOES TESTS: Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov underwent cardiovascular tests yesterday at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston to determine if he needed to be given a pacemaker before he returns to the Soviet Union. A spokesman for the 67-year-old physicist and Nobel laureate, making his first visit to the West, said there was no immediate word on the results of the tests.
FAST ENDS: In Washington, eight advocates for the homeless yesterday ended 48-day.
water-only fasts staged as a protest over funding cuts in government housing programs. Carol Fennelly, a community force behind the capital city, a community for Creative Non-Violence shelter for the homeless, was the first to break the fast, at 8 a.m. CDT. She then checked into Howard University Hospital, where she was listed in serious condition after undergoing a series of tests that revealed a dangerously low blood potassium level.
ABDUCTED INFANT STILL MISSING: A Little Rock, Ark., woman whose newborn baby was abducted from a hospital by a phony nurse went home yesterday, and authorities said they were closer to finding the frail infant. The mother, Annette Thomas-Jones, appealed to the woman who took the baby to "call a friend, call the police, call a minister and tell them." I've done something wrong." Ten-day-old Christopher Michael Jones was born six weeks premature. Doctors have said he could die if he did not get proper medical attention.
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Wednesday, November 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
★KANSAS★
U.S. House
2nd DISTRICT
98 percent of precincts reporting
✔ Slattery (D.i) 133,444
Meinhardt (R) 48,540
3rd DISTRICT
Douglas County results
✔ Slattery (D.i) 21,395
Meinhardt (R.) 10,146
99 percent of precincts reporting
✔ Meyers (R,i) 148,348
Kunst (D) 54,208
4th DISTRICT 91 percent of precincts reporting
✓ Glickman (Di) ... 113,510
Thompson (R) ... 64,764
5th DISTRICT
91 percent of precincts reporting
✓ Whittaker (R.i) ... 117,860
Barnes (D) ... 50,755
AMENDMENT
State Reapportionment 51 percent of precincts statewide
Yes ... 284,180
No ... 181,844
(D) — Democrat; (R) — Republican; (I) — not in office
Slattery wins seat in House for 4th term
By Barbara Joseph and Grace Hobson Kansan staff writers
TOPEKA — Calling it the most gratifying political victory of his life, Jim Slatterly celebrated his triumph over Republican opponent Phil Meinhardt with more than 400 candidates at the Jayhawk Tower last night.
With this victory, Slattery will return to a fourth term as U.S. representative to the 2nd Congressional District.
"People said a resounding 'yes' to our positive campaign." Slatery, flanked by family members, told a crowd in the Florentine Room. "We didn't spend a dime on negative campaigning. It's part of the reason we won the victory that we did."
With 98 percent of the precincts reporting, Slattery had 133,444 votes, or 73 percent, and Meinhardt had 48,540 votes, or 27 percent.
"I's simply a reflection of what the polls said all along," said John Carlin, former Kansas governor. "This is a Republican district, but Jim Slatter is strong. He showed it again tonight."
Amid the bright lights of television stations, cigarette smoke and signs touting local candidates, supporters cheered, clapped and at times talked so loudly that Slattery and other candidates were unable to speakoke on television screens for the national results.
"I'm very disappointed, but it's a real adventure. I wouldn't have missed it for anything," said Meinhardt, a retired Air Force officer who moved into the district to challenge Slattery. "I'm going
Meinhardt, at the Ramada Inn in Topeka, conceded the race about 8:30 p.m.
Roger Aeschilman, communication director of the state Republican party, said, "Phil put up a really good campaign. He is to get the point across that he (Slattery) is an extreme liberal."
to seek a job in government; I'm too young to retire."
The campaign was an uphill battle for Meinhardt, who struggled with finances and the power of Slattery's incumbency.
"To beat an incumbent, you need a minimum of a half-million dollars," said Tish Rogers, Meinhardt's campaign manager. "We had hoped for a closer race. We ran a good grassroots campaign. I wasn't surprised that he lost, though."
Rogers said the campaign spent about $40,000 for the primary and general elections, of which $20,000 was Meinhardt's own money.
In contrast, Slattery spent about $250,000, none of it his own money, said Don Cooper, Slattery's campaign manager.
Lack of finances also affected the number of TV commercials Meinhardt could afford. Rogers said the money for commercials ran out at the end of October. There were no radio commercials.
Cooper didn't know exactly how Slattery had spent on TV and radio commercials, but he said it was a sizable amount. The commercials resumed about three weeks ago and stopped this week.
TOMMY DAVIS
Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Kan., who won his fourth term in Congress last night, stands with his wife, Linda, and their sons Michael and Jason at the Democratic headquarters in Topeka.
Area turnout high 80 percent of voters fill polls
By Katy Monk Kansan staff writer
The ballot boxes were brimming in Douglas County last night as about 80 percent of the county's registered voters went to the polls. Voter turnout came within $1\frac{1}{2}$ percentage points of breaking the county record.
But those looking for record-breaking events don't have to look far. At 40,574, the number of registered voters in the county is the highest ever. But not all that more people had applied for absentee ballots than ever before.
Jaimes said she thought the presidential election and publicity encouraging voting had spurred people to register.
"Nationally, they'd predicted one of the lowest voter turnouts. But
that's not the way it's been in Douglas County or in the Midwest," she said. "I think the people here take voting very seriously and see it as somewhat of an obligation to go vote."
Preliminary results show national turnout at around 50 percent, the lowest since 1948 when turnout was 51 percent. In 2016, 54.41 of 64 when turnover was 48 to 49 percent.
The county's record was set in the 1984 presidential elections, when 81.5 percent of 39,826 registered in the county voted.
The statewide vote also approached the 1984 record of 1,025,000, but with 90 percent of the vote tabulated, it appeared that the total would fall just short of a million, and the record would stand with the 1984 re-election of President Reagan.
State reapportionment amendment excluding college students passes
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
College students who claim permanent residence outside of Douglass County will not be counted in Douglas County census data under an amendment to the state constitution that was passed last night.
Some elected representatives had opposed the amendment because they said it wasn't fair not to count students who lived in Lawrence for nine months of the year, many of whom register to vote in Douglas County.
With 2,156 out of 3,081 precincts,
or 70 percent, reporting, 430,738
people, or 63 percent, voted in favor of the amendment. About 37 percent, or 247,867, voted against it.
The amendment, Section 1 of Article 10, will permit the Kansas Legislature to reapportion both senate and representative districts on the basis of a state census in 1989.
However, in 1992 and every 10 years thereafter, the amendment will require the Legislature to reapportion on the basis of a federal census. This census would be adjusted to exclude military personnel and college students
who claim permanent residence in other states or nations.
Military personnel and college students who claim residence in Kansas would be counted in their records, especially where they currently live.
The old constitutional method required both houses to reapportion in 1898 and every 10 years thereafter without any requirement regarding the source of population figures used.
Incumbent State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said last night that she opposed the amendment because it didn't count students where they currently live.
"I have a house seat with more students in it than any other," she said. "The attempt was to keep the vote as rural as possible, to keep students back on the farms in rural Kansas."
But State Rep. David Miller, E-Rudora, said earlier this week that he was in favor of the amendment to the state census to pate the need for the state census.
State Sen. John Solbach,
D Lawrence, said, "I don't think this should be an amendment. It should be the vote." Kagan report Mark Kanen con-
Kansan reporter Mark Fagan contributed information to this story.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 9. 1988
LAWRENCE
72
Kansas House Complete official results
44th DISTRICT
✔ Branson (D) ... 7,859
McGhee (R) ... 3,378
45TH DISTRICT
✓ Solbach (D) ... unopposed
48th DISTRICT
✔ Charlton (D) ... 3,785
Norwood (R) ... 3,142
Kansas Senate
2nd DISTRICT
✓ Winter (R) ... 19,304
DuPree (D) ... 9,624
County Commission
2nd DISTRICT
3rd DISTRICT
✓ Amyx (D) ... 4,919
Pyle (R) ... 4,219
McEthaney (R) 6,505
Stoneback (D) 4,084
SHERIFF
✔ Anderson (R) ... 22,030
Pinegar (D) ... 8,618
Lawrence to keep its incumbent delegation
Bv Mark Faagan
and Debbie McMahon Kensan staff writers
Lawrence yesterday sent its incumbent delegation back to the Legislature in Topeka.
State Seen, Wint Winter Jr., R-
Lawrence, and State Rep. Jessie
Branson, D-Lawrence, were over-
whelmingly re-elected by their
northeast Kansas constituencies.
But State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton,
D-Lawrence, reclaimed her seat
by a only narrow margin.
Charlton defeated Republican Bernie Norwood and 7,785 votes to 3,142 votes in the 46th District, which is mainly eastern Lawrence.
"I'm relieved, I suppose," Charlton said after her victory. "I'm just glad it's over. You're always glad when it's over."
Charlton said the race was closer than she expected.
"I thought people were kind of fed up with (Norwood)'s negative campaigning," she said. "Apparently, it did influence some votes."
Norwood, Charlton's opponent, is a Lawrence paralegal.
"This is no bad deal." Norwood said after his defeat. "It's been a super effort. I was satisfied with the voters' choice, because it's their choice. I expected to win; it wasn't just wishful thinking."
just what Charlton was elected to her fifth full term in the state House of Representatives on a platform of support for the Margin of Excellence, open admissions and opposition to Washburn's entry into the Regents system.
Winter defeated Democratic candidate Mike DuPree 19,304 votes to 9,624 votes in the 2nd round, which includes Lawrence and Toebe.
Winter was elected to his second
term in the Kansas Senate on *m* platform of support for theMargin and equal education opportunities for all Kansas children.
Branson defeated Republican Renee McGhee 7,859 votes to 3,378 votes in the 4th District, which encompasses of KU and western Lawrence.
Branson was elected to her fifth term in the state House on a platform of support for the Margin, improved health care and more money for public education.
"I can tell you it feels very good and I'm very excited." Branson said. "But when you're re-elected, you must be ahead of job ahead of in the next term."
"I have hundreds of thank you notes to write, and a lot of constituent mail to get out. And there are those yard signs to take down."
McGhee, Branson's opponent, is
SMOKING ELEVATOR
Bernie Norwood, Republican candidate for the Kansas House in the 46th District, his wife, Vern, right, and daughter-in-law Shannon, left, await the final totals. Norwood lost the election to incumbent Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence.
a KU graduate student who has served in Student Senate. She said she would fight for increased salaries for classified employees and faculty. She also supports the Margin.
in other race races, Joan Flower defeated State Rep. Robin Leach in the 47th District; State Rep. Robert Miller of Baldwin City was re-elected in the 43rd District; and State Ed. Reilly defeated challenger Stevi Stephens.
Margin McGhee could not be reached for comment.
Anderson elected sheriff in landslide County voters select Amyx, McElhaney for commission
By Deb Gruver Kansan staff writer
Douglas County residents decided to vote for experience yesterday as Republican candidate Loren Anderson won the election for sheriff, capturing about 72 percent of the ballots.
ballots.
Answers, who will make the step from undersheriff to sheriff, ended up with 22,003 votes in his landslide victory over his Democratic opponent Gale Pinegar. Pinegar had 8,618 votes.
"They had the opportunity to select someone totally new," Anderson said. "So I did not expect it to be such a large margin."
The sheeriff's race had the largest margin in the county races. The final results for the Douglas County polls were in about 10 p.m.
Anderson's platform included improving the 911 and HELP
emergency systems. During his campa-
ign, Anderson prided himself on his more than 20 years of experience in law enforcement.
In the other county races, voters chose to have Louie McElhaney and Mike Amyx as their new representatives on the Douglas County Commission. Both will serve four-year terms starting in January.
MeEhlaney, the Republican candidate for the 3rd District, won 61 percent of the vote. MeEhlaney won the back of the 6,585 votes to I.J. Stonehack's 4,084.
"I'd hoped that I would do even better," McElhaney said. "I broke my foot, so I wasn't able to get out and campaign as much as I would have liked to. I just kept an eye on what IJ. was doing."
Throughout the campaign for the 3rd District, Stoneback and McElhaney differed on whether to keep the
position of county administrator. Stoneback, who served as a commissioner from 1973 to 1976, said that if he was elected, he would move to eliminate the county administrator a position now held by Chris McKenzie.
McEhlaney, who will serve in his first public office and replace commissioner Warren Rhodes, said earlier that he would look into McKenzie's job description but would not eliminate the position.
The race between Amyx and his Republican opponent Tom Pyle for the 2nd District was closer. Amyx won the election with 4,919 votes, or 53 percent, to Pyle's 4,319, or 47 percent.
Amyx said that he wasn't surprised by the margin.
"I was telling Bob Moody just last night, 'Look, Bob, it's going to be close,' Amyx said. "We worked
hard right up until Monday night. I guess I feel almost numb."
Moody was Amyx's campaign manager.
Both Amyx and Pyle had public office experience. Amyx entered the race with six years of Lawrence City Commission experience and Pyle was in his fourth term of the Eudora City Council.
Amyx will have to resign from the city commission in January to begin his term for the county. He will replace David Hopper.
Several unopposed candidates won re-election easily. They included Republican Jim Flory, district attorney; Republican Patty Jaimes, county clerk; Republican Nancy L. Welsh, county treasurer; and Democrat Sue Neustift, register of deeds.
Kansas reporter Mark Fagan contributed information to this story.
Amyx wins race, leaves city politics
Bv Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
Democrat Mike Amyx's victory in the county commission race will leave the five-person Lawrence Commission one member short
But Amyx said he never meant to leave city politics prematurely.
Although his term as a city commissioner is not officially over until April 1989, Amyx will be leaving city work in January to begin his four-year term with the county commission.
Amyx defecated Tom Pyle, his Republican opponent in the 2nd District race, by 600 votes yesterday. He will fill the seat vacated by Commissioner David Hopper, who decided not to run again because of medical reasons.
"I of course, always intended to fulfill my city commission term." Amyx said in October. "But I decided to move on, and the city has to get new blood."
Buford Watson, city manager,
said the procedure would be for
Amyx to serve as a city commissioner
until January. Yesterday,
Amyx said that he would definitely
stay on until his county seat
started.
Watson said, "The commission can choose to leave his seat vacant until April, or it can choose to have it filled."
If the commission decided to fill the seat, Waston said it would appoint someone, rather than hold a special election.
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Wednesday, November 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NATIONAL
★
each state voted
Bush Dukakis Unresolved
Wash. Mont. N.D. Mich. Maine Vt.
Ore. Idaho Wyo. Minn. Wis. N.Y.
Neb. Iowa Ill. Ind. Ohio Pa.
Nev. Utah Colo. Kan. Mo. Ky. Va.
Calif. N.M. Okla. Ark. Tenn. N.C.
Texas La. Miss. Ala. Ga.
Fla.
Total electoral votes
Bush: 426
Dukakis:112
Alaska Hawaii
KANSAN graphic
KU experts react to Bush's victory
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
Peace and prosperity brought about the election of George Bush, but his victory was far from a mandate for the Republican party, local political experts said.
While Bush won about 54 percent of the national popular vote, Democratic candidates gained several seats in Congress and had strong showings in many state and local races.
"The bottom line is Bush won because the economy is doing well. But then locally, the Democrats have been most successful in recent times with domestic problems," said Roy Laird, KU professor of political science. "The American people vote by their pocketbooks."
"It's the schizophrenia of American voters. On the one hand, they want a strong leader who will solve their foreign relations problems, and they also have the Senate and House making life at home better. In a very rational but schizophrenic
way, the American people are having their cake and eating it, too."
Bush won about 56 percent of the Kansas vote. In Douglas County, the margin was slimmer. The Bush-Quiley tape edged out the Dukaik-Brensten tape, capturing slightly less than 50 percent of the vote.
Allan Ciglar, KU associate professor of political science, said that although Kansas is a strong Republican state. Bush's lead here may have been narrowed because of the close race between Bush and Kansas Sen. Bob Dole for the Republican nomination.
However, Cigler said Bush's victory in both the state and across the nation was no surprise.
"People see a good economy and a country at peace," he said. "People will probably talk about a poorly run Democratic campaign. Dukakis was very vulnerable."
Cigler said that he thought the Democrats had a chance of winning this year's presidential election,
Burdett Loomis, chairman of the KU political science department, agreed.
but that they didn't defend themselves against the Bush campaign's negative attacks soon enough
"The consensus is that the Dukakis campaign was very, very late in responding to negative ads. On the other hand, the Republican campaign was consistently very strong. It walked a narrow tightrope on truth, but it consistently ran a strong campaign."
Cigler said that relations between Congress and the president would be tense because many Democrats who had been voted into Congress were bad feelings about Bush's negative campaign.
"We may enter into an era where the president is not nearly the initiating force that the last couple of presidents have been," Cigler said. "Any new initiatives from the president won't get very far and initiatives from Congress will have a lot of problems."
Election breakdown by county
BUSH DUKAKIS Topeka Hays Wichita Lawrence
KANSAN graphic
BUSH
Continued from p.1
Bush said he would begin making decisions on his new administration today.
On Dukaiks, Bush said, "I think I know how Governor Dukaiks feels. I lost a few along the way myself and it hurts."
Dukakis concedes
Dukakis, his long race for the presidency ending in disappointment, told supporters in Boston that "we are ready to embrace 'the values and we share us'."
"This campaign has not been just about me and Lloyd Bentsen." Dukakis told a crowd of 3,000 supporters who gathered for what they had hoped would be a victory motion at Boston's World Trade Center.
"It's been about all of us, the values and the ideals that we share. That's what we've been fighting for," he said in time to work for every day," he said.
Dukakis, standing with his wife, Kitty, and family members, said he had telephoned Bush to congratulate him for being a chorus of boos from the crowd.
"I know I speak for all of you and all of the American people when I say he will be our president and we will work with him," he said. "This nation faces major challenges and we must work together."
After speaking, Dukakis went into a private meeting with his staff and major contributors before heading home to his Perry Street duplex.
His supporters cheered "92, 92," in reference to another quest for the presidency, in four years. But Dukakis made no reference to a repeat of his candidacy. And his mother, Euterep Dukakis, had a quick answer when asked if he wanted him to run again: "No."
Quayle celebrates
Dan Quayle pledged in triumph last night to serve the nation with devotion and dedication under Bush and proclaimed the Republican and pro-Republican management of the changes President Reagan has brought to the United States.
Standing under the glare of lights in a Washington ballroom packed with some 4,000 well-wishers, Quayle also promised, "I won't rest ever in my determination to serve our next president, George Bush.
"You have truly made this the most memorable night of our lives," said Quayle, who got on an unween start as the No. 2 man on the ticket.
Quayle, 41, was accompanied on the stage by his wife, Marilyn, and their three children, Tucker, 14, Benjamin, 12, and Corinne, 9.
"You need never question the devotion and dedication I will bring to this job," he said.
"I know that my obligation to our Constitution and to our people is sacred. The vive presidency is not a job. It is a trust created by each of you. I will never violate that trust."
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 9, 1988
NATIONAL
9
Youngest governor gets vote in Indiana
The Associated Press
Democrats reclaimed the Indiana governor's office for the first time in 20 years yesterday, ousted West Virginia's political warship Gov. Arch Moore with a political novice and put a scare into GOP incumbents in Rhode Island and Utah.
Indiana's Evan Bayh was elected the nation's youngest governor at age 32, and Moore was elected as 12 states elected governors.
Gov. Edward DiPrete overcame allegations of wrongdoing in Rhode Island to defeat a Democratic businessman for the second time in two years, while fellow Republican Norm Bangter was re-elected in Utah in a come-from-behind upset.
Democrats held 27 of the 50 governorships going into the election and registered a net gain of one seat, putting the party in an improved position to influence the state congressional redistricting battles after the 1990 census.
With 91 percent of the vote counted, Bayh, who as the son of former U.S. Sen. Birch E. Bayh is he to a popular name in India like Bharat Bhanjan Baleen LLG, John M. Nutz, 52 percent to 48 percent.
In West Virginia, Democratic newcomer Gaston Caperton, a wealthy insurance executive, denied Moore an unprecedented fourth term in a state with a slumping economy. Caperton, 48, called himself an outsider with a businessman's approach to the job and portrayed Moore as an old school politician.
school president.
With 93 percent of the vote counted, Capeton led 59 percent to 41 percent for Moore.
In Montana, former GOP state Sen. Stan Stephens wrecked a comeback attempt by former Gov. Thomas Judge for a seat being vacated by a Democrat. With 42 percent of the vote in, Stephens received or 53 percent to Judge's 47 percent.
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The Associated Press
Democrats control House
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WASHINGTON — Voters threw out a pair of congressmen entangled in ethics problems, but returned a hauntingly familiar House of Representatives that for the 35th straight year will be dominated by Democrats.
Senate Before After
Republican 46 44
Democrat 54 56
House Before After
Republican 177 174
Democrat 258 260
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The last votes were being counted early today, the same voters who chose Republican presidential candidate George Bush was voting for Hillary Clinton to be the House that had stood at 255-177 in the 10th Congress with three vacancies.
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It would be the first time in 28 years that the party losing the presidency managed to gain ground in the House. Early today Democrats had won 253 seats and in eight other races added to 170 Republican seats on GOP leads.
ine financial and other advantages that incumbents possess proved the key in yesterday's voting. Ninety-nine percent of the 408 representatives seeking new terms were on their way to re-election early today.
Freshman GOP incumbent Chic Hecht of Nevada narrowly trailed Gov. Richard Bryan. And in the fight for Washington state's open seat, former GOP Sen. Slade Gorton held a narrow lead over Rep. Mike Lowry. Gorton lost reelection to the Senate in 1986.
Wyoming's Malcolm Wallop lead state Sen. John Vinich by just 532 votes with 97 percent of the vote counted.
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Former Virginia Gov. Charles Robb easily defeated GOP candidate Maurice Dawkins to take the governorship and become a Republican Paul Trible in Virginia
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628 Vermont
In New Jersey, Democratic incumbent Frank Lautenberg held off a strong challenge from Republican Pete Dawkins. And 80-year-old Sen. Quentin Burick, D-N.D., beat back a challenge from state House Republican leader Earl Strinden.
terms were on their way to be approved by the Board of Democrats claimed the results proved that voters
Whatever caused the incumbent tide, it was not enough to pull at least three legislators to victory.
In suburban Atlanta, Ben Jones, a Democrat who portrayed Cooter on television's "The Ducks of Hazzard," ousted two-term Republican Rep. Pat Swindall in one of the country's most bitter campaigns.
Democrats had much to smile about in Texas. On the Gulf Coast, Republican Rep. Mac Sweeney, a two-term incumbent, lost to Democratic lawyer Greg Laughlin, and state Sen. Bill Sarpaiulus was leading GOP hopeful Larry Milner for a vacant Kaphn handle seat.
Democrats also scooped up a vacant seat held by a Republican in Nebraska when former state Sen. Peter Hoagland defeated Jerry Schenken, a doctor, in one of the country's most expensive House races.
preferred their policies.
Democrats get a foot in door of U.S. Senate
The last time a party winning the presidential race lost ground in the House was in 1960, when Democrats lost 20 seats even though John F. Kennedy won the White House.
In Nebraska, appointed GOP Sen. David Karnes was defeated by former Gov. Robert Kerrey, a Vietnam veteran and Medal of Honor winner who made national news while governor for his romance with movie star Debra Winger.
Republicans did pick up one Democratic seat in the South, Rep Trent Lott defeated Rep. Wayne John Stenin in the seat of retiring John Stenin.
WASHINGTON — Democrats tightened their grip on the Senate Tuesday as they knocked off maverick Republican Sen. Lowell Wecker and engineered victories by two former governors in GOP territory.
The Associated Press
Kerrey
In Montana, Yellowstone County Commissioner Conrad Burns upset two-term incumbent Democrat John Melcher, whom he had criticized as too liberal, Burns, a former farm broadcaster, became the first GOP senator elected from the state since 1952.
reach of offsetting some of the Democratic gains.
In Florida, Democratic Rep. Buddy MacKay remained locked in a see-saw battle with conservative Republican Rep. Connie Mack over the seat of retiring Democratic Sen. Lawton Chiles, in a race that could well be decided
Republicans suffered in Wisconsin, where Susan Engelleiter was defeated by millionaire businessman Herk Bohl, owner of the Milwaukee Buck's basketball team and a political novice.
ELECTION
Continued from p.1
Maggard was sympathizing with other Democrats at a party for Mike DuPree volunteers.
Parties and bars seemed to be favorite places to celebrate the results or commiserate about
bus, Ohio, sophomore, said,
"Because we are amid — friends.
We've had odr debates.
Regardless of the reason,
we had eight years of Reagan, so
we can survive four more years of Bush."
Democratic roommate.
them. One group at the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th St., did a little of both.
Asked why they were sitting together after such a partisan event, Elizabeth Kennedy, Colum-
Three in the group were Republicans and two were Democrats, but they gathered around a pitcher amicably enough.
Republican voter Rick Laraby, on the other hand, went to the Wheel to seek refuge from a
"I'll stay here until he goes to bed."
Winter, 9-year-old daughter of Wint Winter, incumbent state senator Katie, listening to the results on her headphones, kept her own tally with a felt-tip marker on a memo board.
"He kept looking for a channel that showed the Democrats winning," Laraby, Wellington graduate student, said. "He couldn't find one. He finally resorted to local elections.
Bedtime could wait for Katie
Kansan reporters Mark Fagan,
Grace Hobson and Debbie
McMahon contributed information
to this story.
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Wednesday. November 9: 1988 / University Daily Kansan
NATIONAL
Democrats score seats in Kansas Legislature
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — The Democrats scored several key victories in the Kansas Legislature, upsetting the second-highest Republican leader in the state House of Representatives and incumbent Republican senators.
However, the Republicans offset those losses by defeating a Wichita Democrat and claiming a Kansas City, Kan., seat, which was previously a Democratic stronghold. That means the Democrats had not cut into the Republicans' solid majority in the House.
Republican Barbara Lawrence, a Wichita teacher, unseated Rep. Connie Kennard, D-Wichita, who was seeking a second term.
In the Senate, the Democrats had an upset victory when Marge Petty, a member of the Topenaffite defeated incumbent Jeanne Hoferer.
In another upset, Republican Sen. Robert Frey was narrowly defeated by Democrat Janice McClure of Sublette Frey, elected to the Senate in 1984, was charismatic of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
In addition, Republican Hank Turnbaugh of Kansas City, Kan. defeated Democrat Mark Rosey.
Jans K. Lee, a Kensington Democrat, handily defeated incumbent Neil Arasmith of Phillipsburg. In the Kansas House of Representatives, Majority Leader Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan, was unsuccessful in his bid for a fifth consecutive two-year term.
Missouri kills insurance plan
By Terry Bauroth Kansan staff writer
The heated battle over Missouri's proposed comprehensive health insurance plan ended last night with the amendment's defeat.
Missouri Constitutional Amendment 8, known as MedAssist, was defeated by more than 690,000 votes. The amendment gained 490,939 “yes” votes, or 29 percent, and 1,182,416 “no” votes, or 71 percent. To pass, the proposal required a simple majority.
MedAssist would have been financed by a state-wide earnings tax of sixth-tenths of 1 percent. The tax would have been applied to salaries, wages and commissions of Missouri residents, to non-residents on services done in Missouri and to the net profits of businesses.
The money would have been used for programs to help about 1 million Missourians who go without adequate health insurance at some time.
in a year. In a year of generally low-key state races, this issue had sparked some
flames in the closing days of the campaign with each side accusing the other of using deceptive ads to win support for its view.
Proponents of the measure focused on the working poor who cannot afford health insurance and on the families who cannot pay the bills resulting from catastrophic illnesses. Opponents drew attention to the tax increase that would have financed the expanded health care.
Critics of MedAssist did not try to mislead voters, said Randy Scherr, director of government relations for independent businesses.
"They were going to pass a proposal that meant millions of dollars to the hospitals for doing exactly what they are doing today," Scherr said. "Proponents did not inform the public that they were taxing individual incomes as well as corporate incomes."
If the amendment had passed, Missouri would have joined Massachusetts as the only states in the nation to offer a comprehensive state health insurance system.
I
Sandra J. Watts/KANSAN
Poll cat
While resting in the sunlight, Smokey the cat sits underneath the voting booths at Valleyview Care Home, 2518 Ridge Court. Eighty percent of the Douglas County registered voters turned out yesterday.
Nebraskans vote to keep waste dump site
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
Nebraska will be the site of a depository for the low-level radioactive waste compact that includes Kansas.
includes Kansas.
Nebraska voters defeated an initiative last night that would have removed the state, the selected host for a waste depository, from the Central Interstate Low-level Radioactive Waste Compact.
In addition to Nebraska and Kansas, the compact includes Arkansas, Louisiana, and
Oklahoma.
With 1,170 of 1,878 precincts reporting, Nebraska Initiative 402 was failing 212,367 votes, or 63 percent, to 122,978, or 37 percent.
Sam Welsch, head of Nebraskas for the Right to Vote, the organization that led the drive to put the initiative on the ballot, had predicted voters would pass the measure 2 to 1.
"We're disappointed but we're not defeated," Welsch said. "We've run a factual campaign and we knew going in that Nebraska would come out the winner.
"We had more informed voters and more people concerned about the issue. We're going to have a major impact in the upcoming legislature."
Welsch said his group would continue to fight against the compact.
with the compact process.
"There's growing concern in Nebraska," he said. "The compact will have to make some changes."
"While we will disband as a committee tonight, many of the group have expressed a desire to work to ensure that the compact system works for all Nebraskans."
Had Nebraska voters decided to pull out of the compact, the state would have been subject to penalties including paying to build the compact's facility in addition to building its own. Costs were estimated at $35 million to $40 million for each facility.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 9, 1988
11
Early signing period to begin
Jordan will be Williams' first recruit
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
Adonis Jordan today will become the first player to sign a national letter of intend under Kansas men's basketball coach Roy Williams.
However, the other half of a projected dream backcourt has put his decision on hold.
Harold Miner, a 6-foot-51'2 swingman from Inglewood (Calif.) High School, and Jordan of Reseda (Calif.) Cleveland High School were expected to sign national letters of intent to attend Kansas.
"The word was that they were Kansas' dream backcourt," Gibbons added.
Gibbons ranked Miner 33rd and Joelson nationally among high school seniors.
Today is the start of a one-week early signing period for high school and junior college basketball recruits.
Bob Gibbons of All-Star Sports Publications said Jordan and Miner were two of Kansas' top recruiting targets this season.
Jordan verbally committed to Kansas last Thursday. Cleveland coach Bob Braswell confirmed the 6-foot plan to make it official today.
Inglewood coach Vincent Combs said late Monday that Miner probably would commit to Kansas today. The team's combs said Miner had decided to wait.
he was not made up his mind," Combs said. "It doesn't look like he's going to commit tomorrow."
Miner's final four schools are Kan-
kensburg, Pittsburgh and
UCLA. Corbis said.
Combs, a veteran coach, said
Miner compared favorably with past Inglewood stars Reggie Theus and Jav Humphries.
"Without a doubt, at this stage," Combs said, "he's probably a year ahead of those kids."
Humphries and Theus play in the National Basketball Association. Theus is a 6-4 off guard with the Atlanta Hawks. Humphries starts at point guard for the Milwaukee Bucks.
Although Miner will play the point for Inglewood this season, his best college positions probably will be forward and off guard. Cambs said.
"He can play the post, the wing and the baseline." Combs said. "This year I'm going to run him at the point to give him a little more work on his wing. He needs to play a little more (defense), but we're working on that."
Combs said Miner had NBA three-point 'shooting range. He made 65 percent of his field goal attempts and 40 percent of goal throws as a junior at Antlewood.
Miner averaged 27.3 points, 11.1 rebounds, 3.2 steals and two assists. Three players scored on his ages at Reseda Cleveland were 17 points, 14 assists and seven steals.
"Right now, he's really wide open," Brassell said. "If his visit turns out well, maybe he and Adonis would want to go there together."
If Miner decides not to attend Kansas, the Jayhawks could sign Lucious Harris, Jordan's teammate. Braswell said Harris would not attend Kansas if Miner signed with the Jayhawks.
Harris is scheduled to visit Kansas this weekend. He has visited Loyola Marymount, Providence, Arizona State and Texas-Ell Paso.
Harris, like Miner, can play forward and guard at 6-5, 175 pounds. He averaged 17.3 points and 13 rebounds last year.
Jordan and Miner visited Kansas together last month during "Later" season.
The Kansas women's basketball team likely will sign at least two recruits during the early signing period beginning today and ending Nov. 16.
Women likely to sign two recruits soon
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
Shannon Kite, a 5-foot-11 guard, from Elk Horn, Iowa, said she planned to sign a national letter of intent with the Jayhawks tomorrow at Elk Horn-Kimballtion High School.
Kite, who chose Kansas over Brigham Young, South Dakota and Augusta, said she made her decision after a visit to the KU campus.
Misti Chenault, a 6-foot-2 wing player from Eleno, Reno, Alaska, she would visit Lawrence this weekend and would sign with Kansas after that.
Kite was the second leading scorer in Iowa last season, averaging 54 points a game. Iowa state women's high school basketball rules require six players a team, three offensive and three defensive, none of whom cross halfcourt, which contributed to Kite's high scoring average.
Kite never played defense in high school competition, but she played in a summer league that used traditional rules.
"The overall atmosphere at Kansas was very appealing to me," Kite said. "I was impressed with the coach's staff and the players on the team. I feel like the women's basketball team at Kansas has a lot of potential."
Rod Hoegh, basketball coach at Elk Hom-Kimbalton High School, said Kite was a versatile player who could shoot from almost everywhere
on the court.
“She has as many shots and moves as any player I've ever seen,” Hoegh said. “She can score from the inside or from the outside. But I think her biggest asset is her work chic.” She's played hard for everything she's got.
Kite said she anticipated playing guard at Kansas.
"It will take some time to adjust," she said. "I'm expecting a much faster game with a higher caliber of players, and I would improve in all aspects of my game."
"I'm about 99.9 percent definite about signing with Kansas right now," Chenault said. "The coaching team was very attractive to me. I wanted to go out of state, but it's nice that Kansas is still in the Big Eight Conference. I'm excited about the opportunities there."
Chennault, who averaged more than 22 points a game during both her sophomore and junior seasons at El Paso College, Kansas was a logical choice for her.
Chenault said every school in the Big Eight Conference contacted her except Iowa State. She made recruiting visits to Southern Methodist University and Montana State, but she has never seriously considered them.
The Jayhawks, two-time defending Big Eight tournament champions, go into this season with eight new players.
"This is going to be a rebuilding year for Kansas," Chenault said. "I was attracted by the chance to come in and play right away."
Caroie Carter, basketball coach at El Reno High School, said she thought Chemann would fit in well at Kansas.
"She will adjust well to college basketball," Carter said. "Misti is the type of player that doesn't give up. If she truly desires something, she will dedicate herself to it and achieve it."
KU defense gets more good news freshman receives Big Eight honor
By Scott Luster
Kansan sportswriter
By Jeff Euston
The Kansas defense, which frustrated Kansas State in a 30-12 victory Saturday, got more good news yesterday.
Strong safety Daryl Boykin, a true freshman from Kent, Ohio, was selected Big Eight Conference defensive player of the week.
A true freshman is a player that is playing and not redshirting his team.
In Saturday's victory, Boykin made seven tackles, broke up a pass, and stopped a Wildcat drive with an interception.
cadat drive with an interception.
Boykin now has 73 tackles this
season, second on the team behind sophomore Curtis Moore's 135.
"I didn't feel that I performed that well," he said. "But obviously somebody else thought I did. I thought I played OK, but I don't think that was the best game I've played."
Boykin said the honor was a surprise.
"It's not any big deal, though. If the honors come, they come. It's not really a big deal to me. I'm just truying to get my job done."
Boykin said getting the opportunity to play was important to his improvement
'When you start getting playing time, game by game you gain more
experience and you gain more confidence," said Boykin, who was recruited by Kansas coach Glen Mason as a running back.
"It's a big honor." Mason said. "I said for a long time that (Kansas freshman) Dou Terry had a good chance to be the Big Eight Newcomer of the Year, and I think Deral Boykin does now. He's been playing as a true freshman. That's not any big deal around here, because we've got so many freshmen playing. But I think he's played really well."
Mason said senior cornerback Peda Samuel still was doubtful for Saturday's game at Oklahoma State. Samuel reaggravated a goin pull
Sophomore linebacker Tony Barker twisted his knee in practice yesterday. X-rays were taken, but Barker's status was not yet known.
during the Kansas State game.
Senior tailback Arnold Snell still was limping after suffering a bruised thigh against K-State.
Freshman linebacker Paul Friday, who suffered a knee sprain Saturday, did not practice yesterday but remained probable.
Sophomore tailback Frank Hatchett, who suffered a mild concussion Saturday, did not participate in contact drills yesterday, but remained probable for the Oklahoma State game.
A's outfielder selected Player of the Year
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Jose Canseco, the first major leaguer to hit 40 home runs and steal 40 bases in one season, was selected The Associated Press Player of the Year yesterday in a landslide.
The Oakland right fielder received $141_{1/2}$ votes from a panel of sportswriters and broadcasters. Los Angeles right-hander Oler Hershiser was runner-up with 13 votes followed by Minnesota's Kirby Puckett with five and Boston's Mike Greenwell with 41k.
"It means a lot because it shows the improvement I've made between 1986 and 1988." Canseco said.
Not that 1986 and '87 were all that bad.
oad.
Canseco hit .240 in 1986 with 33
"I don't think I had a bad drought except for an 0-for-20. And even when I was 0-for-20, I was hitting the ball well, so the key was staying consistent, said Canseco, who let the team rise to their first AL patent since 1974.
The American League charts 17 different offensive categories and Canseco ranked in the top 10 in 12 of them.
home runs and 117 runs batted in en route to the American League Rookie of the Year award. In 1987, he had 31 home runs and 113 RBI.
Canseco has hit more home runs (106) in his first three full seasons than anyone but Eddie Mathews (112) and Joe DjMaggio (107).
This season, if all came together as Cianceo led RBI and RBI while hitting .307.
His 111 career home runs, including five after a late-season callup in 1985, the 100th-highest total for a player at the end of the year in which he turned 24. The other nine players are in the Hall of Fame.
“In spring training I thought there were other members (40-40) but then when I realized it, I said ‘Did I stick my foot in my mouth by saying this’.” Canceeen said though I doubt it, nor yet it doesn't mean I wilt ‘shoot for it again.’
"He's got as much ability as any player I've ever seen except for Wille Mays," said Reggie Jackson, who played the last two seasons of his career in basketballs. "He can potentially hit 500 homers. I'm sure he's going to hit 400."
On Aug. 6, Canseco stole his 30th base to become the 11th player to time great as Mays and Auron. On Sept. 23, Canseco took his place in
Mel Ott, who already played eight seasons, had 176 at Canseco's age. All-time leader Henry Aaron had 140 en route to his record 755.
The home runs kept coming for Canseco in the playoffs. He hit three against Boston during the Athletics' sweep of the Red Sox.
Of Canseco 42 home runs, 27 either tied the game or put the Athletics in the lead, and he hit 16 home runs with two strikes.
baseball history when he stole his 40th base.
In Game 1 of the World Series, Canseco was hit by a pitch in the first inning and hit a grand slam in the second.
KANSAS
54
10
KANSAN file photo
Former Kansas center Marvin Branch, who was declared ineligible last December, is trying out for the Topeka Sizzlers of the Continental Basketball Association.
Branch to play on Topeka team
Kansan sportswriter
By Mark E. McCormick
"I'd have preferred that everything would have worked out at KU, but going the CBA route was the only other option I had." the player in center said. "I'd have a better chance at being by pro scouts."
But he's trying out with the Topeka Sizzlers.
Interstate 70 wasn't the road Marvin Branch originally planned to take to the NBA.
Instead of sitting out a year, the 22-year-old Detroit native began shopping for a Continental Basketball Association team that would be willing to take him on until he was eligible for the NBA draft next year.
When poor academics forced him of the court at midseason last year, Branch left Kansas after learning he wasn't eligible for the rest of the season.
The Sizzlers gave him that chance.
"We're very happy that he got him," said Pat Ditzler, Sizzler assistant coach. "He could be a very good CBA player."
Branch couldn't enter the NBA draft because his college class is a new one. The player announces before a specified date that he intends to skip his
final year of college and enter the professional draft, he cannot enter the draft until his college class has graduated
Ditzler said Branch worked hard and was a rare talent.
"A big man 6-10 to 7-foot with good mobility is hard to find," he said. "Most of them are in the NBA. Marvin has good moves, and he's also a very good shooter. I fully expect Marvin to be with us after camp."
Branch, who has signed a one-year contract, said two-a-day practices left him drained.
"I'm happy they gave me the chance. Now, it's just on me and how hard I want to work at it.
"I knew there wasn't a CBA team in Detroit, and I already have some friends around here," he said. "It really wasn't a big deal, I just wanted to continue my basketball career."
Branch said he returned to Detroit briefly to play in a summer league and then played at Robina on day 1 of the season to make up for his inactivity.
Despite his dilemma at Kansas and the tough practices at the Sizler camp, the bottom line is that he chances to make the pros, he said.
"I just want to play," he said. "Anywhere I can make it."
Sports Briefs
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL SCRIMMAGE: Freshman Tanya Bonham scored 20 points in leading the white team to a 75-43 victory over the blue team in a Kansas women's basketball intrasquad scrimmage yesterday in Topeka.
Guard Michelle Arnold added 13 points for the white team while guard Lisa Brady scored 12
Junior center Lynn Page divided her playing time between both teams. She had 11 points and six rebounds for the white team and eight points and seven rebounds for the blue team.
Bonham, a 5-foot-8 forward from Arlington, Va., connected on nine of 13 shots.
Forward Marthea McCloud led the blue team with 11 points and six rebounds.
for the blue team
The Jayhawks will play another
scrimmage 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in
Leavenworth.
GADDIS WINS AWARD: Freshman Mike Gaddis, projected by many fans as the next great Oklahoma running back, was named Big Eight Conference offensive player of the week for his work against Oklahoma State.
Gaddis rushed for 213 yards on just 18 carries and scored on runs of 13 and 44 yards to lead the Sooners to a 31-28 victory over Oklahoma State.
MUSICAL QUARTERBACKS:
It's Steve DeBerg's turn again to try to lead the Kansas City Chiefs to their second victory of the season.
Coach Frank Gansz said Monday that DeBerg would replace Bill Kenney at quarterback Sunday when the Chiefs.
Golfers look for national ranking
Coach thinks strong finish is indication
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
Based on a strong fall season in which the Kansas women's golf team won two tournaments, Coach Brad Demo said he expected the Jayhawks to climb into the national rankings sometime next year.
After overcoming an 11-stroke lead in the last nine holes of play to win the Texas-El Paso Golf Tournament Sunday in El Paso, the Jayhaws just might be moving up Demo's timetable.
The tournament title, which Kansas won with a score of 624, was a hard-earned one. Demo said.
The Jayhawks, who trailed Long Beach State by two strokes after recording a score of 310 in the first round Saturday, had to scramble when they lost an additional nine strokes in the front nine holes of the final round Sunday.
"Usually we don't keep track of how we are doing while the tournament is being played," Demo said. "But we knew how far we were behind and I asked the players to get it together."
Long Beach State, which this fall was ranked as high as 24th nationally, finished second with a score of 625. Kansas State was third with 672, followed by Colorado State, 705, and Texas-El Paso, 744.
"It's really tough to come back from a lead like that on a team as good as Long Beach State. To me, something major came out of it. I think it let our players know that if they are down, they won't necessarily stay down."
Athison, a Duncan, Okla., junior,
said ending the fall season with a
team victory could help the Jayhawks
break for the spring sched-
"I think it was important to end on a "good note." Atchison said. "It makes you feel good about yourself and the team. What was especially good about it was that we had five good scores instead of just two or three. It's pretty nice when you can drop an 83."
Kansas golfers Sherri Atchison and Shelly Triplett tie for second in the individual standings with scores of 155 each.
"I ended up playing in the second round with the girl I tied in the first round." Triplett said. "I hurt me and made her lose her instead of playing the course."
After shooting a 74 in the opening round, Triplett, a Pullman, Wash., freshman was tied with Long Beach Giants Gordon for the individual lead.
Triplett and Atchison were eged out in the top medalist race by Gordian, who won with a score of 164. The said she was pleased with the results.
"I'm especially happy with the team play," she said. "We got rid of some of the nerves we had earlier in the game, and I'm very comfortable around each other."
Demo said he also had seen a
---
Please see GOLF, p. 12, col. 5
12
Nednesday, November 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Coaches sing praises of Sanders
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Pat Jones isn't blaming his loss to Oklahoma entirely on a couple of strokes of frightfully bad luck.
"The bottom line is I don't think we played well enough to win," the Oklahoma State coach said of the Cowboys '31-28 loss to the Sooners on Saturday. "But what irritates me is I'm not sure they did either. But we came out three points shy, and we've got to live with that."
With losses to Oklahoma and Nebraska, the Cowboys and their glittering offense are once again relegated to their familiar position of third in the Big Eight. Still, there is plenty of excitement surrounding Oklahoma State as Barry Sanders continues his remarkable season.
Sanders was an overwhelming choice when coaches were put through an annual ritual of picking the one player out of the Big Eight they would want to start a football team.
"There's no doubt I'd pick Barry Sanders," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "there's a better football game here in the country, I'd like to see him."
Admiration for Sanders has spread rapidly. In eight games, he has rushed for 1,691 yards on 231 carries, topping the nation with a 211-yard
average.
average.
"I think a great running back is the starting point for a team, although everybody thinks a quarterback is," Iowa State coach Jim Walden said in selecting Sanders. "I don't think there's a better athlete in the conference."
"That's the easiest question I've ever been asked," Kansas State coach Stan Par�is said. "Harry Carr is better, he's the best player in the United States."
Oklahoma's Barry Switzer, who has called Sanders "the most exciting player in college football," said he was also some disagreement among his staff.
"My defensive people said (Nebraska quarterback Steve) Taylor, Switzer said. "Personally, I'd say
"I'd take Barry Sanders." Nebraska's Tom Osborne said. "He's a great player, very durable, and gets an awful lot out of a play that somebody else wouldn't get. I'm very impressed with him."
Sanders. So I'll go with Sanders because I'm the head coach and I make the final decisions."
Only Colorado coach Bill McCartnev was hesitant.
"That's a tough one," he said. "Sanders, I think, is deserving of the Heisman Trophy. But I like our tailback (Bri Eienbiem), so I'm not going to choose Sanders. When you choose a guy, that means you like him better than your guy. I don't want to say I like somebody better than my own guy. Let me think
. I'll say Barry Sanders."
change in attitude among the team members.
GOLF
Continued from p. 11
"I've seen them grow from having very shy attitudes to having the attitudes of winners," he said. "They are learning what it takes to be aggressive and what it takes to win. This team will not be satisfied with taking second or third. If they ever are satisfied, we're in trouble."
Kansas golfer Donna Lowe scoreen 156 to tie for fourth. Loway, a Hays junior, said she had witnessed many of her during their three years on the team.
"I've seen a big improvement in the program since I was a freshman." Lown said. "A lot of that has to do with (Demo). He helped us progress to where we aren't afraid to tee it up and compete.
our game now than we did at the first tournament this fall. That's important.
Laura Myers and Sara Hepler
completene her work with tota-
l 162 and 167, respectively.
Myers, a Missouri City, Texas,
town that he had adjusted to
playing college baseball.
"For me, it been an easy adjustment because everyone on the team is so supportive," she said. "I think we have the potential to be a top 20 team. We want to do things to help us improve and physical part of our golf game."
Hepler, an Edwardsville, Ill., sophomore, said the confidence Demo had in the players helped them.
"He believes in us and that makes a difference," she said. "We have learned to be more of a team this fall. This tournament was an indication that next spring we should be right up there."
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PRINTING SERVICE 864-4341
FOR ALL YOUR DUPLICATING NEEDS...
Learned Duplicating Services 3018 Learned Hall
Featuring: Automatic 2 sided copies Variable Reductions Photos Screened Collating Stapling
Come see us at Learned
No job too large or too small Free pickup/delivery service Open Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Phone 864-4479
Burge
Duplicating Services
309 Burge Union 864-5098
Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m. (closed during lunch)
LET US DO YOUR DUPLICATING FOR YOU
SERVICES AVAILABLE:
Bold Print
Reasonable Prices and Convenient Parking
Bold Print
$8^{1 / 2}\times 11$ and $8^{1 / 2}\times 14$
2 sided copies
Variable reductions
Transparencies
Labels
Large selection of paper
(colors and weights)
VELO BINDING (only at Burge Center)
Xerox 1090:
Both machines print only $8\frac{1}{2} \times 11$ and $8\frac{1}{2}\times 14$ paper, or cardstock Phone - 864-3354
- bold print
- capacity to staple up to 50 pages
- variable reductions (65%-98%)
- copies 1 sided original — 2 sided copy
- copies 2 sided original — 2 sided copy
QUESTIONS? STOP BY OR CALL WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU.
Wescoe Duplicating Services 1520 Wescoe Hall
Hours: 7:00-5:00 (open during lunch)
Xerox 9500:
Wescoe Duplicating has two new machines that have the following features:
erox 9500:
— dark bold print
— photo contrast (excellent on photographs)
— variable reduction (61%-102%)
— copies 1 sided original—2 sided copy
— paste-up setting (reduces paste-up lines)
Duplicating Services
645 New Hampshire OLD POST OFFICE
Just a few of our available services:
- Staples in a choice of 2 positions
- Crisp sharp image reproduction
- Fast, efficient and affordable copies
- Variable reduction
- No parking hassles.
Drive right up and walk right in.
- Glue bind
- Covers available
Never a job too large or too small.
Have a rush job?
Give us a call & we'll work with you.
Hours 8:00-4:00 Monday-Friday (But can adjust hours according to your needs)
Please Call - 841-1829
Ektaprint 300
COLLEGE MONEY
for Freshmen and Sophomores.
Writes guild unclaimed years
Writes. Send unclaimed year-
services. 622-KA Fifth Avenue, New
York. 15086-15088. Money-Back Guar-
dency.
---
2512 W 6th St.842-6379
SPRING BREAK
COMPUTER
SUPPLY SOURCE
BAHAMAS
from Kansas City to Freeport Six nights superior first class
- Six nights superior first class hotel accommodations directly on Lucaya Beach, Grand Bahama Island
- Quad basis - Welcome
- Professional escort
Classified Ads
- And More...
- Limited Space
UP TO A CHALLENGE?
March 12-18. 1980
- Round trip airport/hotel
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- Round trip air transportation from Kansas City to Freeport
10 TO A CHAIR
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders meeting will be held tonight from 6-7:30 at Watkins Health Services, room 7
Don't be a TUKEY try MASSAGE: Reduce your stress and don't forget our Gift CERT package. You will never gobble your budget either; students 25% off Call 814-662-Remember, you knelt it!!
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
only $249 and land plump ride transportation
Deluxe condominiums with fireplace, jacuzzi, etc.
1 book from Live. Contact David 842-161-163
Guest Speaker Marcia Epstein
Wednesday, Nov. 9
7-9 p.m.
Mary Kay Cosmetics, Contact Deean Wilks at
NLW4KG.
INTERNATIONAL CLUB MEETINGS
KU Students, faculty, staff and family members:
You are invited to participate in the annual SLA training on Wednesday, March 15th at the SLA office. Deadline: Mon., Nov. 21. For more information call 864-3477. Sponsored by SLA
will discuss culture shock and understanding suicidal problems
ECKANKAR discussion group forming. For more info, call 749-1127.
Kansas Room, Kansas Union
SUNFLOWER
TRAVEL
SERVICE
704 MASSACHUSETTS
Thursday, Nov. 10
4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union
Any Questions Call 749-1570.
international club
International Club
SUNFLOWER TRAVEL
842-4000
encourages members to also attend a speech by the Finance Minister of Ecuador
ETHNIC ARTS & CRAFTS
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology
Univ. of Kansas
M-Sat
9-5
Sun
1-5
THE COMIC CORNER
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!*
NE corner of 23rd & Iowa 941-4294
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
GET INTO THE GROVE. Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional radio, club DJ's. Hot Spins Maximum Party Thrust DJ Val Rey Kanella 841-7833.
ENTERTAINMENT
Late night munchies
Stop by Johnny's Classic
Rumors!
Johnny's
Open:
10 a.m.-midnight
Sun- Tues.
10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
Wed- Sat.
Classic Burgers 9th & Illinois
THE BURGER
GOOD VIBRATIONS the most affordable mobile music for any occasion (Call: Brian) 841-9484
JOHN G SINGS Parties, B-days, singing messages, 841-9764
FOR RENT
2 BR Apt. Washer/Dryer, Micro. Disposal,
Close to Downtown, Campus 8435/mon. 1-295-6254
weekdays, 749-1072 weeks/days/nights.
On 24th & Iowa. Close to the bus
route. Call 842-9655. Rent $135.
*sunroom duplex with one car garage available next semester on KU bus路.* Phone 814-209-172
2nd. Semester Sublease - Naima Place Apt. 2 -
3560 Naima baird. bath or unfurnished.
749-449
Available午 1; 2 bedroom apt, new carpet, new
paint, and appliances, nice porch, close to
campus, cats' $150/month + utilities 749-5213 or
749-6966
Available January thru May. Two bbm apartment w/lfireplace. Sunrise Place 817 Michigan. Call 843-9034.
Complete! Furnished 1.3, and 4 bedroom apartments available immediately) & near KU. Call to day 141-212, 841-355, 841-1429, or 749-2413.
Completely Furnished Studies 1.2 & a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-7411, 842-5351, or 749-2491. Mastercraft
FANTASTIC, NEW APARTMENT one bedroom,
Dishwasher, Dishwasher (Dryer, Microwave,
Bus Route. What you are looking for! ♥ 841-8271.
841-8971.
FEMALE roommate needed. Very close to cam-pan, extremely spacious, Laundry facilities, off-street parking.
Female Roommate wanted: to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes: own bedroom, own bathroom, washer, dryer, fireplace, and free laundry room.
Female roommate wanted to fill 4th bedroom in new Mastercraft Apt. Close to campus. Available now and/or next semester. Own room. $14 utilities.
Call 841 0783
- emale roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom duplex Overlooks Park, 2 blocks from bus, 3 great roommates $125 + tuillites 841-2746
Female roommate needed: Orchard Corners furnished apt. - own room & bathroom $170 - Available now or 2nd semester Call 843-5929
For Sublease: 2BD, 1 bath, new carpet, new fridge, quiet, large kitchen, $375/month. 841-3168. For sublease: supersize upstairs apt. $300/month. Washer/dryer: Great Location. Call 749-245 or 749-3168.
Fully furnished one bedroom, apartment. Civicli-
fied. Big enough for two? Must go in Nov. 10th
& Arkansas. $340 + utilities. 841-0732 or 749-2415.
Janette
---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 9, 1988
13
**New apartement:** one bedroom practically on
sample $25/mo. ca/ch, furn/turn-in. Available
Large 1 bedroom apt. Amhoven Place. Quire, very clean 1st half of Nov. Free leave is signed by the 3rd. Call 841-9228 or 841-1212.
January Sub-lease $165 + utilities. Own room.
On route. Call Mary 841-3375.
Lease for spring semester. One space in nice large 2 BD apt. 5 min. walk from campus. Available Dec. 20. Call 841-6882.
lease for spring semester, furnished 2 large
edrooms, bath, bath, laundry, close to campus with
nary great locations. Call 841-9673 NOW!
living with a roommate from Helli? Downtown
pt. available Dec. 1. $165/mo. All utilities paid.
all 749-4155
LUXURY 2 bedroom 2 bath room available starting Dec. Jan./ Large rooms, clean, quiet W D hookups, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, tennis. 842-3025
Moving to KC? Person needed to share 2 bedrooms apt close to KU Medical Center. Prefer female Large bedroom S175 + - - - - utilities.8165-4167.
New Hidden Meadows Townhouses Two Bedroom
Two Bathroom Townhouse 769-1118 841-391-2823 Iowa Behind Hacn
326-506-3300
Spacius 2 br. apt. near campus. Take over lease.
$300m. 843-1215.
One large bedroom for sublease at Haven Place immediately $300/mo, water paid, and furnished
Sublease next semester. Nonsmoking roommate
1$100 / mo . 3 utilities. Near campus. 842-6888
Saundower House is taking applications for Spring 89. We offer private rooms, TV/VCR game, and laundry facilities. Low rent, includes all utilities. We also offer cooperative living a try Call 749817 or 841 0484.
THAILAND STUDIO available for sublease
THE LANDING STUDIO, location:
laundry, poolillion, Phone 799-363
Phone 799-363
*ALK to class!* Available Jan. 1 4BR, 3 BATH,
iodian durex $77% month. Call 843.7968
HILLVIEW APTS.
HILLVIEW APTS
1733 West 24th 814-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
- On bus route-near shopping
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
LOCATION
Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts, Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
5th & Crestline 842-4200
2 Bedroom 2 Bath $395.
We Bring More Roommates Together by Splitting Them Up.
You can still save money by sharing the rent and keep your privacy too!
Colony Woods realizes the closer you are to your roommate the farther apart you want to be. Knowing this, we separate our 2 bedrooms and a kitchen and living room area.
Ask How We Can
Save You $$$$.
Colony Woods
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
FOR SALE
10-speed bike for sale. Call 843-4638 after 5:00 pm.
$15.99
1979 Ford Pinto. Excellent condition. Call Ray
844-844-9645, after 7:30 844-9647.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade quilts, primitives, rock-n-roll record cards, vintage clothing, books, coins, baseball cards, slot machines, Maxfield Pearl art, decoration items, toys, games, and so much more stuff it will blow you away!) QUANTRILLE'S FLAE MARKET. 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sun and 10:5. For booth info call 842 64610.
Carmichael Mtn. Bike White Month old Jeff
441.207.896
Comic books, Playbooks, Penalties, etc. *Mac's*
comics 811 New Hampshire, Overseas *Sal & Sun*
CRK rear deck 8x9 Yamaha 8 inch Alpine Subs
jfdl.841728
Jett 841-2916
For Sale: A Tandy 600 portable computer and one
Druck DMP (US printer. Call 841-3388.
Tandy DMP 160 printer. Call 841-3583.
For sale. A round trip to any city in the U.S. Best offer.
Call 841-2972, 841-1792
FREE information on new Ka Police Photo radar. NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE $0.90 per the BEL VECTOR 3 TORrad detector that will detect vehicle headlights. P.O Box 274, Lausanne K6. 60033 P.O Box 274, Lausanne K6. 60033
gloves, sucks & milten! Rolf Ocker
Caniform Clothing
CARHANHT
WORKWEAR
Oakley
Oakley
Oakley
Open Sundays
Christmas
14. St. Mara Surplus Sales. St.
1437 273
Enterprise, P.O. Box 214, Milwaukee, WI 53207
GWT. SURPLIUS! NEW G.I. Overshoes. Combat boots, and safety toe boots. Wool blankets. Field jacket. Field Jibs. Overcoats.
Go to Miami, Twirl trip tickets available for a discount price. 749 5737 after 6:00 pm for more info
Beautiful, black 5-piece drum set. Dijlyn cymbals.
Call 841-421-8174 weekdays 10pm-11:30pm.
MCAT study material from G.A.P.S. Improved my score dramatically. Originally $350.00 Best offer @ 843-8796.
basis. Call 841-4211 weeknights 10pm-11pm.
MAC with dual drive, Imagewriter, mouse, and software $1200 OBO. 864-2343 nights.
Men's 10-speed bike $80. Acoustic guitar with case
$80. Both excellent condition. 842-2488, keep trying.
Mobile DJ system on sale on 1000 watts sound,
lights, lasers. 749-1500
BOOTH
Nationair Hall contract for sale. Private room or
otg rent. BALL ROAD 6872.
Nagel, librithap print, The Book, framed, $80.
John, M.A., 750.
All contract for sale. Private room of
two. Call 841-4837.
Book a roll. Thousands of used and rare albums
Rock-n-roll : Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday Quantrill's Fie Market, New Hampshire.
SAE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $45 sell $200. Must see to appreciate. Many functions. 841-7564.
trailer 12 x 65, w & d, shed, deck, AC, store,
fric. nice, #430, 300 Day 749-8240
AUTO SALES
1972 Plymouth, reliable transportation. FM cassette deck, runs great. $700.00 Jason 842-5105
10pm-11pm.
toyota 4x4 p-u 5p-U S-Rs all options red
must sell $450 obc Chuck 814-9932
1981 Toyota Tercel, AM/FM cassette good condi-
67 Beetle. Runs well. Drive it home for $350.
749-7302
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100.
Fords, Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevy's. Surplus.
Durans Guide. (U.S.) 978-562-8070. Sys 978-562-8070.
Is It True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government? Get the facts today! Call 1-317-427-1241 Ext. 3094.
Mirian is a beautiful black 1983 Mazda RX-7. She needs a new home. For more info call 644-3678 or leave message for Geri at 644-4750.
RED HOT bargains! Drug dealer's cars, boats,
planes rep'd. Surplus. Your Area. Buyers Guide.
(1) 159-878-600-Ent S-9798
HELP WANTED
2 positions - Custodial worker - each 15 hours per week. Contact Personnel Office, Student Health Service
Attention: Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above avg. starting salary: Avg. between 2-5.168 W, 23rd.
Banquet positions are now open at the Adams Center, where staff members work through the holiday season. Servers, bartenders, & hostesses are needed. Above average pay & professional working conditions.
BIOLOGY LABORATORY ASSISTANT Part-time, approximately 20 hours per week. Must be available for 3-4 hour blocks of time during the school year. Applicant must apply to International Research Corp., 2201 W. 31st Street. References and transcript required. Applications closepm. 5pm. Ten an equal opportunity.
- Christmas Help $9.90 (Hours Flexible)
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students
Parkbased oil and gas firm. For informing and interview please call Argon Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at
GVERNMENT JOBS. $10.04-$53.20/yr. Now
Hiring Your Area. 117-892-5677.
Hire me at: www.gvernment.com
**COURSEMARK CAMP JOBS in the Colorado Roosevelt College as part counselor, cooks, nurses, offer lunch, homework, childcare Room and board plus cash salary and least 10 apply. Interviews to least 19 to apply. Interviews on campus in January. Write GILLESY Colorado CAMPS. 303-377-6580. FOR THE SUMMER OF YOUR
Help Wanted: Part-time day and evening help and
transfer duties in the hospital only at Border Bandido 1.825 W, 23rd Floor
and Borders Street, 1.825 W, 23rd Floor.
NAMIES need to live in and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good job! Please contact more information when: Jankel (K.C. 1-722-6490)
Junior women. Consider a commission in the Marine Corps. See Lieutenant Milburn at 925 Iowa or Call 841-1821.
Up to $40 per week. Positions nationwide: East, West, South, Midwest, 1 year commitment: 1:800-722-4433. National Nanny Resource and Referral.
Now hiring cooks and cashiers for days, evenings,
and over-night shifts. Starting pay $4.00-$5.00
Apply anytime. Hardiee on the turnip. 843-8303
Part-time Child Care Worker to work 4-MT w/ a residential trustee. Must have a driver's license and pass KRB check. Salary nego, depending upon education and experience. *Interview call: Shauna Area / Forest Interview call:
Business Manager/ Editor Applications
Part-time data entry / audit personnel needed ma. to noon 6 days per week. Must be dedicated, dependable, and a self-starter "Computer expert." Please send resume to: STAFFER INFILH. Staffer FInlh. Lawrence, KS 6045
PART-TIME Furniture Delivery Personnel Apply in person Thompson Crawley 520 East 2nd. Terrace
Kansas and Burge Union Bookstore hiring temporary help. Job posted Level 5, Kansas Personnel Office. Come in person to apply.
The Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/
Affirmative Employee 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 Kawai is now accepting applications for the Editor and the Business Manager positions for the 1989 Spring Semester. They are paid positions and require journalism experience. Interested students should contact the organizations in 119 Sauset-Flint Hall, the Student Senate office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
Business Manager applications are due Tuesday, November 8th at 5 p.m. in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Wednesday, November 9th. Applications for Editor are due Friday, November 11th at 5 p.m. in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held November 14th.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Pizza Shirtz is immediately hiring both full-time and part-time. We require a Bachelor's degree in Business or 60+ hours per year possibly including paid mileage, and bonuses. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shirtz office.
Pizza Delivery drivers - bourgey wage plus commission must have own transportation and insurance. Apply in person. Pizza Shope 601 Kasoldi Warehouse shopping Center.
POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
DUTIES: Assists program advisor and assistant director with clinical duties relating to study abroad program coordination and administration at KU. Demonstrated clinical experience, excellent typing, word processing and organizational skills. Must be able to work four-hour days. Req's Bach or Master's degree S A L A R Y $ 5 0 0 $ 5 5 0 $ for a more complete description and application
Graduate Student Assistant
Part-time - Study, Abroad Office
Applicants must submit a resume and the names and phone numbers of three references. Completed applications must be received by non, November 10. Position begins immediately.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisernet, Airlines, & Amusement Parks. NOW accepting applications for these resorts. For more information and an application, write national Rescue Association Server. PO Box 13705, New York, NY 10024.
Ann Blackhurst, Department Secretar;
Office of Study Abroad
203 Lippincott Hall
University of Kansas 6045
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings: National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT. 59901
Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for Day & late night shifts. Above avg, starting salary. Apply between 2.618 to 1.918 W. 23rd.
BY, SELL. LONCAN TOU
On TV. Rt. Jewelry, Stereo. Musical instruments. crafts and more. Wear jewelry/MVC AEAM CJ. J Hawk Pawn & Jewelry. W108 W, 61h 794-1991
MISCELLANEOUS
ΦKT PRESENTS
THE
KRI Christmas break! Triple are filling last for 4 great locations! Call me. Ann * 614-2080, your unchance Tours rep. works before it's too late!
3rd Annual "Push for Life"
Saturday, Nov. 12 6:00 a.m.
FULOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 412-236.
plain.
ribbed.
stretch lace
Proceeds go to the Children's Heart Foundation.
wheel chair drive from K-10 to Kansas City
Brazilian Fall Party DANCE! DANCE! DANCE!
at the Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Saturday Nov. 12
COTTON TIGHTS
Featuring DJ Ray Velasquez
Hillel
לְהַאֵין
Featuring DJ Kay Velasquez
Sponsored by the
Luso-Brazilian Club
Wednesday Nov. 9
Soviet fewry Letter-writing Table
All Day
Kansas, Lippon
Gary, an attractive SWM, 23, fun-loving, active, sensitive, not phony, likes trying new things, is optimistic, has a kind of humor, chances, would like meeting female, 20-25, enjoy same. We could friends, maybe more to do.
For more information call Hillel House, 749-4242
Shabbat Dinner & Kristallnacht Service
6 p.m. Hillel House
PSYCHIATRY WEEKEND NO. 9
Friday Nov. 11
PERSONAL
REALLY LISTEN Call or call by Headquarters We're here because we care 841-2345 1419 Mass papers
Char, Jen J, and Meg. You have enriched him. Char - as a great friend, Jen - as a super mom, and Meg - as a non-martel roommate. I love all of you! Thanks, tenia. Jep. P
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWM,
21.30 P.O. Box 442-043, Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Photo appreciated.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
To the guys with "****!" who streaked through our store-we are anxiously awaiting you encore! The Sirlin Stockade Waitresses
9 EAST 8TH
L. M.T. - You are so wonderful! I love you more than ads can express. Forever. P.S.P.
BUS. PERSONAL
Government Photos, Passport, immigration,
vs. Modeling, theatrical, advanced fine art
portfolio. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
articulate future. Tum Swell 749-1611
Boston Harbor 710-258-491-611
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
dependents 2 children with $25 deductible only
Medicaid or other coverage higher. Kansas
Insurance Services 402-161-31
SINCE 1920
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON
5th and Iowa - HOLIDAY PLAZA - 841-6232
749-0334
Tanning 8 sessions only $20
Hot Tub $5/person private 1 hr.
2 month membership
HealthClub $15 month
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct page of letter-quality type . 845, 203, days or evenings
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affable typing and wordprocessing, Judy. 842-7945 or Judy. 841-1915.
TYPING
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT, CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence.
Mrs. Matthia 841.129
Wednesdav
MTTE AHEADBOOK RESIDENTS. Word processing service available near you. YPA application experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak, 843-608.
CAMPING BIRD
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-4119. In Topeka. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer.
Chicken breast
Dinner
$4.00
Draws
60°
Johnny's
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Will pay you who recorded the Robert Bork speech. Need to make a copy. 814-9648
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---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
RESEARCH
11/9 Kildonan
"Eraser fight!"
14
Wednesday, November 9, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Stephan vows to stay in office, fight verdict
Attorney general wants to keep options open
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Attorney General Robert Stephan said yesterday he would continue in office and would fight in court a breach-of-contract judgment against him.
He said if he ultimately loses the
case, he will not ask the state to help him pay any damages he is assessed.
PETER J. MAYER
"I have violated no laws of this state or done anything else to violate my oath of _office." Stephan said. "I am the attorney general, and I intend to remain attorney general."
Stephan
gellerai.
He addressed speculation that he might resign in the wake of Monday's verdict by a federal court jury that he broke a confidentiality agreement not to disclose a 1985 settlement of a
sexual harassment suit brought by former employee Marcia Tomson Stingley.
The jury awarded Stingley $200,000 in compensating damages.
Stephan said Kansas taxpayers will not foot any of the bill and no fundraising efforts are under way to raise money either to pay the settlement or cover the costs of further legal fees.
Stephan told a news conference at the Kansas Judicial Center yesterday afternoon that he was disappointed at the size of the judgment but said he understood "how the jury felt under the instructions they were given that there was evidence to find a breach of contract had occurred."
"I plan to file a motion to point out to the court that the jury was not informed of what properly constitutes damages in a breach of contract suit." Stephan said in prepared remarks he read at the news conference.
"The judgment should be limited to pecuniary damages and the jury should have been told that."
The attorney general said he chose to have Assistant Attorney General Carl Gallagher help represent him in the breach-of-contract trial. "I felt it was reasonable." Stephan said.
Stephan said he would "assume all legal responsibilities" for future litigation in the case."
Stephan added, "After the appropriate legal proceedings, if there is a judgment, it will not and should not be the responsibility of the state. In other words, I accept responsibility for all obligations henceforth."
Stephan has served as attorney general since January 1979. He won re-election to four-year terms in 1982 and 1986.
the attorney general said he received several calls from supporters yesterday morning offering to contribute money for the settlement
New club to be informal Group will focus on American Indian culture
By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer
It's been three years since the last KU American Indian club disbanded.
KU American Indian club弥逊堡
But Sunday, nine KU students met for the first meeting of the new campus American Indian club.
The club is for all students, faculty and staff interested in Indian culture at KU, not just for Indians, said Owen Le Beau, an Eagle Butte, S.D., graduate student who organized the group.
At its first meeting, the group talked about the goals of the club, introduced each other and scheduled the next meeting. The group's next meeting is tentatively scheduled for 6 p.m. Nov. 17 in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
"We want the group to serve as a support group for American Indians and Indian culture at KU," he said. "But the group is open to anyone with
a vested interest in Indian culture."
Organizers sent letters about Sunday's meeting to all 148 American Indian students on campus. Organizers couldn't get a list of the 39 Indian faculty and staff members, although Le Beau said he wanted to invite them. American Indians compose the smallest minority group at KU.
Le Beau said that future meetings would include speeches from people from the University community and that involved in those cultural events.
calm.
"We'll be involved in the Cultural Awareness Week next semester, and we might try to sponsor a powwow in the spring," he said. "But for now, we're just slowly getting off the ground."
Le Beau said that he planned to ask Student Senate for money for the club next semester, but that the club didn't have many expenses right
Le Beau said the Indian student group on campus three years ago, the intertribal Alliance, had a political slant. This group, however, will remain politically and religiously neutral to avoid alienating people.
"From my experience, you can't speak about politics or religion without discord," he said. "We don't want to take a stance that would keep one Indian student from feeling comfortable.
"Although I know with Indians, it's tough to separate social aspects from religious ones."
now.
Michael Skenadore, a Keshena,
Wis., sophomore, is the group's
interim president until more formal
guidelines for the club are established.
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Fall'88 Business Manager University Daily Kansan Highest student position. Responsible for day to day operations of the advertising staff of the sixth largest paper in Kansas, including directing the hiring and training of a 40 person staff, sales management, newspaper production and client relations.
Spring '88 National Sales Manager University Daily Kansan Responsible for all national sales efforts, including advertising placement,sales calls, interaction with advertising agencies and rep firms, development and management of a regional sales force and implementation of cooperative advertising programs.
Fall '87 Production Manager University Daily Kansan Responsible for all aspects of the production department, including the logging of insertion orders, coordination of advertising, news and printing services interests, and layout of the newspaper.
Summer '87 Advertising Director University Daily Kansan Solely responsible for coordinating all facets of production and directing all related problem-solving efforts as well as management of sales representatives.
Spring'87 Campus Sales Representative University Daily Kansas Responsible for sales, including planning, budgeting and campaign presentations to more than 40 active accounts. Exceeded semester quota, participated successfully in staff programs, maintained productive client relationships and expanded account list.
The University Daily Kansan Staff will soon be taking applications for sales positions.
Watch The Kansan for further information concerning application deadlines and interviewing dates.
---
Vol. 99, No. 54 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 10, 1988
Manning took loans at KU, agent says
The Associated Press
108
MIKE MARSHALL
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Danny Manning's agent confirmed yesterday that the former Kansas basketball star took loans from another former Jayhawk player who reportedly admitted he was involved in violations that led to NCAA probations for Kansas and McNeese State.
"I't is true," agent Ron Grinker said of (Mike) Marshall's reported statement that he gave Manning small loans. "He gave him $5, $7, $10 when (Manning's) father (former KU coach Ed Manning) was out of town."
Grinker was interviewed by telephone from his Cincinnati office by the Kansas City Star.
In its Nov. 14 issue, Sports Illustrated said the name of the former player, Mike Marshall, was withheld after investigations of Kansas as part of a deal Marshall made with the NCAA. The NCAA's investigation resulted in a three-year probation for the defending national champions.
Marshall, 26. played one season at Kansas in 1983-84, then transferred to McNeese State, which is also on NCAA probation. Marshall said he received payments from McNeese State boosters during his year there, the magazine said, helping put that school on probation.
Marshall's identity was not revealed after the investigation
because he wanted to be a coach and did not want scandal in his background. The magazine said. The interview anonymity in return for information.
The magazine said that Marshall, who was closely associated with former Kansas coach Larry Brown, made a cash payment and bought a plane ticket for a potential recruit to take loans to Manning and other players.
"I'm sure if you ask Mike Marshall, he'll tell you Danny always paid him back." Grinker went. "Danny thought nothing of it. He
didn't consider Mike Marshall to be a part of the basketball program."
Marshall's whereabouts yesterday were not known.
Manning was the first pick in the NBA draft this year but has not signed a contract with the Los Angeles Clippers. Brown has returned to the NBA as head coach of the San Antonio Spurs.
In an interview with an NCAA investigator, during which a Sports Illustrated reporter was present, Marshall said Brown knew about the plane ticket and cash payment to the family of Vincent Askew, 40, who wanted to transfer to Kansas. Askew wound up not transferring.
David Berst, assistant NCAA director for enforcement, confirmed yesterday that a Sports Illustrated newspaper as present at two NCAA interviews.
interviews." He did sit in on two interviews but did not explain to our person that he was a writer. He was represented to be a friend . . . or someone who was going to work out with the player, the person we were going to interview." Berst said.
"I am somewhat concerned that an individual would participate without identifying himself. I have already made those thoughts known
Please see MANNING, p. 10, col. 6.
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
NCAA investigation might be reopened
The NCAA might reopen its investigation into the Kansas men's basketball program because of the possibility of additional NCAA rules violations, NCAA director of enforcement David Berst said last night in a telephone interview from his home in Kansas City, Kan.
Berst said that because he was leaving today for an NCAA Intractions Committee meeting involving another school, the Kansas situation would be reviewed sometime next week.
In the Nov. 14 issue of Sports Illustrated, former Kansas basketball player Mike Marshall said he gave former All-American basketball star Danny Manning small loans while Manning was a student-athlete at
Marshall was not a student when he loaned money to Manning, and that constitutes a violation of NCAA rules. Neither Marshall nor Manning could be reached for comment.
Manning's agent, Cincinnati-based lawyer Ron Grinker, confirmed that Manning had received $5, $7 and $10 loans from Marshall while Manning was at Kansas
Bert first said the NCAA would compare information in the article with information the NCAA had in order to determine how much the NCAA should pay.
determine whether we are experts.
"Those are not very significant violations if that's all that was involved and he was the only eligible player from the team involved." Berst said.
herst said that if the case were reopened and the NCAA found violations had occurred involving members from last year's team, the NCAA could strip Kansas of last season's national championship.
"That's a possibility." Berst said. "But I don't want to include it among the likely alternatives, at this point, until we review the article and our findings."
Berst also said that Kansas could receive the "death penalty" if the case was reopened but that was a remote possibility based on the information he had heard so far. The death penalty would eliminate basketball as an intercollegiate sport at Kansas for an undetermined period of time.
Berst said it was possible that Manning would have to testify if significant violations had occurred.
testify.
In a telephone interview from his home last night, Cancellor Gene A. Budig said, "The University of Kansas spent 18 months working with the NCAA staff, responding to all of the inquiry in great depth. We had never heard that Danny Manning had borrowed any money."
Kansas Athletic Director Bob Frederick said last night that he had not expected to hear of the possibility of additional violations.
"I would not presume to speak for the NCAA staff. I do believe it is time for us to look forward and put the matter behind us and unite with Coach (Roy) Williams. He is committed to high standards with student-athletes on the court and in the classroom."
"We were really shocked at the new information," Frederick said. "We've cooperated daily for almost $1 \frac{1}{2}$ years with the NCAA. What we knew, they knew."
Frederick said he hoped that the NCAA could reach a decision quickly.
Please see NCAA, p. 10, col. 3
JAMES C. BROWN
Stephen Wade/KANSAN
As term paper and project deadlines approach, students crowd the stacks in Watson Library looking for a quiet place to study. LEFT: Akin Falaaiye, Iole-Ekiti, Nigeria, graduate student, works on his dissertation in political science. ABOVE: Library windows are aglow in the nighttime air.
Study by night
Democrats add 9 seats many hope for Margin
Rv David Stewart
Kansan staff writer
Several Kansas legislative seats changed hands in Tuesday's election, and many political watchers said the new governor was a better fit for the Margin of Excellence.
Ed McKeechin, press secretary for House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg, said that the Margin benefited from the election.
"The Margin of Excellence's chance to be considered more widely," McKeech said.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer schools in total financing and to 100 percent of their peers in salary salaries. The board will be under a motion for its second year of financing during the 1889 legislative session.
Mark Tallman, state legislative director of Associated Students of Kansas, said that a survey taken before the election showed that support among all the candidates for the Margin and other higher-education issues was strong but that support was stronger among Democrats.
Was it stolen, among
Of the 22 new representatives, 13 are Democrats. Of the 11 new senators, seven are Democrats.
The new composition of the House is 58 Democrats and 67 Republicans; the Democrats gained seven seats. In the Senate, there are 18 Democrats and 22 Republicans; the Democrats gained two seats.
Although Tallman said that support for the Margin was bipartisan, he said that one casualty of the Margin issue was the House Majority Leader, Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan. Knopp was defeated by Sheila Hochauer, D-Manhattan.
"I had made a judgment call not to oversteep our bounds," Knopp said.
Nopp said that Democrats had made a campaign issue out of his vote against a floor amendment to add more money to the Regents
He said that the Margin might not have received any financing because
conservative Republicans were against allowing too many increases.
"People were more concerned with rhetoric than with results," he said.
against allowing too many increases. Knopp said that although Kansas State University had received most of its budget requests, his opponent still was able to convince voters that Knopp was against higher education.
theoretic than with results, he said.
As for the future of the Margin, Knopp said it was positive. The addition of two Democrats to the senate would help but that the trick would be to convince conservatives to spend money on higher education, he said.
Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, who was re-elected over Mike DuPree, D-Lawrence and in the fight for the Margin's second year
"He was certainly a strong advocate in a position where he could help." Winter said.
He said that he could not think of any Senate participants in the fight for Margin financing who had lost the election. However, Winter said that Robert Talkington, R-Lawrence, who decided not to run for re-election of his Senate seat, would be missed.
"He was a KU graduate, and he had been very supportive," Winter said.
Rep. Jess Branson, D-Lawrence, who was re-elected over Renee McGhee, R-Lawrence, agreed that Talkington would be missed, but she said that at this time it would be hard to reach the Margin would do in the Legislature.
"I just think it's difficult to determine at this time," Branson said. "There's always a chance that with new blood things are going to get better."
Branson said that the Lawrence representatives would be ready to fight for the Margin. But the fight will be a difficult one because Margin money next year will have to come from the state's general fund. Last year, financing for the Margin came from state general fees and hospital revenues.
Bush picks James Baker to be secretary of state
The Associated Press
HOUSTON — President-elect George Bush picked James A. Baker III, a Reagan administration stalwart, as his secretary of state yesterday but at the same time pledged a major turnover of personnel.
pet. Moving with unusual speed barely 11 hours after claiming victory, Bush announced a handful of key appointments.
of Rey Appointed Craig Fuller. Bush's vice presidential chief of staff, and campaign pollster Robert Teeter will share authority as co-chairmen of the transition team that will plan the takeover of power from Reagan.
In a declaration sure to send shudders through the ranks of the 5,000 political appointees at work in the Reagan administration, some of them have been bringing in a brand new team of people from across the country.
The president-elect said he wanted to announce the rest of his Cabinet soon and think about the possible choices during a Florida vacation this weekend.
ate the process. Bust sad:
However, he carefully left room for some Reagan holdovers to join his administration.
"In my view that will re-invigorate the process." Bush said.
Please see BUSH, p. 6, col. 1
Political parties analyze Kansas election results
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — In post-election "spins" on what Kansas election results meant, Republicans claimed victory yesterday because of George Bush's big win and because they didn't lose control of the Legislature. Democrats crowed about their gains in the state House and Senate.
galls in the state House and GOP Gov. Mike Hayden and GOP Chairman Fred Logan Jr. held separate Capitol news conferences to stress that the loss of nine Republican legislative seats was less than the party holding the governor's chair historically has suffered in years in which there are no elections for statewide offices.
House Democrat Leader Marvin Binkis also held a Statehouse news conference, while his party chairman, Jim Parrish, telephoned his comments to reporters. The Democratic leaders said Republicans were putting up a brave front, but actually were stunned by Tuesday's losses.
were students of Pennsylvania. Parrish pointed to five Senate races, each decided by fewer than 1,000 votes, all of which were won by Republicans. If Democrats had won
Both sides also agreed there was nothing surprising in the fact Kansans voted overwhelmingly to send four U.S. House members who had opposition back to Washington with new two-year terms.
three of the five, they would have taken the Senate, he said.
terms
Republican 3rd District Rep. Jan Meyers scored the greatest victory, with 74 percent of the vote over Lionel Kunst, while Democratic 2nd District Rep. Jim Slattery got 73 percent over Phil Meinhardt, Republican 5th District Rep. Bob Whittaker collected 70 percent against John A. Barnes and Democratic 4th District Rep. Dan Glickman gained 64 percent over Lee Thompson.
he sat.
Both sides agreed Bush backed up a pre-election GOP contention that he would score a solid presidential victory in Kansas. Bush finished with an unofficial 532,253 votes, or 56 percent, to Democrat Michael Dukakis' 423,166 votes and 43 percent. Minor party candidates Ron Paul and Lenora Fulani got 12,464 and 3,907 votes, respectively, to account for the other percent.
The two parties' 'spin doctors' disagreed sharply, however, over the significance of the Democrat's gains in the two houses of the Legislature. Republicans saw their Senate advantage reduced from 24-16 to 22-18 and their House margin dwindle from 24-16 to 67-18.
Parrish called it amazing that Democrates, with fewer registered voters and less money, could wrest nine seats from the GOP — two in the Senate and seven in the House — and come within 100-200 votes in several other races.
Barkis, who had been targeted for defeat by the Republicans but ran up a 62.38 percent win over Carl Gump, a candidate Hayden campaigned for, predicted Democrats would win control of the House in 1990.
---
Loss of two Senate seats represented 8.3 percent of the 24 seats the GOP now holds in the upper legislative chamber, and loss of seven House seats represents 9.5 percent of the 74 seats the party now holds in the lower body.
2
Thursday. November 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
Lawrence weather
Weather Service
Forecast
Sunny and cooler
High: 53°
Low: 35°
Today will be mostly sunny and cooler with a high of only 53 degrees. Tonight the low will drop to a chilly 35 degrees.
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
49/28
Sunny
Omaha
45/29
Sunny
Goodland
49/27
Sunny
Salina
50/34
Sunny
Topaka
54/32
Sunny
Kansas City
53/34
Sunny
Columbia
53/32
Sunny
St. Louis
54/34
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
55/35
Sunny
Wichita
55/38
Sunny
Chanute
56/38
Sunny
Springfield
57/37
Mostly sunny
Tulsa
53/44
Sunny
Forecast by Jeff Gertner
Temperature are today's high and southerly low.
5 Day
Friday
Sunny
62/39
HIGH LOW
Saturday
Chance for t-showers
58/36
Sunday
Partly cloudy
55/34
Monday
Partly cloudy
59/38
Tuesday
Sunny
61/40
The nation
Seattle
50/48
Denver
48/28
Chicago
48/31
New York
50/48
Phoenix
76/55
Dallas
74/52
Miami
84/70
Frontal cool wind stationary
Seattle 50/49
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- An affirmative action workshop for Vietnam era veterans will be held at 9 a.m. today in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
- A Phi Kappa Phi reception for the top five percent of the graduating senior class and selected graduate students will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. today in the English Room at the Kansas Union.
American Friends of Palestine will have an information table set up from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today in the Kansas Union.
Saint Louis, MO.
■ Canterbury House will offer the Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
The Mathematics colloquium will present Marian Kwapisz at 4 p.m. today in Aronszajn Seminar Room at Big Toward
■ The Geography colloquium will present Joan E. Holmes, associate professor of German, at 3:30 p.m. in 317 Lindley Hall.
- Laurie Carlson, graduate teaching assistant in English, will give a graduate student colloquium at 4 p.m. today in 4019 Wesley Hall.
The KU School of Garland will present Jorge Gallardo Zavala, Ecuador's minister of finance, at 4 p.m. at Pearson Auditorium at the Kansas University.
On Campus
The Baptist Student Union will meet at 5:30 tonight at the American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th. 3-Free dinner will be served.
Psi Chi will meet at 6 tonight in 547 Fraser Hall.
Environs will meet at 6 tonight in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
■ KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 tonight in Parlor C at the Kansas Union.
■ Latin American Solidarity will present Mary Kay Meyer at 6:30 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Music
istries, 1204 Oread Ave. A rice and beans dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
The Champions Club will meet at 6:30 tonight in Parlor A at the Kansas Union.
■ The KU American Chemical Society Student Affiliates will meet at 7 tonight in 2007 Malott Hall.
Jennifer Bloomer, University of Florida, will speak at an architecture and urban design lecture at 7 afton in Alderson Auditorium at the Kant
The Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight in Adams Alumni Center.
Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 tonight in the International Room.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union. Study abroad will meet at 7:30 tonight in the West Gallery at the Kansas Union.
TRUMAN SCHOLARSHIP NOMINAS
Competing students must be full-time sophomores, among the top 25 percent of their class in grades. U.S. citizens or nationals, have a grade point average of 3.0 or better and be studying for a career in politics or government.
TRUMAN SCHOLARSHIP NOMINATIONS: Three students from the University of Kansas have been chosen as semi-finalists for the Truman Scholarships, which can award up to $7,000 in scholarship money.
A regional review panel will interview the semi-finalists in February and March, and the winners will be announced in April. One student is selected from each state, the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico. Fifty-five additional nominees could be selected.
Semiramis Rogers, Wichita;
Thomas R. Walker, Concordia,
and Kyle Wetzel, Lawrence, were chosen
KU Truman Selection Committee
attend.
SINGERS CONFERENCE AT KU
More than 300 singers from a four-state region will be visiting the University of Kansas today through Saturday for the 1988 regional convention. The association of music of Singing, Host for the convention is the KU department of music and dance.
A special guest at the convention will be Richard Wolitch, who has conducted at many of the world's leading opera houses and is now a conductor with the Metropolitan Opera in New York. He will present a lecture, "Backstage at the Opera," at 8 p.m. tomorrow. He will also conduct classes for select voice students on Saturday.
SINGERS CONFERENCE AT KU:
dels to genres
Jack Wright, professor of theater and film, and artistic director of the University Theatre, will speak on "The Stage Director's Point of View" at 3 a.m. tomorrow.
Students from Kansas, Colorado,
Nebraska and Wyoming, ranging
from high school to graduate
students, will attend the conference.
About 60 voice teachers who will
judge voice competitions will also
Marjiep Barstow, a teacher of the Alexander technique of breathing and relaxation, will work with students at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow.
The final round of voice competition for upper-level students will be at 8 p.m. Saturday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
FEMINIST AUTHOR TO SPEAK: A nationally recognized novelist and feminist will speak at the University of Kansas at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
Sara Paretsky, who is a Lawrence native, is sponsored by KU's Women's Studies Program. Her speech is titled "From Anger to Witch the Moral Decline of Women in 20th Century Detective Fiction."
Parelsky is the author of five mystery novels and was named the Ms magazine Woman of the Year in 1987. She recently organized Sisters
in Crime, a women's caucus in the Mystery Writers of America.
ALUMNI PLEDGE MONEY: Two KU alumni together have pledged $1 million to Campaign Kansas, Carl Locke, dean of the engineering, announced this week.
The money, pledged by Charles and Mary Jane Bruckmiller Spahr, Cleveland, Ohio, will be used primarily to expand space in the engineering library by 60 percent.
The Spahrs' donation also will augment two engineering fellowships they already had established with the Kansas University Endowment Assoc-
Charles Sphar, retired chairman and chief executive officer of Standard Oil and private business consultancy in 1954 with an engineering degree.
Mary Jane Spahr attended KU in 1938.
STANLEY LEARNED HONORED:
Stanley Learned, the former head of
Phillips Petroleum Co., became the first life member of the University of Kansas School of Engineering Advisory Board on Oct. 21.
Life members retain all rights and privileges of membership, including full voting rights.
Learned earned a bachelor's degree in civil engineering in 1924 and earned a master's degree in 1936. He joined Phillips Petroleum Co. in 1924 and eventually became its chief executive officer in 1962.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 10, 1988
3
Campus/Area
KU on Wheels embezzler still hasn't paid up
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
A former coordinator of KU on Wheels who embezzled more than $257,000 from the Student Senate financed program has paid only $2.860 in restitution.
price paid.
Since then, he has made two additional payments, $100 in August and $50 in September.
$50 in September.
McCurry's payments and a $50,000 payment made by the insurance company that bonded him have been turned over to the KU on Wheels program, which is holding the money as part of a contingency fund, said Scott Russell, current coordinator of KU on Wheels.
KU on Wheels includes the bus system, Secure Shuttle and lift vans for disabled students.
Russell said that KU on Wheels' accounting procedures had been changed as a result of McMurry's embezzlement and that a recent audit found that no further changes needed to be made.
According to court records,
McMurry embezzled the money from the bus system between 1978 and 1982. He was arrested in September 1982 and charged with five counts of felony theft.
teacher. He was convicted in June 1983 and sentenced to one concurrent and four consecutive two- to five-year prison terms. The sentence was modified in November 1983 to five concurrent two- to five-year terms.
McMurry also was ordered to pay restitution of $257,051.17.
He was granted parole in February 1985 after spending 17 months in Kansas state prisons.
In 1884, the University of Kansas filed a civil suit and won a judgment against McMurry for that amount.
Mary Prewitt, KU assistant general counsel, said now that McMurry had completed his criminal sentence, the only hold the University had on him was through the civil suit.
She would not comment on what action the University was taking to enforce the judgment of the civil suit.
To pursue a civil judgment, the University would have to file a certified copy of the judgment in Colorado. McMurry's wages could be garnished or any non-exempt assets could be seized, Prewitt said.
SACRED HEART
Gimme shelter
Afternoon rain prompts Lisa Meiman, Fort Collins, Colo., junior, left, and Meg Porteous, Teopak junior, to huddle under an umbrella after
leaving class. KU Weather Service is calling for a high today of 53 degrees with clearing skies. The service predicts a low of 24 tonight.
Paralympian wins 4 medals
By Grace Hobson
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Tracy Miller did Danny Manning one better at the Seoul Olympics
In fact, she did Manning four better.
**In training:** She was in the 1988 Paralympics, Miller, Lawrence graduate student, brought four silver medals. Manning, competing in the Seoul Olympics with the U.S. men's basketball team, won a bronze medal.
Miller competed in track in the 800,1,500,5,000 meters and the marathon as part of the U.S. Disabled Sports Team. Miller said a woman from Belgium beat her in all four events.
To race, Miller uses a specially designed wheelchair, which costs between $1,000 and $2,000. The chair doesn't have arm rests and is lighter than regular wheelchairs.
have all tests and a right. Miller said that to prepare for the games, she did short workouts three or four days a week, one long day of about 20 miles, and one shorter day of 11 miles. She said she didn't start to train until about June when she found out she was eligible for the Olympics.
Bill Botten, Overland Park senior, trained daily with her for about seven weeks before the games. Botten, who introduced Miller to racing when he met her at the Rehabilitation Institute in Kansas City, Mo., said she did
even better than he had expected.
She improved her times even over what she did in training," he said. "You train so hard that you hope it pays off in the long run, but you just never know. She's progressing really fast."
Miller said her time in the marathon was her best ever. She completed the 26 miles in her wheelchair in 2 hours, 16 minutes, compared with her previous best of 2 hours, 37 minutes.
"Just from seeing my time in the marathon, I was really encouraged to continue racing." Miller said. "I have high hopes for the spring. I will work really hard this winter."
Miller said the competing year began in the spring, even though there were usually races year-round. Having been racing for less than two years, Miller said she was only one step behind her opponent and she will compete in a marathon in Columbus, Ohio
The support Koreans had for the paralympic athletes was the brightest part of her trip, Miller said. The 100,000-seat Olympic Stadium was packed during the week's events, held Oct. 16 through 24.
"We were lined up waiting for the opening ceremonies, and the stadium was so big that I thought that there would be only about 40 people there," she said. "That's how it would be here."
Student Senate grants $3,466 for printing of Disorientation
By Craig Welch
Kansan staff writer
The bill received lengthy debate with some senators complaining that the guide was a political publication — one that Senate should not finance.
Student Senate passed a $3,466 bill last night to finance the printing and publicity for Disorientation, a 32-page alternative resource guide.
Jay Gerber, liberal arts and sciences senator, said the publication had endorsed political opinions in the past, had failed to seek alternative financing before approaching Senate and contained information that, although interesting, could be found elsewhere.
An older edition of the guide included a listing of local restaurants
senator, quoted the Senate code.
"The Student Senate will work to further the cultural, social and political growth of KU students," he said. "The Student Senate shall strive to protect and enhance the student's right to free speech."
In response, Paul Leader, law
Leader said Disorientation fit under each of the headings. He also said that Disorientation had been financed by previous Senates.
In other business, Senate debated for almost an hour on a $197 bill to finance a newsletter and publicity for the newly formed Campus Vegetarian Society. The bill eventually was defeated.
debarated.
Christine Stanek, architecture senator, said the information the group wanted to disseminate can be obtained easily from Watkins Memorial Health Center. She also
suggested that the group wait a few months to ask Senate for money so that it could become better established.
Senate also took the following actions:
■ passed a $2,040 bill to help finance performances by the University Dance Club
■ passed a $1,200 bill to maintain the Senate typing room in Watson Library
■ passed a $1,092 bill to cover an increase in phone expenses for 11 student organizations
passed an $885 bill to finance the KU Sailing Club
- approved a $385 bill to finance the International Association of Students in Economics and Commerce.
KU Space Program's future remains up in the air after Senate kills bill
Bv Katv Monk
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
The KU Space Program is fighting for its existence after a $10,000 financing request was killed Nov. 2 by the Student Senate Finance Committee.
At a meeting yesterday, program officers and school of engineering officials sought ways to save the program's 1989 space shuttle flight experiments. The program has a contract with NASA to send a canister containing five experiments into space.
containing two pieces.
About half of the $10,393 was requested for equipment for pre-testing and half for materials to be sent into space.
Maharya Rahbarrad, program president, said after yesterday's meeting that Carl Locke, dean of engineering, had proposed a challenge grant in which the school would match money the club raised, up to about $2.000.
Rahbarbad said other proposals included incorporating the program's needs into Campaign Kansas fund raising, approaching chairmen of departments that have students involved in the space program and looking to corporations with equipment the program could use.
Saeed Farokhi, the program's faculty adviser, said he found the finance committee's decision hard to believe
If no money can be found to support the project, Farokhi will have to contact NASA to cancel the experiment, which he said would be embarrassing, disappointing to the students involved and a bad signal to KU students and faculty.
Farokhi said the space program offered students hands-on experience not offered in KU classrooms. That experience can attract potential engineering students.
“Our relationship to NASA and the space shuttle puts us in the frontiers of space exploration and scientific research related to space,” he said. “This is a unique opportunity open to universities at a very low cost to participate in space research."
"There's not a question of the importance of that kind of effort," he said. "It's more a question of wise use of the activity fund."
But Paul Leader, co-chairman of the finance committee, said the program's significance alone did not warrant Senate funds.
Leader said the committee killed the bill for three reasons: The amount requested, $10,383, was too big a chunk of the $10,300 unallocated account; the club did not appeal to a broad base of students; and the committee considered the group's financial responsibility questionable.
Craig Citron, student body treasurer, said the group misused Senate last year in thinking that a $3,000 request granted by the Senate was for one time only.
But Farokhi and Rahbarrar said Senate had misunderstood that point. Farokhi said the program was intended to become a permanent feature of KU's space education and had never been intended as a one-time project.
before yesterday's meeting. Farokhi said no effort would be spared to assure the program's future.
"We have taken it so far," he said. "We can't just drop the ball."
Kansan Fact:
KU students spend over $4 million a month on discretionary items.
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Thursday, November 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Opinion
Bush manages a victory; now comes the hard part
The big question of 1988, who will be the country's president, was answered Tuesday. But the questions the country must deal with now may linger for a while yet.
Why was Michael Dukakis, who once held commanding leads in the polls, so thoroughly defeated in the Electoral College? What are the implications for U.S. politics when a candidate can win so convincingly after hiding his vice presidential candidate, dodging debates and news conferences and campaigning in the most negative of ways from the start?
on friendships and political ties.
To further amend for evils of the Reagan years, Bush must seek out women and minorities for top positions. Not all the best and brightest minds in Washington are white males. The bill will modify
paigning in the most negative or way of wanting. Such questions, and many others, will keep the political science professors busy analyzing and second-guessing until the next election and beyond. In the meantime, George Bush has to figure out how he's going to heal whatever wounds the campaign has caused and start leading in a way the majority of the American people seem to think he's capable of.
Finally, Bush needs to start considering how he will modify his goals to accommodate the goals of the Democratic-controlled Congress. Without the claim to a mandate that his predecessor had, Bush is going to need to work closely with Congress to produce effective legislation.
people. His next step should be to start giving his cabinet posts to competent people. The multiple scandals of the Reagan administration show the dangers of awarding such posts based on friendships and political loyalty.
President-elect Bush set the right tone in his acceptance speech Tuesday. He spoke with respect of his opponent and properly avoided speaking of any sort of mandate.
Having to deal with an unfriendly Congress and a plethora of domestic problems, Bush has his work cut out for him. He has shown he has what it takes to win an election, but the world will wait to see if he can answer the big question for 1989: Does he have what it takes to lead the nation? Let's hope he does.
The curriculum committee is going to discuss a much-needed mandatory course on racism. Proposed by Concerned Faculty and Faculty Against Institutional Racism in conjunction with students from the United Coalition Against Racism, the course would provide an analysis of race and racism as well as cultural achievements of people of color.
Racism class should be mandatory
Michael Merschel for the editorial board
Other Voices
Racism is a significant phenomena in society and at the University, and the course would increase student understanding of this issue. The course is essential to any liberal arts education.
To its credit, the curriculum committee already has recommended that the proposal be instituted as an optional course. However, unless it approves the course as a requirement for all undergraduates, the class will be nothing but another ineffective token gesture.
The course must be mandatory.
The course must be mandatory.
If the course is optional, it is unlikely that students who most need to be educated about racism will choose to take it.
The university of obesing whether or
to be educated and students should not have the luxury of choosing whether or not to be educated about racism or other cultures. The University does not give students the choice about whether or not to learn a foreign language or to achieve a certain level of writing skill. To enforce these requirements and to make the course on racism optional would reflect the skewed priorities under which the University administration operates.
under which the university has a role. In order to combat racism at the University, structural changes need to be made. The University has consistently made excuses for low minority enrollment and the dismal percentages of minority faculty. In the proposed mandatory class, the faculty and administration have an opportunity to make a meaningful change. UCAR has been demanding that such a course be created since the spring of 1987.
There are no acceptable excuses.
The Michigan Daily University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Mich.
News staff
News Star
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Joseph Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jeffs ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Kurt Messentmith...Promotions manager
Sarah Hinder...Marketing manager
Brad Lehart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Asst. production manager
Michael Lehman...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 office or staff position.
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Guent staff could be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom. 111 S.S. Street Letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
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The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest questions. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall.
columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Hall, Lawrence, Kan 6045, daily during the regular school year, exclusive Friday, Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, and Wednesday through the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Kansas. Kan 6044 Annual subscriptions are $10. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through student activity fee to the University Daily Kansan, 118
POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
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Honest, professor,the computer did it
I finished writing the assignment on the word processor at 11:45 p.m. It was due the next morning. Just before printing it I decided to switch a few paragraphs. I thought I hit the button to "move."
move.
The next minute I was staring at the screen, baffled. The screen resembled a jigsaw puzzle. For the next three hours, I tried to piece the whole thing together. And eventually I succeeded. Everything looked all right, except that a few 'a', e's, and some other letters came out in italics. And that's the best I could salvage on that assignment.
I wasn't alone in my anguish
or severed he began to panic. He had spent almost five days on the paper. He had to make his deadline.
that's the best I can do.
I never could decipher how that happened. I decided then that I would go back to using a typewriter.
Hurriedly, he called the word processor's software headquarters long-distance in Massachusetts to get help. While talking to the experts there, George fidgeted some more with his keyboard, trying to retrieve what he had lost.
I wasn't alone in my hag. My friend George had an assignment day Monday by 5 p.m. to 10 a.m. he was typing into his word processor for the bibliography for his 18-page notebook, but accidentally hit the wrong button on his keyboard. The screen read: "Document invalid or severely damaged."
trying to restrain.
He now tried anything. Nor did he make the medicine. His research paper, its footnotes, its bibliography — all were wiped clean at the erroneous touch of a key.
Rias Mohamed
Guest columnist
George worked on the same paper, beginning from the start, after saying thanks to his professor, who extended the deadline.
to the typewriter.
About that time, Macintosh computers were being offered at discounted rates, the offer too tempting to spurn. I settled for a Macintosh.
George said he had gotten wiser since the incident. He said that if precautions had been taken, things would not have gone wrong. The ones in use to take these precautions, he said.
s
I then began to question my decision to go back to the typewriter.
The computer soon proved to be a handy instrument, until I wrote a 20-page paper for a seminar class. I finished the paper, edited, paginated and made a printout. Everything was perfect. It then made a laser printout and submitted it.
The next class my professor told me, "Your paper doesn't read at all." The professor gave the paper back to me, and to, my horror, I found that the top and bottom lines on every page were deleted. I told him it was "a computer problem."
sarcastically. But he understood the problem, and he let me correct it. (My good luck: No points were taken off.)
he selected a loud man who called out, "Computer! Isn't that a fine invention?" he said
Not long ago, my roommate Sean wrote a paper, for which he used my computer. He had almost finished the paper, when suddenly the screen read: "Error has occurred. Document erased. Sorry." His entire paper was lost and couldn't be retrieved. His situation was similar to that of George's. Sean never made the deadline; he had to work on that paper one more time.
I tend to think when deadlines are crucial — when failure to meet a deadline means an F grade, when a late submission of an assignment can turn an A or a B into a C or D — the prudent choice should be the old-fashioned typewriter and not the word processor.
word processor.
When George missed his deadline, he said he cursed the word processor, using "four-letter expletives." But two days later, in a less emotional frame of mind, he said it's "truly a godsend if you use it right."
When Sean missed his deadline, he said he wanted to fling my computer out of the window. In Sean's case, there was no way he could have taken more precautions. He had done everything right.
more precautions. I never use the word processor sometimes. But every time I use it, I wonder if word processors understand professors who give such warnings about missing deadlines: "Don't come and tell me, 'I had a problem with the computer.'"
Rias Mohamed is a Madras, India graduate student in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
I have always believed that the basic freedoms are among the most precious rights given to the people of the United States. And when subjects come along to challenge these freedoms, I welcome them, knowing the United States I know is protected by the Constitution. In short, I am not one to censor the people. However, my belief has come into conflict because of a recent article in the Kansan. I find that what is constitutionally right is standing against what is truly right.
against what is truly right.
On Nov. 7, the Kansan sent an article on the death of a KU freshman. In the light of this troubleship, all the world owed him was peace. The dignity and grace of this young boy was stripped from him in the article. He died as a result of auto-erotic asphyxiation. It sounds gross, but that boy, in his last mention here on earth, did not need his name matched with his ugly fate. If the "crime" needed to be discussed, it should have been done in another place instead of this boy's final story. If the boy's death needed to be announced, let the cause of death be asphyxiation. But for everything that was right, it was wrong to let the two come together.
Once again, I believe that U.S. citizens need to be informed. And I believe it is the job of a
newspaper to do just that. But Monday's article battled what is right. It pitted a distorted freedom of the press against something I would hope to be held a little more precious — humanity. With so much youth still in me, death is my biggest fear. But to see a peer, even one I did not know, treated so callously, not only adds to my fear of death, but makes me question the basic heart of this world. I thought it had one. A boy's life passed, and the Kansan treated it as little more than a piece of gossip.
little more than the answer. The arsenal was a headline short of the Kansan Enquirer. The Kansan lacked humanity and heart Monday. It owes that boy's family an apology. And it owes that boy more. He is dead. Withholding the reasons, his life is over at 18. His school should have let him go peacefully, and his school newspaper should be ashamed for not doing that.
Kristin Blocker
Missing heart
Kristin Blocker Glen Ellyn, ill., sophomore
Recently a number of people have complained that a fee for a lockout key in the University residence halls seems unreasonable and that it is just a way to steak blood from poor college students, who control some reason beyond their control, locked themselves out of their rooms. I was intrigued. I am a desk assistant at GSP-Corbin, so I decided to seek data. I checked the files of 100 residents. On an average, they checked out keys 1.82 times for the semester. It would seem that two free check-outs are ample and fair.
Two times a charm
air.
Then consider the $5 dollar fee. To get your car unlocked, for instance, you have to find a phone, call a locksmith or mechanic, and wait 20
re
r i n i n p e s s
s i l
a t e n e u s
i r
minutes. Then you have to fork over an average of $20 dollars. Five dollars seems very generous.
of $20 dollars. Five dollars seems very generous.
I think we will find that when it is important enough, residents will learn — another human trait.
Gwendolyn T. Lietzen Kansas City, Kan., freshman
Insensitive reporting
The death of an 18-year-old is certainly not an easy topic to write about especially when the cause of death is accidental. However, it seems that there are correct and incorrect ways to report the untimely death of a young college freshman. The Kansan did not choose the correct way to report the death of KU freshman Thomas P. Lewis Jr. in Monday's Kansan.
P. Lewis Jr. in attorney.
The Kansan story was started with good intentions, but by the middle of the story it was difficult to read plain reading. Why turn a story need not be more than an expanded obituary into sensationalized tabloid gossip? Does the Kansan staff really need to expose the details of the death of a young student by delving into his private life? Do Kansan readers really need a lecture from a KU professor on how to conduct oneself safely in private?
conduct oneself safely.
Is this really how Thomas Lewis would have liked to have been remembered by his fellow student body? It seems that the Kansan has lost all compassion for the students that it is supposed to serve.
Buck Taylor Chicago junior Mike Killeen St. Louis senior
BLOOM COUNTY
ANOTHER UGLY LEFTOVER FROM THE GALAXY'S STUPIDEST PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST... BILL
THOROUGHLY DIGESTED BY A RIGGED, PURCHASED SYSTEM...AND DEPOSITED BEHIND ON THE AMERICAN SIDEWALK OF LIFE.
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11-10 CHILDREN'S CENTER
LET'S GO HOME,
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---
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 10, 1988
5
Business, buyouts and Beatrice
By Debbie McMahon Kansan staff writer
The former chairman of the multi-interest Beatrice Company said that students must be willing to take risks to achieve success comparable to his.
Donald Kelley gave his speech, "Restructuring Corporate America," to two different audiences yesterday. About 150 students enrolled in Business 800, Dean's Seminar in Business Administration, heard Kelley speak at 2 p.m. in the Burge Union. Students graduating in December listened to Kelley at 6 p.m. in Wescoe Hall.
Marilyn Taylor, associate professor of business, said Kelley could be considered the "dawn of leveraged transactions and acquisition and divestiture."
Former chairman advises
students to take more risks
Most recently, Kelley is known for engineering the largest leveraged buyout in history, Taylor said. In 1986, along with Kohlberg, Krawitz and a large investment bank, he purchased the Beatrice Company for $7 billion.
A leveraged buyout is when the management or an outsider uses det, instead of equity, to buy a company, Taylor said. Since 1980, suchbuyouts have increased because investors have been more willing to manage debt transactions.
The history of the Beatrice buyout was unusual, Taylor said. Kelley was
head of the Esmark company and tried to purchase Esmark as a management buyout. Instead, Beatrice bought Esmark in 1984 as an outsider buyout by offering stockholders more money. Kelley left his position but two years later bought Beatrice as an outsider.
Kelley's other major transactions include the purchase and sale of Avis twice. While at Esmark, he borrowed the money to purchase Norton Simon.
Kelley sees restructuring as a result of increased debt loads caused by leverage buy outs.
"I think it is essential that all of us recognize adapting to the realities emerging from this continuing ecological challenge," he said.
After his speech at Burge, he was asked what effects the election of George Bush will have on leveraged buvouts.
"I think there's not much difference whether Vice President Bus's or the other guy won." Kleyed said. "I'd say we're going to have increased responsibility is unfortunate. Regardless of how well intentioned it is, it will be wrong."
Tomorrow, Jorge Gallardo, minister of finance of Ecuador and KU graduate, will speak on "Strategies for Renegotiation of Foreign Debt" at 4 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
Haskell's request to reassign Gipp to Lawrence refused
The Associated Press
A request by Haskell Indian Junior College's National Board of Regents to reassign Haskell President Gerald Gipp to Lawrence will not be considered by the Bureau of Indian Affairs until next week, a bureau official said yesterday.
Carl Shaw, spokesman for the bureau, said that the request wouldn't be considered until bureau officials had a chance to see the results of an investigation into Gipp's conduct while president of Haskell.
Shaw said that he wasn't sure whether the report was complete but that it would not be released to the public until next week.
The regents passed a resolution last week, calling for Gipp's return
while the bureau completes the investigation.
Gipp has been assigned temporarily to the bureau's central office in Washington D.C. during the investigation. The investigation stems from an instructor's claim that improperly prepared change grade he had given Gipp's daughter while she was a Haskell student in 1987.
The board's resolution says that Gipp is needed at Haskell to take care of administrative duties. Van Peters, an administrator from the bureau's Portland, Ore., office has been acting president in Gipp's absence.
- Kansan reporter James Farquhar contributed information to this story.
Professors sign $1.2 million contract to study TV's effects on poor children
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Two KU professors recently have signed a $1.2 million contract with the Children's Television Workshop in New York to finance a study of television's effects on economically disadvantaged children.
John C. Wright and Alethea C. Huston, professors of human development and family life and directors of the University's Center for Research on the Influences of Television on Children, will conduct the study of 400 Kansas City-area families in low-income neighborhoods.
Wright and Huston recently completed a similar study involving 328 T.peka families with preschoolaged children. The new study will involve families with children ages 2 to 7.
"There are two things we are trying to find with the study," Huston said. "We want to know what kinds of conditions lead children to different patterns of TV
watching and the effects of the different viewing patterns on their development."
The new project, which is scheduled to last seven years, will follow children's viewing habits from about age 2 for about three years, and will evaluate the children's intellectual, social and psychological development.
Huston said the focus of the new research would be the differences between children whose earliest viewing was of educational children's programs such as "Sesame Street," and those who had watched primarily entertainment programming such as soap operas or situation comedies.
The professor's previous findings suggested that early and frequent viewing of shows such as "Sesame Street" helped children develop reading skills, vocabulary and an interest in print media.
Veterans Day to be observed Vietnam POWs. MIAs to be remembered at vigil tomorrow
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
Banks and post offices will be closed to observe Veterans' Day tomorrow, and several organizations will be busy commemorating veterans.
duty commemorating the University of Kansas squadron of the Arnold Air Society, an organization affiliated with Air Force ROTC, will conduct a candlelight vigil at 7 tonight to honor soldiers still listed as prisoners of war or missing in action from the Vietnam War.
The vigil will take place at the Vietnam Veterans' Memorial, at the southeast corner of Memorial Drive and West Campus Road, and will last about 45 minutes. Tom Berger, program assistant in the office of affirmative action and a Vietnam veteran, will speak at the vigil. NIMH AMR.
The vignil is part of the society, brance week, which includes the distribution of red ribbons to promote POW MIA association and a petition drive to ask the Vietnamese government to account for MIAs.
we want to make the Vietnamese government aware that we haven't forgotten them. "Renner said,
The Castle Tea Room
"We not only want to make Americans aware of POWs,
Tomorrow, a color guard will conduct a retreat ceremony on p.m. at the flagpole outside the Military Building.
At Haskell Indian Junior College, Veterans' Day observance will begin tomorrow at 7 a.m. with a sunrise ceremony at Stidham Union. A gourd dance will begin at 2 p.m. at Coffin Complex followed by a powwow at 7:30 p.m.
At 10 a.m. tomorrow, a memorial service will be attended at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Alford Clark Post 852, 138 Alabama St. The service will be sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign Wars with the American Legion Dorsey-Liberty Post 14, the Disabled American Legion Barracks 22 and the Vietnam Veterans of America.
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Thursday, November 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
BUSH
Continued from p.1
It is widely assumed that Bush will ask Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady, Attorney General Dick Thornhurst and Education Secretary Lauro Cavazos to stay. All three joined the Reagan administration in recent months.
Thornburgh said yesterday that he had been given no indication of whether Bush wanted him to remain.
The Washington Post reported that Bush wanted to replace Thornburgh with former Environmental Protection Agency chief William Ruckelshaus or Illinois Gov. James Thompson. Thompson said yesterday that he wasn't interested.
Ann Dore McLaughlin may keep her post as labor secretary or get another Cabinet position, possibly interior.
interested. Former Sen. John Tower of Texas, an arms negotiator in the Reagan administration who later advised Bush's campaign on national security matters, is expected to be in line for secretary of defense.
interior.
Others mentioned as possible nominees for the labor post include Rep. Tom Ridge, R-Pa., and Constance Horner, now director of the office of personnel management.
Former Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole, wife of one Bush rival Bob Dole, also has been mentioned as a candidate for another Cabinet job.
another chamber of trust. For the powerful post of budget chief, the favorite is Richard Darman, a one-time senior aide in the Reagan White House and later deputy secretary of treasury.
deputy secretary of state Richard Burt, ambassador to West Germany, is known to be interested in the job of national security adviser at the White House.
The career of George Bush
DONALD J. ROBINSON
George Bush spent 13 years in the oil business after entering politics. After two terms, he held the House of Representatives, he held a series of appointments. Ronald Reagan chose Bush as his running mate at the 1980 Republican convention in Detroit. He will become the 41st President of the United States in January.
Reagan chose Bush as the 41st President of the United States. He will become the 41st President of the United States.
Co-founder and director of Zapata Petroleum Corp. of Houston
U.S. ambassador to United Nations
Republican Natt, Committee
Director, CIA
Navy pilot in World War II; lieutenant (i.g.)
Ran for U.S. Senate; lost election
Elected to House of Representatives
Born Milton, Mass., June 12, 1924
1924 1934
1944 1954
1964 1974
1984
SOURCE: Whole Who in America; Looking Forward? (Rush University)
B.A., economics, Yale University
President, Zapata Off Shore Corp.
Ran again for Senate; lost
Twice elected vice president
Democrats criticize Dukakis campaign, look ahead to 1992
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Democrats, once again on the wrong end of a presidential election landslide, took scant at first; then everyday from election victories everywhere but at the top of the ticket and were blaming Michael Dukakis for losing a race they once thought was theirs to win.
win.
"The Dukakis campaign ran the worst campaign of this century," said Robert Slagle, chairman of the Texas Democratic Party.
Democratic Party.
"Clearly, the Democratic Party is alive and well," said Kathy Vick of Louisiana, a former chairman of the Association of State Democratic Party Chairs. "We're in this position where we can elect everybody but a president."
president
waked if she thought Dakukis would get a lot of
criticism from party officials, she replied, "Yep."
criticism from party briberies, so he repaired. "We left Atlanta thinking we could win." she said. "Nobody thought it was going to be a lead-pipe-cinch. It ended up not being close."
While many Democrats were looking back on the 1988 campaign and expressing frustration and anger, others were already looking ahead to 1992.
were already looking ahead to 1922. "Our next political season really does begin today."
said Jesse Jackson on the CBS show "This Morning."
"There are big-city elections in 1989, the census in 1990, reapportionment in 1991," said Jackson, reeling on a list of what he considered important challenges facing the Democrats even before attention is turned to the next presidential contest.
*Residential contest.*
Appearing on the same program, Gov. Bill Clinton, another potential 1992 contender, said, "There's still a very vigorous national Democratic Party out there."
But the Arkansas governor warned against the "L-word" tat plagued Dukakis in his campaign against Republican George Bush.
He said Democrats "have to articulate a philosophy that is not perceived as too liberal. The American people are deeply conservative in general and very progressive in particular. What we have to do is make sure the American people know where the Democratic Party stands."
On the NBC "Today" show, State Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Georgia, said the party ought to "shorten the overall primary season. I think we've got to figure out a way to spend less money in the races and I think we've got to change the procedures substantially so that the primaries have a profile of voters much more like the general election."
Profs predict style of Bush presidency
Policies are unclear, they say
By Barbara Joseph Kansan staff writer
Move over, politics of confrontation a la Reagan; make room for politics of compromise a la Bush.
At least that's the view from Marvin Harder's political rooftop.
"President Reagan was more engaged in the politics of confrontation than of compromise," said Harder, professor of political science. "He had stronger public support than Vice President Bush has. I suspect Bush will make an effort to adhere to the politics of compromise because the Democrats have gained ground in the House and the Senate."
ground in the new Congress, Democrats will strengthen their majority in both houses. In the Senate, Democrats were expected to win 56 seats and Republicans 44 seats, a gain of two seats for the Democrats. In the House, Democrats were expected to win 261 seats and Republicans 174 seats, a gain of seven seats.
seeds, a flag.
He specializes in U.S. politics and political philosophy. He is also director of the University of Kansas Capitol Complex Center and of the Institute for Kansas Legislators, both in Topeka.
Harder said:
"Essentially, Bush won because he successfully generated a negative image of Michael Dukakis," Harder said. "It's going to make it a bit more difficult for him to function successfully. He's going to have to assuage the Democrats."
An attitude of compromise is also necessary because Bush's negative campaign offended Democrats, Harder said.
the Democracy. Harder said he thought Bush could
overcome those difficulties by making an effort to work with Congress. And there is no way to predict what Bush will do as president.
"As to policies, he has given us so little indication of his positions that no one has a clear idea what he will do, including the Republicans in Congress," Harder said.
Another political science professor said Bush would bring little change.
"I don't think Bush will make any major changes in economic or foreign policy," said James Titus, professor emeritus of political science. Why should he? He is riding a ship of those he's done pretty well. If the economy doesn't collapse and the stock market doesn't fall apart, why rock the boat?"
ROCK
He taught at the University of Kansas for 31 years, specializing in U.S. government and political theory.
theory.
However, Titus said the prospect of Bush appointees to the Supreme Court bothered him.
"Once they get in, they can serve forever," Titus said. "They do make policy. The new appointees will probably be conservative, giving us a conservative court."
conservative Titus said that he couldn't tell from Bush's campaign what his policies would be. Nor could he tell whether Bush would have influence in Congress.
"You can't judge his ability to persuade from his vice presidency," he said. "Constitutionally, the only job of the vice president is to preside over the Senate. He has no vote unless there is a tie. But to me, Bush is not a very pushy fellow. He's a team player."
Political Roundup
GORBACHEV CONGRATULATES BUSH:
Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev congratulated President-elect George Bush yesterday and said he hopes that the new administration will continue developing U.S.-Soviet relations. Foreign Ministry spokesman Vadim Perfiliev said an early summit is likely. The Soviets did not express a strong preference in the election, but Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennady Gerasimov said last week that the Soviets would like a prompt summit with the winner.
VOTER TURNOUT LOW: Voter turnout in
Tuesday's election was the lowest since 1924 because the electorate felt little enthusiasm for either presidential candidate and decided the "rational" choice was to stay home, Curtis Gans, director of the Committee for the Study of the American Electorate, said yesterday.
ENGLISH OFFICIAL IN FLORIDA: Florida and Colorado voters overwhelmingly declared English their states' official language. Arizona did likewise, but by a bare 51-49 percent margin.
said yesterday.
The research and public policy organization which is nonpartisan, found the low turnout to be caused by a variety of factors, including the conduct of the candidates, the coverage of the campaign and the use of television advertising. Gans said.
CALIFORNIA REJECTS AIDS INITIATIVE: Californians decisively rejected an initiative that would have forced doctors to report AIDS patients and approved of one allowing AIDS testing for some people accused of crimes.
forces swept to victory in Michigan, Colorado and Arkansas. The Michigan vote to approve a ban on state-financed abortions for poor women, except to save the life of the opposed. was 58 percent in favor, 42 percent in favor. Coloradoans also voted against state-funded abortions, by 60-40 percent. In Arkansas, an amendment forbidding state-funded abortion and protecting life beginning at conception won by 52-48 percent.
crimes.
PRO-CHOICE GROUPS WIN: Pro-choice
BRENSAKR, HAWAII APPROVE VOTING MEASURE: Nebrakasn approved and
Hawaiians rejected constitutional amendments allowing many 17-year-olds to vote in primary elections. The amendment to Nebraska's constitution makes a person eligible to vote "for the calendar year in which such citizen has attained the age of eighteen years."$^{17}$
MARYLAND UPHOLDS GUN BAN: Despite a $4 million media blitz by the National Rifle Association, Maryland voters upheld their state's law banning cheap handguns known as "Saturday night specials."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 10, 1988
Nation/World
7
Air Force grounds B-1s for safety inspections
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Air Force yesterday grounded the nation's fleet of B-1B long-range bombers for a precautionary safety inspection following a crash of one of the new planes in Texas.
The flight suspension order will be followed within the next day or two by specific instructions to B-1B mechanics on what aircraft systems need to be installed. LT. Col. George Peckey, a spokesman at SAC headquarters in Omaha.
The Strategic Air Command, which is responsible for land-based nuclear bomber and missile forces, said the order to suspend flying was a "normal precaution" in the wake of a major accident.
Those instructions will probably reflect the suspicions of the official board of inquiry that is investigating
Tuesday's crash of a B-1B near Dyss Air Force Base, Texas.
Peck said he did not know which systems would be checked and would not speculate on the cause of the crash. He said the inspection was expected to require two to four hours an aircraft.
Eyewitnesses to Tuesday's crash have said they saw smoke and fire trailing an engine on the plane. All four crewmen managed to eject safely from the stricken bomber, which was ashhed in a field outside Abildme, Texas.
The spokesman said the flight suspension order would not affect the B-1B's currently standing alert, and it would take offe in the event of nuclear war.
In Texas, the Air Force set up a roadblock to seal off the crash site yesterday and sent in military investigators.
Nuclear plant restart undecided
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — An atomic reactor at the Savannah River Plant probably will not restart as scheduled at the end of December, further delaying new supplies of critical nuclear weapons materials, said an Energy Department safety official.
In the past few months, nuclear weapons production has ground to a virtual halt. Safety concerns shut down the three reactors at Savannah River near Aiken, S.C.; a contamination incident and related problems closed a building at the Rocky Flats Plant near Denver; and a strike shutdown the Feed Materials Production Center in Fernald, near Cincinnati, Ohio.
"My own view is that we have been making insufficient progress at the site to meet such a (December) date," said Richard W. Starostecki, acting assistant energy secretary for environment, safety and health.
The Savannah江 Reactors are the only facilities in the United States now capable of producing plutonium and tritium, which are needed for nuclear weapons. Plutonium supplies are limited because we reuse problems sometime in the next six months, congressional and administration sources have said.
Starostecki compared the state of the federal nuclear weapons complex to that of the commercial nuclear industry after the accident at the Three Mile Island in October 1979.
Three and half years. He said it would take years to install safer equipment and raise training standards to levels commensurate with those found in private industry.
To outline restart plans and get a firmer grip on a timetable for Savannah River, Starostecki said, he was meeting this week with managers from the department's office in Aken and from the E.I. DuPont
Nemours Co., the contract operator, and the Westinghouse Corp., which is to take over the plant on April 1.
Last month, Energy Secretary John S. Herrington said he hoped to begin a phased start-up of the plant's K-reactor in December, reaching 50 percent capacity in a few months, which began operation in 1954, are restricted to 50 percent of full power due to safety concerns.
"We will provide the secretary with an estimate of what it takes and when . . . by the end of the month," Starostecki said.
A spokesman for DuPont at Savannah River, Becky Apter, said "the last date I heard was December 31," and that was subject to delay.
Starostecki said the department would develop what he called "compensatory" operating procedures to allow safe operation of the closed facilities. For Savannah River, those
steps include:
- requiring reactor operators to practice accident control techniques extensively on a simulator.
- requiring the presence of a degree-holding engineer in the control room.
- adding more highly trained managers and operators to the staffs of he contractor and the regional department office.
- reorganizing and improving communication between contractor and departmental employees, in particular assuring that those who manage and analyze the plant are in close contact with those in the control room.
- developing detailed technical criteria on the operation of the plant, and making sure it is in the hands of the staff to step which has not been taken before.
Mitchell, attorney general convicted in Watergate, dies
analyzing the ability of the reactors to withstand earthquakes.
WASHINGTON — Former attorney general John M. Mitchell, who authorized the Watergate break-in and then went to prison for conspiring to cover up the burglary, died last night of a heart attack. He was 75.
The Associated Press
Mitchell collapsed on a sidewalk in Georgetown and died at 6:27 p.m., said Claudia Dominitz, a spokesman for Energy Washington University Hospital.
Mitchell, the first attorney general to be convicted of a crime, served a
19-month prison term for his role in the Watergate cover-up. He was convicted along with Nixon's chief of staff H.R. Haldeman and the president's domestic counselor, John D. Ehrlichman, who also served $1 \frac{1}{2}$ years in prison.
Mitchell was Nixon's closest adviser. He was Nixon's law partner and mentor, then ran his 1968 and 1972 election campaigns.
Nixon, who was a year older,
leaved up to Mitchell as a father
factor.
News Roundup
JUSTICE OFFICIAL RESIGNING: Justice Department official William Bradford Reynolds, who championed the Reagan administration's controversial civil rights policies for more than seven years, announced Wednesday that he is resigning, effective Dec. 9. Reynolds spearheaded the Reagan administration's opposition to affirmative action hiring and promotion programs and other anti-discrimination tools that had been at the heart of federal civil rights policies since the 1960s. Liberals expressed pleasure over his resignation, while conservatives praised his record.
PLO REQUESTS ARAFAT VISA: The Palestine Liberation Organization said yesterday it has
ISRAELI PATROL KILLS BOY: An Israeli patrol opened fire at stone-throwing Palestinians in Gaza City yesterday, killing a 3-year-old boy and wounding two youths, Arab reports said. The clash came as Palestinians marked
requested a U.S. visa for chairman Yasser Arafat so he can address the U.N. General Assembly after his organization decides whether to declare an independent Palestinian state. Secretary of State George P. Shultz said in a letter made public yesterday that Arafat is not welcome in the United States. A spokesman for the U.S. Mission indicated, however, that Arafat and two other officials of the PLO were likely to be granted limited visas for U.N. business.
the start of the 12th month of their uprising against Israeli occupation. Palestinians blocked roads with burning tires, unfurled illegal Palestinian flags and closed businesses with a general strike.
RESEARCHERS FIND NEW EVIDENCE: Researchers have found evidence that a single gene can help trigger schizophrenia and have estimated its approximate location. Their approach may help find new treatments for a disorder that strikes one in 100 people. The gene also may predispose people to a personality disorder that makes them loners or to other mental conditions thought unrelated to schizophrenia.
located just one block north of the Union • above Yello Sub
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THE CALENDAR WEEK OF JULY 1984
Who knows, with this IBM PS/2, I may be so organized even my socks will match. So stop by today and find out just what the IBM Personal System/2 can do for you.
And this year I really mean it. So I'm buying myself an IBM Personal System/2 computer. Why? Because it comes with everything you need to begin computing right away. Just take a look at the "KU PS/2 Jayhawk Packages" to see what I mean. And not only is the IBM PS/2 easy to learn and use, it offers you the right performance at the right price.
Orders accepted from November 1 to December 7, 1988.
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8
Thursday, November 10. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Living
A true blue tradition on the Hill
ARCH C
Don't step on my white canvas shoes
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
At a university where it's uphill almost any way you turn, comfortable shoes are a necessity. But comfort does not necessarily preclude running for longer distances. The harnessed true blue to a popular campus tennis shoe.
The canvas tennis shoe with the blue label at the heel has topped sales charts in Lawrence shoes stores for several seasons. They are priced at less than $25, and the demand for the style has opened up a market for reasonable facsimiles as well.
Jeff Arensberg, a salesman at Arensberg Shoes, 825 Massachusetts St., said the plain white Keds snaker used to be a seasonal item had become a year-round fashion statement.
"We used to sell them just in the spring and summer. Now they've become the uniform shoe brand."
Elise Hess, Lawrence freshman, owns six pairs just because she likes them.
"I've always had white ones," she said. "They're casual and comfortable, and they go with me."
Kim Smith, Chicago sophomore, said she owned only white Keds.
"I like them because they're cheap. They're practical and comfortable," she said.
Other students are not as brand-conscious, but simply desire the style of show, the plain, low-tech look.
"Mine are fake Keds," said Laura Russell. Overland Park sophomore, who wears her sneakers without shoelaces. "I got them at K Crest Stadium." She has holes in the toes, and I can just trash them."
Jeff Pitcher, Overland Park senior, doesn't have keds but that his wife, Kelly, "must have keds" because she's a football fan.
"They don't have to be Keds, though. As long as they're cheap, white and comfortable."
The less-expensive shoes similar to Keds are available at discount stores. Rhonda Howard, shoe manager at Wal-Mart, 2727 St. st., said she works in the business area for cost $49.95 and can wear in white, red and black
"They're really fast sellers. The white is the best seller." Howard said.
The popular Keds style that started the trend is the Champion Oxford. It is usually favored by women, but Keds also makes a mens' style. Arensberg said the men's version was a slip-on, and while it was a popular shoe, it remained a seasonal choice for guys.
The greatest demand is for the white Champion Oxford, but the style is also available in pink, red, navy blue, khaki and black, or in white leather. Arensburg said the Keds style was
popular for children, and the rubber-toe style still was chosen by many parents for their children.
Besides the Champion Oxford, Keds also markets a high-topped canvas model. Arensberg said the high-tops were a new style and had sold out during the summer.
"We did not order very many because it was new," Arensberg said. "They sold out, and we don't have anymore coming in during the winter, but we'll get more in the spring."
Peggy Colbert, a Penney's salesman, said sales for the high-tops had picked up during the winter. She said the high-tops cost slightly more than the oxford and came in white, black and denim. The leather Champion Oxford comes in white or black and costs about $40.
J. C. Penney, 1801 W. 23rd St., sells the regular oxfords, the leather style and the high-tops.
"They're all quite popular. We keep a good stock of them all the time," Colbert said.
The popularity of the Keds style does not appeal to everyone, however.
Stacey Cook, New Albany sophomore, doesn't like them.
"They're cheesy, and the toms always wear
them. They don't really 'tell' you don't wear
tennis shoes much anyway."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 10, 1988
Sports
9.
Coach hopes for tall feats from the shortest position
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
Depth and versatility at the guard positions are strengths that Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams is counting on to make up for the team's lack of height.
"We're going to have to use our quickness both on offense and defense to make up for our lack of height." Williams said.
Williams said they would play mainly at small forward. The three had spent most of their college careers at off-guard.
Despite their change of position, no one is complaining.
The Jayhawks have seven players 6-foot-5 and shorter, but three of them — senior Milt Newton and junior Freeman West and Jeff Gueldner — will play forward this season.
"With me being the fourth tallest player on the team, I'll probably be playing a lot at the small forward and maybe even power forward." West said. "I don't have any regrets. I just means I will have to learn a new skill. I'm not going to do that. If it's going to help us to win, I'll do anything."
do Antoine against the Spirit Express Monday night. West proved that he could be a force inside, grabbing a game-high 10 rebounds in 16 minutes.
Newton, who was the second leading rebounder on last year's team, averaging five a game, said he would have to rebound more this season.
"Last year when I didn't get seven or eight rebounds a game I was upset." Newton said. "Now this year,
91
With me being the fourth tallest player on the team, I'll probably be playing a lot at the small forward and maybe even power forward. I don't have any regrets. It just means I'll have to learn a lot of new things, and I'm willing to do that. If it's going to help us to win, I'll do anything.'
Freeman West Kansas basketball player
I'll have to try to go out and get eight or nine if it can be done. So every time the ball goes up, I'll be looking to crush the boards."
At guard, the Jayhawks have seniors Lincoln Minor and Scooter Barry, junior Kevin Pritchard and freshman Sean Tunstall.
"I think Lincoln will basically be concentrating more on the two guard," Williams said. "Sean Tunstall is working more on the point. Kevin and Scooter are playing a little bit of both."
Williams said he had not decided who will start when the Jayhawks open the season Nov. 25 at the Great Alaskan Shootout in Anchorage, Alaska. Kansas will play the host school, Alaska-Anchorage.
Barry, Pritchard and Tunstall saw action at point guard in the Jayhawks 91-72 victory against the Express. None of them were recruited as point
guards out of high school
Last season, Pritchard took over at point guard midway through the season and played a major role in the Jayhawks' drive toward the national title. If given a choice, Pritchard said he would prefer off-guard.
"I still believe (off-guard)'s my natural position," the 6-3 Pritchard said. "Right now, I'm learning both the number one and two positions. I think I'll probably be playing both. I tried point guard (last year) and played in the final 16 games. For me, I've always responded in a positive way when more responsibility has been put on me."
Minor said he would be content at point guard or off-guard.
"we have a lot of guys who can either play point guard or the off-guard, and I'm just going to fill the role that the team needs the most and try to be a leader on the court."
try to be a leader in the game.
Newton said Minor could play a big role on this year's squad as a defender.
"To be honest, I think Lincoln Minor is the quickest player on our team." Newton said. "When he wants, he's one of the better defenders in our conference. He'll be a big part of the team."
Tunstall played 10 minutes against the Express before fouling out without scoring.
winnams said it would take time for Tunstall to learn the point guard position.
"I'm asking him to do some new things," Williams said. "I'm asking him to play point guard, and he never played point guard in high school."
KU to play in tennis regionals
By Ken Winford
The Kansas women's tennis team will join 11 other teams in the main draw of the Rolex Regional Qualifying Tournament tomorrow at the Wood Valley Raquet Club in Topeka.
The tournament, one of eight regional events being played, is a qualifier for the ITCA/Rolex National Indoor Intercollegiate Championships, to be Feb. 9-12 in Minneapolis, Minn.
Kansan sportswriter
Minnesota. Other teams playing at the central regional include defending Big Eight Conference champion Oklahoma State, Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas State, Wichita State, Creighton, Nebraska, New Mexico, New Mexico State, Utah and Brigham Young.
The top two finishers in each single event and the winners of each
doubles tournament, along with at large selections, will compete in the national tournament.
Kansas coach Eric Hayes said his team would probably run into some of the toughest competition it has faced this year.
"The very best players in the region are here." Hayes said. "There are a few players here that are among the best in the country. The level of competition here is very high."
Hayes said that for the Jayhawks who have hopes of gaining national exposure, the regional tournament could be a stepping stone to a national ranking.
"This is a very important tournament for us because we want to compete nationally," he said. "But to break in on the national scene."
have to win on the regional level first."
in it. The national indoor tournament will consist of singles draws of 32
Although a few of the Kansas players were suffering from minor injuries, Hayes said the whole team would compete.
"This is such a big tournament it's important for everyone to play." Hayes said. "We are going to run into some tough competition, but our players just have to concentrate on what we've worked on and go out and do it."
payers and doubles draws of 16 teams.
The Rolex regional tournaments involve more than 2,000 players from more than 500 colleges and are the largest event in collegiate tennis.
KANSAS
BASKETBALL
Kansas assistant trainer Mark Cairns, left, ices Kansas junior forward Freeman West's knee in the Jayhawks training room. West strained his right knee during basketball practice yesterday and is expected to be out for 10 days.
Men's team signs first recruit
Point guard Jordan signs letter-of-intent; other players hesitant
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
Kansas signed its first 1988-89 men basketball recruit yesterday, but the possibility that the NCAA could open its case could once again jeopardize the school's recruiting efforts.
Adonis Jordan, a 6-foot point guard from Reseda, Calif., signed a national letter-of-intent to attend Kansas yesterday. His coach at Reseda Cleveland High School. Bobby Braswell, said Jordan had signed the letter and mailed it.
signed. Reached at his home last night. Braswell said neither he nor Jordan had heard about the allegations made by former Kansas player Mike Marshall.
In an article which will appear in the Nov. 14 issue of Sports Illustrated, Marshall said he had made loans to Jayhawk players and that former coach Larry Brown knew about the violations which put Kansas on probation, The Associated Press reported yesterday.
"it's difficult for me to comment on it until I hear the charges." Braswell said. "Really, the first thing I want to do is talk to (Kansas coach Roy) Williams. But, of course, if the investigation is reopened, it would be a concern."
Harold Miner, a player who is considering Kansas, might have second thoughts because of the new allegations, his coach said last night. However, Inglewood (Calif.) High School coach Vincent Combs said Miner was not aware of the new charges.
have been Combs said Miner was bothered by the three-year probation Kansas is serving.
charges,
"I'll have to see what the effect is."
Combs said, "but it will probably have some effect on him."
said, "I'm sure the first investigation was very, very upsetting to him," Combs said. "He doesn't hold that against Coach Williams. He still believes in him very strongly. There's a definite bond there."
"Harold said, 'Well, you know people will look at the program as being tainted,' that's the only thing he's ever said that would strike someone as a negative thing."
Miner, a 6-5 $ _{1/2} $ , 190-pound swingman is considering Kansas, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh and UCLA. Combs said he thought Miner would make his college choice within the next two days.
days.
Bob Gibbons of All-Star Sports
Publications ranks Miner and Jordan as the 33rd and 42nd best high school
players in the country, respectively.
"Adonis is definitely one of the nation's top point guards," Gibbons said. "He's a true point guard in that he's an excellent floor-leader and he moves the ball well. He's the type of recruit that Roy would like to have directing his offense."
Jordan, who averaged 17 points and 14 assists a game as a junior, said yesterday afternoon that he planned to call Miner last night to talk about his decision.
"I spoke to him last week, and he said was either Kansas or UCLA." Jordan said. "Because of the probation, he still has some doubts about Kansas."
Miner and Jordan were teammates on Team Reebok, a California high school all-star team, this summer.
One of Jordan's high school teammates, Lucious Harris, might get one of Kansas' two remaining scholarships if Miner doesn't sign.
Harris, a 6-5 swingman, averaged 17 points and 13 rebounds per game last year.
"It looks like either (Harris) or Harold." Jordan said. "Wheevers says they want to come first. I would like to play with both of them. They're good friends."
Freshman adapting to college play
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas middle guard Matt Nolen isn't used to playing for an underdog almost every game.
Nolen, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, used to play at Rockhurst High School, which won the 5A Missouri state football title last season. He's had to adjust this season to a Jayhawk team that has lost eight of its first nine games.
"It a little bit demoralizing, but I guess if you're pretty tough, you can overcome it," he said. "You have to look at it positively. You don't look at it like we've lost eight games, but like we've won one game."
Nolen, who is only 5-foot-6 and 225 pounds, began the season fifth on the depth chart at middle guard. He got an opportunity to play when middle guards Darrin Samuels and Mike Dinkel left the team early i the season. Now he has started the last two games.
"At the beginning during two a-days, his role was going to be a scout team for us and be redshirts and get into the off-season training program to get him stronger and quicker." Eumont said. "He was happy with that — the chance to earn a job in next spring."
two games Originally, the Jayhawks planned to redshirt Nolen, said defensive line coach Vic Eumont.
"They were telling me they (Nebraska) had an All-American center," Nolen said. "I was nervous. My hands were all sweaty. McCabe got hurt, and I went up and stood next to coach (Mason) and he turned around and yelled my name and I was standing right there. He said, 'You've got to get in there on defense,' and I said, 'Okay, coach, I ready.'" Nolen made
Nolen's first chance to play came when starter Scott McCabe was injured against Nebraska.
On his first two plays, Nolen made two tackles, despite being three inches shorter and 25 pounds lighter than junior Jake Young, the Cornhuskers' center.
In his second collegiate start last week against Kansas State, Nolen made eight tackles and batted down
a pass.
1. pass.
Nolen said he did not view his size as a detriment.
"I knew I was small and what I did was just submarined," he said. "I'd just take out the guy's knees in front of me and just try to crawl under him. Now I've started to just play regular defense."
"I's an advantage because most of the time I can get underneath the centers since I'm a little bit smaller," he said. "Most the people I play against now average about 275. I only weigh about 252 or 230. They're a lot stronger than me. They bench press about 450 or 470. I bench press 300. So I have to concentrate on technique and playing hard."
Being undersized can be both an advantage and a disadvantage.
technique and program His time at Rockhurst prepared Nolen well for playing in the Big Eight Conference, Eumont said.
"He's a heady player and he has excellent technique," he said. "He comes from Rockhurst, and Rockhurst has always been known for doing a great job of coaching. You can see from his techniques that he's been well drilled and well schooled in the game of football."
"I think he's done a really fine job." Mason said. "He's one of those guys who has stuck in there from the day go. When you can stick in there and avoid injuries, you're getting got touches to get into, but to get into it was worried that he could hold his own, but he did hold his own." He didn't have a choice."
Kansas coach Glen Mason has been impressed with Nolan's play.
Nolen almost made the choice to attend Missouri this fall, but decided to come to Kansas because of the chance to play.
"I talked to the Kansas recruiter and they didn't recruit as many linemen, so I thought I'd have a better opportunity to play.
"Until about two weeks before two-a-days, I was going to Missouri," he said. "I wanted to get a scholarship.
"I never in my wildest dreams imagined that I'd play football at KU."
54
Kansas freshman walk-on nose guard Matt Nolen, who was on the sixth team early in the season, has moved to the starting team for the past two games.
Twins' Viola gets Cy Young Award KC's Gubicza finishes third in voting
NEW YORK — Frank Viola, the Minnesota Twins left-hander who led the major leagues in victories in compiling a 24.7 record, was named winner of the 1988 American League Cy Young Award yesterday.
Viola received 27 of a possible 28 first-place votes and 138 of a possible 140 points from the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Dennis Eckersley, Athletics got her first first-place vote and was second with 52 points.
Mark Gubicae of the Kansas City Royals was third with 26 points, Dave Stewart of Oakland had 16, Bruce Hurst of the Boston Red Sox had 12 and teammate Roger Clemens, Cy Young winner in 1986 and 1987, had eight.
The Associated Press
"I didn't know what to expect," Viola said from his Orlando, Fla. home. "I didn't want to worry about it. You don't want to get your hopes too high so that they get shot down."
Viola, the first Twins player to win since Jim Perry in 1970, said there was no reason to be upset that he wasn't a unanimous pick.
"Twenty-seven out of 28, that's not bad, is it?" he said.
Viola, most valuable player of the 1987 World Series, had a 2.64 earned-run average this season and 193 strikeouts, ranking third in the AL in each department.
"It it took me five-plus years to find this kind of consistency. This year is just a carryover from last year." Viola said just before the season ended. "It's been a dream. Any pitcher who tells you he doesn't dream of winning 20 games or starting the All-Star Game or winning the Cy Young is a flat-out liar. I know that after the season ends, it will have been a pretty good year to look back on."
bac bac bac
Viola, 15-2 at the break, was the winning pitcher for the American League in the All-Star Game. His
"He doesn't have an 'S' on his shirt," Kelly said. "A lot of people around here think he's Superman and is strong as an ox every three or four games. There's just no way."
Vioa won 19 consecutive games in the Metrodome over 25 starts between 1974 and 1983, two more home wins during the 1987 World Series.
"Actually, the goal of winning 100 was more important to me." Voila said. "It means you go out there every fourth day, be consistent and stay healthy. I just hope the next 100 are a little easier than the first 100."
"I'd be so close to home and I'd have a chance to make so much money in commercials," he said. "I was MVP of the Word Series in Minnesota last year, and except for Disney World, I haven't endorsed anything."
Although he has settled into Minneapolis life, Viola is a native New Yorker and at one time wanted to play in his hometown.
20th victory of the season came on Aug. 30 against Texas. It also was the 100th victory of his career.
Now he's not so sure he wants to go home.
During the Twins Manager Tom Kelly said Viola's performance created expectations that were impossible to fulfill
"The more I've learned about baseball organizations, the more Ive realized that it would be hard to go home again." Viola said. "We may not get the big commercial money here in Minnesota, but we do get some privacy and some piece of mind."
he's so well liked in *Minneapolis* that when a poll was held asking whom the Vikings should start at quarterback, Vivai got five votes.
---
"He has a better arm than both of them," a respondent said, referring to Vikings quarterbacks Tommy Kramer and Wade Wilson. "And he can't lose in the Dome."
10
Thursday, November 10, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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"The more time they take, the more it hurts us and Coach Williams," Frederick said. "I wish they could tell us (today) what they plan to do. By continuing this into next week they're hurting us."
FREE MOUNTING AND BALANCING
were they meeting
Williams, reached at Allen Field
House yesterday after practice,
refused to comment.
HAPPY DAY TO YOU!
NCAA
Continued from p.1
Frederick said he telephoned the NCAA office yesterday to speak with Berst but was unable to get through because Berst was in a meeting.
"To us, he looked like someone who had been in the war with Marshall and a word." Beers said.
He said the investigator thought he was a friend of Marshall's.
Berst said he considered the reporter's methods unethical.
He also said the NCAA had not known about possible loans to Manning until the article was published.
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Frederick said that he and Budig
"Marsshall withheld the information during our interviews with him and must have told (Marx) outside of the interview session," he said.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL RECRITU: While the University of Kansas women's basketball team didn't sign any recruits yesterday on the early signing period, it will probably receive a commitment today.
Berst said Marx never explained to the investigator that he was a writer.
Sannon Kite, a 5-foot-11 guard from Elk Horn, Iowa, said Tuesday she planned to sign a national letter of intent with the Jayhawks today at her high school.
The high school senior was the second leading scorer in Iowa last season, averaging 54 points a game. Kite picked KU over Brigham Young, South Dakota and Augustana (S.D.)
conferred about the situation late yesterday afternoon, but he would not determine a course of action until they spoke with the NCAA. Frederick said he would try to contact Berst today.
Berst confirmed that a Sports Illustrated reporter, Jeffery Marx, was present at two interviews in which an NCAA investigator had questioned Marshall about his involvement in the violations.
Now Servicing Vehicles. Call For Appointment.
Kite, who made a recent visit to the campus, said she was impressed with the University.
Kite said she expected to play guard at KU.
"The overall atmosphere at Kansas was very appealing to me," Kite said. "I was impressed with the coaching staff and the players on the team. I feel like the women's basketball team at Kansas has a lot of hotness."
NEED NOT BE A
MEMBER TO BUY
"It will take some time to adjust," she said. "I'm expecting a much
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faster game with a higher caliber of
play. I'll be looking to improve in all
aspects of my game."
RE-SEIGN RELIEVER:
Riefiep pitcher Ken Dayley has signed the two-year contract to which he agreed last week at terms that were not disclosed, the St. Louis Cardinals said yesterday.
CARDS RE-SIGN RELIEVER:
Jordan, the league's MVP, scoring champion and defensive player of the year last season, also was credited with nine steals as the Bulls handed Boston its second loss in three games under new coach Jim Rodgers.
Dayley, 29, pitched in 54 games last summer, compiling a 2-7 record to go with five saves and a 2.77 earned-run average. In four years with St. Louis, he has a 15-21 record with 25 saves and a 3:16 ERA.
The defeat also ended Boston's 45 game home winning streak against Cleveland.
including 19 in the fourth period, and the Chicago Bulls ended a 12-game Boston Garden losing streak last night with a 110-104 victory over the Boston Celtics.
The Celtics, led by rookie Brian Shaw, fought back and led by as much as three points in the third before settling for a 79-78 edge.
Dayley, a left-hander who last month was among major league players named free agents by an arbitrator because of albinism. By club owners, was reported to have signed a contract for $1.8 million.
Chicago, which hadn't won in Boston since March 6, 1985, led by as much as 10 points in the first half as Chicago scored leading the Bulls to a 54-37 advantage.
"Ken struggled following an early-season injury but showed continued consistency late in the season," Manager Whitey Herzog said of the 1988 performances by Dayley. "I truly believe that there's no better left-right (relief pitching) tandem from Dayley and Todd, Worrell."
But Jordan, who had eight points in the third quarter, caught fire again in the faint, putting Boston ahead to 3-2. But the team hamper with just over eight minutes left.
"They asked me my name at both meetings, and both times I told them," said Marx, Washington correspondent for the Lexington (Ky) Herald-Leader. "I would have told them I was a reporter if they had asked me, but they never asked."
JORDAN BOMBS CELTICS:
Michael Jordan scored 52 points
"He was here and we are on probation, and he was at Kansas and they are on probation. That may be a connection," said McNeese State basketball coach Steve Welch, who arrived at McNeese State a year after Marshall played there.
Horace Grant had 15 points and
Sam Vincent 13 as the Bulls evened
the game.
Berst said loans made to a player by a representative of the University's athletic interests would be a violation of NCAA rules, but he said he did not know whether the loans to Manning would fit into that category.
Marshall, 26, a native of Shelbyville, Ky., said he received "thousands of dollars" from McNeese State boosters when he played there.
Grinker said neither he nor Manning had been contacted by the NCAA.
"I would have to review the information first and determine if this is new." Berst said.
At Kansas, Marshall and Brown were so close that others at KU referred to Marshall as Brown's son. Brown confirmed that characterization to Sports Illustrated, "Mike Marshal has been living off me. He adopted me years ago."
MANNING
Earlier this week, Brown told the Topeka Capita-Journal, "Yea! I'm mad at Mike. He adopted me, and he's done nothing but hurt me. Actually, I think he likes all this attention."
Wagon Wheel Cate 1401 Ohio
图
to the writer," he said.
Jeffrey Marx, who wrote the magazine's story, denied that he misrepresented himself to the NCAA.
Mon: Hamburger Steak
Tues: Mexican Special
Wed: Chicken Breast & Fries
Thurs: Chicken Fried Steak
Fri: French Dip
Specials 11:00-2:30
Daily Lunch Specials 11:00-2:30
---
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVICE
TRACEY GARCIA
Haircuts $6.50
For appointments call 842-3699
2123 Ridge Court
THE COMIC CORNER
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
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No sure of it? Worried about driving in the snow? Finance a problem?
Consider being well get your round trip tickets ready! Collegeiate Winter ski break so
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1-800-721-5911
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ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM A
TENSION HEADACHE NOW?
call Kathy Gorman immediately at Watkins Memorial Health Center (913)864-9595 to see if you qualify for a medication study
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP
ADAMS CAMPUS. CAN YOU SURVIVE THE CHALLENGE?
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Classified Ads
FINANCIAL INCENTIVE PROVIDED
Alvamar Ladies Bazaar Saturday, Nov. 12
11:00 4:00 Castle Tea Room 13th & Massachusetts.
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce your stress and don't forget the GIFT CERTIFICATES make you more valuable. TICKETS are budget order, but either 25% off Call 814-696-1 Remember, you knit it!®
Student Senate
is accepting applications
s accepting applications
for the following positions:
- Treasurer
- Administrative
Assistant
Applications due in the Student Senate Office,
105 Burge Union by
Friday Nov.18 at 5 p.m.
Questions? Call 864-3710 Paid for by Student Senate
ECKANAR discussion group forming. For more info call 749-1127.
Lunar Academy
Lunch Time, Nov. 13th, 15th, 18th and 21st Tues.
KU Students, faculty, staff and family members
You are invited to participate in a
sale of KU's new application on
the SUA office. Deadline: Mon, Nov 21.
For more information mail 864-397-1657.
Mary Kay Cosmetics, Contact Deeann Wilks at
811-907-6625.
$&11 THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI &
Ski Lodge, Skiing Resort
$&24 $&12宝利路 golf course transportation.
Deluxe condominiums with fireplace, jacuzzi,
1 book from Ibex. Contact David $&14; 6160. Limited.
Hillel
לִילו
Friday Nov. 11
Habitat Dinner & Kisiklai Service
6 p.m., Hilli House
RSVP by Wednesday Nov. 9
For more information call
Hilli House, 749-4242
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting Professional music in a large, open Party Thrust JD Ray Velesquez 841-7083 GOOD VIBRATIONS the most affordable mobile music for any occasion Blt Iriann 841-9484 JGHN G I Briann Parties, B days, singing 841-1677
Late night munchies
Stop by Johnny's Classic Burgers!
Open:
10 a.m.-midnight
Sun - Tues.
10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
Wed. - Sat.
Johnny's
Classic Burgers
9th & Illinois
c
---
FOR RENT
2 BR Apk Waher Dryer Micro Dispone, Clare
3 BR Apk Waher Dryer 4450 ml -196-6243
3BR Apk Waher Dryer 294-10728
2 bedroom apt. on 24th & Iowa. Close to the bus route.
Call 844-9676. Rent: $15
2 bedroom duplex with one car garage available next semester on KU bus route. Phone 841-2107.
2 bedroom, 853 E.I. 138; 3 bedroom house 812 Concette
2 bedrooms. 804 Nissan. 842 Missouri. 824 Erie.
Available Jan. 1.2.10bed apn, new carpet, new
paint, and appliances, new porch, close to
campus, cats only $150 month - utilities 749.5213 or
749.656
2nd Semester Subbasee - Nassim Place Apts 2
1944; bachit, bathfill or unfurnished
7944;妒契
Mastercraft
Available January thru May. Two bdrm apartment w/ fireplace. Sunrise Place 837 Michigan Call 643-9034
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4-bedroom apartments available immediately & near Kail. Call to 841-721-8412, 842-725-8412, or 749-2415
11
Completely Furnished Stations. 1:23 A a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 860-749-3491 or 749-3491 Mastercraft Management
FANTASTIC NEW APARTMENT one bedroom,
Dishwasher, Wastewater (Dryer), Microwave,
Bus Route. Just what you are looking for! ! #841-8271.
841-1971
FEMALE roommate needed. Very close to campus, extremely spacious. Laundry facilities, off-street parking. Call Reth 843-1095
Roommate wanted to share beautiful apartment in PepperTree Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes own bedroom, bathroom, fireplace, and free water. Please call 212-876-3540.
Female Roommate wanted to share large two story house $200/month. All utilities paid. 841-0656
Female roommate wanted for nice 1 bedroom duplex. Overlocks Park, Park 2, from bus. 4 greatroommates $125 + utilities $84/Z446
Female roommate needed: Orchard Corners furnished apt, own & room/bath $170 + utilities Available now or 2nd semester. 843-5392.
For Subluez, 2BD, 1 bath, new carpet, quiet room, great kitchen, $375 monthly. 841-569-106
For subluez, spacious upstairs #1800 monthly.
Great Location. Great Call (#749-254) or
842-5572
Fully furnished one-bedroom, apartment
Civilized; big enough for two. Must go in Nov.
10th or Arkansas. $340 - utilities 841 0732 or 794-2415
Jamette
January Sub-lease $165 + facilities. Own room.
On route C Mary 841-3375
Large ! bedroom apt. AHoven Place. Quire, very clean. salt half of November. Free if lease is signed by the 3rd. Call 841-9528 or 841-1212.
Lease for spring semester, furnished 2 large bedrooms, bath, laundry, close to campus with most great locations. Call 612 9783 NWU!
Living with a roommate from Hell? Downtown apt available Dec. 1, $165/mo. All utilities paid Call 749-4355
Moving to KC? Person needed to share 2 bedroom
nort; close to KU Medical Center. Prefer female
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 10, 1988
LUXURY 2 bedroom 2 bath apartment available starting Dec Jan. Large rooms, clean, quiet W/D宿舍, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, tennis. 842-3025
NEW. 2 bedroom 1 bath apwr dryer, and microwave.介机 on bus route. Available Jan. 1, 4:45pm Call: 841-2962 or Woodway Apartments. New Hidden Meadows Townhouses. Two Bedroom and Two Bedroom with Behind and Fireplace 749-1414. 841-3919. 2822 home. Inkar Beauty
Moving to the KU Medical Center. Prefer female large bedroom 701 + 2* utilities: B606-540-467 NASIMH Hall Sullasee. Will give money for deposit. Starting second semester. Call Rob
Sublease next semester. Nonsmoking roommate
New York, NY. Nonsmoking. 853.6088
One large bedroom for sukabene at Hanover Place
immediate $350/month, water paid, and furniture
paid.
11/90 m / 3 - utilities. Near campus. 842-6688
Sub lease immediately until May 88. A room with a view. Apple Lane Studio. Desperate! (913) 491-3036
Sublease (Jan 1 May 31) 2 bedrooms, 1½
spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK
Families welcome. 845-9021.
*pacissos 2 br. apt. near campus. Take over lease.
$980m. 843-1215
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Newly remodeled
- On KU bus route
- Great location
- Gas heat
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
26th & Iowa 843-6446
HILLVIEW APTS
1733 West 24th 841-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 182 bedroom units
* Laundry facilities
* On bus route-near shopping
* Water paid
* Some with gas paid
* Ample off-street parking
* Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
LOCATION
Available Now!
Spacious, Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You, to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
meadowbrook
TRAILRIDE STUDIO available for sublease spring semester Queter, clean location (tus route, laundry, pool, Dillon 5) phone 749-4936 at 2a/2m evening or weekends
Sunflower House is taking applications for Spring 8. We offer private rooms, TV/VCR game, and lady faculties. Low rent, all amenities, sunny location, co-operative co-operation living at (L). Call 769-821 or 841-844
WALK to class! Available Jan. 1 4HR, 3 BATH,
modern duplex. $725/month, Mail 843-7386.
WANTED - Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 842 2357.
FOR SALE
1979 Ford Pinto, Excellent condition. Call Ray
9am-5pm 864-3450, after 7:30 862-9467
Sun-Spm 84954, aforest 7.824 96427
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and jewelry, costume jewellery, handmade crafts, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playsbys, collector and chepo rock n-roll music, tools for art and craft, slot machines, slot cards. Maxfield Parrish art, deco, advertising items, clocks, watches, desks, antique tools, Royal Tool Company, Quantum S.L.F.A MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sun. and Sun. 15 for both rental info 84954 66327
Apple iComputer with expanded memory.
Monochrome monitor, 2 disc drives, modem and various programs, $800 or OBO. Elian Nix 175cm.
AUDIO SALE- Cassette decks, Teac, JVC, Sony from $75 - $150. Must sell. 841-9484
Beautiful, black 5-piece drum set, Dijian zilian.
Call: 841-4211 weekends 11:30pm.
Cannondale Mtn. Bike, White Month old, Jeff
841-2967.
Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat & Sun.
10-5.
CRX rear deck 6x9 Yamaha 8-inch Alpine Subs
Jeff 841.297.
Best offer. Call BK before 3:30 pm at 842 147527.
FREE information on the BKA Police Photo
NOW in NU. Also special offer to SAVE
the money you spend! BKA Police will
detect shi raker including New BKA BkL,
BKA BkM, and BKA BkR.
GOVT SURPLUS!" New G I Overshoes. Combat boats, and safety-toe boats. Wool, blankets, gloves, seals, & fieldmats. Field Jets, Overcams.
Cannagefly Clothing Also CARHARTT WORKWEAR Morn. Sat 9-5 | Open Sundays *11* Christmas 12-4. St Marys Surplus Sales. St. Marys, Ks 1-477-2734
Go to Miami, Fl. for Thanksgiving and or Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for a discount price. Two 749 5737 after 6:00 pm for more info.
MAC with dual drive. Imagewriter, mouse,
and software $210 080 OBO-8624-343 nights.
Government Homes from $1.00 "U Repair". Also tax delinquent property. Call 805-644-9333. Ext. 769 for info
MCAT study material from G.A.P.S. Improved my score dramatically. Originally $350.00 Best offer. 843-8796
Men's 10-speed bike $80. Acoustic guitar with case
$80. Both excellent condition 842-2488, keep trying
Mobile DJ system back on sale. 1000 watts sound,
luzes, lasers. 749-1500
Nagel, lithograph print, The Book, framed, $80.
call, John at 841, 1790.
Naismith Hall contract for sale. Private room or for two.Call 641-4837
Rock e. roll · Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on easter Saturday and Sunday
Quinnell's Fleet Market, 811 New Hampshire
SAF. P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $450 sell 200. Must see to appreciate. Many
functions. 841-7564.
Trailers Wm-60 Wm-
Trailer 12' w & d shed deck, AC store
7' w & d shed deck, AC store
Trumpet - Bundy with case, excellent cond.
842.9064 $200 OBO
AUTO SALES
1972 Plymouth, reliable transportation. FM cassette deck, runs great $700. Jaeon 842 3165
1981 Toyota Tercel AM/FM cassette, good condition
roost. cost: $1250.00 for: @884.2219
62 Beele Runs well Drive it home for $350
749-7392
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
per vehicle (Chevy). Surprise parcel
guidance 1-800-657-2222. Guide 1-800-
657-2222.
Mirian is a beautiful back 1983 Mazda RX-7. She
was the model for Gert at 16 in 1982 and
move leave for Gert at 17 in 1983.
LOST-FOUND
LOST: Maroon glasses with a maroon snap case
BAD 9172. Could be毒蛇。
Business Manager/
Editor
Applications
Business Manager applications are due Tuesday, November 8th at 5 p.m. in 200 Stauffer Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Wednesday, November 9th. Applications for Editor are due Friday, November 11th at 5 p.m. in 200 Stauffer Flint Hall. Interviews will be held November 14th.
HELP WANTED
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.
journalism experience. Interested persons may pick up applications in 119 Saffron Flint Hall, the Student Senate office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
2 positions - Custodial worker - each 15 hours per week. Contact Personnel Office, Student Health Service.
The University Daily Kanzu is now accepting applications for the Editor and the Business Manager positions. These are laid out results and request.
ARLINES NOW HIRING. Flock Attendance.
Job Title: HR Assistant
Lations to Stork. Entry level position.
Lations to Stork. Entry level position.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Attention. Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for full time job positions. Move avail starting from September 2016.
Christmas Help $9.90 (Hours Flexible)
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
912-358-9675
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students part-time position is available with Overland Drilling Company to conduct interview please call Argon Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at
Banquet arrangements are now open at the Adams Alumni Center. Applicants must submit a letter of interest, two semester service hardeners, & bastesses are needed. Above average 1:260 Roadway using conditions. Average 1:260 Roadway E.A. E.O.
Great SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Colorado Rockies near Estes Park as counselors, cooks, nurses, office wranglers, aid directors, and children Room and Laundry accredited. Must be at least 19 to apply Interviews on campus in January Write CHLEE COLORADO CAMPS. Dep. C Box 6241; Denver, CO 80201; FOR THE SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE!
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$59,230. Jr. Now
Hiring. Your Area. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9758
for current Federal list.
NANNIES needed to live and work in the exe-
triment, D.W.C. area. Must be responsible
mature and enjoy working with children.
Give up any more information Call
Jen (in K.C. 1-722-6800)
Kansas and Hurge Union Bookstoreers hiring temporary help. Jobs posted level 5. Kansas Union Books, Inc.
Up to $90 per week Positions nationwide East, West, South, Midwest, 1 year commitment 1-800-723-4633. National Nanny Resource and Referral
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening help and delivery drivers. Start at $6.90/hr. Apply in person or by phone. Mail resume to: 341-728-2288.
cart-time positions available at Naisimith Hall for both the commercial breakfast packs and other position benefits and flexible hours. If you need the money to travel or work in another desk and fill out an application before vacancies appear, contact us.
Parttime Child Care Worker to work 4-9 M.T in residential treatment for boys ages 12 and up. Send resume to Alta Shaheen KIKE check. Salary耶 due depending upon education and experience. For interview call Olatha Shaheen area. For interview call
Parttime data entry audit person needed ha to mo nite 6 days per week. Must be dedicated, dependable, and a self-starter. Computer skills required. Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, KS 6040.
PART-TIME
Furniture Delivery Personnel
Apply in person Thompson Crawley
East 20th, East 22nd, Terrace
*time work machines*. Packer Clime is examining the feasibility of having *I*'s production shift jobs a.m. 12-2noon, 12-4noon, 4-6noon, p.m. 12-noon, 12-4noon, 12-6noon, 12-midnight-14a.m, 12-midnight-14a.m, 12-midnight-14a.m, 12-midnight-14a.m, pay $4.50/h. If interested call dear 8029. Ask for part work time
Pizza Shuttle is immediately available both full-time and part-time drivers. Day and evening hours are limited. We have daily paid mileage, and bonuses. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shutter.
*pizza Delivery drivers- hourly wage plus commission must have own transportation and insurance. Apply in person. Pizza Shoppe 601 Gawling, Goldbridge Shopping Center.
POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT Graduate Student Assistant
DUTIES: Assists program advisor and assistant director with clerical duties relating to study a broad program coordination and documentation at KU. Demonstrated clinical experience, excellent typing, word processing and organizational skills. Must be able to work four-hour shifts. S L A R Y, $ 5 0 0 $ 5 5 0 For a more complete description and application
Ann Blackhurst, Department Secretar
Office of Study Abroad
203 Lippincott Hall
University of Kansas 6045
Ann Blackhurst, Department Secretary
Applicants must submit a resume and the names of the applicant(s) to the appropriate mailing address. Planned applications must be received by open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
SUMMER JOBS OUTHITS! Over 5,000 Open
Workings in Favorite Locations!
Stamp for Free Details! 13 E. Wyoming,
Minnesota.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines, & Amendment Plan applications. Apply for positions in internships, internships, and positions. For more information and an application, write National College Recreation Service PO Box 2876, San Diego, CA 92105.
Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for Day &
night late shifts. Above avg; starting salary.
Apply between 2.5. 1618 W. 23rd
MISCELLANEOUS
On TN, VMCs, Jewelry, Sternee, Musical in
TVS, WCS, MAE, J Hawkins & Jewelry
On TN, VMCs, Jewelry, Sternee, Musical in
TVS, WCS, MAE, J Hawkins & Jewelry
ONE WAY AIRLINE TICKET, K.C. - SEATTLE
DEC 22 $90 .843-6000
MAX U. HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT??*
OAK, Basketball, Volleyball, Mast be modeling()
Duc, Nashes, I. C. B. Y. What a time the two towers had
had. Happy 21st!! ELM
Study the Pooh, it is eight years or one month!
Oh well, one month of the best times ever
Thanks. I love you Love. That Girl. Your Pooh.
SWM. Grad Student. nice looking, somewhat shy,
looking for sincere, nice SWF, 21:04.
Photo appreciated. Lawrence, Ks. 6544.
Photo appreciated.
PERSONAL
CRB and Laura. The next time we party go partyhopping let's try actually going in. *Six Techs*'s Diddy
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841:2345 1419 Mass
Sweaters, 40's jackets, berets,
wool skirts, coats, new
vintage jewelry, scarves.
To the guys with *"!"* who streaked through our store, we are anxious awaiting you encore!
L. M.T. You are so wonderful I love you more than ads can express. Forever. S.P.S.
Looking for ON CAMPUS?
BUS. PERSONAL
HARPER
Tina P. - youre so such a cutie! Look out, watch your Pong! Tong up youre 12! The hats and have some fun. If you decide to go with Pokey the room think that was Okay! Love! Your dog
Fall is here
Low cost Major Medical insurance for
dependent, 2 children with $25 deductible only
$6.6 million With parent slightly higher Kansas
Insurance Service #821-161
Government Photos. Passport. immigration. visas. Modeling, theatrical. Advanced fine art portfolio. Sites can be a valuable asset to your art future. Tum Swells 749-1611.
SKI Christmas break! Trips are filling out for 4 great locations! Call me. Ann. #411-2000, your Sunshuter Tours rep. for details here it's too late!
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. 841-2451 M-S 10-5-30 Thur. '11 B
SUNLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without parental testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 842-2361
CHESTER Thanks for the batting practice.
mage jewelry, scarves.
HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass, Suite 201. 749-0123
Looking for
Please see page 2
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND. TX
STEAMBOAT. CO
DAYTONA BEACH. FL
MUSTANG ISLAND. TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND. SC
SPRING BREAK '89
Trips Available Now
Don't Wait Until It's Too
Late!
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
1-800-321-5911
THURSDAY Dollar Days
READING
Chef's Surprise
Cheap!
Domestics
$1.00
Imports
$1.50
Johnny's
Up & Under
401 North 2nd
TAN, HEALTH & HAIR SALON 25th & Iowa — HOLIDAY PLAZA — 841-6232
Tanning 8 sessions only $20
Haircut with shampoo & style $10
Perm cut extra $32
Hot Tub lhr. private §5//person
HealthClub $15 month
2 month minimum
SERVICES OFFERED
Astrology. Would you like to know about me, special more, about yourself, or what will in turn help you find your life self addressed, stamped envelope to Astrology Operation P. Box 341, Marx Moor 64989
Bachelor Portraits are still the greatest gift idea for any senior. A collection of posing assistance. For more information call 1-800-725-6344.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered (thru Midwest
Drivers Education Program)
years of driver's license认可. Transportation
French tutoring. Translations Paper revisions done on computer. Expert work 8 years experience. Job 843-4102
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling: For free, conditional, 24 hour referrals, call KU. Info at 804-356-2000 or Headquarters at 841-2245. Sponsored by GLOK
K. U. INFORMATION CENTER 804-3506. Campus, community events. University procedures. SUICIDE CRISIS HELP, referrals. 24 hrs/day.
PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICES: Ekatchone
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W
services. PASSPORT 60, Art & Design Building,
room 206. 844-6767
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.)
teaching experience. Call Axel at 841-7661
Need a babysitter?? Experienced girls can help.
Math tutor - Master's in math and six years
teaching experience. Call Alex at 841-7601
No job too big or small. Call 814-6678.
PRIVATE WAREHOUSE, OBGAN, and Abortion Safer.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park...(931) 491-8678.
TYPING
Leaving Town?
11,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Job# 849.79445 or Lisa 841-1915
2 Smart Typesetting. Dissertations, Thesis,
Paper, Resumes and more. Spelling corrected
and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts
Low typing prices. 749-7240
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality type . 843, 065, days or evening.
842-4668 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc. IBM correcting Selectric, silenced correcting. 843-654
Accurate work processing. Meadowbrook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience. Call evening before 7:49 p.m. (866) 253-2011
ACT NOW - Papers, resumes, & cover letters
WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3469
Airline Tickets at airline counter prices no service charge
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary,
$1.25 double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence.
Mrs. Mattie 841-1291
ATTN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS : Word processing service available near you. APA format experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak,
843 6708
Donna's quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term papers, letters, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser
Print. Spelling corrected. 842-7247.
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 2734-4119 In Topeka. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer.
Call R.J. Tying Service 841-5942. Papers, Palgas, Legis, Thesis. No calls after 9 P.M.
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
Expert Typet - Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
**BON FEXING TYPE** 841-8538
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum: 7291-
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check
M.F. 10.5.811.9779
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
SPEEDTERM Word Processing Service. Accurate and reliable, spelling checked. Call 843-276.
***Ttyping at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 843-011-94, 4-4 Monday–Thursday or 9-9 on Friday.
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
TYPNING/WORD PROCESSING.Done on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes Letter-Quality Legal. Printer exp. Laura. 542.3782 Leave Message
THEWORLDTOCRIS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these resumes, commercial, IBM-PAC, MPC, CPM or dot matrix, laser, since 1893. 843-167
Pregnant and need help? *call* Birthright at 843-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
word processing, paper; Papers, resumes,
applications, dissertations. Also, assistance with
grammar, spelling, composition, editing. Hve M.D. Sense; 841-0697, 841-6254
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne. 842-7058.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Lawrence. 841-5716.
Quality Tuiting, Economics, Statistics,
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dennis. 842-1055
Student group use full color cards to advertise your activities. Call 842-3444 for details
Word processing IBM Okidata printer $1.25/don
file space page. Call before 10 pm. 749-100-
Kathy
WANTED
DESPERATELY Seeking guitar or keyboard amplifier. Stave. 841-5945
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse. $2 rent/utilities, bus route, fireplace, pool, washer/dryer (Call 749-0993)
Formal roommate wanted for spring sessions.
Formal roommate needed to attend all alliances. Call 842-3695. Leave Message.
Formal roommate wanted second semester to attend all alliances. Call 842-3695. Leave Message.
$100/month + 1 months. Close campus and join community.
Female roommate wants: January Sublease,
Garage fireplaces? 1₃ rent utilities. Call 841-9842.
I'll buy you the VHS recorder player & you can
have a peek at 841.718.
Policy
Roommate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne 749-4281.
One needed to share beautiful new townhouse
Private room and bath with all amenities. (In bus
route: 749-7205)
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester.
Call 749-5073. Leave message
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1 You will have your own bedroom and your own bathroom. Male roommate for next semester. $175 utilities a month, ten minute walk to campground.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
IS THERE REALLY A SANTA CLAUS?
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE needs a SANITA.
Thursday evening, and weekends. Nov. 7-The
sisters' youth, old or young, need appl. (
842-9811)
Second Semester. Female Roommate wanted:
$100 and 2 utilities. Walking distance or bus route.
Call 842-7853
Rosmani rented Housegeorge Apartments at $290 a month * + y utilities. Call Tim at 1656 824-2375.
Rosmani rented Housegeorge Apartments at $290 a month * + y utilities. Call Julie before or after午 162 446-6277.
Spring Semester. Quiet, studious roommate wanted $145/mo. plus *u*utilities. Close to campus. Call 842-1626.
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified rates are based on consecutive day insertions only
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
Bond box ad please add $4.00 service charge.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect correction of any advertisement.
Tearthes are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
Deadlines
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 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Classified Rates
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0-15 3.10 4.55 6.50 10.80 16.15 20.40
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21-25 4.20 6.25 8.75 13.60 19.55 24.40
26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00 21.30 26·5
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 16.45 22.95 28.35
Classifications
In
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help waited 800 services offered
001 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 tipping
001 retail 310 office 300 shipping 800 services offered
Name
Address (phone number published only if included below)
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins___
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OJLOW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
University Daily Kansan
Education, NJ 66043
JERSEY NJ 66043
THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Ho! Just like every time, you'll get about 100 yards out before you start heading back."
---
2.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 10. 1982
FOR RENT
2 BH Ap. Water Dryer, Dryer, Mini Dispail, Close to Downtown / Campus 4$435/mo 1-296-6254 weekdays, 749-1072 weekends/nights
2 bedroom apt. on 24th & Iowa. Close to the bus route. Call 842-9269. Rent $135
11
2 bedroom duplex with one car garage available next semester on KU bus路. Phone 841-2107.
2 bedroom. 853 E.I. 130. 3 bedroom house. 812 Cm² for 3 bedrooms. 901 Missouri. 842-2288.
2nd. Semester Sublease - Naimish Place Apts : 2
8749 jacuzzi hutbub, furnished or undfurnished.
7849 4292
Available.li, 1.2 bedroom apt., new carpet,
paint and appliances, new porch, close to
camps, cars okay. $350 month - utilities. 749-5213 or
749-9606.
Mastercraft
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4-bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call 841-7212, 841-7252, 841-1292, or 749-2415.
Available January thru May: Two bbfm apartment w/fireplace: Sunrise Place 877 Michigan Call 841 9043
Complete Furnished Studios, 1-23 & a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call us at 894-2491. Mastercraft Management
FANTASTIC, NEW APIRIMENT one bedroom,
Dishwasher, Washable (Dryer, Microwave,
Bus Route, Just what you are looking for!) **841 8271,
841 1971**
- most house wanted to share beautiful apartment in Peppertree Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes own bedroom, bathroom, fireplace, living and free water. Please call 789-6083.
FEMALE roommate needed. Very close to campus, extremely spacious. Laundry facilities, off street parking. Street Bell 843-1999
Female Recommitee wanted to share large two-story house $20/month. All utilities paid
Dexter roommate wanted for nite 4 bedrooms
duplex. Overlocks Park, 2 blocks from bus,
4 great rooms! $125 - utilities 841-2746
Roommate roommate needed. Orchard Corners furnished apt, *own room* & *bathroom* $170 - utilities. Available now or 2nd semester. *845-3892*.
For Subluex, 2BD, 1 bath, new carpet, new fridge, quiet place, kitchen sales, $37,849. 841,659. For subluex, spacious upstairs at $500. Moorwalk driveway. Great location. Call 494-249 or 494-269.
Fully furnished one-bedroom, apartment. Civilized
e.g. Big enough for two. Must go in Nov. 10th
& Arkansas $340 - utilities 841-0732 or 794-2415
Janette
January Sub-lease $165 + utilities. Oven room.
On route. Call Mary 841-3375.
Large 1 bedroom apt. Hanover Place, Quint, very clean, half of Nov. Free if lease is signed by the 3rd. Call 841 9528 or 841-1212
Lease for spring semester, furnished 2 large bedrooms, hath, hath, laundry, close to campus with many arrival locations. Call 814-9973 NOW!
Living with a roommate from Hell? Downtown
apt available Dec. 1, $165/mo. All utilities paid.
Call 789-4153
Moving to KCl+ Person needed to share 2 bedroom apt. close to KiU Medical Center. Share female.
LUXHXY2 start bedroom 2 bath apartment available starting Dec. Jan. Large rooms, clean, quiet W/D hookups, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, tennis. 842-3025
Large bedrooms 8175 + i² attitutes 609-466-466
NAISMITH HALL Sublease. Will give money for deposit. Start second semester. Call Rob 841-907-663
NEW I2E 2 bedroom apc Wasp, driver, and microwave included on my mobile. Wynden Hardware Inc.
pwr wusher drive, armoor
and microwave increase
1.443 hrs; call 681-2967 or Woodway Apartments
681-2967; call 681-2967 or Woodway Apartments
Two Bedroom and Two Bedroom with Study and Fireplace.
750-1141, 841-919, 852 Iowa Back Behind
S-Lose immaculate) until May 9. A room with a view: Apple Lake Studio Desperate (013) 826-7533.
Large one bedroom for sublease at Haverow Place immediately. $830/mo, water paid, and furnishes. Call 612-797-5455.
Sublease next semester Nonsmoking roommate
Sublease (Jan 1, May 31) 2 bedroom, 1½
spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK
Families welcome @ 943-0821
Spacious 2 br. apt, near campus. Take over lease.
$3000. 843-1215
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
- Newly remodeled
- On KU bus route
- Great location
- Gas heat
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
26th & Iowa 843-6446
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 841-579
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 182 bedroom units
* Launched facilities
* On bus route-near shopping
* Water paid
* Some with gas paid
* Ample off-street parking
* Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable. Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
842-4206
WALK to class! Available Jan. 1 4BR, 3 BATH,
modern duplex. $725/month. Call 843-7386.
Sunflower House is taking applications for Spring 89. We offer private rooms, VTC/vram, and laundry facilities. Low rent, all utilities, and a cooperative living ability. Ivy call 761-4944 or 761-4943.
TRAILRAGE STUDIO available for sublease spring semester. Quiter, clean, great location (bus route, laundry, pool, Dilton's). Phone 749-436J after 2pm晚餐 or weekends.
WANTED : Person or person to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested please call 718-642-3950.
FOR SALE
1979 Ford Pinto Excellent condition Call Ray
9am-5pm 864-4950, after 7:30 864-9467
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, music instruments, children's playhouses, Playbables, collectors and chequered rock-n-roll records, vintage clothing books, coins, baseball cards, toys and stuffed animals, advertising items, clocks, watches, anti-tarnish
advertising items (these include Dallusion, and so much more it will blow you away!) QUANTILLE S. FLEA MARKET 801 New Hampshire. Open every day from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Call in advance into 864-656-3233; MasterCard welcome!
Apple. It computer with expanded memory.
Monochrome monitor, 2 disc drives, modem and
various programs: $80 or $00. Elan S175x
sales, and no local hosts, $45 or $41. BH327
AUDIO SALE, Cassette decks, Teac, JVC, Sony
from $75 - $150 Must sell. 841-9484
Beautiful. black 5-piece drum set, Dizijan jacket. Call 841-4212 weeknights 11:30pm. Cannondale Mt. Bike. White Month old jeffl. 841-268.
Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
10-5.
Jeff 841-2978
For sale: a round-trip ticket to any city in the U.S.
FREE information on New KPa Police Photo radar NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE $80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 radar detector that detects explosives and other unexploded ordnance on the P.O. Box 274, Layton KS 6643.
GOVT SURPULS! New G1. Overseas. Combat
bases, and safety bots, for the Army.
GOVT SURPULS! G1. Overseas.
Canonflight Clothing. Also CARHARTT
Christmas 12th. Merys Surplus Sales
Christmas 12th. Merys Surplus Sales
Go to Miami, Fl. for Thanksgiving and or Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for a discount price. Call 749-5733 after 6:00 pm for more info.
Government Homes from $1.00 "U Repair". Also tax delinquent property. Call 805-644-9533. Ext. 769 for info.
MAC with dual drive. Imagewriter, mouse,
and software $200 OBO 864-2343 nights
MCAT study material from G.A.P. S. Improved my severe drama originally. $1000 80 Best of Best.
Men's 10-speed hike $80. Acoustic guitar with case
$80). Both excellent condition 842-2488, keep
trying
Mobile DJ system back on sale. 1000 watts sound,
'light', lasers. 749-1500
Nagel, lithograph print, The Book, framed, $80.
call John at 841-1780.
Nasithum Hall contract for sale. Private room or for two. Call 841-4837
stock roll : Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 5 p.m on eaturday and Sunday Camillus' fl伟 Market,811 New Hampshire.
SAE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $450 sell $200. Must see to appreciate. Many functions.
841-7644
Trailer 12 x 65, w & d, shed, deck. AC, stove.
Dryer 84-790. Cab 794-794.
Trumpet Bundy with case, excellent cond.
842-9064 $200 OHO
AUTO SALES
1972 Plymouth, reliable transportation, FM cassette deck, runs great. $700.00 Jason 842.5105
10mm.11mm
1981 LPM, LPM
1981 Toyota Tercel AM/FM cassette, good condi.
1981 Tercel FM cassette, good condi.
67 Beetle Runs well. Drive it home for $350
249,200.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords, Mercedes, Corvette, Chevy, Surplus,
Dodge, Cadillac, and more car盗版 Santa
Mirian is a beautiful black 1983 Mazda RX-7. She needs a new home. For more info call 864-3678 or leave message for Gerri at 864-4750
LOST-FOUND
LOST: Maroon glasses with a maroon snap case.
941-0737. Could be anywhere.
The University Daily Kansas is now accepting applications for the Editor and the Business Manager positions for the 1989 Spring Semester. There are paid positions and require journalism experience. Interested persons may pick up interviews in our Office, at the Student Senate office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
Business Manager/
Editor
Applications
HELP WANTED
Business Manager applications are due Tuesday, November 8th at 5 p.m. in 200 Staffair-Flint Hall. Interviews will be held Wednesday, November 9th. Applications for Editor are due Friday, November 11th at 5 p.m. in 200 Staffair-Flint Hall. Interviews will be hold November 14th.
The Kanan is anEqual Opportunity/
Affirmative Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, age, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, or ancestry.
AIRLINES NEW Hiring. Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service
Lettings. Salaries to $10KR. Entry level positions
(1) Call 835-877-6000 E-mail A-9738
2 positions - Custodial worker - each 15 hours per week. Contact Personnel Office, Student Health Service.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Attention: Sub & Stuff have immediate openings for full time day positions. Above avg starting salary. Apply between 2.5-148 W. W2rd.
Banquet positions are now open at the Adman Ahmad Center. Applicants must be available to meet with hosts and hatters, & hostesss are needed Above applying for a 1862 Room at the holding condition at 1862 Room ADE E OE .
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students part-time position is available for Overland River location. Please contact your employer. For interview please call Arqon Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at 212-735-8000.
Great SUMMER CAMP JOURS in the Colorado Rockies near Easist Park as counselors, cooks, nurses, office warden, drivers, unit directors, childcare Room and board planners. Must be at least 19 to apply Interviews on campus in January. Write CHEILEY COLONIAL CAMPS. Dept. C: box 625, Denver, CO 80210. FOR THE SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE!
Christmas Help $4.90 (Hours Flexible)
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
(91) 345-9675
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$59,230. Vr. Now
Hiring. Your Area. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. R 9758
for current Federal list.
NANNEES can live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good communication skills more information in Jank (in C K 7-122408)
Kansas and Burge Union Bookstorers hiring temporary help. Jobs posted Level 5. Kansas Union Personnel Office. Come in person to apply
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening help and delivery drivers. Start at $16.00 hr. Apply in person or at Border Basket 128W. 22rd
Up to $40 per week. Positions nationwide. East,
West, South, West. 1 year commitment.
1-800-722-4435. National Nanny Resource and
Buffalo
Part-time positions available at Nassau Hall Train Station, 1852 East 47th Street, food coords and other positions. Benefit and flexible hours. If you need the money to work from home, schedule a desk and fill out an application before vacancies appear.
Part-time data entry, audit人员 needed to in-
noit nine days it per week. Must be dedicated,
dependable, and a self-starter. Employees
106, 119 Stauffer Failer Hall. Lawrence K. 60043
Part-time Child Care Worker to work 4 M-T W in residential treatment home for boys aged 18 to 36 months. Send resume to CHK check 'Salary nego, depending upon education level'. Chk area: Shaheenau Area. For interview call
PART-TIME Furniture Delivery Personnel Apply in person Thompson Crawley 220 Eight. 22nd, Terrace
Pizza Shuttle is immediately hired both full-time and part-time delivery drivers. Hiring and evening hours available: 8:40 a.m.-5:30 p.m. with bonus bonuses. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shuttle.
art time workers. Packer Plastic is examining her feasibility of having a tine production shift率 m.p. 12 min-1 hour-14 min-12 m.p. 12 min-12
*Pizza delivery drivers - hourly wage plus commission must have own transportation and insurance. Apply in person. Pizza Shoppe 612 Wardlaw Waterfront Shoring Center
JUTIES. Assists program manager and assistant director with clerical duties relating to study material and a proctored QA test. Currently enrolled graduate at K U. Demonstrated clinical experience, excellent typing, word processing and organizational skills. Must be able to work four hours per week on a job offered to you. A L A K Y $ 500 $ 550 for a more complete description and application
POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT Graduate Student Assistant
Ann Blackhurst, Department Secretary
Office of Study Group
203 Lippincott Hall
University of Kansas 66045
812.361.7742
Applicants must submit a resume and the names of the named applicants. All completed applications must be received by noon, on or before the application deadline.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesmen, Airlines, & Amusement Parks. Accepting applications for summer open positions. For more information and an application, write National College Recreation Service PO Box 1279, San Antonio, TX 78220.
stuff has immediate openings for Day & late night shifts. Above avg. starting salary. Apply between 2.5, 1618 W, 23rd.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Creeks Swamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wuyang, Kailuqi MT, 99001.
MISCELLANEOUS
On TVs, VHJs, Jewelry, Stores, Musical in
cameras, cameras, and more. We honor
Via M.C.A.M.E.X. J. Hawk Pawn & Jewelry,
1904 W. 249-1010
ONE-WAY AHRLINE TICKET, K.C. - SEATTLE
DEC 22 $90,843-840-8000
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care
841-2345 1419 Mass
MAX C. HOW YOU DO SLEEP UP AT NIGHT?⁽¹⁾
OK, BASKETBALL. Volleyball, Must be modeling!
Dice, Nachos, I.C.B.Y. What a time the two towers had. have Happy 21st! ELM.
PERSONAL
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWM, 21.30
P.O. B. Box 424.043, Lawrence, KS. 66444
Photo appreciated
Study the Pooh. It is eight years or one month!
ok, well one of the best times ever
Thanks. I love you! Love, That Girl, your Pooh.
L. M.T. You are so wonderful! I love you more than ads can express. Forever, P.S.P.
To the guys with ****** who streaked through our store. we are anxiously awaiting you encore! The Sirion张康厅 Wastreasures.
Sweaters, 40's jackets, berets,
wool skirts, coats, new
vintage jewelry, scarves.
BUS. PERSONAL
We're always open.
CHESTER Thanks for the batting practice
Tina P. - You're such a cute! Look out, watch your tote. You pouch it up in ti2. The hats and room diapers fun. If you decide to go with the roma diapers that's like die-hake. Love - your diaper.
HARPER
Government Photo, Passport, immigration,
visiting Modeling, theatrical Advanced fine art
portfolio. Sides can be a valuable asset to your
artist future. Tom Swells 749-1611
Fall is here ___
(KB and Laura). The next time we go partyhopping let's try actually going in! 'Silo Tech's Outdaa and Voeha hit
Low cost Major Insurance for
low cost Major Insurance for
under 66 month. With parent slightly higher Kappa
86 month. With parent slightly higher Kappa
SKI Christmas break! Tops are filling last for 4 great locations! Call me. Ann @ 414,802,young. Your Suncatchers Tour reps. for details when it too late!
ON CAMPUS?
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without partial testing upon a successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316
HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass., Suite 201, 749-0123
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. 841-2451 M-S 10:5:30 Thur. ttl B
Barb's Vintage Rose
Please see page 2
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND. TX
STEAMBOAT. CO
DAYTONA BEACH FL
MUSTANG ISLAND. TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND SC
SPRING BREAK '89
Trins Available Now
Don't Wait Until It's Too
THURSDAY Dollar Days
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
1-800-321-5911
Chef's Surprise
Cheap!
Domestics
$1.00
Imports
$1.50
reading
SINCE 1980
EUROPEAN
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
TAN HEALTH & HAIR SALON 25th & Iowa — HOLIDAY PLAZA — 841-6232
Tanning 8 sessions only $20
Haircut with shampoo & style $10
Perm cut extra $32
HealthClub $15 month 2 month minimum
Hot Tub 1 hr.
private $5//person
SERVICES OFFERED
Astrology. Would you like to know about asthône?
What is it and how can you help your future (your future)? You will be delighted send a
self addressed stamped envelope to Astrolab
Box 341, Smithville 90440 for list of services
Bender Portraits are still the great gift idea.
Setting includes glamorousized wear and full
passion assistance. For more information call
Mike or Gracie collect at 1-899-3799
DRIVER EDUCATION CIP offered third Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
French tutoring. Translations Paper revisions done on computer. Expert work. 8 years experience. Bob 843-402.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling For free, con-
ference, 24 hour referrals, call KU Info at
843-396 or Headquarters at 841-245. Sponsored by
GLSOK
KU INFORMATION CENTER 804-356-3966 Campus, community events University. PROCESSURE SUICIDE CRISIS HELP, referrals, 24 brats day KU INFORMATION CENTER 804-356-3966
KU PHOTOGRAPH SERVICES : Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B W services. PASSPORT $60.00. Art & Design Building. *vom 20* 944-6476
Need a babysitter?? Experienced girls can help No job too big or small. Call 841-6678.
TYPING
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $/hr. 843-9032
(p.m.)
Math tutor. Master's in math and six years
excellent experience. Call Alex at 841-7961.
Good job! Submitted @22. Good work on math can
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Admission Services. Overland Park...(913) 409-6788
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac curate and affordable typing and wordprocessing ludy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915
Leaving Town?
2 Smart Typesetting, Dissertations, Thesis,
Paper, Resumes and more. Spelling corrected
and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts.
Low typing prices: 749-7240
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality type. 842, 1063, days or evenings
842-4868 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm
Airline Tickets at airline counter prices no service charge
ACT NOW Papers, resumes, & cover letters
WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3469
occurate, affordable typing experienced in form papers, theses, muse, IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-954
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
Call evenings before 10.749.1961
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence
Mrs. Mattila 841-129.
Diana's Quality Typing and Word Processing
Term paper, terms, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser
DRAWING. Sample corrupted. 892-7241.
EXPERT TYPING Mary Daw 273-4109 In Topeka Accurate professional word processing services IBM letter quality printer
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
ATTN. MEADONBROOK RESIDENTS . Word processing service available near you. APA form of experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak, 843-6708
Expert Typist: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
IRON FENCE TYPING. 841-8583
Call. B.J. S' typing, Service 841.5942. Term
Papers, Literal, Thesis, etc. no calls to 9 P-M.
THE PEACE STORE:
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum, 729-
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
M-F. 105-841-9223
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
SPEEDTERM Word Processing Service. Accurate and reliable, spelling checked Call 843-2276
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
TYPING/AWBOOKPROCESSING. Done on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes. Letter Quality Printer. Legal exp. Lauren. 542.37.38. Leave Message
Quality Tutoring, Economics, Statistics
Mathematics. All levels. Call Dems. 842-1055
Student groups use full color copies to advertise
your activities. Call 663-1424 weekdays for details
***Typing at a reasonable rate* Call Barbara at 8431-0119 Monday Thursday and 8:30 on Friday. **WORDOBTOCTS* Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, theses, resumes, commercial, IBM PC/MC, Mac CD, dot matrix, data matrix, Laser. Since 8431-3147.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
word processing, typing, Papers, resumes, applications, dissertations. Also, assistance with grammar, spelling, composition, editing HW M.S. DEREZ, 841-6960, 841-6254
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence 841.5716.
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also
toring写 projects, Call Anne.842-7708.
WANTED
DESPERATELY Seeking guitar or keyboard amplifier. 841,5945
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse, *rent/ utilities*, has route, fireplace, pool, water dryer. Call 749-0981
*室内 roommate wanted for Spring semester*
*Please call 842-3610, 842-3615, all utilities paid. Call 842-3612. Leave message.*
Female roommate wanted second semester to
*$100.00 per month* *y* individuals Close to campus and
*in the same apartment.*
Male roommate needed starting Jan. I will have your own bedroom and your own bathroom. On bus ride $100.00 + .utilities. Call 842 3719
Male roommate for next semester. $150.00
Female romantique wanted. Janet Sublumberie
Garage fireplace$^1, 18 rent utilities. Call 841. 6842
Til you buy the VRS recorder (player & you can have a pop one, 841. 7198)
Male roommate for next semester $175
+ utilities a month, ten minute walk to campus
841-7085 let ring.
Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester Call 749-6075. Leave message
Ine needed to share beautiful new townhouse.
Private room and bath with all amenities. On bus
oute: 748-206.
Roommate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne 749-4261
Policy
IS THERE REALLY A SANTA CLAUS' DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE needs a SANTA Thursday evening and weekends. Nov. 7 Dec. 22 Only kids sillful, old or young, need call. Apple
Second Semester Female Roommate wanted
$180 and 2 utilities. Walking distance or bus route Call 942-7855
Roommate wanted Geoengineering D-Based
$89 a month + 1 months in U.S. B414 1066.
Roommate wanted immediately. Private
r
Someone needed to assume lease. 2 bedroom, $1_{1}$ close to campus. 843-1215
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spring Semester. Quiet, studious roommate wanted. $145/mo plus *utilities*. Close to campus. Call 842-626
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---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Hot! Just like every time, you'll get about 100 yards out before you start heading back."
---
12
Thursday: November 10. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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GAMMONS SNOWBOARD
Students share space with cockroaches
Despite use of pesticides hall residents complaining about high number of bugs
By Jeremy Kohn
Kansan staff writer
Amy Beckett may not be a typical statistician, but she has observed fewer cockroaches roaming her scholarship hall's cafeteria during the evenings this semester.
Beckett, a Topeka senior at Miller Hall, said that although the cochra cocktail experience had improved since last year, she remained unsatisfied. Last year, she said, about 10 cochra cocktails an hour could be seen late at night in Miller's cafeteria. About three an hour are common now.
"If they have somebody spraying, they should do a better job." Beckett said.
And students at some residence and scholarship halls said last week that weekly insect spraying by the student housing department has not destroyed cockroaches in their kitchens and cafeterias.
William Bell, chairman of the entomology department, said that under most circumstances, it is not possible to destroy all cockroaches. The insects, which can cause allergies, infiltrate most buildings. They have 16-30 offspring daily, eat anything, and can live anywhere.
"Where food is around, it is impossible to spray everything." Bell said.
everything. Although students may complain among themselves, the housing official who supervises pest control said that no complaints from those groups had been filed with the housing department this semester.
Marion Temple, assistant director of student housing, said the hallways, lobbies, trash chutes and janitor's closets in residence halls, scholarship halls, Jayhawk Towers, Stouffer Place and Sunflower apartments been sprayed weekly since last fall. Kitchens in residence and scholarship halls have been sprayed weekly since August, he said.
Residents can complete a request from their manager's office for their private rooms to be sprayed as well. Temple said that vacant buildings will be sprayed and fumigated this summer. However, fumigation is not possible during the school year because buildings must be vacant for at least half a day, he said.
Temple said he did not know how often the residence halls were sprayed between the end of 1985 and last fall, when he became supervisor of pest control. Before 1985, student housing paid a private firm $12,000 a year to spray its buildings and that the annual cost of spraying is now $17,000.
Temple said he was not sure whether spotting three cockroaches an hour meant a problem existed at Miller. But pest control had improved, he said, because there had been no complaints this
"I think we're doing a better job than we've done in the past." Temple said.
However, Michael Shumaker, Lawrence branch manager of Terminix, a pest control company, said that Beckett's observations meant that a cockroach problem existed at Miller and that the University might be mishandling its pest control. Weekly spraying for a year should have corrected the problem, he said.
"Somewhere within the technicians, the chemicals, the applications, you will find where the problem is." shumaker said.
The University cannot thoroughly spray all of its buildings during the school year because it has to follow state laws concerning entry rights. Tenants have to give permission for their rooms to be spraved.
Students from Jayhawker Towers said two weeks ago that they also had cockroach problems. The housing department received an Oct. 20 complaint from a Jayhawker Towers resident about cockroaches, garbage removal and a lack of hot water for the complex's laundry room.
Temple said that roaches were attracted to food, garbage and grease and that dirty kitchens were prime areas for the insects.
However, kitchens at residence and scholarship balls are cleaned daily.
However, Glogowski said he has seen fewer cockroaches this year.
Gerry Dixon, Great Bend junior at Battlefield Scholarship Hall, said the spraying kept the insects away from the hall's kitchen for about two days. But the insects always return.
Students at Ellsworth Hall, McCollum Hall and Hashinger Hall said they had seen the insects in cafeterias, kitchens, bathrooms and weight rooms.
Temple declined to comment on why the weekly spraying had not solved the problem in the residence or scholarship halls.
But Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said that some cocochares always survive exterminating attempts. The spraying helps keep the problem limited.
"They have to go somewhere." Landkamer said.
Ken Glogowski, Emporia sophomore, who works in Hashinger's kitchen, said the insects probably entered the kitchen from the packing materials of each new food shipment. Temple said this explanation was likely.
"the goal is to control and minimize the pests," Stoner said. ___
"You should have come earlier this morning; you could have hidden one." Dixon said last week. David Landkamer, a licensed exterminator who is now a cook at McCollum hall, said he held the school's leadership halls weekly from February to Oct. 28, when he worked for housing maintenance.
He said the construction of a drainage system south of 14th and Louisiana streets near some scholarship halls may have increased the number of the insects in some of these halls.
843-6282
One number brings out the best at KU
Now, at KU, there's just one number to remember for fast delivery of pizza that's every bit as good as one you'd go out for.
Godfather's Pizza. $ ^{10} $ Now you don't have to settle for anything less, anymore.
711 W. 23rd Malls Shopping Ctr.
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Natural Fiber NATURALWAY 820-822 Mass Clothing For Men 913-841-0100
MEXICAN FIESTA
Tues. & Sun. 100 Margaritas
Wed. 125 Mexico's
Finest Beer
Sun. Nite 290 Student's
Dinner
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2515 W. 6th 841-1323
Pumpkin Pie!
Free Samples!
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Louisiana Purchase
Shopping Center
843-5500
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
Thank you for shopping!
Ω
COFFEE FAITH
Explain the taste of coffee to one who has never smelled or tasted coffee.
Or, explain love to someone who has never known love.
Or, explain believing to a non-believer.
What's it like?
Psalm 34:8 · "Taste and see..."
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread
It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh* computer at school.
Just their signature.
at school
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan to Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one.
Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800-831 LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
and send it. If they qualify, they'll receive a check for you in just a few weeks.
You don't need your parents' money to buy a Macintosh.
There's no collateral. No need to prove financial hardship. No application fee.
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*Offer open only to full-time KU students
Microsoft
Best of all, the loan payments can be spread over as many as 10 years. Which gives you and your parents plenty of time to decide just who pays for it all.
Apple
Introducing Apple's Student Loan-to Own Program Loan applications are available in the computer store at the Burge Union.
© 1998 Apple Computer Inc. Apple the Apple logo and
Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
Come by and talk to us about your computer needs today!
Burge Union 864-5697
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Vol. 99, No. 55 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1850 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday November 11, 1988
Mike Marshall's story doubted
Bv Jeff Fuston
System Euston
Kansan sportswriter
Former Kansas assistant basketball coach R.C. Buffard and former Kansas player Rodney Halday said yesterday that they did not believe former Kentucky guard Marshall, who said he had paid dayhawk players.
"Mike's always looking for a place in the paper," Buford said of Marshall, who played at Kansas during the 1982-84 season. "He'll always be way. He's always mooed off other people."
In the Nov. 14 issue of Sports Illustrated, Marshall was quoted by reporter Jeffrey Marx as saying that he made loans to Kansas players, including Danny Manning, Manning's agent, Ron Grinker, confirmed that Marshall gave Manning numerous small loans.
Mars said yesterday that Marshall had not been paid for his information.
"I you have to know Mike to understand what he did. Hull said by phone from Chicago last night. I think he made up 99 percent of it. You just have to know Mike. He just likes getting exposure. If he
Buford, former player Hull reject allegations
knew that the story would be published in the magazine, he'd tell them anything."
Hull, who played at Kansas from 1964 to 1988, said he had not read the article, but when he was told that a picture of Marshall打50 and 100 dollar bills appeared, he said, "That's the way
"I don't trust him," Hull said of Marshall. "I trusted him a few years ago, but I wouldn't trust
Former Kansas队 Codir Hunter, who was Marshall's roommate during the 1983-84 season.
Hunter said that the Kansas City Times had misquoted him yesterday as saying he received money from Marshall.
"That's not accurate." Hunter said. "I roamed with Mike, but I never took any loans from him and he never gave any to me.
never received any money from anyone. As far as I know, none of the other players ever did, either I don't think Coach Brown ever had any idea that happened."
Reports about how much money may have been exchanged have varied.
Larry never gave him Marshall large sums
at money. Buffet said "Larry gave him $50
"He. Brown." just wishes everybody would leave him alone. He doesn't deserve this."
Hunter also said that if, in fact, money had been exchanged, the amount of $5 or $20 was not important.
"You borrow $5 from your friends all the time," he said. "If you're at the grocery store and your friend is short, you loan him the money. But it's pay back. I don't think players were paid. But it's always a possibility. But if it did happen, it's that serious."
NCAA to question Manning, Marshall
By Arvin Donley Kansas sportswriter
The NCAA will question former Kansas basketball star Danny Manning and former Kansas player Mike Marshall concerning allegations made in a Sports Illustrated article that said Manning and other former Jayhawks had accepted illegal loans from Marshall, NCAA Director of Enforcement David Berst said yesterday.
Berst defended the NCAA yesterday for allowing Jeffrey Marx, the Sports Illustrated reporter, to sit in on two NCAA interview sessions with Marshall, stating that friends of witnesses often sat
in on interviews. But Borst said he thought Marx acted unethically because he did not identify himself to NCAA investigators as a reporter.
In the magazine's Nov. 14 issue, Marshall said he lent money to Manning and other Kansas players, usually ranging from $20 to
The article also alleged that Marshall withheld information from the NCAA during its interview sessions.
Manning's agent Ron Grinker aid Wednesday that Manning had
Please see NCAA, p. 5, col.1
Hazardous waste prompts protest Woman handcuffs self to chair in Hayden's office for 4 hours
By Cindy Harger
Kansas staff writer
TOPEKA — A woman handcuffed herself to a chair in the lobby of Gov. Mike Hyden's office for about four hours yesterday to protest the disposal of hazardous waste.
At about 11:50 a.m., Lauren Maddy, a 34-year-old woman from Rose Hill, led a group of 18 supporters, including some KU students, into Hayden's Statehouse office. She was told that the governor was in a meeting and would be busy all day.
"That's O.K." "Muddy said. "I'll wait."
To the astonishment of the Haydenwids, Maddy handed the secretary a written statement, handcuffed herself to a chair, and became silent.
The protest begin after a rally by environmental groups on the steps of the Statehouse. The rally begins by the use of chemicals in agriculture.
"I have locked myself into your environment as you have locked me into mine. Consider me a hazardous chemical." Maddy's
Maddy spoke at the rally, saying that she contracted a rare lung disease from living near the Vulcan Chemicals Co. in Wichita, from 1982 to 1987. She said her doctor told her to move from Wichita about two years ago because of her lung disorder.
"Vulcan Chemicals didn't hold my hand while I was in the hospital fighting for every breath. The EPA didn't send flowers while I was on chemotherapy, steroids, antibiotics." Maddy said. "And sadder yet, not one of our protecting officials were writing strong laws to protect us."
Maddy is involved in a federal lawsuit that she and about 30 others filed against the Vulcan Chemicals Co.
Mist of Maddy's supporters at her protest yesterday did not know Maddy or her protest plans before the rally. However, some were willing to sit in the Governor's lobby as long as Maddy would.
"I will’m trying to stay three days, if that’s what it takes," said Dearle Goldfarb, Frankfort, Kan., junior. "I want the state and Legislature to know its a real problem, but they don’t want to dent with it. They’re just going to let us sit here when they have the power to do something with us. And they just sit there when they have the power to do something with toxic wastes."
By handcuffed herself to the chair in Hayden's office reception area, Maddy said she hoped to make the governor as uncomfortable as she has felt in an environment poisoned with hazardous waste.
"Do you like me in your environment? Are you comfortable with me here? Well, we're not comfortable with toxic waste in our back
Maddy said that she wanted the government to stop issuing permits for production and disposal of toxic chemicals.
"The state keeps allowing more permits to go into effect without evaluating what is going on now," she said.
John Strickler, special assistant for environment and natural resources for Gov. Hayden, said that Maddy had a bad habit of slipping on the chair that handcuffing herself to the chair without I going to solve anything.
Please see PROTEST, p. 12, col. 4.
Air Force releases photo of Stealth jet
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Air Force has been flying a Stealth radar evading jet fighter for seven years and now has about 50 of the planes at an isolated base in Nevada, Pentagon officials said yesterday.
Partially lifting a veil of secrecy that has enveloped the plane from its birth, the Pentagon and Air Force released a photograph of the unusual aircraft but declined to disclose its capa-made now because the Air Force needs to start flying the craft in daylight, a spokesman said.
The plane is built by the Lockheed Corp at a tightly guarded plant in Burbank, Calif., the Air Force said.
The sources said the decision to unveil the plane was prompted in part by the scheduled Nov. 22 unveiling of the B-2 Stealth bomber with the bomber has been built at a recent and advanced technology than the fighters so there is little reason to continue to hide the fighter, the sources explained.
soldier. Defense officials also had concluded that even if they wanted to keep the program secret, future court fights were likely to shatter
"It has been operational since October 1983 and is assigned to the 4450th Tactical Group at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada. The aircraft is based at the Tompah Test Range Airfield in Nevada," he said.
The photograph released by the Pentagon depicts a relatively small plane with a flat underbelly. It somewhat resembles a sting ray — black or dark blue with no exterior markings.
The Pentagon said that the plane had been declared operational and ready for wartime missions in Oct. 1863 but that it first flew in June 1903.
The Stealth fighter "is officially known as the F-117A," said Dan Howard; the Pentagon's chief spokesman.
security the sources said. Production line workers at the Lockheed plant in Burbank are gone to court in connection with an assault on them by exposure to dangerous chemicals.
The cockpit is located far forward in a nose that comes to a sharp point, with what appears to be gun barrels or air-speed probes sticking out.
THE ROSE CATHERINE SCHOOL OF EDUCATION
Lest we forget
In a moment of silence, Karen Becker, Austin, Texas, senior, honors servicemen and women who are still listed as prisoners of war or missing in action from the Vietnam War. KU Arnold Air Society members held a candlelight vigil last night at the KU Vietnam War Memorial to observe their second annual POW/MIA Remembrance Week. The
group said that 2.143 Americans are still unaccounted for in Southeast Asia. A memorial service for Veterans" Day will be conducted at 10 a.m. today at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Altord Clark Post 852, 138 Alabama St.
Birds beware: Hunting season to open
By Ken Winford
Kansan sportswriter
The state's biggest hunting weekend of the year begins tomorrow when pheasant and quail season opens across Kansas.
Mike Miller, Kansas Fish and Game wildlife representative, said he expected between 80,000 and 100,000 hunters to participate in the opening of the season.
"This is by far the biggest weekend of the year in terms of numbers of hunters in the field." Miller said. "About 30,000 hunters will be nonresidents of Kansas. We're keeping bouts trying
Because Kansas is considered one of the best
"In the last few years, Kansas has probably been one of the top two pheasant-quail states in the nation," he said. "In terms of combination hunting, we have a big advantage over most other states because of our abundance of pheasant, quail and prairie chicken."
"With that many people hunting, there will be some out there without licenses," Miller said. "Wildlife conservation officers will be in the
states in the country for hunting pheasant and quail, the number of out-of-state hunters is increasing. Miller said.
Miller said the Kansas Fish and Game Department would increase its supervision this year.
field trying to control the problem. The only thing we can do is increase the manpower."
Miller said supervision would be concentrated in northeast and central Kansas, where hunting was expected to be popular.
A hunter is limited to four pheasants a day and possession of 16 after the first four days of the
In addition to pleasant and quail hunters, a large number of deer hunters are expected this weekend.
Although hunters won't be allowed to hunt deer with firearms until Nov. 30, the archery season is already open.
---
2
Friday, November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Rainy day
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Rain today
High: 54°
Low: 45°
Today's skies will be cloudy all day and chances of rain get better through tonight. Tonight's low will be 45 degrees.
North Platte
10/28
Rain
Omaha
49/38
Rain
Kansas City
54/43
Late rain
Columbia
54/43
Rain by evening
St. Louis
53/44
Turning mostly cloudy
Dodge City
53/38
Rain early
Wichita
54/45
Rain
Chanute
53/48
Rain
Springfield
58/48
Lake rain
Forecast by Mark L. Bognor Temperature areas are today's high and tonight low
5-Day
Saturday
Rain ending
52/38
HIGH LOW
Sunday
Mostly sunny
58/39
Monday
Chance of rain
60/40
Tuesday
Rain ending
54/35
Wednesday
Mostly sunny
55/32
The nation
Seattle
45/32
Denver
56/29
Chicago
47/36
New York
51/37
Los Angeles
69/44
Phoenix
75/52
Dallas
72/61
Miami
84/72
Fronts:
occurred
wet
saturation
The nation
Eastth 45/22
H
Denver 56/29
Chicago 47/38
New York 51/37
Los Angeles 69/44
Phoenix 75/52
Dallas 72/61
Miami 84/72
Fronts
incuded
water stationary
KU students plan for Indian festival
KU India Club will sponsor a Diwali Night celebration at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at Cordley Elementary School, 19th and Vermont streets.
By a Kansan reporter
Diwali, one of the most celebrated festivals in India, has religious, social and fiscal significance for its observers.
Rominder Singh, president of KU India Club, said the celebration, which is comparable to the Christmas and New Year's celebrations in the Christian tradition, was open to anyone who wished to attend. The calendar observance of Diwali was Nov. 9.
Tickets to Diwali Night are available at the SUA box office or from
Singh, who may be reached at 841-9906. Ticket prices are $6 for KU India Club members and $8 for non-members who buy tickets in advance. Non-member tickets will cost $9 at the door.
The festival will feature traditional Indian food, which will be catered by Mother India Restaurant of Kansas City.
Singh said Diwali is celebrated differently in various parts of India, and all of the cultures of India would be represented at tomorrow's celebration. There are many Indian legends about Diwali, and for all Indians it is a time to celebrate the beginning of a new year with food, gifts and friendship he added.
Soda machines can kill says one Army doctor
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Soda machines that tip over when rocked by people wanting a free drink or their money back can mainm or kill and should be fixed so they won't fall, an Army doctor said yesterday.
In a study published in last Friday's Journal of the American Medical Association, Michael Cosio of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington documented 11 deaths from falling soda machines.
One victim was found pinned to a wall with the soda machine resting on his neck. Death was presumed to be due to suffocation. Other victims were either crushed to death or asphyxiated.
"If you look at it from the victims' standpoint, if they get hurt if a machine lands on them, they have a 20 to 25 percent chance that they get
killed." Cosio said.
killed. Costa said.
Changes are needed to safeguard the public, he said. A spokesman for the Consumer Product Safety Commission said the agency is investigating the problem.
"Few people would believe that a soda vending machine can be tipped over or that anyone would be foolish enough to even try to tip such a machine," Cosio wrote in the study! "Not only can these machines be tipped over, but they can injure and even kill."
Cosio looked into accidents involving 15 men at military installations overseas from June to September, and four were killed, and 12 required hospitalization.
A follow-up investigation of 32 additional men, including some civilians, documented eight more deaths, he said.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 onight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union. KU Undergrads opt to go on elephant sale will begin at 9 a.m. today in 1231 Oread, next to Frasher Hall.
The Biology Club meets at 4 p.m. today in Aloe A at the Kansas Union, Featured speaker who will speak about mammals.
On Campus
The Women's Studies program presents Sara Paretsky speaking at *p*. m. today in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
■ The International Folk Dance Club will meet from 7:30 to 10 onatt St. John's Gymnasium.
■ Campus Christians will meet at 6:30 tonight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
■ An American economic history lecture by Libe Garibec, will be at 3:30 p.m. today in 401 Summerfield Hall.
A University Assessment Committee meeting will be at 3:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
SUA presents the film "Unbear
An aerospace colloquium featuring Tyson Flugstad will be at 3:30 p.m. today in 3139 Wescoe Hall
able lightness of Being," at 3:30, 7, and 9:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
■ KU and the University of Oklahoma will play volleyball at 8 tonight at Allen Field House.
■ Round Up for Hunger, a service project of the United Methodist Church, will begin at 9 a.m. tomorrow at the ECM center, 1204
- "Whose Life is it Anyway?", a production in the University Theatre Series, will be at 8 tonight in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murray
- A panel discussion of the deforestation in rain forests will be at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. The discussion is sponsored by the Brazil-Portugal Association.
- The Brazil-Portugal Association is having a Brazilian Fall Party at 9 p.m. tomorrow at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire
The KU India Club is sponsoring
Diwali Night at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow
at Cordell Elementary
School.
KU Bible Study worship services will be at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
Police Record
Two car speakers valued at $400 were taken Wednesday from a car parked in the west lot of Memorial Stadium. KU police reported.
■ An unknown suspect took a $30 check and a $20 bill sometime between Tuesday and Wednesday at Haworth Hall, KU police reported.
A space heater valued at $295 was taken sometime between Oct. 3 and Oct. 22 from a business in the Cincinnati Street, Lawrence police reported.
A cloth coat with a fur collar valued at $65 and a pair of prescription glasses valued at $150 were taken sometime between Tuesday and Wednesday from a residence in the 1400 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police reported.
An unknown suspect took $125 in quarters from a video game machine in Naismith Hall sometime between Tuesday and Wednesday, Lawrence police reported.
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A 10-speed bicycle valued at $110 was taken Nov. 1 from the 700 block of W. 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported.
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Campus/Area
3
Remote controls for traffic lights could be part of city firefighting
By Deb Gruver Kansan staff writer
Remote control devices that turn traffic signal lights green could be in the hands of Lawrence firefighters after 60 days.
At Tuesday's Lawrence City Commission meeting, the commission decided to authorize a resolution of intent, meaning that the remote control system will be used if it isn't protested. There is a 60-day period for public protest of the purchase.
Jim McSwan, Lawrence fire chief, said he was pleased with the commission's approval and its resolution of intent. The system will lower total response time to fires by about 25 percent and provide safety for fire trucks on the streets.
"It maximizes the efficiency of the department," he said.
The devices relay messages to the traffic control system to turn the light
green, McSwain said. After the truck passes through the intersection, the light will return to its normal cycle.
Each of Lawrence's 12 fire trucks would be able to operate with the device.
McSwain said that it would cost about $175,000 for the devices and additional parts for Lawrence's signal lights. That money would be borrowed from city bond buyers, said Buford Watson, city manager.
After the 60-day period, the city will begin accepting bids. McSwain said the city would have more than enough money to implement the system.
Such remote control systems have been around for about 15 years.
"But the reliability was not as good back then," McSwain said.
The Overland Park Fire Department installed its system about five years ago.
Jim McKenzie, Overland Patre in
tain, said that his department had experimented with the system. It worked so well that they decided to buy one.
"It turns the light green about two to three blocks before we even get there," McKenzie said.
Watson said that Lawrence had considered the system for a couple years and that the purchase of the devices came up during the budget process in July.
McSwain said that the fire department recently presented a complete study to the commission that swayed its approval.
"It's just very dangerous for firefighters and the public to go into intersections with red lights," McSwaid said. "We have to stop for safety purposes, of course, but stopping obviously slows us down."
The department has never had any serious accidents when entering intersections with red lights, but he said that there had been a few minor accidents in the past.
SenEx wants discussion on NCAA news
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
After an off-the-record discussion yesterday, the University Senate Executive Committee decided to ask the KU officials involved with the NCAA basketball investigations to meet publicly with faculty and students.
Bob Jerry, SenEx chairman, could not say when the officials would be able to meet with the group because they were too busy to be available on short notice. However, some sort of meeting may take place tomorrow or Thursday at the University Council meeting.
KU officials mentioned on the record were Chancellor Gene A. Budig and Tom Mulinazzi, president of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation.
Earlier in the discussion, Jerry gave a report on what he knew about the recent
NCA news from what he had heard from Vickie Khou, KU general counsel.
News surfaced Wednesday night that former player Danny Manning allegedly took $$, £7 and $10 loans from former KU coach Kevin O'Neill, who the NCAA investigation might reopen.
Jerry said that the news took the administration by surprise.
"Vickie and the chancellor were shocked when they herd about this Wednesday night with calls from a reporter," Jerry said.
He said that Budig was concerned with the allegations and how they could affect both the basketball program and the University in general.
University with what goes on on the blaving fields," Jerry said.
James Seaver, professor of history, said that Budig and the faculty members on the athletic board seemed to have been attacked by the press and deserved a forum to present their sides of the story.
Evelyn Swartz, presiding officer of University Council, said that although Budig was busy with Campaign Kansas fundraising, she wanted to see if he could meet the the group as early as next week.
Sandra Zimdar-Swartz, associate professor of religious studies, said that she was concerned about the ethical and moral aspects of the basketball program's conduct raised.
"I think this is setting one of the worst examples we can set for students on this campus," she said.
Competency hearing delayed in turnpike murder trial
A hearing to determine if John William is competent to stand trial was rescheduled until Nov. 23 in Douglas County District Court yesterday.
By a Kansan reporter
District Court yesterday.
William, 27, also listed as John Hoffman
and John McGinnis on court records, faces
a charge of first degree murder in connection with the death of 9-year-old Richard D. Settlemyre, whose mutilated body was found floating in the Kansas River near the turnip bridge July 14.
William's attorney, Edward G. Collier, Jr., requested the continuance because Dr. Robert Schulman, an expert witness for the defense, would not be able to
examine William until Nov. 14.
A competency examination carried out by Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 335 Missouri St., found that William was unable to assist in making his defense, and on Aug. 12 he was found incompetent to stand trial and committed to the state hospital in Larned.
1950
Sandra J. Walts/KANSAN
Restoring the stone
After restoring stones on the sides of Trinity Episcopal Church, 1011 Vermont St., Joe Tucker uses a ladder to descend at the end of the work day. Brian Doherty awaits his turn. Both work for Mid-Continental Restoration in Fort Scott.
Students rise to expectations of new distinguished professor of architecture
(3)
Phil Carvalho/KANSAN
Wojciech Lesnikowski, professor of architecture and urban design, prepares for his lecture on European architecture of the 16th century and the present.
By Debbie McMahon Kansan staff writer
Wojciech Lesnikowski likes his new job teaching at the University of Kansas, just don't ask him to live in a quiet town.
"I cannot sleep when I can't hear any noise," Lesnikowski said.
Although Lesnikowski lives in Kansas City, Mo., he will have to begin to get used to the quiet life of Lawrence for a few years.
Lesnikowski, professor of architecture, was named the first Dona Hatch Distinguished Professor of Architecture this fall when he was recruited to teach at KU. He began teaching in the fall.
Dennis Domer, associate dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said the school spent five years looking for someone to qualify for the Hatch professorship. The position was made possible by a bequest from Dor
Hatch, a 1930 architectural engineering graduate who died in 1977.
"He's an aspiring faculty member," Domer said of Leskowski. "He has very high standards. Students rise to his expectations. He has a reputation of getting superb work from students."
One of his students, Chris Morris, Springfield, Mo., senior, said Leskowski was one of the most prestigious professors he had ever had.
"It's really good that Kansas has a teacher of his caliber," Morris said. "He's so prominent in the architecture world and he provides us with a good view of world architecture. His views are great, and the way he presents them is clear and fresh."
So far, Lesnikowski said, he is encouraged and pleased with work his students have done.
received materials that surpass many of my previous experiences in the United States. My emphasis is about what one can do if one is pushed. I have high standards. I do not tolerate mediocrity. I'm too old for it and I have no time for mediocrity."
"After two months, I have
Lesnikowski was born in Poland but said he considered Paris his home now.
"Paris is a home for Poles who don't want to live in Poland," he said, "I left Poland in 1964. I don't understand the system that is in Poland."
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Lesnikowski attended the Polytechnic Institute of Architecture and Urban Planning in Krakow, where he received his master's degree in 1961. He has taught at several schools, including Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. He also taught at several schools in the United States, including
Lesnikowski is currently working on an exhibit of modern French architecture, which will be shown in July at the Art Institute of Chicago and then at National Gallery in Washington.
Yale, Harvard, Cornell, the University of Wisconsin and most recently the University of Illinois at Chicago.
He said he was glad to be away from Chicago, where he had been teaching and practicing architecture, because now he can devote himself 100 percent to academia.
It's No Secret. It's Good Food.
"I ran away from Chicago simply because I had too much work." Lesnikowski said he found KU to be comparable to lv League. He the peaceful midwinter setting should allow him to achieve more.
And when the peace and quiet in Lawrence gets to be too much, he can return home to Kansas City
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Friday, November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Scrap failed Secure Shuttle and give Tipsy Taxi new life
The shuttle program, which was designed to give students free, safe rides home after they had been drinking, is failing not only because of low ridership but also because of the inherent problems it has with where and how people actually use it.
Student Senate is wasting our money on the inefficient Secure Shuttle program.
on Wheels. With so few riders, the average cost of the shuttle is $37.50 a rider, said Chris Shirling, administrative assistant of Student Senate.
Secure Shuttle starts at Johnny's Up and Under, 401 N. Second St. and stops at Bogarts of Lawrence, 611 Vermont St.; the Eldridge Hotel, 710 Massachusetts St.; the corners of Seventh and New Hampshire streets; 10th and Massachusetts streets; 14th and Tennessee streets; 14th and Ohio streets; 12th and Oread streets; and the Kansas Union and Watson Library. The shuttle then goes to Gammons, 1601 W. 23rd St., and takes the students home.
will arrive at each location.
Secure Shuttle averages only about 11 to 15 riders a week, according to Scott Russell, transportation coordinator for KU on Wheels.
The shuttle runs from midnight to 3 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday, but very few people know that, nor do they know when the shuttle will arrive at each location.
Has Student Senate forgotten Secure Shuttle's predecessor Secure Cab, commonly known as "Tipsy Taxi?" Secure Cab came and picked students up when they called it. Senate discarded that program because the cab company raised its rate from $2.50 to $4 a rider, only to spend an average of $37.50 a rider with the shuttle program now.
There can be life after death. All it may take is the signing of a card.
a rider with the snorkel. Obviously, Secure Shuttle is not practical for most students, nor is it cost efficient. Few people use it, and it costs too much money. Student Senate should look at forgetting Secure Shuttle and look into reinstating Secure Cab as a practical, effective and cheaper way of getting students home safely.
Christine Martin for the editorial board
a card.
A KU student who died last week after a liver transplant didn't have the opportunity to be an example of this philosophy, but at least he had a chance. Many people on organ-donor waiting lists suffer and die needlessly because of the shortage of people willing to donate organs.
Donors can be life-savers
Americans have many different reasons for not pledging their organs after their deaths, but the reasons for pledging an organ far outweigh feeble reasons for not wanting to donate.
or people through 8,500 to 10,000 patients who die in hospitals each year potentially are suitable donors, the number of actual donors has remained relatively constant at 2,500 to 2,700 a year for the past decade.
organ far outweigh recent needs. Some say they are too old. But even a 65-year-old with many age-related diseases still may have healthy organs to contribute
Some fear their organs may be taken when they still have a chance to live. But "brain death" must have been diagnosed before any organ donations will be considered. Every attempt is made to save a dying person before organs are taken.
Some vain people say their bodies will be disfigured when a physician takes the organs. But doctors use standard operating procedures when removing organs, and all wounds are closed so the person can still have an open casket funeral service.
The reasons for offering to donate organs after death are numerous. First, and most important, donating organs is giving life. It shows that the person who has died had enough respect for other lives to give part of themselves so that other people have a chance to live.
People who want to donate organs should tell family members of their decision. If someone wishes to pledge organs, he or she should ask family members to abide by that wish.
Deciding to give organs after your death should be a simple choice to make. Once the choice is made, the process of getting that decision on paper is even simpler.
getting that decision on paper.
In many states, including Kansas, a signature on the back of your driver's license is all it takes. The Midwest Organ Bank in Kansas City, Mo., also has information on organ donations.
What happens to a person's body after he or she dies will mean more if parts of that person help others to live. The donor will be remembered as a life-giver, and the recipient will be proof that the donor was a life-saver.
Julie Adam for the editorial board
News staff
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adams ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jesse ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Kripp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Missara Smith...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Asst. production manager
Michael Lehman...Classified manager
Jenn Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
or staff position. The students should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The word will be photographed.
They will be photographed to edit or edit letters and guest questions. They
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 can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Staufer-Flint Hall. Letters and announcements are the writer's answer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reader will the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They will be brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuaffler-Finley, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year;展览-Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lakeland, Kan. 66044 Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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MACKENEY Chicago Tribune
GENTLEMEN...
START... YOUR...
ENGINES!!
TEAM DUKAKIS
GASOLINE ALLEY
How Mike Lost.
No time to waste for Decision '92 Bush's campaign shows how to get elected by ducking issues
No one paid closer attention to the just-completed presidential election than I did, and for good reason. By the time 1992 rolls around, I will be old enough to run for this nation's highest office. And since the Rev. Jesse Jackson says the next presidential race already has begun, I had better not waste any time plotting my run for the White House. To guarantee a victory four years hence, I plan to follow to the letter George Bush's blueprint for success.
for success.
Like the president-elect, I won't make the mistake of tainting my political fortunes by getting myself elected to any position of authority between now and November '92. There might be a House seat in the offkey, may be an ambassadorship, perhaps a cushy job in the United Nations abstaining from apartheid condemnation. If I am chosen for a job running an important agency, I'll insist on heading the CIA, where disgruntled employees can't rat on me in their memoirs without getting censored by the agency.
censored by
Compare that stering record of accountability with that of loser Michael Dukakis. He foolishly rat for the governorship of Massachusetts and won. That meant he had to spend the past 10 years proposing legislation, speaking up at meetings and balancing budgets. The only thing George Bush has ever had to keep balanced are the headphones he wore at the U.N.
PABRIOLA MOROSO
wore at the U.N.
You might ask how I can formulate policies when I don't know what the issues will be come the next Iowa caucuses. The heck with politics. Who
Bill Kempin
Staff columnist
needs issues? I happen to know that my opponent Mr. Bush once ran on a ticket with a man who, as governor of California, tortured criminals who committed heinous crimes while away from prison. Even as you read this, a camera crew is scouring the countryside looking for polluted bodies of water in the president-elect's home region that are the result of abysmal environmental failures in the Bush administration. With Texas, Maine, Connecticut, Ohio, California, and the District of Columbia to choose from, they're bound to find at least one squall pond somewhere. Furthermore, my opponent is a card-carrying member of a public library containing literature dealing with subjects such as communism, promiscuity and sordid violence. Is this the kind of man that we want representing hard-working, mainstream Americans like you and me?
There will be flags to the left of me, flags to the right of me. The national anthem will be my campaign theme song. If Arnold Schwarzengereen and Chuck Norris support Mr. Bush, I'll ask Rowdy Roddy Piper and Big John Studd for their
endorsement and challenge the other side to a six-man tag team match. Disgustingly cut kids in super slow motion will move into my lap at every photo opportunity. So what if my opponent basks in his thousand points of light and hears the quiet voices no one else can hear. I'm borrowing my campaign slogan from that most populist of discount stores, Wal-Mart: You're always next in line with Bill Kempin.
Finally, I'll be sure to pick a vice president with a solid congressional background — the co-author of one whole bill in the last eight years. My vice president will be well-informed on the important issues of the day, by a governor or senator whispering in his ear right a reporter's pointed question. And in the final days of a hotly contested campaign going right down to the wire, my vice president will be out there in the heat of battle — chatting to pre-schoolers in ghost towns.
But wait a minute. Doesn't a mature, intelligent democracy like the U.S. deserve something better? Maybe the American people are correct when they say they want more than sarcasm, sound bites and Star-Spangled Banners. Instead of trying to appeal to the base instinet in people, perhaps I should strive to win 426 electoral votes by appealing to the highest common denominator
Bill Kempin is a Lawrence graduate student in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Here comes the judge
Mr. Compassion doesn't stop there, though. If one happens to enjoy basketball, one "must endure a season that has almost lost its meaning." The only thing I must endure is his article, or should I say death sentence. For those who have been supporting the team for years, and I can justly say I speak for thousands, we will
"endure" *nothing*. We will be there. So go sell your story to Kentucky.
Now presiding is the honorable (?) Judge Mark Tilford of the editorial board, a compassionate man, a man who would like to "ban (coach) down from any NCAA coaching position. Why stop there your honor, why not burn at the stake? After all, he committed such a heinous crime as lending a recruit the funds to go home to see his ailing grandmother. In his 2nd, editorial, Judge Tilford plays Mr. Omniscient, claiming that the staff "demonstrated an inability to run a clean program." And how does his honor know that? He doesn't need to. All he needs to do is point his judicial and follow the rest of the palebearers to the grave, ready and wanting to see the death of such a decadent sport, sponsored by such "guilty people."
Mark Hershman St. Louis senior
Anger misfocused
Some of Larry Brown's recent critics need to re-evaluate where their feelings of animosity are rooted. He deserves reproach, but not exactly for the reasons he is getting it
exactly for the moment.
Back when Brown left for more money to join the San Antonio Spurs, his fans were naturally disappointed, but seemed to "understand" why he went. As with many relationships, when one party exits, the other is going to be upset. I think that when Brown left, the KU community felt slighted, which was to be expected. But because he had built such a good team that went on to become national champions, everyone was too caught up in superficial niceties to admit negative feelings.
So now, when everyone realizes that Brown is a mortal capable of making mistakes, worship is no longer paramount. In fact, all of the derogatory comments made now are ironically contradictory to the praises of only six months ago.
ago.
Larry Brown did not deserve the "understanding" he received when he left. He built up a team, got a better offer, did not recruit, investigations were pending, and he left. This tells me something about him as a person, not a coach. In
fact, it seems he's a real chicken. He probably saw what was coming and split so he wouldn't have to take the heat, knowing full well that although he committed the infractions, punishment would stop here and not follow him to Texas.
Texas.
The NCAA should realize the injustice of the system and remedy it by punishing the violator, like the real world punishes a criminal. In the end, the innocent remainder of the sports program, as well as the school as a whole, loses put.
out.
So in this light, Brown's coaching abilities need not be questioned, but instead the enforcement of the NCAA regulations should be. Although I hate for it to be true, I'd be willing to bet that if every recruiting team were investigated, most, if not all, have committed infractions and will continue to do so. Not by any means do I think this is right. But to call Larry Brown despicable because he didn't run a "clean" program is ridiculous; to call him a weasel for when going it got rough is not.
weather for guns, with Brown if you will, but consider exactly from where this anger comes. Furthermore, the NCAA needs to re-evaluate its system of unjustly hurting the innocent while the guilty escape with only a heated press conference or two. One more thing: Coach Williams and the team, you have my sincere sympathies.
Jennifer Vanderhoof Olathe sophomore
BLOOM COUNTY
OLIVER'S
LAB
OLIVER'S LAB
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---
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 11, 1988
NCAA
Continued from D.1
received numerous small loans from Marshall ranging from $5 to $10 but that Manning always paid him back.
Neither Grinker nor Manning could be reached for comment yesterday.
Marx, who wrote the article for Sports Illustrated, confirmed that he was the reporter present at two interview sessions and said that Marshall approached him about sitting in on the meetings.
"He called me the morning of Sept. 9 and invited me to a meeting with Mr. Moss," Marx said. "He knew me as a reporter because I had worked
with him before on an article, and he trusted me."
Marx said that Marshall had not been paid by Sports Illustrated to do the article.
Marx said neither of the NCAA investigators was aware that he was a reporter. He said he would not answer if the investigators had asked.
"They asked me for my name and I told them," Marx said yesterday in a telephone interview from his Washington D.C. office. "They never asked me what my profession was. If they had asked, I would have told them. If they would have told me to leave I
Berst said investigators should have questioned Marx more thoroughly, but that it was unethical for Marx not to identify himself as a reporter.
would have."
Berst said the NCAA occasionally allowed friends to sit in because "it sometimes helps us to get better information because it makes the person being questioned feel more at ease."
Berst said he would meet with officials from KU next week to determine whether to reopen the NCAA infractions case. On Nov. 1, the NCAA put Kansas on three years of probation for recruiting
violations that occurred during the summer of 1986.
Bob Frederick, Kansas athletic director, issued a statement yesterday that said, "It is our intention to fully pursue the questions that were raised and seek a quick solution to the matter. It would be helpful if you could give any further comment regarding the issue until that time."
Under NCAA rules, such loans could have made Manning ineligible during last season if the loans occurred when Manning was a student and when Marshall was considered a representative of the University. The article does not
state when the loans were made.
Marshall was one of three University representatives of the Kansas basketball program who the NCAA Infractions Committee said were to be disassociated from the University's athletics program based upon their involvement in the recruiting violations.
Other allegations in the Sports Illustrated article included:
- that former Kansas coach Larry Brown told Sports Illustrated that in the summer of 1966, he had a phone conversation with then Memphis State coach Dana Kirk. In that conversation, Brown
admitted having paid for a plane ticket for Vincent Askew, a Memphis State player who had considered transferring to Kansas. Brown said Kirk informed him that he had taped the phone call. He concluded that Kirk, in turn, informed the NCAA of recruiting violations at the NCAF.
■ that Marschal, who played for McNeese State during the 1983-86 season, said he had received thousands of dollars from McNeese State boosters. McNeese State is currently on probation for rule violations in its basketball program.
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Friday, November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Efficiency of lighting in KU buildings questioned
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Safety and comfort also considerations lighting experts say By Craig Welch
One way to reduce electricity costs at the University of Kansas would be to use lightning more efficiently, a KU professor said yesterday.
Steve Hamburg, assistant professor of environmental studies, said KU could save tens of thousands of dollars by improving the efficiency of the lighting in some campus buildings. For instance, Waltz Library
"Watson has a wonderful trove of lighting problems," Hamburg said. "There is massive lighting in front of terminals and windows, and the lights in the stacks are on all the time. We could save tens of thousands of dollars on this building alone."
has lights that stay on regardless of the rooms' use.
Hamburg suggested installing switches for the lights in the Watson stacks so students and visitors could turn the lights off when the rooms were not in use.
Hamburg also said that some buildings, like Haworth Hall, had corridors which used only of its lights, while other floors used all the
T
there is massive lighting in front of terminals and windows, and the lights in the stacks are on all the time. We could save tens of thousands of dollars on this building alone.'
Steve Hamburg assistant professor of environmental studies
Hamburg glanced around the sun-lit room and said that some rooms obviously didn't need as much light as others. He suggested the installation of switches on the light fixtures themselves.
available lighting. Those inconsistencies should be considered, he said. Using his office as a third example.
The switches could vary the level of lighting for different parts of a room, and after they were set, one wall switch could turn them on and off.
However, some lighting experts agree that some of Hamburg's ideas
Ron Helms, chairman of architectural engineering, said continuous lighting was a necessity in Watson for security and comfort.
"What if a woman walks into the
stacks, turns on the lights and then a rapist walks in behind her and turns them off” he asked. “If she can turn the lights on and off, then so can someone else. That’s why some University buildings don’t have switches.”
Helms also questioned the feasibility of using spot lighting in corridors.
"It could easily result in injury or a lawsuit." Helms said.
Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, said that during the energy crunch of the late 1970s, lighting levels had been reduced. But, after much complaining, lighting was returned to higher levels.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 11. 1988
Nation/World
7
Speech triggers German protest
The Associated Press
BONN, West Germany — The president of the parliament called the early years of the Hitler era a glorious time for many Germans, triggering a short during the governing era and yesterday marking the Kristallnacht.
The remarks by Philipp Jenninger led to demands for his resignation by members of the opposition Greens and Social Democrats, who were among about 50 who marched out of Berlin and reportedly televised speech to Parliament.
Parliament president praises Hitler on eve of ceremony
Jenniger's address threatened to overshadow West Germany's carefully planned ceremonies marking the 50th anniversary of the Kristall-nacht, the night the Nazis began their first organized persecution of the Jews.
The national ZDF television network said that Jenninger might resign and that leaders of the main parties met in Bonn to discuss his future.
The 56-year-old conservative had talked at length about the positive feelings of many ordinary Germans early in the Hitler dictatorship.
"Didn't Hitler bring to reality what (Kaiser) Wilhelm II had only promised, that is, to lead the Germans to glorious times? Wasn't he chosen by Providence, a Fuehrer such as is given to a people only once in "
thousand years?" Jenninger asked.
"For the fate of the Germans and European Jews, Hitler's successes were perhaps even more fateful than his crimes and misdeeds," Jenninger said. "The years from 1933 to 1938, even from a distant retrospective and in the knowledge of what followed, still are a fascinating thing today, since throughout history there was hardly a parallel to Hitler's triumphal process during the first years."
In Jerusalem, Israel's Foreign Ministry said it was astonished by Jenninger's speech.
News Roundup
Home garment work bans lifted by U.S.
prohibitions in five clothing industries starting Jan. 8 were published in the Federal Register. The White House abandoned efforts to also remove the ban on homework in a sixth field, women's apparel.
apparent. Labor Secretary Ann D. McLaughlin said lifting the prohibitions will give workers increased flexibility and improve competitiveness of U.S. industries.
"The changing workforce demographics demand that we provide employment opportunities that allow workers the freedom to choose flexible alternatives, including the ability to work in one's own home," she said in a statement. "Women, for example, have entered the workforce by the millions."
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration yesterday removed most of the remaining bans on home production in the garment industry. The bans were imposed 47 years ago to combat the exploitation of immigrants and other low-wage workers.
tries.
FLORIDA'S MACK WINS: Conservative Republican Rep. Connie Mack III won a cliffhanger Senate race yesterday in Florida over Rep. Kenneth MacKay, a moderate Democrat, for the seat being relinquished by Democratic Sen. Lawton Chiles. The outcome means the Democrats will have a 55-45 majority, a gain of one seat instead of two, in the new U.S. Senate.
The Associated Press
U. K., IRAN RELATIONS: Britain and Iran restored full diplomatic relations yesterday, renewing hopes for the release of British hostages held by pro-Iranian Islamic extremists in Lebanon. Relations between the two countries soured in May after African powers arrested on shoplifting charges in Manchester in northern England and a British diplomat was assaulted by militants in Tehran.
shot and another was bludgeoned to death, officials said yesterday.
BRAZILIAN STRIKE: Thousands of strikers angered by shrinking paycheeks Wednesday stormed Brazil's biggest steel mill in Volta Redonda, 80 miles northwest of Rio de Janeiro. Strikes hurled rocks and bombs at police and soldiers. Two workers were fatally
New regulations eliminating the home work
EMPTY LIFEBOATS FOUND: Two burned, empty lifeboats were found yesterday in the North Atlantic, but there were no signs of the 27 crewmen from a tanker that broke in two in stormy seas and were rescued by the Odyssey. The Odyssey, a Liberian-registered vessel with Greek and Honduran crewmen, was heading for a Canadian port.
EPA REPORT: The Environmental Protection Agency said yesterday its sampling of the indoor air in 10 public buildings around the country turned up traces of more than 500 different chemicals. Although the concentrations were generally small, they sometimes reached 100 times the levels found in typical outdoor air.
B-1 BOMBERS READY: The Air Force returned nearly one-third of its B-1B bomber fleet to flight status yesterday after conducting safety inspections spurred by a crash earlier this week. Air Force officials declined to predict when they would complete the one-time inspections for the remaining B-1Bs.
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We've Expanded!
Don't miss IBM's PS/2 Demonstration Fair on campus. Save a spot on your calendar for IBM's PS/2 Demonstration Fairs. We'll show you how the IBM Personal System/2 can help organize notes, revise papers, produce high-quality graphics and more. Its easy to learn and easy to use. We think you'll find it's a perfect match.
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IBM PS/2 Fair
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Dad's Birthday
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
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Friday, NOVEMBER 16
Meet Candy @ Library 3
Saturday, NOVEMBER 16
Tony's Party 8:00
Sunday, NOVEMBER 16
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Demonstration Fair Schedule
November 15 Academic Computer Center Presentations:
10:00 AM - PS/2 Technology
11:00 AM - Desk Top Publishing
1:00 PM - Microsoft EXCEL
November 22
November 22 Academic Computer Center Presentations:
10:00 AM - PS/2 Technology
11:00 AM - DOS4.0
1:00 PM - Connectivity to Campus Library
November 29 Academic Computer Center Presentations:
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IBM
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© IBM CORPORATION 1988
---
8
Friday, November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
AIRLINES
Photos by Shauna Norfleet/KANSAN
GROUND CONTROL
LEFT: Brett Mauser, Lenexa sophomore, controls his airplane with a hand-held remote box. Mauser was flying his radio-controlled aiplane yesterday in a field near Clinton Lake. The plane runs on 10 percent nitrous gas and is made of wood and plastic. ABOVE: Mauser fills up the gas tank of his airplane.
Court may review ruling on abortion
The Associated Press
Missouri case could reverse Roe v. Wade
WASHINGTON — The federal government told the Supreme Court yesterday a pending Missouri case gives it an "appropriate opportunity" to reconsider the high court's landmark 1973 ruling that legalized abortion.
In what appears to be the Reagan administration's last chance in the Supreme Court to address the 1952-age row Wade vs. Raleigh ruling, Solicite (R) asked the court brief noting that the Missouri case "is free of procedural defects."
"Accordingly, if the Court is prepared to reconsider Roe v. Wade, this case presents an appropriate opportunity to hold so," said Frieda's 12 page brief.
The solicitor general notes that the U.S. government's views on abortion were expressed in a case in June 1986. In that case, the government urged that Roe vs. Wade be overturned and instituted right to the procedure. But the court voted 5-4 to reaffirm the earlier ruling.
In the Missouri case, the state passed a law two years ago regulating abortions. The law also contains a finding that the life of each human
being begins at conception.
The law provides that no public funds, employees or facilities are to be used to perform or assist in an abortion or to encourage or counsel a woman to have an abortion.
The law was struck down in July by a federal appeals court, which said the law was invalid under Roe vs. Wade.
Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the National Right to Life Committee, said the Missouri case offers the high court a chance to address some important issues, such as limits on abortions late in pregnancy, even if it decides not to use the case to overturn Roe v. Wade.
In their appeal, Missouri officials said that if their state law does not satisfy the Roe decision, then the Supreme Court should reconsider that ruling and go on to give states almost unlimited authority to ban abortions any time they had reason to do so.
"We're not predicting that the court would use this case as the occasion to overturn Roe v. Wade." Johnson said. "That's a possibility. Of course, we would be delighted if they did."
Watkins officials recommend vaccinations now for January flu season
By Terry Bauroth
Kansan staff writer
To combat the number of deaths caused by influenza each year, KU health officials are recommending that people in high-risk categories receive flu shots.
About 20 people died of influenza and related pneumonia in Douglas County in 1987. Deaths occurred in people 30 and over, but most were in the age group of 80 and over, according to the Kansas State Health Department in Topeka.
Watkins is offering flu shots through December, or until the supply is gone, to students, faculty, staff members, and retired faculty and staff members. The cost is $8 for fee-paying students and $10 for non-fee paying employees. Appointments are not necessary.
Most *as* risk for getting the flu and associated complications are those people with chronic illnesses and people over the age of 60, said Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"Although the flu shot is offered to everyone, I would not recommend it to healthy students." Yockey said.
The best time to receive the flu shot is now through Nov. 15 because it takes three to six weeks to work, and flu season begins in January, he said.
"A lot of illnesses are called the flu, but the true flu is a very specific viral illness," said Sergio Ortiz, who abrupt onset of a high fever, severe headache, intense muscle aches and a non-productive cough."
A non-productive cough is one that does not produce mucus.
Jody Woods, coordinator of nurses at Watkins, said, "Getting the vaccination doesn't mean you're not going to get sick. But you might only get a milder case than you would have."
People are more likely to get the flu when their resistance is low, Woods said. Lack of sleep, poor eating habits and stress can lower
resistance to diseases.
The Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department also offers flu shots today from 1:30 to 4 p.m. at Babcock Place, 17th and Massachusetts streets, and tomorrow from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. at City Hall in Eudora. The cost is $5.
Elaine Houston, registered nurse at the county health department, said that people who were allergic to eggs should not receive the flu shot.
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Superconducting super collider
9
HOW IT WORKS
Two beams of protons are fired in a 52-mile circle, headed in opposite directions. Researchers watch them collide in labs called interaction halls.
Interaction halls
0 3 MILES
Refrigeration and power stations
Booster accelerators fire protons into loop
THE ACCELERATOR
Built in a 10-foot-wide underground tunnel.
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Room in walkway for workers and small service vehicles.
Service vehicle TUNNEL
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Proton beam pipes
Liquid helium cooling
Superconducting magnet
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THE BEAM PIPE
Superconducting magnets bend the beam into curving path. To produce such powerful magnetic forces, the magnets are cooled to 450 degrees below zero F with liquid helium.
SOURCES: Dallas Morning News, Wall Street Journal
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/JUDY TREIBLE
Texas is selected in 7-state contest for super collider
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Texas beat out six other states yesterday in a high-stakes race to capture the $4.4 billion superconducting super collider, which, if Congress finds the money $o build it, would be the largest scientific instrument ever constructed.
the instrument to the project's home state.
The announcement by John Herrington, secretary of the Energy Department, drew immediate howls of protest from losing states, where officials had waged a years-long battle to win the giant atom-smasher, the jobs and the scientific prestige that will accrue to the project's home state.
Illinois officials also were angered, with House Minority Leader Robert Michel calling on the president to review Herrington's decision declaring Texas the preferred site for what the department will name the Ronald Reagan Center for High Energy Physics.
the texas decision has a strong smell of White House politics," said Sen. Donald Riege Jr., D-Mich. "We and the other five finalist states got a raw deal."
Eight senators — Alan Dixon and Paul Simon of Illinois, Riegle and Carl Levin of Michigan, Dennis DeConcini and John Mcain of Arizona and Tim Wirth and William Armstrong of Colorado — asked Reagan to establish a bipartisan
commission of physicists that would review all seven of the finalist sites. The others sites are in North Carolina and Tennessee.
The senators said if the project "is to have the slightest chance of being funded," the President must demonstrate the Texas decision "was based solely on scientific criteria utilizing a fair, open and competitive bidding process."
Herrington said the Texas site — some 16,000 farm acres in Ellis County 35 miles south of Dallas was "superior" to the others for building the collider, a 53-mile underground tunnel capable of whipping proton beams into each other with 20 times the force of the world's most powerful existing particle accelerator.
"The Texas proposal clearly received the highest overall technical evaluation ratings of any proposal and exhibited no significant overall weaknesses." Herrington said.
"I have to tell you there are no politics in this," Herrington said at a news conference attended by such prominent Texans as House Speaker Jim Wright and Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, both Democratrs, and Sen. Phil Gramm, a Republican.
The decision was announced two days after Bush, an adopted Texan, was elected president.
Losing states complain that politics ruled decision
The Associated Press
The losers cried politics and the winners were jubilant at the news yesterday that Texas was chosen as the site for a proposed $4.4 billion federal super collider.
named for President Reagan. "The ice on the cake is the very special relationship between Ronald Reagan and Texas," said the Republican governor.
Politics suited Texas Gov. Bill Clements just fine. He said the giant atom smasher would be
The other losing states were Michigan, Arizona,
Illinois, Colorado, Tennessee and North Carolina.
In Waxahachie, the town south of Dallas where
the 53-mile doughnut-shaped hole in the ground will go, most were celebrating the project that would bring 4,000 construction jobs and 3,500 permanent jobs to the community of 18,000 in four
(0) Congress has appropriated $205 million for the citing so far.
The Pi Phi's and the Phi Kapp's would like to thank the following fraternities and sororities for participating in the 1988 Fall Classic Tournament to benefit the Lawrence United Way.
A Δ Π Δ Γ Π B Ф
A E Π Δ T Δ Π K A
A Γ Δ Δ Υ Σ A E
AK Λ K Σ Σ X
AT Ω Φ Δ Θ Σ Φ E
BETA F I J I T K E
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Good Luck!
Semi-Finals and Final Games to be played at Allen Field House Sunday, Nov. 13
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The Cavain String Quartet
Annie Fullard, Violin
Susan Waterbury, Violin
Erika Eckert, Viola
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Performing Octet in E Flat, Op. 20 by Mendelssohn
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String Quartet (1974) Zwilich
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Donald Weilerstein, Violin
Peter Salaff, Violin
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Quartet No. 19 in C Major, K465
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
"... String quartet playing doesn't come better than this." Boston Globe
7:30 p.m. Monday, November 14, 1988
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved/For reservations, call (913)864-3982; Public: $12 & $10; KU & K-12 Students: $6 & $5; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $11 & $9.
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society,and the KU Endowment Association. Half Price for Students
YOU'LL HAVE THE Time Of Your Life!
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The University Of Kansas Theatre Presents A Searing Look At Contemporary Medical Ethics
WHOSE
IS IT ANYWAY
BY BRIAN CLARK
8:00 P.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY.
NOV. 11-12 & 18-19, 1988
CRAFTON-PREYER THEATRE
WHOSE
IS IT ANYWAY
BY BRIAN CLARK
8:00 P.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY,
NOV. 11-12 & 18-19, 1988
CRAFTON-PREYER THEATRE
Tickets On Sale In The Murphy Hall Box Office. All Seats
Reserved/For Reservations. Call (913)864-3982. VISA
And Mastercard Accepted. Special Discounts For KU
Students And Senior Citizens. Partially Funded By The KU
Student Activity Fee. This Production Is An Associate
Entry In The 1989 American College Theatre Festival XXI.
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Friday, November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Semiannual fund-raiser assists KANU programs
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Talk is not cheap, especially if it's on the radio.
Since Saturday, KANU 91.5 FM radio has been conducting one of its semi-annual fund-raising campaigns to pay for its talk. The campaign concludes tomorrow.
Debi Gilley, public information coordinator for KANU, said the Fall Fanfare '88 campaign coordinated a phone pledging system and a mailing campaign to encourage new patrons to establish memberships with the station and remind regular patrons to renew their support. Another campaign to raise money is planned for this spring.
KANU has signed up almost 200 new members this week, raising almost $35,000 by telephone. The fall goal is $100,000. Gilley said money received through mail-in support would supplement the phone campaign.
"Each drive is different," Gilley said. "Generally, a lot of people wait until the end, so we have a flurry of calls on the last day."
KANU is public radio station and does not advertise commercially. The station relies on support from listeners to supplement monies it receives to the university of Kanu. The station underwriters and the federal government.
Staff members have been making on-the-air appeals during the day, asking listeners to contribute to the station.
Darrell Brogdon, program director at KANU, said listeners could view their pledges as investments in good radio.
Brogdon, the host of the "Imagination Workshop", one of KANU's special programs, said many people did not realize the cost of producing a radio program.
"The cost also includes a lot of time, but it takes several thousand
dollars to put a show on the air," Brogdon said.
Rachel Hunter, assistant program director at KANU, also produces the "Good Time Radio Revue," a special program which is broadcast several times a year from Liberty Hall.
"We're not here just for the fun of it," Hunter said. "Listener support is vital."
Gilley said the special programs were important to draw listenership, and encouraged continued patronization of the station.
Marcia Cooper, membership coordinator, said about 150 volunteers and members of the KANU staff assisted in the campaign. Area restaurants helped by donating food to the people answering telephones at the station.
The two fund-raising efforts are projected to raise about $265,000 in private funds to supplement KANU's other monies.
CARLOS MORALES
Daniel Starling/KANSAN
Making the mold
Lori Pam, Higland Park, Ill., senior, watches David Vertacnik, associate professor of design, band a strip on a piece of pottery in a ceramics class yesterday.
Harvard professor to speak on history of Christianity in the Ukraine
By Laura Woodward Korean staff writer
Kansan staff writer
In support of the 1000th anniversary of the introduction of Christianity to the Ukraine, the departments of history and Soviet and East European Studies have invited Ihor Sevchenko to speak at KU.
ianization of Rus' Ukraine viewed from Bvzantium."
Sevchenk, a professor at Harvard University, is an authority on early Ukraine and Byzantine history. The Ukraine is located in the southern part of East Europe. At present, it is known as the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.
Sevchenko will speak at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Centennial Room in the Kansas Union. His lecture is titled "The Christ-
"He's one of the world's greatest authorities on the subject of early Ukraine and
Byzantine history," said Norman Saul, professor of history. "It's quite something to have him come here."
His visit is sponsored by the Maria Palij memorial fund, established by Michael Palij, retired Slavic librarian at Watson, for the support of studies of the Ukraine
This will be the fourth lecture in several years sponsored by the Maria Palij memorial fund.
"Palij is very much interested in having the Ukraine recognized," Saul said. "It's been pretty much neglected."
Palij also organized a Ukrainian Christianity display on the third floor of Watson Library. The display will run until Nov. 19.
In A. D. 1988, the Ukrainian people accepted Christianity from Byzantium, during the reign of Prince Volodymyr the first Ukrainian state.
"It's an important time because religion was very important." Palij said. "Culture and literature came from the Christian culture. People then began to write about Christianity and culture."
"The main reason I did this is that I hope professors and students would see this and think about Christianity," he said.
An average city
The greater Kansas City area has become a model test market because it is so "average." It hits near the median mark in many aspects of U.S. life.
The average median age for a person living in Kansas City is 30.2 years old. The U.S.average is 31.3.
37. 5% of people living in Kansas City have completed high school and 19.1% have completed college. Comparatively, the national figures are 34.4% and 16.3%.
There are 2.65 persons per household living in Kansas City.The national average is 2.75. The Kansas City figure for persons per family is 3.21, while the U.S. figure stands at 3.27.
图示:一个戴毕业帽的女孩。
KC's buying habits draw test products
Dave Eames/KANSAN
By Janell Good Kansan staff writer
Kansas City attracts marketers of new products, because it is representative of the U.S. population's wants, needs and desires.
Linda Urey, Procter & Gamble representative, said that the Kansas City metropolitan area was named as one of the top 10 test market areas by national marketing associations in a trade magazine last year. Other test market areas included Toka Oka, Bakersfield, Calif.; and Atlanta.
Companies such as Procter & Gamble and Frito-Lay rely on the tastes of people in the Midwest because it is a model market, she said.
Source: U.S. Census
Ulrey said that the Kansas City Standard Metropolitan Area statistically matched the average consumer in the United States.
According to the 1980 U.S. Census, the average household has 2.75 members nationwide compared to 2.66 members per household in Kansas City. The median age in Kansas is 30.2 years old, running very close to the nationwide median age of 31.3 years old.
years out.
These are the assets that give Kansas City the chance to see new products first, Urey said. For instance, McDonald's put their trust in the taste of
Kansas Citians when they chose to market the first McDonald's Happy Meal and their later creation of the McRib sandwich here in Kansas City.
he mentioned. Ulrey said that having a closed media area like Kansas City was perfect for testing new products. The closest advertising market was St. Louis and there are no overlapping advertisements from one area to another, she said.
Before testing a new product, marketers try to identify and project the consumers needs, but the process is often complicated.
consumer makes the consumers cast their votes for new products by their willingness to pay for the product during test marketing." Ulev said.
Mike Valadez, Frito-Lay division trade development manager, said that test marketing gives the consumer more choices by generating a higher volume of products and more options.
"Test marketing also pumps advertising dollars into Kansas City and increases sales at the retail level, like the supermarkets and convenience stores," Valadez said.
He said that Kansas City was an area of dominate influence and that the Nielson ratings were also gathered here. The Nielson scan track market system also collected data on new products, besides ratings for television programs.
Demographically, Kansas City was middle-of-the road when it came to consumer buying habits. This gave a fairly accurate account of how a new product would score in a national market, he said.
"The marketer must watch out when testing different trends of fad products. Something that might receive record sales on the coast, might float in the Midwest and vice versa, Valdez said.
Maurie Pituck, researcher for the Bernstein-Rein Advertising Agency in Kansas City, said that the cost of advertising had a large impact on the testing of new products.
"A company must advertise heavily in the test market area to introduce a new product to consumers. Kansas City has relatively low media costs compared to the rest of the U.S." Pitluck said.
Once an advertising agency has chosen a test market, they must decide how to get their product to the consumer. There are many distribution companies in the Kansas City area, he said.
companies in the United States. "There are lots of food markets and fast food restaurant chains, this helps get the product to the consumer quickly." Pittuck said.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 11, 1988
11
Arts & Entertainment
Director to quit administrative role
Willis leaving post to teach full-time
A. A. M.
Ron Willis is stepping down after this semester from his administrative position in the University Theatre.
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Within his small, cluttered office at Murphy Hall, amid play scripts and piles of books, Ron Willis is gladly preparing to make a minor career change.
the end of
But it is with no regrets that he will
once again become a "plain old
faculty member."
After 13 years as director of University Theatre, Willis will step down from the administrative position at the end of the semester.
faculty member.
Tall, bearded and bespectacled.
Willis is a well-known figure in university theater circles as a director, but described himself as a reluctant administrator.
"I'm looking forward to being able to teach full time again," he said. "I sure do enjoy it. The joys of teaching and directing are lasting."
freelance in 1935.
Willis' wife Marie said she was happy that he was getting back to the classroom.
"Ron's served the department well, and after 13 years it's time," she said. "Now he can focus on his professional development as a teacher and scholar."
teacher and school.
Willis will take a sabbatical during the spring semester and return to the University next fall. Among his pursuits during the sabbatical is a book on play spectatorship.
"I have found that aesthetic education in our country is sadly deficient." Willis said. "People don't know how to watch plays."
Willis said the art of observing plays was something he stressed when teaching his drama classes.
well teaching "Witnessing a play properly has the same precepts of a good education," he said.
Willis has given workshops on play spectatorship through the American College Theatre Festival.
A colleague who has worked with
Wills in staging, production and the
ACTF, said that the right words to describe Ron Willis were difficult to find.
"He's such a vivacious personality I couldn't compare him with any one," said Roger Gross, professor of drama at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville.
"Artistically, he is a very adventurous director, always doing something surprising." he said.
Wills" last play this semester is "Whose Life is it Anyway?" a medical ethics drama written by Brian Clark.
Will Carpenter, a Tulaa, Okla., junior who plays the leading role in "Whose Life Is It anyway?" said he had enjoyed working with Willis in the production.
"Ron is a genius." Carpenter said.
"Ron is a really good friend."
Willis said he liked staging new plays because he did not have to fight audiences' pre-conceived notions.
"With a new play, you work out the bugs while it's in progress," he said. "What the audience doesn't see is the development of new talent and the development of the product itself. I like witnessing that."
With the numerous productions he has staged at KU and other universities, Willis said it was difficult to pick a favorite. However, there is one production that he is not likely to forget for awhile.
Just more than a year ago on Nov. 5, 1987, while making the final adjustments for the University production of "Hamlet," Willis broke a leg, a rib and his nose when he fell off the stage in Crafton-Preyer Theatre.
Fully recovered now. Willis is able to laugh about the accident.
"Since they reconstructed my nose, I can breathe better than I ever could before," he said. "It's kind of a humorous dimension to the whole story."
Wills said he viewed each production as a voyage but admitted that he
didn't remember much about a show when its run was complete.
what is it? "I'm very boring when I'm working because everything relates to the show. It even wakes me up at night. When then it's over, that feeling's gone," he said.
"But I give him my own feelings."
Marie Willis said that her husband encouraged feedback on his plays.
Wills said that he enjoyed working with classic plays but that he tried to enhance the excitement of the original texts. He also owned his own thoughts and interpretations.
"Mostly I just listen," she said.
"At this point, it doesn't matter so much to me that other people like a play or not," he said. "What matters is my own ideas about each performance."
and Wills said that during his sabbatical he planned to read so he could be updated on things he would be teaching after his return to academia.
"I want my students to become good, liberally educated people," he said.
Next fall, Willis will be found alternately teaching classes in acting
and drama, and in the darkened seats of Crafton-Preyer Theatre coaxing emotion and feeling from young actors on the stage. These are the places where he wants to be, and where he feels most comfortable
where he feels most comforted.
His wife said the shift in jobs was a change whose time had come.
"He'll be able to make a different kind of contribution now," she said.
'Whose Life Is It Anyway?' addresses dying with dignity
Kansan staff writer
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Dignified living is a goal for which many people strive throughout their lives, but often consideration is not given to the right to die with dignity.
"Whose Life Is It Anyway?" a medical ethics play by Brian Clark, focuses on a disabled man caught between his desire to die and the loss of control over his body.
The KU University Theatre will present the drama at 8 p.m. today, tomorrow and on Nov. 18 and 19 in Crainton-Preyer Theatre at Mur
phy Hall. Ron Willis will direct the production, which will be his final play before retiring as administrative director of University Theatre. Willis will return to teaching and directing next fall after a spring sabbatical.
Will Carpenter, Tulsa junior, portrays Ken Harrison, a sculptor who has been paralyzed as a result of a car accident which destroyed his central nervous system and left only his brain functional. Harrison wants to be removed from life support systems and allowed to die, but Carpenter said the scope of the play extended beyond the
"It's not about life or death," Carpenter said. "It' s about making a choice and having your rights and dignity stripped away.
paralyzed man.
"A lot of people have handicaps but you don't realize your limits. Once you separate the head from the body a lot of things become obvious."
carpenter had Harrison battled throughout the play with doctors and lawyers to receive permission to disconnect his life-support system. The overriding question is whether Harrison is mentally stable enough to make such a
the medical community wants to force Harrison to live until he dies a "natural death."
Marcus Richey, Wichita senior, plays Dr. Barr, a psychiatrist who examines Ken to determine whether he is suffering from depression that would hinder his decision-making faculties.
"It it's definitely not depressing or sad. The playwright was careful not to let anyone wallow in self-pity." Richey said.
Dr. Emerson, who was responsible for keeping Harrison alive after the accident, makes it his duty throughout the play to see that Harrison is kept alive until he dies a natural death.
Reggie Hodges, Compton, Calif.. senior, plays Dr. Emerson.
"As a doctor, it is my duty to save life, that's the bottom line." Hodges said. "The doctor thinks he has accomplished something by
saving this man's life, and now the man wants to die."
The legal battle which is waged within the hospital room ultimately is a victory for Harrison, but Richey said the conclusion left the question unanswered whether the decision reached was the right.
“It’s ironic. You don't know whether to cheer or to feel bad.” Richey said. “Ken is a funny guy, he's made you laugh for two hours and now he's going to die.
"It has a powerful effect. It's funny, sad, touching, and it makes you feel good."
Hodges said that the doctors were not perceived as the bad guys in the play, even though they were good. The HarlowerArchive also despishe his wishes.
'each person in the play truly believes that he is standing up for what he thinks is right,' Hodges said. "There are no real villains."
"Whose Life Is It Anyway?" was originally staged in London and was named the best play of 1977. In 1979, the play received the New York Outer Critics Circle Award for best play during its run in New York City. The play is the University of Kansas' associate entry in the 1989 American College Theatre Festival to be held in spring.
Carpenter said that the play did not evoke sadness, but that it was also not a lighthearted story.
"The audience will leave with mixed feelings. It's a two-way thing; everyone will have to make their own choice." he said.
Hodges said that he wanted the audience to think about its feelings on the topics considered in the play.
"This has been a tremendous experience for me and I hope the audience walks away really affected," he said. "I want it to cause them to think."
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Friday, November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
PROTEST
Continued from p. 1
"The governor shares her concern, but he doesn't have the power to snap his fingers and do away with hazardous waste." Strickler said. "We're dealing with a complex issue, but they're want-to deal with it in a simplistic way."
Hayden's office issued a statement after the meeting, which said specific concerns were raised by the Vulcan facility in Wichita.
At 3:30 p.m., Hayden met with Maddy in his office for about 15 minutes. A security guard with a master key unlocked the handcuffs because Maddy said she didn't bring a kev.
"Because of my deep interest in these matters, I directed the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to establish a process to allow for open and productive discussions about concerns we have regarding environmental safety and protection," the statement said.
Maddy said that during the meeting, Hayden expressed sympathy to a certain extent.
prior
"The governor said he would look into it, which is the response we always get," Maddy said.
■ The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
SAN DIEGO
Scott Wallace/KANSAN
Lauri Maddy, Rose Hill resident, contracted a rare lung disease from living near the Vulcan Chemical Co. in Wichita.
GREENPEAC
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BURGER & BUNCH
Farm pesticides pose dangers
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
Environmentalists rally at Statehouse
Scott Wallace/KANSAN
Several environmental groups held a really yesterday on the steps of the capitol in Topeka to protest the use of agricultural chemicals.
TOPEKA - The use of toxic chemicals in agriculture has reached dangerous proportions, an environmentalist said yesterday at a rally and news conference on the Statehouse steps.
"Farm chemicals threaten the health and safety of those working on and living near farms" said Dick Russell, a spokesman for the National Toxics Campaign. "They are damaging soil, poisoning our water supply, even the very food they are used to protect."
The rally and news conference were conducted in conjunction with the release of a report by the National Toxics Campaign, a nationwide group formed to develop and implement solutions to toxic waste problems.
The rally took place at 10:30 a.m. yesterday during a meeting of the state legislature's agricultural committee, which was discussing recommendations for this year's legislative session.
The report, called "Shadow on the Land," stated that about 375,000 tons of pesticides were
umped on U.S. farmland each year. The chemicals not only cause health hazards but also cause an economic burden on farmers. For instance, the report stated that one-third of the cost of producing an ear of corn went to chemicals.
The report offers solutions through reforms in federal policy, regulations and education.
Members of several environmental groups attended, including about 10 members of the KU Environs.
Deirdre Goldarb, Frankfort junior and an Enviros member, said that she grew up on a farm
that didn't use chemicals. However, she and her family have been affected by agricultural chemicals used by others in the area.
"There are times when we can't eat the fish (from area streams) because the water is so polluted or well has had high nitrate levels.
John Kostick, a farmer from Marshall County, emphasized that farmers weren't the only people affected. He said that people who live in cities also should be concerned about their water.
Workshop to teach KU students skills to deal with AIDS patients
"Ask where your water comes from," Kostick said. "Remember, we all live downstream."
By Laura Woodward
Kansan staff writer
About 100 KU students will spend this weekend at a workshop in Robinson Center learning to work with people with acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
people involved in the workshop is sponsored by the Good Samaritan Project of Kansas City, Mo., a volunteer organization that helps AIDS patients and their families and friends. The project was begun in 1985 by the Metropolitan Community Church of Greater Kansas City, Mo.
"I hopefully, the students participating will be so inspired from this workshop that they will volunteer for the project," said Phil Huntsinger, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation.
Huntingstar said two KU students were instrumental in bringing the workshop to campus: Pat Bloxham, Lakewood, Colo., graduate student, and Naglaa El Hodiri, Lawrence senior.
"I went through the training last year, and it was very beneficial to me," Bloxham said. "But it was very expensive commuting to Kansas City. I thought that the program should be available to everyone at KU at
minimal cost."
minimal cost.
Annette Wild, administrative assistant for the project,
said, "We are encouraged that students are wanting to learn more about this disease."
huntsinger said the students participating in the workshop would be encouraged to volunteer for the project but were under no obligation.
project but were unable to complete the students were required to register by Nov. 7 and were asked to pay a registration fee of $15. The workshop includes communication exercises and discussion of psychological and spiritual issues. Physicians will speak on the medical aspects of the disease.
on the medical aspects of HIV. Wild said the project had 739 clients. The number comprises 243 AIDS patients, 246 people who have tested HIV positive and 241 family members and friends.
HIV positive and 24 family members. Other aspects of the project include recommended professional counselors and a teen-staffed crisis line. The project operates on a buddy system.
The project operation "We assign a volunteer to be a supportive friend and help them through the rough times." Wild said, "People have so many preconceived notions about AIDS patients.
"This is an eye opener.
Lawrence growing westward Residents concerned with preserving aesthetic environment
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
Some Lawrence residents expressed concern last night to city and county officials about the way development will progress in western Lawrence.
About 45 people attended a public hearing at City Hall about proposed policies for the Western Development Area Plan, a guide that will govern western expansion. The Western Development Area is bordered by Interstate 70 on the north, County Road 13 on the West, the Wakarua River on the south and Kasold Drive on the east.
The plan is being drafted by a committee comprised of city and county planning officials who conducted the hearing.
David Evans, chairman of the committee, said that the
bond grant award degree grant policy proposals
committee had spent a year drafting policy proposals reached a point where we need public comment" he said.
Evans said the committee should send the plan to the county planning commission in December or January
Much of the concern at the meeting focused on the environmental impact of development, particularly on
Elkin's Prairie and the Baldwin Creek watershed area
"The Baldwin area is a very aesthetic area and very sensitive," said Bob Lichtward, resident. "This area deserves special treatment. There should be no roads or sewers going through it."
Joyce Wolf, Lawrence resident, said Elkin's Prairie, north of Sixth Street near County Road 13, also deserved special treatment.
"The area is unique and deserves preservation." Wolf said. She said the residents of Baldwin Creek had expressed concern and wanted a natural history inventory of the area to decide how it should be developed.
Other residents said they were concerned about the possible rigidity of the development plan.
"Planned Unit Development is a great idea in the abstract," said Ed Colller, a Lawrence lawyer. "If there is too much planning, it tends to hurt the plan rather than help it. To take any kind of specific regulation and make it binding, at some point it isn't going to work."
Collister also said that there should be some conju-
tion between county and city regulations.
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THE KU BOOKSTORES PRESENT: The Fred Terry Macintosh Seminar
Penny Ginsberg
Fred Terry is a contributing editor to MACazine, and wrote a graphics column for the magazine. He has written for MacUser, MacWorld, MacWEEK, Computer Shopper, and Personal Computing. He is a contributor to The Macintosh Bible, 2nd ed.
"All You Need to Know About HyperCard"
★ The Basic Elements of HyperCard
★ Stack Planning & Design
★ XFCNs, XCMDs & HyperTalk
★ Very Slick Stuff
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
HyperCard Tools & Books
Saturday Nov. 12
10 a.m. - Noon
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
Free Admission!
Burge Union
864-5697
Open to all KU students, faculty and staff
Future Topics:
Dec. 3 - Spreadsheets
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 11, 1988
Sports
13
Kansas gets ready for 14th-ranked Cowboys
By Jeff Euston Kansan sportswriter
After nearly upsetting No. 8 Oklahoma last week, one might expect the Oklahoma State Cowboys to be flat in tomorrow's game against Kansas.
But KU coach Glen Mason isn't counting on it.
"They're a good football team," Mason said of the 14th-ranked Cowboys. "They're on their way to a big game. I think they'll be ready."
Last Saturday in Stillwater, the 6-2 Cowbys came about as close as possible to handing the Sooners their victory. The event since a 1984 loss at Kansas.
Quarterback Mike Gundy led the Cowboys on a last-ditch drive, but his fourth-down pass to sophomore Mason Parker was dropped in the end zone.
The Cowboys led the Sooners 28-24 late in the second half, but Oklahoma took a 31-28 lead with a touchdown later in the fourth quarter.
The Oklahoma State players will have some inspiration, despite being 39-point favorites and the fact that they lost to the Jayhawks for 13 years.
Tomorrow's game at Lewis Field in Stillwater, Okla., is the final home appearance for 16 Oklahoma State seniors.
Among them are each of the Cowboys' five starting offensive linemen, whose average size is 6-foot-3, 276 pounds.
The linemen provide the blocking for three of the best players at skilled positions in the country — senior wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes, junior quarterback Mike Gundy and junior tailback Barry Sanders.
The Oklahoma State offense has averaged 45.6 points a game this season. In last week's loss to Oklahoma, the Cowboy's streak of seven straight games with 40 or more points was broken.
"Their offense is very powerful."
Kansas strong safety Deral Boykin said "It's going to be a big test for our defense. We're going to have to play probably the best game we've played this year. You can't prepare for one certain thing with Oklahoma State. You've got to prepare for everything."
This week in practice, the Jayhawks have prepared for Sanders, who leads the nation in rushing, with 1,691 yards.
Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones said he believed Sanders, who is from Wichita, should win the Heisman Trophy.
"I think Barry Sanders is the best collegiate football player in the country," he said after Sanders' 215-yard rushing performance against Oklahoma. "I read someplace that if anybody's got a brain and a vote, and they do not vote for this youngster, they are not very smart. I will fully agree with that. We did not win the game, but he put on a great show. I thought if there was one dominant player on the field, it was Barry."
Sanders is on a pace to shatter a number of NCAA records.
He needs to average 217.3 yards in his last three games to break Marcus Allen's NCAA career recording of 2,342 yards, set in 1981. He has averaged 211.3 in the Cowboys' eight games.
He is leading the country with an average of 270.6 all-purpose yards a game. Sanders is on a pace to break the NCAA record of 246.3 set by former Colorado star Byron "Whizzer" White in 1937. White is now an associate justice of the United States.
Sanders is averaging 19.9 points a game by himself. The Jayhawks are in the top 25 of the league.
the record tomorrow if he gets the chance.
In an Oct. 29 game at Kansas State, Sanders rushed for 320 yards, the 16th-best rushing performance in that season and in a realized Sadpers, might try to break
"I would imagine they would," he said. "Everyone gets all excited about big numbers, especially the Heisman Trophy candidates."
But Sanders is not the only weapon in the Oklahoma State offense.
in the Indiana state board
Gundy is ranked second in the
country in passing efficiency and has
thrown for 12 touchdowns.
Dykes, a senior who was a pre-season All-American, has caught 50 passes for 932 yards and seven touchdowns.
As a team, the Cowboys rank third in the country in scoring and seventh in total offense.
Those numbers do not bode well for the Kansas defense, which is last in the country in rushing defense. As if that weren't enough, the Jayhawks, especially the defense, will be hampered by injuries once again tomorrow.
Sophomore linebacker Tony Barker twisted his ankle in practice earlier this week and will not make a play. His knee will be replaced by senior Mike Long.
Freshman Paul Friday cannot start because of a knee sprain and will be replaced by freshman Jason Tyler
Senior wide receiver Willie Vaughn, who has a sore shoulder, will not start. He will be replaced by freshman Kenny Drayton.
Mason said he realized that all of the injuries did not help the Jayhaws chances.
"Barry Sanders, Hart Lee Dykes and Mike Gundy are some of the most charismatic players in their positions," Mason said. "And they're supporting cast is great, too."
"It's one of those games where not only does it matter what we do, it matters what they do. Our defense takes the easy way to slow down their offense."
Game 10
KU
Kansas Jayhawks
Coach Glen Mason
Record 1-8/1-4
oSU
Oklahoma State Cowboys Coach Pat Jones Record 6-2/3-2
wh-2 QUINTH Smith, 5-11, 180, Jr.
LT-77 Picher Ceres, 6-1, 250, Fr.
LG-53 Smith Holland, 6-3, 250, Fr.
OC-51 Chip Buddle, 6-2, 255, So.
RG-59 Dave Grattan, 6-2, 250, Sr.
RT-76刀 Hundelt, 6-2, 255, Jr.
TE-86 John Bakero, 6-3, 235, Jr.
CB-5 Kelly Donohoe, 6-0, 180, Jr.
RB-43 Roger Hatchett, 6-0, 215, Fr.
TB-3 Frank Hatchell, 5-10, 190, So.
WR-85 Kenny Drayton, 6-0, 170, Fr.
PK-93 Brad Fleeman, 5-11, 170, So.
85-LD Ban Newdraw, 6,22,28 Jr.
ST-69 Mark Koncz, 6,3,26 Jr.
GM-64 Matt Nolen, 5,6,25 Fr.
RT-62 Dave Wallon, 6,7,240. So-
RL-89 Jason Tyler, 6,1,210. Fr.
RL-50 Mike Long, 6,0,25.沈
19-Curtis Moire, 6,1,225. So-
WC-12 Troy Gregory, 5,9,170.沈
CC-80 Rodney Harris, 5,9,190.沈
WS-23 Jaspi Priest, 6,0,180.沈
DS-14 Doral Boykin, 5,10,180.Fr.
P-97 B.J. Lohsen, 6,3,215.沈
Probable Starters:
Offense
Probable Starters: Defense
Series:
TE 93 Vance Vico, 6, 5, 247, Jr.
LT-62 Mike Wolfe, 6, 5, 276, Jr.
LG-59 Chris Stanley, 6, 4, 271, Sr.
C-51 John Roiswert, 6, 2, 256, Sr.
RG-73 Jason Kidder, 6, 3, 274, Sr.
RT-56 Bryon Woodard, 6, 2, 304, Sr.
SE-11 Hart Lee Dykes, 6, 4, 220, Sr.
QB-12 Mike Gundy, 6, 1, 628, Sr.
FB-32 Garrett Limbick, 6, 2, 244,
TB-21 Barry Sanders, 5, 8, 197, Jr.
FL-19 Jarrod Green, 6, 1, 200, Jr.
PK-25 Cary Blanchard, 6, 1, 195, Jr.
DE-98 David Bailey, 6-4, 235. Sr.
LT-91 Donnard Colbart, 6-2, 260. So-
NG 60 Marc Jones, 6-2, 278. Sr.
RT-57 Shawn Mackay, 6-3, 246. So-
D-31 Devin Jones, 6-1, 212. So-
LB-77 Bobby Raynor, 6-0, 237. Fr-
LB-53 Sim Drain Ili, 6-0, 221. Jr.
LC-2 Melvin Gillam, 5-11, 168. Fr-
S-7Lamar McGrigs, 6-2, 198. Fr-
FS-45 Rod Smith, 6-1, 203. Jr.
RC-5 Joe King, 6-3, 180. So-
P-25 Cary Blanck, 6-1, 195. So-
Kansas leads the series 22-21-3, but Oklahoma State has not lost in the last 15 games. Since 1973, the Cowboys lead the series 12-0-3.
Kansas defeated Kansas State 30-12. Oklahoma State lost to Oklahoma 31-28. Miscellaneous:
Oklahoma State tailback Barry Sanders needs to average 217.3 yards in his last three games to break the all-time single season rushing record of 2.342 yards held by Marcus Allen.
Coverage:
The Kansas-Oklahoma State game will be carried by the Kansas Jayhawk Network. The game can be heard in Lawrence on KLZR(105.9 FM) and KLWN(1320 AM).
Manning still idle sees Clippers lose
The Associated Press
RICHFIELD. Ohio — Danny Manning, who watched his wife be teammates on the Los Angeles Clippers lose to the Cleveland Cavaliers yesterday, remains willing to sit out the season if the Clippers won't meet his contract demands, his agent said.
mming and agent Ron Grinker of Cincinnati were at the Coliseum for the Clippers' 108-91 loss to Cleveland in the Cavaliers' home opener. Cleveland improved to 3-0 while the Clippers dropped to 1-3.
"There's no progress at all."
Grinker said in reference to salary negotiations. "I just came here to cheer up a good friend, (Clippers' coach) Gene Shue. I also came here hoping to run into (team general manager) Elgin Baylor. He's not here. I guess when the
going gets tough, the tough disappear.
"They said they'd pay us whatever they were allowed to under the salary cap." Grinker said. "Once we got the figures from the league office, then they changed the terms again."
The Clippers have offered Manning a five-year, $10 million contract that started with $1.5 million the first year and improved to $2.5 million the final year. However, 30 percent of each yearly salary would be deferred under the team's proposal, Grinker said.
"Danny Manning told them (Tuesday) he's not going to go to L.A. (or contract talks) unless they're ready to sign him. He also told them he's prepared to sit out the season, which Danny doesn't want to do."
Hershiser wins Cv Young Award
Jackson wins second place for Cincinnati
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Orel Hershiser baseball's most dominant pitcher ever for the season's final two months, unanimously won the National League Cy Young Award yesterday, adding another honor his amazing record.
Hershiser's record streak of 59 scoreless innings ended the regular season and swept him past all rivals. He wound up 23-8 with a 2.26 earned-run average for the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.
Hershiser was Most Valuable Player of the World Series and of the National League playoffs. Voting for the postseason began before the postseason begin.
Hershiser got all 24 first-place
votes and 120 points in balloting by two members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America in each league city. Cincinnati's Danny Jackson, who had an identical record to Hershiser, was second with 15 second-place votes and 54 points. David Cone, 20-3 for the New York Mets, was third with nine second-place votes and 42 points.
Hershiser is the 12th unanimous Cy Young winner, the first since Roger Clemens of Boston and Dwight Gooden of the New York Mets in 1985. Minnesota's Frank Viola, named Wednesday to win the Al Cy Young, wasone vote shift of unanimous.
This was the first time since 1970 hat only three pitchers received votes.
The pitching-rich Dodgers have won the Cy Young more than any other team, eight times since it was first awarded in 1965. Fernando Valenzuela did it last for Los Angeles, in 1981.
Hershiser, a 30-year-old right-hander, had been one of the best and most consistent pitchers in the major
leagues for his first four full seasons. This year, he raised himself to a new level, combining magic and magnificence in drawing comparisons with the all-time greats.
"I think my life will be classified in two sections now — before 1988 and after 1988," he said after becoming a World Series hero.
Hershier led the league with eight shutouts and 267 innings. His ERA ranked third, he was seventh with 174 opponents being batted just .213 against him.
Jackson's 2.73 ERA ranked 100th.
Cone, who did not join the Mets'
rotation until May, was second with a
2.22 ERA and second with 213 strike-outs.
1988 was a great year for me but it was only one year." Cone said from Japan, where he went with Hershiser and other major leaguers for All-Star exhibition games. "The thing is, in this business you have to do it more than once.
"I want to keep proving myself over and over again. Consistency is what I'm after. Personally, I look
back at 1988 as a first step for me. Next year will be step No.2."
Hershiser began the season with six straight victories and was 13-3 at the all-star break. His success put him on the All-Star team for the second straight seasop.
But Hershiser, who sings hymns between innings to relax, was locked in a tight race for the Cy Young until his incredible string started on Aug. 30. At that point, he was 17-8. Jackson 18-6.
Hersheri beat Montreal 4-2 that night, finishing with four scoreless innings. He followed by shutting out Atlanta, Cincinnati, Atlanta again, Houston and San Francisco.
Then, in his last start of the regular season on Sept. 28, Hershiser pitched 10 scoreless innings against San Diego to break Don Drysdale's mark of 58, set in 1968. Hershiser was reluctant to surpass the record of the Dodgers Hall of Famer, and had to be encouraged by Manager Tom Lasorda and teammates to pitch the last inning.
Shauna Norfeet/KANSAN
Making waves
Senior two-time All-American Glenn Tramel, sophomore Jeff Stout practice. The Kansas swim team was preparing to compete against Tom Roeninki take a break between sets during swim Arizona today and Arizona State tomorrow.
Notre Dame says no to Sugar Bowl's bid
"Their concern as related to us was there is the possibility of playing a lesser-ranked team with more than one loss." Mickey Holmes, Sugar Bowl executive director, said Wednesday.
"They say that whoever is in the Orange Bowl (Nebraska or Oklahoma) will only have one loss. If not, they said, that situation certainly would exist in the Fiesta Bowl said. "They warn us loose instead of keeping us hanging. I respect them for that and appreciate it."
The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS — Top-ranked Notre Dame has told Sugar Bowl officials that the Fighting Irish won't play in the Jan. 2 contest in the Louisiana Superdome, opting instead for possible bids to the Orange Bowl or the Fiesta Bowl.
By NCAA rules, bowl invitations cannot be issued until Nov. 19. However, schools and bowls often communicate their holiday wishes ahead of time.
"We have gotten the money together, and we are going to explain our scenario to them," said Charles Callaghan, Gator Bob spokesman.
The Gator Bowl on Wednesday made Notre Dame a $3 million dollar offer to play unbeaten West Virginia on New Year's night.
Notre Dame officials said there
- Mickey Holmes Sugar Bowl executive director
T
■ heir concern as related to us was there is the possibility of playing a lesser-ranked team with more than one loss.'
could be no announcement before Nov.19.
However, this is how the Irish have listed their options: Orange Bowl vs. the winner of the Nebraska-Oklahoma home game in the Big Eight Conference title; West Virginia Bowl vs. undefeated West Virginia or Florida State.
Holmes said the Sugar Bowl had a number of options left as well.
---
"We have everything that was open yesterday and the day before." Holmes said. "We can have an exciting game if things break right, like Notre Dame losing one. Then this whole thing is up for grabs."
The Sugar's host team will be either Louisiana State, Auburn or Georgia. Holmes said he would continue to look to the Pacific 10 conference, Florida State, West Virginia and Miami for a potential visiting team.
14
Friday, November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Softball team has powerhouse ability
By Mark E. McCormick Kansan sportswriter
The fall softball season made a believer out of KU coach Kalum Haack.
Haack, who thought he had a good team at the beginning of the fall season, now thinks his young team could be a powerhouse this spring.
"If not this year, next year we should be the team to beat in the Big Eight." Haack said of his 9-3 team. "We are going for that victory, we can challenge Oklahoma State."
With six freshmen, four sophomores, three juniors and one senior, Haack said, he hadn't expected his team to come as far as it had in so short a time.
"We've made some big jumps," Haack said. "We're really strong. At this point, we're much better than we were last year, and all we can do is get better. We're looking to do really
well."
Pitcher Roanna Brazier said she was pleased by the team's fall performance.
"Overall, I think we did fairly well," she said. "We lost some games that could've gone either way, but the outlook for the spring looks promising. I'm really excited about it."
freshman Shelly Sack finished the season with a .459 batting average, Brazier had a .355 and freshman Jennifer Frost hit .300 for the season.
The Jayhawks have had strong hitting this season, Haack said.
Honest testimonial. Pitcher Reenie Powell, the team's only senior, was a bright spot for the team. Haack said.
"Even though Reenie lost two games, if she gives that kind of effort in the spring, we'll do really well," he
The Jayhawks have found themselves without the services of outfielder Christy Alvarez, who injured her knee during practice.
said.
her knee during practice.
Replacing Alvarez will be difficult,
Haack said.
"It's our goal to have her back by the Big Eight Conference Championships (this spring)," Haack said. "But for now, we've got a big hole to fill in the outfield. I don't think we'll be as strong with anyone else, but whomever we put out there, they'll have big shoes to fill."
Brazier said that Alvarez came through for the Jayhawks in pressure situations.
"I know losing her for a while will hurt a lot," Brazier said. "She was one of our come-through people whether it was hitting or in the outfield."
Haack said that he hoped the fall
had made the team more consistent and aggressive for the opening of the spring season.
"I want us hungry to win every time we step out onto the field," he said. "If we do that, we'll win."
Haack said the team had suffered from a lack of aggression and consistency at times.
The Jayhawks could have their work cut out for them with a tough non-conference schedule this spring.
"Most of our nonconference schedule is top 20 teams," Haack said.
"If there's a tough team, we'll play them tough, but if we play a weaker team, we play weaker," he said. "That's due to our youth. I want to erase whohome we play."
"I've never seen a team as close knit as this one or one that had as good an attitude." Haack said. "They really pull for each other."
Cross country teams set to beat KSU, OSU
The men's cross country team aims to defeat at least two big Eight Conference teams at the regional championships this weekend, the cross country coach said yesterday.
By a Kansan reporter
Gary Schwartz, Kansas cross country coach, said the team goals at the race will be to defeat Kansas State and Oklahoma State.
The Jayhawks lost to the Wildcats and Cowboys at the league championships on Oct. 29 in Stillwater, Okla. The men's and women's teams finished sixth and eighth, respectively, at that meet.
Schwartz said 10 women's and 13 men's teams competed in the mens' 10-kilometer and the mens'
womens' five-kilometer races last year. He expected about the same number to run tomorrow. The race will be at Jester Park, near Des Moines, Iowa.
The top two men's teams will qualify for the national championships, which will be at Jester Park next Saturday.
Schwartz said he hoped Steve Heffernan, Kearney, Neb., junior and Craig Watcke, Minster, Ohio, senior, the team's strongest runners, would qualify for nationals.
Tricia Brown, Prairie Village junior, and Kelley Coffey, Arlington Heights. Ill., junior, will run for the Jayhawks in the women's race.
The University of Kansas Chapter of the:
American Association of University Professors
Invites you to attend an address by
Senator Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas
"Higher Education in the New Administration"
Tuesday Nov.15 at 4 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Faculty, students and the public are cordially invited to attend. *Refreshments provided*
Because You Love To Live Samuel Ramey Bass
Tchava L
"His powerful bass, always eloquent, glowed like a trombone."
London Suman Times
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
5:00 p.m. Sunday, November 20,1988 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved /For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $15 & $13; KU & K-12 Students: $7.50
& 6.50; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $14
& $12
You'll Have The Time Of Your Life!
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swartbout Society, and the KU Endowment Association
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
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U2 Rattle & Hum
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daily: *4:50, 7:00, 9:00*
& Sat: *11:00, 13:00, 14:00*
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daily: *4.55*, 7.15; 9:25
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Clara's Heart
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daily: *4·35; 7·05; 9·15
Sat. & Sun: *2·05; *4·35
Feds
daily: *4:40, 7:20, 9:10
Sat, & Sun.: *2:20, *4:40
Gorillas in the Mist
daily: *4:30, 7:00, 9:30
Sat. & Sun: *2:00, *4:30
THE COMIC CORNER
NE corner of 23rd and 1 low
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
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Bargain Maintenance & Senior Care $2.50
on select tickets for later Only
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ADAMS CAMPUS CAN YOU SURVIVE TH CHALLENGE?
ECKNARM discussion group forming. For more info
contact 749-1127
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce your stress and don't forget your GIFT CERTIFATES make you a thankful customer, 20% of budget either 20% students 25% Call 814-696-1628. Remember, you know d!!'
8:00-12:00 p.m.
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9:00 am-Midnight
The Congo Bar
Live music this Friday November 11th
KJIK Listeners: The fight's not over! Attend an open Forum Tues., November 15th, Aldersdor Aubud to discuss Academic freedom, Censorship, and the fate of KJIK & College radio today.
Little Anthony and the Kingsmen
Avamarar Ladies Bazaar - Saturday, Nov 12
11:00-4:00 Castle Tea Room. 13th & Massachusetts.
ΦKT PRESENTS
Mary Kay Cosmetics, Contact Deeann Wilks at
814-916-7000
Classified Ads
3rd Annual "Push for Life"
wheel chair drive from K-10 to Kansas City
Saturday, Nov. 12
6:00 a.m.
Proceeds go to the
Children's Heart Foundation
Student Senate
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
Films presents...
Friday and Saturday
3:30 and 8:00 ONLY
The Unbearable Lightness
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STADIUM BARBER SHOP
is accepting applications
for the following positions:
- Treasurer
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1301 S. Washington
Quality Haircuts at
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Applications due in the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union by
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at 5 p.m.
Questions? Call 864-3710
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cut of State Students-Gome on vacations
Earn travel money and much more during your
vacations by being our sales rep in your city,
where you can book accommodations (including reckers). New and exciting art card designs by Alphight. Light up the room with a new book from Lamplighter Books, 9th and NIL 149-7377.
KU Students, faculty, staff and family members.
You are invited to participate in a special event that will give you an application in the SUA office Deadline. Mon. Nov. 21. For more information call 643-467. Supported by SUA
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margaret.hammond@norton.edu
FANTASTIC, NEW APARTMENT one bedroom,
648 West 21st Street.
Wauser Dryer, Microwave. Bus
Room. Just ask what you're looking for! #414 8271,
843-1971.
843-1971
FEMALE roommate needed. Very close to campus, extremely spacious. Laundry facilities, off-street parking. Call Beth 843-1969
romantic female wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park Available immediately. Apartments include own bedroom, laundry room, fireplace, and tree water. Please call 749 6936.
Female Roommate wanted to share large two story house $200 month. All utilities paid 41-956
Female roommate needed. Orchard Curtains for fitted, apt room & bathroom 8470 - utilities Available now or 2nd semester. 843-5392
For Sublease. Large 2 bd., Colony Woods available now. Call 843-7680
---
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 11, 1988
15
Female roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom
flat in Brooklyn with sunny views from bus.
large rooms! $125 + $40/month
For Sublease, 3RD, 1 bath, new carpet, new
ridge, quat. large kitchen, $35 monthly. 841-368-106
for sublease; spacious upstairs apt $150 monthly.
Great Location! Call 749-245-822
@ 825-232
Fully furnished one bedroom. Apartment. Civilized.
Big enough for two! Must go in. 10th, 10b
& Arkansas. $340 - utilities. 841-0732 or 749-2415
Janette.
Jamary Sub-lease, $165 + . utilities. Own room.
On route. Call Mary 841-3375.
Large I lbedroom apt. Haven Place Quiet, very quiet. Fax 841-902-3071 or leave signed by tred. Call
Lease for spring semester, furnished 2 large bedrooms, bath, laundry, close to campus with many great locations. Call 841-965-NOW!
Living with a roommate from Hells* Downtown
apt. available Dec. 1, $165/mo. All utilities paid.
Call 749-4155.
Moving to KC? Person needed to share 2 bedrooms
from 180 sq ft. Prefer female
bedroom 817 sq ft.
Recommend 4-bedroom home.
LUXURY 2 bedroom 2 room' apartment available starting Dec. J/an. Large rooms, clean, quiet W/D hookups, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, tennis. 842.3025
NAISMITH HALL. Sublease. Will give money for deposit. Starting second semester. Call Rob 841-0587.
NEW. NICE 2 bedroom apt. Washer, dryer, and microwave included. On bus route. Available Jan. 1, 8:435 ms. Call 841-2997 or Woodway Apartments
46001 Kallon叫仑 29000 route availiate
New Hidden Madows Townhouses Two bed-
room and Two bedroom with Sturdy and Fireplace
Two Bedroom 30119 30129 Behind Bathroom
Car wash
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place immediately $330/month, water paid, and furnishings included.
Spacious 2 br. apt. near campus Take over lease $300mo. 843-1215.
Sublease next semester. Nonsmoking roommate
$190 mo. + $3 utilities. New campus. 64-86-46
Sub-less immediately until May 12. A room with a
Apple Lake Studio. Desperate! (913)
401, 306
Sublease (Jan 1, May 31) 2 bedrooms, 1½
spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK
Families welcome. #843-0821
Saintflower House is taking applications for Spring 98. We offer private rooms, VTC/VR game, and landy facilities. Low rent,含 all utilities. Call 749-7817 or 974-6848 for co-op accommodation.
TRALRIDGE STUDIO available for sublease spring semester. Quit, clean, great location (bus route, laundry, pool, Dillon s). Phone 749-483-678 'tern evenings or weekends.
Walk to class Available Jan 1 4HR, 3 BATH,
*modern kids* $725/month Call 841-7386
WANTED - Person or persons to assume a lease at Hamover Place at semester end. If interested e-mail 840-237-2111
69 282 127
Wanted immediately - Male roommate - Own room $150 mo + $2 utilities $150 dep. 13th & Kentville Lansdowne 149-388 198
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 841-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
- On bus route-near shopping
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
by Thompson-Crawley
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
meadowbrook
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
Solubrook
We Bring More Roommates Together by Splitting Them Up.
Colony Woods realizes the closer you are to your roommate the farther apart you want to be. Knowing this, we separate our 2 bedrooms and 2 full bath rooms in a kitchen and dining room.
You can still save money by sharing the rent and keep your privacy too!
2 Bedroom 2 Bath $395.
Ask How We Can Save You $$$.
Colony Woods
apartments
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
FOR SALE
1979 Ford Pinto Excellent condition. Call: Ray
9am-5pm 864-4650, after 7 30 842-9647
861-328-6390 An absolutely awesome array of antiques, fine art and vintage used furniture, picture framing, precious and jewelry, handmade quilts, printmaking and playing cards, cheeso ro n' cell vintage clothing books, coins, baseball cards, old molds. Machine to make advertisements in glossy, decks, anti-flooding Royal汰渍, and so much more it will blow you away 'QUANTITY! SAT S MAREET 911 NORMANDY ST MARKET 911 NORMANDY ST THE BOOZAL retreat into call 842-6616 or My Masterclass welcome!
All Sports Ticket for sale. $75. Ask for Chris at 864-3136 before noon or 842-3234 after 5 90.
Cannondale Mtn. Bike. White. Month old. Jeff
841-2978.
Apple Ie computer with expanded memory
Mondeo monitor, 2 dive mode, modern and
programs programs, $600 or $100 OR Elan S175 Nix
and w logos long beds or $84 or $80.97
AUDIO SALE Caseet desks, Teac, JVC, Sony
from $15, $150 Must sell 84-948
Comic books, Playbills, Penthouses, etc. Mac's
Comics 10:51 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
CXR rear deck 6x9 Yamaha 8-inch Alpine Subs.
b\fM92078.
For sale: a round-trip ticket to any city in the U.S.
Best offer: Call BR before 3:00 pm at 842-1757
FREE information on New Ka Police Photo radar. NOW in use. Also use the camera to SAVE 500 on the radar. Pay the full fee for all the radar including New Ka BkL Enterprises, P.O. Box 274, Laos Ks.6003
*OT SURPLUS!* New G.I. Owenshores, Combat boots, and safety-toe booties. Wool (blankets, socks, & mittens). Field Jacks. Overcaps, Camouflage Clothing. Boxing gloves. 9-15. Open Sundays "t" Christmas 12-4. St. Marys Surplus Sales. St. Marys. Kgs. 147-2734
to Miami, Tail for Thanksgiving and/or
Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for
a discount price. Call 749-3733 after 6:00 pm for
more info.
IBM Correcting Selective II w/ extra ribbons, lift-off belt, and three type baskets for high-density disk drive 800kbps. High-density disk drive 900kbps 5.25. Call Joe at 843-3620. MAC with dac drive, image driver, MIDI controller.
software $120.00 BIG SIZE Mattress set, King sized Top quality, very firm Used only 3 months. Now $450.84-6059.
MCAT study material from G A P S. Improved my score (demonstratively) Originally $90 best of $100.
Men's 10-speed bike $80. Acoustic guitar with case
$80. Both excellent condition. 842-2488. keep
trunnel
Nagel, inklograph print, The Book, framed, $80,
call John at 841-1780.
Naismith Hall contract for sale. Private room or for two. Call 841-4837.
New showing, Figi Graphics newest southwestern art. catch the new wave at New Wave Futons 11 East 8th St. 842-7578
Rock-n-roll - Thousands of used and rare albums
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. eve Saturday and Sunday.
Owen's Fleet F market, B11 New Hampshire.
SAE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $450 sell $200. Must see to appreciate. Many
functions. 841.7564
Sleep with the best. A cotton Futon for $88.88. Only at New Wave Futons. 11 East 8th St. 842.7378.
Trailer 1' x 65" x 8' w & d, wed, deck, ac, stove,
ref. mice, #4300, Call Day 749-5240
Ref. nice, $4,300 Call days 749-5260
Trumpet · Bundy with case, excellent cond.
842-9644 $200 OBO
AUTOSALES
WATERBED Queen with six drawer pedestal,
low mileage; Bargain! $150, 843-1551.
1972 Plymouth, reliable transportation, FM console deck, ruot great. $700 Jaeon 845-316-6955
1981 Toyota Corolla, AM/PM cassette, good compass,
Toyota Tercel. Runs well. Drive it for $500
Runs Wells. Drive it for $500
GOVMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords. 300,657 off 400,000 Ex-97-88
600,657 off 400,000 Ex-97-88
OST—FOUND
LOST: Maroon glasses with a maroon snap case 841-2171. Could be anywhere.
HELP WANTED
- positions - Custodial worker - each 15 hours
- Contact Personnel Office, Health Student
ADMINISTRATIVE ARTS
Excellent work working in a friendly, energetic, and ambitious workplace part-w time. 25 to 30 hrs/wk - as an administrative assistant or skills-based job able to work effectively in a fast paced environment. If you are interested please call Craig Sell at 841-1200 between 9 and 11am.
Attention: Sub & Stuff have immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above, start salary. Apply between 2-15. 8th W. W2rd.
ABILITIES NOW HIRING. Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Lettings. Salaries to 10%k. Entry level positions
(1) CALL 0537-6006 Ext. A-9738
Hazaret positions are now open at the Atlanta Allerment Center. Applicants must be a certified server, Servers, bartenders & businesses are needed. Above all, students must have taken AP 156 Desk Aide E. O.E. @ Hazaret 156 Desk Ave E. 0 E.
Christmas Help $8.90 (Hours Flexible)
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students part-time position is available in writing based oil and gas information and training on cell Arm Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at
Freshmen, sophomores, and juniors train in the summer to become Marine Corps officers after graduation. Aviation and financial aid available Iowa. Call 841-1821
No experience (913) 345-9675.
Great SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Colorado
nursery near Eastes Park as counselors, cooks,
nurses, office, wringers, drivers, unit salaries
and board plus supervision. Fully accredited. Must be at
least 19 to apply. Interviews on campus.
January Write COLEY COLLONES
Fax 602-8253 for box 6023. @ 8253 80206,
9037-37816. FOR THE SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE!
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,400-$25,230. Now:
705-687-6876 Ex # 6948
for current federal Banking Job.
Applications for Editor are due Friday, November 11 at 5 p.m. in 200 Sausset Flint Hall. Interviews will be held November 14th.
The University Daily Kanan is now accepting applications for the Editor position for the 1998 season in a position and requires journal experience.
KANSAN Editor Applications
increased persons may pick up applications in 119 Sawfair Flint Hall, the Student Senate office, 105 Burge Union, and the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 105 Burge Union.
The Kanans is an Equal Opportunity/
Affirmative Employment Employer.
Applications are sought from all qualified
people regardless of race, religion,
color, age, sex, disability, veteran
status, national origin, or ancestry.
Help Wanted: Part-time day and evening help and desk assistance at Borden; Barden Island, W. 25rd and Alderbury; Bardon Island, W. 25rd
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
P6NMBH need to live and work in the exe-
tremely demanding life at WDC. D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good salary. Please contact information call in K.C. 1722-6180.
National Marketing firm seeks ambitions junior, senior, or graduate student to manage on-campus promotions for top companies this semester. Flexible hours with earning potential to £600 per week.
Kansas and Burge Union Bookstores hiring temporary help. Jobs posted Level 3. Kansas Union Personnel Office. Come in person to apply
Use Kansan Coupons
Part home Care Care worker to work 4 M T in residential treatment home for boys age 12-17. Must have a valid driver's license and pass KRH check. salary karyo, depending upon education level. Two position areas. In contact call 913-764-6006 in the double露台 area. In contact call 913-764-6006
OVERSEAS JOBS $ 100 $2000 sum. Summer,
Rock. All Countries. All fields. Free info. Writer
lround. ID # KS2-851. Coral De Mar CA 98253
Part-time worker - Packer Plastic is examining the feasibility of having *t*'s production shift shifts. The following data are available:
bp m - 12 m[1d|night] - 12 m[1d|night] + 48 m.
bp m - 12 m[1d|night] - 12 m[1d|night] + 48 m.
starting pay $4.25/hr. If interested
PART-TIME
Furniture Delivery Personnel
Apply in person Thompson Crawley
220 East 22nd Terrace
431-768-9680
Part-time positions available at Naiismal Hall
have the option which include breakfast cook,
restock, and other positions Excellent meal
benefits and flexible hours. If you need the money
and experience come to Naiismal Hall's Lobby
desk to view the options before vacation.
JOE/M/F/H/AA
Pizza Shuttle is immediately bringing both full-time and part-time driver delivery. Day and evening driving is available, with daily paid mileage, and beneses. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shutter.
call 842-3000. ASK the patient to order
Pizza Delivery drivers - hourly wage commission must have own license and insurance Appointment with Pizza Shop 610
Atrium Shopping Center 601
Part-time. Study Abroad DUTCH INSTITUTE with assistant and assistant director with clerical duties relating to study abroad program coordination QUANTIFICATION ASSOCIATE KU. Demonstrated clinical experience, excellent typing, word processing and organizational skills. Must be able to work four-hour shifts. Salary: $ 50 00; $ 55 00 For a more complete description and application
POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
Applicants must submit a resume and the names and phone numbers of three references. Compiled applications must be received by noon, November 10. Position begins immediately.
Blackhurst, Department Secret Office of Study Abroad 203 Lippincott Hall University of Kansas 66045
o h
Ann Blackhurst, Department Secretary
of Studio Abroad.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines, & Amusement Parks. NOW accepting applications for summer camp programs in information and application. write national College Recreation Service. PSW write national College Recreation Service. PSW
SMALL HOUSES OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Open-
space National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59901.
Sub & stuff has immediate openings for day & later
sales. Req's: first starting salary. Applwy-
days: 0-5. 168 W.
MISCELLANEOUS
On TVs, VCAs, Jewelry, Stereos, Musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Visa/M.C.A.M.E.X. J-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1804 W. B. 749-1019
FRIDAY
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
ONE-WAY AIRLINE TICKET, K.C. - SEATTLE,
DEC. 22-$90; $43-$840.
Hors D'oeuvres
at the top.
BUS. PERSONAL
Kamikazees
& Schnapps
754
Dance
Up & Under
401 North 2nd
Johnny's
401 North 2nd
PERSONAL
Brazilian Fall Party DANCE! DANCE! DANCE!
at the Bottleneck
737 New Hampshire
Saturday Nov. 12
J.P. Schmidt! This weekend is going to be great
can't wait to see you in a tax. 000b baby baby!
Lay A little more to your little sis.
Lin M. After 215 kidse Westport won't be the same after he goes with you through. Then again you won't be the same after we get through with you! Olive juice & L." Word Rich
Featuring DJ Ray Velasquez
Sponsored by the
Luso-Brazilian Club
Government Photos. Passport, immigration,
visa. Modeling, theatrical, Advanced fine art
portfolio. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
victory future. Tom Sawal 795-1611.
$3
Awesome Opossum: Dinner at Billy's; you're paying! May PMS give me strength! Love! Froo-
Charlie B. Thanks for everything! You mean so much to me. Love. Your little one
Friend. Welcome to KU. Hope this all works out for now and forever. Who says fairy tales can't come true. A major love, Tiger Joy.
MAX U.: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
P.S. What about the shower? Maybe! I love you forever, MORE.
Low cost Master Medical Insurance fr
depends 2 children with $25 deductible on
$63.66 month. With parent slightly higher Kansu
Blood Bank 921-161.
L. M.T. You are so wonderful! I love you more than ads can express. Forever, S.P.S.
are Guy: Estatically, ritously, happy as a-clam at high-water gly GLAD YOU'RE HERE! love!! Flipping.
Sean, oops, I mean Shan: I am looking forward to Moon Walker: w/your Sunday and Dawn! w/your Walkin' Here's to a great weekend Lov Liz
Sweaters, 40's jackets, berets,
wool skirts, coats, new
vintage jewelry, scarves.
To the guys with "****" who streaked through our store, we're anously awaiting you're encore! The Sirion Stockade Wastaches.
SOUTH PADER ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT, CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
SPRING BREAK 89
Fall is here
SWM-Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWF, 23-10
P. O. Box, 422-943, Lawrence, Ks. 66544
Photo engraved
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. 841-2451 M.S 10:5:30 Thur. 'il
Late!
Don't Wait Until It's Too
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
SCARVES
1-800-321-5911
THE BEACH HOUSE
9 EAST 8TH
749-0334
Typical servings of beer, wine and liquor are equal in alcohol content.
WEBB'S
FINE WINE
800 W. 23rd * 841-2277
SKI Christmas break! Trips are filling for fast a4
* great locations! Call me. Am* **814-202**, your
* Suncatch Tours rep. for details before it’s too late!**
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided.
SERVICES OFFERED
**astronomy**. Would you like to know about someone special, more about yourselves, or what will happen if your friend or family member self-addressed, stamped envelope to Astral Operations P O box 344, Smithville, M6489
*http://www.astraloperations.org/contact.htm*
Mike or Mgr college考生
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
Driving School serving KU students for 20 years
with excellent obtainable, transportation
481-7749
KU. INFORMATION CENTER 864-506-3066 Campus, community events. University procedures. SUCIE CRISIS HELP, referrals. 21 days/day
RV PHOTOGRAPH SERVICES. Ekachtekman services within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT 600. Art & Design Building. Fogreen 986. 844-6077.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.).
Moschini
Need a babybattet? Experienced girls can help
you call in or email us 714-6678
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park...(913) 491-6878.
testing experience. Call Alex at 841-7601.
Nobody's heard?? Experience girls can help
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
Quality Tutoring. Economics. Statistics.
Mathematics All levels Call Dennis. 842-1055
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Lawrence. 841-5716 ___
A
Student groups : use full color copies to advertise your activities. Call 864-3244 weekdays for details
Toyota Quality Service
Oil Change Service
- Genuine Toyota filter, up to 5 quarts.
$14.95
vehicles only coupon required
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing, lady, 842 or L954 or Lady, 841-1915.
ter quality type.
i plus Typing. Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754 or 842-2671 and weekends.
1. der Woman Word Processing . Former editor transforms your writables into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of etter-quality type. 843-263, days or evening.
2 Smart Typewriting. Dissertation. Thesis.
Paper, Resumes and more Spelling corrected and all output laser printed in our choice of fonts.
Low typing papers. 749-2740
842-4868 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm
sensing corrected. 845-3231
Ace word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
Call evenings before 10.749-1691
Accurate, affordable type experienced in term papers, theses, mice., IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-9554
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $1.25 space-spaced pica page. East Lawrence.
Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
MTT. SATURDAY 8:21:23
ATTENY MADDOBWORK RESIDENTS: Word processing service available now, APA for callers, spell check. Call Pat Macak,
843-708.
PRINTER ISSUE
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-4191. In Topeka. Accelerate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer
Call R.I.S. Typing, Service 814-5942. Teri
Legalism, Thesis, etc. no calls to 9 P.A.S.
Papers, Legal, Thesis, These - do no calls after P.M. Dona's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters, Laser Printer, Binder 862-7474 Laptop Printer
PEACE TYPING
Service level - less than 10%
Expert Typist- Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203.
IRON FENCE TYPING. 841-8583.
Any repairs or maintenance performed in our shop.
exp 12/1/88
The Peace Store. 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SPEEDTERM Word Processing Service. Accurate and reliable, spelling checked. Call 843-2766
TOYOTA QUALITY
WHO COULD ASK FOR ANYTHING MORE!
843-257-269
**TYPING/WORDWORK ESSIGN:** Done on computer, saved link for easy corrections/changes to digital printer. Legal exp. Laura Littera, Message.
ELLENA
TEAM TOYOTA
29th & Iowa 842-2191
***Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 843-101- 94 Monday, Thursday and 9 on Friday. Typing word processing on p. L.C printer. Term paper, theses, dissertations, mica. Barb
THEWORDHOCHTS - Way pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these resumes, commercial, IBM PC, MAC, CDP Daisywell, dot matrix, laser. 1968.
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne. 847-7706
Word processing teacher.
TYPING
CT NOW: Papers, resumes, & cover letters.
WRITING LIFELINE. 941-3469.
word processing, typing, typesetting, resumes, applications, also assistance with grammar, dialect, composition, editing. Have BIUSD 8197, 841-6254
M.S. Degree 14103080
Word processing IBM Okidata printer $1.25/double space page. Call before 10 p.m. 749-1900.
Kathy.
WANTED
DESPERATELY Seeking guitar or keyboard amplifier. Steve, 841-5945.
Female roommate wanted for Spring semester
House on House - 1 bedroom for $210 a month
All utilities paid. Call 842-3698. Leave Message.
Female roommate wanted for Spring semester
House on House - 2 bedrooms, 2 apartment,
$12.00/month + t₃ utilities. Close to campus and
townhouse. Joelle 842-3224
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lose of two-bedroom townhouse, 2/ rent/utilities, hus route, river pool, pool, wawher (drive *Call* 749-699)
Second Semester Female Roommate wanted,
818b and $t_1$ utilities. Walking distance or bus
route Call 842-7895
Female roommate wanted: Janet, Sublime Base
garage/fireplace, *t*₃ rent utilities (Call 841-3842)
IS THERE REALLY A SANTA CLAUS?
DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE sees a SantA
thursday evening and weekends. Nov. 27–10.
Courtly solo; old boy; young need; apply Call
841-3843
Person wanted to assume lease of one to-froon apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester Call 748-565. Leave message.
Roommate needed to share large 2 bedroom apt. near campus. Available immediately. Yvonne 749-4361.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
One needed to share beautiful new townhouse
Private room and bath with all amenities. On bus route 749-7205
Policy
Roommate wanted Georgetown Apartments 8-103 a month + $ t_2 vacations. Call Tom B 841-1966. Roommate wanted immediately Private bedroom and bath $710 a month, $ t_2 vacations. Call Julie before or after 11th - 842-4067 Second Semester Female Roommate
state roommate needed starting Jan. 1. You
leave on bus ride $100 - tuition each on
bus ride $100 - tuition each
Male roommate for next semester $175 -
utilizes a month, ten minute walk to campa-
ney
route. Call 021-665-8888
Someone needed to assume lease: 2 bedroom, $1_2$ close to campus: 843-1215
Spring Semester. Quiet, studious roommate wanted $145 mo plus {utilities} Close to campus Call 822-1630
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Okay, buddy. Then how 'bout the right arm?"
16
Fridav. November 11, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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10
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Vol. 99, No. 56 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday November 14,1988
PLO leaders recognize Israel
The Associated Press
ALGIERS, Algeria — PLO leaders accepted a U.N. resolution yesterday which implicitly recognized Israel's right to exist and recommended the PLO's parliament endorse the decision.
Approval by the Palestine National Council, the PLO's parliament-in-exile, is virtually certain and would meet one of the conditions for U.S. recognition of the Palestinian Liberation Organization.
The declaration accepting the resolution will be presented to the plenary session of the PNC, which began a special four-day meeting in Algiers on Saturday.
"The PNC will come out with a political decision and a program of peace," PLO spokesman Ahmed Abdul-Rahman said.
Sources close to the talks said that after two days of haggling, it was clear no compromise was possible.
Abdul-Rahman said the council wanted to adopt the resolutions unanimously, although it also was opposed.
The Palestinian council meeting is expected to conclude tomorrow with a declaration of independence for the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Those opposed to Resolution 242 objected to its referring to the future of Palestinians in the occupied territories as "a just settlement of the refugee problem."
The Algiers conference was called to deal with the new developments in the Middle East and especially to take advantage of increased attention
More than 310 Palestinians and 11 Israelis have been killed in the 11-month uprising.
and sympathy for the Palestinian cause sparked by the uprising in the Israeli-occupied territories.
Besides a declaration of Palestinian independence and approval of a political program that includes acceptance of Resolution 242, the conference was expected to establish a provisional government.
PLO officials, including Abdul-Rahman, have stressed that the provisional government, when it is formed, would not be an alternative to the PLO but an institution of the PLO mandated to negotiate peace.
Right wing controls new Israeli coalition
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Two ultra-Orthodox parties endorsed the Likud bake yesterday, giving the right-wing Likud the support it needs to form a new coalition government, Israeli television said.
President Chaim Herzog planned to meet today with representatives of Likud and its rival, the left-learning Labor Party, and give the party with the greatest
support the go-ahead to form the government.
Israel held national elections Nov. 1, but neither of the major parties gained a majority of votes. Likud won 40 seats in the 120-member Knesset, or parliament, and Labor won 39.
With the newly secured support of the ultra-Orthodox, however, Likud and its allies on the far-right will control 63 seats in the Knesset.
'90 KU budget seeks $250,000 for libraries
Dean says that Margin money would stop acquisitions slide
By Mark Fagan
Kansas staff writer
In recent years, KU libraries have suffered from rapid inflation of book and subscription prices and devaluation of the U.S. dollar in foreign markets, causing a sharp drop in buying power for acquisitions.
But now, under the Margin of Excellence, something soon may be done about it. The University of Kansas' 1990 proposed budget calls for $250,000, earmarked for library acquisitions.
Although that would be a $177,500 increase over this year's $27,500, Jim Ranz, Dean of libraries, said it would merely keep KU libraries from falling any further behind.
dontna.
"It would allow us to hold the line," he said. "We wouldn't slip any further. It wouldn't allow us to recover from the devastation of the past few years."
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to increase total financing of Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer institutions and faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
Most of this year's Margin money for the libraries went toward the new science library, including expanding the on-line catalog and adding staff positions.
The proposed budget is being reviewed by the state budget office in Topeka, and the office will make its recommendations to Gov. Mike Hayden this month in January with his proposal to the Kansas Legislature in April.
Jon Josserand, KU specialist in government affairs,
said Hayden's recommendation was an important step in
their work.
Although Jossnerand would not comment on specific components of the mission-related enhancements, such as library acquisitions, he did say it was likely that many of them would be approved.
And library officials hope he is right. Ranz said approval of acquisition money was essential.
"If we don't get that, there would simply be further cancellations." he said.
Ranz said the library system had canceled more than 2,000 periodicals and had forgone purchasing large amounts of new materials.
Ranz said the combination of rising inflation and continued devaluation of the dollar had cost KU libraries $809,000 in buying power over the last three years. That loss was offset by a base budget increase of only $105,000 during the same period, leaving the libraries with a net loss of $804,000.
"We've lost about a third of our purchasing power in our acquisitions budget," he said.
Please see LIBRARY, p. 6, col. 4
THE SRI LANKA CINEMAS
Happy new year
ABOVE: Before going on stage, Ranee Ramaswamy makes final adjustments on her traditional Indian costume. Ramaswamy danced as part of a Diwali celebration on Saturday at Cordley Elementary School, 1837 Vermont St. Diwail is the name for the Indian holiday to bring in the new year. RIGHT: Rita Mustaphi, an Indian dancer, performs the Holl, a classical Indian Kathak-style dance. See related story, p. 14.
THE BALAJI KAMU DANCE COMPANY
'Pud' classes don't meet expectations
By Grace Hobson
NCAA won't reopen Kansas investigation
Kansan staff writer
inform students' semester at enrollment time, students comb the catalog to find classes that will pad their grade point averages.
Under their official course titles,
Unusual Weather, Gemstones,
Insects and Man and Children in
Television are all notoriously easy classes, according to students at the University of Kansas.
Weird weather for wimps, rocks for jocks, bugs and boys and kiddie vid all have something in common.
"I think it's important to have easy courses to balance out the courses that are difficult," said Jim McNamara, Topeka senior.
Ted Bordman, Overland Park senior, is taking Psychology of Satisfaction. He said he enrolled in the class, which meets once a week at night and consists of students
Jim Schoen
The most frequently mentioned
est classes were the Psychology
of Satisfaction, Introduction to
Jazz, sex education classes and
Human Development and Family
Life classes.
Please see EASY, p. 9, col.1
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
David Berst, the NCAA's assistant executive director of enforcement, said the case would not be reopened because the loans occurred before Marshall would have been considered an athletics representative. Marshall played basketball at Kansas during the 1983-84 season.
The NCAA announced Friday that it would not reopen its investigation of the Kansas men's basketball program.
In the Nov. 14 issue of Sports Illustrated, an article stated that former All-American Danny Manning and other Kansas players received millions from former Kansas player Mike Marshall.
University representative after he was hired by former Kansas coach Larry Brown to work in his basketball camp during the summer of 1986.
Berst had said that the NCAA would not decide whether to reopen the case until this week. But after contacting Marshall and several people, the NCAA was able make a decision within two days.
Berst said that Marshall was considered a
Berst said, "The NCAA staff and the University of Kansas have contacted the principals identified in the article and other individuals who were involved with small loans were made in 1984, 1985 and 1986.
"The information collected indicates that the looms were made before (Marsail) would have been used for the production of yarn."
under NCAA legislation. It does not appear, therefore, that the loans were contrary to NCAA legislation or that the available information is sufficient to justify reopening the case.
Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick was happy with the NCAA's decision.
"We are extremely pleased that the NCAA has reviewed the issues raised in the Sports Illustrated article as well as additional information which was gathered yesterday and has concluded that there is no basis to reopen the infractions case with the NCAA. We also have a warrant. We applaud the NCAA for the expedition manner in which they handled this matter."
"We are especially happy for coach Roy
The early signing period for basketball recruits began last Wednesday and ends this Wednesday. So far, the Jayhawks have signed Adonis Jordan, a guard from Reseda, Calif.
Williams, who can now move ahead with his recruiting program, which was unfortunately disadvantaged by the uncertainty of this matter."
The Jayhawks were given a three-year probation *W* 1, barring them from defending
As part of the probation, the NCAA said that the University must disassociate Marshall from its athletic program.
During its initial investigation, the NCAA found that Marshall had loaned money to a former rival team.
Athletic department will hire compliance auditor
By David Stewart Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
About half an hour before the NCAA decided Friday not to reopen its investigation of Kansas basketball, Bob Frederick, athletic director, said that his department was advertising for a compliance auditor to make sure no more NCAA rules were broken.
Frederick said that he hoped to have the compliance auditor in place by Dec. 1. He said that although the department already had an auditor, that person was more in charge of keeping the books than worrying about possible NCAA infractions.
Frederick spoke at a special meeting of the University Senate Executive Committee. Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Tom Mulinazio, president of the University of Kansas Athletic Association, served on the executive council, and Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, also attended the meeting.
According to the NCAA's Nov. 1 ruling, the University must recritely its compliance with NCAA legislation for the 1988-89 academic year.
nug said that he accepted full responsibility for the actions of the University and that Kansas sports were ready to move on.
However, Budig said that he could not always know what was happening within the program.
"The buck stops here," Budig said. "I realize responsibility for all activities at the University of Kansas resides with the chancellor, and I accept that responsibility."
James Seaver, professor of history, said that it was a perversion of Budig's role as chancellor when he had to spend so much time working with the athletic department.
Budig said, "There is no way that the chancellor of the University of Kansas can be in charge of the day-to-day administration of the athletic department any more than that
individual can be in charge of the day-to-day administration of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences."
Frederick, who is in charge of day-to-day administration of the athletics program, said his department would crack down on infractions.
"This kind of thing won't happen again in the future as long as I have the opportunity to do it."
Budig said that he was confident that the correct people were in place to stop further intractions of NCAA rules.
---
2
Monday, November 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
Sunny and warm
High: 67°
Low: 46°
Today's high should be around 64 degrees.
The skies will become cloudy tonight as the low drops to around 46 degrees.
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
53/30
Partly cloudy
Omaha
51/34
Mostly sunny
Goodland
61/30
Partly cloudy
Salina
63/40
Mostly sunny
Topaka
64/43
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
68/47
Mostly sunny
Columbia
69/49
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
70/42
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
70/43
Mostly sunny
Wichita
69/49
Sunny
Chenute
67/49
Sunny
Springfield
69/52
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Leigh Anne Stout
Temperature is today's high and tonight's low
Tulsa
70/52
Sunny
5-Day
Tuesday
Chances of rain
52/38
HIGH LOW
Wednesday
Partly cloudy
58/39
Thursday
Partly cloudy
60/40
Friday
Mostly sunny
54/35
Saturday
Mostly sunny
55/32
The nation
Seattle
46/35
Denver
60/30
Chicago
63/46
New York
60/44
Los Angeles
62/49
Phoenix
76/46
Dallas
60/64
Miami
80/73
Fronts:
cold occluded
warm stationary
Seattle 46/35
Denver 60/30
Chicago 63/46
New York 62/44
Los Angeles 62/49
Phoenix 76/46
Dallas 80/64
Frontier cool included warm stationary
Miami 80/73
72% of KU students read Kansan Classified
EAGLE HEARING HELD: Citizens of Lawrence can voice concerns tonight about how the bald eagle will be affected by the proposed riverfront retail center project at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
Massachusetts service The public meeting is in conjunction with the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, which is seeking reactions to proposals to lessen the retail center's effects on the endangered bald eagle.
The proposed development, at the site of the Bowersock Mills & Power Co., is in an area listed as a critical habitat for the eagle. Many eagles have been seen feeding along the river during winter.
The departent is responsible for issuing a permit to the city and the shopping center developers because the development would take place in the critical habitat.
CHAMBER MUSIC RECITAL: The Kansas Chamber Artists' third recital will feature music for voice and brass.
The program will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
The free performance is sponsored by the department of music and dance and is open to the public.
News Briefs
public.
Denise Myers, assistant professor of voice music and dance, soprano, will open the program singing "Three Japanese Songs" by Steven Addiss, professor of art history. David Bushue, professor of french horn, will accompany her on the french horn, and Richard Angelletti, professor of piano, will accompany on the piano.
Norman Paige, professor of voice music and dance, and John Stephens, associate professor of voice, will sing "Three Songs" by Henry Purcell. They will be accompanied by cellist Edward Laut, associate professor of cello, and harpsichordist Michael Bauer, assistant professor of music and dance.
The Kansas Brass Quintet will perform three works: Fugue in G minor, by J.S. Bach, transcribed by Bushouse; Quintet in B flat minor by Victor Ewald; and Brass Quintet, op. 65, 1974, by Jan Koetsier.
Jam Roberts
Members of the quintet are David Turnbull,
assistant professor of trumpet, and John Wojcik.
Enid, Okla., graduate student, on trumpets; Bus-
house, on french horn; Scott Watson, assistant professor of tuba and euphonium, on tuba; and Thomas Ashworth, assistant professor of trombone, on trombone.
KASSEBAUM TO SPEAK: Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum will speak on campus at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union.
kassebaum's lecture, "Higher Education in the New Administration," is free and open to the public. The speech is sponsored by the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors.
501.
Kassebaum is a member of the Senate Budget and Foreign Relations committees and serves on the Science, Technology and Space Subcommittee.
Last June, the national AAUP presented to her the Henry T. Yost Congressional Recognition Award for her strong advocacy of education in the Senate.
Kassebain, who earned a bachelor's degree from KU in 1954, was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1978. She was re-elected in 1984. Her term ends in 1991.
CENTER TO BE DEDICATED: The University of Kansas will颁发 the recently renovated Baehr Audio Reader Center, 1120 W. 11th St., at 10 a.m. Friday.
Friday.
The dedication will include comments by Chancellor Gene A. Budig, Carl Gump, chairman of the board of trustees of the Louis W. and Dopha Baer Foundation, and W.C. Hartley, chairman and chief executive officer of the Miami County National Bank, a trustee of the foundation, Ralph Turner, chairman of the Audio Reader advisory committee, and Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, also will speak.
A shuttle bus will provide transportation to the building for those parked in Lot 59, just west of Memorial Stadium.
Memorial Stadium.
The center's present structure was built as a private home in the 1920s and was later used as a fraternity house. The $375,000 renovation was made possible by an initial gift of $150,000 from the Baehr Foundation.
The center moved to its new facility earlier this year. The renovation doubles the amount of space it has.
The center is a radio reading service for blind and print disabled people, has about 5,000 listeners in western, central and northeast Kansas. It broadcasts portions of 26 Kansas newspapers.
HUGHES SCHOLARSHIP ESTABLISHED: A Shawnee couple recently established a scholarship for the University of Kansas in their son's name
Louisiana rugues, Stephany Brown Hughes after the Proctor and Gamble Co., Cincinnati, Ohio pledged $75,000 this semester toward the earnest goal of J. Trenton Hughes Memorial Scholarship Fund.
high school.
A second recipient will be selected for the 1989-90 academic year. After Hall, recipients will receive a $2,000 scholarship for their freshman year.
oufling abs. scholarship will be awarded to an incoming KU freshman who graduated from DeSoto High School. Kelly Hall, DeSoto freshman, will receive the first scholarship of $1,000 a semester for four years. Hall knew Trent Hughes while attending high school.
The gift will be administered by the Kansas University Endowment Association and will be included in Campaign Kansas, KU's three-year, $150 million fund-raising drive. One Campaign Kansas objective is to raise $11 million in undergraduate scholarships.
graduate scholarships.
Trenton Hughes played on Desoto's football and tennis teams, and his parents said he wanted to attend KU.
DEBATE TEAM THIRD: The KU debate team recently was ranked third in the nation among college debate teams.
college debate conference.
The ranking, which covers tournaments the team participated in this semester, is the first of the season by the American Forensic Association. Only Northwestern University and Baylor University were ranked higher out of the 181 schools.
Robert Rowland, director of forensics and professor of communications studies, said, "We are especially pleased by the ranking since three of our top six debaters graduated last year."
our top six deserves. Rowland said that the ranking maintained the team's tradition of excellence. In the last two years, the team has been ranked in the top 10. In 1986, the team was ranked third, and in 1978, it was seventh.
Correction
ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM A
Trenton Hughes died in a 1987 car accident during his senior year of high school.
TENSION HEADACHE NOW?
Because of a reporter's error, former state Sen. Robert Talkington, R-Iola, was misidentified in Thursday's Kansan.
A green 1977 Volkswagen Rabbit, valued at $1,200 and left unlocked with the keys inside, was taken Saturday afternoon from a room
call Kathy Gonman immediately at Watkins Memorial Health Center (913)864-9595 to see if you qualify for a medication study
Police Record
FINANCIAL INCENTIVE PROVIDED
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP
HARLEY
6
BRIAN SCHNEIDER
☆
driveway in the 3000 block of West 26th Street, Lawrence police said. ■ A sewer pipe was plugged with croque balls causing about $600
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50th Anniversary Commemoration of Kristallnacht Film and Discussion "A Painful Reminder" Facilitator: M.J. McClendon Tuesday, November 15, 1988 Parlor A, Kansas Union 7:30 p.m.
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Student Union Activities
Calendar of Events
November
s m t w t f s
13
Star O Magic Bazaar
14
15
Movie - Vanishing Point 8 p.m. $1.50
Chips
D & D Perune
16
Movie - Brentwood Box Truck 4.8 p.m.
Champions
17
Double Feature Ball Drop and Motion Lose Weight 8 p.m. $9.00 Bridge Club
18
Movie - Bull Durham & Motion Lose Weight 8 p.m. $9.00 and $9.00
Check Box Day 11:10 Open Carving
19
Happy Thanksgiving!
11/29-12/2 Arts & Crafts Bazaar, 9-5, Kansas Union Gallery
Star O Magic Bazaar
28
29
Movie-Mixed Piece 8 p.m. $1.50
Chips
D & D Perune
30
Movie-Hair Tails Was My Little Presham 8 p.m.
Champions
1
Movie-Hair Attraction 8 p.m. 7 and 9:30
Open Carving
2
Movie Hall Attraction 8 p.m. 7 and 9:30
Open Carving
3
For more information, call the SUA Office at 864-3477
ZUA
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 14, 1988
Campus/Area
3
KU alumnus receives OZZI award
Johnson says KU experience still influences his career
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
A 1978 KU graduate last night received the 1988 Grand OZZI award for his work in national and international film-making.
Stephen Johnson, who directed the award-winning Peter Gabriel "Sledgehammer" video, the first season of "Pee Wee's Playhouse" and a video to illustrate the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights, accepted the award as part of the 1988 Kansas Film Institute Film and Video Festival.
About 100 people attended the ceremony in Downs Auditorium at Dvche Hall.
Johnson said that his experiences in Kansas helped him with his career.
"I've come to appreciate the background I was given both in Kansas and back here at KU," he said.
Johnson, who was a radio-TVfilm major, recalled that his last experience at the University of Kansas was probably the one that contributed the most to his recent success.
"I had about $200 in parking tickets that were unpaid." he said.
tickets that were unpaid, "ne said. Johnson said he talked officials into letting him pay for half of them, which was all he could afford, and they released his transcript, allowing him to go to graduate school at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.
Before presenting Johnson with the Grand OZZI, Roger Holden, president of the Kansas Film Institute, showed examples of Johns work and read a congratulatory program from Wee Wee Herman.
Then, Holden said, there was another surprise. The lights went down, and a short film announced the award.
Johnson was relieved.
Johnson was relieved.
"I was terrified that you had gotten one of my student films," he said.
Holden also presented the Life Achievement OZZI to two Lawrence filmmakers, Herk Harvey and John Clifford. Together, they directed a 1982 film that has become a cult classic.
While accepting his award, Clifford said, "In Steven Johnson, you met someone in the avant garde of a group of very young boys in the back of the caboose."
Holden presented 11 OZIZs to student filmmakers in the areas of narrative videos, long nonfiction, short nonfiction, long promotions, short promotions and public service announcements, commercial video films, short narrative films, short narrative films and music videos.
je!
University of Kansas graduate Stephen R. Johnson discusses his directing career before receiving the "Grand Ozzi" award. Johnson was honored by the Kansas Film Institute last night for his work in film and video.
Portrayals sexist, feminist says
By Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
Although Sara Paretsky, novelist and feminist, joked at a dare during her speech on women's roles in detective stories, the seriousness of the journey for equal rights showed through.
"Women are often portrayed as species of monsters wanting to strip men of their rights," she said.
Paretsky, author of five mystery novels and MS magazine's 1987 woman of the year, spoke Friday afternoon in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. The speech, "From Angel to Witch: The Moral Decline of American Women in 20th-Century Detective Fiction," was sponsored by the department of women's studies.
A KU student in the 1960s, Parestyk dedicated the speech to the memory of Elizabeth M. Watkins.
Paretsky said that women characters in detective fiction almost always were mutilated and
destroyed or portrayed as destroyers.
"The women are not central to the action," she said.
Paretsky spoke of the history of inequality for women back to the time of women's suffrage in the 1920s.
"It was thought that chivalry would end if women were given the right to vote," she said.
And she gave some modern examples
In 1984, Pareksey said, a division of the Baptist Church declared that women could not serve as clerics.
"They have declared women as the servants of men," she said.
A Lawrence native and KU graduate, Paretsky served on KU's Commission on the Status of Women in the 1960s.
She recently organized Sisters in Crime, a women's caucus within the Mystery Writers of America. The caucus wants to make readers
aware of the male bias in mystery writing
In a January 1988 interview in MS, Paretsky said that about 40 percent of the mysteries published were produced by women but weren't as distinguished as men's works in the genre.
Angel Kwolek-Folland, lecturer in women's
health, introduced Parishes, she had
been introduced to a new form of
motion.
"She's addressed the troubling issues of our time: toxic waste, the violence against women," Follhardt said.
Paretsky called on the movie "Fatal Attraction" to illustrate today's violence against women.
In the movie, actress Glenn Close has an affair with the male character, Michael Douglas, who is married. The movie depicts a raged woman who stalks her ex-lover. Douglas finally kills Close, Paretsky said, and is portrayed as the movie's hero. Close is portrayed as the "bad guy."
"It is a sobering thought for feminists.' Parettsky said of such a depiction of women.
Zoologist fights for Agnes' descendants, gives suggestions for enhancing habitat
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
Agnes the Frog may have lost the race for Douglas County commissioner two years ago, but she won't lose a habitat that she can thrive in if Joe Collins gets his way.
Collins, zoologist at the KU Museum of Natural History, recently sent a letter on ways to enhance the crawfish frog habitat to reviewers of the prophecy southwest Lawrence and nearby wildlife and county agencies.
"I'm just making sure the kind of habitat that is created would be the kind that is used by the crawfish frog and not a waste of the city's money." Collins said.
Collins has been concerned about
Agnes ran for office to protest development of the proposed trafficway that would be next to the Baker Wetlands, an area designated as critical habitat for the threatened frog species.
the brothers and sisters of Agnes the Frog, a fictitious northern crawfish frog who gained national attention when she ran for the commission.
"Wet, open prairies with groundwater close to the surface that are annually flooded, represents the type of soil most commonly used for frogs for breeding." Collins said.
Collins' letter described the ideal crawfish frog habitat.
"Ultimately, the water must dry up by mid-July so no fish are able to live in the water," he said.
He said that most importantly, the frogs would not breed in permanent ponds.
Frank Hempen, director of Douglas County Public Works, said that Collins' suggestions would aid engineers as they followed through with whatever mitigation procedures were accepted.
The county, in conjunction with the Kansas Department of Transportation, is drafting an environmental impact statement on the trafficway. Hempen said the statement was close
"It is good to have important information, such as this, in advance so we don't have to go back and fix things later." Hempen said.
Bob Wood, terrestrial ecologist for the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, said some proposals existed that would help make up for frog habitat lost from the trafficway's construction.
to being ready to go through the final approval process, which would be complete in 60 to 90 days.
Wood said the city and the trafficway developers could acquire new land near the Baker Wetlands and develop it into a wetland area. The lake provides an existing wetlands, making it easier for the crawfish frog to survive.
The wildlife department issues the final construction permit for the traffiway because of the critical habitat designation.
'Last Temptation hits in Lawrence
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
Theater sees peaceful protests
Controversy over director Martin Scorsese's film "The Last Temptation of Christ" has been renewed in Lawrence with the movie's Friday opening at Liberty Hall.
Protesters have gathered in front of the movie theater for every showing, said Tim Griffith, manager of Liberty Hall. 642 Massachusetts St. protestors has grown since Friday, from four people to about 20 yesterday.
"The Last Temptation of Christ," based on Nikos Kanzakatz's novel about Christ's life, evoked controversy from fundamentalist Christians because it portrayed Christ being tempted by lust.
Griffith said the theater was neutral about the film, and the protesters were welcome as long as they weren't violent.
Griffith said the movie theater decided to show the movie because Liberty Hall traditionally chose movies that other剧院 didn't run it. The movie was averaging about 100 people a showing. The movie will run until Dec. 3.
"We don't particularly endorse any of the movie's thoughts," Griffith said. "People have the right to see
what they want to see. (The protesters) are welcome to express their opinions as long as they don't bodily stop anyone from getting in."
Two protesters, John Wintrey, assistant professor of Army ROTC, and his wife, Marietta, stayed for all of Sunday afternoon's showing and said they would protest throughout the movie's run.
"We're here for a peaceful protest," Marietta Wintrey said. "I don't want to stop anyone from seeing it. Everyone has a right to see it."
"I think if that's what they believe, that's fine." Deeds said.
Kent Deeds, Lawrence senior who saw the movie yesterday, said the protesters didn't hinder his curiosity to see the movie.
Deeds said he enjoyed the movie although he said it was too long, running almost three hours. Annette Marks, Topeka resident, disagreed with Deeds about the quality of the movie.
"I thought it was a dreadful movie, in every sense," she said.
But Marks said she didn't see the movie for its cinematic quality.
"I only came to express my freedom of speech," she said. "If it hadn't been for the controversy, I wouldn't have come."
Courts may order garnishing of rent after tenants' suits
Kansan staff writer
By Jeremy Kohn
Tenants can receive court-ordered damages from their landlords more quickly by garnishing other tenants' rent payments, a consumer affairs specialist said last week.
Camille Dalager, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, said such a situation occurred in June when a student won a $333 judgment against the Moseley Management Group, which manages Boardwalk Apartments, 524 Frontier Road.
Todd Lower, former Boardwalk resident and Topeka sophomore, said he filed a suit against Moseley in June because it hadn't returned his security deposit within the required 30 days after Lower vacated his apartment at the end of hisApril.
Lower requested through the court that another Boardwalk tenant send rent payments directly to the court until the damages were paid. The rent would be counted as money owed to Lower by Moseley.
Dalager said that method of garnishment, which is payment by the defendant to the plaintiff, had been used once before several years ago in Lawrence. She said Moseley paid the money to avoid embarrassment with the garnished tenant.
"It it the garnishm order) doesn't give you a feeling of confidence in the business person," Dalager said.
She said that tenants might doubt their landlord's honesty or business methods if they discover that former tenants had taken
Garnishing another tenant's rent is an effective way to get court-ordered money, she said, because monthly rents are a constant source of income for apartment owners or managers.
Sheryl Sampson, court clerk,
said that winning a small claims
case was't difficult but that get-
ting money from the defendant
was.
"If they don't have any assets, it's hard to get your money." Sampson said.
Barbara Berry, vice president of Moseley, said the request for garnishment had nothing to do with the company's decision to pay Lower.
"It may encourage other people, but it didn't encourage us," Berry said last week.
She said that the garnished tenant had contacted Boardwalk's management in October about the impairment orders from the court.
According to court records,
garnishment orders were dropped.
Oct. 18, and the court received
Jack's payment to Lower
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"If you can successfully garnish somebody, that is a quicker access than other options," she said.
But Dalager said many plaintiffs never received their money because some people disregarded the law and didn't return the asset.
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Monday, November 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KU's best professors get recognition they deserve
No one is reluctant to point a finger at the cause of the mediocrity of American education. From "A Nation at Risk," the government report revealing a crumbling public education system, to "The Closing of the American Mind," Allan Bloom's account lamenting the lack of cultural literacy in higher education, an easy target is drawn: teachers.
And why not? They have little prestige or status in society; they earn some of the lowest public-service salaries in the nation; and their profession is shunned by college graduates.
One would think that a university professor might draw a little more respect. But all at the ivory tower is not idealistic, as any University of Kansas professor will attest.
Overcrowded classrooms, poor salaries, poorly prepared students seeking advising and other problems interfere with the learning process and the time professors can spend outside of class addressing students' concerns about their educations.
That is why the HOPE awards are some of the most prestigious among the dozens of awards and prizes given by the University in a year.
The names of previous HOPE award winners are on a large plaque adjacent to the main lobby of the Kansas Union.
Seniors annually vote on the Honors for Outstanding Progressive Educator award, which will be presented Saturday at the Kansas-Missouri football game.
Those names represent educators who have lived up to the true mission of the University: to stimulate the minds of students and help them to think freely; to instill in them the skills and knowledge they need; and to teach them how to use that knowledge to improve the lives of others.
The numbers on the television screens and the ceaseless scrutiny and projections that accompanied them reaffirmed in many voters' minds last week that their votes do not count in a presidential election.
Mark Tilford for the editorial board
The 10 finalists for the HOPE awards deserve praise, as do all the nineteen. They set a high standard that all professors should seek to follow and that the entire University can be proud of.
Networks blow it again
president election In such an election the worst place to cast a vote is on the West Coast. There, part of the electorate is destined to hear who their next president will be before they ever get to vote. In a democracy, where every vote counts, not only is that unfair, it just isn't right.
it just isn't right. Every four years, commercial networks, in their pompous and self-serving race to beat their competitors, fall into the habit of reporting the news before it happens. The process entails exit polling, followed by the irresponsible tradition of predicting the winner in the election.
The networks projected the winners in some states with less than 1 percent of the votes counted. One network even declared George Bush the winner in North Dakota after only six votes had been counted. And at 8:17 p.m., Dan Rather said that Bush would be the next president of the United States.
The damage is undoubtedly immeasurable and irreparable when voters are discouraged from casting a vote because the networks have declared a winner.
It turns out the network was right. But what if it had been wrong? The networks were wrong in some cases. NBC incorrectly projected Maryland and had to change it from Dukakis to Bush.
Networks must restrain their eagerness and recognize that the way they report the results is an ethical question and not one surrounded by dollars and cents. If they can't do this, and it doesn't appear they can, the system itself could be changed.
A nationwide poll-closing time would prevent projections while other states still are voting. To make sure voters in all zones get the same amount of time to vote, the voting could take place during a 24-hour span, perhaps on the weekend or during a national Election Day holiday.
And finally, states could withhold election results until all of their precincts have reported. That would deter premature network predictions because no solid statistics could back them up.
There are problems, of course, with such proposals. But something needs to be done. If only the networks would understand their influence and remember that their words are scrutinized more so than the numbers that they rush to report.
crustized more so than the hair on the
Restraint is the cure. Without it, the voters will always lose.
Tony Balandran for the editorial board
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Draca Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Jim Protasman...National sales manager
Kurt Messerman...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhard...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Asst. production manager
Nestel Lehmann...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.
can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
Letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
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WELL... GEORGE...
YOU LOOK FINE, BUT I
STILL HAVE ABOUT
TWO MONTHS LEFT.
Student's act teaches an ethics lesson
I heard about the incident while I was picking up a paycheck for a fellow student. I joked with the woman in charge, telling her that if she had any lefter checks, she could give them to me. As a matter of fact, she said, we have just such a check.
A student had stopped by the office recently and refused his paycheck. He'd worked for the money and was entitled to the check by all standards but his own. Apparently, he believed he hadn't worked hard enough to deserve the check. So he refused the money.
Amazing.
Many of us seem to think that the chief ethical consideration is not getting caught when we break the law. Those of us who try to obey the laws often believe ourselves to be unusually righteous. For example, a few semesters ago I accidentally received an extra scholarship check. The situation was clear cut. Obviously, an oversight was involved. The money really wasn't mine, so, feeling quite virtuous, I gave it back.
Amazing.
But the case of the student mentioned above is different. He refused the check not because of an oversight and not because he hadn't worked for it, or because he was worked for it enough. These are some standards.
Compare his standards with the ones outlined in a recent U.S. News and World Report article. According to the article, members of a prominent U.S. institution habitually use their positions of influence to improve their own coffers. While following the letter of the law, they ignore its spirit. They influence public policy, then gain personally through financial contributions and
Mark Jost
Staff Columnist
peaking engagements. They cost taxpayers millions of dollars.
Why doesn't the government do something? Because the institution in question is the U.S. Congress. Here are two examples of what our leaders have been up to:
- By allowing multinational corporations such as Bechtel and Monsanto to continue to deduct a large portion of their research expenses, Congress effectively gave them $211 million in tax breaks on top of approximately $1 billion in annual benefits that they received in previous years. Congress also extended an additional $703 million in potential research tax breaks for the same corporations.
Key people involved were Sen. Lloyd Bentens, D-Tex, Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-III, and Rep. Beryl Anthony, D-Ak. Benten received $15,120 in campaign contributions; Rostenkowski, $10,000 in contributions and $7,500 in speech fees; Anthony, $19,000 in contributions and $5,000 in speech fees. Total political action committee dollars to Congress: $2,672 million.
A measure placed on the defense-appropriations bill will waste hundreds of millions of dollars by eliminating most competitive bidding for spare
parts for military aircraft and ships. An Indiana based contractor was the measure's chief supporter.
Sen. Dan Quayle, R-Ind., and Rep. Frank McCloskey, D-Ind., pushed the measure. Quyle received $8,500 in PAC contributions from the contractor's parent company, General Motors; McCloskey got $1,600. GM and its affiliates gave a total of $468,119 in PAC donations to members of Congress.
There are plenty of other examples in the article. Not that we should conclude that all members of Congress are out for themselves. But the government's recent track record isn't much to be proud of.
President-elect George Bush has promised that he intends to propose a new code of ethics that contains "high standards" for public officials.
Responding to that idea, columnist Paul Greenberg asked, "Ever notice that one of the first reactions to an ethical scandal is not an insistence that standards be obeyed, but a proposal to raise them? If folks didn't do what was right before, what makes a reformer think they'll obey even higher standards?"
higher standards.
It seems to me we need fewer ethics rules and more people who meet the standards we already have. That brings me back to the student I mentioned at the start of this column. If he is reading this and one day decides to run for office, I hope he lets me know. He has at least one vote waiting for him.
■ Mark Jost is a Lawrence graduate student in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
On behalf of the faculty, staff, students and fans of Perry Middle School, we would like to extend our thanks and comment about 30 KU Marching Band members for their support at our recent home football game. We also would like to thank our assistant football coach and KU student teacher, Josh Woodward, for his efforts in making this happen.
The students who came to help us celebrate and motivate us to a thrilling overtime win were polite, mannerly yet enthusiastic and entertaining. Their presence and support helped us celebrate an already memorable 1982 football halftime even performed an improbable halftime show!
Thanks, KU band
We salute their efforts and congratulate them for their entusiasm and exemplary behavior. We would be glad to have you back at any time.
Go big blue!
Brian Bingham
Adviser Base Council president
Kathy Erickson
Pep Club/Cheerleading sponsor
Eric Hyler
principal
Brian Bingham
Stop the Klan
The following is a response to the editorial of the Penn State Daily Collegian (reprinted in the Oct. 31 Kansan) that defends the Ku Klux Klan's right to march on Independence Hall in Philadelphia without counter-protest (the KKK backed out of their march when they were unable to obtain a demonstration permit).
The oft-used "free speech" argument, employing the Constitution to shield the Klan, makes a mockery of the pain and suffering of untold millions of people in this country and around the world who have been victimized by and have fought against race-hatred and fascism. The Ku Klux Klan diametrically opposes the ideals that underlie both the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence and where equality and democracy are the tenets of the Republic, how should a group be placed in such it exposes and practices exclusion and genocide? It is clear that there can be no place in this country for fascist-supremacists to destroy the hard-won gifts of millions of U.S. citizens who do not fall into the category of Protestant-white-male.
It may be easy to defend the Klan's rights in the cozy, white, Penn State newsroom, yet anyone who has had a family member terrorized or has himself been a victim of Nazi/Klan attacks, or anyone who recalls the history of Germany, Spain, Greece and Chile understands that unless you defend your home, your rights and your nation against fascists and meet them head on, you are not merely providing them a forum which in effect legitimizes their genocidal views, you are inviting national disaster.
Organized around the slogan, "All Out to Stop the Klan," a Labor Black-based anti-Klan demonstration (to which the editorial presumably was a response) has totalled much more than 200 national and international endorsers. This broad base of working people and students recognizes the danger and moral outrage of fascism and its insulting practices with burials and other race-hate incidents that have been increasing recently in the city of "brotherly love."
The Klan's right to speak cannot be compared seriously with the right of every black, Jewish, Hispanic, Asian, Catholic, unionist, gay or any so-called "undesirable" person to live and live in dignity without fear. It is an incontrovertable fact. People die unless fascists are stopped.
We urge every student to do his or her part to protect this country and its people. Racists must be taught that their violence and virulent ideas are not welcome in our neighborhood or in our country. Constitutional arguments about free speech are misleading. The Constitution was not intended to protect those who incite and perpetrate violence against the citizens of our country. There is no freedom of speech in a concentration camp.
Dan May
Lawrence senior
David Scheuer
Honolulu sophomore
Lee Manliow
Chicago junior
Stephanie Ring
Olathe Junior
Tom Archer
Lawrence resident
BLOOM COUNTY
NARGH!
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OOF
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GENTLE-
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---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 14, 1988
5
ZZZZ ZZZZ ZZZZ
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Is your radio station falling asleep or alternative music? Attend an OPEN FORUM to discuss the fate of KJHK and college radio today. Bring your questions and answers
your questions and answers.
When: Tuesday, November 15, 7 p.m.
Where: Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
Free and Open to the public
Special thanks to the 350 concerned listeners who attended
the Benefit Concert. See all of you Nov. 15!
NEW AMERICA
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Sponsored by the Committee Representing Students that KJHK serves, a registered student group at the University of Kansas
MISS KU-LAWRENCE SCHOLARSHIP PAGEANT INFORMATIONAL MEETING
Eldridge House Hotel 7th and Massachusetts Wednesday, Nov. 16th at 7 p.m.
The Miss America Scholarship Pageant Programs awards over 5 million dollars in scholarships annually.
Come find out how you could be the recipient of a scholarship.
For more information, call Tracy Noll 749-5011, or 842-7936, or Karen Fender, 842-4273.
The Miss KU-Lawrence Scholarship Pageant is an official expo利员 in the KU-Lawrence Pageant.
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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.
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.
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.
Reading the expression on my face, he said, "What can I say? I like it. The Café Français 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."
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KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Monday
Adult Children of Alcoholics will meet from 3:30 to 4 p.m. in room 7 at 125 W. 12th St.
The Center for International Programs is sponsoring Roselli Abinader Fulbright scholar from Sao Paulo, Brazil, speaking on "Discover Brazil, an Unforgettable Country," from noon to 1:30 p.m. H on the third floor of the Kansas Union.
The Non-Traditional Student Organization will meet at 7 p.m. in the Daisy Hill Room at the Kansas Union. The meeting will involve management workshop with test-taking tests.
"The Christianization of Rus" Ukraine viewed from Byzantium," a lecture by Professor Thor Sevencko, Harvard University associate director of the Ukrainian Research Center, will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Centennial Room at the Paul Adam Adam College. A reception will follow in the Paul Adam Adam College, Adama Alumni Center.
The Peace Corps will have an information table set up from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Kansas Union. A film and application workshop will be from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union.
Tuesday
15
An open forum to discuss KJHJ at 7 p.m. in Aldershot Auditorium at the Kansas Union. The Committee Represents KJHJ's KJHJ Serves is sponsoring the forum.
"How to Develop Family Companies and Take Them to the International Market," a lecture by Torbjorn Ek, executive vice chairman of a Swedish public development company, will be at 2 p.m. The lecture will be in the Pioneer at the Burge Union. The KU School of Business is sponsoring the event.
The Kansas City Chapter of the
**Resume Writing and Interviewing for Women, a workshop sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center.** A master's degree in Regionalist岗 at the Kangasian University.
■ Marantha Campus Ministry will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
American Society of Women Accountants will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Golden Ox Restaurant, 1600 Genesee, Kansas City, M. Kar, See Ken. U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge will speak on *Bankruptcy* for members and 15 for students and 125 for students and members *11* and 325 for students.
Wednesday
16
A Pinch Press Corps meeting will at 8 p.m. in Alcee G at the Kansas Union Pinch is 'a new organization for humor to Mt. Oread. It senses a sense of humor to Mt. Oread.
The French Club will meet at 8 a.m. by Evan Palmer's. They will show the movie "The Decline of the American Empire," and will plan the French Club T-shirt.
The Art History club will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Eastern Seminar Room at the Art and Architecture Library.
The KU German club will meet at 4:30
p. m. at Miller Hall on Lilac Lane. They will show the movie "Aguirre, the Wrath of God."
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will meet from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Dungeons and Dragons will meet at 6 p.m. in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union
The KU Chess club will meet at 7 p.m. in Alcove A on the third floor of the Kansas Union.
Thursday
**GLOSK** will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burgeon Union.
**KU Christian Science Student Organization** will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the University of Wisconsin.
**The Champions Club** will meet at 6:30 p.m. in Parliar A at the Kansas Union.
**The Canterbury House** offers the holy eucharist at noon in Danforth Chapel.
17
Boston Hotel and The Baptist Student Union will meet at 5:30 at the American Baptist Center. Free Dinner will be served.
Public Relations Student Society of America will meet at 7 p.m. in the International Room at the Kansas Union
*Campus Crusade for Christ will meet at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.*
Friday
18
Monday.
The Peace Corps will have informational interviews from 8:30 to p.m. in the Placement Office at the Burge Union. All students taking part in the interviews must complete a series of applications. These applications can be picked up at the information table on
The International Folk Dance Club will meet from 7.30 to 10 p.m. at St John's Gymnasium
**Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship** will meet at 7 p.m. in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union.
Sunday
20
**KU Bible Study** will have worship at the Kansas Union services at 10 a.m. in the Javahawk Room
The Pi Phi's and the Phi Kapp's would like to thank
KY•102
and the following sponsors for making our Fall Classic 1988 a big success!
American Speedy Printing The Bum Steer Jayhawk Trophy Co. Border Bandido KLZR 106 Hardee's Pizza Shuttle Inc. Owens Flower Shop Runza
1
Mondav. November 14. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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More cooperation on contra aid expected in Bush administration
WASHINGTON — One early test of the compatibility of President-elect George Bush and the Democrat-controlled Congress will concern aid to the Nicaraguan government, the most contentious foreign policy issue of recent years.
The Associated Press
At a news conference last Wednesday, Bush said the Nicaraguan contraans will have "high priority" in his administration, and he pledged to "keep the pressure on the Sandinistas" to institute democratic reform.
But he stopped short of saying that a proposal for military aid will be sent to Congress.
The Reagan administration and Congress were never able to achieve a consensus on Nicaragua because of philosophical differences that were compounded by deep personal mistrust among the leaders in both branches.
In an interview last week, outgoing Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams, the administration protagonist on contra aid for more than three years, said the emergence of a "whole new cast of characters" in January could give the contra aid cause a shot in the arm.
Abrams said that with a new group taking over on January 20, the chances of a better relationship were
"It would be very odd for Congress to start the relationship by saying, 'Glad to meet you. We don't trust you.'"
war on the congressional Obstacle
Much of the bitterness Abrams alluded to was directed
at him personally, mostly because leading congressional
Democrats felt his word could not be trusted.
He said a "significant reduction" in personal bitterness combined with the "increased repression" in Nicaraguan youth has been reported.
But congressional sources doubt that the new administration will choose to do battle early on with Capitol Hill on an issue as divisive as contra aid.
One alternative to renewed contra military aid is additional international pressure on the Sandinistas. Secretary of State George P. Shultz is expected to issue an appeal for such pressure when he addresses a meeting of hemispheric foreign ministers on Monday in El Salvador.
But Abrams believes diplomatic pressure must be supplemented by military pressure, calling the contra a threat to his self-esteem.
Still, Bush did say three years ago that he "absolutely" would ask Congress for military to the contraas aid if there is no progress in the Central America peace process.
During the campaign, Bush sought to avoid references to Nicaragua, partly because raising that issue could have revived memories of the Iran-contra affair, a subject on which he generally was on the defensive.
On Thursday, House Speaker Jim Wright indicated a
fresh start with the Bush administration in Nicaragua.
"I hope it will be possible in Nicaragua that we might find some avenue which both of us can embrace, a path through the country."
Reagan lost his last bid for congressional approval of military aid in February. Since then, once in March and again in September, Congress has agreed to six-month terms that will force the form of food, clothing, shelter and medical services.
LIBRARY
"Humanitarian aid does serve to keep them as an organized force until we can turn Congress around," he
The aid is being distributed to camps on the Honduran side of the Nicaraguan border where about 10,000 rebels have gathered since last spring. An estimated 2,000 remain inside Nicaragua. Many experts doubt the contras can ever be reconstituted as an effective fighting force, but Abrams disagrees.
Continued from p.1
"Those increases far exceed the increases the state has given the libraries," he said.
Inflation rates for books and periodicals are higher than the overall inflation rate. Ranz said. Each year, prices increase 5 to 10 percent for books and 10 to 12 percent for periodicals.
Devaluation of the dollar also has hit library acquisitions hard, Ranz said. About half of KU libraries' book purchases come from overseas markets.
"We've lost about 40 percent of our buying power overseas," he said. "That's really just been a devastat- ion for us."
Peter Schanck, law library director, said that it was fortunate that the majority of law books and periodicals came from the United States. However, acquisitions are still a problem.
He said that the law library was underfunded this year and that it was searching for an additional $20,000 to prevent large-scale cancellations of books and periodicals.
figures."
The law library budget is separate from the rest of the KU libraries.
"We received virtually no money from the Margin of
*Excellence.*" he said. "There was a creative juggling of
He said the law library asked for a $50,000 increase for acquisitions last year but received only $22,000.
"All this talk of how wonderful the Margin of Excellence is for the University is true for salaries and numbers of positions, but it's untrue for libraries," he said. "The point is, we just didn't benefit."
Schanck said inflation rates for law publications ranged from 7 to 12 percent — at least double the national inflation rate. Reasons for the higher inflation rates, he said, include increasing printing costs and the fact that publishers can charge more in a captive market.
That has been particularly tough on the law library's 3,700 periodicals, which make up 88 percent of its acquisitions.
"Keeping up with the law is obviously very critical," he said. "The necessity in the legal field is to be up-to-date in what the law is and what people's interpretations of that law is."
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Don't miss IBM's PS/2 Demonstration Fair on campus.
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November 15 Academic Computer Center Presentations:
10:00 AM - PS/2 Technology
11:00 AM - Desk Top Publishing
1:00 PM - Microsoft EXCEL
November 22 Academic Computer Center Presentations: 10:00 AM - PS/2 Technology 11:00 AM - DOS 4.0 1:00 PM - Connectivity to Campus Library
November 29 Academic Computer Center Presentations:
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 14, 1988
Nation/World
7
Atlantis crew preparing for classified space flight
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A two-day countdown simulation began yesterday as part of preparation for the mission scheduled late this month.
The five astronauts who will make the flight will board the shuttle Atlantis today for the final two hours of the rehearsal to test communications and run through checklists and other launch day procedures.
The target for the launch is Nov. 30, but a firm date won't be set until shuttle managers complete a flight
readiness review Wednesday.
Most details about the flight are cloaked in secrecy because Atlantis will be carrying a Defense Department payload, which sources report it as a de-geering satellite intended to fly over 80 percent of the Soviet Union.
The astronauts flew here Saturday from the Johnson Space Center in Houston for three days of special training. Then they counted down was underway, they went to the launch pad to be briefed on procedures in case of a fire.
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Plans by the far-right Conservative Party to resegregate facilities in about 100 towns have set off fears of a black backlash at home and tougher sanctions from abroad.
The Associated Press
Nearly 400 Conservative Party town councillors, who were elected Oct. 26 in nationwide balloting, held a closed-door meeting Saturday in Pretoria to plan the party's pro-apartheid strategy on the local level.
Resegregation strategy in works
The party, which campaigned on a promise to return the "whites only" slaves, managed to get about 100 towns, mostly in Transvaal, the most populous province.
The National Party, which controls Parliament, has in recent years rescinded many of the so-called "petty apartheid" laws. Restaurants, bars, hotels and cinemas began opening to all races.
But the Separate Amenities Act, which allows town councils to segregate facilities on the basis of race, remains on the books.
will ask the national government to reverse previous declarations opening downtown business districts to all races. They pledge to make all public facilities in cities off-limits to blacks who live in outlying townships.
The municipal councils have no authority to order owners of facilities to resegregate private premises. They also have the power under licensing and zoning ordinances to make life difficult for businesses who cater to all races.
Conservative Party leader Andries Treunricht said the party was not turning back the clock," but he would have people to have their own communities."
Conservative spokesmen say they
ill revitalize the efforts of foreign groups seeking greater economic and political isolation of South Africa.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — More than 30 political parties are battling over 217 seats in the National Assembly, but Pakistan's first free elections in a decade have been backed by a majority and supporters of two slain leaders.
South Africa has by law and by custom imposed a policy of apartheid under which the 26 million blacks have no voice in national affairs, which are controlled by the 5 million whites.
In some cities the Conservative Party controls, segregation has been ended. In many apartments have signed automatized apartment laws have been removed in many places.
Several commentators predicted the new Conservative strategy would
In many cities, parks, public facilities and transportation remain segregated.
leader of the left-leaning Pakistan People's Party.
Pakistan's 48 million eligible voters, three-fourths of them illiterate, can choose between symbols at the 33,300 polling booths around the country. An arrow is for Bhutto's party, a bicycle for Zia loyalists and a lantern for backers of Pushtun separatist leader Abdul Wali Khan.
Pakistani elections Wednesday
Wednesday's contest pits right-wing loyalists of former President Mohammed Zia ila hua against Benevento leader Giuseppe Zufikar, Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and
The Associated Press
Zia's rule also ended in death on Aug. 17, when Zia, U.S. Ambassador Arnold Raphel and 28 others were killed in a transport plane crash.
In Johannesburg, controlled by President P.W. Botha's National Party, blacks who try to get on buses designated for whites often are rudely ordered off by drivers.
GANG WARFARE CONTINUES: Drug-dealing gang members in Los Angeles are murdering in record numbers despite police sweeps and the mayor's pledge to "take these terrorists off the streets." But authorities insist the battle is being won in target areas such as south-central Los Angeles and say those successes are not reflected in the numbers. Police Department figures show gang-related homicides rose three-fold in October compared with the same month last year, from 11 to 33. For the year through Oct. 31, they were up nearly 25 percent, from 166
News Roundup
in 1987 to 207
MANDELA MAY BE RELEASED: A representative of the African National Congress said Saturday that the South African government may release black nationalist leader Nelson Mandela as early as tomorrow. Mandela, the 70-year-old leader of the ANC jailed 27 years ago, was sentenced to life in prison for conspiring to overthrow the government. He was transferred from prison to a hospital in August for treatment of tuberculosis. Since then, it has
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**SPAIN FLOODS:** Three days of heavy rain on the Mediterranean coast flooded rivers and highways in Spain, damaged hundreds of homes and left five people dead and three missing, police said yesterday. Police said firefighters evacuated more than 800 people from flooded homes in the Barcelona province.
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Agencies help bring holiday cheer home
By Daniel Niemi
Kansan staff writer
Low-income families in Lawrence may have a brighter Christmas with help from the Lawrence Holiday Bureau.
Sherrie Cannon, coordinator of the bureau, an annual program run by Lawrence social service agencies, said the bureau now was accepting calls from people willing to adopt a family for Christmas or to make food or gift donations.
Adopting a family means providing enough food for breakfast, lunch and dinner on Dec. 25, one new item of clothing for each family member and one new toy for each child.
She said that no cash would be distributed but that people could make cash donations. The agency will then purchase gift certificates for the families.
Families who want to be adopted may apply at participating social service agencies through Dec. 9. Those agencies are Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm St.; Douglas County Senior Services, 745 Vermont St.; Lawrence Indian Center, 1920 Moodie Road; Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania St.; and the Salvation
However, families or individuals who are not interested in adopting a family can still contribute clothes or toys. Cannon said.
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Anson said she expected about 1,000 families to apply for adoption.
1,000 families to apply.
Susan Beers, director of social services for the Salvation Army,
said, "In this day and age, Christmas is such a hyped event, especially for children, that it's difficult for low-income parents to explain why they can't have Christmas presents like their friends. If we can provide a present for Christmas for everyone in the community, then it's well worth it."
Families who want to be adopted must fill out an application, supply a Social Security number for each family member that has one and show proof of income. Cannon said the applications would be reviewed individually.
"We don't want to set any hard and fast limits and have someone come in who is $5 over that and doesn't get a Christmas gift," she said.
Cannon said the agencies were tightening their guidelines to ensure that every adopted family would receive the gifts intended for them.
"When you're moving a large quantity of items in a short period of time, it is very difficult to ensure that one small box doesn't fall out into another box," Cannon said. "It's difficult to say it will never happen again, but we're trying to be very careful."
Work continues on plan for University-wide assessment
By a Kansan reporter
The University Assessment Committee reported in an open forum Friday that progress was continuing with the curriculum to evaluate the education of KU students.
the education of the Board The Board of Regents last spring directed state universities to have assessment plans ready by January.
Ray Hiner, committee chairman,
told about 10 people at the meeting
that a plan was not ready.
He said in general ideas.
Hiner said that subcommittees
were studying assessment of major fields, general education and basic skills, and creation of a goal attainment survey.
Grant Goodman, professor of history, asked committee members how they planned to assess students when everyone took different courses within different majors.
"How do you assess a salad bar?" he asked.
Hiner said that the committee would submit a plan that allowed each department to choose a different method of assessment.
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Fall'87 Production Manager University Daily Kansan Responsible for all aspects of the production department, including the logging of insertion orders, coordination of advertising, news and printing services interests, and layout of the newspaper.
Summer '87 Advertising Director University Daily Kansan Solely responsible for coordinating all facets of production and directing all related problem-solving efforts as well as management of sales representatives.
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The University Daily Kansas is an Equal Opportunity Employer
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 14, 1988
9
Poachers kill 10 elephants in Kenya wildlife sanctuary
The Associated Press
NAIROBI, Kenya — Poachers killed 12 elephants in a wildlife sanctuary and hacked off the ivory tusks that are selling at a record price on the world market, a government official said yesterday.
The Saturday morning slaughter in Tsavo National Park, about 220 miles southeast of Nairobi, brought to 160 men from elephants killed in Kenya since April.
The Wildlife Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the elephants were apparently in a herd when poachers opened fire. The official said the carcasses were found close to each other.
Police mounted a ground and air search for the poachers and arrested a man carrying four elephant tusks, the official said.
The killings came a day after President Daniel arap Moi vowed that the government would stop the poaching.
"This is a dangerous trend the government is determined to reverse." Moi said Friday.
Experts blame the intensified slaughter on the price of ivory, which has climbed steadily since the early 1970s and now averages $82 a pound.
Two weeks ago, 30 armed men entered Meru National Park, 140 miles northwest of Mount Meru, where white rhinoceroses, wildlife experts said. They said the
San Francisco zoo mistreats its elephants, report charges
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — A humane society investigation has found serious problems with the handling of elephants at San Francisco Zoo its director saves.
"This is not a document for sensationalization, but one for change," said Richard Avanzie, director of the San Francisco Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
The results of the SPCA's study will be turned over to the director of the zoo, the general manager for the Recreation and Parks Commission, the mayor and the Board of Supervisors this week, Avanzino said.
Avanzino would not go into specifics, but said the report was largely critical of the methods used to control the elephants, and documented serious problems in the way the animals are disciplined.
The zoo came under fire last month after Tinkerbell, a 7,000-pound Asian elephant, seriously injured a veterinary technician. The animal's mail's behavior said she was striking back for prior abuse.
In addition to the SPCA study, a panel of three nationally recognized elephant experts investigated the incident.
slaughter eliminated the species from Kenya's public lands.
Late last month, poachers slaughtered and removed the tursks from five elephants in the Tsawo reserve and from eight other elephants in the Mathews Range, 250 miles north of Nairobi.
The governmental launched an anti-poaching campaign in August, when George Muhoho, minister for
tourism and wildlife, announced the killings of 92 elephants during the previous three months.
Studies by the Nairobi-based U.N. Environmental Program show that in the past 15 years, Kenya's elephant population has dropped 85 percent. An aerial survey of Tsavo and the surrounding area found fewer than 5,500 elephants, down from 35,000 in 1974.
EASY
Continued from p.1
playing computer games, because it was easy.
it's a great way of getting three hours credit with little or no stress. Bordman said. "It's a chance it's a good way to meet people."
Although the class is fun, Bordman said the course wasn't teaching him very much.
"I haven't learned diddy squat," he said. "That's the one class in this University that I haven't learned a thing."
Maynard Shelly, professor of psychology and the course instructor, said he taught it to be easy for students. The psychology was too substantial subject.
'I think it is an ego trip for
people to make classes difficult when they don't need to be," said Shelly. "It's immoral. It's like selling a Ford for the price of a Cadillac."
Shelly said that he made his class easy because students should not have to spend as much time studying for a psychology class as they would for an engineering class, for example.
Bordman said a more worthwhile easy class was Sociology 662, Corrections.
But not all classes are as easy as people think they are. Unusual Weather and Introduction to Jazz are two classes students said they mistakenly thought would be easy.
Mike O'Connor, Colorado Springs, Col., junior, said he took Unusual Weather because he heard it was easy, but now he is
struggling through it
"The department knew it was easy, so they changed the format," O'Connor said. "The exam questions aren't as easy as they used to be; they are detailed and complex."
Introduction to Jazz isn't as easy as people say it is, either. On the first test, Richard Wright, associate professor of music at Columbia university, instructor said that 50 percent of the class received C's and D's.
A student in the class, Kelly Bradley, Northfield, III., junior, said she agreed that many students have a wrong impression of the class.
"I don't think it is as easy as people make it out to be," Bradley said. "The first test was very difficult."
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Monday, November 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
NU wins after CU fumble
The Associated Press
J. J. Flannigan was carrying Colorado's hopes when he inexplicably dropped the ball.
Flannigan broke free in the first half Saturday and appeared on his way to an uncontested 43-yard touchdown against No. 7 Nebraska.
But he got to the Nebraska 19 and dropped the ball. By the time he picked it up, the Cornhuskers were upon him.
Kansas sophomore running back Frank Hatchett ran 80 yards for a touchdown on the third play of the game but Kansas still lost to Oklahoma State 63-24 on Saturday.
By getting past stubborn Colorado in Lincoln, Nebraska set up the annual showdown with Oklahoma on Saturday for a trip to the Orange Bowl.
The 19th-ranked Buffalo came out empty-handed, and Nebraska went on to a 7-0 victory in the final Conference weekend of the season.
"I hope we have a better game this week," Hauskorn coach Tom Osborne said after the narrow victory over the Buffs. "Colorado's defense played tough. There were no surprises. I thought we'd move the ball better, but we didn't." Microsoft 7
Charles Thompson led the Sooners to three scoring drives in the first half at Columbia to beat the Tigers, 2-7 and 1-5.
Missouri shut out the Sooners in the second half, but it was too late.
"I knew they would take a lot of gambles and make a lot of stunts," Thompson said. "You're going to have some success doing that."
Tigers coach Woody Widenhoffer didn't get the upset he needed as ammunition to get his contract renewed and fell to 11-31-1 in his four seasons, 2-7-1 and 1-5 this season. Iowa State 16 Kansas State 7
Iowa State was penalized eight times for 83 yards, turned the ball over three times and had a touchdown call back because 12 men
3
And the Cyclones managed to win at Manhattan
Kansas plagued with 2nd-half blues
Sanders says other players deserve time
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportswriter
STILLWATER, Okla. — The only thing stopping Barry Sanders in Oklahoma State's 63-24 victory was Sanders on Saturday was Sanders himself.
After scoring five touchdowns and rolling up 312 yards rushing on 37 carries, Sanders took himself out of the game. Sanders said he wanted to give other Oklahoma running backs the chance to play.
And after breaking numerous team, conference and national records, it seemed everyone but Sanders was impressed.
"I guess maybe it'll hit pe 20 years down the road, but it's no big deal right now," said Sanders, a 5-foot-8, 197-pound tailback from Wichita who shies away from the Heisman Trophy hype.
But Oklahoma State coach Pat Jones repeated what he had said since the media hype began.
"The secret is that he's a good running back and he's got a great offensive line in front of him." Mason said. "They've got a bunch of seniors and fifth-year seniors who are big, they wear them down."
"I think the people here today witnessed the finest collegiate football player in the country," Jones said. "What Barry did is something the whole squad can share in."
The 'Cowbys' offensive line, especially, shared in Sanders' achievements, Kansas coach Glen Mason said.
"A guy in a cowboy hat kept yelling at me over my shoulder the whole game. 't bet you $100 he gets I guess I should have bet him."
Though Sanders did not reach
the 400-yard mark, he did surpass the 300-yard mark for the third time this season. No other running back in NCAA history has accomplished the feat more than once in a career.
He also established the NCAA record for the most touchdowns in a season. Sanders' five touchdowns in the game gave him 31 touchdowns for the season, breaking the previous mark of 29.
And Sanders remained on track to break the NCAA record for rushing yards and needs to average just 120 yards in his final two games to
break the record, set by USC's Marcus Allen in 1981. Sanders is averaging 222.6 rushing yards per game.
But as dominant as Sanders' performance was, the Oklahoma State offense had another star, senior wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes, who had nine catches for 152 yards and three touchdowns
The combination of Sanders and Dykes made things difficult on the Kansas defense, Jayhawks senior cornerback Rodney Harris said.
"Barry Sanders is a good back," Harris said. "But as soon as you start thinking they're going to
The Kansas defense began the game with three starters out with injuries. Things got worse when freshman strong safety Deral Boykin left the game in the second quarter with an ankle injury.
keep giving the ball to Sanders, that's when Hart Lee Dykes gets a chance to beat you deep."
The Cowboys' offense rolled up
717 total yards, more than any
other team this season. Through 10
games, the Jayhawks have
allowed an average of 44 points
and 541 yards of total offense.
But for the first half, anyway, Kansas was in the game. In fact, at
halftime, the Jayhawks had outgained the Cowboys 356-312. Kansas was behind only 28-17.
Kansas took a 7-0 lead on the third play of the game when sophomore tailback Frank Hatchett took over and ran 80 yards for a touchdown.
During the run, Hattchett aggravated a leg cramp that had bothered him before the game. He was taken off the field and more times the rest of the game.
But that didn't stop the Jay hawks.
Freshman Tony Sands replaced Hatchett and ran for 177 yards and a touchdown on 22 carries.
"He's a tough little guy," Mason said of Sands. "Hopefully, one day he'll grow up to be about the size of a Barry Sanders."
Sands' most important run, though. was limited by a penalty.
With the Jayhawks trailing 14-10 in the second quarter, Sands broke around the right corner for 37 yards to the Cowboys' four yard line. A late flag was thrown, however, and Kansas was penalized 15 yards for clipping. Two plays later, senior cornerback Melvin Gilliam stopped the drive by intercepting a pass from Kansas quarterback Kelly Donoho in the end zone.
"It was big because it was a 14-point turnaround." Donohoe said. "If we could have scored then, it would have been 17-14. Instead, they got the ball back and ended up going down the field and scoring.
Things got worse for the Jayhawks in the second half. Oklahoma State outscored Kansas 35-7 and took too-tailor to the Jayhawks.
“It’s kind of been a sore spot for us all year long,” Kansas center Chip Budde said. “We come out and play a good first half. I don’t know whether if teams make it work, or not, what we’re doing, or if they’re just not ready for us to play as hard as we do.
"If we can figure out what the problems are in the second half, we'll get things turned around."
Sanders credits Heisman candidacy to team effort
By Mark E. McCormick
Kansan sportswriter
STILLWATER, Okla. — Oklahoma State junior running back Barry Sanders won infamy in northeast Texas to throw rocks, who lived to throw rocks at people.
Those flat, smooth rocks that curve in the air when thrown with a sidearm were his favorite. He was good, giggling with delight when he heard the thud of the flying stone and the cry of his victim.
But he was good at just about everything athletic.
He reigned as a track star at his grade school's track and field day, was a Little Dribblers Basketball player who adeptly adopted dribbler on the soccer field.
1 was always pretty small for my size," he said. "It didn't bother me because I just thought of myself as a team player.
Sanders showed flashes of being a dangerous running back even as a third grader with the Beech Aircraft Red Barons, but had trouble convincing coaches that he wasn't too small to do the job.
"My father thought I should be playmester," he said, about what father I had about the job.
"I've always known he was legitimate," said Barry's father, William Sanders. "Barry is the most prolific back Wichita has produced."
As he grew, Sanders became more dangerous.
Reminisce with his Wichita North High School football buddies and they will tell you how Sanders averaged 30 yards per carry and finished with four touchdowns as a wingback in the first game of his senior year.
They'll also tell you that in his first start at tailback had 274 yards in the season.
John Gutierrez, who played football with Sanders at North, said he knew early that Sanders would be a great college back.
Yet with his childhood background as a dirt-clod assassin, the law of averages might suggest that throwing the football was his destiny, rather than carrying it and embarrassing would-be tacklers as a running back.
"He just seemed different than any of the other players," Gutierrez said. "I just don't get it."
Talk to Tulsa. Miami of Ohio and Kansas, each of whom he ripped for 100 yard kickoff returns. Consult Nebraska, which surrendered 189 yards to the 5-foot-8, 197 pound tailback
Most opposing players probably wish he had stayed with basketball or soccer.
back.
Ask the people who have tried to tackle him: "He's the fastest back I've ever seen," said one University
of Colorado defender.
Ask the people who have tried to have him tacked: "Barry Sanders is the best back in the country," said Oklahoma coach Bary Switzer.
"I don't think there's a better back in the conference," said Iowa State coach Jim Walden.
"That's the easiest question I've ever been asked." Kansas State coach Stan Parish said when asked what player he'd choose to start a season. "Barry Sanders. Because he's the best player in the United States."
Now, everyone's talking Heismat Trophy.
"I personally think the Heisman, Trophy winner should be the best player in the country, perhaps the guy who does the most for his team." Parrish said in a Kansas City Star interview.
"Barry Sanders should be running awav with the Heisman balloting.
"He's like Joe Morris of the New York Giants only he's better."
Sanders' numbers back up the praise.
- With two games remaining, he may run off with the NCAA single season rushing title. Sadders needs to average 170 yards a game to surpass former USC running back Marcus Allen's record of 2,342 vards.
■ He's approaching the NCAA record for all-purpose running in a season. The record is 2,633, set by former Temple running back Paul Palmer in 1986. Sanders has 2,551 with two games remaining.
■ He's the first player in NCAA history to run for more than 300 yards in a game three times in a season.
■ He's the first player in NCAA history to open two consecutive seasons with 100 yard kick returns, and he has returned are a Big Eight record.
Against Kansas State, he had the second best rushing day in the history of the Big Eight Conference with 320 yards. That effort was second only to former Colorado running Charlie Davis' 342 yard effort in 1975.
He leads the nation in rushing, scoring, and average yards per game.
He has shattered the Big Eight most touchdowns in a season with 34.
He needs 145 yards to surpass former Nebraska Heisman Trophy winner Mike Rozier's record for most rushing yards in a season. Razier set the record with 2,148 yards in 1983.
He's the first player in NCAA history to score at least two touchdowns.
With all these statistics, and still another volume of "Barry's Believe it or Not Record Book" still unopened, how does he feel about the
NCAA records?
OKLAHOMA STATE
21
With the numbers Sanders is packing into the record book, which the Heisman Trophy judges think are very important, he seems to be in position to win the award. The concept of winning doesn't exhilarate him, though.
"I really don't care about any of those," he said. "They aren't important."
"I'm thankful, I think I'm blessed, but it's not the most important thing in the world to me," he said. "To win it would be an honor, but I'd consider it more of a team accomplishment than an individual one."
Sanders said he could see through the media hype.
Oklahoma State junior running back Barry Sanders didn't hurt his Heisman Trophy chances Saturday by rushing for 312 yards and five touchdowns against Kansas.
"It could all end in one play," he said soberly. "That could really happen. Would anyone care about me then?"
The good life
Five touchdowns and 312 yards
Saturday against Kansas and he sat
on the bench.
Records and defenders crashed around him Saturday, as the Oklahoma State offense Barry'd another victim.
Stands supporting 40,100 fans at Lewis stadium in Stillwater, Okla.
raise the chant, "Bar-ry, Bar-ry!"
Sanders was barely out of his shoulder pads before he was shuffled into the press box for a national interview with ABC.
Back in the locker room moments later, he answered the same question.
He told the wide-eye media crew that the Heisman Trophy would be nice to have, but that he'd rather focus on team goals.
The same question greeted him as he left the locker room in search of his father, who was also under siege by 20 to 25 autograph hounds.
Reporters are often as pushy with their pens and pads as the starstruck kids, he said.
"Their questions are old, repetitive and boring," he said. "Sometimes I want to ask them, 'Can't you ask me about something besides football?' Can't you find something else to talk about?"
"I don't like the hype at all. People just don't understand that as a human being, if you have a bad day, you don't want to have to come home to the same questions you answered yesterday.
"I try to smile and be nice, but all they want to talk about is football. I'm not even human to them."
The physical demands also seem unhuman.
Sanders carries the football 25 to 30 times a game into offenses whose main purpose is to stop him.
His slashing style enables him to
"I got pretty beat up against K-State," he said. "I was sore and all
His hands and forearms are road maps of scars created when they were pinched between helmets and
banged up the next day. You don't seem to realize how many times you carry the ball until you're sore and exhausted the next day."
stepped on by cleats.
The artificial turf also took its toll, chipping skin from his arms and hands.
"Falling on artificial turf is almost
Please see SANDERS. p. 11, col. 1.
---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 14, 1988
Sports
11
Freshman wins tennis regional
By Ken Winford Kansen sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas tennis player Eveline Hamers gave what she hopes is an indication of things to come Saturday at Women's Tournament in Tokyo Women's Tournament in Tokyo
Hamers, who won six matches without a loss over the weekend, said as she progressed through the field, she gained confidence.
"I played better after each match," she said. "We hadn't had any matches for a while so I was ready to play. I also knew this was our last tournament this fall so I knew I could go for it."
Hamers, a freshman from Meerens, Netherlands, defeated Brigham Young's Mary Beth Young, 6-3, 6-2 in the finals. The victory qualified her for the ITCA national championships in February in Minneapolis, Minn.
Hamers, the four-seed in her half of the draw, said by keeping her opponents off balance she was able to come in the semifinals and the finals.
Earlier in the day, which also happened to be her 20th birthday, Hamers beat Susanna Lee, also for Young. 6-3, 6-2, in the semi-final.
"In the finals the girl I played had a very strong forehand," Hamers said. "So early in the match I hit away from it. later on, I went back to her forehand in the match when she wasn't expecting it. It confused her because she really didn't know what I was going to do."
KINES
Kansas tennis player Eveline Hamers, Meerserst, Netherlands, fresh- man, concentrates on her shot. At the Rolex Invitational in Topeka this sets, 6-3 and 6-2, taking the championship.
Hamers said she was helped by the support of her teammates.
"I had people there rooting for me
Hamers said she thought her victory could help both her and her teammates going into the spring season.
those last two matches and it really made a difference," she said. "I tried to play as aggressively as I could. I must have been going so everything worked well."
"I think winning this tournament is a positive thing for the team," she said. "Any time one of us can do well, it's positive for the rest of the team."
Five other Kansas players participated in the singles portion of the tournament.
To reach the semifinals, Hamers beat Oklahoma's Stycal Bullman, 6-1, 6-4. BYU's Patti Urban, 6-4, 6-1. Oklahoma State's Monika Waniek, 6-0, 4-6, 3-2 and Utah's Michelle Miras, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3.
Salina senior Susie Berglund won her first-round match topping Colorado's Sonja Panajotovic, 7.6, 6.3, before being eliminated by Katarina Sfirnavic who made it to the semifinals before beaten by Young.
Ponca City sophomore Stacy Stotts beat Southwest Missouri State's Angie Turrie, 6-4, 6-1, before being defeated by the dawn's eightseed, Oklahoma State's Jackie Booth, 6-1, 6-1.
In other first-round single-
matches: Mindy Pelz was defeated
by Utah's Liz Fox, 6-3, 7-6. Laura
Hagemann lost to Kansas State's
Shaun Patterson, 6-4, 7-5.
Rajahudhuri dropped a three-set
decision to Susi Costa of USA.
In doubles play, Hamers teamed up with Rayachaudhuri to beat Toomey
and Breed of New Mexico, 6.3, 7.6,
in the first round. The Kansas tandem was then defeated by Godman and
Delisle of Oklahoma State, 6.3, 6.2.
Siegmund. 6-2. 6-5.
The doubles competition was eventually won by the top-seeded team of Price and Wanick.
Other doubles results from the first round included: Stotts and Page Goins lost to Guba and Edeklotter of Nebraska, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2; Berglund and
Bengals lose ball, game to Chiefs
The Associated Press
Albert Lewis began a Kansas City comeback with a punt block, then recovered a fumble to set the stage for Nick Lowery's fifth field goal, a goal that would have been impossible. He gave the Chifs a 31-28 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals yesterday.
After Christian Okoye's run tied the game 28-28. Cincinnati's Marc Logan fumbled the kickoff and Lewis recovered at the Bengals' 28-yard line with 1:05 to go. Lowery kicked his five field goal 63 seconds later, converting despite a low snap from center.
The Bengals, 8-3, held a 28-19 lead over the Chiefs, 2-9-1, with more than six minutes to play. But Lewis blocked a punt through the end zone to pull Kansas City within a touchdown. 28-21.
The Chiefs then tied it with 1-11 left after a pass interference call on David Fulcher. The penalty gave Kansas City a first down at the Cincinnati 1. Okoye scored on the next play.
The Chiefs had pulled within 21-16 in the third period, only to have the Bengals retaliate with Stanford Jen-
nifer team-record 98-yard kickoff return.
Jennings took Loewery's kickoff on the 2-yard line with about five minutes left in the third period, cut left and ran untouched to the end line. Bengal second of 97 yards by Willie Shelby against Cleveland in 1976.
Lowery, meanwhile, kept the Chiefs in the game. His 37-yard field goal in the first period gave Kansas City a 3-0 lead, which Cincinnati's leadoff out with a 4-yard downback run with 6-25 left in the opening quarter.
Lowyed carry field goals of 35 and 23 yards in the first half and his 47-yarder in the fourth period made it 28-19.
The Bengals went ahead 14-9 on
Washington 14
Mike Tomeczak and Matt Suhey each ran for first-half touchdowns as the aroused Chicago Bears, with recuperating coach Mike Ditka looking on from the sidelines, charged to a 20-0 halftime lead en route to a 34-14 thrashing of the Washington Redskins.
"He doesn't have to stand up and coach — he has a tremendous presence. Bears safety Dave Duerson was injured in a mild heart attack 11 days earlier.
Dika "was kind of laid back, but the test will be two weeks from now when he thinks he's back to health," Duerson said.
Dikta spent much of the second quarter sitting on the team bench having his pulse checked by a doctor. He was back on his feet for the second half.
"I admit I got a little tired in the first half. I think it was the sun and the sweater." Ditka said. "I felt terrific in the second half."
Bears defensive coordinator Vince Tobin handled the team, with only a few pieces of advice offered by Ditka.
Seattle 27
Norm Johnson kicked a 46-yard field goal with one second left to give Seattle a 27-24 victory over the Houston Oilers and made quarterback Dave Krieg's return a winning one after a seven-game absence.
Houston 24
The Seahawks, 6, drove 53 yards in 10 plays in 4 minutes, 49 seconds before Johnson kicked his game-winning field goal.
The loss kept the Oilers, 7-4, from moving into a first-place tie with Cincinnati in the AFC Central. The
NFL Roundup
eahawks stayed in a tie for the lead
n the AFC West with the Los Angeles
Raiders and Denver.
Cleveland 7
John Elway three touchdown passes, and the Denver Broncos converted four Cleveland turnovers into 20 first-half points en route to a 30-7 romp in a rematch of the participants in the last two AFC championship games.
The Broncos, beating Cleveland for the 10th straight time, are 6-5 and remain at the AFC West standings. The Broncos snap times off the pace in the AFC Central
New Orleans 14
Los Angeles Rams 10
Bobby Hebert completed 22 of 37 passes for 249 yards and the New Orleans defense frustrated the Rams most of the game as the Saints beat Los Angeles 14-10 and broke a firstplace tie in the NFC West.
new Orleans safety Gene Atkins, who had just been flagged for a pass interference penalty that put the ball at the New Orleans 17-yard line with 1:01 to play, sealed the victory when he intercepted Jim Evert's pass in the end zone with 50 seconds remaining.
Bahr connected on second-half attempts of 45, a season-high 10 and 19 yards as the Raiders, 6-5, remained tied for first place with Iowa. The Bahr had missed six of eight kicks from beyond 40 yards this season.
Chris Bahr kicked three field goals and a rugged Los Angeles defense held struggling San Francisco without a touchdown for the first time in two years in a 9-3 triumph, the Baiders' third straight victory.
Los Angeles 9 San Francisco 3
New York Giants 17
Phoenix 24
Neil Lomax threw for 353 yards and two touchdown passes but sprained his left knee as the Phoenix Cardinals beat New York 24-17.
Lomax, who completed 23 of 35 passes, threw a 4yard touchdown pass to Roy Green 1:44 into the fourth quarter that put Phoenix ahead 21-7, but sprained the knee and did not play again. Cliff Stoutd replaced him.
Indianapolis 20 Green Bav 13
Chris Chandler passed for two touchdowns, but Indianapolis, 6-5, had to stop a last-second drive at the 2-vard line to beat Green Bay.
New England 14
New York Jets 13
A big-play defense forced three turnovers and John Stephens scored the clinching touchdown in 6-4, with Bengals and 6-8 in its first road game of the season.
Pelz were beaten by Kansas State's Schindlehne and Bitner, 61, 63, and Laura Hagemann and Elba Piera were defeated by Utah's Fox and
Philadelphia 27
Pittsburgh 26
Luis Zendejas kicked an 18-yard field goal with 1:15 left for the Eagles, 6-5, who overcame mistakes to keep their playoff hopes alive. The Steelers, 2,9 lost for the ninth time in 10 games.
San Diego 10 Atlanta 7
Brad Redmistrane ran 57 yards with a short pass from Mark Vlassic to set up Barry Redden's 5-yard touchdown run with 4:23 to play as San Diego, 3-8, snapped a six-game losing streak.
Donald Igwubweki kicked a 52-yard field goal with 10 seconds remaining at Tampa Bay, 3-4, crawled out of the NFC Central basement. Detroit and Green Bay, each 2-9, replaced the Bucs.
Tampa Bay 23
Detroit 20
Manning ends holdout, scores 12 in NBA debut appearance
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES -- Danny Manning didn't have to wait long to see his first NBA action after signing a five-year, $10.5 million contract.
And although he was nervous,he was glad his holdout was over.
PETER MUIR
"Naturally nobody likes to just sit and watch, especially when it is that close." Manning said after the Clippers beat the Phoenix Suns 138-127 in overtime in their
Manning
home opener Saturday night.
Manning, the NBA's top draft pick who missed the entire preseason and four regular-season road games, entered Saturday's contest with 4.35 left in the first quarter and the Clippers leading 12-6. After the game, later they led 23-16 after Manning assisted on a fast-break slam dunk by Ken Norman.
Manning scored 12 points in 27 minutes on 6-of-10 shooting. He missed his three free throws, had two turnovers and one block shot.
His first NBA points came on a 12-footer in the lane with 37 seconds left in the second quarter toward the end of the game. The Clippers a 34-44 halftime lead.
Manning rated his performance a 5 on a scale of 1 to 10.
"I wasn't happy with my offense. I missed a lot of shots. It's going to have come with time," he said. "It has been real frustrating. I didn't get tired. I felt very good tonight. I credit my aerobics instructor for that."
"I was just happy to come in and contribute. It feels good to be out there playing again."
The crowd of 13,826 at the Sports
Arena greeted him with mixed boos and cheers when he was introduced before the game.
Manning had not played since he was held scoreless against the Soviet Union in the semifinals of the Olympics in September. The 6-foot-10 forward led Kansas to the NCAA title with a 20.1 average last spring and was named the College Player of the Year.
When asked in a pregame press conference if he was nervous, Manning, dressed in a Clippers warmup suit, said, "Yes, that's why my hands are in my pockets. My hands are clammy.
"I haven't felt like this since I was a freshman getting ready to play my first (college) game," Manning said.
He might have thought he was back at the Kansas when he said, "hopefully we can go out and play 40 minutes of good basketball for you." College games are 40 minutes long while NBA games are 48 minutes.
"Coach (Gene) Shue is going to take his time and be patient with me
... and hopefully I can move along a little faster than people expect." Manning said.
The Clippers negotiated Friday with Manning's agent, Ron Grinker of Cincinnati, and agreed in principle to the contract.
Manning had been staying with Grinker, but said he went to visit a friend in Toioce, Ohio, and didn't out about the deal until late Friday night. He missed his flight to Cincinnati Saturday morning and had to catch up with Grinker in Los Angeles.
The agreement was reached after the Clippers, who had wanted to defer 30 percent of Manning's salary, agreed to an all-cash deal.
"There was a lot of stubbornness on both sides," said Manning, who will make $1.5 million this year.
SANDERS
Continued from p. 10
like falling on cement," Sanders said.
Sanders held his index finger in the air and sang at his weekly Fellowship of Christian Athletes meeting last Thursday.
Sanders held his index finger in the air and sang at his weekly Fellowship of Christian Athletes meeting last Thursday.
"This little light of mine, I'm going to let it shine, this little light of mine, I'm going to let it shine," he sang in a low, unfluctuating voice.
He began to chuckle at his lack of singing ability.
"With everything going on, I've tried to move a little closer to God." Sanders said. "I go to church every Sunday."
Genuine friends
Religious cards, a bible-study guide, letters and pictures of his brother Byron who's closing in on a 1000 yard season at Northwestern University in Chicago, crowd the shelves in his apartment bedroom.
lives in his apothec
Deeply involved in church, he said
he finds comfort in his weekly FCA meetings and bible study.
"I like going to FCA because I'm with people who care about more than football," he said. "They are people who really care about you."
"A lot of people just want to hang around," he said. "I never say anything about it, and I'm not rude. I just know most of the people I meet from here on out are going to be like that.
Genuine friends are difficult for him to find, he said.
"They always tell you how great you are and they talk about football all of the time. When you're out in public, they'll be sure to say your name over and make sure everyone knows that they know you.
"One day, someone was asking me why I liked to be by myself so much and my roommate Cecil said. "Don't you know he grew up in a house with 13 people?" I'd appreciate some time alone too," Sanders said.
Consequently, he spends as much time alone as possible and he likes it that way.
OKLAHOMA STATE
21
OKLAHOMA STATE
26
"I don't like that at all."
Barry Sanders, left, warms up with fullback Cecil Wilson. The Cowboys beat Kansas, 63-24, Saturday.
After games, he's been known to
slip off with his father William and some friends for a relaxed dinner.
"I like to get a break and go somewhere where I can relax," he said.
Barry Sanders seems too good to be true.
He doesn't go out to nightclubs and
he's been to only one of his junior high or high school dances, at which he was crowned Homecoming King. Not a bad average.
He doesn't drink and refuses to take asprin or cough syrup when he's
In fact, the way he avoids even
over-the-counter medicine approaches a phobia.
"I just don't like pills," he said. "I've always wanted to stay away from them as much as possible. I don't want to say that they don't work, but I've never felt anything from them. I feel just as strong and I don't get tired when I don't take them."
Statistics, Accounting II, Business Law and Economics II.
"It gets hard sometimes, but I'm handling it," he said.
But for his heavier class load is also taking for the business management model.
a resissman Trophy candidate as a junior, even if he doesn't win. Sanders is starring next year's media onslaught right in the eyes.
Not an appetizing thought to someone who's already had a bellyfull of the pushy press.
"Hopefully, I will be ready for it," he said. "If there was one thing that I could change, I'd ask them to look at me differently. I don't want people telling me how great I am all the time. That would be fake. I just want them to treat me like I'm human."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
KJHK FM 90.7
TOP COLLEGE FOOTBALL TEN
Points
1 Notre Dame (13) 9-0-0 175
2 USC (4) 9-0-0 159
3 Miami(Fla.) 7-1-0 135
4 West Virginia 10-0-0 113
5 Florida State 9-1-0 111
6 UCLA 9-1-0 77
7 Auburn 9-1-0 75
8 Nebraska 10-1-0 66
9 Oklahoma 9-1-0 46
10 Arkansas 10-0-0 25
(1 number of first place votes)
The weekly top 10 poll is voted on by the sports stats of the University
---
The weekly top 10 poll is voted on by the sports staffs of the University Daily Kansan and KJHK-FM 91.
12
Monday, November 14, 1988 / University Daliv Kannan
Shirtliffe blames linesmen for soccer club's 2-1 loss
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas men's soccer club was defeated by Illinois, 2-1, in overtime of a controversial seminal match yesterday at the National Colligiate Soccer Association Championship in Ames, Iowa.
The match was played without a referee. The two linesmen handled the officiating duties after the scheduled referee didn't show up.
The Jayhawks, who held a 1-0 lead against Illinois late in the first half after Mark Plakorus scored of an assist from Dan Stoke, were looking to increase the lead when Kamran Moosavi was taken down in the penalty box.
penalty box.
One linesman called a penalty kick for Kansas, but the other one waved the call off. After a conference, they decided to compromise and awarded a free kick to the Jayhawks.
The Jayhawks still led, 10 two minutes into injury time, when an official called Stoke, who had gone up to head a loose ball, for a dangerous play.
Kansas failed to score but led at the half. 1-0
The Fighting Illini converted the free kick for a goal to send the game into overtime and got the game-winner off a penalty kick seven minutes into the overtime period.
Kansas coach Glenn Shirtliffe said he was upset with the officiating
he was upset with the breach.
"It was repeated incompetence
I n looking back, I
In looking back, I shouldn't have allowed us to play the game until they came up with a referee. They might have been competent to hold a flag, but neither of them were competent to referee.'
- Glenn Shirtliffe
Kansan men's soccer coach
tent to re-enroll Lilfiffe said both the compromised call on Kansas 'free kick in the first half and the dangerous play call on Stoke were important factors in the Jayhawks' defeat to the Illini, who beat Minnesota, 2-1 for the national title.
"We outplayed Illinois in the first half," he said. "But once again by not having the penalty kick when Kamran was taken down we missed out on a good opportunity to take a bigger lead.
"On the dangerous play call, both Dan and the Illinois player went up to head the ball. There was nothing dangerous or contrary to the rules
as today. The Jayhawks also missed on several scoring opportunities in the first half, according to Shirtliffe.
done. I've been a coach for 12 years and I've never seen officiating as bad as today."
"We played a good game today and had Illinois rattled," he said. "We hit the post four times in the first half. Part of this was our own doing. We should put out our opportunities."
ties.
Kansas reached the semifinals by posting a 2-1 record in the preliminary round. After being defeated by Minnesota, 2-0, Friday, the Jayhawks came back to beat Wichita State, 5-2, and Wisconsin-Eau Claire, 3-0, Saturday.
3-4. Salutory
Ed Nelson scored three goals and
Nelson added two scores in the
Jayhawks' victory over Wichita
State. Nelson, Weas and Moosai-
scored against Wisconsin-Eau
Claire.
Next year's national soccer championship will be played in Lawrence. Gordon Kratz, sports club coordinator of recreation services at Kansas, was chosen as the conveyor of the tournament.
Two teams each from the north, midwest and Big 10 intercollegiate soccer leagues and one each from the Rocky Mountain and Southwest will receive bids.
"It should be a very good tournament," Shirtliff said. "I guarantee we will have good officiating."
This weekend yielded one victory and a boost of confidence for the Kansas men's and women's swim teams.
Men's swimming beats AU
By Grace Hobson
Kansan staff writer
Women's team loses, but says meet built their confidence
Gary Kempf, men's and women's swimming coach, said the meets showed the teams' improvement and proved they could compete with high-caliber teams.
swat
Competing against top-ranked University of Arizona on Friday and Arizona State University on Saturday, the only victory for the two teams was the men's against Arizona. But both teams came away feeling stronger about their abilities.
"This was a confidence booster," said Glenn Trammel, Lawrence senior and team captain. "It's early in the season, and we beat the eleventh-ranked队 and came close to the ninth-ranked team."
The men's team beat Arizona
63-53 but lost to Arizona State 64-49.
The women's team lost to Arizona
69-48 and Arizona State 78-62.
teams. He foiled very well against two of the top-ranked teams in the nation," Kemp said. "I was very pleased with their progress. It was really important to take this big step to beat a big team."
The men won the 400 yard medley relay to lead off the meet against Arizona. The men also won
"The big key was that we won both relias," Kempf said. "It was a really big win."
the 800-yard freestyle relay.
a fellow.
Other highlights of the men's
meet against Arizona came when
Allan Chaney, Fairbanks, Alaska,
senior, won the 50 freestyle and
Dan Mendhenl, Pleasant Hill
Calif., senior, placed second. Robert
Sturman, Kansas City, Mo.
freshman, won the 200 butterfly
and Bobby Kelley, Easley S.C.
junior won the 500 freestyle. Also,
Andrew Billings, Fairbanks
Alaska, sophomore, won the 100
freestyle.
The women's team didn't fare as well against Arizona.
"The women were a little flat." Kempf said. "It was a long day of travelling. The effort was really good, but we just didn't make it cool."
work.
Barbara Pranger, Davenport,
Iowa, freshman, won the 50 free-
style, and Erin Easton, San Anto-
nio, Texas, junior, won the 200
breastroke. Also, Barbara Ann
Smith, Mequon, Wis, junior, won
the 400 individual medley.
Smith said that traveling the two hours by air to Arizona was hard on the team, and getting used to swimming outdoors also had an effect on the team's performance. But Friday's meet prepared them for Arizona State the next day, she said.
"We had a really good meet
against Arizona State," Smith said. "We were expecting ASU to be a better team; it really pumped us up a lot."
The women won the 200 medley relay and the 400 freestyle relay. Sue Spry, Chicago senior, won the 100 freestyle in addition to the relay events. Other individual victories were Easton in the 100 backstroke, Smith in the 500 freestyle, Gina Brown, San Ramon, Calif., freshman, in the 200 butterfly, and Pranger in the 100 butterfly.
The men's team got off to a bad start against Arizona State when they lost the 400 medley relay by two-tenths of a second.
Trammel was on the winning 400 freestyle relay team and placed first in the 200 individual medley and the 200 backstroke. In both of those individual events, Jeff Stout, Tula Okla., sophomore, placed second.
Trammel said he was impressed with Stout's performance at the meet, Stout, who walked on the team last year, proved to be a strong swimmer in a variety of events.
Billings won the 100 freestyle,
Kelley won the 200 breaststroke
and Andy Flower, Plymouth
Mich., junior, won both the one and
three meter dives.
"He's just a kid with a lot of talent," Trammel said.
SHARONS BRIDAL BOUTIQUE
Formal Wear
For the Holiday Season
Custom Designed
Party Dresses * Tuxedos * Evening Gowns
2449 Iowa in Holiday Plaza 842-8922
NTSO
The Non-Traditional Student Organization Time Management Workshop
Test Taking Tips
Monday, Nov. 14, 7 p.m.
Daisy Hill Room, Burge Union
non-traditional student organization
Inexpensive and Fast
Jewelry Repair
817 Mass
843-4266
Inexpensive and Fast Ring Sizing and Chain Repair Jewelry Cleaning and Examination FREE
Marks JEWELERS
Quality Since 1889
Because You Love To LOVE
Q
AVANI LEVELAND
Performing Octet in E Flat, Op. 20 by Mendelssohn
The Cavain String Quartet Annie Fullard, Violin Susan Waterbury, Violin Erika Eckert, Viola Merry Peckham, Cello
"... an accomplished example of craftsmanship and wonderfully communicative."
The Strad
Also Performing String Quartet (1974) Zwilich
".. String quartet playing doesn't come better than this."
Boston Globe
Also Performing Quartet No. 19 in C Major, K465 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
The Cleveland Quartet
Donald Weilerstein, Violin
Peter Salaff, Violin
James Dunham, Viola
Paul Katz, Cello
Presented by the University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series Tickets on sale in the Murphy Call Box Office All seats reserved/For reservations, call (913)864-3982; Public: S12 & S10; KU & K12 Students: $6 & $5; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $11 & $9.
7:30 p.m. Monday, November 14, 1988 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts; additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthwout Society, and the Kentucky Department Association.
KU Endowment Association Half Price for Students
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The University of Kansas Chapter of the:
Invites you to attend an address by
Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas
American Association of University Professors
Senator
"Higher Education in the New Administration"
Tuesday Nov.15 at 4 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Faculty, students and the public are cordially invited to attend. *Refreshments provided*
NEW!
Pumpkin Pie!
Free Samples! Take us home for the Holidays
Louisiana Purchase
Shopping Center
843-5500
I Can Believe In YOGURT!
Give Yourself Nourish
Hillel
האלף
Adult Children of Alcohols meets from 3:30-4:30 today at Walkins Memorial Health Center. Room 210.
Surfcords
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSAGE! Reduce your stress and don't forget your GIFT CERTIFICATES make you feel more valued. Call 811-642-3626 budget jewelry, students %25 off Call 811-642-3626. Remember, you kneel it!!
Grieving and Loss: The University Counseling Center is offering an information and support group in which you can find others who are close to someone who has. The loss may be due to a life threatening illness, death, relationship breakup or another reason. The group meets on Wednesday from 4:pm. Contact Dr. Gary Price, 116 Bailey Hall, phone 864-3031 if you would like to join the group or you have questions about
Time Management Workshop
**group**
KJH KILLERS. The fight's not over! Attend an event on Tues, Nov 15th, 19th, Alderson Adu and discuss Academic freedom, Censorship, and the fate of KJH & College radio today.
KU students, faculty, staff and family members
You are invited to participate in the
workshop on our application in the
SIA office. Deadline: Mon. Nov. 21.
For more information call 643-1477. Sponsored by
SAI.
Non-Traditional Student Meeting featuring Test Taking Tips
When: Monday, Nov. 14, 7 p.m.
Where: Diahy Hill Room
Burge Union
Paid for by Student Senate
Fine Arts
Mary Kay Cosmetics. Contact Deeann Wilks at 841-9407.
Out of State Students - Going home on vacations
Earn travel money and much more during your
vacations by being our instructor, your host
home (fall 2016, Fall 2018, including reusers). New and exciting art card
designs by Alphight. See them at the album,
sampler Bookstore, stlh and NH
Call 749-3377
SurfCords THE BEACH HOUSE 9 EAST 8TH
MEXICAN FIESTA
Tues. & Sun. 100 Margaritas
Wed. 125 Mexico's
Finest Beer
Sun. Nite 299 Student's
Dinner
Special
BECERROS
2515 W. 6th 841-1323
Classified Ads
Events of the Week
THE BE
Tuesday, Nov. 15
50th Anniversary Commemoration of Kristallnacht
Film and Discussion
"A Painful Reminder"
Facilitator: M.J. McLendon
Facilitation: 7:30
Park A. Karson, Kansas University
Thursday, Nov. 17
Soviet Jewry Committee Meeting
7 p.m.
For more information,
for mobile call,
749-4242
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
BREAKERNIDGE! January 14, 2015 $15.15
only #28 skiboard! Mountains transportation
with frigicep, jacuzzi, ice block from lift. Contact David 842-161. Limited
space remains.
The ACOA workshops will be held from 3:30 to 4:30 in Waikinah Walking Center, second floor, room 7; on November 14 and 28, and December 12. The meetings are free.
meetings are SKI GIVE. WE TEACH SKI GIVE. Dermatologist tested.
We provide a skin care system for you. Call today!
Nancy Armstrong, Mary Kay Beauty Company
841-4351
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Super Sound superior sound and lighting Professional club, radio 3, Hot Spins Maximum Party Thrd, Dj Ray Velasquez 841-7083
ENTERTAINMENT
THURS. 10 DAY SAT
GOOD HAPPINESS, the most affordable mobile
service on call. Crain BJ 841-8448.
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B-day songs,
841-1874.
Monday & Tuesday
Cheeseburger,
5 p.m. - 11 p.m.
Cheeseburger.
CHECKOUT
Fries & Beverage
$2.50
Johnny's
Johnny's
Up & Under
401 North 2nd
p.m.
FOR RENT
2 BR Apt. Washer Dryer Micro, Disposal Close to Downtown. Campus 4435 no. 1: 1,285-6254 days, 749-102 weeks; nights.
2 bedroom apt. on 24th & Iowa. Close to the bus
Call 842-9765. Rent: $315
room duplex with one car garage available next semester on KU bus route. Phone 911-2107.
2 bedroom. E33. 813. 813. 3 bedroom house. 812. Connected. 2 bedrooms. 901. Missouri 842. 228
2nd. Semester Sublease - Naismith Place Apts. 2,
bdrm. jacuzzi bathh. furnished or unfurnished.
749-429
749-4429
2 rooms for rent, females only, near stadium: $125
a month, call Amy at | 631-9668
Available Jan. 1 Netroom api, new carpet,
new furniture, airprices, close to camp,
cata okay $500 month = utilities 749-5213 or
749-3656
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4 bedroom apartments available immediately near KU. Call to day 841, 8425, 8431, 8439, or 749 2413.
5238, 841-1429
Mastercraft
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-23 and a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Cat 841-1212, 841-0256, or 749-2431. Masterstor
Management
FANTASTIC, NEW APARTMENT one bedroom
Dishwasher, Water/Dryer, Microwave, Bus
room what you're looking for!! ★ 841-8271
845-1971
Romale Roombate wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperfruit Park. Available immediately, glass, furniture, own bedrooms, water, fireplace, frieplane, and Free Water. Please call 749-6036.
- University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 14, 1988
13
Female Roommate wanted to share large two-story house $200/month. All utilities paid.
Female roommate needed: Orchard Cordons furnished apt., own room & bathroom $170 + utilities. Available now or 2nd semester Call 843-5928
Female roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom duplex. Overlooks Park, 2 blocks from bus, 3 great rooms. $125 + facilities. 841-2746.
FOR SPRING SEMESTER. Nice furnished studio $265/mo. Water and cable paid. Bus Route. Call 749-2806.
For Sublease, 2BD, 1, bath, new carpet, new
fridge, quiet, large kitchen, $375宅, 841-569.
For Sublease, Large 2, bd., Colony Woods,
available now. Call 841-7986.
...unstuffed one bedroom, apartment. Civilized.
...big enough for two. Must go in. 10th & Arkanas.
$349 + help 841-7032 or 794-2415
Janette
Living with a roommate from Hell? Downtown apt. available Dec. 1. $165/mo. All utilities paid. Call 749-1455.
LUXURY 2 bedroom 2 bath room available
decent Dec/Jan, Large rooms, clean, quiet
W/D hookups, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool,
tennis 842-3025
NEW, NICE 2 bedroom apt. wusher. dryer and
shelving. Kitchen appliances. 1450 m³.
1.450 m³. C叭841-2979 or Wordy Apartment
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place
immediately $380/m², water paid, and furnish-
ing included.
Moving to KC? Perman need to share 2 bedroom
room. Large bedrooms 1, 2 + utilities. 816-547-067
NAIMSHI HALL Sublease. Will give money for
departure. Start second semester. Call Rob
Room available at semester very near campus.
Share kitchen, bath $160 + deposit. Utilities paid
$24,875.
Overland Park Sublet. Nice 2 br. duplex. 8 min.
KU Med. Center, 12 min. K.C $375. Available Jan.
1. Call 262-4350.
Spacios 2 br. apt, near campus. Take over lease,
$3090.00-841215
SUBLURES 1 bedroom furnished apartment, on
kui bus route, kui $28 plus utilities. Available
Dec 1, lease until May 31, 1989, 749-0034 ext 223 or
749-705
494-1635
Sublease next semester Nonskilling roommate
- utilizes - Northeast Campus 442 4088
$190 no . + u tuilties. Near campus. 842-6088
Sub lease immediately until May 9. A room with
a vise'. Apple Lane Studio. Desperate! (913)
491-306
Sublase (Jan. 1, May 31): 2 bedroom, $1/2 spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK.
Families welcome 841-8421-0831
Sublease. Large 2BR apt. on Bus Route. Can sleep 3 Call 841-3430.
HILLVIEW APTS
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 814-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- Laundry facilities
- On bus resi
- 1&2 bedroom units
- laundry facilities
- On bus route-near shopping
* Water grid
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
TRAILRIDGE
TRRADIAGE STUDIO provided for sublease
spring semester. Quit, clean, great location (bus
route, laundry, pool, Dillen's). Phone 749-6381
or 2022 evenings or weekends.
Sunflower屋 is taken applications for Spring 89. We offer private rooms, VTV/CRM, game and laundry facilities. Live rent, include all utilities. Call 749-8671 or 841-0848.
NOW RENTING
1 Bedroom Apartment
Paid Water & Gas, Patio
Laundry Facilities
0.90.90.90.90
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
3 Bedroom Town House Fireplace, Carpet, Patio Washer/Dryer Hookups On.KU.I Bus.
LOCATION
Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
meadowbrook
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Newly remodeled
- On KU bus route
- Great location
- Gas heat
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
26th & Iowa
WALK to class! Available Jan 1 4BR, 3 BATH,
store duplex $725/month Call 843-7386
Wanted immediately - Male roommate - Own room $155 mo + 2 utilities $150dep 13th & Kentucky. Cooker L498-7981
WANTED - Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 842 2537.
843-6446
FOR SALE
2 IBM MagCard Typewriter/Word Processor.
Good condition. $175 each/$300 for both. Call
anytime 843 9356
Nagel, lithograph print, The Book, framed, $80
call John at 841-1780.
2 OU Nebraska game tickets, Nov. 19 in Norman.
Call John between 7-8 pm. Best offer excepted
841-1780.
All Sports Ticket for sale. $75. Ask for Chris at 813-346 before or no. 822-334 after 9:00.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and collectible books, comic books, Playboys, collector and chesoo rock-n-roll records, vintage clothing, books, coins, baseball cards, slot machines, Maxfield Art disc, art deco
advertising items, clocks, watches, calculators, tools, Royal Palace and more stuff in the museum. More info at SURE'S FLALE MARKET 181. New Hampshire. Open every day and Sat. 10s. For booth rental see 482-646-613.
Apple iPhone computer with expanded memory.
Monochrome monitor, 2 disc drives, modem and various programs. $800 or OBD I/O Blank S175 Macbook, 9 long ports & 9 long boards. IVS-3V. IVS-3V. IVS-3V.
$75 - $150. Must buy 841-9464
Brand new stereo with Intel speakers. Cost
$350. Must buy 841-9464
from $75 - $150. Must sell. 841-9844
Brand new stereo with Infinity speakers. Cost
$400. Sell for $300. CD player $60. 799-3898
$400 for $30 CIP pay @%25.00
Cannondale Mtn. Bike White. Month old Jeff
Kline
9427
Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics. #11 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
10.5
CXR rear deck 6x9 Yamaha 8-inch Alpine Subs.
[149/270.3]
FREE information on New aka Police Photo radar. NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE $80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 radar detector that will detect all radar including other devices. (Note: K6043, K6043,
GOVT SURPLUS! Now G1. Overhaws, Com-
mends and extends new rules for sports,
bats & mittens, & field jerseys. Field jerseys
are now permitted on campus. WEEKDAIL
Mon-Sat 5; Open sunday to
Christmas 12, 14. St. Mary's Surplus Sales.
St. Mary's Surplus Sales.
IM Correcting Selectir 11 w / extra ribbons, lift tape, and three type balls. Dialectual dupple on drive 48326 kmhp 3089 kmhp (589 kmhp 2.5) call 8432 6302 K2=19km Slaton 77 and 127 D. Nordica 800ft-510. Rockford Fogate 5 plates. Pods Ctrl Price to Call. Skill Call 8432 8371
Mac with dual drive, imagewriter, mouse, and software $1200 OBO 864-2343 nights
Mattress set. King sized. Top quality, very firm
MCAT study material from G.A.P.S. Improved my score dramatically. Originally $350.00 Best offer. 943.700
Naisim Hall contract for sale Private room or
for two. Call 841-8437
Now showing. Figi Graphics newest southwestern art. Catch the new wave at New Wave Futons. 11 Eighth St, 849.7287
Rock n-roll - Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on e Saturday and Sunday. Owner's耳 Event Market, 811 New Hampshire.
SAE P-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $450 sell $300. Must see to appreciate. Many functions. 841.7564
Sleep with the best. A cotton Futon for $88.88.
At New Wave Futon 11 East 8th St. 842-7578.
Dyna Extension Futon 11 East 8th St. 842-7578.
Trupetron. Call Alan 842-7659.
Trupetron. Dandy with case, excellent coolen
Bobbie Johnson
Program disks available. Call Alan 842-7659.
Trumpet - Dundy with case, excellent cond.
810-7934 $900 OHQ
WATERBED Rented with six drawer pedestal
low mileage Bargain! $150. 843-1551.
AUTO SALES
1981 Toyota Tercel, AM/FM cassette, good condi
no rust, $135 or best offer @ #824.219
GOVENMENT SEDIZED VEHICLES from $100
Fords Mercedes Covettes Chevys Surplus
Guide 1) Buy 865-687-600. Ex S-9738.
LOST-FOUND
LOST: Maroon glasses with a maroon snap case.
841-2721. Could be anywhere.
LOST. Plastic wallet pack of pictures. Union? Wecore? HELP. Sentimental value: 749-749 ask for LISA.
HELP WANTED
ADMIN
Enteretable for a friendly, energetic, and ambitious person to work part-time. 25 to 30 hrs wk - as an administrative assistant in an office environment with good typing skills, and be able to work effectively in a fast paced environment. If you are interested please call Craig Sell at 841-1200 between 9 and 5
MRILLIES NEW HIRING. Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings, Salaries to $10K. Entry level positions.
1016. 427. 877. Fxt A. 4758
Attention: Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above avg: starting salary. apply between 2-5.168 W. 23rd.
Banquet positions are now open at the Adams Alumni Center. Applicants must be avail-ble of a Bachelor's degree, five years of horticarders, & hostesses are needed Above 126th Ave. E.O.E. at 126th Acre E.D. E.O.E.
Geology and Petroleum Engineering Students part-time position is available. Overland drilling equipment will be provided interview please call Arqn Resources Corporation Exploration and Production Division at
Office of Study Abroad announces a full-time, position 12-month appointment, starring *Mary Koch*. In the course accounting, study abroad student financial advisement, coordination of Summer Institute programs for required qualifications and a more detailed position description. Contact information: Deadline for applications: November 25, 1988. Contact person: Nancy Mitchell, Assistant Director, Office of Study Abroad.
Christmas reep 30 pts thurs
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
(013) 245-6075
GOVERNMENT JOB. $16,940-$59,230.yr. Now
Hiring. Your Area. (1) 865-857-6000 Ext. R-9758
for current Federal list.
Lawrence, Kansas 60455 EOAA Employer
Freshman, sophomores, and juniors in train the summer to become Marine Corps officers after graduation. Aviation and financial aid available.
NAMIES need to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good math skills are required in information call (Janet K. C.) 7-227-6190.
Great SUMMER CAMP JOBS in the Colorado Rockies near Estes Park as counselors, cooks, nurses, office.wrangers, drivers, unit directors, childcare. Room and board plus cash salary and benefits. Participate in least 19 to apply Interviews on campus in January Write CHEILEY COLORADO CAMPS. Dept.C Box 625. Denver, Colorado 82036. FOR THE SUMMER OF YOUR LIFE!
RESORT HOTELS, Cruisesines, Airlines,
& Amusement Parks, NOVAK accepting
applicants. For more information, for an application,
write Natale College Coronation Hotel; PO
307-415-8950.
GOVERNMENT NEEDED for 2 small children ages 7.15am to 6:00pm weekly in my home. Reliable car necessary. Call after 6:00pm anytime weeksends. 814.8448
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening help and delivery drivers. Start at $3.60 hr. Apply in person only at Border Bordel 1528 W 32rd
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kalagell. MT 59001.
Part-time positions available at Nannahib Hall food service where you serve cottage cooks, caterers, restaurant hosts and other real benefits and flexible hours. I need the money for your kitchen desk and fix it on an application before vacancies can be filled.
NANNY OPPORTUNITIES
* Chicago; toddler $300/week*
* Dallas; two children $150/week*
* New York; newborn $25/well*
OVERSEAS JOBS $900/$2000 mo. Summer, Yr.ound, All Countries. All fields. Free info. Write LC, PO Bx 52-KS10, Coronel Del CA, M6285. Part-time Child Care Work to worker 4+ MTR residential treatment health care license and pass KBI check. Negale help, education and experience. Two positions open in the Olathe/Shawee area. For interview call
PHARMACY
1 year commitment. Many positions available.
Call 1-800-937-NANI
part-time data entry/admit need needed 8m.
to noon d on days per week. Must be dedicated,
dependable, and a self-starter. Computer experi-
ence a must. Send K. Sendens, 189,
119研究所, K. Sendens, 165.
part-time workers. Packer Plastic is examining the feasibility of having 'y' time production shifts: 8a.m-12 noon, 12 noon-4p, 4 p.m-8p, 8 p.m-12midnight, 8 p.m-12night for minimum of 20 hours, for minimum of 20 hours w/staring pay $2.45/hr. If interested call please call 84300. Ask for part-work time
Part-time office assistant. 75% time. Demonstrated word processing ability on Word 97. Prefer orientation, accuracy and dependability. Enrolled at KU. Prefer 1 year clinical experience. Become a Beach Center instructor in Dorothy Johanming. Beach Center On Families & Disability. 4138 Haworth Hall 6045. Application deadline
Pizza Shuttle immediately hiring both full-time and part-time drivers. Day and evening shifts available. Daily paid mileage, and bonuses. Must have own car and insurance. Apply in person at Pizza Shuttle.
Pizza Delivery drivers - hourly wage plus commission must have own transportation and insurance - only in person. Pizza Shope 601 Weipa Warehouses Shopping Center.
Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for Day & night night shifts. Above avg. starting salary. Apply between 2,618. 1618 W. 23rd.
ONE-WAY AIRLINE TICKET, K.C - SEATTLE,
DEC 22 $90.84 $43-800
On TVs, VCRs, Jewelry, Stereos, Musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Wiz卡/M.C.A.M.E.X. J-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry, 84W B. 6th, 749-193
RUY SELL. LOAN CASH.
MISCELLANEOUS
Late night munchies?
Open:
10 a.m.-midnight
Sun- Tues.
10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
Wed- Sat.
Johnny's Classic Burgers 9th & Illinois
One way ticket from Chicago to KC1 on Nov. 26.
Call Dehra 834-3001.
Stop by Johnny's Classic Burgers!
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
HAMBURGER
PERSONAL
LISA, Party? You called Monday night,
November 7. Call Matthew
BT. What happened? Where did you go? No one answered. Check with Mrs. C. You know how to
Lover. I feel like instigating a sandwich night and bake cake for dessert! I love you! Your impromptu
MAX I: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT? **Milas- Happy Birthday.** We love you. Have a
Birthday to you.
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Female roommate wanted for Spring semester
House on Ohio - 1 bedroom for rent. $210 a month.
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Male roommate needed starting J. 1. You will have your own room with a private bathroom $190.00 + salaries. Call 842 93719
One needed to share beautiful new townhouse
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Person wanted to assume lease of one bedroom apt. At Meadowbrook. At end of this semester Call 749-905. Leave message.
Roommate wanted, Georgetown Apartments B 4829 a $70 hour + $y utilities. Call Tim B 341-1566 Roommate wanted immediately Private Roommate wanted after 8am Call Julie before 5am or after 1pm B - 482-6072 Second Semester Roommate wanted. $180 and $y utilities. Waking distance is less than 5 miles.
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119 Stuffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1986 Chronicle Pictures
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"Well, we're back!"
14
Monday, November 14, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Diwali celebration begins Indian new year
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Regardless of religious traditions, cultures around the world make note of the passing of each year and celebrate the beginning of a new one.
Last week marked the days of celebration that accompany Diwali, the ringing in of the new year in India. Diwali is one of the most widely celebrated holidays in India, involving food, dance, parties and an exchange of gifts.
The KU India Club marked the occasion Saturday night with a Diwali Night party at Cordley Elementary School, 1837 Vermont St.
Rominder Singh, president of the club and Delhi, India, graduate student, said although the actual date for Divali this year was Wednesday, the club celebrated Saturday to draw a bigger crowd. About 200 people attended.
Diwali not only has religious significance but also involves fiscal and social aspects that are observed by every culture in India.
Businessmen close out their account books to end the fiscal year, and houses are cleaned and decorated with oil lamps and candles.
"It is a very religious feeling, but everyone also celebrates with gifts and food. It's like Christmas and the Fourth of July put together," Singh said.
Kshama Gargesh, Mysore, India, graduate student, sang the traditional invocation song, which is a prayer in Sanskrit to Lord Ganesha. An elephant-headed deity, Ganesha is the god of knowledge and a harbinger of good omen. The invocation is used for many celebrations in India to ensure a successful event.
"It is very social because we are all so far away from home," Gargesh said.
Singh said the date for celebrating Diwali was based on the moon's phases and fell on Amavasya, which is a Sanskrit word meaning day of no moon. The celebration is three days long, with the final day reserved for grand scale parties that include fireworks displays.
occasion, and women wear bright silk saris and ornate jewelry to the celebrations.
Gifts also are exchanged, with new clothing being a traditional present. Diwali is a formal
Gambling is often a major part of Diwali parties because the holiday is a time of worship of Laxhmi, the goddess of wealth.
"People always hope she will make them lucky," Singh said.
The Diwali celebration also includes dancing, and the club brought in professional Indian dancers, Rita Mustaphi and Ranee Ramaswamy, for Saturday's party.
Mustapha, from Calcutta, India, performed three styles of Indian dance — Kathak, Manipuri and Tagore — that represent cultures from different parts of India.
Ramaswamy, from Madras, India, performed Bharata Natyam, possibly the oldest classical Indian dance form, originating in Southern India during the 5th century.
Singh said the dances were not specifically for Diwali, but were folk dances that used body movement and music to tell stories.
"This celebration is a good chance for people from all parts of India to be together and talk and get to know each other." Gargesh said.
Music series to present quartets
By a Kansan reporter
The KU Chamber Music Series will present the Cleveland Quartet and the Cavani String Quartet at 7:30 p.m. today in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The Cleveland Quartet will open the program with Mozart's Quartet No. 19 in C, K. 469 and will join the Cavani Quartet to perform Octet in E flat, op. 20, by Felix Mendelsohn.
All seats are reserved and tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office. Tickets are $12 and $10 for the public; $6 and $5 for KU students and students in grades kindergarten through 12; and $11 and $9 for senior citizens and other students.
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SCILLIUM UNIVERSITATIS KANSENSIENS
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 99, No. 57 (USPS 650-640)
PUBLISHED SINCE 1869 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday November 15,1988
Police fired for union activity, lawyer says
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
The chairman and vice chairman of the Kansas University Police Officers Association were fired this fall by KU police because of their attempts to have the group certified as an employee union, a lawyer who represents the association said last week.
The lawyer, Steve Bukaty, also accused the KU police department of using improper procedures during a recent internal investigation.
"It is the organization's position that the chairman and vice chairman were terminated illegally because of their union activity." Bukat said.
KU police director James Denney denied the allegation that police officers were fired because of union activities.
"There has not been nor will there be any action taken in the police department because of any organizing activities." Dennev said.
Denney would not say whether any KU police officers had been fired, and said he could not comment on personnel matters because of civil service regulations.
Bukaty refused to name the officers in question. However, according to public transcripts of a hearing before a representative of the Public Employee Relations Board last spring, KU Police Officer Timothy R. Cochran, Topeka, identified himself as the chairman of the KUPOA and KU Police Officer Cecil M. Leonard, rural Lawrence, identified himself as the association's vice-chairman.
Contacted at home, Cochran said he had been advised by legal counsel not to discuss the matter and would not elaborate. Leonard could not be reached for comment.
Bukaty, who is a Kansas City, Kan. attorney, said he advised the two men not to talk to the media.
KUPOA is a group of about 35 KU police department employees. The group, which is not a union, is not recognized by the state, Department of Human Resources or the University as a representative burglaring organization. It is now in the first steps of forming a union.
Bukaty also refused to discuss any specific details which led to his allegations, because he had no knowledge of the case.
through civil service procedures.
Mary Prewitt, assistant general counsel for the University, also said she could not comment on Buketu's allegations because of civil service regulations.
Ralph Oliver, KU police assistant director, said on Nov. 7 that as result of an internal investigation, changes had been made in police procedures and personnel. Oliver would not say whether the investigation was related to union activities.
KU police officer Gary Wieden, who said he was the interim chairman of the KUPOA, on Wednesday that the two officers had been fired "a couple weeks ago."
Bukaty said that improper actions taken by the KU police department while conducting the internal investigation included surveillance of police officers, late night interrogations, threats and intimidation of employees by police management.
In response to the allegations, Denney said, "It is absolutely untrue that there was any intimidation by the management of the police department by the department simply operated that man."
There was no surveillance of police offi
cers in connection with the internal investigation." Denney said.
Bukaty would not give any details on whether the two men who were fired were the subjects of the investigation, nor would he believe they were fired because of the investigation.
Denny said he objected to the term "late night interrogations," but said, "You have to realize that the police department is a 24-hour operation and you try to do things at a...
The internal investigation began in late September after it was discovered that copies of confidential criminal and investigation records, along with an unsigned cover letter alleging improper investigation process, were sent to people outside the police department.
An Attorney General's investigation into the charges made in the cover letter found that the police department investigation procedures had not been improper. Prewitt said after the investigation was completed in the first week of October.
Denney said that the KU police internal investigation had discovered who had taken
the documents and how. He said that while the primary work of the investigation has been finished, the investigation has not been completed.
According to Kansas statutes, knowingly releasing confidential information from official records is one of numerous grounds for dismissal of a public employee.
Bakaty said he expected that an election would be held before the end of the year to decide whether the KUPOA would be for president or representative of the majority of the employees.
Ray Siehndel, director of administration for the state department of human resources, said that the Public Employees Relations Board in a ruling made on Sept. 21 had determined which KU police employees would be part of the bargaining unit, the first of three steps needed to form a recognized union.
The KUPOA was appealing part of the decision. The part under appeal is the decision not to include sergeants as members of the organization. In the decision, sergeants were not included in the association because they have a supervisory role.
Court upholds abortion law
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday refused to give husbands the legal power to prevent their wives from having abortions.
The justices, without comment, let stand an Indiana Supreme Court decision that a husband has run into legal trouble and is constitutional right to abort her pregnancy.
The state court's ruling in the abortion case last July was based directly on past rulings by the nation's highest court.
Erin Andrew Conn of Elkhart,印ent went to court early last summer in an attempt to prevent her estranged wife, Jennifer. from having an abortion. She was about six weeks pregnant at the time.
A state trial judge issued a temporary order barring Conn from having
the operation performed, but a state appeals court threw out that order.
"Erin has no right to veto Jennifer's decision . . . as such decision concerns only her," the appeals court ruled.
The Indiana Supreme Court, acting on Erin Conn's subsequent appeal, then adopted the appeals court ruling as its own.
The state courts said Conti's attempt to block his wife's abortion was prohibited by prior Supreme Court rulings back to 1973, when a landmark decision by the justices legalized abortion.
In 1976, the court struck down a Missouri law requiring consolent consent before a woman could obtain an abortion, the first 12 weeks of her pregnancy
Drug testing Government orders random checks
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Transportation Department yesterday ordered a wide range of drug testing, including random checks, for more than 4 million transportation workers from airline pilots and flight attendants to truckers and railroaders.
Transportation Secretary Jim Burnley said the transportation industries were no more immune from drug abuse than other parts of society, listing a series of accidents and other indicators that he said show narcotics to be a problem among truck and bus drivers, commercial pilots and railroad workers.
He acknowledged that the tests, which take effect in a year, likely will be challenged in the courts.
The Supreme Court has before it two separate drug-testing cases, including one involving post-accident
"Random testing is a counter-productive, shotgun strategy that is at the same time an unwarranted invasion of privacy and of no significant impact in the battle against trust abuse," said ALPA President Henry Duffy.
testing of railroad workers, that are expected to be decided next year.
After Burnley's announcement, the head of the 40,000-member Air Line Pilots Association vowed to go to Congress and to the federal courts to overturn the requirement for random testing.
Also on Monday, the 9,000-member Owners-Operators Independent Drivers Association of America, representing independent owners of heavy-duty trucks and small truck fleets, filed suit in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, challenging the random drug testing of commercial truckers as well as post-acident and pre-employment testing.
F. M. B. P. R. E. A. L. M. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Enjoying the warm weather, Todd Reed, Wichita freshman, slides down the handrail on the stairs behind Carpathia O'Leary Hall leading to Potter Lake. He was on his way to class yesterday afternoon.
Riding the rails
Campus reacts to PLO vote
By Debbie McMahon
Kansan staff writer
Campus reaction to the Palestine National Council's recognition of Israel was to wait and see how Israel, the world community will respond.
The PNC, the parliament-in-exile for Palestinians, approved a United Nations resolution yesterday which recognizes Israel's right to exist.
Related story p. 6, col. 1
The council is expected today to declare the West Bank and Gaza Strip independent, after 11 months of Palestinian uprising against Israel's 21-year occupation.
Mahmoud Aïb, Irid, Jordan, graduate student, who said his home is in Nazareth, said it would only be fair to recognize the Palesinian state.
"When the Jews came from Europe, after the Holocaust, and went to Palestine and declared it their state, the United States and the United Nations recognized it, just moments after. Ali said, "Now it's the Palestinian state. It has the same circumstances."
All said he thought the PNC gave too much for not having any guarantees in return.
"I think it is kind of premature," Ali said. "They should have gotten some guarantees from Israel and the U.S. that they would recognize the PLO, and that a withdrawal from the occupied territories would occur."
He said the results of the declarations could test the PLO.
"This could be the last chance," Ali said. "If they don't achieve anything, then probably more radical actions will occur."
The declaration sets out a new political strategy by endorsing U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, thus satisfying one of Washington's key
Please see CAMPUS, p. 6, col. 1
Proposed KU budget seeking funds for minority student teaching posts
By Mark Fagan Kansan staff writer
Under the University of Kansas proposed budget for fiscal year 1990, minority students at KU have much to look forward to.
An additional $95,000 would be earmarked for student recruitment and retention, including adding an additional staff member for minority recruitment in the Office of Admissions.
The Margin of Excellence portion of the proposal calls for $7,000 to be set aside for 10 graduate minority teachers assistships.
Admission
The assistantships would offer a student a $7,500 stipend, which could be renewed for each of the next three years.
"I would like to have more," said Robert B. Sanders, associate dean of the graduate school. "But it represents a good first effort on the University's part."
KU's budget proposal is now being reviewed by the state budget office in Topeka, and the office will make its recommendations to Gov Mike Hayden later than theHayden will send his proposals to the Kansas Legislature in January.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to increase total financing of Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer institutions and faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
KU administrators are hopeful that the entire second year of the Margin of Excellence will be approved.
"The idea is to increase the pool of students who are interested and able to do graduate work." Sanders said. "We can increase the pool of people who have advanced degrees and they can take their places in society, as teachers at the University or other appropriate employments."
The proposed budget document
identified minority graduate student recruitment as particularly difficult, and said the new assistantships should be made available to minority graduate students at KU.
Nationwide, minorities earned only 10.3 percent of the nation's doctoral degrees in 1986, according to federal census figures.
The 10.3 percentage is an anomaly. Sanders said, because minorities make up about 22 percent of the nation's population.
"There are very few minority students in the University, and even fewer minority graduate students." Sanders said. "This program is an incentive for departments to actively recruit minorities."
The assistantships would be in addition to the normal allocation of departmental graduate teaching assistantship funds, the budget proposal said. Thus, competition for the awards is expected.
"Since we have more schools than we have awards for, some will have to be left out," he said. "And we have many more departments that could also use the awards."
Sanders, who is also chairman of the minority graduate student recruitment advisory committee, said the assistantships would be awarded to students based on merit, which includes scholastic achievement, grades, test scores and letters of recommendation.
He said the committee in the next few months would decide upon specific criteria for the awards.
Still, Sanders said he was unsure whether state legislators would approve the provision.
"I'm not a politician, so I don't have a feel for what they are likely to do," he said. "I hope it will pass we can implement it next year."
Minority doctorates are truly minorities
Another of the mission-related
DOCTORATES EARNED BY WHITES AND MINORITIES
Field whites / minorities
Engineering 1,224 / 155
Physical Sciences 2,714 / 289
Life Sciences 3,958 / 384
Social Sciences 4,080 / 468
Humanities 2,496 / 232
Professional 1,246 / 43
Education 4,820 / 775
Minorities make up 22 percent of the total population yet only 10.3 percent of all doctorate degrees are earned by minorities.
Whites 89.7 %
Other Ethnic groups 10.3%
Source: 1986 Federal Census
enhancements under the Margin calls for $95,000 to be devoted to student recruitment and retention
Stephen Kline/KANSAN
The proposal would add to the Office of Admissions another staff member, whose primary concern
would be the recruitment of qualified minority students.
Marshall Jackson, assistant director of the University Placement Center, said the new staff member was needed.
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2
Tuesday, November 15. 1988 / University Daily Kansar
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
Key
Unsettling weather
High: 69°
Low: 36°
Today will bring cloudy skies and strong southerly breezes pushing the high up to 69 degrees. There is an 80% chance of afternoon thundershowers, some possibly heavy.
Tonight's low should be 36 degrees.
North Platte
7021
Snow
Omaha
7429
Showers
Omaha
7429
Snow
Salina
6934
P.M. thunderstorm
storm
Topeka
6934
P.M. thunderstorm
storm
Kansas City
7440
P.M. thunderstorm
storm
Columbia
7841
Evering thunderstorm
St. Louis
7851
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
6629
Rain
Wichita
6934
P.M. thunderstorm
Chanute
6934
P.M. thunderstorm
Springfield
7645
Cloudy
Forecast by Shirreff Snow
Permanent snow cover on holiday
high and tonight's low.
Tulsa
7642
P.M. thunderstorm
5-Day
Wednesday
Clearing
46/29
HIGH LOW
Thursday
Sunny
49/32
Friday
Partly cloudy
53/34
Saturday
Chance for showers
45/30
Sunday
Clearing
42/23
The nation
Seattle
47/36
Los Angeles
66/52
Denver
44/17
Phoenix
68/43
Dallas
82/54
Miami
83/73
Fronts:
cold
occured
warm
occured
Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Clearing 46/29 Sunny 49/32 Partly cloudy 53/34 Chance for showers 45/30 Clearin
HIGH LOW 4"
Party cloudy
53/34
Seattle 47/36
Denver 44/17
Chicago 70/53
New York 57/45
Los Angeles 68/52
Phoenix 65/43
Dallas 82/54
Miami 83/73
Fronts:
warm
acciduous
warm
alternatey
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Is your radio station falling asleep on alternative music?
Attend an OPEN FORUM to discuss the facet of KJHK and college radio today. Bring your questions and answers.
On Campus
When: Tuesday, November 13, 17 p.m.
Where: Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
When: Tuesday, November 15, 7 p.m.
- An open forum to discuss KJHK will be at 7 tonight in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. The Committee Representing Students that KJHK Serves is sponsoring the forum.
and Open to the public Special thanks to the 350 concerned listeners who attended the Benefit Concert. See all of you Nov.15!
The KU School of Business is sponsored by a speech by Torbjörn Eik, executive vice chairman of a Swedish public development company. He will speak at 2 p.m. today in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union.
- Maranatha Campus Ministry will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
- ■ Resume Writing and Interviewing for Women, a workshop sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, will be from 7 to 9 tonight in the Regionalist Room at the Kansas Union.
- Hispanic American Leadership Organization (HALO) is meeting at 6:30 today in the Daisy Hill room at the Burge Union.
The International Club will meet from 7 to 9 tonight in the West Bank at the Kansas Union.
be at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Alcove G at the Kansas Union. Pinch is a new organization for people who want to see a sense of humor return to Mt. Oread.
Free and Open to the public
The French Club will meet at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Evan Palmer's. They will show the movie "The Decline of the American Empire."
The Art History club will meet at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Eastern Seminar Room at the Art and Architecture Library.
A Pinch Press Corps meeting will
**Anorexia Nervosa and Associate Disorders will meet from 6 to 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.**
THE KU German club will meet at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at Miller Hall, 1518 Lilac Lane. They will show the movie "Augurre, the Wrath of God."
■ The University Forum will feature Paul Stephen Lim at noon tomorrow at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building, 1204 Oread Ave. Lim Street, Atlanta, GA 30329. Better Still Tell it Like It Should Be." For more information call 843-4933.
Julie Adam, Kansas City, Kansen, will be the editor. She is presently the Kansan associate editor. Debra Cole, Derby senior, will be the business manager. She is presently the Kansan retail sales manager.
**AGER ANNOUNCED:** The Kansas Board has announced the new University Daily Kansan editor and editor for the spring semester.
Applications for the business staff are available at 119 Staff-Flint Hall. Applications are due at 5 p.m., Nov. 16. A general informational meeting will be at 5:30 p.m., Nov. 14 in 202 Staff-Flint Hall.
News Briefs
NEW EDITOR, BUSINESS MAN-
Information about news staff applications will be announced later this week.
Sponsored by the Committee Representing Students that KJHK occurs at the University of Kansas
Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said Steve D. Ray, 509 Missouri St., was arrested Friday afternoon. Mulvenon said the alleged rape occurred at a home in North Central Lafayette, the victim, a 46-year-old Lawrenee woman, reported the incident to police Nov. 7.
LAWRENCE MAN CHARGED WITH RAPE: A 32-year-old lawman was charged with felony rape in the town of Fort Bragg, according to court records.
The victim told police that Ray was a casual acquaintance whom she had let into her house prior to the alleged rape, Mulvenon said.
It's No Secret.
RUNZA
DRIVE RUN
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KU students spend over $4 million a month on miscellaneous expenses
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50th Anniversary Commemoration of Kristallnacht Film and Discussion "A Painful Reminder" Facilitator: M.J. McClendon Tuesday, November 15, 1988 Parlor A, Kansas Union 7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the University of Kansas Hilliard
American Association of University Professors
The University of Kansas Chapter of the:
Invites you to attend an address by
Senator Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas
Tuesday Nov.15 at 4 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Faculty, students and the public are cordially invited to attend.
*Refreshments provided*
A Searing Look At Contemporary Medical Ethics
The University Of Kansas Theatre Presents
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Tickets On Sate In The Murphy Hall Box Office. All Seats Reserved/For Reservations. Call (913)864-3982. VISA And Mastercard Accepted. Special Discounts For KU Students And Senior Citizens. Partially Funded By The KU Student Activity Fee. This Production Is An Associate Entry In The 1989 American College Theatre Festival XXI.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 15, 1988
Campus/Area
3
THE TOW TRUCK
Photos by Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
THE FIRM WOODWORKERS
Change of address
LEFT: Using a bar of ivory soap, Darell Ward, Burlingame, Kan., prepares the skids on which the house, 824 New Hampshire St., will be moved. Dale Fortenberry, Topeka, right, said soap was the best lubricant for the job. Fortenberry and Ward work for Heimst Moving Inc. ABOVE: Using a truck, a steel cable, and a wench, Victor Fortenberry, Topeka, begins to pull a 108,000 pound house onto steel skids, which will be used to transport the house across town.
KU space club seeks financing
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
The KU Space Program remains determined to send experiments into space in 1989 despite a daunting blow over the budget. The Finance committee earlier this month.
Mahyar Rabbadr, Olathe senior and program president, said the committee's denial of a $10,000 request would not ground the program's five experiments. The finance committee denied the request on Nov. 2.
"The design and development of the projects are still going on." Rabbarrard said. "Nothing is at a standstill.
"This is a minor setback, as they say. It just makes it a little more difficult. We'll be spending energy earlier rather than testing the experiments."
The 34-member space club is operating now on $4 membership fees, he said.
The club will meet Thursday to discuss fund-raising plans.
In a meeting last week, Rahbarbad and engineering school officials analyzed ways to finance the equipment and pre-flight testing they had planned to pay for with Senate funds. The club also will seek to reduce costs by borrowing time on industrial equipment.
Saeed Farokhi, faculty adviser to the club, detailed plans for soliciting donations or equipment time from Kansas industries.
"But that doesn't mean we're not going to show up in front of the Student Senate finance committee (again) . . . and request operational expenses for this activity." Farokhi said. "They are not off the hook."
In addition to other fund-raising methods, Carl Locke, dean of engineering, presented a research grant from the Engineering General University Fund.
The fund of about $35,000 is built from alumni donations directly to the School of Engineering for unrestricted use. We said, Locke administers the fund.
Locke said that in addition to giving students experience in space project work and gaining national exposure for KU, the program also offered a summer program for Rugby or KU Frisbee Club. Both of those clubs are financed by Senate
I *not quite sure* I understand all the reasons cited by the Student Senate. "I'm not sure," he said. "I think an outright rejection of funding was a little
The design and development of the projects are still going on. Nothing is at a standstill. This is a minor setback, as they say. It just makes it a little more difficult. We'll be spending energy finding the money rather than testing the experiments."
- Mahyar Rahibarrad
Olathe senior
KU! Space Program president
misplaced."
Finance committee members said last week that the request had been denied because of the large amount requested, participation that would likely be limited to students in the sciences and a misleading statement last year that as a $300 fee by the Senate would be a one-time expense. Farooki and Rahbarad said the Senate had misunderstood the last point.
Chris Shirling, who was co-chairman of finance at the time of the Nov. 2 meeting, said that if the space program returned to the moon in the next semester, the request would likely be looked upon more favorably.
Shiring also said he thought some members of Senate and the space program had approached the request from an adversarial position. He said if both groups took a more cooperative stance next semester, the program might benefit.
The space program has a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to send a canister containing five experiments aboard a shuttle in May.
The experiments are:
a vapor deposition test, to determine coatings of metal coating in slowing decay when plastic is exposed to radiation;
GradEx to request larger budget Official says increase justified,seeks to buy more equipment
- the building of composites, or
joining materials together, in space
to determine differences from building
them on earth;
- a simulation of red blood cell interaction with membranes, to study a weakening of bone marrow in space.
Kansan staff writer
a chemical mixing test to see if re-entry affects the mixtures and if space has any affect on mixing;
an experiment to test for effects of microgravity and radiation on seed reproduction.
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
A Graduate Student Executive Council official said last night that the group would request between $80,000 and $100,000 from the Student Senate for fiscal year 1990.
Michael Foubert, executive coordinator, said that the Graduate Student Council probably would
"Obviously, the likelihood of getting that kind of money is rather low," he said.
Foubert said that he expected to receive between $80,000 and $50,000. He said the request would be made within 10 days.
He said that one problem with receiving the money was that it would seem like a large increase from what the current operating budget is.
This year, the council received 822,536, according to the Student Senate 1989 budget.
Foubert said that the council needed the extra money because more graduate student organizations were formed at the University of Kansas after the budget had been finalized and because the groups needed better equipment, such as computers and printers.
"It will look like a major increase, but they reflect actual needs," he said.
reflect actual needs. no answer.
Foubert said the reason the council would request more money than it thought it would get was as part of a political game.
"You ask for a wish list, and you pave everything down to what you can live with," he said. "If you ask what you can live with, you get a bare survival budget."
Other members of the council referred to this process as "Mickey Mouse games."
Heithem E-Hodri, Lawrence graduate, said, "No to sound high and mighty, but this is reason."
But Foubert said the graduate students would have to follow the rules of the predominantly undergraduate Student Senate.
"Although it's Mickey Mouse, it's the only game in town," he said.
Council members agreed that a problem of communications might be the key.
James Mur, Overland Park graduate student,
said that undergraduates on the Student Senate
thought graduate students were the same as they.
"They don't understand what a graduate student does," he said. "They do the same thing, and their classes are different."
Foubert suggested that graduate students were partially to blame for the miscommunication and that they possibly could improve it by holding receptions for student senators.
In other business, GradEx will meet sometime near the beginning of next year with Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, and Tom Rawson, associate vice chancellor for administration and finance, to discuss how the council can lobby to help pass the second year of the Margin of Excellence.
Campaign for KANU raises $61,000 so far
By a Kansan reporter
KANU's fall fund-raising efforts yieided more than $61,000 last week during an eight-day phone-in campaign, said Marcia Cooper, membership coordinator.
Fall Fanfare' 78, the radio station's semi-annual campaign, combined the phone pledging system with a mailing effort to raise a projected $100,000. Cooper said that in addition to the money raised by the phone contributions, between $25,000 and $35,000 would likely be raised through contributions that patrons would mail in.
"All in all, I feel pretty good," Cooper said. "It wasn't record-breaking, but it was okay. We'll
keep plugging away."
Money raised would contribute to general operating expenses and would also help support special radio programs. KANU is a public radio station and receives no commercial money.
Cooper said the amount of money received by the station may have been lower than in the past because of the election season which prompted people to contribute money elsewhere.
"The timing was a little off. People only have so much money and sometimes there are too many causes," she said.
Another fund-raising campaign will be conducted in the spring.
SENIORS Vote for your favorite H.O.P.E. Award Finalist
Wed. Nov. 16 & Thurs. Nov. 17 in your School's Office of the Dean (CLAS voting in 106 Strong Hall)
- Lonn Beaudry, Fine Arts * Norman Forer, Social Welfare *
* Chip Howat, Engineering * James Lapoint, Education *
* Valentino Stella, Pharmacy *
H. O.P.E. Award sponsored by Senior Board of Class Officers
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4
Tuesday, November 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students, administration can't ignore threat of AIDS
College students who are not worried about AIDS need a wake-up call.
That call comes from new evidence that shows AIDS is more widespread among college students than previously believed. Central recently released the
The Centers for Disease Control recently released the preliminary results from a study of blood samples drawn from students who came to campus health centers for diagnosis and treatment of any ailment requiring a blood test. The study shows the AIDS virus present at the rate of three out of 1,000 students. This figure is almost as high as the rate among convicts, which is four out of 1,000. Convicts are considered a high-risk group.
Three in 1,000 may not seem like much, but figure that if the University of Kansas has an enrollment of about 27,000, there would be about 90 students with the AIDS virus at KU, according to the study.
College students must snap out of their complacent attitudes about AIDS. To stop the spread of the disease, students must follow guidelines set by health experts such as avoiding casual sex with strangers, using condoms and being tested. Students also need to disregard myths and take time to educate themselves about AIDS.
themselves about AIDS. The University must do its part by doing more than just handing out pamphlets. Programs that educate about AIDS must be stressed. And KU could become one of the many universities, including Kansas State, that allows condom machines in its residence halls as an effort to slow the spread of AIDS. So far, several different requests by residence halls to have condom machines installed have been denied.
The study suggests the AIDS virus is not limited to homosexuals and drug users. The disease is spreading to the heterosexual community, and college students are not any more immune to it than other groups. Students and University officials must pull together to help stop the spread of AIDS.
Julie McMahon for the editorial board
Stephan's legal problems
Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan found himself in trouble again last week when he lost a judgment in a breach of contract suit. He disclosed in 1985 the $
The suit came about after Stephan disclosed in 1985 the facts of an out-of-court settlement between himself and 'Marcia Tomson Stingley, a former file clerk in his office. Stephan paid $24,000 in 1982 to settle a sexual harassment suit she brought against him.
Stephan hasn't just suffered financially because of the case. The scandal ruined his chances for governor in 1986 when he was considered an early favorite, and his political opponents are sure to use the lawsuit as ammunition against him now and during his next campaign, just as they did last time.
against him.
The jury ordered Stephan to pay $200,000 in damages. Stephan said he would continue in office and would fight the judgment against him.
But the loss of the breach-of-contract suit and surrounding controversy shouldn't force him from office now. Stephan, who was elected attorney general in 1978 and won re-elections in 1882 and 1986, has had a solid record of service in office, and has been a friend to such causes as press and consumer rights and anti-drunken driving measures.
There may be reasons to oppose Stephan, but unproven rumors shouldn't be one of them.
There was nothing illegal in settling the sexual harassment suit out of court. It would be wrong to insinuate that he was guilty of sexual harassment. Question Stephan for breaking his agreement. Question how the state's chief attorney did not know the terms of a settlement. And question how he could originally suggest that the state would have to pay for his defense. But don't judge him for an alleged crime when his guilt has not been proved.
Christine Martin for the editorial board
The cloud from this episode will linger over Stephan's strong service record for some time. Maybe that's the most unjust part of this case. Because the harassment charges never went to trial, we may never know whether he's truly guilty of wrongdoing or just being hounded. But unless different facts come to light, Stephan should be allowed to put it behind him and get on with the affairs of the state.
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board
News staff
News staff
Todd Cohen...Editor
Michael Horak...Managing editor
Julie Adam...Associate editor
Sophie Wade...News editor
Michael Merschel...Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes...Campaign editor
Craig Anderson...Sports editor
Scott Carpenter...Photo editor
Dave Eames...Graphics editor
Jill Jess...Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Conveyors sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Mats Wassermuth...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garfand...Asst. production manager
Michael Lehmann...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 worts 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.
accuracy or staff position
*Guest columns* would be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
text will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Finn Hall. Letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
water will be photographed. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They will also be photographed in the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Fint Hall.
The University Daily Kansas (UPS5 650-840) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffert Hall, Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60415, daily during the regular school year, during the Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60442. Annual student subscriptions are $3 and charged through the student activity fee. Subscriptions are $3 and addressed changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045.
...AND PRAY FOR
MOMMY AND
DADDY AND POKEY
MY TEDDY BEAR...
AND JUST THIS ONE LAST THING, GOD
PLEASE , PLEASE, WHATEVER YOU DO,
DON'T LET GEORGE BUSH DIE!
KLINE
...AND PRAY FOR
MOMMY AND
DADDY AND POKEY
MY TEDDY BEAR...
AND JUST THIS ONE LAST THING, GOD
PLEASE , PLEASE, WHATEVER YOU DO,
DON'T LET GEORGE BUSH DIE!
KiNe
Crossing fine line between the 'Big L's'
It's okay to be liberal, but is everyone who wants cleaner air and water a loonie?
It's not every day that somebody walks into the governor's office and handcuffs herself to a chair. Especially in Kansas.
But it happened last week when Lauri Maddy chained herself to Mike Hayden's chair to protest what she said was the state's inaction in dealing with hazardous wastes from chemical plants.
"I have locked myself into your environment as you have locked me into mine," Maddy said in a written statement. "Consider me a hazardous chemical . . . I am ever present in your environment. You can haul me away, where will you put me? You can't get rid of a hazardous waste."
No wife maddie is a loony commite who opposes peace, Mudge and the American way," said my intellectual sparring partner, U.B. Orderly, and did war be a little more specific?
MERCADO
Derek Schmidt
but she does have a point. I mean, if living near the Vulcan Chemical plant in Wichita really did cause her to develop a lung disease, doesn't she deserve to be upset?
Could you be a little more specific?
"She's a liberal, big L, who wants to spend,
spend, spend, regulate, regulate, regulate. And for what? To keep a few chemicals out of her body."
Staff columnist *
deserve to be upstairs. "Of course, but there's a difference between being upset and being looyo. I get upset when the neighbor's dog doo-doos on my lawn, but I don't handcuff myself to the neighbor's chair. I go and tell him to take care of his dog."
Does the dog do it again?
"Yep. Neighbor never did listen to me." I rest my case.
"Don't confuse the issue. This Maddy woman could have worked within the system. She could have written letters, called her representatives, lobbed."
But the system is slow. What about the other Laurie Maddys who would be hurt in the meantime?
"You can't just decide to work outside the established rules. That's anarchy."
So maybe she was part of the system. Maybe the system doesn't stop at the capitol doors. A man in a jail cell in Birmingham faced that same problem 25 years ago. Dr. King wrote: "You deplore the demonstrations taking place in Birmingham. But your statement, I am sorry to say, fails to express a similar concern for the conditions that brought about the demonstrations . . . Direct action seeks so to dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored."
"So what you're saying is that if I want the state to buy me an airplane for my personal use, it's okay to shackle myself to the governor's toilet until he gives in."
You could try,but you'd look silly
You could try, but you'd look sinny.
"Who would I叫你, and Maddy didn't?"
"Why would I look silly, and madden just law. Because Maddy was fighting for aJust law. Remember what St. Augustine said: "An unjust law is no law at all." You could stay in manacles for 1,000 flushes, and there would never be justice in buying you an airplane.
"So you think there is justice in using state influence and money just to guarantee that all Kansens have pollutant-free water and air and food and land?"
Exactly.
"You belong to the ACLU. don't you?"
No, but I joined the KU Ambassador Program. If that close enough?
that close enought.
'Look, what you say says a lot of sense. But I still think she went too far. After Maddy met with Government Hayden, he issued a prepared statement: 'As the nation's only environmentally trained governor, I am extremely concerned about protecting our state's environment and natural resources.' What do you think Maddy would say to that?'
God help the other 49.
Derek Schmidt is an independence junior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Shaky faith
In a day of right-wing extremes, why should I be surprised when a "Christian" (and I use that term loosely) such as Erie Schmidt blindly misinterprets the Bible for the purpose of promoting (insultingly) his own beliefs? Why should it surprise me when he would rather "hang a millstone" around a minister's neck and kill him, rather than become aware of the views of others?
views of others :
In my opinion, he has misunderstood the meanings of the words "promote," "sponsor"
and "Christian."
and "Christian.
In his letter (Nov. 4), he warns of the wrongdoings of Jack Bremer, KU campus minister, because he sponsored a presentation by the Wicca religion Oct. 29. The word "sponsor" indicates support, be it financial or moral. Allowing Sue Westwind the opportunity to speak on behalf of the Wicca religion does not inherently connote support. Bremer is a reverend of the Methodist church, not the Wicca religion. He supports both financially and morally the Christian church, not Satan.
The word "promote" also was misused. The Ecumenical Christian Ministries did host a
forum in which a non-Christian faith was discussed. The purpose of the forum was to become aware, not to convert.
become aware, not to convert. Lastly, the basis of his letter was motivated by his "Christian" ethic. I am deeply offended by his advocacy of Bremer's death, as a friend of Bremer and as a Christian. I have tried to eliminate the feelings of hatred and wickedness that were present in Schmidt's letter. Obviously, his Christian faith is on unstable ground.
Timothy Paris
Topeka senior
Kansas State University
Give voters due
Suppose Roy Laird, the political science professor quoted as an expert in the Nov. 9 Konsan had said, "Women vote their feelings" or "Blacks vote for the darker candidate." I suspect most readers react with outrage. These are incredibly sexist and racist remarks. Should we not react with similar protest to what he did say, namely that "The American people vote by their pocket books?" Or that Bush won because "the economy is doing well"?
These remarks assume that the voter is a self-centered slob, governed by his or her stomach, unable to think or reason about any issue beyond creature comfort. Such a view is
classist, snobbish, elitist paternalism with which no American should put up.
The same attitude infects some of the comment concerning the Reagan presidency. Arthur L. Thomas, Arthur Young distinguished professor of business, emeritus, distinguishes himself for condescension by describing Reagan as "lazy, uxorious and popular." Dare we ask how someone so lacking in humanity, to say nothing of leadership quality, could be elected by two enormous landslides and maintain unequaled popularity ratings for eight years? Thomas just assumes the American people can't evaluate their leaders. He implicitly subscribes to the notion that the noxious Reagan fooled all the people all the time, except himself and perhaps a few elite others.
Ditto for the silly diatribes such as "plastic," "pathetic" and "style over substance presidency." The authors reek of a far-smarter-than attitude toward the public. Such posturing is itself ignorant and pathetic. One may criticize Reagan's policies and actions without insulting his person or the American voter's intelligence.
Without the help of snooty experts, voters told their own story through the exit polls. Thirty-six percent based their choice on foreign policy issues. Twenty-four percent esteemed anti-abortion as their prime motivator. One may argue about these values, but one may not smirk, jeer, and foam at the mouth as if those who hold them are despicable.
Gary Hardaway Hillsboro graduate student
BLOOM COUNTY
POOR OL' BILL THE
CAT... WHAT IS THERE
LEFT FOR HIM NOW?
BILL
PRESIDENT
POOR OL' BILL THE CAT... WHAT IS THERE LEFT FOR HIM NOW?
WHAT ELSE REMAINS FOR A FAILED POLITICAL ANIMAL TO OFFER HIS COMMUNITY?
LET'S FRY 'IM FOR BRunch!
MILKTOAST le COOKBOACH
WHAT ELSE REMAINS FOR A FAILED POLITICAL ANIMAL TO OFFER HIS COMMUNITY?
LET'S FRY I'M FOR BRUNCH!
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Prince Charles turns 40
The Associated Press
BIRMINGHAM, England — Prince Charles denounced a "Life Begins at 40" button and poked fun at his eccentric memory yesterday as he celebrated his birthday with 1,500 youths he has helped overcome poverty and unemployment.
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 15, 1988
A ball at Buckingham Palace for friends and family was scheduled for the evening.
"You've given me one of the best birthday parties I could ever have hoped for," the air to the throne declared after a day that included champagne toasts, birthday cakes, renditions of "Happy Birthday," and a principely bit of disco dancing with three of his guests.
He chose Birmingham, Britain's second-largest city, and spent the day visiting projects partly financed by his various charities.
for the evening.
Charles used his 40th birthday to launch an appeal for $70 million for the Prince's Youth Business Trust, a charity that gives seed money and professional advice to unemployed people aged 18 to 25 who want to start their own business.
He went to Handsworth, an inner city district torn by race riots in 1985, to inspect Grove Lane Baths, which were converted into a community center.
Then he continued to the Old Tram Depot, which has been made into a transport museum. It was festooned with flags, balloons and antique gaslamps.
In the cavernous tram depot, the prince was semenaded by calypso and rock bands, and by hundreds of young people singing a specially composed paean to Charles: "Thank you for showing where the road can lead; If we put our mind to it, in time we will succeed."
His mother, Queen Elizabeth II, is in good health at 62, and he expects a long wait before being crowned King Charles III. Meanwhile, his search for a meaningful role has transformed him into a compelling spokesman for Britain's needy youth and a critic of environmental neglect.
Bishops welcome Bush; promise to tackle issues
WASHINGTON — The nation's Roman Catholic bishops yesterday recommitted themselves to speaking out fearlessly on public issues in the new Bush administration while grudgingly bowing to Vatican intervention on a church matter.
The Associated Press
on matters
The president of the National Conference of Catholic
Bishops and John L. May of St. Louis, opened the
group's annual meeting by congratulating President-
elect George Bush on last week's victory.
elect George Bush on last week's victory. May then said that the bishops would continue to tackle heated public issues as they did during the Reagan administration.
May and our leaders of the bishops conference played down talk of new controversy between them and the Vatican, but most of the discussion at yesterday's session revolved around two issues:
revolved around two issues:
a last-minute intervention by the Vatican that will keep the group from voting this week on guidelines for resolving disputes with theologians.
resolving uniputas nowown proposed rejection of a draft Vatican the bishop'sown that seems to greatly limit the theological authority of conferences similar to the National Conference of American Bishops.
The Vatican intervention, which complained that the guidelines suggest equality between theologians and bishops, "might be perceived as confrontational or as belittling the episcopal conference, which I know is not intended," said Cardinal Joseph Bernardin of Chicago.
In response to the Vatican complaint, the bishops reset a vote on the guidelines for next June.
He and other bishops said the objection should have come much earlier.
The second dispute is broader, involving a draft Vatican document questioning the theological underpining for bishops' conferences. U.S. church leaders have built their conference into a seemingly powerful bureaucracy in recent years.
The bishops will vote tomorrow on a proposal to reject that document outright.
may said the bishops' response has been portrayed incorrectly by the news media "as if it signaled some sort of struggle with the Holy See. With all due respect for the creative imaginations of certain writers, this is simply false."
1482 Bishop James Malone of Youngtown, Ohio, a former president of the conference, introduced a revised rejection proposal, considerably toned down from the original which had used such phrases as "rigid and confusing" and "overly defensive and negative" to describe the Vatican draft.
vatican drum Pope Paul II has publicly supported the bishops' national pastoral letters on nuclear arms and the U.S. economy — both of which took strong issue with policies of the Reagan White House.
of the reagan White House. But there also has been criticism from top officials in the Vatican, who have questioned the authority of the bishops.
Is angioplasty outdated? Doctors discover new ways to unclog arteries
WASHINGTON - Doctors are attacking heart disease with a variety of tiny new devices that shave, sand or burn away fatty deposits that clog the arteries, according to reports yesterday.
The Associated Press
cause heart attack described yesterday at the annual meeting of the American Heart Association.
But it's yes! Pedigree being developed are intended to burrow through plugged heart arteries and blast away the fatty buildings that choke off the flow of blood and cause heart attacks.
of the MIA, the devices are intended to replace or improve balloon angioplasty. This treatment, performed on 184,000 people last year, is one of the nation's most common medical procedures.
During angioplasty, doctors thread a tiny balloon through an artery into the heart. There it's inflated, squeezing open the narrowed blood vessel. In about 30 percent of cases, however, the vessel soon closes shut again.
again.
Inexperienced hope the new tools will solve this problem. The devices have been tested on numbers ranging from about
50 to more than 200 patients. While these initial results show they can open up clogged arteries, more followup will be necessary before doctors know whether the long-term success is any better than with balloon angioplasty.
The new devices include:
- Shave catheter. This device works something like a miniature electric razor. Anything on the vessel walls that contacts the catheter's whirling blades is sliced off and removed.
- *Rotabatler*. This is a diamond-coated burr similar to a dentist's drill. "It literally polishes and sands the inside of a diseased vessel," said Dr. Robert Ginsburg of Stanford University.
- Hot-tipped laser. This metal point is heated by a laser.
It burns away the fatty deposits.
Smart laser. This approach uses a laser beam directly to burn the deposits. Earlier attempts failed because the pin-point beam burned holes in the artery. Now doctors are marking the fat first with specific colors, then using lasers that only attack those colors.
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Tuesday, November 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
PLO parliament recognizes Israel
The Associated Press
ALGIERS, Algeria — THE PLO's parliament today proclaimed an independent Palestinian homeland with Jerusalem as its capital, and extended the olive branch by implicitly recognizing Israel.
Wearing the traditional black-and-white checked headress, Arafat read his speech in Arabic in a low, solemn voice.
PLO chairman Yasser Arafat read the declaration early today to the 450-member Palestine National Council, Arab dignitaries and observers, who broke into long applause and loud cheers.
"The Palestinian National Council hereby declares the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital, which will be for all Palestinians wherever they are," he said.
The PLO leader declared the new Palestinian state would be government by "a democratic,
parliamentary system based on freedom of opinion, multiple parties, freedom of worship and equality between men and women."
The declaration of the new state did not set out its boundaries, which the Palestinians say should be determined in future negotiations.
MIDDLE EAST Algerian Foreign Minister Boualem Bessaiah announced to the council that Algeria officially recognized the new state, becoming the first country to do so.
It had been expected that the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip would be included in the homeland. Israel captured the West Bank from Jordan and the Gaza Strip from Egypt in the 1967 Middle East war.
The declaration came shortly after the council had endorsed a new political strategy implicitly recognizing the state of Israel and renouncing terrorism.
CAMPUS
Continued from p. 1
preconditions for dealing with the Palestinian Liberation Organization.
Deborah Gerner, assistant professor of political science, specializes in Middle Eastern politics. She said the United States and Israel have not seemed to be influenced much by the actions of the PNC.
"The most recent meeting of the PNC) reflects their acceptance of the existence of Israel." Gerner said. "The question is what does the PNC have to do to please the United States and Israel."
She said in the short run, the declarations probably won't affect Israel's actions. But in the long run, it might make the world community more supportive of the Palestinians.
nesthands:
Sadeq Abuobaid, Amman, Jor
ian, senior who said his real home is Palestine, is president of the General Union of Palestinian Students at KU.
"The action is probably not good for us, because what if we recognize Israel and then they still won't talk to us and continue the bloodshed in the occupied territories?] Whether we recognize Israel or not, I really don't think it will change anything. And whatever Israel does, I don't think America would criticize Israel," Aboubid said.
The PLO has ordered that all Palestinian organizations respond with peaceful demonstrations, he said. His group, the General Union of Palestinians Students (GUPS) is planning to have such a march on campus tomorrow.
Bush seeks to reassure markets
The Associated Press
GULF STREAM, Fla. — President-elect George Bush, seeking to calm skittish financial markets, said yesterday he considered the federal budget deficit a matter of "great urgency" that he intends to tackle quickly in the new administration
Bush also said he was fully committed to the Reagan administration's policy of coordinated actions with other major countries to stabilize the value of the dollar on foreign currency markets.
The vacationing president-elect added his voice to a chorus of Reagan administration and Bush aides trying to reassure financial markets after a huge sell-off last week. The big drop was blamed on the unforeseen shift in Bush's ability to handle the economic challenges facing the nation.
The words of assurance apparently had some effect. The Dow Jones industrial average of 30 stocks, which had lost almost 80 points since Bush's first election, reached 47 point Friday. steadied and ended the day down only 1.95 points.
The dollar, which had been battered last week, recovered some of its losses as traders reflected on the U.S. statements pledging further cooperation to stabilize the currency.
"The dollar apparently is stronger this morning and apparently the
Economic analysts have said the shaky markets are reflecting worries about Bush's ability to bring down the U.S. budget deficit, especially in light of his tough 'read my lips' stance against tax increases and his repeated insistence during the campaign that a "flexible freeze" on spending was all that was needed to balance the budget.
Tokyo market is up, so these gyrations happen," he said.
Bush told reporters he was "convinced that the deficit remains a major problem."
"I will address myself to that early on in my presidency," he said. "It is a matter of great urgency."
Bush's chief of staff, Craig Fuller, who is also co-director of his White House transition team, emphasized the deficit as "priority one" in an interview on the NBC-TV's "today show. Fuller sheds light on good contacts" with House Speaker Jim Wright on the matter.
Both Fuller and Bush indicated there would be no major differences in spending priorities between the Bush and Reagan administrations.
On the dollar fluctuation, Bush was asked if he favored lowering the dollar against foreign currencies, as was suggested last week by his occasional financial adviser, Martin Feldstein.
Quayle, Indiana governor discuss successor for Senate
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Vice President-elect Dan Quaylo announced yesterday that he intended to resign his Senate seat in time to give his successor a jump in seniority over the new class of lawmakers be sworn in Jan. 3.
Quayle said he had no recommendations to make on a successor when he met privately with the head of the company, who will make the appointment.
Orr, a Republican, stressed that the decision would be his to make, and said he and Qayyle "talked about it" in people of land. That's confidential."
The appointee will serve until a special election in November 1990. The list of possible successors includes Rep. Dan Coats, a former aide to Quayle who holds the House seat once occupied by Quaile;
Indiana House Speaker Dan Paul Mannweiler and Mitchell Daniels, a former White House political director with close ties to Sen. Richard Lugar.
Quayle's wife, Marilyn, has passed up several opportunities to say whether reports of her interest in the seat are true, although the vice president-elect told reporters he would tend to issue a statement shortly.
Other names mentioned include Marion County prosecutor Steve Goldsmith; Lt. Gov. John Mutz, who was defeated in the election for governor last week, and Indianapolis Mayor William Hudnut.
Others whose names have cropped up include former Indiana Secretary of State Edwin Simcox, one-time Environmental Protection Administration chief William Kleaus and Rep. Dan Butler.
"The policy in effect is the admin-
istration policy built around policy
coordination and exchange market
stability. That's the policy of the
administration," he replied.
Bush's comments were virtually identical to a brief statement issued in Washington.
The Associated Press
presidential campaign.
BOSTON — Defeated Democrat Michael Dukakis, facing an uneasy transition back to the Massachusetts Statehouse, acknowledged Monday that his state has fiscal problems but insisted they're not as bad as George Bush said they were.
As he did on the campaign trail, Dakikis refused to rule out new state taxes. But he promised to balance the current $11.6 billion state budget when the fiscal year ends next June.
they are no longer from the cheering rallies of the presidential campaign, the governor fielded questions from his home-state press on issues ranging from taxes to a new car for the lieutenant governor.
Asked about his own political future, Dukakis said he had made no decision about whether to run for governor again in 1990, when his current term expires.
"We face major challenges," Dukakis acknowledged at a jammed Beacon Hill news conference. But he disagreed with critics who say the state faces a "fiscal crisis" and denied that problems had worsened at home because of his 20-month
"It's too early to tell. I'm back at a job I love. I'm challenged by it." Dukakis said, promising to make a decision on his plans "sometime next year."
Last Wednesday, Dukakis held a news conference to assess his unsuccessful presidential campaign. At the time, he said he planned to continue
the fight for the national agenda his campaign
will be able to evaluate on a possible
second run for the presidency.
Dukakis appeared rested yesterday after his first weekend of rest in months.
While Republican George Bush vacationed in Florida, with federal office-seekers and international stock traders hanging on his every word, Dakikas walked from his home in suburban Brookline to the local trolley stop and rode public transit to work yesterday with no fanfare.
The only news conference question touching on Dukakis' presidential campaign was from a reporter who wanted to know if the time the governor spent campaigning was to blame for the state's fiscal situation.
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eating disorders like anorexia or bulimia are psychological problems that can be physically dangerous - even deadly. The Eating Disorders Clinic located at the Charter Counseling Center of Lawrence is specifically designed to get at the underlying psychological problems, while teaching healthy new eating habits.
If you suspect any of the above signs of an eating disorder, call the Charter Counseling Center of Lawrence at 841-6000. Treatment is usually covered by insurance.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. November 15, 1988
7
Nation/World
Soviet space shuttle lands after successful first voyage
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — The Soviet space shuttle Buran touched down on a concrete runway in Soviet Central Asia early today, flawlessly ending its unmanned 3 hour, 25 minute maiden voyage, Radio Moscow said.
manner. "The U.S.S.R. has successfully tested its first reusable space craft Buran," the official radio said.
"The unmanned shuttle has just landed on a special runway near the Baikonur Space Center," it said.
interrupting its regular programming.
A previous attempt to launch the Buran had been frustrated by last-minute troubles.
Gorbachev, Reagan to meet again
minute technical training. The shuttle was launched at 6 a.m. Moscow time (6 p.m. yesterday CST) in low flame and clouds of white steam from the special launch site in the Soviet republic of Kazakhstan. Forty-seven minutes later it reached orbit, firing its own rockets for the first time.
WASHINGTON — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will make another visit to the United States early next month and hold a fifth final meeting with President Reagan and, possibly, President-elect George Bush, U.S. officials said yesterday. Both sides another
The Associated Press
After George Bush, U.S. officials said the meeting would give the two sides another chance to try to close the game a treaty to sharply reduce their long-range nuclear weapons and ease tensions caused by a slowdown in the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan.
the arm of Soviet troops. The treaty is enmeshed in several technical problems that may not be easily solved. But on Afghanistan, the Soviets already have pledged to
have all their forces out by Feb. 15.
have all their force's power. Blaming attackers of U.S.armed Afghan rebels, the attacks announced two weeks ago that the withdrawal had been suspended. Still, Gorbachev has not ruled out adhering to the deadline. A coalition of militia
He on anering to the two officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Gorbachev also would address the United Nations on his second visit to this country. His four meetings with Reagan have served to improve U.S.-Soviet relations. Bush, after winning the election last week, said he would like to hold a summit meeting with the Soviet leader as well.
summit meeting
A third team said the likely date for Gorbachev's U.S. visit was Dec. 7.
Earlier, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher announced that Gorbachev and his wife Raisa would visit London Dec. 12-14.
Bush said last week he was interested in a meeting with Gorbachev if it could produce progress on arms control, human rights or regional disputes.
Musa would visit Japan, Reagan mated with Gorbachev in Washington last December, the third of their four summit meetings. They signed a treaty to abolish U.S. and Soviet intermediate-nuclear missiles.
national disputes.
Bush ruled out a mere get-acquainted session. "I am acquainted with him," the president-elect said. "What I want to see is progress."
News RounduD
Woman suspected of killing boarders to collect benefits
The Associated Press
fits.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The seven bodies unearthed from shallow graves around Dorothea Montalvo Puente's rooming house haven't been identified, but detectives suspect that they are the bodies of Puente's boarders who she allegedly killed in order to collect their social security benefits.
Puente arranged to have herself designated as payee on the disability checks of at least one of her now missing boarders, authorities say. She is suspected of collecting welfare or disability benefits from her boarders after killing them.
OPEC TALKS BEGIN: OPEC oil ministers begin a series of crucial meetings this week in Brussels, Belgium, designed to impose greater discipline on the cartel and end the persistent weakness in world crude prices. But industry analysts don't expect OPEC to reach an agreement.
men were injured in the attack early yesterday by three young men who had shaved heads and wore military jackets.
ment:
GROUPS OUTRAGED BY BEATING DEATH:
Civil rights groups expressed outrage yesterday at the beating death in Portland, Ore., of an Ethiopian man, apparently at the hands of white supremacist skinheads. Two other Ethiopian
SAKHAROV CRICITIZES GORBACHEV'S REFORM METHOD. Andrei Sakharov, the Nobel laureate and nuclear physicist, said yesterday that Soviet President Mikhail Makhachev is pursuing democratic reforms through "democratic means."
'undemocratic means'
**IRAQ-IRAN PEACE TREATY POSSIBLE:** Iraqi President Saddam Hussein said yesterday his country and Iran could sign a peace treaty in 10
days if Tehran is willing, the official Iraqi News Agency reported. Peace talks between Iran and Iraq stalled Aug. 25, five days after a United Nations-sponsored cease-fire halted fighting in the 8-year gulf war.
GORBACHEV CALLS FOR FOOD SUPPLIES: President Mikhail S. Gorbachev summoned top Communist Party and government officials to a provincial town yesterday and told them his reforms will fail unless consumers get better food supplies.
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Tuesday, November 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
A. K.
Phil Carvalho/KANSAN
Plaster surgery
Focusing all of her attention on a plaster head, Trina Baker, Topeka junior, works in her beginning sculpture class. Baker was working yesterday in the Art and Design Building.
Pains of computer users include eye strain, aches
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
When Greg Johnson comes home from a long day at the computer science lab, he usually has to stretch a lot before his body feels normal again.
"I guess it's not too much different from watching TV all day," said Johnson, a Topkaka senior. "But I don't like it for long." He is for a long time in these chairs.
Other KU students and employees who spend a lot of time working with video display units come home with a variety of ailments including eye strain, headaches, wrist acres and leg cramps. These ailments have been labeled "technostress" by science magazines.
But students and employees said that better lighting, good chairs and careful selection of video display equipment, few, if not most of these problems.
"With most video display units these things are a problem, said Travis Butler, Lenexa junior and a monitor for the computer science labs. "But the major problem is one ergonomics, the layout of the labs."
Ergonomics is the study of the anatomical, physiological and psychological aspects of humans in the working environment. People who study ergonomics hope to improve the design of electronic workstations.
"A problem we have in the labs is the mishmash of chairs." Butler said. "A lot of them are not in very good shape."
Tim Thurman, manager of computer resources in the computer science
department, said he discarded a chair in his office for another one that would give him better back support.
"P posture and the way you sit are very important," Thurman said. "You need to have your lower back supported."
Bad chairs are not the only problem in the computer labs, Butter said.
"I'd like to see more work on the computers themselves," he said. "Some of the computers are four and five years old and the video display units go down. There isn't as much contrast."
Butler said that, after a few years of wear, the phosphor, or the color on the screen, is not as pleasing to the eve. This can cause eye strain.
Video display units commonly use three main phosphors: amber, green or a black and white contrast.
"I think the color is a personal preference," said Kanishka Delanerelo, Sri Lanka junior and one of two systems managers for the computer science department. "Some say green or amber is easier on the eyes than white. It also depends on the resolution."
Resolution refers "to how well-defined characters are on the screen. Because the characters are built with a specific set of rules, how close the dots are to each other.
Another factor is whether the unit has a slow fade or a fast fade. Butler said the slow fade was better for controlling it, because there was no flicker effect.
A fast fade unit's characters will completely leave the screen before a new electronic beam can revive
them. When a character leaves the screen, a flicker, which can cause eve strain, will result.
A slow fade unit's characters will fade off the screen with a ghostly effect, never completely leaving the screen before a new electronic beam returns.
Richard Orchard, Lawrence optometrist, said he did not treat many people complaining of eye strain from video display units.
Ideally a computer should be
properly installed and have a
mobile screen.
"This sort of strain also applies to long reading sessions," he said. "What happens is you tend not to blink when you're focusing on something and the surface of the eye is not moistened enough."
"The keyboard needs to sit dead center," said Melva Alheide, secretary for the gerontology center. "If it stops working, you have to stop and adjust it myself."
Butler said headaches were a major problem, but that they sometimes resulted from overall fatigue — not just from video display units.
Thurman said he got shooting pains in his forearms, which he compared to tennis elbow, from typing a lot on his computer.
There also can be stress involved with using computers.
Dalenerolle said a source of stress in the labs was using a computer which gave feedback too slowly. Most personal computers can give feedback in less than one second. He said it was easy to get used to quick feedback and get irritated when a computer took too long.
Plaza permit discussed Conditions to protect bald eagles considered
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks may soon grant a permit allowing construction of the Lawrence riverfront shopping plaza, if the city and developers agree to certain conditions that would prevent the DBI from officials on the bald eagle, KDWP officials said last night.
"We're pretty close to the end point," said Bill Layher, environmental services section supervisor for the KDWP. "We've looked at all the biological information we can find. We've felt the environmental impact could be alleviated with certain conditions."
The KDWP released its construction permit draft at a public meeting last night in City Hall. About 40 people attended the meeting which allowed concerned citizens a chance to participate in the riverfront plaza construction and to make suggestions before the permit conditions become finalized.
The KDWP is responsible for issuing a permit to the city and the project developers, the Chelsea Group, because the proposed construction would take place in an area designated as critical habitat for the endangered bald eagles. In fast winters, many bald eagles have been reooting in cottonwood trees and feeding along the Kansas River.
The permit draft included the following requirements:
towing requirements:
■ All windows on the river side of the plaza building would have to be designed so that the eagles wouldn't see human activity inside of the building.
All human foot traffic on a planned walkway/wirelane would be prohibited during January and February. However, most likely be feeding the area.
■ The city would grant conservation easements, or land free from development, near the city's wastewater treatment plant and land on the left bank of the river.
The city and developers would be
responsible for planting at least 15 new trees by the wastewater treatment plant.
Some Lawrence residents, how-
ever, were not satisfied.
"The permit conditions are good,
but I don't think they go far enough."
said Michael Almon, a Lawrence
representing Kaw Valley, Permaculture.
Almon and others said they thought pedestrians should be restricted from the walkway/firelane for longer than two months. Eagles have been known to roost and feed in the area from November to March, but the eagles were not observed during two peak months. He also felt that conservation areas should be created in places where the eagles would be more apt to use them.
Stephen Hill, owner of the Bowersock Mills & Power Co., where the plaza is to be built, said that eagle wings would help noisy industrial area for about 114 years, so the plaza should not affect the eagles much.
School funding changes
Kansas committee endorses measures to reduce levy impact
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - A special legislative committee yesterday endorsed measures designed to reduce the impact the current statewide property reappraisal is expected to have on state aid for urban school districts.
The Special Committee on School Finance, attempting to rewrite the state's school funding formula, endorsed three measures intended to reduce the changes in local property tax mill levy that could result from reappraisal. devices in some school systems could drop after the new property values across Kansas are in place.
ticular concern about the financial blow big-city schools could suffer because of an increase in urban property values and a decrease in rural values.
The state is now involved in the first reappraisal effort in more than 20 years, which is expected to result in an increase in property values in rural areas will remain about the same or decrease.
Lawmakers have expressed par-
The three recommendations endorsed by the committee are:
state income tax collected within the districts. However, districts must deduct 85 percent of that rebate from state aid. The proposal would eliminate that deduction, thus benefiting larger school districts where residents have higher incomes.
- Elimination of the deduction from district's state aid of 85 percent of the income tax rebate they receive. Presently, school districts receive 20 percent of the
A provision guaranteeing that all school districts will receive at least half of the state aid they receive presently. This measure is intended to help a crowded in-state aid that some school districts might experience.
Averaging the property values over a two-year period to come up with the figures that state officials would plug into the formula.
City Commission to consider amending parking ordinance
By a Kansan reporter
The commission meets at 7 p.m. in City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
The Lawrence City Commission will discuss amending a zoning ordinance for off-street parking requirements at its meeting tonight.
The amendment, if approved, would change the off-street parking requirements for 2-bedroom or larger apartments. The ordinance would adopt standards based on square footage and consider adopting a parking permit system for districts within Lawrence.
the commission's agenda also included:
* a site plan for Quail Run Hollow, 13th and Inverness streets
- the revised site plan for Jayhawk Storgard site, 23rd and Haskell streets
- text amendments to the city zoning ordinance and text amendments to the joint city-county subdivision regulations.
- request to rezone from single family residence to multi-family on the northeast corner of
12th Street and 31st Street.
■ authorization of $16,500,000 of taxable industrial program funds for the given project.
a book of promise and a letter to seahorse
chapter.
- a resolution declaring 533 Walnut St. blighted.
- a public hearing declaring a portion of an alley between New Hampshire and Rhode Island streets and a portion of Pinkney Street vacated for public right-of-way for the planned riverfront project.
several traffic safety commission recommendations.
---
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You don't need your parents' money to buy a Macintosh.
Just their signature.
It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh* computer at school.
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan-to-Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one.
Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800-831 LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
and send it. If they qualify, they'll receive a check for you in just a few weeks.
There's no collateral. No need to prove financial hardship. No application fee.
*Offer open only to full-time KU students
Best of all, the loan payments can be spread over as many as 10 years. Which gives you and your parents plenty of time to decide just who pays for it all.
苹果
Introducing Apple's Student Loan-to-Own Program
Loan applications are available in the
computer store at the Burge Union.
* 1988 Apple Computer; Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, and
Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
Come by and talk to us about your computer needs today!
Burge Union 864-5697
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 15, 1988
Sports
9
NCAA bid was seconds away for senior runner
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas senior Craig Watke was 10 seconds from advancing to this Saturday's NCAA cross country championships.
"Last year I missed going to the NCAA by one second and this year 10 seconds." Watchee said. "But the difference is that last year I felt like I was doing a lot of obstacles and did my best."
The Jayhawks ended their season, finishing sixth out of 13 teams.
Watchee finished 11th with a time of 30:56 in the 10,000 meter run at the District Five meet Saturday in Des Moines, Iowa. The NCAA meet next Saturday, includes only the top 10 finishers at the district meet.
Although neither Watche nor the rest of the Jayhawks advanced to the NCAA meet, Kansas coach Gary Sethi said he was proud of their effort.
"We accomplished several of the goals we set for the meet by beating Oklahoma State and Indiana State who beat us earlier in the year," said Dylan Martin, who to defeat Kansas State, but they finished ahead of us in fourth place.
"I cannot express the kind of race that (Craig) ran Saturday. He is a senior and had not raced well recently. We had a discussion about a week and a half before the meet and he decided he was really going to have a great race. He should feel good about how he raced. He exhibited great pride in his school and great confidence in himself."
Watche said he wanted to end his
cross country car on a high note.
"I got myself together and ran a
Cross Country
Last year I felt frustrated. This year I felt like I fought through a lot of obstacles and did my best.'
- Craig Watcke
Kansas cross country runner
good race," Watche said. "It was the last race I would run in my cross country career, so I wanted to run well."
Schwartz said junior Steve Heffernan's 35th place finish and freshman Ty Thiel's bout with stomach cramps at the Jawhays from finishing higher.
"Ty couldn't even finish the race because of stomach cramps and Steve did not run his usual good race." Schwartz said. "He didn't feel good anymore," she really wasn't anything he did or did not. It was just one of those things."
Juniors Trish Brown and Kelly Coffey were the only Jayhawks entered in the women's 5,000 meter race. Brown and Coffey finished 34th and 44th, respectively, out of 54 runners.
Nebraska won both the women's and women's district crowns and will represent the Big Eight in the NCAA meet. Iowa State's men finished second in the meet and also qualified for the NCAA meet. Schwartz said that Oklahoma State, who finished second on the women's side, might also be invited to the meet as an at-large team.
Schwartz said he only took two women's runners because many of
the runners were suffering from minor leg injuries.
"A number of the kids were having leg problems so we decided to let them heal up and get ready for the indoor season," Schwartz said.
Looking back at his first season as Kansas' cross country coach, Schwartz said he was pleased with the teams' performances.
"I thought we had a pretty smooth transition of the runners and coaches getting to know each other," Schwartz said. "I saw improvement in the runners from week to week and that's what is important."
The good news for Schwartz is that most of his runners will be returning next season.
"We lose Craig and that's a lot of talent," Schwartz said. "But we have a lot of good experienced runners coming back next year and we also will be coming back next season. Also, with our recruiting, we look to bring some talent in."
Schwartz said his recruiting efforts had concentrated heavily on high school runners in Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri. He hoped to increase the number of runners on the squad especially on the women's team.
"We've got a pretty good numbers base for the men that we'll look to add to," Schwartz said. "On the women's side, we're going to have to revamp the whole thing. We've had seven or eight on the team this season and by next season we're honing to have 15-20."
Watkee said he expected the cross country to improve dramatically next season.
"I think they improve by leaps and bounds, but I would wish I could be able to run with them."
Multiple injuries restrict Hatchett's rushing yards
By Jeff Euston
Kansas tailback Frank Hatchett's season has been an uphill climb.
7
After quitting the team at the end of August, Hatchett, a sophomore from El Dorado, battled his way to the fourth team to a starting position.
He started the last two games against Kansas State and Oklahoma State, but both times he was forced to leave in the first quarter.
Two weeks ago against K-State, Hatchett ran for 78 yards in the Jayhawks' 80-yard touchdown drive on their first possession before suffering a conclusion as he was knocked out of bounds.
And Saturday at Oklahoma State, Hatchett scored on an 80 yard touchdown run in Kansas' third play of the game. But he was forced to leave the game after the second series because of cramps in his side.
Daniel Startling/KANSAN
After waiting so long to start, the bad breaks were frustrating. Hatchet said.
Kansas tailback Frank Hatchett has rushed for 190 yards in the last two games.
"That Kansas State game was frustrating especially," he said. "I wanted to have a good game because my high school coach went to school at Kansas State and he always follows the Wildcats.
"I haven't accomplished anything I wanted to. That's my fault. I don't have anybody to blame but myself."
Hatchit cried the team Aug. 25 but returned five days later. He was not allowed to play his first game back and was relegated to the fourth team. He saw action until the fourth game of the year against New Mexico State.
"From a team standpoint I still think we did what was best for the team," running backs coach Vic Adamele said. "He could have easily come back for the Auburn game. It probably would have helped our performance on the field.
"But from the standpoint of how it affects this team, as far as attitude, he felt he was going to have to earn his way back. Frank understands that. It's been an uphill struggle. But he'll be better for it in the long run."
Despite carrying the ball just seven times Saturday, Hatchett ran for a career-high 112 yards. Hatchett said he enjoyed his long run Saturday, but he didn't take all of the credit.
"It was fun," he said of the 80-yard run. "It was just like high school again. I have to attribute most of it to the line."
Hatchett also gave credit to fullback Roger Robben, who blocks for the tailbacks.
"Our fullbacks play a large part in the running game," he said. "Every time we run the ball, they make key blocks.
"Roger, I call him 'Roper Robot.' If I had to pick a team, a fullback blocking for me, I'd pick Roger. He's making me look good."
Though Hatchett was pleased with his performance, he said he was not completely satisfied.
"I'm not happy about the outcome, losing all of those games," he said. "But, we're a lot more competitive than we were last year. I think we're getting some respect after we play teams."
"After this game (Missouri), I'm going to start thinking about next year and what I have to do," he said. "I want to start off on the right foot and do what I can capable of doing and help this team win some games."
For that reason, he is optimistic about both next week and next season.
Freshman strong safety Deral Boykin, who sprained his left ankle in the Oklahoma State game, also is listed as questionable this week.
A victory over Missouri on Saturday could give Kansas at least a sixth place in the Big Eight. The team's loss will hurt by injuries again this week.
Senior cornerback Peda Samuel still is suffering from a groin pull and is listed as questionable for Saturday's game against Missouri.
Sophomore linebacker Tony Barker, who is suffering from a sprained ankle, is listed as questionable.
Freshman linebacker Paul Friday, who is suffering from a knee injury, will see limited action Saturday.
Sophomore defensive tackle David Gordon is out for the Missouri game because of a sprained ankle.
Dawlings KANS.
Jayhaw
Kansas senior guard Scooter Barry led the Jayhawks with an 81.5 free throw percentage last season
Barry readies for new season
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
It was one of the most memorable moments in Kansas basketball history.
Scooter Barry, the son of the greatest free-throw shooter in basketball history, was at the free-throw line, with his father, Rick Barry, watching intently from the stands.
Kansas was clinging to a 78-77 lead against Oklahoma in the NCAA championship game with 16 seconds remaining as Barry flipped his wrist and the net stelled through the net to give Kansas a two-point leap.
The elder Barry jumped out of his seat and shot his fist into the air in elation.
"I had confidence in Scooter," the elder Barry said. "He had the best free-throw percentage on the team. It was a critical free throw. I just wanted him to have a chance to contribute to the championship. I was so happy for him. I've always been proud of Scooter because he's such a good kid."
Barry missed his second free throw, but Danny Manning grabbed the rebound, was fouled by Stacey King, and the championship belonged to the Jayhawks.
The younger Barry said he still enjoyed looking back at that moment.
"A lot of people remember the free throw." Barry said. "It was a neat experience for me because it was something on a national level and I got to share with both of my parents there. It's something few people get a chance to experience. As time goes by, I probably understand that it's one of those things they can't take away from you."
But life as a Kansas basketball player hasn't always been easy for Barry. He was not heavily recruited out of high school and when former Kansas coach Larry Brown offered Barry a scholarship, some said Brown was doing a favor for Barry's dad, who was an old teammate
"I put a lot of pressure on myself to prove that I was here because of me and that Coach Brown thought I could play." Barry said. "I didn't like that people were nice," he added. "That reason alone and that I didn't deserve a scholarship.
Barry said those accusations bothered him at first, but also motivated him to become a better player.
"It it was something that I needed to outgrow. I realized that I shouldn't let what other people say affect me. I just need to make myself, the coach and the team happy, instead of everybody else."
After being redshirted during the 1984-85 season, which was his first at Kansas, Barry saw little action
his freshman and sophomore seasons, playing in 17 games each year and averaging 1.2 points per game
Then, last season, Barry played in 35 games and
played the football of his college career during
the NSAA tournament.
In the Midwest Regional championship game against Kansas State, Barry scored a career-high 15 points and equaled a career-high with five rebounds.
"If he had not had the game that he did against Kansas State," his father said, "the Jayhawks probably would have made it to the Final Four."
But last season was not an easy one for Barry, who said he became frustrated midway through the season.
"There was a point last year where I didn't know what it was doing wrong or what I could do to get it right." Barry said. "It was kind of ironic because it was at the same time when the team was doing really bad.
"I tried to find positives in a negative situation. That's what we did as a team and what I'm doing for myself. I learned a valuable lesson — I found that it will help me plug away, good things will happen to you."
Barry said he liked Coach Roy Williams' coaching philosophy, which included more positive motivation than Brown's.
"Coach Williams isn't afraid to give you positive motivation," Barry said. "Whereas, Coach Brown was more likely to point out the bad things and expect the good things. Not that he wouldn't compliment you, but that he would earn a compliment from them because it was like your own goal to get him to say, 'you did a good job.'
"It's a lot easier to play when you're trying to do good than when you're trying not to do bad."
Williams said he planned to use Barry as both an off-guard and point guard this season.
"I like his competitiveness," Williams said. "He does things for the team like diving for loose balls and hustling on defense that's going to help us win."
Barry said he improved his game this summer at a college basketball league in New York City.
"It was a lot of fun," he said. "It made me a lot more defensive-minded which is something I had never been able to do."
The younger Barry said when his dad talks about basketball — he listens.
"My dad has helped me with my basketball in college than at any other time," he said. "He saw me this summer playing basketball or work on. Those are the things I try to work on because I do value his opinion a lot."
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL SIGNEES: The Kansas women's basketball team announced the signing of two players yesterday to national team. The early signing ends tomorrow.
The other Kansas signee, Misti Chennault,
is a 6-3 forward from El Reno, Okla. Chennault averaged 23 points and 11.7 rebounds a game last year.
percussionist.
One of the signees, Shannon Kite, is a 5-foot-11 guard from Elk Horn, Iowa. She averaged 54 points a game last year for Elk Horn-Kimballition High School. All Iowa high schools play under a six-on-six format that calls for three people to play offense and three people to play defense.
VOLLEYBALL TONIGHT: The Kansas volleyball team plays league-leading Nebraska tonight in Lincoln, Neb.
tonight, Kansas lost a five-set match to the
alabama Suncoons 15-13, 4-15, 5-15, 15-10 and
Sports Briefs
10-15 at Allen Field House.
The Jayahawks, who are last in the Big Eight Conference, dropped to 1-8 in the conference and 5-21 overall. The second-seeded team recorded a league record to 7-2 and overall record to 19-7.
Junior hitter Jodi Oclschlager and freshman middle blocker Kim DeHoff led the Jayhaws offensively with 17 and 16 kills. Kyle Rieslewicz and Chris Kleinschmidt had 27 digs for Kansas.
KUG FOLL SECOND: Led by the play of senior John Ogden, the Kansas golf team was second after two rounds in the Miami Sun and Fun Golf Tournament in Miami, Fla.
Ogden shot an opening round 68 Sunday and followed that up with a 73 winning for a total of 141. Ogden is second overall at the tournament.
Kansas, with a team score of 588. trailed Central Florida for the led tournament with
a total of 586 going into today's final round.
a total of 586 going into today's final round.
Virginia Commonwealth was third with a score of 595, followed by Stetson (Fla.) 596,
and Huntingdon (Ala.) 597.
FONTES REPLACES FIRED LIONS COACH: Wayne Fontes was named interim coach of the Detroit Lions after owner William Clay Ford fired coach Darryll Rogers and offensive coordinator Bob Baker following the loss Sunday to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
"I'm elated, overjoyed, probably overwhelmed." Fontes said at a news conference yesterday. "This is something I've worked for all my life.
"I'm sorry to see Darryl released. We were close, but what is past is past. All I know now is I'm the coach for the next five weeks. I'll best I can and see what happens after that."
Fontes. 48, is the 17th coach in Lions'
"I feel these moves are in the best interest of our team and our fans," Ford said in a statement. "The players have been through a lot this season. Their attitude has been remarkable considering all the problems and distractions.
history and the second interim coach since Ford became sole owner of the team in 1963
"It's important the players maintain a positive attitude and make some progress during the last five weeks of the season. These changes should help make that position
The trial started Sept. 12 and the jury began its deliberations Tuesday afternoon.
NO VERDICT IN KIRK TRIAL. A federal court jury failed kirkday after a third full day of talks to reach a verdict in the tax evasion and obstruction of justice trial of former Memphis State basketball coach Dana Kirk.
Kirk declined to talk about the jury's discussions and said he did not know if length deliberations were a good sign or a bad one.
The jury met all day Wednesday and Thursday and then broke for the three-day Veterans Day weekend.
"I've never been through this, so I don't have any feel for it," he said as he left the federal courthouse in downtown Memphis with his wife, Ann, and several supporters.
Throughout the jury deliberations, Kirk has been joined in the courtroom by family and friends.
---
SANDERS HONORED AGAIN: Oklahoma State's Barry Sanders, for the sixth time this year, has been named Big Eight offensive player of the week. Sanders was a unanimous selection after rushing for 312 yards and five touchdowns against Kansas Saturday.
10
Tuesday, November 15, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU professors create drug abuse program
Athletes learn the risks and alternatives
By Mark E. McCormick Kansan staff writer
Two KU professors will give you the straight dope on drugs.
Assistant professors of health, physical education and recreation, David Cook and Raymond Tricker, have created a comprehensive drug education program and video cassette detailing the myths and risks of using performance enhancing drugs.
Freshmen athletes are required to take the drug education class HPER 707. Substance Abuse and Prevention, but it is open to all students. The NCAA has financed the production of a series of tapes that will be distributed to all 800 NCAA schools for use in classes.
Cook said the program teaches athletes to make rational decisions about drugs.
"Drugs and the College Athlete," a video prepared by two KU assistant professors of health, physical education and recreation, Raymond Tricker, left, and David Cook, is being distributed to NCAA colleges.
about ogs.
"We don't want them to just say no,
we want them to say, 'No, because I
have a better way,'" Cook said.
"Otherwise, it's just an emotional
decision."
decision.
A concern for the effects of drug testing without education led to the program. Cook said.
"Athletes were being tested and not being taught," he said. "Sure, testing is a deterrent, but there needs to be something else."
to be something else.
Sherlanda Brooks, a member of the track team, said she plans to take the course.
"Women especially don't know what they are doing to their bodies with drugs," said Brooks, a Chicago sophomore. "If they plan to have children, they could really be hurting themselves."
students.
After training in the program, athletes used the information they learned in class and spoke to elementary and junior high school students. Cook said.
themselves.
The program outlines the truths and myths about drugs and their effects, as well as the risks and alternatives, Cook said. By focusing on truth and education, rather than scare tactics, Cook said the program had met with positive responses from students.
"Some of the children had incredible problems."
"Those little kids asked some tough questions. They said things like, 'My parents get drunk every night and beat me,'" Cook said.
Although the athletes could not answer every question, they helped the children understand that they had choices, Cook said.
DRAG AND THE CHANGE IN THE ATTACKED AUDIENCE
Jeffery Johnston/KANSAN
Students in the program have responded well to the school visits. Many have offered to do more presentations at other schools, Cook said.
"Those kids really made an impression on them," he said. "There's no way to tell a kid to say no, when you're saying yes. They made them solidify their position and they came back with a solid philosophy."
pr
Tricker said the athletes take a test before and after the program that measures their attitude toward drug education. Athletes invariably finish the program with a more positive attitude, he said.
About 150 students have gone through the program, which has run for about a year and a half. It has been so successful that the NCAA agreed to finance the production of "Athletes at Risk," "Drugs and Ath-
"The NCAA put up the money and said they were making 1,200 copies," Tricker said.
letie Performance," "Recreational Drugs" and "Prevention and Intervention," a video project directed by Cook and Tricker.
Tricker said. Tricker said the NCAA would be sending copies to every athletic director at every member institution.
notables as former Kansas All-American Danny Manning, Nebraska football coach Tom Osborne, Penn State coach Joe Paterno and UCLA football coach, Terry Donohue, Tricker said.
In a national survey conducted by himself and Cook, Tricker said less than 5 percent of the nation's universities had a drug education program.
The video series features such
reflected the need for such a program. Tricker said he decided to take a fresh approach to the problem.
"If our aim was to cure the ones in society who are addicted, we'd be aiming in the wrong direction," he said. "Most of the people in society aren't drug addicts, and we're trying to get that majority to take their heads out of the sand."
Housing repairs planned for break
Bv Jeremy Kohn
Kansan staff writer
Because the results of the survey
Student housing residents with leaky faucets, clipped paint or other maintenance problems are invited to plan their winter break repairs with housing officials.
housing officials.
Terron Jones, associate director of student housing and head of housing maintenance, said that residence hall directors, hall managers and some maintenance officials have made about 2.300 maintenance requests for the "winter break maintenance blitz." A final list of the planned work will be ready in about two weeks, he said.
be ready in about two weeks, he said. Jones said that the current request list was from only housing officials and invited students to call him if they needed work done.
him if they needed work done.
"If students want to talk about specific problems, they can set up an appointment or contact us," he said.
Jones said that from Dec. 27 through Jan. 13, housing maintenance will repair electric, plumbing, refrigeration, furniture and kitchen problems in the Jayahawk Towers, Stuuffer Place, and the residence halls and scholarship halls.
The final list will include only the most important requests. Jones said.
He said the winter break was a perfect time to do the repairs because the residence halls would be vacant. Without special permission from the housing department, no one can live in the residence halls during winter break.
"These are the unique times to get into the buildings and fix problems," Jones said. "And that's anything from a missing screen to a hook missing in the closet to a leaky faucet."
"You take the most serious things that need to be done, and do those," he said. "You don't have the manpower, you don't the resources to fix all the requests."
Kim Madda, Oak Brook, Ill., freshman at Hashing Hall, and other residence hall students said they were impressed with Jones' invitation.
"I think that shows he really cares about what we have to say." Madda said.
we have to say.
Coleen Downey, Little Rock, Ark., freshman at Mills College, Hall, said that talking directly to maintenance officials would be more effective than requesting work through the hall manager, which is the normal procedure for maintenance requests in residence halls.
"Sometimes when we complain, we feel that it is in vain," Dodson said.
She said housing officials waited from late August to early October before they cleaned a splattered egg from her residence hall room window.
Other officials students can contact are Marion Temple, assistant director of student housing; Don McConnell, assistant director of student housing; Jeff Carmody, assistant director of student housing and head of custodial services and Carol V Tersch, coordinator of planned hall improvements.
WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE
KU
SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
SWEATSHIRTS
Support a KU Journalism Tradition with a sweatshirt from the KU Ad Club!
*2 Sweatshirts: 50/50 Cotton or new superweight (Advertising Beefy-Tees also available)
*Choose your favorite color: Red, Blue, Gray or White
*Sizes: S, M, L, XL and children's sizes
Order yours from Nov. 15 - 17 in front of
Order yours from Nov. 15-17 in front of 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Dear Client,
Synerfusion is a totally unique
sound that, in the only way that
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ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM A
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RIVER CITYHAIR CO. We've got designs on you! PERM SPECIAL $35
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THE ULTIMATE PERM EXPERIENCE
Dear Client,
- Student Haircuts $12
* Student Hi Lites $26
- Capuccino Bar
❤
*Experienced Designers Walk-ins
call Kathy Gorman immediately at Watkins Memorial Health Center (913)864-9595 to see if you qualify for a medication study
dren, who were visiting him. Police said he shot his son and daughter and then himself with a .357-caliber Magnum pistol he had purchased one day earlier
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP
PACIFIC STATE CITY
- We
842-0508
In most Kansas communities, purchasing a handgun is simple. A person needs to be 21, present identification and fill out a federal form that asks the person to swear he or she isn't a felon, a fugitive from justice, someone dishonorably discharged from the armed services, an illegal alien, a mentally defective person or an unlawful drug abuser.
Matrix
1021 Mass.
A hand carrying a bag.
If you buy an HP Desktop printer from us right now, hewitt-Packard will send you '100' for your desktop personal computer printer.
Our HP DeskJet Offer: Shape Up Your Printing, Ship Out Your Impact Printer.
DEMOLITE
Simply purchase an HP printer and move up to laser-quality output. Then ship out your printer. Then hewlett-Packard. They will send you a *100 check*
plus 10' towards shipping costs.
Come in while this offer lasts,
and ask for more details. You'll
just how to get your shoes in
shin shape in shin shape.
Offer good between October 1, 1988 and January 31, 1989.
hp HEWLETT PACKARD
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER
804 New Hampshire
842-7526
Councilman Greg Ferris called for the Wichita waiting period study following the deaths three weeks ago of Doug Marx, a divorced man, and his two chil-
Lawrence, Junction City, Kansas City, and Manhattan already require a wait ranging from two days to two weeks.
Wichita studies change in handgun regulations
The Associated Press
WICHITA — Four recent deaths have helped spurt Wichita City Council to consider making the city the fifth Kansas community to require a waiting period for handgun purchases.
Mary Kay Cosmetics. Contact Deeann Wilks at
841-9407
KI Students, faculty, staff and family members. You are invited to participate in annual NIH Training Day (August 12-14). Sponsored by the SIA office. Deadline: Mon., Nov. 21. For more information call 604-347. Sponsored by SIA.
Out of State Students - Going home on vacations.
Earn travel money and much more during your vacations by booking sales rep in NYC or visiting vivienda (including reoers). New and exciting art card designs by AlphaLight. See them at Lamplifier Bookstore, 6th and NH Call 749-3377
KJHIR Hateses: The fight's not over! Attend Open Forum Tues., 10/31, 1pm; Alderson Aud to discuss Academic freedom, Censorship, and the fate of KJHIR & College radio today.
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
BREKENHIDE! January 1, 8-9:45 1818 sails
8400 land skiing with fireplace, jacuzzi, set
i lick from lift. Contact David 842-1616. net
Space female
Do the TURKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce
our stress and don't forget our GIFT CIRTIFICATES make holiday shopping easy not gobble it up 22%
Remember, remember, knoll!
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Student Senate
is accepting applications
-Treasurer
-Administrative
Assistant
Applications due in the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union by
Friday Nov. 18 at 5 p.m.
Questions? Call 864-3710 Paid for by Student Senate
Hillel
הליא
Events of the Week
Tuesday, Nov. 15
30th Anniversary Commemoration of Kishinailnacht
Film and Discussion
"A Painful Reminder"
Facilitator: M.J. McClendon
2:30 p.m.
Classified Ads
Parlor A, Kansas City
Thursday, Nov. 17
Soviet Jewry Committee Meeting
7 p.m., Hillel House
For more information, call Hillel House, 749-4242
WE TEACH SKIN CARE. Dermatologist tested
for her skin a care system for you. Call today!
Nancy Armstrong, Mary Kay Beauty Company
841-435J
Sutton
Growing and Loss: The University Counseling center is offering an information and support group for individuals who have experienced a significant life-threatening illness, who has been may be due to a life threatening illness, death, relationship break up, job loss, or chronic pain. They meet hosts can’t change their role. Contact Dr. Gary Price; 116 Bailey Hall, phone 844-8931 if you would like to join the group or if you have questions about the
TOPIC
INTERNATIONAL CLUB MEETING
International Center
Shortly to be followed by film "Tampopo." A satire about food and sex.
The first noodle western by Iuzo Itami.
Followed by discussion with Aki Nakajima.
Tuesday, Nov. 15
7 - 9 p.m.
Gallery West
Kansas Union
international club
ENTERTAINMENT
Monday & Tuesday
Cheeseburger,
Fries &
Beverage
$2.50
Johnny's
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
1 p.m.
---
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B days, singing messages, 841-1874
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 15, 1988
11
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot Spins Maximum Party Thru. DJ Jray Velasquez. 841-7083.
IODG VIBRATIONS the most affordable mobile
music for any occasion, Call (Brian) 841-9484.
FOR RENT
1 bedroom availability on 24th & Iowa. Near bus route .*842-9756* Rent: $175 - 3 *y* utilities
2 bedroom, 833 E. 13th, 3 bedroom house, 812 Connected.
2 bedrooms, 901 Missouri, 842-2288
2nd Semester Sublease - Naimish Place Apts. 2,
zucchelli bath, furnished or unfurnished
744-4292
Mastercraft
2 rooms for room, females only, near stadium. $125 a month, call Amy at 1-831-9688.
Available Jan. 1, 2 bedroom apt, new carpet,
and paint, and appliances, close porch, close
cars, easel, $500 month - utilities 749-5213 or
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4-bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU; Call 841-721, 841-725, 841-1498, or 740-2415.
Completely Furnished Studio. 1-2-3-4 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-1255, or 749-2415. Mastercraft
Female Roommate wanted: to share beautiful apartment in Peppertree Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes: own bedroom, own bathroom, fireplace, and free laundry call 749-8036.
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
Female Roommate wanted to share large two story house $200 month. All utilities paid. 841-0956.
Female roommate required. Orchard Corners furnish
app, apt, own room & bathroom $170 +
indices. Available now or 2nd semester.
843-3392
Female roommate wanted for nie 3 bedroom roommate Overlocks Park, 2 blocks from bus, 3 great rooms $125 - utilities: RAIRE
FOR SPRING SEEMESTER Nice furnished
for $800 buoy WATER and cable mounted.
Bath Hose.
Call 512-878-9300
For Sublease: 2BD, 1 bath, new carpet, new
kitchen.宅宅铺, kitchen, $375 each. 841-569-8199.
For Salelease: Large 2bd, Colony Words,
available now. Call 841-7880.
Fully furnished one bedroom,公寓. Civilized.
But enough for two. Must go in. August &
Arkansas. $340 - utilities. 841-732 or 749-2415
Janette.
Living with a roommate from Hell? Downtown apt. available Dec. 1, $165/mo. All utilities paid. Call 794-4135.
LUXURY two bedrooms 2 bath apartment available starting bedroom Jl, Jan Large rooms, clean, quiet W/D hookups, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, tenants. RPZ 2025
NASMITH HALL Sublease. will give money for
deposit. Starting second semester. Call Rob
Moving to KC* Person needed to share 2 bedroom, apt to close to KU Medical Center. Prefer formal room. Must be 50 years old. No family members.
*NSEW NICE 2 bed room apt Waspter, dryer, and microwave included. On bus route A93. Call 641-875-3800. Apartments N480 and N482 for sublease, on bus route garage, $396; call Scott at 843-834-800.
Will give you money for deposit + one half month rent. Starting Spring Semester, Call Choi 749-4855.
study area. Availance午 1 p.m. and the late
one large bedroom for sublease at Haverne Place
immediately. $300; mw, water paid, and furnished.
Call 841-212 or 843-266.
garage 4200.
Nice 2 bed apartment for lease. Nasumpath Place
Apartments. New appliances. Jacuzzi built in
site. Avail Study Area. 1 $360 - $810 (NYC)
Overland Park Sublet: Nice 2 br. duplex. 8 min.
KU Med. Center, 12 rain. K C $75. Available Jan.
1 Call 462-4530
Room available at semester very near campus.
Share kitchen, bath, $160 + deposit. Utilities paid.
$250 per month. Take over lease.
Spacious 2 br. apt, near campus. Take over lease,
$300mo. 845-1215.
Spring Semester Sublease. 1 bedroom. W/D. On bus route 332/mo Call eve. 749-5460
SUNFLASE. 1 bedroom furnished apartment, on
SUBLAGE 1 bedroom furnished apartment, on KU bus route, pool, $35 plus utilities. Available Dec. 1, leasu until May 31, 1989, 749-603 ext. 223 or 749-703.
*do leave immediately* until May 29. A robe with a view 'Apple Lane Studio Desperate' (913) 491-3068.
| | |
| :--- | :--- |
| May 11 | 2 bedroom, 1½ |
199-730
Sublease next semester. Nonsmoking roommate
$190 mo + t_2 utilities. Near campus. 842-6088.
sublease (Jan 1, May 31): 2 bedrooms, 1v
spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK.
Families welcome. #434-0821.
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 81:5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
- On bus route-near shopping
- We are paid
- Laundry facilities
- Some with gas paid
- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available
by Thompson-Crawley
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
15th & Crestline
new House Tower is located applications for Spring 2019. we offer private rooms, art game, and laundry facility with Low rent. I need to cooperate a living a try. 740-7671 or 811-0404.
TRAILHIDE STUDIO available for sublease
spring spring. Quet cleat, clean location bus
laundry, laundry, Pool, Dilunji Phone 70-439
evenings or weekends.
WALK to last call: Jan 1, 4B3 BATH 3,
modern duffle $275/month. MAIL 847-7866.
WANTED: Person or persons to assume a lease at
Hanover School at semester end. If interested
at 2pm every evening at 10am.
Wanted immediately. Male roommate - Own
room $15 mo + t_2 utilities $130 dep. 13th &
hour. Call Lorell 749-3881
TRAILRIDGE
TRAILRIDGE
1 Bedroom Apartment
Paid Water & Gas, Patio
Laundry Facilities
3 Bedroom Town House Fireplace, Patio Patio Washer/Dryer Hookups On K.U. Bus
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
FOR SALE
2 IBM MagCard Typewriter/Word Processor.
Good condition. $175 each/$300 for both. Call
anytime 843-9356.
2 OU Nebraska game tickets, Nov. 19 in Norman.
Call John between 7-8 pm. Best offer excepted
841-7180.
841-1780
All Sports Ticket for sale. $75. Ask for Chris at
842-3136 before noon or 842-3234 after 5-90.
indoubtedly awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picnic tables, hardwood boards, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playbabs, cheese and cakes, stuffed animals, baseball balls, slot machines, Maxfield Parrish, art decoration, advertising items, clock boxes, and so much more it will flow you away! QUANTITY FILA SHELLS 12" x 18" $350;
AUDIO SALE. Cassette decks, Teac, JVC, Sony
from $75 - $150. Must sell. 841-9484
$400. Sell for $30. CD player $69. 749-898-
Comic books, Playmates, Playstores, etc.
Max's Comics. 111 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
815
FREE information on New Ka Police Photo radar. NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE $80.00 on the BEEL detector that detects terrorist enterprises. P O Box 274, Lasing Ks. 66043
GOVT SURPRISES!' New G.I. Overheads, Combat boats, and safety-toe boots Wool (blankets, glove, sucks, & mittens) Field Jkts, overcoat Camouflage Mottins Lotion Moths Trousers O'Clock Open Sundays '11 Christmas 12-4. St. Mary's Surprises Sales. St. Marys Ks. 147-2734
Go to Miami, FL for Thanksgiving and/or
Geena. Two round trip tickets available for a discount price. Call 749-5773 after 6:00 pm for more info.
HIM Correcting Selective II w/ extra ribbons, lift-off tape, and three type balls. Digitale phone dual cassette headphones. Call K12345680 kbpp floppy 2.52. Call J12345680 kb-123. Silom L74 and 612D. Nordica 800 Boots-510. Rockford Fogate 6x plates. Pods 510. Rockford Fogate 8x plates. Call K912345680 Call K912345680
MAC with dual drive. Imagewriter, mouse,
and software $1208 OBO. 864-2343 nights
Nasel, lithograph print, The Book, framed, $80;
john call at 814-1780.
Now showing Figi Graphics at new west southwestern
in East 81st St. at 829 W at New皮莱厅 11.
East 81st St. @ 829 W at New皮莱厅 11.
East 8th St. 842-7738
Rollback—rock-all of used and rare albums to a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday.
Priced in the Market 811 New Hampshire.
SAE P-10 stereo preamplifier with warranty.
New $450 sell $200. Must see to appreciate. Many
functions.
Sleep with the best. A cotton Futon for $88 .88 Onat
with New Wave Futons 11 Eight BSt 837-7487.
Tandem External 2" disk drive $150 SAVE $150
Program disk available. Call Alain 872-7690
Trumpet - Bundy with case, excellent cond
842-9644 $20 BOO
WATERBED Queen with six drawer pedestal. Low mileage, Bargain! $150 843-1551.
AUTOSALES
1881 Toyota Tercer AM/FM cassette, good condition, no rust, $15 best or less. ww22-8129
GOVERNMENT SERVICE
GOVRANCEMENT SERVICE
Govranciment Services
Caravettes. Caravettes. Surplus
Guide 1) 847-605-4700. Ex-S U7938
LOST-FOUND
OST. Mornai glasses with a maroon snake case
41·2177. Could be there in a picture.
OST. Plastic wallet pack of images 'I’m not
vesco!' HELP. Sentimental value. 794·7909 ask
HELP WANTED
*Chicago - toddler/$30/week*
*Dallas - 2 children/$18/week*
*San Francisco - 2 boys/$15/week*
*New York - newborn/$14/week*
*European Europe/$30/year*
*year commitment.* Many positions available
Call 1-800-937-NANI
CRUISE SHIPS Now hiring all positions. Beth
skilled and unskilled. For information Call
413-780-6000 Ht694
NANNY OPPORTUNITIES
*Chicago - toddler - $300/week*
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
working for a job requiring for energy, energetic,
and ambitious physical skills. Bldg 20 - to 30
lesk w/ an administrative task. Bldg 30 -
to 40 lesks as an administrative task.
good typing skills and be able to work effectively
in a fast paediatric environment. If you are interested
call Craig Bell at 814 280 between 9 a.m. and
1 p.m.
COVERNESS NEEDED for 2 small children ages
16.7 - 17am on 6:00pm weekdays in my home.
Reliable car necessary. Call after 6:00pm
weekdays, any time weeksday, 841-8448
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $18,040-$59,200/yr. Now
Hiring Your Area. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. R 9758
for current Federal list.
DJ.Producer for KLZR 7am-5pm, 30w hrs/
Previous experience required. Letter or resume
to Mie. Lee, P.O. Box 307, Lawrence, KS 66446.
for current Ports.
Helped Wanted. Part-time day and evening help and delivery drivers. Start at $6.00 hr. In person only at Border Sandpiper 1W28. 32rd
APARTMENT LEARNING. Challenging position for outgoing person with good customer relation skills and sales experience. Part-time position to work on ground floor to work on ground floor. 824-5131
AILRILS NOW WORKING. Flight Attendants,
Travel Agent, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Salaries to 10KW. Entry level positions.
Call: 805-287-6000 Ext. A9738
Office of Study Abroad announces a full-time, professional position, 12-month term. Students will include office accounting, study abroad student financial advisement and other requirements. For required qualifications and a more detailed position description came with the announcement. November 25, 1988. Contact person: Susan Crawford, Assistant Director, Office of Study Abroad, cell; Assistant Director, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66043. OE/AA Employer
NANNES need to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. We must be responsible mature and enjoy the variety of opportunities. Year minimum. For more info call: Janet (in C K: 722-6190)
Attention: Sub & Stub have immediate openings for full-time day position. Allow a start time between 10 am and 4 pm. No phone calls or emails.
Bangup positions are now open at the Adams Alma Center. Applicants must be available to work as a full-time student or hostess and hostses are needed. Above average pay & professional working conditions. Email job@adamsalma.edu.
ADMINISTARTIVE ASSISTANT
Christmas Help $8.90 (Hours Flexible)
* Entry level openings
NANNY
Up to $800 per week. Positions nationwide: east,
east, South, Midwest, 1 year commitment.
1-800-722-4535. National Nanny Resource and
Referral.
RETURN.
OVERALL JOBS: 1000 $2000 mo. Summer, YM
OVERCAMES All areas. Fields free. Info Write
LC PO B5 KS21 CORona Del Mar, CA 90252
Part-time positions use at Naimishi Hall food service which include breakfast catering, catering and flexible hours and flexible hours. If you need the money and experience come to Naimishi Hall's Lobby desk and fill out an application before vacancy
- Branford KP School
* Entry level openings
* No experience necessary
(913) 345-9675
Part-time worker. Packer Plastic is examining the feasibility of having a work station on 4p m, 4p m, 4p m, 8p m, 12m dh ght m. For minimum hours/wk. Start paying $2.49/h. Written reservation.
Please note that each student accounts audit/audit person needed 8 a.m. to school 6 a.m. on week days Must be dedicated, dependable, and a self-starter. Computer experience is required. Contact Us at 861-1954 or Lawski, Lawrence. Ks 6154
*tart-time office assistant* 75% time. Demonstrated work processing ability on line with computer. Assisted learning. Accuracy and dependability. Enrolled at KU Prefer year clinical experience. Be prepared to travel to Johannesburg, Beach Center On Families & Disability, 418鸿华 hall 6044. Application deadline
Pizza Delivery drivers - hourly wage plus commiss
must have own transportation and in-
surance. Apply in person. Pizza Shoppe 605
Nass, Westridge Shopping Center.
Pre-law Sensors, first and second year law school. Go to CS this summer to become a Marine Corps Judge Advocate after passing the bar. 925 Iowa. Call 841-1821.
RESORT HOTELS, Crunelines, Airlines, & Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications for summer travel to the five nearest post-winter locations more information and an application. write National College Reservation Service, PO Box 12469, St. Louis, MO 63107.
Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for Day &
late night shifts. Above avg, starting salary. Apply
by telephone 2618. 16 W. I Street
SUMMER HOME OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Open-
land National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews,
Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming,
Kallispell, MT 98901
MISCELLANEOUS
HYD. SPLY,
On TVs
Instruments, cameras, and more.
We honor
Visa/M.C.A.M.E.X.
J-Hawk Paint & Jewelry
1804 W. 6th 1749-1919
One way ticket from Chicago to KCI on Nov. 26.
5. Call Debra 841-3361.
Stop by Johnny's Classic Burgers!
BUY. SELL. LOAN CASH
Open:
10 a.m.-midnight
Sun - Tues.
10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
Wed. - Sat.
Late night munchies?
Iohnny's
Classic Burgers 9th & Illinois
C
PERSONAL
Amy, Wow it's been one year. Unbelievable.
Thanks for everything. I love you. John
BT What happened? Did you do it? No one answered. Check with M. C. You know how to
Come the hell va? Tanti Auguri? Quanti anni avrua? Vien a jemma mi Marted sera, но sua sorrasa per te! T'aimo amma!我 amma!
dragons and a wet snow leopard - what more could I ask for?
could I ask for?
LISA. Party? You called Monday night,
November 7. Call Matthew.
P.J - What about the shower? Maybe! I love you!
Forever, MENE.
M> MAX. LO: YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT? **B**
Pat Boese. How was dinner? Sorry for the
knot tessie. Let's meet for a beer. Jazzah Nov.
Th10, 8.30. Wear red.-R.
Photo appreciation
To my 'slow eye' Teddy Bear: This first month is just the beginning, babe. I Love You! Your Cinnamon Girl
Sediment survey. Software for SWF,
SMR, Grad student, nice looking, somewhat
looking for fraternity, nice, SWF, 21-30
wireframe for FRM, 424-943, Lawrence, Ks.
66044 unreserved
Senor Harris, Venga a mi casa anoche son las
Sietey media, Sorpreenderas! Tu Senoria.
Paying too much for car insurance because of Your Age?
delivery for Government Press, Passport, immigration,
Government Pictures, theatrical. Advanced fine art
art portfolio. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
artistic future. Tum Swells 794-1611
The guys with ****** who streaked through our streets to buy ****** were so enriched. Stockholm Warehouse
For that personal touch Gateway Insurance
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
depends on 2 children $deductible only
$66.66 month and slightly higher Kansas
医保 821 181
Tuesday
FALL Line Ski & Snowboard Tuning Complete tuning & repair Home pickup and delivery Certified Tech. Call 842-5202
GREAT DEAL! Before you leave for Thanksgiving or Christmas break, be sure to have your on-changed, your radiator (flipped and has water) rotated and cleaned. Your equipment is important to be performed before you go anywhere. Phillips 66 wants to get acquainted by offering you these and more services for $10, just to get to know you. If it’s a new appliance, you can call 842-6153 M W F (8am-12pm, 12am-7pm) or T JM (12am-11pm)
BUS. PERSONAL
Had a few tickets?
Need an SR-22?
STOLENFREE DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without pat testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841-2361
20
GATEWAY
INC.
SERVICES OFFERED
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT, CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
SPRING BREAK 894
Trine Available Now
923 N. 2nd.
842-7841
AMYX BARBER SHOP
912-9425
haircut $5.00 Mon-Fri
842 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. 842-9425
no appt. necessary
o day o week
Don't Wait Until It's Too Late!
open 6 days a week
4 full-time barbers
Redken and Nexxus products
舞蹈
Extended Play
MOBILE D.J. SERVICE
ALL OCCASIONS
Special Rates Through January!
BRAD OGDEN
OWNER
642-7881
6510 W. 91ST, #34
OVERLAND PARK, KS 66212
Leaving Town?
Airline Tickets
at airline counter prices no service charge
ON CAMPUS
LOCATION
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Boudre Portraits are still the greatest gift idea.
Setting includes glamourized make-over and full
assistance. For assistance. For more information
call Mike or Gracie列列 1-999-3789.
Maupintour
TRAVEL SERVICE
749-0700
MICHIGAN
DRIVEER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest
School, serving K.U. students for 20
driver's license obtainable, transportation
provided, 841-7749
Gayk and Leisha Peer Counseling. For free, confidential, 24-hour referrals, call KU Info at 843-396 or Headquarters at 841-2345. Sponsored by GLOSK
K.U. INFORMATION CENTER 844-366-5066.
Campus, community events, University procedures.
DERISION/CRISE HELP, referrals. 24 hrs/day
spelling correct. 96-107
Accurate word processing. Wendowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
Call evening before 10.749-1691.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES : EakdultBC
services within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $60.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 208 864-4767
ACT NOW-Papers, resumes, & cover letters.
WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3469.
ACCURATE, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, iBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-854.
Call R.J.'s Typing Service 841-5942. Term Papers, Legal, Thesis, etc. No calls after 9 P.M.
Donna's quantity Typing and
Term paper types, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser
Printer. Spelled corrected. 842.2747.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $1.25(double-spaced page) East Lawrence.
Martha Matilla 841-1219
EXPERT TYPING Mary Daw 7234119
Topika Accurate professional word processing
services IBM letter quality printer.
MATH TUTOR since 1978, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.)
math tutor - Master's in math and six years teaching experience. Call Alex at 841-796-76.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Adversary Servi-
ce #1199 841-796-768
SPEEDTERM Word Processing Service Accurate and reliable, spelling checked. Call 649-226
Expert Typist- Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
HIGH ENCE TYPEING 841-8583
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 278's
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
M.F. 10.5. @841-9223
Mrs. Matilla B41-1239.
ATTEND MAINCOURT RESIDENTS. Word processing service available near you, APA for experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak,
ices. Overland Park, IL 61549
*needed and need help* Call Birhright at
483-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy
esting
testing
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Development Statistics.
DEAGE TVDING
TYPING
TYPING/WORDPROCESSING. Done on com-
pose for easy to correcty changes/changes.
Quality-Printer. Legal exp. Laura.
56,787. Email Message.
492-4866 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm
2 Smart Typetting. Dissertations, Thesis Paper, Resumes and more. Spelling correction and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts. Low typing prices 78-9740
***typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 84311-014. Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday. Typing word processing on p.C. lQ printer. Term papers, theses, dissertations, mice. Barbara
1-1000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Job 842-794 or Lisa. 841-193.
THEWORD-ORCIS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, theses, resumes, commercial, IBM-PC, MAC, CIF Daisyheel, dot matrix, laser. Since 1983.
July 20, 1943
I-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor of the four writtencripts in accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-grade type. 843-265, days or evenings
WANTED
WORD PROCESSING Efficient. Accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne. 842-775-7001 Word processing IBM Okiada paper. $125 bm spaced page. Call before 16 pm. 749-750-8001
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses,
dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates
841-8633
Female roommate wanted for Spring semester.
House on Ohio 1 bedroom for rent. $120 a month.
All utilities paid. Call 842-9809. Leave Message.
Female roommate wanted security to assume house on landlord apartment
to ensure security. Close to campus and downtown. Jeanne 943-3224
Female roommate wanted second semester to teach of two-bedroom townhouse. 2i utilities, bus route, fireplace, pool, washer/driver, Dial 749-0951.
Make roommate needed starting Jan. 1 You will have your own bedroom and your own bathroom. On bus route $100.00 + $y_unities. Call 842-3719 Non smoking roommate need to share house Rent $15
Male or Female female mentioned to share giant 2 HI ap at home, washer/dryer, pool, huge garage bus route 175/me (negotiable), 2 utilities. Garage 841-6077
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
REWARD
Up to $1,000
- Policy
route: 794-290
Roommate wanted Geogeton apartments B-1
Roommate wanted Call 841-1956.
Call Tim at 841-1956.
Roommate wanted immediately Private bedroom and bath at $497.50 a month, $y utilities Call Juile before som or after 11pm
Roommate wanted for spring semester January Student roomed from campus & close to downtown 3 locations from campus & close to downtown 153 a month plus $y utilities 794-3981. Lorem
Second Semester Female Roommate wanted $180 and $y utilities. Walking distance or bus route: 794-290
one needed to share beautiful new townhouse.
Private room and bath with all amenities. On bus route 749-729.
for information leading to identity/arrest of person responsible for hit and run accident between bicycle and car. Nov. 8, 12:30 p.m.
at 15th-16th & Kentucky. Please call 1-816-474-TIPS, you may remain anonymous; or call Lawrence P.D.
841-7210 case # 88-10554.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
- Policy
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
ALL CAPS count as 3 words
insertion of any advertisement of pre-paid classified advertising
No refunds on commercially available charges add $4.00 service charge.
Words set in **Bold** FACE as 5 words
Words set in **Arial** APPS & **BOLD** FACE count as 5 words
Classified sets are based on consecutive day insertions only.
No responsibility is assumed for more than one incorrect
insertion of a font in a hortisement
No refunds on cancellation Blind box ads.please add $4,00 service charge. Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Foundads are free for three days.no more than 15 words.
Deadlines
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
**Classified Rates**
- Prepaid Order Form Ads
Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
001 announcements 300 for sale 500 help wanted 900 services offered
001 entertainment 700 salute趴者 700 help wanted 900 wanted
001 events 700 personal 900 wanted
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 3 Weeks 1 Month
0-15 3.10 4.55 6.50 10.80 16.15 20.40
16-20 3.60 5.40 7.60 12.20 17.85 22.40
21-25 4.20 6.25 8.75 13.60 19.55 24.40
26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00 21.30 26.35
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 15.45 22.95 28.35
200 for rent 400 last week. 700 pay next time.
Classifications
Name ___ Phone no.
Address___
(phone number published only if included below)
Please print your ad one word per box:
Please print your ad one time.
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAS
Date ad begins Make payment to:
Total days in paper (University Daisy Kansas)
Amount paid 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
11.15
© 1960 Columbia Press.
Distributed by Colonial Press Syndicate.
"Egad! . . . Sounds like the farmer's wife has really flipped out this time!"
---
COUPONS
Tuesdav. November 15. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Buy one 16"two topping pizza & two soft drinks at regular price $6.75 + tax Get a second one at 1/2 PRICE
Get a second one at 1/2 PRICE
CHECKERS
Hours: Mon.-Thr. 9:00-10:00
Friday. 9:00-6:00
Sub&Stuff Sandwich Shop
2214 Yale
841-8010
49¢ plus tax
CHEESE FRIES!
A Touch of Class
Get Ready for the Holidays With:
$3.00 OFF HAIRCUTS
$5.00 OFF PERMS &/OR COLOR
$5.00 OFF BACKSCRATCHER
NAILS
Good with Erin, Kathy, Linda & Sandy
6th & Kasold, Westside Shopping Center
842.5690 Exp.11/29/88
22.14 10h
CHECKERS DI77A !
with this coupon '
not valid with other offers
expires 11/30/88
1618 West 23rd
Substuff
Bread & Dips
25¢ OFF any 6" SUB
50¢ OFF any 12" SUB
75¢ OFF any 20" SUB
(expires 11-30-88)
Dine in. Carry out. Free Delivery.
--selected meats and served on fluffy
Pita bread with fresh onions,
tomatoes, and tangy cucumber sauce
COME IN AND TRY ONE TOY!*
Good thru Dec. 31st, 1988
not valid with any other offer
3 MOVIES FOR 2 DAYS
Dine in...Carry out...Free Delivery CHECKERS
ONLY $400 WITH COUPON Good Mon., Tues.,
& Wed. through November 29,1988
BORDER Buy One Get One
BANDIDO FREE Taco Bar*
1528 W 23rd (across from post office) 842-8861
*valid with this coupon only thru Nov. 28, 1988
VIDEO BIZ
Not valid with other offers
749-3507 9th & Iowa
--selected meats and served on fluffy
Pita bread with fresh onions,
tomatoes, and tangy cucumber sauce
COME IN AND TRY ONE TOY!*
Good thru Dec. 31st, 1988
not valid with any other offer
CHECKERS PIZZA
16" DELUXE (sausage, pepperoni,
mushrooms, onions & green peppers)
+ 2 Soft Drinks
$7.99 + tax
(no substitutions - expires 11-30-88)
C H E C K E R S
BORDER
BANDIDO
Buy any menu item
get a second one
FREE
1528 W. 23rd (across from post office) 842-8861
valid with this coupon only thru Nov. 28
TACOS 49¢
(Limit 10 with this coupon) OFFER EXPIRES 12/31/88
TOGO JOBZS
2214 Tale
Get a FREE Runza Sandwich or 1/4 lb. Hamburger with the purchase of French Fries or Onion Rings.
1101 W. 6th 1006 Mass. 1626 W. 23rd
841-8010
--selected meats and served on fluffy
Pita bread with fresh onions,
tomatoes, and tangy cucumber sauce
COME IN AND TRY ONE TOY!*
Good thru Dec. 31st, 1988
not valid with any other offer
RUNZA
DRIVE INN
RESTAURANT
Cheese, double, deluxe and mushrooms extra
One coupon per visit
quickly with another offer.
Chicago Style
2700 Iowa Lawrence, KS
--selected meats and served on fluffy
Pita bread with fresh onions,
tomatoes, and tangy cucumber sauce
COME IN AND TRY ONE TOY!*
Good thru Dec. 31st, 1988
not valid with any other offer
Cornucopia Restaurant
Serve our Italian roast beef at your next party or occasion.
10% Discount with this coupon
Call 841-8440
pimum • 48 hour notice required • expires
Expires: November 20, 1988
EXTRAORDINARY FRUIT, SOUP & SALAD BAR $3.75 WITH COUPON
1801 MASSACHUSETTS MONDAY-FRIDAY 11 A.M - 10 P.M
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M - 10 P.M
--selected meats and served on fluffy
Pita bread with fresh onions,
tomatoes, and tangy cucumber sauce
COME IN AND TRY ONE TOY!*
Good thru Dec. 31st, 1988
not valid with any other offer
PIZZA Shoppe
1 POUND
SPAGHETTI
GARLIC TOAST
32 OZ. COKE
$4.95
PLEASE BATTER WITH 12 VOLTS
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
601 KASOLD
ONE HOUR C.D. FRENZY
MANICOTTI
GARLIC TOAST
32 OZ. COKE
$4.95
842-0600 L___DINE-IN ↓ CARRY-OUT
FREE DELIVERY
Clip Kansan Coupons and Save!
25% OFF Compact Disc
(with coupon only — not valid on sale items)
Tue. Nov. 15, 3:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m. ONLY
this offer will not be repeated this year
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO / VIDEO
the GLAMPHONE.com
MEDIUM
PIZZA
ORIGINAL OR
DEEP PAN
1 TOPPING
32 OZ. COKE
LARGE
PIZZA
ORIGINAL OR
DEEP PAN
1 TOPPING
132 OZ. COY*
ONLY $7.95
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA BUILT WITH 10 YEARS OF EXPERTISE
WESTERN CITY CATERING CENTER
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
601 KASOLD
STANDING OVATION
presents...
15% OFF
KMS
hair care
products
ONLY $9.95 + TAX | ONLY $9.95 + TAX
DINE-N INFAR-CRY-OUT ___
GYROS $1 OFF
749-0771
FREE DELIVERY
842-0600
COMPADRE'S
Restaurant
1820 W. 6th (iust east of Iowa)
COMPADRE'S Restaurant
Restaurant
749-2770
NATURAL WAY
15% OFF ALL JEWELRY
15% OFF ALL JEWELRY
Largest Selection of Farrings in Lawrence
THE GRINDER MAN
International Collection of Sterling Silver and Gold-filled Earrings
Colorful Enamel
Cloisone from
Laurel Burch
(expires 11/31)
820-822 Mass. 841-0100
--open Mon-Wed 11-5
Thurs 11-7
Fri & Sat 11-5
50c off a mini (6") sub
$1 off a maxi (12") sub
Not valid with others offers.
(expires 11/28)
704 1/2 Mass.
PENNYLINE
CDSATETTS • COMPICT DISCS • RECORDS • VIDEOs
This coupon good for
Natural Fiber Clothing.
20% OFF
843-7398
20% OFF
Limit one per customer
Not valid with any other offer
Downtown
844 Mass.
Level One
Hours: 10.8 Mon.-Sat.
11:6 Sun.
12:30 PM-5:30 PM
60044
SALE
Reebok rugby shirts $19.95
Selected socks $1.00
Nike & Reebok tights 15% off
Everything in store 10% off
FREE WAFFLE CONE WITH THE PURCHASE OF A LARGE OR GREATER FROZEN YOGURT OR 2 SCOOPS OF ICE CREAM.
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A LARGE OR GREATER FROZEN YOGURT OR 2 SCOOPS OF ICE CREAM.
Hours
Mon-Sat 9:30-6:00 p.m.
Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m.
Sun 12 noon-5:00 p.m.
$1.00 VALUE
843-0412
1012 Massachusetts
$1.00 off Evening Buffet (7 days a week)
50¢ off Luncheon Buffet (7 days a week)
544 W. 23RD
SPORTS UNLIMITED
FLAVORS
FROZEN YOGURT, ICE CREAM & BAKERY
701 W. 9th
NEXT TO THE SUN DECK
coupon expires 11-28-88
749-4244
FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA LAAGNA SALADS
PRADA*TM* MARCIOTT*M*
PIZZA LASAGNA SALAUS
SPAGHETTI MANICOTTI
Valentino's
Ristorante
Large Smoothie for Medium Price
GQ
HAIRSTYLING
For Men & Women
Shampoo, Cut
& Blowdry...$13
longer hair (reg. $15)
slightly higher
Coupon good with Randy, Lori H., Beckie, Ann, and Christine.
Please present this coupon before ordering. One order per coupon per customer per person. Customer must pay as sales tax. Not good in most countries. Good only in participating "TCBY" stores. Cash value, $ of a cent.
"The Country's Best Impart."
843-2138
611 W. 9th
This certificate entitles the bearer to a free spinal examination at the Anthony Chiropractic Clinic. Call the Anthony Chiropractic Clinic at 841-2218 to make an appointment for your free spinal examination. Please allow 45 minutes for your personal consultation with the doctor and examination procedure.
THE Fitness Factory 1 MONTH for $19 Aerobic Studio 842-1983 expires
--expires 11-29-88
Anthony Chiropractic Clinic
(Across from the Dillons Super Store)
3017 W. 6th Street, Lawrence 841-2218
We carry a full line of aerobic clothing 11-29-88 in the malls shopping center coupon must be brought in for redemption
---
25c Bowling
This coupon entitles the bearer to one 25¢ game during open bowling (weekday afternoons).
The Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One 864-3545 Expires Nov.29,1988
---
$3.00 OFF
Any Large Pizza
With 2 or more toppings
PYRAMID PIZZA
The delivery is Fast, Friendly, and FREE.
"We Pile It On"
842-3232
10
---
INSIDE
Special Jayhawk Basketball Issue: Picking up the pieces
Vol. 99, No. 58 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wednesday November 16,1988
LAKESIDE, CO., MAY 19, 1972. A woman carries a mattress through the debris of her damaged home after an earthquake.
Karen Heusted, Topeka resident, picks her way through the debris after a twister ripped through her father-in-law's home in Topeka.
November tornadoes surprise Kansans
High winds and a tornado swept through southwest Topeka yesterday damaging homes, businesses and a high school but causing only minor injuries. While tornadoes and severe thunderstorms battered northeast Kansas, snow and blizzard-like conditions dominated western portions of the state.
Numerous sightings of funnel clouds occurred at about 2 p.m. At 2:05 p.m. a tornado touched down near the intersection of 29th Street and Wanamaker Road.
The tornado swept northeast at 45 mph, hitting the administration building at Topeka West High School. Six students sustained minor injuries, mostly from flying glass.
By 2:45 p.m., the National Weather Service announced that the tornado warning had expired for Shawnee County, and cleanup work began. About 30 houses were destroyed in the twister's path.
Topeka West High School
21st Street
Tornado was first sighted just north of Lake Sherwood
75
470
Faithnawn Road
29th Street
Area where the majority of houses were damaged
Lake Sherwood
The perfect conditions
Around noon yesterday, weather conditions were ideal for the development of tornadoes. Warm moist air from the southeast was colliding with cold, dry air moving east. While spring-like storms sprung up in northeast Kansas, winter storms dumped snow and ice on the west.
Atchison County Another twister was sighted around 3 p.m.
Goodland: High winds, snow, ice
Topeka
Lawrence
COLD/ DRY
WARM/ MOIST
L
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Tornadoes hit at least four counties in eastern Kansas and several areas of western Missouri yesterday afternoon.
A tornado first touched down in Topeka at 29th Street and Wanamaker街 at 2:05 p.m. Police declared the area worst hit, a section bounded by 29th Street, Westport Drive, Arrowhead Road and 25th Street, as a disaster area. The tornado traveled about seven miles, skipping up and down in some places.
Officials said that six students at Topeka West High School sustained minor injuries and that there also was extensive damage to businesses and homes on the southwest side of Topeka.
Rainfall in Topeka was light, at 1/5 inch, because the storm moved so fast.
Late yesterday afternoon, Red Cross officials who sent volunteers through the area in Topeka hardest hit by the storm they found in New Hampshire among others with major damage and about 20 with minor damage.
Dave Eames. Bill Skeet/KANSAN
Source: KU Weather Service, National Weather Service
Officials at Stormont-Vail Hospital said 18 people were treated there for minor injuries.
Sue Stebbins, evening supervisor at St. Francis Hospital, said that four people with minor injuries been treated there and released.
"So far, the injuries have been really minor, just minor lacerations," said Larry Temple, a shift supervisor for the Medevac ambulance service.
Rick Toland, Topeka district manager for Kansas Power and
Please see TORNADO, p.10, col. 1
Israel rejects Palestinian independence
The Associated Press
JERUSALEM — Israel rejected the Palestinian declaration of independence yesterday as an exercise in "ambiguity and double talk" that neither renounces terrorism nor clearly recognizes the Jewish state.
Israel was put on the defensive by the move toward moderation, however, and officials concede they face an uphill battle against the PLO attempt to win recognition for a Palestinian state.
About 1.5 million Palestinians and 70,000 Jewish settlers live in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which Israel captured from Jordan and Egypt in war.
The Foreign Ministry, which issued the Israeli government's official reaction, said of the PLO declaration that it was being again employed to excuse its
The Palestine National Council, acting as the PLO legislature, proclaimed the Palestinian state and issued a political declaration accepting U.N. Security Council Resolution 242, which implicitly recognizes Israel's right to exist. The declaration also limits PLO guerrilla action to military targets in the occupied territories.
Only leftist groups in Israel praised the PLO for moderating its anti-Israeli language. Extreme right-wing groups urged the government to respond by annexing part or all of the Gaza Strip and establishing new Jewish settlements.
advocacy of violence, resorting to terrorism and adherence to extreme positions."
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, who is expected to lead a new right-wing government, contended that moderating the PLO language was merely a tactic, part of an overall strategy to destroy Israel.
Ministry spokesman Alon Lelio said: "They mentioned rejection of terrorism outside Israel, but they did not denounce terrorism inside Israel. So we still see the PLO as a terror organization, and the government decision not to negotiate with the PLO stands."
He said the declaration was "another step in the war of Arab terror organizations against Israel's enemies," and we shall respond accordingly."
U. S. Rep. James Schueer, D-N.Y. met with Shamir and described him as "very concerned that world public works were needed," syrups words in a great, vast box."
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres, leader of the center-left Labor Party and Shamir's rival, said there could be no Palestinian state without negotiations involving Israel and the PLO declaration was "yet another attempt to avoid making unequivocal decisions."
Avraham Sela, an international relations expert at Hebrew University, said: "It will be by Israelis
Please see ISRAEL, p. 6, col. 1
Award finalists narrowed to five Seniors to cast final ballots to pick 1988 HOPE winner
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
The HOPE Award finalists were announced Thursday, and now the rest is up to students.
Today and tomorrow, seniors can vote for the winner, who will be announced at 12:45 p.m. Saturday before the football game.
■Please see page 16 for HOPE candidate profiles
The Honor for Outstanding Progressive Educator award involves a series of elections to narrow the pool of candidates. The honor is the only student-selected award at the University of Kansas. The first was given in 1959. Only seniors may vote.
A committee made up of senior members of the Board of Class Officers and presidents of various houses met on Thursday to detect the five finalists on Thursday.
The group was picked from 10 final-finalists whom seniors chose last week. Timothy Bentghen, associ
The finalists are Lonn Beaufort, associate professor of design; Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare; Colin Howat, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering; James LaPoint, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation; and Valentino J. Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry.
ate professor of journalism, voluntarily withdrew because he won the award in 1896.
The committee interviewed each semi-finalist for about 30 minutes, asking about each professor's teaching philosophy. Mike Blumenthal, chairman of the committee, said selection wasn't easy.
"It was a very difficult decision," said Blumenthal, Kansas City, Kan., senator. "I honestly believe that each of us are outstanding in their own right."
Each finalist will receive a plaque, and the winner will receive his name on a plaque in the Kansas Union. The winner also will receive about $500, said Bobby Jann, Northbrook, Ill., senior and president of BOCO.
Communications waiting list has 600 Department to help seniors who need classes for graduation
Department to help seniors who need classes for graduation
By Jennifer Corser Special to the Kansan
About 600 students are on a waiting list for closed communications courses, an obstacle that could cause problems in schools needing the course to graduate.
For the past two years, the department has had more students wanting to take courses than could be accommodated, he said. The department intends to open five additional upper-level classes by reassigning instructors who usually teach lower-level classes. Seniors who need com-
courses
All communications classes except three upper-level classes are closed for next semester, said Wil Linkugel, chairman of the communications studies department.
Leslie Godfrey, Merriam senior and communications major, needs 21 upper-level communications credits to graduate in May. She was on waiting lists for three classes, but the communications department has called her to let her take one of the classes she needs.
munications classes to graduate will be given first priority.
On Friday, the department plans to post outside the communications department office a list of students who may need to enroll in the additional classes.
"I think I'll get into at least one more communications class," she said.
department also was considering enlarging other classes to make room for other graduating seniors and communications majors.
James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the
Linkugel said a lack of faculty was causing a shortage of communications classes. Five communications professors who left the University of Kansas during the past decade were not replaced. The department has hired two faculty members for next semester.
"We have in the past been able to get graduating seniors in classes, and we hope to this spring as well," he said.
"We have this waiting list despite the new faculty," he said.
Also contributing to the problem are students who wanted to be personnel administration majors. When the college stopped admitting students into that degree program, students changed to communications.
Linkugel said those students needed advice about their options. Now they are flooding the communications departments.
Two courses that traditionally have more students wanting to enroll than space available are COMS 542, or Problem-Solving Group Discussion, and COMS 548, or Theories of the Interview.
Linkugel said that he was not sure how the department would accommodate graduating students if the department didn't teach that something would be done.
Kansan staff writer
By Daniel Niemi
Endowment Association reports increased assets
The assets of the Kansas University Endowment Association increased almost $15 million last year, according to its annual report released yesterday.
At the same time, expenditures for University support increased more than $3 million.
"It means good growth, and it will allow KU to become a better place," said Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association.
The association manages gifts and contributions to KU, including scholarship funds and professorships, and offers low-interest loans
to students.
The increase in asset value came from income from investments, such as stocks and bonds and income from fund raising.
According to the report, asset value increased $14,927,936. The total value of the endowment fund amounted to more than million, up from about $193 million.
However, the growth was not as good as the previous year, when the association reported more than an $18 million increase.
Seymour attributed the smaller increase to less income from the sale of securities, such as stocks.
---
Please see ENDOW, p. 12, col. 4
2
Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Darn right cold!
High:44°
Low:25°
Snow flurries possible in the early morning.
The day will be mostly sunny with a high of only 44 degrees. A mostly clear sky will be on tap for tonight with a low of 25 dgrees.
North Platte
41/16
Mostly sunny
Omaha
38/21
Mostly sunny
Goodland
49/21
Mostly sunny
Salina
48/23
Mostly sunny
Topeka
45/22
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
40/26
Mostly sunny
Columbia
43/27
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
50/30
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
45/27
Mostly sunny
Wichita
48/27
Mostly sunny
Chanute
45/27
Mostly sunny
Springfield
46/28
Mostly sunny
Forecasted by Mike LaPoint
Temperature are today's high and lowest now.
5-Day
Thursday
Mostly sunny
47/24
HIGH LOW
Friday
Chance for showers
49/30
Saturday
Chance for rain
48/28
Sunday
Partly sunny
48/26
Monday
Sunny
50/30
The nation
Seattle
64/29
Los Angeles
69/54
Denver
41/23
Chicago
50/27
New York
61/51
Phoenix
70/46
Dallas
67/40
Miami
84/70
Frontal
wet
included
warm
sabrely
Seattle 24/7/39
Denver 41/23
Chicago 52/21
New York 61/51
Los Angeles 69/54
Phoenix 70/46
Dallas 67/40
Miami 64/70
Fronts:
cold
incubated
warm
aluminium
A Pinch Press Corps will meet at 8 tonight in Alcove G at the Kansas Union
- The French Club will meet at 8 tonight at Evan Palmer's house, 1201 Tennessee St. The club will show the Decline of the American Empire.
The Art History Club will meet at 4:30 in the Eastern Seminar Room at the Art and Architecture Library
The KU German Club will meet at 4:30 today at Miller Hall.
Anorexia Nervosa and Associate Disorders will meet from 6 to 7.30 tonight in room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
On Campus
Dungeons and Dragons will meet at 6 tonight in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union.
The KU Chess Club will meet at 7 tonight in Alcove A at the Kungfu Club.
- The KU History Club will meet at 4 today in the Walnut Room at the Kansas Union.
Kansas City The University Forum will feature
Paul Stephen Lim at noon today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Hall. Lim will speak on "Tell it Like it is, or Better Still, Tell it Like it Should Be." For more information, call 843-4933.
The Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 5 o'clock in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
The General Union of Palestine Students will sponsoring a peaceful march at 1:15 today starting at the Kansas Union.
The Champions Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in Parlor A at the Kansas Union
KU Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 3:00 p.m. tomorrow in Parlor C at the Kansas Union.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
- The Canterbury House will offer the Holy Eucharist at noon tomorrow in Danforth Chapel.
News Briefs
BUDIH HONORED WITH APPOINTMENT: Chancellor Genele A. Budig has been elected to the executive committee of the National Association of College Land-Grant Colleges, University Relations announced yesterday.
The election was made Monday during the association's annual meeting in Dallas.
Budig will be one of 13 university leaders serving on the executive committee of the association, which has 149 member institutions.
He also was appointed recently to the board of directors of the American Council on Education, a 1,600-member organization. He represents the American Association of Universities on the 34-member ACE board.
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Budig has been a representative to the American Association of University Societies.
Mulvenon said that there didn't appear to be any clothes missing from Sandoval's room and that an untouched sack lunch was found in the kitchen. The family have been contacted and have no knowledge of his whereabouts.
POLICE TO CHECK LICENSES:
Lawrence police officers will be stopping cars to check driver's licenses and registrations at three different intersections during the next two weeks, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges for 13 years and to the American Council on Education for 17 years.
HASKELL STUDENT MISSING: An 18-year-old Haskell student has been missing since Nov. 5, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said the checks, which began yesterday, would take place at 10am on Friday and at 8am, at Sixth Street and Wakarusa
ROBERTSON TO SPEAK IN LAWRENCE; Pat Robertson, television evangelist and former Republican presidential candidate, will speak at a Lawrence group's annual Christmas banquet.
Larry Mohr, president of the Lawrence chapter of the Full Gospel Businessmen's Fellowship International, said Robertson would be their guest speaker at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 16 in Oakland. A buff-flat-style dinner will be held.
John Sandoval Jr., 108 Barker Court, was reported missing Thursday. He was last seen leaving a party in the 1600 block of Kentucky Street the night of Nov. 5. He is about 6 feet tall and weighs about 150 pounds. He was wearing a gray sweater, black slacks and black dress shoes.
Drive, 23rd Street and Wakarusa Drive and the intersection of Highways 40, 24 and 59
Sandoval was doing well in school and was unlikely to have left without telling anyone.
Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said police were becoming increasingly concerned about the situation, particularly considering Sandoval's character. Friends and Haskell officials have indicated that
Mohr said that Robertson would not charge a fee to the group.
- An Apple 2E computer, a compact disc player and a cassette player, valued together at $3,835, were discovered missing during a party Sunday night at a fraternity in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police said.
Police Record
64% of KU students use Coupons
■ An unidentified man exposed himself to two 21-year-old female students early yesterday morning in the 1600 block of Oxford Road, Lawrence police said.
The University of Kansas Audio Visual Center reported missing an
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STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES
ATTENTION Polio cases reported from Israel
overhead projector valued at $900
taken sometime between Friday and
Monday from Hoch Auditorium; a
VHS videocassette recorder valued
at $302 taken between Oct. 26 and 27
from the third floor of Malott Hall;
a laser pointer valued at $300 taken
A new outbreak of polio has been reported in Israel. It is recommended that all travelers going to Israel be immunized. Since the immunization process takes 8 weeks, please call 864-9500 for information and to check availability of vaccine. If you have never been immunized, you polio your travel plans should be delayed.
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Learn how to intervene quickly and effectively when an emergency strikes!
*CPR 'A' American Heart Association Certification (Adult CPR, one night class)
December 1st
Classes are held at Walkins Health Center in the Second Floor Conference room from 6:30 - 9:00 p.m. *There is no charge for the CPR class but you must purchase a $4 book and read it in advance of the class.
December 8th
between Spring and July from the second floor of Wescoe Hall; a laser pointer valued at $300 taken from Lippincott Hall between May and July, KU police said.
Living in a Chemical World Drug abuse can affect your physical, emotional and social health. Why do people turn to drugs? How did we become such a drug-centered society? What can you do if you or someone close to you has a drug problem? Come to or call the Department of Health Education/Student Health Services for information.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 16, 1988
3
Campus/Area
State to cut 1990 budget; KU may lose
By Mark Fagan
Kanean staff writer
Kansan staff writer
State agencies, including the University of Kansas, should expect their budget wish lists to get trimmed back despite a state treasury increase. With revenue, a top adviser to Mike Huckabee, Mr.
KU's budget request for fiscal year 1900 is being reviewed by the state budget office, which will make its recommendations to Havden later this month.
Michael O'Keefe, state budget director, said the state could not afford to finance all of the agenies' requests and return the remainder of an income tax windfall at the same rate. The state is increasing in income tax revenues generated by changes in the federal tax code in 1986.
O'Keefe released figures showing that
state agencies had total spending requests of almost $4.93 billion, a 13.3 percent increase over this year's budgets.
KU's proposal would increase the University's present budget by 2.6 percent.
"If all the spending requests were approved as is, the state general fund would be in the red by the end of the next fiscal year." O'Keele said.
He said general fund requests, which provided the majority of financing to Kansas 113 state agencies, totaled $2.6 billion for next year, while revenue would only total $2.3 million.
The proposed level of statewide spending would result in an ending balance of $43.5 million at the end of the next fiscal year, June 30, 1990. The figure does not include money for state employee pay increases and does
not take into account returning the rest of the
bearer, which Hayden had said he was
considering as a replacement.
"Clearly, the governor will not spend more money than the state has, and he will retain what he considers adequate balances," O'Keefe said.
Evelyn Swartz, presiding officer of University Council, said the warnings of budget cuts were well-founded.
KU's proposal calls for a 7.6 percent pay increase for unclassified faculty. The increase, which would be distributed to faculty based on merit rather than across the board, was included in the $43.5 million state revenue estimate.
"One of the things about any cut is that it puts us in a less desirable position, because we don't want to have to adjust."
faculty salaries," Swartz said. "We really shouldn't be talking about cutting, but rather increasing."
Still, O'Keefe said revenues would increase and mentiure requests had increased 2.4 percent.
Last week, a group of state fiscal experts and university economists increased by $166 million their estimate for how much tax they can expect to collect over the next fiscal year.
"These numbers clearly indicate that initial spending requests must be pared down in order to return the windfall and retain the fiscal integrity." O'Keefe said.
He said the state needed to maintain a surplus of about 5 percent in the general fund so that it would not need to take out loans during the year.
The figures O'Keele released are for "C level" budget requests, one of three submitted by state agencies. The two others are based on figures supplied by the budget division and assume agencies will see either a decrease in financing or a small increase.
KU's C level request was $229.7 million.
Both two were $229.7 million and $124.7
million.
State officials and politicians sometimes refer to C level requests as “wish lists.” In the past four fiscal years, O'Keele said, he has met 85 to 93 percent of C level requests.
KU received 98.7 percent of its C level request for fiscal year 1989.
Kassebaum prioritizes Bush agenda
- The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Senator suggests fiscal policy, education top president's h
Mary K. Harrington
Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum speaks to about 200 people in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union.
By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer
Nen. Nancy Landon Kassebaina said yesterday afternoon that controlling U.S. fiscal policy should be Bush's first priority as president.
And although Bush campaigned for the office as the education president, Kassebaum said she didn't expect much change between his administration and President Reagan's. But she expected education to be near the top of the Bush agenda.
"I agree with President-elect Bush that funding solutions for education should include certain private sources," she said. "But I firmly believe we shouldn't promise more than we can deliver."
Kassebaum spoke for an hour in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union to an open meeting of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors.
More than 150 people came to hear the Republican senator speak about her expectations of her husband's foreign and domestic policy.
More attention and money should be given to improving elementary and secondary schools to improving colleges, she said.
"Such education is a crucial building block for a solid education system," she said. "Our education system is going to be a key compartment now we succeed and how well we are able to lead in the future."
However, she said that the political credibility of the United States was tied to fiscal responsibility. And, because the United States is in debt to other countries, tough choices must be made.
"As long as we owe money, we deal with a much more weakened hand," she said. "What we do with our budget deficit is so important, not only to us, but to the rest of the world."
For example, she said, Congress neglected to find money to pay for the $2 billion drug bill recently passed by Congress.
Too often, she said, Congress has passed legislation without making the tough and sometimes unpopular choices about financing.
"Currently, we have about $500 million that we can use for the drug bill," she said. "But what about the rest of the money?"
She said that a change in government leadership might yield a new direction and that Bush needed to establish priorities quickly.
"If he doesn't set the agenda quickly, the Congress will do it for him," she said.
Gena Curry, Kansas City, Kan.
senior, said she didn't share
Kassaeum's optimism that Bush
education among his top priorities.
"I would be very surprised if Bush raised the amount of money available for education." Curry added. "We concerned with no raising taxes."
T. P. Srinivasan, professor of math, said he was impressed with Kassebaum's realistic approach
Japanese studies of children's TV similar to U.S.'
By Janell Good
Kansan staff writer
Japan hopes to collaborate with the department of human development and family life on future research projects about television's effect on early childhood, a Japanese media researcher said yesterday.
Kodaira
Sachiko Kodaira, media researcher for NHK Broadcasting Culture Research Institute in Tokyo, will speak at 2:30 p.m. South Hall on March 8th to the effect of Jan.
anese children's television programs on educational development.
Kodira said that a Japanese study that began almost 10 years ago of 2 and 4-year-olds found both positive and negative results.
"These programs can be the starting point of learning for preschool children," Kodaira said. "It gives children the stimulus they need to learn everyday activities, but learning to distinguish reality from animation might take some time to overcome."
Kodaira said U.S. and Japanese children's television programs differed. U.S. programs, such as Sesame Street, were more for home use and children's entertainment in addition to their educational benefits.
developed a more intensified children's television program series. Japanese children ages 2 to 5 have the opportunity to view six different educational programs every day. The programs are designed to be used in the preschool classroom with teacher's instruction, she said.
In comparison, the Japanese have
U. S. and Japanese children in general achieved an increased attention span and attained higher identifi- cation skills in educational programs, Kodaira said.
In the future, Kodaira said, she hoped international children's television programs would be created to promote educational skills at an early age.
Kodaira's visit is sponsored by the Center for Research on the Influences of Television on Children, a research institution in human development and family life.
John C. Wright, professor of psychology and of human development and co-director of the center, said Kodaira was invited in part because Japanese and U.S. research on children's television were comparable. Kodaira's visit may offer insight for future research.
Wright said the center focused on the potential benefits children could derive from television.
Rocky Horror returns to KC
The center recently received a $1.2 million grant from Children's Television Workshop in New York for a seven-year study on television's effect on economically disadvantaged children.
Stage version of the show to run tonight through December
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
With a jump to the left and a step to the right, the Rocky Horror show is back in Kansas City.
Except it is on stage, not on screen. The Rocky Horror show premieres at the Unicorn Theater, 3830 Main St. at Kansas City, Mo. Tickets are $10.
"We have the schedule to run through December 31, and we're hoping it will extend past that," said Jennifer Sullivan, assistant director for Unicorn Theater.
Hardy said the shows through this weekend were close to being sold out. Tickets for shows other than the preview tonight are $12.
Cynthia Levin, artistic director for
the show, said, "It's going to be wild with the college and high school crowds. That's the big group."
The show's storyline closely parallels that of the movie version.
It opens with a traditional newlywed couple finding themselves stranded at a mysterious old castle in the company of various eccentric characters.
After dancing to the Time Warp, the newly wed are greeted by their host, Dr Frank N Furter. The evening moves on with introductions to other members of the household and finally climaxes with the appearance of their host's version of Frankenstein.
Levin said the show was locally cast.
"Things have been going great," she said. "It is so much more fun to see the stage play than see the movie. It is so much more fun to see those who are fans of the Rocky Horror show and for those who come out of curiosity."
Levin said typical "Rocky Horror" props that people brought to the movie version, such as toast and newspapers, could not be used during the performances. The musical is recommended for mature audiences.
The show is written by Richard O'Brien, directed by Fred Goodson and has musical diection from Susan Kingwill.
Crew sues last year's coach
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
The suit was filed Nov. 7 in Douglas County District Court by Kevin Wickliffe, attorney at Legal Services for Students. The suit concerns a rent-to-own agreement between the client and the crew in purchase two practice boats, as well as shells.
KU Crew members are suing a former crew coach for the return of two boats.
Elliot said yesterday that he was not aware of the suit filed against him. He said that about two years ago when the University of Wisconsin was selling used boats, the KU Crew purchased two and would have purchased more but did not have the money. Elliot said they understood that the crew would buy them from him.
According to court records, an agreement signed on Oct. 14, 1986, by Elliot, then crew president Woody Browne and faculty adviser Linda Beville, leased each
Elliot said he took possession of the boats Nov. 3 after consulting with a lawyer because he was concerned about how the shells were being stored and the insurance on them. He said he had written two letters about his concerns to the crew executive board but had not received a reply.
shell to the crew for $350 a year. Those fees could be deducted from a purchase price of $3,400 for each boat.
No court date will be set until Elliot has a chance to reply to the complaint.
Elliot, who now coaches the Washburn University Crew, said he resigned Aug. 1 after disagreements concerning his coaching contract with KU Crew. He said he had offered to return the 1988 lease payment.
John Milburn, crew president, said a reply had just been approved by the board when Elliot took the boats
Milburn said that lease payments had been made for the past two years and for 1988 and that all crew equipment was insured.
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Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Benefits of engineering fee outweigh cost to students
This week, the Board of Regents will act on a joint proposal from the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and Wichita State University for an equipment fee to be paid by engineering students.
Student reaction to the proposal has been mixed.
Although any fee increase is an extra burden on students' budgets, this plan would strengthen the infrastructure of engineering education.
First, laboratory costs far exceed the $300,000 that the equipment fee would provide. The KU School of Engineering needs $1 million annually for acquisition, replacement and maintenance of engineering equipment. However, the $300,000 would at least provide the school with a secure foundation on which to plan and operate.
The function of equipping, maintaining and updating laboratories has been financed so far by a $900,000 contribution from the University and by pooling personnel funds. The proposal would release these funds for their intended use.
According to the proposal, KU engineering students would pay $10 a credit hour only for engineering courses, an average of $500 for a student's entire engineering education. This plan is less expensive and more equitable than the equipment fees recently introduced in other engineering schools.
Iowa State engineering students, for example, pay a flat $100 fee every semester, and University of Michigan engineering students pay a flat $150 fee each semester.
Furthermore, the proposal does not set a precedent that allows other non-engineering schools to introduce an equipment fee. Engineering, law and medicine always have been equated as professional disciplines. Although a law student pays graduate fees each semester and a medical student pays an astronomical $6,000 each year, an engineering student pays the same as the liberal arts student. And that is despite the fact that an engineering education costs the school more than a liberal arts education.
The logistics of an equipment fee support the proposal, and engineering students would benefit by supporting it.
Muktha Jost for the editorial board
Pop quiz on KANU loyalty
Quiz time. How many of you out there are regular listeners to KANU, the University of Kansas' very own public radio station? Quite a few, it seems. OK, now how many of you listen just a little bit, say to the jazz shows, the classical music or the news? Quite a few more. Now, how many of you bothered to help out the station during the fall pledge drive that ended last week?
Where did everybody go?
Manu had everybody KANU received only $61,450 in phone pledges during the one week drive, said Howard Hill, the station's general manager. That's not even two-thirds of the drive's $100,000 goal. Hill said that wasn't as bad as it seemed because mail-in contributions could raise quite a bit more toward the goal. But it still highlights the fact that too many people take public radio for granted, even in Lawrence.
Nationwide, only about 10 percent of the people who listen to public radio bother to contribute, Hill said. Every contributor pays for nine others who enjoy the programming just as much.
AT KANU, those programs aren't just the big national such as "Morning Edition" and "All Things Considered." They include top-notch programming by KU professors such as "Opera is My Hobby," by James Seaver, and "The Jazz Scene" by Dick Wright. Such programs aren't just entertaining; they're great publicity for the whole University throughout the community and across the state.
But, as Hill suggested, the best reasons for supporting KANU aren't because it makes the University look good or performs an important public service. The best reason to contribute is because the programs are good. And KANU's programming has been nothing less than excellent.
But it could be better. The more support the station gets, the better programming it can provide. The people who don't contribute to the station are selling themselves short by not helping out.
So for the one in 10 of those KANU listeners who passed the quiz, congratulations, and keep up the good work. As for the rest of you, it's not too late. KANU is waiting for your call.
Michael Merschel for the editorial board
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel G尔德 ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen .. General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales manager
Linda Koppa...National sale manager
Muster Smith...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Asst. Productor
Leighman Lerman...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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READ... MY... LIPS:
A KINDER AND
GENTLER NATION!!
Nothing dreadful about a disability
Play's scenario of despondency an exception for most disabled
"Whose Life is it Anyway?" a play by Brian Clark presented again this weekend by KU University Theatre, portrays the life of an intelligent young male sculptor who is severely injured in an accident. Faced with life as a quadriplegic, he terminates his relationships with loved ones and seeks to find a way to end what he considers a misdense existence.
As a person with a physical disability, I have real concerns about this worst-case scenario. Do audiences who attend the play or who have seen the film version come away with the perception that many people with severe physical disabilities devate their lives and would rather choose death to being "confined in a wheelchair" or "relegated to a bedridden existence"?
Unfortunately, audiences could generalize the portrayal of a disabled person in this play to all persons with severe physical disabilities. People who have had traumatic accidents resulting in spinal cord or head injuries can directly face a readjustment to life. But many of these same people now live independently in the community with a sense of purpose and dignity.
MATTHEW BURTON
As the title implies, this is a play about choices.
In such extra-durable situations, does one have the
Glen White
Guest columnist
right to make a personal decision about one's life or ultimately one's very existence? Philosophers and purveyors of ethics could argue these important questions at great length.
Like the play's main character, Ed Roberts is another person with a severe disability, who took a different approach to a similar problem. Ed contracted polio at the age of 14. He lost the use of his arms and legs and had to use an iron lung to breathe. After several years of struggling to adjust to this devastating disability, he made a choice to enroll in college, where he received education from the California Department of Rehabilitation and was refused because he was "too disabled to work."
denied admission to the University of California at Berkeley. "We tried cripples and it didn't work," said the dean of students, explaining that the campus had no place to live for a student with an iron lung.
Ed fought for his choice to receive a college education and won approval for financing but was
Ed again fought for his choice of college education and succeeded at Berkeley. While at Berkeley, he developed one of the first independent living centers in this country that helped allow people with severe disabilities like his to live independently and make their own choices. Several years after he graduated from Berkeley, Ed became the head of the California Department of Rehabilitation — the very department that 15 years earlier had declared him too disabled to work!
Every day people with disabilities make choices. Choices about where to live, whom to live with, where to go to school or where to work. Although not all people with disabilities are as tenacious as Ed Roberts in getting what they want, most consider their lives and their purposes in life of great value and significance.
Glen White is a Lawrence graduate student in human development and family life.
Times change,but people stay the same
Slats Grobnik was staring at the bar's TV set, listening to the TV intellectuals giving us the election tallies.
"It looks like we're in a new era," Slats said.
Yes, a new era.
"But I don't feel any different."
Well, it'a a little early. You have to give any new era a little time.
"That's the trouble with these new eras. I've been through almost a dozen of them. And I'm still waiting for something to really change."
But there have been vast changes
"Nah, nothing really changes."
How can you say that? Compare our lives today with when we were young. The modern technology, the scientific advances, things we now take for granted. Air conditioning, automatic transmissions, television, CD players, wonder drugs, organ transplants, robotics and achievements, stretch-stocks and the Walkman.
"What has that got to do with elections? Those are all things people invented to make a buck. The politicians don't have anything to do with it."
They were responsible for our sending men to the moon, a stunning achievement.
"Yeah, what a waste that trip was. Why'd we go, anyway? We haven't built even one condo on the moon. Wait till Japan gets up there. They'll subdivide it and turn every crater into a sand.
I
On the tube, the TV philosophers began talking about the chapters America could expect.
"Hah, listen to that guy. Changes. What changes?"
"Yeah? Well, how about if I make some predictions about what it will be like a year from now."
changes:
There are bound to be changes.
Mike Royko
I'm listening
Syndicated columnist
But what about all the new jobs we've been promised?
"Okay, I predict if you're poor today, a year from now you're still going to be poor. Unless you're dead or hit on the state lottery."
"The only new jobs anybody's going to get is the gang that's going to move into the White House offices. The Office of Con, the Office of Bunk and the Office of Blahblah. You know how much we spend in taxes to get lied to? Every night, a million people get their taxes reduced and they get home late. Why should we send millions on professional double-talkers who couldn't even fool my wife? Want another prediction?"
Eagerly.
"If you're rich today, you'll be rich a year from now, unless you're dumb enough to listen to a stockbroker, in which case it's your own fault."
Then you don't expect a tax increase?
“Sure taxes will go up, and you don’t have to read my lips either. You don’t even have to read my ears or nose. But I’ve never seen a tax increase apples on the streets.”
You're on a roll.
"Okay, a year from now, if you walk down a dark street in New York or Chicago or Detroit or Miami, there's a chance somebody is going to jump out of
a gangway and give you a little bop on the head and take your wallet or your purse."
But what about the great war on crime, cracking down on the wrongdoers?
"Listen, the Great Communicator couldn't do anything about madders six blocks from his own digs, what's the new commander in Chief going to do? What's on the South Side of Chicago? Send in Marines?"
But through leadership, one can raise phone awareness of the problem.
"Oh, yeah, awareness. When a lunk walks into a gas station and puts a gun, he says: 'Hey, are you aware of what I am here for?' And the gas jockey will say: 'I am fully aware. Have, take every dollar and my Timex, too.' So you want another prediction?"
I'm getting depressed, but go on.
"Anybody who sniffs coke or puffs grass today, a year from now they'll still be sniffing or puffing if they want to. Maybe the price will go up a little or down a little, but the stuff'll still be there."
"Yeah, they might get tough with Nortica. Danny might tell him: 'look, we're your best customers, so the least you can do is give us a volume discount."
But what about the war on drugs? Won't they do something about people like Noriega?
Well, at least we can hope to become a more kind and gentle society.
You do? We will be more kind and gentle?
"Yeah. Until the next election."
"That's something I agree on."
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist who writes for the Chicago Tribune.
BLOOM COUNTY
IT'S MIKE PUKAKIS, HE
WANTS TO KNOW IF BILL WANTS
• TO SHARE A BUNK BED
WITH HIM AT THE 'BETTY
FORD HOME FOR
DINOSAUR5."
by Berke Breathed
WHAT ABOUT WIVES?
WIVES?
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ON WEEKENDS.
DOES KITTY SNORE?
SNORING?
---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 16, 1988
1.
120
5
Glimpse
Mary Anne
Stokes tries to study before class with Madeline finishing her breakfast and tugging at her hair.
A child is holding the door with her hand. In the background, three people are seated in chairs facing a mirror.
Spying her babysset, Madeline tries to enter Liz Spadarotto's Italian class.
Photos by Sandra J. Watts Story by Debbie McMahon
Cun
Even when studying at home at the kitchen table, Stokes has to concentrate on Madeline
HORSEPLEET
In between classes, Stokes takes Leslie, left, Rusty and Madeline out for pizza
Balancing Act
Homework and homelife keeps student mom busy
A
t 6:30 a m. Sandra Stokes' alarm goes off. But as a non-traditional student with three children, she doesn't have the luxury of hitting the snooze button like many students.
Instead she yells at Rusty, her 15-year-old son, to get out of bed and into the shower. Madeline, her 21-month old daughter who has gone to classes at a private school in Boston, is slipping over the steps changed. Nine-year-old Leslie, who Sandra
describes as her over-achiever, gets herself out of bed and bathed.
The parakeets chirp, Mister Rogers or Sesame Street entertains Madeline, and in the background Swahili tapes play as Stokes practices for her language class while doing the breakfast dishes. Then Stokes irons the clothes that her family will wear that day and gives Madeline
The two older children go to school, as well as Stokes and Madeline, who carries her own backpack.
Climbing Mount Oread isn't easy, especially with a baby carriage.
By 9:30 a.m. they're on campus.
"Madeline gets very upset if we don't have time to stop at the Union," said Stokes, a Lawrence junior, who is taking 14 hours this semester. "Whoever knows Madeline by now is used to her and either laughes at her, or ignores her."
Madeline goes to class with her as an alternative to childcare, which she says she can't afford.
Stokes is one of about 650 undergraduate students this semester who have children, said Linda Marshall, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center and adviser for the Non-Traditional Students Organization.
Marshall said she was familiar with the needs of student-parents, including a lack of good and affordable childcare, difficulties with scheduling classes and little time to devote to their studies and children.
children.
Stokes said she thought non-traditional students with children should organize and form a cooperative carechildcare program for infants and older children. But that takes time.
older children, but that doesn't mean I'm just so busy and juggling so many things, sometimes I don't know what I'm juggling anymore," she said. "I don't have the time to help form a group. I don't know that we'll ever get that dream."
For example, Stokes said that sometimes professors didn't consider her to be a serious student because she brought Madeline to class.
"I find a lot of discrimination at KU against non-traditional students. We're not recognized as students, but as moms and daddies."
She said she didn't want to use Hilltop Child Development Center, which has a $15 non-refundable fee to be put on a waiting list and charges more than she can afford.
Hilltop can charge as much as $14.75 for a full day of child care.
Hilltop can charge as much as 414 of the expenses for Martha Langley, assistant director of Hilltop, said scholarships for non-traditional students were available. Currently, the expenses of 57 out of the 144 children who attend Hilltop are supplemented b$^2$ scholarships. But the expenses of only two of those 57 are covered in full.
Another option for childcare on campus is the Edna A. Hill Child Development Lab at Haworth Hall, which the department of human development and family life sponsors. But only children between the ages of 21+ and a canine that service costs $30 to $60 a week loading permanent.
As for Stokes, like many other non-traditional students, she is making due. She hopes to attend law school after getting her degree in
"I'm very scheduled, and I do things in advance," Stokes said. "I have to take advantage of every moment."
THE WORLD OF
Stokes is usually seen juggling Madeline and books.
Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Palestinians celebrate Declaration of independence sparks rejoicing
The Associated Press
NABLUS, Occupied West Bank — Jubilant Palestinian youths yesterday set off fireworks and chanted "My Homeland, My Homeland" despite tight security measures aimed at quelling fanfare about the newly declared Palestinian independence.
Palestinian independence.
The celebrations in the West Bank and Gaza Strip took on a cat-and-mouse style, as youths violated curfews to send off balloons with outlawed Palestinian flags or sing patriotic songs, then ran and hid when army patrols arrived, Arab witnesses said.
At least seven people suffered gunshot wounds in Gaza, where 650,000 Arab residents were ordered to stay in their homes, hospital officials said. Military spokesman had no reports of gunshot wounds.
no reports to the territories, setting up checkpoints on our highways and barring Palestinians from entering Israel. Reporters were allowed into the territories only with military escorts.
A reporter escorted into Ramallah was told by a Palestinian woman who gave only her first name, Marlin, that, "Today we are very happy because the PLO
says we have an independent state. No matter that we do not celebrate today. We will celebrate tomorrow or the next day."
The declaration of independence was announced early yesterday by PLO chief Yasser Arafat at a meeting of the Palestine National Council, the PLO's parliament-in-use, in Aligiers, Algeria.
Curfews were in force throughout Gaza and in at least 25 towns and refugee camps in the West Bank, the army reported.
Soldiers patrolled communities by jeep and on foot. Armored personnel carriers mounted with machine guns drove through the streets of Bethlehem, and metal-plated gravel throwers used in riot control were seen in downtown Nablus.
downtown Nabus. In Arab east Jerusalem, 1,000 additional police and a military force were brought in. An army officer who insisted on anonymity said troop strength in some areas north of Jerusalem had been increased three-fold.
Israel has occupied the West Bank and Gaza Strip, home to 1.5 million Palestinians, since the 1967 Middle East war. For the past 11 months, the army has battled an uprising against Israel rule.
U.S. rejects PLO proclamation
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration said yesterday that there were "positive elements" in a new Palestine Liberation Organization policy statement, but it rejected a PLO proclamation of an independent Palestinian state.
acts of either side but only through a process of negotiations. A declaration of independent Palestinian statehood is such an unilateral act.17
State Department spokesman Charles Redman said the status of territories under Israeli occupation "cannot be determined by unilateral
The Associated Press
The statement early yesterday in Aligiers by the PLO's parliament-inexile, the Palestine National Council, did not specify the borders of the new territory but it presumably encompasses the West Bank and Gaza Strip, which have been under Israeli control since 1967.
At the White House, presidential spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the administration saw "positive elements" to the PNC statement, including its acceptance of U.N. Security Council resolutions 242 and 338.
These lay the groundwork for a comprehensive settlement to the Arab-Israeli conflict and implicitly recognize Israel's right to exist.
as too little and not convincing enough. The PLO needs to do something striking with a clear intention."
Continued from p. 1
ISRAEL
Leil of the Foreign Ministry said: "We realize we will have to work very hard in order to explain our position in the world."
Analysts said the main problem for Israel is its lack of a credible plan for starting peace negotiations and ending Palestinian uprising in the occupied territories that began nearly a year ago.
Asher Sussar, a political scientist at Tel Aviv University, said the Algiers declaration may cause the wrist to look more favorably on the PLO.
the PLO. "Israel's position does seem to be rather inflexible as opposed to what seems to be a softening of the PLO's position," he said in an interview.
interview.
Trade Minister Ariel Sharon, a leading member of Hamir's right-wing Likud bloc, called the declaration a "dangerous development."
Sharon said Israel might face economic sanctions and political isolation, and should assert its own claim by imposing sovereignty on part of the occupied lands.
Yossi Sarid, a parliament member, was among leftists who welcomed the more moderate PLO language. He praised Palestinian acceptance of a 1947 U.N. partition resolution that envisioned both Jewish and Arab states.
"Adoption of the partition principle by the PLO, indirect recognition of Israel, and readiness for
Mediterranean Sea
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ISRAEL
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Israel closes occupied areas after Palestinian declaration of independent homeland
Europe
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ENLARGED AREA
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N
0 20
MILES
EGYPT
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Knight-Ridder Tribune News
Susser of Tel Aviv University wording of the declaration suggested the PLO viewed acceptance of a two-state solution only as a "necessary evil."
negotiations shows the PLO has changed," he said.
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---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 16, 1988
7
Nation/World
Ex-police officer kills three injures 10 in South Africa
The Associated Press
PRETORIA, South Africa — A former police officer, who belonged to a neo-Nazi group, opened fire on a group of blacks yesterday in downtown Pretoria, killing three and wounding 10 before he was arrested, police said.
The white gunman was identified as Barend Strydom, 23, who resigned from the police force in February after an inquiry found him guilty of
improper behavior, including "possession of radical right-wing documents," police said.
Strydom, dressed in a police camouflage jacket and armed with a pistol, opened fire on a group of black street vendors, witnesses said.
As panicked pedestrians fled, the gunman ran along a sidewalk and opened fire a second time before police arrested him near the State Theater in Pretoria, said witnesses.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The rate of occupational injuries and disease is on the rise again, with more than 6 million cases reported last year. There were 351,000 more injuries and 53,000 more illnesses reported in 1987 than in 1986, a government agency reported yesterday.
A 5 percent jump in the incidence of job-related illnesses and injuries, from 79 of every 1,000 workers in 1886 to 83 of 1,000 workers in 1887 was the first increase since 1984, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported.
Job-related injuries up last year
Statistics reported. The AFL-CIO blamed the increase on a "lack of enforcement" by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration of federal safety standards
and regular training. However, Labor Statistics Commissioner Janet L. Norwood said that the increase in the job injury and illness rates may be due to better record-keeping resulting from new government guidelines and intensive efforts to improve the statistics.
and regulations.
For example, the BLS last year trained some 14,000 representatives from companies employing a total of 20 million people on keeping accurate injury and illness records.
Companies that under-report job accidents to the government can face severe penalties.
Job-related fatalities in surveyed private businesses with 11 or more employees dropped from 3,610 in 1986 to 3,400 in 1987, a decrease that BLS
officials called "statistically insignificant."
A total of 5,843,100 on-the-job injuries were reported last year, compared with 5,492,000 in 1986.
Nearly half of the injuries were serious enough to cost a full day or more of work, and the number of workdays lost totaled 48.8 million, compared with 45.4 million workdays lost to injuries in 1966.
Another 190,000 workers - a 28 percent increase over 1986 - suffered a job-related illnesses, most of them noise-related hearing losses, skin diseases and repetitive motion ailments.
The bureau stated that chronic and long-term latent cases which are often difficult to recognize or relate to the workplace are included in the illness statistics "but are clearly understated."
Agency will mail thousands of past due letters to farmers
WASHINGTON — The Farmers Home Administration yesterday began mailing thousands of notice to farmers who were past due on loans. Members of Congress vowed to close the post-election timing of the move.
The Associated Press
FmHA spokesman Marlin Aycock said about 8,350 people would be mailed through Nov. 25.
The collection comes under rules implementing new credit legislation.
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, accused the FmHA of holding the letters back until after the Nov. 8 presidential election for "political reasons," although the agency had the letters in hand "well before the election."
"That is no way to administer a program that is so important to our nation's farmers, and it is no way to treat the 6,500 or so Texans who are giving the letters," said Bentsen, who was the Democratic nominee for vice president.
News Roundup
OFFICIALS INVESTIGATE COMPUTER:
Federal safety officials yesterday said that
AIR TRAFFIC REVIEW: Federal investigators yesterday for an immediate review of air traffic control procedures in the Northeast after finding that a string of errors allowed a commuter plane to fly alarmingly close to Air Force One last month. The incident, previously reported without detail, occurred Oct. 12 when Air Force One, with President Reagan aboard, and a Bar Harbor Airlines commuter plane flew within 500 feet vertically and 1.5 miles horizontally. Both planes were preparing to descend to Newark, N.J.
General Assembly of the Organization of American States. Peace in Central America is among the topics being discussed during the weeklong meeting of delegates from 31 nations.
they had begun investigating allegations that a defective computer on 1987 and 1988-model Plymouth Sundance and Dodge Shadow automobiles caused the throttle to stick. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said it had received 89 unconfirmed complaints about the problem, including reports of four accidents, one of which caused an injury.
ESTONIA TO CONSIDER PROCLAIMATION:
Estonia's parliament today will consider a "declaration of sovereignty" that proclaims the Baltic republic's independence from the Soviet Union in all areas except defense and foreign policy. Its members also will weigh a related amendment to the Estonian constitution that would bar enforcement of any new Soviet law unless it has been ratified by the Estonian parliament.
one of SAWDS MARCH FOR PEACE: About 20,000 students, students and workers marched through San Salvador. El Saivador, yesterday to demand that the U.S.-backed government negotiate with leftist rebels to end the 9-year-old civil war. The march coincided with a meeting of the
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Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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MIAMI — South Florida's Latin community is reporting a sharp increase in anti-Hispanic incidents since the overwhelming passage last week of the official English amendment.
The Associated Press
English law creating tension Anti-Hispanic incidents have risen since passage in Florida
Soto said his organization had received calls from dozens of people saying some stores refused to hel Spanish-speaking customers.
Amendment 11, which makes English the official language of Florida but leaves implementation to the Legislature, received an 84 percent "yes" vote in the Nov. 8 statewide election.
"What has happened is that people have taken the law into their own hands and are enforcing it as they see fit," Osvaldo Salo, president of the Spanish American League Against Discrimination, said Monday. "I knew Amendment 11 would bring chaos to Miami."
Since the election, a supermarket employee was suspended for speaking Spanish to another employee, the mayor of Coral Gables was quoted as making derogatory remarks about his Hispanic opponent and children in a West Palm Beach high school complained they were forbidden to speak Spanish in school.
Spanish-speaking Supporters of the initiative say it does only what it supposed to do. They believe the Legislature will implement the law despite complaints from Hispanics and the opposition of most state politicians, including Gov. Bob Martinez.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 16, 1988
9
neutral
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Continental Airlines announces new rates for vacation travelers
lisbili
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novi novi
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — After initiating an elimination of discounts aimed at business filers, Continental Airlines announced a restructured "MaxXaver" program yesterday that is expected to boost most remaining cut-rate fares.
Continental said MaxSaver fares, which are used by many vacation travelers, would be based on a flight under the new formula.
Fares had been determined in the past by competition on individual routes and not by mileage.
It was not immediately clear whether other big carriers would
follow Continental's move, but the airline has been the pacesetter on fares in recent years.
"You will see some MaxSavers going up and some MaxSavers going down." Walker said. "We are returning air fares to a more rational level."
He said fares for longer flights generally would be raised while those for shorter flights would mostly be reduced.
MaxSaver tickets must be purchased seven to 14 days in advance and require an overnight stay.
Air fare structures have become geographically "out of whack" as a result of airlines frequently
matching each other's fare increases in recent months, said Robert Decker, an airline analyst for Duff & Phelps Inc. in Chicago.
The changes come amid plans by many major U.S. airlines to eliminate another category of discount air fares. The Airbus fleet four to seven days before a flight and used mainly by business travelers.
In a move initiated by Continental and followed by several major carriers, the junk fares were slated to e eliminated yesterday. But the airlines decided to extend the deadline by a week because of confusion over the change.
Fugitive landlady sought Search for more bodies nearly finished
The Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Federal agents joined the hunt yesterday for the fugitive landlady of a rooming house where seven bodies were found, and investigators believe the woman may have fled to Nevada.
would only have to detectives and workers with shovels were nearly finished excavating the grounds where the bodies
vailing the ground— all apparently elderly and unidentified — have been unearthed since Friday. Police Sgt. Bob Burns said the victims apparently were killed for their Social Security checks, and all had died since the beginning of the year.
The search for Dorothea Montalvo Puente focused on Las Vegas, Burns
said.
"We're still looking for the suspect. She has not been located. She may have gone to see a relative in Las Vegas. We are investigating that. The Las Vegas police have not completed their investigation."
Sacramento television station KCRA reported that Michael Montalvo, Puente's nephew, told Las Vegas police that he picked up Puente at the airport Monday morning.
Both Burns and Las Vegas police declined comment on that report, but Augie Knudson, Las Vegas metropolitan police detective, said his department had issued an all-points bulletin for Puente. Knudson said his department had no idea where Puente might be.
Burns said the FBI joined the search after the arrest warrant was issued. He said there was evidence, which he refused to discuss, "that leads us to believe she is responsible" for the deaths.
Burns said detectives were "downto their last 60 square feet tobe uncovered at this location," a neat, baby-blue Victorian home with white trim on a tree-lined downtown street eight blocks from the capitol.
On Monday, the sixth and seventh bodies were discovered in shallow graves, and police said they feared more bodies may be unearthed.
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Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Daniel Starling/KANSAS*
Large power lines were blown to the ground in Topeka, blocking all traffic on West 17th Street from 17th Terrace to Wanamaker Road.
TORNADO
Light, said the storm left about 6,000 customers without electrical power. By 7 p.m., power had been restored to about 4,000 of them.
Continued from p.1
Another tornado was reported in southeast Kansas, in Neosho County, and a storm damaged parts of neighboring Montgomery County.
A tornado in Butterfield, Mo. cut a wide swath of destruction through the southwest Missouri town, demolishing houses and trailer homes.
There was one unofficial report of a fatality, but there were no immediate official reports of injuries.
■ Kansan reporters Barbaria Joseph and David Stewart contributed information to this story.
Weird weather hits state
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
Kansas residents were metaphorically blown away yesterday by unusual weather in Kansas.
Eastern Kansas enjoyed a sunny and warm weekend only to be hit by an out-of-season tornado yesterday and wintry temperatures today. Meanwhile, blizzards hit the western part of the state yesterday.
According to the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Topeka, only seven tornadoes have occurred in the state during November in the past 28 years. That figure included a small tornado that touched down in Pittsburg on Nov. 9.
Curtis Hall, instructor in meteorology, physics and astronomy, said tornadoes usually occurred in Kansas during the late spring. However, tornadoes can occur anytime the right atmospheric conditions exist.
Hall said that tornadoes could occur when a mass of warm, moist air moved up from the south of the continent and was confronted by a mass of cold air moving down from the northwest. Add strong southwesterly winds, called jet streams, and enough energy is given to the system to produce a tornado or a severe thunderstorm.
scent to produce a smell
"We knew yesterday that we were likely to have severe
weather today," Hall said.
A tornado watch was in effect for most of eastern Kansas yesterday, while western Kansas was dealing with near blizzard-like conditions that came behind the tornado front.
The tornado touched down in Topeka yesterday about 2:05 p.m.
In the west, the heavy snow and high winds closed roads and caused a number of traffic accidents. By midafternoon, Goodland and Garden City both had one inch of snow and low visibility because of blowing snow. In Liberal and Hill City, snow was falling and winds gusted at 60 miles an hour.
at 60 mins air condition. Temperatures varied throughout the state. Matt Hinkin, Manhattan senior who works at the KU weather service, said that at 1 p.m., Lawrence had a high of 76 degrees while temperatures dipped to 32 degrees in Goodland on the other side of the state.
Good luck on the other side. As the storm moves east into Iowa, so will the cold temperatures that are lagging behind it., Kansas should feel the effects of that move this week.
Hall said that Lawrence should not receive any more severe weather from this storm system. Other tornadoes are possible but not probable.
42
Daniel Sheldon/WANSA
Blue Adame, Topeka resident and custodian at Topeka West High School, breaks out broken panes of glass on the south side of the building after a tornado shattered most of the windows.
'66,'83 twisters were worse
By John P. Milburn Special to the Kansan
In each case, the Topeka area had little warning before the tornadoes hit. A May 6, 1983 twister skipped along the southern edge of town causing $7.7 million in damage.
Yesterday's tornado in Topeka was tame compared to the storms that took similar paths in 1983 and 1966.
The tornado, according to witnesses, emerged like a "finger out of the sky," then began to pick off the bodies of person died and 30 were injured.
The storm destroyed 70 homes while damaging more than 370 others. Fifty-five mobile homes also were destroyed.
also destroyed Like the smaller storms, the tornado of June 8, 1966, formed
quickly. Although officials were able to spot the tornado to give advance warning, more than $150 million in damage was done to the city.
The tornadoes took similar paths all three years, hitting the southwest part of Topeka and moving northeast.
It then began moving along a 12-mile path destroying 818 homes and damaging 938. Seventeen people were killed, 353 were injured and 85 were hospitalized. Three nurses and Topakewans were left homeless.
Washburn University was hit hard by the 1966 tornado. More than a dozen buildings were damaged or destroyed. The campus was left with $10 million in damages. Summer school was held at Topeka high schools.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 16, 1988
11
Fall tornado takes Topeka by surprise
By Deb Gruver, Barbara Joseph and David Stewart Kansan staff writers
TOPEKA — Welcome to Topeka.
That's what Phil Rosette thigh tipped yesterday after the tornado tipped over the moving van that just had delivered his furniture. Rosette had arrived from Detroit at his new home, 5800 S.W. 37th St.
Rosette first called 911, then the operator, to report the accident. He couldn't get through.
The Corrigan Moving Systems' van was on its side, punctured by trees and a fence, just 100 feet from Rosette's driveway.
"We have blizzards in Detroit," Rosette said. "This is my first tornado."
--manager, were the only ones in the store when the tornado struck and broke all of the store's front windows.
Bob Resnik, cld in Army fatigues,
stood in front of his demolished home
at 2812 S.W. Maupin Lane and com-
forted his two children.
"Remember that deck we wanted?" he asked them. "We're going to be able to get it now."
Resnik's roof was gone, the windows were broken and furniture inside the house was upside down.
Outside, orange and yellow fiberglass insulation from the walls hung in autumn-bare trees. A trailer was parked in the back of the house; a street sign lay in the yard.
Resnik's two children clustered around their mother and cried.
Around the corner at 2737 Osborne Road, James and Judy Stewart and their son Mike were sorting through their collection house they had lived in for 18 years.
--manager, were the only ones in the store when the tornado struck and broke all of the store's front windows.
The attic was gone.
On one side of the house, the upstairs bedrooms had open sky for ceilings. The Stewarts had covered walls with plastic in anticipation of more rain.
"We looked out, and the rain was so forceful it was almost straight out." Stewart said. "My husband said we should take cover, so we ran to the basement. Just as we got there, we heard a boom and glass flew. The office window exploded. It barely missed us."
When the tornado hit, a plumber
displaced the roofs of the building,
the Stewarts remodeled their house.
--manager, were the only ones in the store when the tornado struck and broke all of the store's front windows.
Jesse Long knew he was in trouble with his garage started falling in around him.
As Long picked up a boat seat that was strenuously yards away from the boat, he said that he was lucky to not hurt during yesterday's tornado.
"It about sucked my ears off."
Long said of the tornado that struck his home at 3620 S.W. Vanamaker manhasset for a trouble when I heard those winds."
He and his wife will spend the next few days salvaging what is left, picking up what they consider still valuable.
"I stung all the way through here," he said, pointing to the field where debris from his garage lay in. Where debris will just pick up what can be saved."
His mother had been downstairs and said the only clue to the tornado was the lights that kept flashing on and off.
Around 4 p.m., the Heustead's son, Ran, warned neighbors to stay away from the garage doors that were folded over like an accordion.
In another part of Topeka, Warren Heusted woke up from napping in his den to find the blown off in his house at 2807 S.W. Osborne Road.
--manager, were the only ones in the store when the tornado struck and broke all of the store's front windows.
"And I heard this horrible roar from the window well." Marian
YELLOWSTONE
Mariorie Lona. Topeka resident. survevs the damage after a tornado struck her house near S.W. 37th Street.
Heusted said.
She said she wondered why she had no heard no warning sirens in the neighborhood — a neighborhood covered in shards of concrete that hated that flown off homes.
Yesterday's tornado will warrant a rebuilt house for the Heusteds.
--manager, were the only ones in the store when the tornado struck and broke all of the store's front windows.
A steady stream of people hauled out the remains of the Severn's home at 2813 S.W. Osborne Road. Their disaster was the worst hit in Topika's灾情。
All that was left standing was the upstairs bedrooms, where clothes still hung in the closet.
Two bedspreads, one navy and one flowered, hung from the roof of the house and swaved in the wind.
Barbara Severn arrived home from her job after she had seen her brother.
"I want my rings," Severn said as she moved toward her home.
After her son Bill retrieved them, she and co-worker Laurie Lolley hugged.
Severn went upstairs and removed pictures from the walls of the house.
The tornado had provided passersby with a clear view of the inside of the Severn home.
What was left was being taken across the street to a neighbor's house.
Phil Carvalho/KANSAN
--manager, were the only ones in the store when the tornado struck and broke all of the store's front windows.
Less than two hours after tornado does struck Topka, businesses at 21st Street and Fairlawn Road were optimistic.
"We'll be open before Thanksgiving," said Carol Emmerling, assistant manager of Arby's restaurant, a chain one, of the hardest-hit businesses.
The roof of the restaurant had been torn off. A USA Today newspaper box had been uprooted and had smashed through a glass door.
But after it all, a display of drinking glasses remained standing in perfect order.
Barb Parks was working on her second day as an Arby's employee.
She said she had worried whether her children were safe. They were in Shawnee Heights, an area the tornadoes did not affect.
Barb Parks, an employee at Arby's restaurant, 5330 S.W. 21st St., inspects the damage after the tornado hit. It was Parks' second day on the job.
--manager, were the only ones in the store when the tornado struck and broke all of the store's front windows.
Catherine Gilmer, an employee at Kinney Shoes, 5200 S.W. 21st St., said that the whole situation was hard to believe.
Gilmer and Vince Rodriguez, store
Soon after disaster had struck, all was calm.
"Look at the rainbow," she said. "The sun's shining."
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Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daliv Kansan
KUEA leads Big Eight
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
The Kansas University Endowment Association leads the Big Eight and its peer schools in the value of its endowment.
its endowment.
According to the Endowment Association annual report, increased yesterday, the asset value of the association increased almost $15 million to $207,460,092.
The University of Nebraska's fund comes closest to Kansas' at $174.8 million, according to statistics compiled for 1987 endowments. At the time, KU's Endowment Association fund was worth $191,969,119.
The University of Oklahoma had the next largest endowment, at $92.5 million, followed by Kansas State University with about $73 million. The University of Colorado was next with assets of $65 million.
Oklahoma State University had an endowment of about $47 million, and Iowa State University had an endowment worth about $43 million.
The University of Missouri-Columbia reported an endowment of about $61 million, but its figures did not include other assets provided by that state's endowment system.
"KU alumni have been traditionally and consistently more generous than alumni at other Big Eight schools and even among most Big Ten schools," said Jim Martin, executive vice president of the Endowment Association.
"I think it has something to do with this community and this campus and with the quality of teaching here at KU and the way alumni are treated after they leave the Hill," he said.
KU's Endowment Association also leads its peer schools in total asset value. Peer schools are similar in size, scope and mission.
The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill reported a 1987 endowment of about $127 million, followed by Oklahoma and Colorado.
followed by Oklahoma and then the
The University of Oregon had an endowment worth
about $22 million and the University of Iowa had an
endowment of about $20 million.
endowment of about $93 million.
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association,
said several factors contributed to the association's success.
ton's success.
"First of all we are independent from the University and from political involvement. I don't know of any other university that has the same thing."
KU may have suffered a little from the stock market crash in October 1987, but recovered all of its value later.
Continued from p.1
ENDOW
"We didn't make as much money on the sale of stocks, but it depends on what you sell and when you sell it," he said.
Last year, the association made about $8 million on the sale of securities, down about $2.6 million from the previous year.
The Endowment Association also reported about a $2.2 million increase in fund raising to about $17 million.
Seymour said much of the increase was due to contributions coming in for Campaign Kansas. Pledges to Campaign Kansas, or money not yet received, were not included in the report.
Campaign Kansas is the University's five-year, $150 million fundraising drive.
The following is a listing showing how the University Endowment Association spent and paid money the last two years. The figures shown are $14,927,035 in 1888 over fiscal year 1987.
A rising endowment
Additions June 30,1988
Fund raising $17,466,827
10
Fund raising $17,466,827
Deposits $8,687,112
June 30,1987
$15,227,215
Deposits $8,687,112
Income from investments $21,446,883
Total additions $47,600,822
$23,872,195
- $7,495,065
$46,594,475
Dec.
University support $26,715,365 $23,034,209
Other expenditures $5,957,521 $5,097,528
Total expendits $32,672,866 $28,131,737
Total fund $207,460,092 $192,532,156
Source: Kansas Endowment Annual Report
KANSAN graphi
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A government-sponsored panel yesterday recommended a major overhaul of wetlands protection. The states would assume responsibility for a national goal of creating more wetlands than are being destroyed.
are being destroyed The National Wetlands Policy Forum, convened by the Conservation Foundation at the request of the Environmental Protection Agency, said the proposed goal of ending the conversion of wetlands to other uses did not mean every single parcel of marshy ground would have to be preserved, but enough wetlands should be created or restored to outweigh the losses.
on our website.
"The federal government has hundreds of wetlands rules, but there is no guiding principle, no overriding goal," said New Jersey Gov. Thomas H. Kean, who served as chairman of the forum. "The result is confusion equal to rush hour on the beltway."
The 20-member forum embraced representatives of builders, industry.
environmental groups, state and local governments and federal agencies. Its recommendations were presented as a consensus package, and Kean and others said the group would oppose attempts to pick out particular measures from the more than 100 recommendations to support or oppose.
About half the 200 million acres of marshes, swamps and other wetlands that were present in the lower 48 states when European settlement began have been converted for other uses - farms, housing developments, shopping centers, airports and everything else that humans build.
In recent decades, however, environmental benefits of wetlands have been recognized increasingly: storage of flood water, cleansing of pollution, protection of wildlife, spawning and nursing of 60 to 90 percent of the nation's commercial fish catch, recharging groundwater and controlling erosion.
Lawrence landmarks get protection City Commission establishes Historic Resources Commission
ay Derek Schmidt Special to the Kansan
The Lawrence City Commission ended more than 17 months of discussions last night by unanimously approving an ordinance to establish a Historic Resources Commission.
"This demonstrates our commitment," Commissioner Dennis Connistle said. "It demonstrates our protection of the value of a non-renewable resource."
The ordinance provides guidelines for protecting historic structures in Lawrence.
The Historic Resources Commission will comprise five members: two professionals in preservation and three members-at-large.
No one spoke in opposition to the ordinance, but several) people expressed concern about details of
its implementation.
"In my opinion, the ordinance is considerably weaker than when it was presented, and I don't think it will do what it is supposed to do," said Steve Lopes, chairman of the Lawrence Association.
Lopes questioned the process by which members had been appointed to the task force that drafted the ordinance. He said that several members were in favor of industrial growth, not economic preservation.
"I don't want balance on the Landmark Commission." Lopes said. "I want people who want to preserve houses."
preserve houses.
Mayor Bob Schumm ruled Lopes out of order when Lopes began attacking appointees by name.
Schumm said diversity had strengthened the final
product.
"If you put all proponents on a task force, then you're going to battle it out down here," Schumm said. "Then there is a greater chance you will get bogged down and have to deny the whole thing."
Commissioner Sandra Praeger said it was necessary to balance industrial growth with historic preservation.
Commissioner Mike Amyx defended the task force appointees.
The ordinance establishes an award for outstanding historical preservation to be given at least once a year. The Paul E. Wilson awards are named for a former KU professor of law who, in the early 1970s, became the first professor in the nation to teach a course in historical preservation.
Hayden asks Democrats for a meeting
The Associated Press
Louisburg to meet within the next two weeks to solicit their suggestions on budget and legislative issues.
TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden yesterday invited the two Democratic leaders of the Legislature to meet with him, noting, "It is imperative that we put partisan differences aside."
or longer gave the two Democratic leaders the choice of meeting on Nov. 23, Nov. 29 or Dec. 1.
The Republican governor asked Senate Minority Leader Michael Johnston of Parsons and House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis of
the governor, said his aide, Tom Laing.
Johnston is out of the state and had not seen the letter, said his aide, Nancy Kaul.
Barkis welcomed the invitation and most certainly would meet with
"Rep. Barkis has never turned down an opportunity to have dialogue with the governor," said Laing. "We'll see if give-and-take really means give-and-take. But it's certainly a more statesmanlike message than we're received in the past, and I'm sure it's appreciated by the citizens of Kansas."
In a statement that accompanied release of the letters of invitation by the governor's office, Hayden was quoted as saying, "The issues facing our state aren't merely Republican issues or Democratic issues; they are Kansas issues.
Hayden said that what he heard from legislative leaders would shape the recommendations he would present to the Legislature in January
Your Key to the Future is Past Experience.
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Fall'88 Business Manager University Daily Kansas Highest student position. Responsible for day to day operations of the advertising staff of the sixth largest paper in Kansas, including directing the hiring and training of a 40 person staff, sales management, newspaper production and client relations.
Spring '88 National Sales Manager University Daily Kansas Responsible for all national sales efforts, including advertising placement, sales calls, interaction with advertising agencies and rep firms, development and management of a regional sales force and implementation of cooperative advertising programs.
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Spring '87 Campus Sales Representative University Daily Kansas Responsible for sales, including planning, budgeting and campaign presentations to more than 40 active accounts. Exceeded semester quota, participated successfully in staff programs, maintained productive client relationships and expanded account list.
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Now Hiring
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Applications are available in 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. All applications must be turned in by Wednesday, November 16th at 5 p.m.. Interview appointments will be available upon completion of application.
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Sports
13
KU women to open basketball season tonight
By Ken Winford
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team underwent a major overhaul after winning its second consecutive Big Eight Conference tournament last year.
The exhibition game begins at 7 p.m. at Allen Field House.
With eight new faces on the team, the Jayhawks will find out just what they have under the hood tonight in their games. They are the Australian Junior Olympic Team.
Kansas coach Marian Washington said the Jayhawks were ready to play outside competition.
"Everybody is excited about playing the game," Washington said. "Anytime you have chance to play a game like this it's going to help you, and you're going to use us to take a good look at where we are and at what we need to do."
The Australian team, after an 83-55
loss to Stanford, has improved its play in the past two games of its U.S. tour.
Australia held a 17-point lead against California at Berkeley before losing 65-63. Drake needed a 19-foot jumper at the buzzer to beat the Australians, 66-65, Saturday in Des Moines, Iowa.
Kansas assistant coach Kevin Cook said the Australians would be prepared to play a tough game.
"Right now they are probably a little down after giving up a 17-point lead against Cal-Berkley and losing at the buzer to Drake," he said. "But they are a very tough and a difficult game, and the games except one and I think if Stanford stays healthy, they'll make it to the Final Four."
Cook said the Australian player to watch was guard Shelly German. The 6-foot-1 shooting guard, who was a member of Australia's Olympic
As a team, we want to make a commitment to working hard for 40 minutes and staying together as a team. We're not interested in peaking tomorrow. The key is to keep working hard and continue to improve every game.'
Marian Washington
Kansas women's basketball coach
"Gorman is a three-point shooter deluxe." Cook said "she's the key." When she makes it clear, she'll be looking to put it up. The other players on the floor will hit the
"But Coach Washington has the (Kansas) team ready to play. They are anxious and excited about getting the season underway."
boards hard.
Joining Gorman in the Australian starting line-up will be 6-3 center, Lucille Hamilton; 6-2 forward, Anne Heller; and 5-1 guard, Jennifer Muller and 5-5 point guard. Becquerel Muller
Washington said the Jayhawks were taking the Australian team seriously.
Coming off the bench for coach Trevor Cook's team is Natasha Bargeau. The 6-foot forward has scored in double figures in all three of Australia's exhibition games and she had nine rebounds against Drake.
"From what we've heard, Australia is a very physical team," she said. "We are going to try to keep pressure on the basketball, run the floor and block out, which are all things we'll have to do the entire season. We are
also going to have to maintain our poise."
Washington said she hadn't decided on a starting line-up for tonight's game.
One player most likely to play an important role for the Jayhawks is junior guard Lisa Braddy.
"Whoever I start (Wednesday) night won't necessarily start on Saturday night (in the Kansas alumni game)" she said. "I expect to see a lot of us in pre-conference schedule until I can get a better feel for where we are."
Braddy, who averaged almost 10 points a game and set a Kansas single-season record assist with 207 last season, was one of five players in the preseason all-conference team in a poll taken by the Big Eight coaches.
Joining Braddy on the team was Oklahoma State's Cinette Jordan, Colorado's Bridget Turner, Amy Ske
phens of Nebraska and Oklahoma's Jo Mosley.
Colorado and Nebraska finished tied for first in the preschool poll with 45 points. Oklahoma State and Missouri were tied for third, followed by Kansas, Iowa State, Oklahoma and Kansas State.
"We were picked fifth in the poll, which is fine." Washington said. "My job as coach is to help us keep our goals in mind. Our ultimate goal is to contend in the Big Eight Conference. If we finish better than fifth, that's great, but we're going to make the best out of this season that we can."
Washington said that as the Jayhawks become more familiar with each other, they have become more comfortable with Washington's system.
"They are doing a good job concentrating on what is being asked of them," she said.
19
Sophomore linebacker Curtis Moore leads the Big Eight Conference with 144 tackles this season.
Player is defense leader
By Jeff Euston Kansan sportswriter
Moore has most tackles in Big Eight
As the anchor of a Kansas defense that has been down this season, sophomore Curtis Moore stands tall.
As a redshirt freshman last season, Moore led the Jayhawks with 10 tackles and was selected by the team as comer of the year in the Big Eight.
Moore, a 6-foot-1, 225-pound inside linebacker from Wichita, leads the Big Eight Conference with 144 tackles.
His 247 career tackles already are more than any player in Kansas history has made during his first two seasons. He now is 16th among Kansas' all-time tackling leaders.
Kansas State coach Stan Parrish called Moore "the heart and soul of the Kansas defense," and Missouri coach Woody Widenhofer said. "He is one of the best defensive players (in the conference)." moved by such
His performance this season has made an impression throughout the conference.
But Moore isn't moved by such praise.
"I really don't think much about
it," said Kansas, who tied the Kansas single-game mark for tackles in a game with 25 against Colorado on Oct. 15. "Those are elements from those guys, but right now I don't even think about it.
"Maybe after the season I'll look back and say that I did some things well. But I just try to concentrate on what we need to do this week to win."
Moore, who made the team as a walk-on at defensive back in 1986, said Kansas was the only school that showed interest in him when he left Wichita Northwest High School to play Kansas for an opportunity to play football and he has been somewhat surprised by his success.
"Curtis Moore has been a real steady performer for us." Mason said. "He's had a lot of tackles and he doesn't have a good supporting cast around him. He's got a very experienced defensive line in front of him and a lot of pressure
"I really didn't expect it," he said. "Anytime you walk on, you just do it because you want to play football and see what you can do. You don't really think about those types of goals. And I still don't. I just try to go out there and do my job."
Moore, as one of the few experi-enced Kansas defenders, has been relied upon heavily, Kansas coach Glen Mason said.
"I really don't feel the pressure," he said. "The only pressure I feel from me. I just try to help the young guys out. They're learning as they go and they're doing a really good job."
Being thrust into the role as a leader on defense obviously hasn't affected Moore's performance.
has been put on him. He's had a good year."
"I've increased that every year, and I'd do the same this year," said Moore, who is down almost 10 pounds from the start of the season.
He said he also would like to get heavier and stronger during the off-season.
Moore is looking to improve next year.
Despite the frustrations of a 1-9 season, Moore said he was optimistic about the Jayhawks' future.
"I think we're headed in the right direction. There's no doubt we'll be better next year."
“This year obviously hasn’t been the best year,” he said. “But I think there’s been some real noticeable changes, such as excitement and playing hard and playing aggressive. We haven’t always come out on top, but I think the fans see the change.
Former coach found guilty of cheating on income taxes
The Associated Press
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Former coach Dana Kirk, who parlayed his basketball success at Memphis State into lucrative business deals, was conspiring to push on his income taxes and trying to intimidate a grand jury witness.
"I have never shot, raped or robbed," Kirk said after a U.S. District Court jury announced its case. He am not a criminal and was never arrested and had opportunity to look at my taxes and say pay this and pay that."
Kirk, 53, faces up to 24 years in prison and fines of $275,000. A sentencing hearing is expected in 30 days after the conviction by the federal probation office
Kirk took over a struggling basketball program at Memphis State in 1979 and led the Tigers to the NCAA's Final Four in 1985. He was fired by September 1986 shortly before he was indicted by a $100 grand jury.
"I'm thoroughly, thoroughly disap-
pared. I'm never thought it would go to this."
Kirk's trial began Sept. 12 and he was accused by government witnesses of accepting money collected by boosters for athletes, of selling basketball tickets for up to five times their face value and of seeking personal payments from promotors of college basketball tournaments.
Former All-American Keith Lee, now with the New Jersey Nets of the National Basketball Association, said Kirk paid him $400 to $600 a month for four years. Lee said he also got $500 a month for a year from Tiger boosters and his mother got $6,200 from Kirk.
Kirk had many promotional deals and other business arrangements that pushed his annual income to almost $300,000, witnesses said. His coaching salary at Memphis State ranged from $35,000 to $62,500.
He was charged with understating his income by a total of $162,000 in 1982 and 1983.
Kirk was convicted on one count of obstruction of justice, one count of income tax evasion and three counts of filing false tax statements. He was charged with two counts of false statement charge and two obstruction of justice charges.
U. S. Attorney Hickman Ewing Jr. said the amount of money Kirk owed in back taxes would be assessed by the Internal Revenue Service and would be unaffected by the jury's verdict.
Kirk said the jury was confused by the complexity of the government's case, but Ewing disagreed.
"The jury thoroughly understood the case. They gave him the benefit of the doubt. They gave him more than he deserved." Ewing said.
The government called 54 witnesses for the trial while the defense summoned two, a bank teller and Kirk's wife, Ann.
Kirk said he did not testify because he thought he had won the case.
Kirk said his tax problems were caused by mistakes and his wife said she was responsible for keeping up with the family finances. She said she was so inapt she had trouble filling out bank deposit slips.
Kirk said he would meet with his lawyers to discuss an appeal. The lawyers declined comment.
"I felt confident everything would be not guilty," he said.
"You're guilty of one and not guilty of the other and both are in essence the same thing," he said.
Kirk was indicted by a grand jury investigating sports bookmaking in the Memphis area and the charges against him were unrelated to gambling.
Ewing said the grand jury investigation led to an examination of Kirk's finances and investigators were surprised to find he had more than $550,000 in certificates of deposit at a Memphis bank.
Kirk declined to discuss the current condition of his finances.
"That's none of your business," he said.
**MAGE:** The Kansas men's basketball team will play an intrasquad scrimmage at 7:30 on Friday at Kansas City, Kan., Community College.
This is the final scrimmage of the season for the Jayhawks. On Saturday, Kansas plays an exhibition game at University Field, National Team at Allen Field Houses.
Sports Briefs
The Jayhawks open the regular season Nov. 25 against the University of Alaska at Anchorage in the Great Alaskan Shootout.
OGDEN WINS CHAMPIONSHIP:
Kansas golfer John Ogden shot a 64-53 to tie the game under par and win the individual championship of Miami Sun and Fun Collegiate Golf Tournament yesterday in Miami, Fla.
It was the first collegiate tournament victory for Ogden, a junior who
redshirted last year after lettering his first two seasons.
Andrew Rice of Central Florida finished second at 217.
Ogden fired a four-under-par 68 during the first round Sunday and followed that with rounds of 73 and 71 in his par 72 Lillehammer Golf Course.
Central Florida, which led Kansas by two strokes before the first two rounds, won the 17-team tournament with an 875 total.
The Jayhawks finished second with 881.
Kansas senior John Snoovic finished 10th individually with a 221. Jeff Johnson was 12th with a 223.
KANSAS VOLLEYBALL LOSES: The Nebraska volleyball team defeated Kansas 15-6, 15-7 and 15-8 last night in Lincoln, Neb.
The loss dropped the Jayhawks'
LEONARD GIVES UP TITLES:
record to 5-22 and 1-9 in the Big Eight Conference. The fifth-ranked Corn huskers are 24-4 and 10-1 in the league.
Kansas' last home match is tomor row night against Kansas State.
LEONARD GIVES UP TITLES
Sugar Ray Leonard relinquished the World Boxing Council light heavyweight and super middle-weight titles yesterday, but did not say he was retiring.
In a letter sent to WBC president Jose Sulaiman of Mexico, Leonard said, "Since I don't know my present plans concerning the continuation of my boxing career I have decided to give up both titles."
WBC rules would not allow Leonard to hold both titles, which he won by stopping Donny Lalonde in the ninth round. Nov 7 at Las Vegas.
Gibson is most valuable in NL Dodgers left fielder defeats Strawberry for honor
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Los Angeles Dodgers left fielder Kirk Gibson, who inspired the Dodgers in the clubhouse and carried them at the plate, was named the National League Most Valuable Player yesterday.
Gibson drove in only 76 runs, the fewest battles-binned by an MVP since Pete Rose in 1973, but did enough to finish comfortably ahead of Darryl Strawberry of the New York Mets. Orel Hershiser, the play-off and World Series MVP, finished a distant sixth.
"I'm not a numbers person. I never set goals to hit this number or get so many RBIs," Gibson said from his home in Michigan. "The intangibles obviously were taken into consideration and that makes me feel good."
"Winning the MVP was never my goal. But I'm happy that so many people had the opinion that I had that much impact on our winning," he said, as we us to become world champs. That's what makes this that much sweeter.
Mets with the other four first-place votes.
Jason received 13 first-place votes and finished with 272 points. Strawberry had seven first-place votes, followed by Kevin McReynolds of the
Strawberry led the league with 39 home runs, was second with 101 RBI and batted 299. McKeynolds hit 288 with 27 home runs and 99 RBI.
McReynolds said, 'Whether I finished first or didn't qualify with one vote, that didn't matter to me.
"Eventually, one day I'm going to be appreciated," Strawberry said. "I have no reason to feel down about it." The team has a good record, I will team. I'll always believe in that.
"He (Gibson) helped turn the team around and played a leadership role. I'm not disappointed at all. I'm just happy to be mentioned."
"Kirk Gibson meant a lot to the Dodgers, and me and McMeynolds meant a lot to the Mets. At a time when the New York Mets were struggling and no one was hitting, I was the only one hitting for two months."
Pittsburgh's Andy Van Slyke was fourth in the voting, followed by San Francisco's Will Clark and Hershiser.
Two members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America in each league city voted prior to the postseason. The American League MVP will
be announced todav
Gibson hit 290 with 25 home runs and stole 31 bases in delivering what he promised — a championship to the Dodgers.
All four hitters who finished behind Gibson had better statistics. Van Slyke hit 288 with 25 home runs and 173 with 164. RBI with 198 and RBI and 29 home runs.
But Gibson gave the Dodgers the drive they needed to rebound from their first consecutive sub-500 finishes since 1967-68.
The left fielder was the symbol of their determination, never more evident than in the World Series. Unable to start because of hambram and knee injuries, he impeded to the plate and hit a two-run, pinch-home run off Oakland's Dennis Eckersley with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning that won Game 1. That was Gibson's only at-bat of the Series.
Gibson, often plagued by injuries in the past, played 150 games during the regular season, the second-most of his nine full years in the majors. Gibson hit 28 doubles and was fourth in the NL with a .377 on-base percentage and ninth with a .483 slugging percentage.
---
14
Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Must be doing something right!
My friend tried some new place. Its behind-the-counter people pushed some just-as-good markdown. Feet hurt with every shot. The shoes? They're history. So's the store.
My friend and I went out for a little basketball last year. Just a pick up game, mind you, but serious enough for new shoes. Thought we knew what we wanted.
Steve G. Brown, chairman of the Communications Board and Kansas City, Mo., senior, said yesterday that board members were working on the two projects to increase communication between Senate and students at the university first, establishing representatives in housing groups, would increase students' awareness of Senate activities.
I tried that place in the 700 block, west side.* Sales help took a while. Asked questions. Thought that kinda personal, but from all those brands, one sure fit. Comfort on down the floor. Outshot my friend, too, who's going with me this time. That store's still there
Senate implementing steps to improve communication
A Student Senate board plans to improve interaction between senators and their constituents by establishing liaisons in housing groups and by conducting surveys.
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
Brown said the board planned to incorporate scholarship halls and Greek organizations by asking them to elect a representative. The board also would contact residence hall assistants and directors and ask them to elect someone from each floor of their halls. Those would act as liaisons between the organization and Senate.
"This network would set up two-way communications between living groups and Senate," Brown said. "It's a very important role."
Brook Menees, student body president and Overland
Another project the board will work on is a survey of students' opinions about Senate issues. The survey would ask about 280 students how they felt about a specific Senate bill, program or activity.
The representatives wouldn't be required to attend Senate meetings. Meneses said, but Senate might send them.
"We would like the opportunity to let students know how bills are passed and what activities and clubs they could get involved with," Menees said. "I know there are a lot of different things that this would be a great way to get them more involved."
Brown said that in the past, student senators had no way of knowing how their constituents felt about a particular issue. He would like to have the first survey done before the end of the fall semester.
Neal Cohen, Lawrence senior and board member, said the survey would be conducted by phone.
*Francis Sporting Goods. Its experienced sales staff's been selling sporty things to sporty people since 1947.
Board to discuss new manager
Park senior, said many students were unaware of the function Senate served at KU. By establishing a network of personnel, Senate could easily pass information to the student body.
By Jeremy Kohn Kansas staff writer
The governing board for KJHK, the KU student-run radio station, will meet today to discuss how and when next semester's station manager will be selected.
Kansan staff writer
Applications for the position were due yesterday. A new station manager usually is hired every semester.
Mike Mader, spokesman for The Committee Representing Students that KJHK Serves, spoke last night at a committee-sponsored forum. The public meeting, attended by about 50 at the Kansas Union, criticized the station's management and discussed this semester's format changes.
Welcome to our team, we're up to your game!
The committee includes former and current staff members who want the station to play progressive music.
Must be doing something right!
- with answers.
The proposal includes these items:
■ re-establishment of the station's overnight and operational areas.
- cooperation among the station's management, staff and other students to seek new music from small and independent record companies.
The proposal includes these items:
■ establishment of a new grievance policy for students who claim to have been discriminated against because of music philoshophy, sex, race or religion.
Jerry Howard, station manager and Topoka graduate student, said after the meeting that additional managers were not needed, that the station received enough albums to a general grievance rule for staff already existed.
The board comprises Mike Kautsch, chairman and dean of journalism; John Kaitch, assistant professor of journalism, radio and television; Max Utsler, chairman of radio and television; Jerry Howard, station manager; Janet Cinelli, student representative for the broadcast sequence; and Dawn Abrahamson, Student Senate representative.
"It asks the board to make a commitment for alternative music," he said.
However, Mader said the proposal was needed to improve the station.
Cinelli said the board would meet in 104 Stauffer-Flint Hall at 3:30 p.m. today.
Many died with their eyes wide and their mouths open as if frozen in a final gasp.
Holocaust film spurs realization
Hauughty S.S. saults men wearing skull and cross-bone pins ordered other dying prisoners to be muddled bodies into mass graves.
Bernstein's 'A Painful Reminder' was filmed in 1945 to record and verify the horrors of Nazi concentration camps. The film was rented by the Jewish student organization Hilel and shown to an audience of about 35 at 7:30 last night in the Kansas Union.
By Mark E. McCormick Kansan staff writer
Bones jutted from emaciated skeletons.
Andrea Katzman, Lawrence sophomore, said the 69-minute film graphically depicted the conditions in some of the Nazi death camps in an attempt to spur apathetic people into action.
"I had learned about the Holocaust since I was a little kid. Ive read books about it and I ve taken a couple of courses, and I thought it couldn't be anymore inhuman," Katzman said. "Then each time I saw the film, I saw that it was even worse than I could ever imagine."
"They had no compassion for these people at all," said Sidney Bernstein in the opening of his documentary about the atrocities of the Holocaust. "It was very much to me to remember what they had done, to make them realize the enormity of what they had done."
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Grieving and Loss: The University Counseling Center is offering an information and support group for individuals who have experienced a life-threatening illness. The loss may be due to a life threatening illness, death, relationship break up, job loss or a signifi- cant of the illness. Wednesdays from 4:45pm. Contact Dr. Gary Price. 16 Bailey Hall, phone 841-8931 if you would like to join the group or if you have questions about the
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NEW IKEB 2 bedroom apt gt Waspster, driver and microwave included. On bus route. Available Jaxon. $750.00
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 16, 1988
15
2 bedroom duplex for lease, on bus route,
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Room available at semester very near campus.
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NOW RENTING
1 Bedroom Apartment Paid Water & Gas, Patio Laundry Facilities
3 Bedroom Town House
Fireplace, Carpet, Patio
Washer/Dryer Hookups
On KU. Bus
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 814-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 182 bedroom units
* Laid furniture
* On bus route-near shopping
* Water paid
* Some with gas paid
* Ample off-street parking
* Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 66044
913 - 843 - 8559
Convenience...
Luxury...
Privacy...
All these Advantages and more!
Naismith Hall...These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hassle-free living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all your worries.
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
For information and a tour come by or call today!
FOR SALE
2 IBM MagCard Typewriter/Word Processor.
Good condition $175 each/$300 for both. Call anytime 843-9356.
2 OU Nebraska game tickets, Nov. 19 in Norman.
Call John between 7-8 pm. Best offer excepted.
841-1780.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture picture frames. An eclectic collection of handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, music boxes, vintage clothing, album covers, image clothing, vintage jewelry, art deco prints. Art deco. Art deco. Art deco.
advertising items, clocks, watches, deks, anti- tools, Royal Doulton, and more stuff much quieter. **MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sat.** 10 a.m. To be rental info 842-686-1134.
AUDIO SALE- Cassette deckes. Teac, JVC. Sony from $75 - $130. Must sell. 841-9448.
400. Sell for $30. CD player 60. 749-8989
Comic books, Playmates, Pbysetts, etc., Max's
Comics 10.1 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun
10-51
For Sale: Lowrey electric organ. Python snakeskin boots. Larry 843-9034
**FREE information on New KPa Police Photo radar.** NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE $8.00 on the REL VECTOR 3 radar detector that detects explosives. ENTERPRISE, O.P. Box 274, Larking Ks.6043
GOVT SURPILLS! New G.I. Overheads, Com-
munity Hospital, St. Louis. Flock JD's,
switches, & miters) Field JD's, Vaccines.
Cammage Clothing *Also CARHARTT*
Clothing 12 *Also CARHARTT*
Chairman 12 *Also CARHARTT*
Chairman 12 *Also CARHARTT*
Mary Surpills SAiel *Sister*
SAiel *Sister*
Go to Miami, Fl for Thanksgiving and or Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for a discount price. Round 749-5733 after 6:00 pm for more info.
HM Correcting Selective II w extra ribbons, off tape, and three type balls. Digitally duped disk drive 300k Rpm to drive 830k Rpm to drive 300k Rpm. Call Zoe at 843-360-2195 or Rootford Forgate 443 plates. Boots-510, Rockford Forgate 643 plates. Obtain CNR. Price to Sell. Call Ruiz 843-887-6216. MAC with dual drive. Imagewriter, mouse, and
software, $1200 OBO. 864-2543 nights.
Naismith Hall contract for sale. Will pay deposit.
Now showing, Figi Graphics newest southwestern art. catch the new wave at New Wave Futons 11 East sth 584 723-778
Pevey Mystic electric guitar, excellent condition $300 and Crate G-40e amp, almost new, $200,
841-7587
Rock-n-roll - Thousands of used and rare albums in a m a m ever Saturday and Sunda Quantrill's F S 10. P A-102 stereo preamplifier with warranty. New $49 sell $20. Must see to appreciate. Many
Sleep with the best. A cotton Topton for $88. Only
10% of customers who buy this package Tandy External 5.25" disk drive $110 Save $150 Program disks available. Call Alan @242-7699.
Trumper Bundle with case, excellent condi-
tion, and warranty. See details at www.
trumpers.com
WATERBED Queen with six drawer pedestal
Low mileage Bargain! $150. 843-1551.
AUTO SALES
1974 Dodge Maxivan, 87,000 miles runs great. $750 on best offer. 841-1955.
1976 Olds, Omega, 35kc, cruise, tilt, rdolog, AM/FM, Pstr, Pbrk, Pwnd, runs super, 160K mj, 750 KOB, 843-232 eves, wknd
177. Ford Mavier谋, new tires, auto-matric. p.s.b.
197. air, $2,900 miles, dependable, ode 643-5688.
1880 Toyota Terracel f.2d, 5 speed, ACD, stereo 718.
Excellent condition, $1000-$1400. 718-6968.
1981 Toyota Tercel. AM/FM cassette, good condition, no rust, $1350 or best offer. @842-2219.
ton, no rust, $135 or best offer. #842-2199
GOVERNMENT SEized Vehicles from 1200
Farms. Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevys. Surplus
Is It True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government? Get the facts today! Call 1-312-742-1142 Ext. 3204.
LOST-FOUND
LOST: Maroon glasses with a maroon snap case 841-217. Could be anywhere.
LOST: Plastic wallet pack of pictures. Union? Wescoc? HELP. Sentimental value. 749/7490 ask for Lisa.
Whomever found my L.D.'s and called me, please return them now! 'M. Carlson.
HELP WANTED
APARTMENT LEASING: Challenging position for outgoing person with good customation relation skills and sales experience. Part-time position, work around school and work around class schedule, BZ3111.
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $105K. Entry level positions.
(1) 853 769 4000 Ext. A-9738
Cottonwood, inc. has staff positions open in the Residential Program. Currently Bring Resident Children to Work on a Weekday or weekday fillings for above minimum wage. If interested please fill out an application at 260-794-1300.
new positions are now open at the Adams Adam Center. Applicants must be available to work from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., bartenders, & hostesses are needed. Approach at 1296 Oak Avenue E.O.E.
*Alternation: Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above are avail- ing salary. Apply between 2/5 *1618 W. 23rd*
DJ/Producer for KLZR 8am/3pm. 30 m/wk/jw.
Previous experience required. Letter or resume
to Mr. Lee, P O Box 3907, Lawrence, Ks. 66446
Calendar Assistant - Half-time student hourly position. Deadline: November 18. Contact Nora Cieland, University Relations 864-3256
GOVNEMENT JOBS $10.04-$59.23/jw. Now
$69.23-857-6007 Ex R758
for current Federal list.
GOVERNANCE NEEDD for 2 small children ages
36.1:7am to 8:09pm weekly in my home.
Reliable car necessary. Call after 6:09pm
weekly, anytime weeksends: 841-8484.
Help Wanted. Part-time day and evening help and delivery drivers. Start at 8:30 hr. Apply in person only at Border Bandido 1528 W. 23rd.
Office of Study Abroad announces a full-time, free student program for the fall semester beginning January 4, 1989. Responsibilities include office accounting, study abroad student financial assistance programs, for required qualifications and a more extensive curriculum. Study Abroad Deadline for applications: November 25, 1986. Contact person: Nancy Milti-Adams, Office of Study Abroad.
Immediate openings with flexible hours for cashier at Farmers Co-op Association convenience store. See June in person, 23rd and Haskell.
November 20, 1986 Contact person: study anlyt-
Assistant, Director of Study, Office of Study Ar-
dward. 212ippott Hall, University of Kansas.
Lawrence. Kansas 69455 EOA Employee.
Lawrence. Kansas 69455 EOA Employee.
NAMIES need to live and work in the exciting Washington, D.C. area. Must be responsible, mature and enjoy working with children. Good salary and benefits. Your minimum. For more information visit www.namies.org.
*Chicago* toddler $30/week
*Dallas* 2-children $18/week
*Denver* newborn $5/week
*New York* newborn $25/week
*Philadelphia & Europe* $20/week
Junior women. Consider a commission in the Marine Corps. See Lieutenant Milburn at 925 Iowa Street, Suite 108.
Up to $40 per week *Position nets* nationwide; East,
West, South, Midwest. 1 year commitment
| 1:800-723-4533 | National Nanny Resource and
Referral.
1 year commitment. Many positions available Call 1-897-923-NAI1
NANNY OPPORTUNITIES
OVERSEAS JOBS. $900-$2500 mo. Summer, round All Countries. All fields. Free info. Write LJC PO B$ 92 KS14 Corona Del Mar, CA 9252
Part-time position weeks at Naishtim Hall food service which include breakfast cook, restaurant manager, and kitchen benefits and flexible hours. If you need the money and experience come to Naishtim Hall's Lobby desk and fill out an application before vacancy.
behind. EOC, OCC.
Part-time workers - Paula Plastic is examining
part-time production shifts. 4 m.p.m-8,
m.a.12 noon, 12 noon-4p., 4 p.m.m-8,
8 p.m.12 midnight, 12 midnight-4a.
4 p.m.8-a.m. Mon-Fri. For a minimum of
20 hours/wk. starting with 8 a.m. br. If interested
Part-time office assistant. 75% time.
Demonstrated work processing ability on Word
and Excel. Participated in Accuracy and dependability Enrolled at KC.
Prefer yearly clinical experience. Be assigned to
school internships. Job Done by Johannang.
Beach Center On Families & Disability.
419 Hirsch Hall 6045. Application deadline
Part-time time audit auditor needed 8 a.m. to noon 6 days per week. Must be dedicated, dependable, and a self-starter. Computer experience must be. Send resume. 165, 119
www.kent.edu
Staying in town over break? Need $$$ Love kids? Apply to Children Learning Center 313 Main for teacher aid position. Flexible hours, $3.50 per hrs.
RESORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines, & Amusement Parks. Send resume to AMUSEMENTS, internship and career positions. For more information and an application, write national College Recreation Service; PO Box 25137, Seattle, WA 98109.
SUMMER JOURS OUTDOORS Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Creeks Stamp For Free Details 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59809.
Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for Day & late night shifts. Above avg, starting salary. Apply between 2.5-1618 W. 32rd
TAO JOHNs - now bring Day & Evenings apply
all 13 locations 1065, Masse 1028, Wr 121, or 110
W. 6th, mature, responsible persons need only
apply. Apply between 2.5 pm.
MISCELLANEOUS
On TVs, VCRs, Jewelry, Stereo, Musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Visa/M.C.E.M.A. J.-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry. 1804 W. 769. 8th-1919
BUY. SELL. LOAN CASH.
Ine way ticket from Chicago to KCI on Nov. 26.
55 Call Debra 841-3361.
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.
PERSONAL
BT- What happened? Where did you go? No one answered. Check with Mrs. C. You know how to get hold of me.
D. B. Congratulations in Atlanta. Hope you enjoyed your homecoming. You were missed. Love, M.J.
Heather, if I had left you a flower it certainly would have been red. Hope to see you soon. Kent. J.L.V. It's that time of year again. Congratulations. I love you later.
MAX U. HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
EVERY LOVE YOU GOOD!
JOEY, I LOVE YOU VERY MUCH! SAND
DUNE.
ed. And you never promise. Yours, P J or S
Pat Bone. How was dinner? Sorrow for the
just (tusset) Let's meet for a beer. Jazzwhun
17th. 8.30 Wear -红. R-R
P.J. What about the shower? Maybe! I love you!
Forever, MENE
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat shy,
looking for friendly, sincere, nice SWF, 21:30.
P. O. P. Box 422 943, Lawrence, KS. 66444.
Photo articulated.
To my "low-eyed" Teddy Bear: This first month is just the beginning, babe. I Love You! - Your Cinnamon Girl.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY CHRISTI
JOHNSON
GREAT DEAL! Before you leave for Thanksgiving or Christmas break, be sure to have your oil changed, the radiator flushed and have those trees rotated and spin balanced. These are important to keep your space airy and go anywhere. Phillips 66 wants to get acquainted by offering you these and more services for only $10, just to get to know you, and you. It is a great gift. Philips W, F, W (12am-11am) or T, H, T (12am-11am).
BUS. PERSONAL
Government Photos, Passport, immigration,
vies Modeling, theatrical, Advanced fine art
portraits. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
artistic future. Tum Sorell 795-1611.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 941-2316
FALL Line ski & Snowboard Tuning
Complete tuning & repair. Home pickup and delivery. Certified Tech. Call 842-5202.
Love.
THE COMIC CORNER
Camalla, Amy & Amy
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
dependent, 2 children with $25 deductible only
$65.66 month. With parent slightly higher. Kansas
Insurance Service #82-1161.
SCOLLAMOID $25 NITE FORTE 12 Ten couy log cabin GAMERoom (fireplaces, HOI, pool table, sama gameroom, fireplace), HOI, pool table, sama Creek, MOUNTAIN LAKES, GAMERoom, SCOLLAMOID, GLADSTONE, Brookshire reservations. GLADSTONE, Lakes CO.
COTTON TIGHTS
THE UMBRELLA
THE COMIC CORNER
NE corner of 23rd & Iowa *841-4294*
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
plain.
ribbed.
stretch lace
Paying too much for car insurance because of Your Age?
For that personal touch Gateway Insurance
BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
EAST 8TH
749-0334
Had a few tickets?
Need an SR-22?
GATEWAY
INC.
923 N. 2nd.
842-7841
SPRING BREAK '89
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND. TX
STEAMBOAT. CO
DAYTONA BEACH. FL
MUSTANG ISLAND. TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND. SC
Don't Wait Until It's Too
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
1-800-321-5911
Wednesday
BREWING
Up & Under 401 North 2nd
SERVICES OFFERED
Boudet Portraits are still the greatest gift idea.
Setting includes glamourized make-up and full
possession assistance. For more information call
Mike or Gracie collect 1-299-3789.
DRIVER EDUCATION education tild midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749
Friend or family of a gay or lesbian? Need to talk? For a Free, confidential referral to Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling. Call KU info at 843-506 and HQ at 841-235. Sponsored by GLOSK.
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling; For free, concen-
dation, 24 hour referrals, call KU info at
843560 or Headquarters at 841-2345. Sponsored "GLOSK."
K.U. INFORMATION CENTER 864-3506. Camps, community events, University procedures.
SUICIDE/CRISIS HELP, referrals 24 hr/day.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
serviced within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $60.00. Art & Design Building,
Room 206. 864-4757
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
math tutor - Master's in math and six years teaching education. Call Alex at 841-7646.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services. Contacted Dr.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park ...(913) 491-6878
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-6821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Questions or concerns about the KANSAN? Need to make a correction? Call 864-4810
Student groups: use full color copies to advertise your activities. Call 864-3244 days for details.
Very experienced Spanish 100-216 fm
Courses offered by the craft model make Espanol easy even .914, 857-0411
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Todd Cohen, editor Michael Horak, managing editor
Plastic Laminating
1-1.000 pages. No 2-2.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctated, gramatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-263, days or evenings
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Huiy. 847-2954 or Lisa. 841-1815
2 Smart Typesetting. Dissertations. Thesis,
Paper, Resumes and more. Spelled correcting
and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts.
Low typing prices. 749-2740.
Howell Creative Studios 1203 iowa 842-9289 corner of Orchard Lane & Iowa 1 BLK south of Capitol Fed.
842-4868 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10am.
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses,
dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates
841-8633.
Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters. (up to 25 inches wide)
ACT NOW - Papers, resumes, & cover letters.
WRITING LIFELINE 814.3469
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc., IBM correcting Selective, spelling corrected. 843-9534
Toyota
Quality Service
ATTEN MEADWBOKROOK RESIDENTS. Word processing service available near you. APA format experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak, 843-6708.
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience Call evenings before 10.749.1961
Oil Change Service
- Genuine Toyota filter, up to 5 quarts.
estate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence.
Mrs. Mattila 841-129
PEACE TYPING
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-419. In Topeka. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer.
Call R.J.'s Triage Service 814-9492. Term paper, dissertation, letters. Donna's Quality Training and Word Processing term papers, dissertations, letters. Laura Spencer corrected, 842-7247. Lauren Printer. Spelling corrected, 842-7247.
$14.95
Toyota vehicles only, coupon required
Expert Typist: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203.
IRON FENCE TYPING. 841-8583
TYPNING/WORD PROCESSING. Do more on computer, saved touk for easy corrections/changes Letter-Quality Program. Legal exp. Laura. 423.738. Leave Message.
Any repairs or maintenance performed in our shop.
exo 121/88
29th & Iowa 842-2191
THREE HITTER
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 729½
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
© 841-9229 or 841-2279
SPEEEDTERM Word Processing Service. Accurate and reliable, spelling checked. Call 843 2276.
TOYOTA QUALITY
WHO COULD ASK FOR ANYTHING MORE?
ELLENA
TEAM TOYOTA
***Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 841-011- Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday Typing word processing on p. L q Printer. Term *Barrara*, thesis, dissertation. minc. Barbara 842-210
THEWORDEROCTOS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these, resumes, commercial, IBM PC, MAC, CAF Docs, dot matrix, data拉斯. Since 1983 843-147
VORD PROCESSING Efficient. Accurate. Also writing tutorials. Writing Calm. A424-87208.
word processing HIM Okiada printer. $125.00
space paid. Call before 5pm. 740-1980.
WANTED
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse. $ rent/utilities, bus route, fireplace, pool, washer/driver (Drave 749-998)
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1 You will be asked to call 843-7277 on bus route $190.00 + $匀仗ites. Bake roommate needed to share house Rent $150.0 + $匀仗ites. Furnished VCKR suite. Call 843-7277 for campus. Campus Bake Roommate 843.7290 ask, for Scout Nomine working time help. apply in person Mr. Nomine not working time help. apply in person Mr.
Female roommate wanted second semester to
assume lease on large 2-bedroom apartment
$810.00/month + 1_½ utilities. Close to campus and
downtown. Joelle J43.23.24
Female roommate for Spring Semester. Good living arrangements very close to campus. Call 643-2725
Female roommate wanted for Spring semester
House on Ohio - 1 bedroom for rent. $210 a month.
All utilities paid. Call 842-3699. Leave Message
Joe needed to share beautiful new town-
Private room and bath with all amenities. On bus route, reasonable rent. 749-7295
Male of Female roommate wanted to save giant 2 BR apt. 1, bath. wash(dryer, pool, huge balcony, on bus route. $73/mo (negotiable). utilities. Garyi 841-9677
Second Semester Female Roommate wanted $180 and t2 utilities. Walking distance or bus route. Call 842-7885.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN Classified Information
Mail-In Form
Roommate wanted *George府宅* APARTMENT 280
bought *mat - 4 months - util. Calm at t11-1600*
*room - 3 bedrooms - subway*
Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment Great location
blocks from campus & close to downtown $150
per month. Move in immediately.
Policy
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Prepaid Order Form Ads
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
Words set in Bold Font count as 3 words.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Funds are ad免费 for three days, no more than 15 words.
Resident or any advertisement.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Gives 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.
- Deadlines
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 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Deadline for cancellation is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
Classified Rates
| Words | 1 Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 2 Weeks | 3 Weeks | 1 Month |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0.15 | 3.10 | 4.55 | 6.50 | 10.80 | 16.15 | 20.40 |
| 16.20 | 3.60 | 5.40 | 7.60 | 12.20 | 17.85 | 22.40 |
| 21.25 | 4.20 | 6.25 | 8.75 | 13.60 | 19.55 | 24.40 |
| 26.30 | 4.75 | 7.10 | 9.90 | 15.00 | 21.30 | 26.35 |
| 31.35 | 5.35 | 7.95 | 11.00 | 16.45 | 22.95 | 28.35 |
Classifications
001 announcements 30 for sale 500 help awaited 800 services offered
001 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 typing
001 training 600 equipment 800 other
Name ___ Phone no.
Classified Mail Order Form
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 Dalkan Kansas
Amount paid ___ 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Skills required ___
---
THE FAR SIDE
By
By GARY LARSON
11.10 Daisy
© 1980 Chronicler Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
"The herring's nothin' . . . I'm going for the whole shmerel!"
16
Wednesday, November 16, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
The HOPE Candidates
Reported by Grace Hobson, Kansan staff writer
Norman Forer
Professor mixes experience, theory in teaching method
Norman Forer unites social welfare theory with practice for his students.
Last spring, he and his students worked to save a Kansas City, Mo. housing project from demolition. He said their efforts resulted in increased financing for public housing
Kell Wheeler, Leawood senior, said Forer's strength lay in his ability to teach through experience.
"For social work, you can't learn through the book," she said. "You have to work with people. He gave us his life experiences."
Forer, associate professor of social welfare, is not teaching this semester because he is recovering from brain surgery he had in April. He said he hoped to resume teaching next fall.
Wheeler said Forer's dedication to his job probably provoked his illness.
JAMES R. BURTON
"I'm sure he worked himself until he was sick," she said.
Wheeler said Forer would stand up for his beliefs no matter what the costs, especially when he's pulling for the underdog.
"Basically, Norm would just do anything for anybody," Wheeler said. "He's a teacher you really get to know well, which is unusual for a teacher."
Forer said he also sought to teach his students to think critically.
Forer was a HOPE award finalist in 1971 after one year at KU and a semi-finalist in 1972 and 1973. He also has lectured at Haskell Indian Junior College and has studied Native Americans extensively.
Classes give him opportunity to see variety of students
James LaPoint
Sports appeals to a large audience, and James LaPoint said he used his background in sports to appeal to many students.
"I deal with a lot of people who are majoring in fields other than physical education," said LaPoint, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, each across the total University."
Some of the classes LaPoint teaches are Sociology of Sport, Coaching of Soccer and Field and Football and Volleyball and Touch Football.
"One thing that is unique about my teaching is that I teach across all levels of the curriculum," he wrote, "to get to see all kinds of students."
LaPoint said it was essential to impress upon students the importance of teaching. Despite the low pay and lack of prestige in the field, he tries to give students a positive vision of life for teaching, his students see the profession in a better light.
"You have to show them that teaching is a positive experience," he said. "I try to approach it from the role i role-m model perspective."
PETER DAVIDSON
Darlene Lalich, Jewett, Ohio, senior who had Sociology of Sport
with LaPoint, said she identified with LaPoint because he applied subject material to his students' lives.
"He made connections between the class and what's happening in the real world," Lalich said. "I remember a lot of what I learned from the class because he made it interesting. He's never boring."
Lalich said LaPoint's interest in students' lives outside of the classroom also was refreshing.
"He takes a personal interest in how the student is doing," she said. "He wants to know if you are doing OK in every aspect of your life."
Colin Howat
Teacher shows his students how to use their knowledge
Known affectionately to students as Chip, Colin Hout said his inspiration as an educator stems from the importance of what he other
In teaching senior-level classes, he said he is able to bring what students have learned in previous courses into classes into a comprehensive course.
"I try to convince them it all makes sense," said Howit, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering. "I show them what they can do with what they have learned."
Howat, who was a HOPE award finalist in 1987, is a consultant for the Midwest Research Institute and Ceramics Research Incorporated, both of Kansas City, Mo. He is also the owner in Overland Park. He has worked as a professional engineer since 1971.
Chris Roth, Overland Park senior, said Howat's ability to bring his experience into the field has been an invaluable learning tool.
"It's a real-world atmosphere." Roth said. "He gets you involved. His favorite style of lecturing is to
"I have a lot of industrial experience," he said. "It lets them (students) practice real-world situations in the classroom."
FREDERICK S. WILSON
start off and then start calling on people, asking them why it would work, why it wouldn't. It's amazing how almost a think-tank atmosphere.
Howat, who earned a bachelor's degree with highest distinction from KU in 1973, said he tries to always remember what it was like being a student with strict time demands and pressures.
Roth said Howat was the most flexible and understanding teacher he has ever had. Howat welcome students to call him at jobs students in activities whenever his schedule allows.
Valentino J. Stella Moving students toward motivated learning
the ability to motivate students is what separates Valentino J. Stella from his colleagues.
"I tend to be a teacher who can take material and make it interesting for students to learn." said Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry. "I try to get people excited about learning."
The Melbourne, Australia,
native has taught at the University
of Kansas since 1973. Last year, he
is a semi-finalist for the HOPE
奖.
"When students recognize your contributions, that's got to be the ultimate honor," he said.
"I think he is really concerned that his students learn the
And recognize they do. Mary Whitley, Lawrence senior, said she voted for Stella because of the care he has for his students.
material and that it is practical for them," she said.
Whitley said she appreciated Stella's fairness in teaching. When she had him for a class last fall, he said he gave the students a copy of the semester's notes and old tests to study. He was concerned about how his class instead of having to worry about taking notes, she said.
Stella has done extensive research in his field and also has supervised many postgraduate doctoral students in their research.
Generally, his research is concerned with applying physical organic chemistry to pharmaceutical problems.
"I know everyone in the pharmacy school is really proud of him for the research he's done."
PETER DENNIS
Whitley said. "He's an excellent example of what the University should look for in a professor."
Lonn Beaudry Strikes a balance between friend and teacher
Many of Lonn Beaudry's students are working extra hard to assure him the HOPE award.
A group of unidentified students have launched an advertising campaign to support their favorite candidate with posters covering the walls of the Art and Design building. One has Beauden's head resting on a book, and another is captioning reading "Elvis is Alive! Only if you vote for Lon Baudley."
Beaudy, associate professor of design, teaches courses called Visual Identity System, Publication Editor, Editorial Design and Typography.
Along with his scholarly duties,
he is the president of Design
Machine, a Kansas City, Mo.
firm. With a partner, Beaury
designs work for more than 30
clients, including the
Nelson/Atkins Museum of Art in
Kansas City, Mo., and the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Atlanta.
Beauty, who was a HOPE semi-final last year, cited his ability to identify with students as his strength.
"I try not to be just a friend; that can be ruinous," said Baudrey. "I hold the line between a friend and an enemy." It is important to blend the two.
Scott Davis, a St. Louis senior who had Beaudry for a class last fall, said that friendship was a gift of Beaudry's teaching success.
"He's really personable with the students," Davis said. "With a lot of teachers, there is a kind of barrier between the student and professor. He seems to break that barrier."
Beaudry said that his friendships with students made him a
A. J. Haskell
better educator
"I try to get them to learn," he said. "Friendship is involved in that."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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DENVER (FSI). The Hyundai Corporation has selected Connecting Point Computer Centers as their exclusive authorized dealer in Lawrence and Manhattan, Kansas. This selection follows the signing of a major supply contract with the 180 store Connecting Point chain here last month.
Hyundai's Super 167TE line of PCs follows their automotive tradition of price/performance. Myles Schachter, Connecting Point President, said that he chose the Hyundai product line because of its great price, high speed and excellent software bundle. Each Hyundai, he said, is fast at 1 MHz or twice as fast as the original PC; has a full 640K memory, 12" or "14" flat amber screen and a 101 keyboard
Hyundai, the $24 billion company known for its high quality, economical cars, has been a major producer of of microcomputers for the past several years.
The Electric Desk software included with every computer is a quality word processor, spreadsheet and database. The system also comes with Keyworks, a program to store keystrokes.
Dr. Rhonda Ross, the firm's Customer Support Manager, has found that the price has not compromised the construction of these powerful PCs. She states that the systems appear to be trouble free and highly compatible. She said this explains the manufacturer's 18 month warranty far in excess of the industry standard.
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Due to the new Connecting Point-Hyundai contract, the Manhattan and Lawrence stores are introducing these PCs at more than 20% off already competitive compatible prices with training included with every purchase. Already, United Telephone Midwest Group, Meningerius's Foundation and PARS Service has selected Connecting Point to provide Hyundai PCs to their employees.
---
---
E
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1850 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17. 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
LOVE TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DAVID & MARY 8 NOV. 24-DEC.
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
the protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for an about hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Taure, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an oftense against God, to protest the abuse of women and to dissuade people from seeing it
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Wintrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said
Many of the students refused comment. De La Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary"; he said it was an insult.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
of the protesters inter-
had seen the film or
to see it.
Jayhawks Basketball
Picking up the pieces
ee
finish their degrees
I that discontinuation was a udents because many wanted e program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. "Farixr, Va., senior, and the choo attended the hearing, said III Drury that the program discontinued.
I with a lot of freshmen and he were interested in majoring he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
isterooting
and was killed. I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he 'o shoot my husband,' she said. ridge, 35; awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge already serving 5 to 18 years in earlier unsuccessful plot on usband's life.
d was convicted in 1985 in the of his wife, Sandy, who at first ared to be the victim of a traffic vent at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River near oria. The investigation was ended after Bird's conviction on obligation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to rise the slaying as a traffic lent.
e story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries
rder Ordened," a movie filmed
ad around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
abit today
abit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City. "
milisch urged smokers unceded about their health to think it their friends and family, g the recent death of his friend "A Corsus Line' collaborator ard Keban. The lyrick, a smoker, died of cancer last amber.
e event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in John Center, ended with two crushes crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities lined nearby.
e Tobacco Institute officially
unced its "Great American
one" program in newspaper
ruments Tuesday, but a
doubt that the program
not planned as a rebuke to
mokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Liberty Hall. 642 Massachusetts
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
BAPTURE & GONN-DEC.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for an hour on all. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's normo-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation o Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
move more.
Bill Johns a theater employee?
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie
testify for Christ," he said
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
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student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher knows what to say," de la Tour said.
Jayhawks will have a great season in '88-'89.
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one of the protesters intervived had seen the film or needed to see it.
ree
4. finish their degrees
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinued with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. When told the major a lot of people were really."
mplain it is academically weak courses to continue." he said, y. Fairfax, vA, senior, who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
mister
hooting
and was killed ... I gave Tom 22-ealter Woodman that he I to shoot my husband," she said. idridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
bird was convicted in 1985 in the fifth of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge or the Cottonwood River near poria. The investigation was sensed after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecution that Bird threw his body from the bridge and tried to raise the slaying as a traffic ident.
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
under Ordeained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
habit today
habit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
amishly urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think at their friends and family, in the recent death of his friend “A Chorus Line” collaboratorard Kleban. The lyrical, avy smoker, died of cancer last ember.
e event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in john Center, ended with two jants crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities d nearby.
e Tobacco Institute officially
tobacco its "Great American
some" program in newspaper
rsements Tuesday, but a
judgment said that the program
not planned as a rebuilth to
smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
BLAST TEMPORATION OF CHRIST
INVITED K NOV. N. DIC.
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Tempation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsee and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the death of his brother, the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuehler, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, I just want to see the movie."
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
to*the* Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes he did not know what to say," de la Taoul said.
one of the protesters inter-
ved had seen the film or
used to see it.
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Contents
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPECIAL ISSUE
Jayhawks Basketball
Basketball
INSIDE
INSIDE
The coach: Roy Williams...4
The Men's Team...6
The Championship...10
The Probation...11
The Competition...13
The Women's Team...21
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
News staff:
Todd Cohen, editor; Michael Horak, managing editor; Craig Anderson, sports editor; Tom Simpson, associate sports editor; Stephen Wade, editor; Elaung Sang, associate news editor; Scott Carpenter, photo editor; Forrest MacDonald, associate photo editor; Dave Eames, graphics editor; Jill Jess, copy chief; Chris Raiston, copy chief
Reporter: Arvin Donley, Jeff Euston, Ken Winford; Mike Considine, Mark E. McCormick, Laura Woodward, Joel Zeff and Mag Fagan.
Photographers: Shauna Norfleet, Staton Breidenthal, Sandra J. Watts, Phil Carvalho, Gary Mook and Steven Wade
Editor: Susan Gage, Ed Morrison, Kynnart Lancaster, Cory Powell and Gary Wilke.
and Stephen Wade.
Copy editors: Kira Gould, Susan Gage, Ed Morrison, Kathryn Lancaster, Cory Powell and Phil Wilke.
Cover photo by Stephen Wade
University Daily Kansan ■ Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16-1984
ree
4. finish their degrees.
hins their degrees.
that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
mplain it is academically weak courses to continue", he said, y. Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
ed with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
mister shooting
and was killed . . . I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he
I to shoot my husband," she said.
idrieve, 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
husband's life.
abit today
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
border Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the his of his wife, Sandy, who at first sared to be the victim of a traffic dent at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River near peroria. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecution that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to use the slaying as a traffic dent.
habit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
dion in New York City." amish urged smokers unconed about their health to think at their friends and family, the recent death of his friend Michael Kilean andard Kleban. The lyric, a cry smoker, died of cancer last ember.
e event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" incoln Center, ended with two crushes crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
e Tobacco Institute officially unced its "Great American some" program in newspaper rituitions Tuesday, but a sesman said that the program not planned as a rebuttal to smokeout.
---
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.. last Christ." about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
ART TEMPETATION OF CHRIST
DAYTON N. NOV. 24-DEC. 17
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The key, heave up a lot,
headmaster of St. Mary's, said the
protesters were there to pray and
serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuehl, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film "almost"
want. They have the right to protest."
John Wintrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Taure said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger one knows what to do on the lea赴 tour.
Picking up the pieces
one of the protesters inter-
erved had seen the film or
used to see it.
Williams next in coaching tradition Ex-UNC assistant is prepared to take on Kansas challenge
Raul
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
Drew Williams loves tradition
After working for 10 years at North Carolina under Dean Smith, Roy Williams was named on July 8 as the seventh basketball coach at Kansas.
Roy Williams owes travis Hirsch. His office in Parrrot Athletic Center surrounds him with 90 years of University of Kansas basketball球场. As he stares at the wall in front of his desk he sees portraits of the six previous coaching legends he will follow at Kansas. The faces of Naismith, Hamilton, Allen, Harp, Owens and Brown remind him of the great basketball teachers who have sat in his chair.
who have sat in his chair. Peering over his shoulder are the faces from the Jayhawks' 1952 and 1988 NCAA championship teams, reminding him of the great players, such as Chamberlain, Lovelate and Manning, who have graced the floors of Hoch Auditorium and Allen Field House.
House.
"I was the one who decided how I wanted this office to be decorated," the 38-year-old Williams said. "I do believe in tradition. I do believe there were some great people in this basketball program here in the past.
For the past 10 seasons, he worked as an assistant at North Carolina under coach Smith, a Topeka native, who was a reserve guard on Kansas' 1962 championship team and graduated from Kansas in 1963.
"Those things are important to me. I don't know that I can ever reach the level of those coaches on that team, but I know that I'm going to try. The teams behind me here — I was fortunate enough to be in one national championship (as an assistant coach at North Carolina in 1982) and I didn't know how to act. Instead of walking around with my hands in the air after the game, big tears were rolling down my face. So I'd like to be involved in one more to see if I know how to act a little better this time."
When Williams was hired as the seventh basketball coach in Kansas history on July 8, he brought much of Smith's influence with him.
act a little better this game. Williams learned the game under a basketball legend, who also is a part of Kansas basketball tradition.
N.C. , native, said.
"Also, I was such a big North Carolina fan before that. I was there as a student at North Carolina for five years (1968-73) and coached high school ball (in Swannanoa, N.C.) for five years (1973-77) after that. So for 20 years he was the most significant influence on my basketball thinking."
"I think when you coach with somebody for 10 years you're going to have a lot of their characteristics," Williams, an Asheville, N.C., native, said.
He is outstanding in all areas of coaching," said Smith, who recommended that Kansas athletic director Bob Frederick hire Williams. "He's a pro crerer and an excellent floor coach. He coached the junior varsity for eight years and consistently won with 6-foot-1 and 6-foot-2 centers going against guys like former 6-foot-10 North Carolina State center) Chris Washburn and (former 6-foot-10 Kentucky center) Melvin Turpin. I was amazed at some of the wins."
The respect is mutual.
Tarquin I was amazed at Smith's Smith said that although Williams had received six coaching offers from Division I schools during his tenure as a North Carolina assistant, Kansas was the right school for him.
"It's the top university in the state and the people there are crazy about basketball." Smith said. "Roy's also very family oriented and it's a great place to raise family."
On July 6, Williams, his wife Wanda, and his two children Kimberly, 9, and Scott, 11, left for a vacation in Bermuda. The next day he was contacted by Frederick and left for Lawrence to accept the job.
Lawrence to accept a job. Williams' wife and children were happy that he had landed his first college head coaching job.
coaching job.
"I had told Roy for years and years that wherever he wanted to go, if he thought it was a good job, that I could live there," she said. "And I know the kids are happy for him. Roy called at 12:30 a.m. (July 8) after he had gotten the job, so I had to wait until morning to tell the kids. Scott came in that next morning asking, 'Are we going, are we going?' I said, 'Congratulations, you are now the son of the new head basketball coach at the University of Kansas,' and he yelled, 'All right,' and started slapping hands."
hands. Williams also brought his close friend and golfing partner Jerry Green from his head coaching position at the University of North Carolina at Asheville to serve as his assistant.
Although the Jayhawks are coming off a national championship, Williams inherited a program with only 10 eligible players and that, two weeks ago, was put on a three-year probation by the NCAA. Green said Williams had done a tremendous job handling the adversity.
"I take adversity."
"I think he's one a marvelous job," Green said. "It would take a strong person not to just sit down and start pointing fuggers — that this was caused by this and this was caused by that. It takes a very strong person to say that this is the situation that exists here, now let's get on with it." Green said had
side.
"I have a temper." Williams said. "I believe in doing things the right way. If I feel like somebody has done some things they shouldn't have done toward me, my family, or my basketball team, I'm going to be upset. And I'm not going to call them back one-half hour later and apologize for what I said because I'm not that kind of person."
Green said, "People who think here's this nice, quiet, easy going guy, really don't know the competitiveness that exists in him. He is really a 101 percent competitor. I think sometimes you can talk softly and walk slowly and it doesn't really show what's inside a person.
caring, sincere manner.
"There are not many people who can meet him and be with him very long and not like him." Green said. "He can go into a room where he knows absolutely nobody and it won't take him long before he is recognized. Not just as a coach, but as a person. He has a very warm personality."
with it.
The soft-spoken Williams, Green said, had the gift of dealing with individuals in a caring, sincere manner.
"He's the type of guy you want to go to war with. There's a lot of people I know that I would say, 'Gee,' I'm not sure whether I
a boy with ponytails, poised in a
Williams, however, does have a tough,
side.
know IT'M YES!
Because of Kansas' rich basketball tradition, Jaimeyahaws rank fourth in all-time victories — the pressure to produce a winner is intense.
Williams admits that he has worried about living up to the high expectations.
should do this or not." But when I'm next to somebody as competitive as Roy Williams, I know I'm ready to go."
about living in town.
"I worry," he said. "I worry if we're going to win or not, I look out there and we have some good players. But I'd like there to be more of them and I'd like them to be bigger. I do believe that I worry probably too much. But I just try to keep it inside me because there's no sense in spoiling everybody else's day."
body else's day
The love affair between Kansas' basket ball coach Chad McCormick his student body is a long tradition. Williams got his first taste of that affection at a midnight basket ball practice, Oct. 15, simply called "Later with Roy Williams."
As he walked onto the Allen Field House floor to make a brief speech, he received a two-minute standing ovation, in which the
He had been baptized into Kansas basketball.
students repeatedly chanted "Let's go Roy."
"When I went out there and the crowd, particularly the students, gave me such a warm ovation, shoot, it was one of the best feelings I'd ever had in my life," he said. "If I could have gone up there and personally thanked every one of them, I would have done it. But there's no way I could do that. The only way I can thank them is to try to do the best I can possibly do."
After most week-night practices, Williams rushes off the court, changes clothes and heads to a dormitory, fraternity or civic function, for speaking engagements.
When asked why he does so much of that type of work, he said, "It's part of my job.
"I'll see students on campus, I'm going to say hello to them." Williams said. "I'm not a reacuse. I'm not going to ignore the fans. I'm definitely not going to ignore the students. I'm old-fashioned. I think the students, after the basketball team, are the most important people."
ree
4 finish their degrees
I must describe discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
dd with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said" 'When told the major a lot of people were really
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said y, Fairfax, vA, senior, who the attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
mister
hooting
sand was killed . . . I gave Tom 22.caliber Woodman that he to 1 shoot my husband, she said. idridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
ird was convicted in 1985 in the th of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a traffic ident at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River near poria. The investigation was sened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecunted that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to raise the slaying as a traffic
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
order Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
habit today
aabit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
amish in New York City
armilish urged smokers uncon-
ded about their health to think
at their friends and family.
He's been dead of death.
"A Chorus Line" collaborator
d荆len. The lyricist, a
ry smoker, died of cancer last
ember.
e event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in old Center, ended with two hants crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities 1 nearby.
e Tobacco Institute officially
nounced its "Great American
home" program in newspaper
rirements Tuesday, but a
saidman said that the program
not planned as a rebuttal to
smokeout.
4
University Daily Kansan Katsasjayhawks Basketball November 16, 1984
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
RAT TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
IN NOV. M. DEC.
"The Last Temptation of Christ", the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall Hall, 642 Massachusetts Avenue.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantzakis, have focused on a scene that was not shot by last toward Mary Galenale.
The Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, I just want to see the movie."
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almo
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Taure said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher asks how to know what to say," de la Tour said.
one of the protesters interve
had seen the film or
used to see it.
Picking up the pieces
'Hawks must battle against taller teams
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
Having only three players taller than 6 foot-7, the Kansas basketball team is hoping that its quickness and returning experienced players can carry them to a winning season.
"We're going to have to rely on our quickness on both offense and defense to make up for our lack of height," Kansas coach Roy Williams said.
The Jayhawks return eight letterman from last year's national championship team, but will be without last year's college player-of-the-year Danny Manning, who averaged 25 points and nine rebounds a game.
The only true center on this year's team is 6-9 senior Sean Alvarado, who was redshirt last season. But Williams said the Jayhawks' offense would operate without a true center.
true center.
"We'll run an offense with a lot of motion, in which several players can post up high or low" Williams said.
Anchoring the power forward positions are a pair of sophomores — 6-8 Mark Randall and 6-7 Mike Maddox. Both Randall and Maddox put on weight and increased their strength during the off-season, knowing they would have to play more physically this season.
is season.
Randall has gained 40 pounds since his
freshman year, from 190 to 230. Maddox's weight increased from 190 to 215 since last season.
"The major goal I've set is to play stronger and to rebound better," Maddox said. "I think we are all going to have to play tougher offensively since Danny Manning is gone."
Randall said. "I wasn't used to being physical when I played high school ball in Colorado, but it's definitely something I need to do this year."
At small forward, the Jayhawks have three players who previously spent most of their college careers at the off guard position. They are 6-4 senior Milt Newton and juniors Freeman West and Jeff Gueldner, who are both 6-5.
Newton ranked second on last year's team in scoring and rebounding, averaging 11.6 points per game and five rebounds per game. He said, despite his height, he would have to increase his rebound total from last season.
"Last year, when I didn't get seven or eight rebounds a game, I was upset," Newton said. "Now this year, I'll have to go out and get eight or nine a game, if it can be done. So every time the ball goes up, I'll be looking to crash the boards."
Looking to crash the boards along with
L
Please see PLAYERS, p.28, col. 4
Staton Breidenthal/KANSAN
The Jayhawks must try to replace Danny Manning, Chris Piper and Archie Marshall who helped Kansas to two Final Four appearances in three years.
Newton still wants to have a role in NCAA tourney
PHILIP CAVALON/KANSAS
Senior forward Milt Newton is the highest returning scorer and rebounder from last season's national champion team. Last season he averaged 11.6 points and 5.0 rebounds per game.
By Joel Zeff
Milt Newton accepts the fact that Kansas will not be able to defend its national championship, but he still wants the Jayhawks to have a role in the NCAA tournament.
Kansan sportswriter
"Everyone has picked us fifth in the Big Eight." Newton said with a smile. "But I would love to finish in first place for the regular season and finish first in the Big Eight tournament."
Eight tournament.
Because Kansas is ineligible for the NCAA tournament, the Jayhaws could end up keeping another team out of the tournament. The Big Eight tournament winner receives an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. If Kansas were to get the Big Eight tournament title, the NCAA bid would go unfilled.
Newton, a 6-foot-5 senior forward, understands the situation the team is in, but he refuses to give up his will to win.
"After all the stuff that has happened to us, we have nothing to lose," Newton said. "We just have to play together and do the things that we need to do to win."
Newton, one of three starters returning this year, is the highest scorer (11.6) and rebounder (5.0) coming back from last year's team. He also is the man that must fill much of the leadership and scoring void left by All-American Danny Manning.
left of Mr. Ankenheim because But Newton sees Manning's absence as an opportunity to prove that he can play without him
"Sometimes I feel the pressure of people expecting too much," he said. "But I had a couple of meetings with coach (Roy) Williams and he explained to me that I can only do so much.
"But I'm my hardest judge and hardest critic. I'm just going to do the best that I can and not worry about what other people think."
Concentrating on the game instead of the pressure to be the savior of the team was one of Newton's primary laws of basketball, he said.
he said.
"With team success comes individual success," Newton said. "I'm not taking it on myself to be the leading scorer or rebounder. I just want to play team basketball. I'm just trying to lead by example."
Some of Newton's examples include 1987-88 NCAA Midwest Regional all-tournament team, 1987-88 NCAA Final Four all-tournament team and a 55.5 shooting percentage last year, third in the Big Eight Conference
Part of Newton's law is a pressure defense and a running, gunning and slamming style
or play
Newton said Williams' style of play was a lot of man-to-man pressure basketball. He also said Williams liked the three-point shot
Newton, a crowd favorite because of his flashy style of play, said his knee injury would not keep him from being able to dunk the hall at the season opener.
"I have the ability to score and I don't mind going up against the big guy," Newton said. "But the thing I need to work on is the man-to-man defense and rebounding."
"It it always slam the ball," Newton said.
"The crowd loves it and I love it. It gets the crowd pumped up."
That is the last principle of Newton's law of basketball.
ree
4. finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak
courses to continue," he said.
y, Fairfax, Va., senior, who
attended the hearing, said
with Drury that the program
discontinued.
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. 'When told the major a lot of people were really
and was killed . . . I gave Tom
22.caliber Woodman that he
1 to shoot my husband , she said,
idridge, 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
husband's life.
ird was convicted in 1985 in the
thir of his wife, Sandy, who at first
earned to be the victim of a traffic
dent at the Rocky Ford Bridge
the Cottonwood River near
peria. The investigation was
sened after Bird's conviction on
solicitation charge. The prosecu-
ntended that Bird threw his
from the bridge and tried to
use the slaying as a traffic
dent.
mister rooting
a story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
order Odained." a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
habit today
habit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
amilis urged smokers uncon-
ceded about their health to think
it their friends and family,
g the recent death of his friend
"A Chorus Line" collaborator
ard Klebcn. The lyricist, a
smoker, died of cancer last
amber.
University Daily Kansan ■ Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 5
e event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Caps" in iin Center, ended with two bants crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities I nearby.
e Tobacco Institute officially unced its "Great American one" program in newspaper ritations Tuesday, but a esman said that the program said as a rebuttal to mokeout.
I will not provide the text content as it is not clearly visible in the image.
.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Albany Hall, 642 Massachusetts Uni.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried knells and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for an hour about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jeffrey Johnston(KANSA)
ART TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
HATED N. NOV. 14, DEC. 25
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueiler, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, I just want to see the movie."
"It made me want to see the movie more."
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about*200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
Jill Johns a theater star!
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier that three to four people
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant profesor of Army ROTC also was
Many of the students refused comment. De la lea said the policy stopped from a vise."
testify for Christ," he said
Picking up the pieces
High school stars hoping to arrive
Maddox, Randall ready to back up lofty prep reviews
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
Special to the Kansan
In major college basketball, being a former high school All-American is more of a necessity than a distinction.
a necessity than a distraction.
Among other players, you're another face in the crowd. To the crowd, it requires you to show your worth early and often.
Sophomore forwards Mike Maddox and Mark Randall brought a little extra baggage with them to Kansas. Both were McDonald's All-Americans, which ranked them among the top 25 high school seniors in the nation
the top 25 high schoolers. "I know at this level, what you accomplished in high school doesn't mean a thing," Kansas coach Roy Williams said. "I've been very pleased with them. They've both worked hard."
Randall, at 6-foot 8½, 230 pounds, and Maddox at 6-6½, 215 pounds are overlooked by national publications that once trumpeted their high school accomplishments.
peted their high school averages weren't impressive. Randall averaged 4.5 points and grabbed 2.7 rebounds two years ago. Maddox's averages were 2.5 points and 1.6 rebounds last year.
Randall, who averaged 27.2 points at Englewood (Colo.) Cherry Creek High School, said he relished the opportunity to prove himself after a year on the sidelines. He was redshifted last year, partially because of the Jayhawks' surplus of big men.
"Its funny how things tend to turn around," Randall said. "This year, I'm kind of glad it's this situation. I want to go out
and do the things I know I'm capable of doing."
Jayhawk fans may have seen the first glimpse of the pair's potential Nov. 7 in a 91-72 win over the Spirit Express. Maddox scored 25 points and grabbed 10 rebounds. Randall had 15 points and five rebounds.
"I think things are going pretty well," said Maddox, who averaged 25.6 points at Putnam City (Oklah). North High School. "I'm just trying to help out as much inside as I can. I'm doing my best to stay in there and fight."
and fight.
While redshirting last year, Randall had surgery to correct a breathing problem which he said has helped his endurance.
"It felt great," Randall said. "It been a long time since freshman year, but I think it was fun to get in front of the fans. I wanted to see how far along I'd come."
to see how far along he is.
Randall said his improved breathing helped him to come into the season quicker and stronger than he's ever been. He has added 35 pounds of muscle since the end of his freshman season.
"I didn't like to lift in high school, but when I realized how big and strong everybody was up here, I knew I had to," he said. "Now I love going in there and lifting."
Now I love being written about Kansas' lack of size. Maddox and Randall both said they and Sean Alvarado had some advantages against other front lines.
"I think we're going to run pretty well," Maddox said after the Spirit Express game. "We're really versatile, we can all play inside and outside."
inside and outside.
It is a big year for centers in the Bight Island. They range from giant size in 7-2, 235-pound Rich King of Nebraska and 7-0, 260-pound Johnny Pittman of Oklahoma State to super quick in 6-10 Stacey King of Oklahoma and Doug Smith of Missouri.
Orthodox men say, "We're definitely giving up quite a bit in height," Randall said. "But we know we can all handle it well."
--one of the protesters inter- ved had seen the film or need to see it.
1988-89 Men's Basketball Roster
Basketball
--one of the protesters inter- ved had seen the film or need to see it.
--one of the protesters inter- ved had seen the film or need to see it.
2.4.1.3.1.1.1.1.1
No./Player Pos. Height** Wt. Yr.
10-Scooter Barry G 6-4 175 Sr.
11-Lincoln Minor G 6-3 175 Jr.
14-Kevin Pritchard G 6-3/12 180 Sr.
12-Mitt Newton F 6-4/12 180 Sr.
13-Pat Murray G 6-2 180 Sr.
13-Mike Maddox F 6-1/12 200 Se.
13-Gelder Guard G/F 6-5 190 Jr.
14-Freeman West F 6-5 190 Jr.
14-Mark Krantz F 6-9 225 So.
14-Nintendo* C 6-10/12 215 Sr.
Oakland, CA (DelAlisle)
Houston, TX (MidLand) JC
Tulsa, OK (Edison)
Washington, WA (Nashville)
NO (Washoe)
Oklahoma City, OK (Putnam North)
Charleston, IL
E. Chicago, IL (Paris CK)
E. Chicago, CO (Paris CK)
Washington, DC, CHerry Creek
Washington, DC, Hutchinson CK)
Hometown (High School/JC)
Note: Ricky Calloway, a 6-6, 180 pound senior transfer from Indiana and Alonzo Jamison, a 5-6/12, 225 pound sophomore from Rancho Santa Claiva (CA) JC will practice, but must sit out the season without losing any eligibility under NCAA guidelines.
Basketball
1987-88 Lettermon lost
Danny Manning
Archie Marshall
Chris Piper
Marvin Branch
Keith Harris
Clint Normore
Coaching staff
Head Coach: Roy Williams
Asst. Coach: Jerry Green
Asst. Coach: Kevin Stallings
Asst. Coach: Steve Robinson
Asst. Coach: Mark Tungeon
Sophomore Mark Randall and senior Sean Alvarado, both redshirts last season, will try to strengthen Kansas' inside play this year.
0
Shauna Norfee/KANSA
1988-89 Kansas Men's Schedule
Home games are boldified All times are central
Day Date Opponent Location Time
Tue. Nov.1 Scrimmage (Bicentennial Canter) Salina, KS. 7:00 p.m.
Mon. Nov.7 Spirit Express (exhibition) Lawrence, KS. 7:35 p.m.
Wed. Nov.16 Scrimmage (Kansas City CC) Kansas City, KS. 7:30 p.m.
Sat. Nov.19 Soviet National Team Lawrence, KS. 7:35 p.m.
Fri.-Mon. Nov.25-28 Great Alaska Shootout Anchorage, AK tba
Kansas, Kentucky, Seton Hall, Iona, Utah, California, Florida, Alaska
Thu. Dec.1 Seattle Lawrence, KS. 7:35
Sat. Dec.3 Loyola-Chicago Lawrence, KS. 1:10 p.m.
Wed. Dec.7 Pacific Lutheran Lawrence, KS. 7:35 p.m.
Sat. Dec.10 Temple Atlantic City, N.J. 2:30 p.m.
Mon. Dec.12 Northern Arizona Lawrence, KS. 7:35 p.m.
Wed. Dec.21 Texas Tech Lubbock, TX. 7:30 p.m.
Thu.-Fri. Dec.29-30 BMA Tournament Kansas City, MO. 6/8 p.m.
SW Tennessee St. vs. E. Tennessee St. Kansas vs. Iona
Brown Lawrence, KS. 7:35 p.m.
Jan.3 Brown Lawrence, KS. 7:35 p.m.
Jan.7 Iowa State Lawrence, KS. 3:10 p.m.
Jan.9 So. Methodist Lawrence, KS. 0:05 p.m.
Thu. Jan.12 Miami Miami FL. 6:00 p.m.
sat. Jan.14 Kansas State Manhattan, KS. 1:10 p.m.
Wed. Jan.18 Oklahoma Norman, OK. 7:30 p.m.
sat. Jan.21 Colorado Boulder, CO. 8:35 p.m.
Wed. Jan.25 Wichita State Lawrence, KS. 8:05 p.m.
sat. Jan.28 Kansas State Lawrence, KS. 3:10 p.m.
Wed. Feb.1 Missouri Lawrence, KS. 9:00 p.m.
sat. Feb.4 Nebraska Lincoln, NE. 3:10 p.m.
Wed. Feb.8 Oklahoma State Lawrence, KS. 8:05 p.m.
sat. Feb.11 Missouri Columbia, MO. 3:10 p.m.
Wed. Feb.15 Oklahoma Lawrence, KS. 9:00 p.m.
sat. Feb.18 Duke Durham, N.C. 3:00 p.m.
Wed. Feb.22 Iowa State Ames, Iowa 7:00 p.m.
sat. Feb.25 Colorado Lawrence, KS. 1:10 p.m.
Wed. Mar.1 Nebraska Lawrence, KS. 8:05 p.m.
sat. Mar.4 Oklahoma State Stillwater, OK. 1:10 p.m.
Fri.-Sun. Mar.10-12 Big Eight Tournament Kansas City, MO. tba
KANSAN graphic
suent who was in the seventh, grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher asks "how can you know what $'say'," de la Tour said.
ree
4 finish their degrees
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said, y. Fairfax, va. sen., and who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
ed with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said" "When told the major a lot of people were really
ird was convicted in 1985 in the th of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a traffic dent at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River near poria. The investigation was ened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecu- contended that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to use the slaying as a traffic
mister
hooting
sand was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he I to shoot my husband. "she said. idride, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
e story of Eldridge and Bird, of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries rord Ordered," a movie filmed ud around Emporia. It aired in 1987.
abit today
abit of smoking is no longer in on in New York City."
milsich urged smokers uncon-
dent about their health to think
their friends and family,
the recent death of his friend
'A Chorus Line" collaborator
rd Kleban. The lyricist, a
*smoker*, died of cancer last
umber.
event, held under the big top The Big Apple Circus" in In Center, ended with two nts crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
6 University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
Tobacco Institute officially
needs its "Great American
me" program in newspaper
tissues Tuesday, but a
buffalo said that the program
oplanned as a rebuff to
iokout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
A MAT TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
MATES M NOV. N DEC.
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall 642, Massachusetts St.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantakis, who focused on a scene when he was by lust for Mary Magdalene.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It is sickening. It is porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmeller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
for the film earlier in the week.
want. They have the right to pro- test."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la La Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary,"
testify for Christ," he said
Picking up the pieces
Pritchard likely will play in both guard positions
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger one don't know what she is talking about to Da Vinci.
Kansan sportswriter
Junior guard Kevin Pritchard sees a lot of changes in the Kansas basketball team this season, but one thing remains the same: his role is unclear.
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportswriter
Pritchard started last season at the off- guard position, but moved to the point guard spot 20 games into the season against Oklahoma.
The move was a success. The Jayhawks were 16-3 after the switch, losing only to Kansas State, Duke and Oklahoma. Kansas later defeated all three teams in the NCAA tournament en route to the national championship.
This season, Pritchard has played primarily at the point guard position. In an exhibition game against the Spirit Express on Nov. 7, Pritchard scored 7 points and had 3 assists.
Pritchard, who missed a week of practice this fall with the flu, probably will play both positions during the season, Kansas coach Roy Williams has said.
"I don't know really what to expect this year," Pritchard said. "I don't know what position I'm going to be in. I would imagine it's going to be point guard. I've talked to him (Williams) a little bit and right now it seems I'll probably be playing a little of both. My main objective right now is making sure I practice hard and improve."
Given the choice, however, Pritchard leaves no doubt where he would rather play.
leaves no dobbot in guard. "I prefer the off-guard," he said. "I guess because you're considered more of an athlete. As point guard, you've got to call the offense and call the defenses. You're looked at primarily as the leader, the coach on the floor. There'a a lot of responsibility. I don't mind the responsibility, but it's tough also. You just have a lot more freedom at the off-guard."
the dajhwacks' third-leading scorer last season, Pritchard also will be looked upon to make up for the loss of Danny Manning and Chris Piper. But Williams said Pritchard could not do it alone.
"I would think that everybody's got to step forward." Williams said. "Kevin and Milt averaged in double figures last year and all of the defensive teams were focusing on Danny. Their biggest challenge is going to be to increase or maintain that while the defensive pressure is focused on them."
"Whenever you lose 30 points a game, we've got to start looking for other places where we can score," Pritchard said. "We're all going to have to score more. It is not like one person is going to step forward and take 25 points responsibility. That's unrealistic. I think if we do it as a group, it's possible."
Pritchard realizes he will be expected to score more.
As a junior, Pritchard knows he, along with seniors Milt Newton and Scooter Barry, will be looked upon as a leader.
"We're an inexperienced team," he said. "I don't like to think of it as a rebuilding year, but I just like to think that we've done and we’re going to go out and do our best."
"I think it just is going to grow more this year," Pritchard said of his leadership role. "Chris Piper and Danny were great leaders. That's what made our team so good. I know I'll never fill Danny Manning's shoes or Chris Piper's. I'm not trying to do that. I'm just going to do the best I can."
Depite the loss of Manning and Piper, Pritchard said he was optimistic about the season.
"But I'll do anything for this team to have us win. If it's me playing point guard 40 minutes a game, that's what I do."
RONALD
Staton Breidonthal/KANSAN
Junior guard Kevin Pritchard ended last season as Kansas' point guard and will play both guard positions this year.
KU fan support entices West
Bv Mark E. McCormick
Kansan sportswriter
With the Allen Field House crowd on its feet, then senior Archie Marshall wobbled to his feet and moved gingerly onto the court in his foot game.
A thick knee brace supported Marshall's surgery-scarred knee.
Marshall examined his grip briefly and with his brow bent into a grim expression, he shot the ball amid the cheers and the crossed fingers of the hopeful crowd.
Then a junior college recruit, Freeman West looked on from the crowd as Marshall positioned himself just outside the three-pint line during the Oklahoma State game.
point line during the Alabama State players relaxed into a low-pressure zone as the ball was inbounded and shifted to Marshall.
crosses the ball bounced off the rim to the crowd's collective "Aww."
It was the spirited atmosphere at that game that strengthened West's decision to come to Kansas.
and so is Yet, he left the court with handshakes and hugs from his teammates and his opponents, as well as cheers from the crowd.
coach.” It was really great. ” West said of Marshall's final appearance as a Jayhawk
Freeman West
"You can tell that the fans here really care about the players."
one of the protesters intere
had seen the film or
used to see it.
He said it reminded him of home.
He said it reminded him of home.
"I really wanted to go to a basketball
school," he said. "I think I'm going to like it here."
The cheering crowd at the game reminded him of the games he played in high school in East Chicago, Ind.
West said he already had made many close friends since coming to Kansas.
Lawrence looked like a friendly city on his recruiting visit, West said.
"We're all just a big family," he said of the team. "Some of us stay together and we hang out together and that's what it takes to win."
"We'd have thousands of people at our games," he said. "The gyms would be packed. And Indiana is a basketball state."
Kansas' emphasis on academics was also a major factor in West's decision.
"The academics were also important," he said. "I want to get an education first."
But during the Jayhawks' season-opening victory over the Spirit Express, fans learned about West's talent on the court.
In only 10 minutes of action, West scored
gross runs and grabbed 10 rebounds.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was pleased with West's performance.
"He's just a tremendous young man," Williams said. "He's making a big jump to major college ball."
KU assistant gets chance to join coach
Kansas men's basketball assistant coach Kevin Stallings wasn't looking for an opportunity to move up the coaching ladder when he was hired by coach Roy Williams.
Special to the Kansan
statings said he did not feel any desire to leave Durpue coach Gene Keady's staff. The West Lafayette, Ind., school was his alma mater and he had spent the last nine years
By Mike Considine
Special to the Kansan
On the other hand, the Kansas offer was too tempting to pass up.
"I was very excited about the opportunity to work with coach Williams," he said. "But I don't want to say I learned everything I needed to learn, so I could learn from Coach Keady every day."
Stallings was a member of Keady's staff for six years. After his graduation from Purdue in 1982, Stallings became a part-time assistant. Two years later, he was the
Please see STALLINGS, p. 30, col. 1
ree
2. finish their degrees
hither degree described that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
complan it is academically weak courses to continue," he said, y. Fairfax, v.a., senior and who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said." When told the major a lot of people were really
mister
hooting
University Daily Kansan ■ Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 7
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
burder Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
v 1987.
ird was convicted in 1983 in the h of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a traffic dent at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River near peroria. The investigation was sensed after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecution that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to ruise the slaying as a trafficident.
and was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he to shoot my husband," she said. idrige, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life
habit today
habit of smoking is no longer in jion in New York City."
ion in New York City," said insurgized smokers unconeed about their health to think at their friends and family, but the recent death of his friend A "Chorus Line" collaborator Jason Theync. The Syracuse a ymoker, die of cancer lastember.
e event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Ciccup" in center, ended with two hants crushing giant plastic n cigarettes as the celebrities d nearby.
ne Tobacco Institute officially unceed its "Great American come" program in newspaper artisements Tuesday, but a bill passed that the program not planned as a rebellion to Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at City Hall, Gaillard Massachusetts St.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DAVID R. MON.-M.-DEC.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantakis, have focused on a scene where Christ tempter by lustful angelic beings
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, I just want to see the movie."
"It made me want to see the movie more."
movie more. Jill Johns, a theater employee.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
for the film earlier in the week.
want. They have the right to protest."
John Wintrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary,"
testify for Christ," he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la tour said.
one of the protesters intere-
ed had seen the film or
need to see it.
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ree
4. finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
mplain it is academically weak courses to continue." he said. y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
mister
hooting
and was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he to i shoot my husband," she said. idridge, 34, awas suits inion second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
ird was convicted in 1985 in the of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a trafficident at the Rocky Ford Bridge or the Cottonwood River near poria. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to prise the slaying as a trafficident.
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS biseries
urder Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
y 1987.
habit today
habit of smoking in New York City "amilisch urged smokers unconceded about their health to think out their friends and family, the recent death of his friend "A Chorus Line" collaborator vard Kleban. The lyricist, avy smoke, died of cancer last ember.
he event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Cup" incoln Center, ended with two chants crushing giant plastic n cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
the Tobacco Institute officially
uniced its "Great American
come" program in newspaper
artisements Tuesday, saying that the program
not planned as a result to
$mokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at St. Mary Hall, 642. Massachusetts University.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried bargains and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DATED N. GOV. M.-DEC.
directed by Martin Scorsee and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzak, have focused on a scene when the character is by lust in Mary Malagalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the killings of two students at the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueler, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
"It made me want to see the movie more."
for the film earlier in the week.
1908 Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
Many of the students refused comment De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary,".
testify for Christ," he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger one doesn't know what to do in a daunting place, like da Toa.
one of the protesters inter-
vived had seen the film or
used to see it.
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In the Mall
842-6626
Picking up the pieces
1
Sophomore Alonzo Jamison will redshirt this year because he didn't meet NCAA academic standards after transferring from Rancho Santiago (Calif). Junior College.
Three Jayhawks face a season on the bench
By Tom Stinson
Associate sports edito
To Kansas senior Ricky Calloway, the bench is not a comfortable seat.
but vanoway, who transferred to Kansas from Indiana because coach Bobby Knight benched him indefinitely toward the end of last season, has learned to get used to the thought of sitting and watching his new teammates this season.
Under NCAA rules, he must sit out a season before being eligible to play for the team.
sayings:
"It's going to be tough on me." the 6-foot-6 forward said. "I like to play. I'm a competitive person.
"But I can get enjoyment out of watching the team play, knowing they're playing hard. I'll be in every game hollering like I'm participating."
calloway is one of three Jayahwks who have to hit out this year. Freshman Malcolm Nash and sophomore Alonzo Jamison also will be watching from the bench.
Nash failed to meet NCAA Proposition 48 guidelines and will have to sit this year without even practicing with the team.
Proposition 48 is an NCAA layaw requiring incoming freshmen student-athletes to score at least 15 on the ACT exam or 700 on the SAT exam. Student-athletes also must have a minimum high school grade point average of 2.0.
average of 2.5.
Jamison did not meet the minimum credit hours allowed under NCAA rules when he transferred from Rancho Santiago (Calif) Junior College. The 6-5, 235 pound forward is redshirting this year, so he will not lose a year of eligibility and is able to practice with the team.
"They're adopting a positive attitude toward the whole thing and are just working hard to make the best of it," coach Roy Williams said. "Ricky knew he would not be able to play. Alonzo found out this summer, and he was very disappointed. But, he's treating it as a typical redshirt year.
"I think they've already decided to handle it, and it's already been done. They'll just try to learn from it."
Calloway was a starter on the 1987 national champion Indiana team and was named Big Ten freshman of the year in 1986, but when he played only one minute in the Hoosiers' final conference game last year and didn't play in Richmond's first-round upset of Indiana in the NCAA tournament, he decided to leave the school.
"I enjoyed three years there," said Calloway, who averaged 18.1 points and 4.3 rebounds a game as a junior. "Last year just didn't work. I just wasn't happy."
The 6-7 Nash averaged 15.5 points and 11 rebounds a game as a senior at Vashon High School in St. Louis, Mo.
Williams said Nash was spending extra time in study hall and lifting weights in preparation for next season. Nash was unavailable for comment because of Williams' rule of freshmen not being able to be interviewed until after their first game.
Jamison averaged 19.5 points and 12.5 rebounds a game and was named the coplayer of the year in the California Junior College system as a freshman last season.
Earlier this fall, he scored 16 points in an intrasquad scrimmage in Salina, and he had an impressive debut in Allen Field House by bringing the backboard at "Later with drums."
"That's when I really knew he cared about the players coach (Larry) Brown signed," he said. "He told me if I went back to junior college, that he'd recruit me again.
damson said Williams gave him a choice of playing another junior college year or sitting out at Kansas this year after finding out he couldn't compete this year.
"I thought I might as well come and learn the system now. This way, I get to learn the ropes. I sort of took it in stride. This (redshirting) makes it easy. I think it will work out to my advantage."
ree
s finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted the program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinued with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. 'When told the major a lot of people were really」
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairfax, Va., senior and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
mister
hooting
band was killed . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he to shoot my husband," she said. idridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
under Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
bird was convicted in 1985 in the h of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a trafficident at the Rocky Ford Bridge or the Cottonwood River nearperia. The investigation wasened after Bird's conviction onsolicitation charge. The prosecution that Bird threw hisfrom the bridge and tried topuise the slaying as a trafficident.
habit today
habit of smoking is no longer in uion in New York City."
nation in New York City". amilisch urged smokers unconnec- ard about their health to think ut their friends and family, reg the recent death of his friend "A Chorus Line" collaborator vard Kleban. The lyricist, a vy smoker, died of cancer last ember.
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 9
e event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in coln Center, ended with two crushes crushing giant plastic n cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
ne Tobacco Institute officially unceed its "Great American come" program in newspaper artisements Tuesday, but a cesman said that the program was called as a rebuttal to "okeout"
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall Mall, 642 Massachusetts St.
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
LAST TEMPETATION OF CHRIST
DAYES & NOV. 8-DEC.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for their sins. They also filmed the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANS
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno."
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
directed by Martin Scorsec and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantzakis, have focused on a scene from the film by lust toward Mary Galdenle.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
Jill Johns, a theater employee.
"It made me want to see the movie more."
for the film earlier in the week.
Debbie Pitt would, assistant man
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was projecting the rogue
testify for Christ." he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar
The Championship
Champs can still keep the memories
Associate news editor
By Elaine Sung
During a particularly low point in the 1987-88 basketball season, former Kansas coach Larry Brown often insisted he was the only coach in the nation who had two football players on a basketball team.
It was true. Brown was worried about the number of players he had and pulled up strong safety and guard Marvin Mattox from the junior varsity squad to join free safety and guard Clint Normore.
defeat.
But there is no doubt that the highlight of last season was winning the national championship in Kansas City. Mo. The players and Brown have the championship ring on their fingers and the week of April 4 forever in their memories.
It was just one example of how turbulent a season it was for the Jahwaws.
It was a sweet victory, made sweeter by beating Oklahoma, the Big Eight Conference regular season and tournament winner, in the title game. The Sooners, with their run-and-gun, high-scoring game, faltered and lost 83-79.
Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs could only watch as his five main men failed in the clutch, and while the Jayhawks celebrated on the court, the Sooners wandered around in shock and stumbled off to the dressing room, not able to accept the enormous
doubt.
"When the horn finally blew and we were all running out on the court, I just started to realize what we had done and how much further we had gone than anybody thought we could go," said guard Jeff Guelden. "We got together as a team at just the right time and there was a lot of pride."
Kansas was the Cinderella team, a team that had somehow overcome injuries, academic ineligibilities and other personnel problems. The Jahayhaws won their second national title using a lineup that took Brown 11 different starting combinations to establish. And they had suffered through several weeks of uncertainty. They were considered "on the bubble" in terms of making the NCAA tournament.
"I think just being the underdogs and then coming out on top, that's a memory that will be with me for the rest of my life," said forward Milt Newton. "We were the team that wasn't supposed to make the NCAA. We were supposed to go to the game and we got in the game, but then we went all over. Beating Oklahoma, I'll remember that for the rest of my life, too, because they were such a powerful team and we played together and we won the game."
the celebrating continued for days afterward, including a rally at Memorial Stadium and a trip to the White House to see
KANSAS 21
SIEGER 44
President Reagan.
Then the rumors started again. Where was Brown going to go?
was Brown going to the first answer came a little more than a week after the title game. Brown was going to return to UCLA.
Then he changed his mind, and decided to stay at Kansas. For whatever reason, be it financial or otherwise, Brown decided to stay with the Jayhawks.
stay with the wayne.
But the decision wasn't final.
Milt Newton guards Oklahoma's Dave Sieger during the national championship game. Kansas won 83-79 last April.
But the decision wasn't clear. On June 13, Brown took a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, becoming the highest paid coach in the NBA when he accepted the head coaching job with the San Antonio Spurs for $3.5 million over five years.
Splurs for $350 "There are no hard feelings on my part." "There was a great coach and obviously I'm going to miss a lot of things about him because he knew what I could do and what other players on the team could do. We wouldn't have to go through the whole learning process all over again. Everybody was a little upset, of course, because we had just lost our coach right after we had such a great year.
after we had such a situation for him. He had a lot of things offered to him. He sincerely told us he wanted to stay here but it was such a great offer. But everybody knows coaching is a business, the same as everything else is and he had to go where the best opportunity was."
"I knew eventually it had to happen. I was sad to see him go, but I wasn't at him at all because it was something that he wanted to do." Newton said. "I've been around coach Bong long enough to know that sacrificed a lot for this time, our community wanted to go to the pros. I'm just happy that he got the chance to do that. I'm happy that he had the chance to stay here and give the University of Kansas the championship."
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
It wasn't much of a surprise to the players, who, like the rest of the University, had heard of the rumors about Brown's impending departure.
And winning the title also tends to block out the bad parts of the season.
And there! It all started out in a bad way. Before the season got under way, Joe Young, a transfer from Dodge City Community College, was declared eligible because some of his junior college hours did not transfer to Kansas. It left him short of the 48 hours required by the NCAA for a junior college transfer to compete. Young, a 6-foot-7 forward, eventually transferred to Washburn University in Topeka.
"When you win the championship, you forget about the bad memories. You just remember the good ones." Newton said. "So I attribute winning the national championship to wiping out all those bad memories." And there were a lot of those.
The good news was that Kansas and the highly-touted Danny Manning were in the pre-season spotlight, with most publications awarding the Jayhawks a Top 20 ranking.
The players and fans soon learned to never assume. The excitement of being ranked in the Top 20 faded away and reality settled. The players traveled to Hawaii for the Maui Classic.
HAWKINS a disappointing beginning. Kansas defeated Chaminade and then promptly lost 100-81 to Iowa and 81-75 to Illinois for a 1-2 start.
"It woke us up to all the hype about us being good and finding out we had a long way to go," said guard Lincoln Minor.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what
anyone imagined. On Dec. 30, playing St. John's in the ECAC Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden in New York City, senior Archie Marshall collided with another player and fell, tearing ligaments in his right knee.
his right knee. He ended his season, and most likely his playing career. Marshall was forced to sit out the entire 1968-87 season when he injured his left knee. He had waited patiently for his comeback, only to see it slip away again.
Marshall was a crowd favorite and an stabilizing force for the team. When he went down, the team was devastated Manning started wearing a white wristband with No. 23 — Marshall's number — written on it in black marker, a tribute to his friend for every game.
The road turned out to be a lot longer than
While Marshall rehabilitated, he told his teammates to go on and look for the future. Part of that future was a junior swinger named Milt Newton out of Washington. D.C.
court winning streak. The Jaybawks took revenge, though, when they arrived at Ahearn Field House in Manhattan three weeks later. It was Kansas' last game against K-State in Ahearn, because the Wildcats were planning to move into the newly built Bramlage Coliseum for the 1988-89 season.
Times got tough in early January, with senior forward Chris Piper still nursing a groin pull and center Marvin Branch being declared academically ineligible. Branch was a 6-10 junior college transfer from Barton County Community College and his ineligibility forced Manning to take over at center.
Newton had seen little playing time in the days before Marshall's injury. But Newton blossomed into one of the bright spots of the season. By the end, he matured into an emotional leader and won the fans' support with his aggressive high-flying style of play
lone of the protesters intervened had seen the film or used to see it.
The Jayhawks, who had never lost more than two consecutive games under Brown, lost five in a row, dropping to 12.8. It bottomed out on Jan. 30, when intra-state rival Kansas State stormed into Allen Field House and broke Kansas' 55-game home-court winning streak.
That, and memories of the broken 55-game streak were all the Jayhawks needed to struggle past the Wildcats 64-63 with a key rebound from Gueldner and the resulting three-pointer from guard Kevin Prichard.
It was the turning point for the Jayhawks, who made a strong showing in the end despite playing against three Top 20 teams in a four-game stretch.
The teams met one more time, which proved to be the charm. The Jayhawks, behind Scooter Barry's 15 points, defeated K-State 71-58 at the NCAA Midwest Regions in Pontiac, Mich., to make the Final Four.
It all revolves back to the championship game. The Jayhawks won the title, and the game will be remembered as one of the best in tournament history. But for the players, six of whom remain on this year's team, it was how they got there that makes the victory even sweeter.
every event. "We don't talk about it so much and we don't dwell on the exact things we did," Guelder said. "More of it is just the little things you reminisce about, not so much winning the championship and how great that feeling was. There are a lot of little things that are going to stick in my mind and a lot of it are memories we had coming together as a team."
ree
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
3. finish their degree
wd with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. 'When told the major a lot of people were really
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairfax, Va, senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
and was killed . . . I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he
1 to shoot my husband," she said.
Idridence, 25, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge is
already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
husband's life.
ird was convicted in 1985 in the
th of his wife, Sandy, who at first
earned to be the victim of a traffic
ident at the Rocky Ford Bridge
r the Cottonwood River near
poria. The investigation was
sened after Bird's conviction on
solicitation charge. The prosecu-
mister
hooting
contended that Bird threw his
from the bridge and tried to
uise the slaying as a traffic
dent.
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries
order Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
habit today
abit of smoking is no longer in on in New York City."
unilished urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think it their friends and family, the greg recent death of his friend "A Chorus Line" collaborator ard Klenab. The lyricist, a y smoker, died of cancer last ember.
e event, held under the big top
The Big Apple Circus" in
inh Center, ended with two
crushings giant plastic
cigarettes as the celebrities
nearby.
a Tobacco Institute officially unced its "Great American one" program in newspaper ritemesses Tuesday, but a judge ruled that the proposition not planned as a resultant mokeout.
.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 188Q BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17.1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
RAT TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
RATES & NOV. 14, DEC. 24
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at albury Hall, 642 Massachusetts.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
directed by Martin Scorsee and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzak, have focused on a scene from the movie by his lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Taure said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
On Probation
NATIONAL
The Jayhawks celebrate after winning the 1988 NCAA title in Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Mo.
KU basketball endures turbulent times
Compiled by Tom Stinson
Associate sports editor
The ride lasted more than eight months and took virtually every twist and turn imaginable, but it would appear that it has come to a end. The Kansas men's basketball program can step off and move on.
ship in the area also lost its coach, received three years probation for NCAA recruiting violations and was placed in a negative spotlight across the nation.
program for the Jayhawks. During those eight months, the Jayhawks went from winning the national championship to nearly losing their program.
The ride began to intensity on June 11, when coach Larry Brown ended weeks of speculation and added to his reputation as a climbing man by accepting the San Antonio Spurs' head coaching job. Brown received $5.5 million over five years for the job and took with him his three Kansas assistants — Alin Gentry, Ed Manning and B.C. Rofford
Ainn Gentry, Ed Manning and R.C. Buford.
Kansas fans were relieved when on July 8
North Carolina assistant coach and Dean
Smith-protage Roy Williams was named the
Jayhawk's seventh men's basketball coach
But that celebration quickly turned to frustration and bevelerment on July 11.
The 14 violations, at least eight of which the University self-reported, occurred between June 1986 and April 1987. They included buying an airline ticket for a recruit, lending a recruit's family money to pay a utility bill and giving a recruit $200
Gentry said after the meeting that "90 percent" of the violations involved Vincent Askew and that former Jayhawk player Mike Marshall was a Kansas athletic department representative mentioned in the violations.
instruction and bewilderment also helped Bob Frederick, athletic director, revealed
"As I understand it, if you had nothing but minor violations alleged, it would not end up before the enforcement committee for infractions," he said at the time.
utnat Kansas had received an official NCAA letter of inquiry concerning recruiting violations.
Askew was a former Memphis State University player who considered transferring to Kansas during the summer of 1966. He lived in Lawrence that summer, and the
Although the infractions were downplayed at the time, Frederick admitted that some of them were serious.
Kansas' response to the NCAA Committee on Infractions was due Sept. 3 and Jayhawk officials met with the committee on Sept. 30.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students know what to do de la tour said.
violations involving him all occurred during a 10-day period that summer.
Marshall played for Kansas in 1983-84 before transferring to McNeese State.
On Nov. 1, 30 days after the hearing, the results of the investigation were released:
"The men's basketball team is on three years probation, including banning three unnamed individuals from involvement in Kansas athletics. Brown later identified the three individuals as Marshall, Ralph Light, president of RAL construction company in Kansas City, Kan., and Jerry Collins, who had produced the Larry Brown Show."
- Kansas loses one scholarship for 1989-90, dropping the Jayhawks to 12 scholarship players, three less than the NCAA limit.
- Kansas is banned from postseason play
■ Kansas is not allowed to pay for recruits to visit the Kansas campus in 1989.
But, the Jayhawks could have received the "death penalty" because it was the second major infractions case involving the institution within a five-year period. The Kansas football program was put on a two-year probation in 1983.
one of the protesters intervened had seen the film or used to see it.
The "the death penalty" is an NCAA ruling that can shut down a program for a speci-
period if that institution was involved in two major infractions cases in five years
The Kansas staff and fans thought the ride was officially over, but it once again gained speed on Nov. 9 when Marshall said in a Sports illustrated article that he gave for American Donny Manning small loops when Manning was a student athlete at Kansas.
"It's true," Ron Grinker, Manning's agent, said. "He gave him $5, $7 and $10 when (Manning's) father was out of town."
David Berst, NCAA director of enforcement, said, "Those are not significant violations if that's all that was involved and he was the only eligible player from the
On Nov. 11, the NCAA confirmed Berst's comments and the ride officially ended.
The NCIA announced that it would not reopen its investigation of the Kansas pro-
Its reasoning was that the loans occurred before Marshall would have been an athletics representative.
No more twists, no more turns and almost no more Kansas basketball. The ride halted just in time, and Kansas' program stepped off onto secure ground.
ree
4. finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
complain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said; y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
habit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
ird was convicted in 1985 in the th of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a traffic ident at the Rocky Ford Bridge r the Cottonwood River near peria. The investigation was sent after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecunted that Bird threw his from the slaying and tried to uise the slaying as a traffic ident.
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 11
sand was killed . I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he
1 to shoot my husband , she said,
idridge, 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
husband's life.
amplified urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think out their friends and family, and the recent death of his friend
mister
hooting
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
order Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
y 1987.
habit today
"A Chorus Line" collaborator
vard Kleban. The lyrist, a
vy smoker, died of cancer last
ember.
he event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in coin Center, ended with two chants crushing giant plastic n cigarettes as the celebrities d nearby.
be Tobacco Institute officially
peeled its "Great American
come" program in newspaper
gritteisms Tuesday, but a
tasman said that the program
was acted as a rebuttal to
Smokeout.
---
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the last night to demonstrate at St. Hall Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
the protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DAVID K. NOV. N. DEC.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
The Rev Herve de laurent,
headmaster of St. Mary's, said the
protesters were there to pray and
serve penance in compensation for
the loss of their beloved wife in the
film and to distribute fliers to
dissuade people from seeing it.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAI
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
To protest the local sighing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people bad protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary,"
testify for Christ," he said.
COACH
Coach Roy Williams handled many of the recruiting responsibilities at North Carolina and immediately hit the recruiting trail after taking the Kansas job.
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The only player Kansas signed in the first week of the early national letter of intent period was 6-0 guard Adonis Jordan of Reseda, Calif.
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student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher asks me to know what to say," by la tour Saure.
"I think it hurt them," said Van Coleman, publisher of the National Recruiter's Cage Letter. "But if I was Roy Williams, I would look at the kids I wanted to recruit and have them in during the December evaluation period. I think you can still save spring recruiting."
While hardly an ideal situation for recruiting, the three-year NCAA probation that Kansas is serving can be overcome.
★ A huge assortment
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
★ A huge assortment of KU merchandise to support the 'Hawks!
Good Luck Jayhawks & Lady Jayhawks!
The Jayhawks can not pay for recruiting visits between January 1 and December 31 in 1898. The restrictions could have a negative impact on all-Star Sports Publications said.
"That could wipe out their late recruiting this year and their early recruiting next year." Gibbons said. "That bothers them for two years."
Good recruits possible despite NCAA probation
“Adonis can be an impact freshman,” Coleman said. “He's a flashy passer, tremendously quick and has a good jumper. He will package the package together and become a leader.”
Chris Heller of Kansas City (Mo.) Rockhurst High School appears to be the only highly-rated big man still considering Kansas.
"He is a highly-regarded player out in California," Coleman said. "But he's not quite the same player as Miner."
CUAH Pittsburgh. Kansas was also in the running for Jordan's high school teammate, Lucious Harris. Reseda Cleveland coach Bobby Brassell said Monday night that Kansas was one of two schools Harris was considering.
If Kansas doesn't use all three scholarships in the early period, Gibbons said Kansas may have to concentrate or in-state high school and junior colleges for the late signing period this spring. He said those players would probably be able to pay their own way.
"Heller would be perfect for that offense." Gibbons said. "He can go outside and shoot or play with his back to the basket."
Harold Miner, of Inglewood, Calif., is expected to play for Chapman between Kansas.
Guard Thomas Hill of Lancaster, Texas, reportedly commited to Kansas but changed his mind and signed with Duke. Another guard, Mitch Butler of North Hollywood, Calif., cancelled a scheduled visit to Kansas for quarterback Jake Suiter. McNair, Richion Park, III, was expected to visit Kansas last week but signed with Purdue last Wednesday.
The fallout from probation includes losing some of the nation's toon players.
Heller's final five schools are Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Southern Methodist and UCLA.
"I think you can recruit junior college kids, because they know the situation in Lawrence is a lot nicer than some of the junior college towns," Coleman said.
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ree
3 finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted the program. Also he said no to the program with the program's discontinu-
complain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said, y. Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
band was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he I to shoot my husband." she said. idridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
mister
hooting
the story of Eldridge and Bird, of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries under Ordained," a movie filmed and around Emporia. It aired in y 1987.
bird was convicted in 1985 in the
thirty of his wife, Sandy, who at first
earned to be the victim of a traffic
ident at the Rocky Ford Bridge
or the Cottonwood River near
peria. The investigation was
pended after Bird's conviction
on solicitation charge. The prosecu-
tion that Bird threw his
from the bridge and tried to
puise the slaying as a traffic
ident.
habit today
habit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
amish urged smokers uncon-
dent about their health to think
ut their friends and family,
ag the recent death of his friend
"A Chorus Line" collaborator
Kleban. The lyricist, a vy-smoker, died of cancer last
member.
he event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in john Center, ended with two joints crushing giant plastic n cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
ne Tobacco Institute officially unceed its "Great American come" program in newspaper articles Tuesday, but a teaser said that the program was assumed as a rebuttal to Smokeout.
---
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Sterling Hall. 642 Massachusetts.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
RATED M NOV. N-DEC.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantzak, have focused on a scene from "The Fall" by lust toward Mary Malgalene.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the loss of life of the film and to distribute fluors to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough" he said.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protect."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
testify for Christ," he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the youngest person knows what to do on the tour.
one of the protesters intervened had seen the film or used to see it.
Picking up the pieces
It was a big year for the Big Eight
Conference got national exposure but now needs to back up success
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
For years, basketball in the Big Eight Conference has been overshadowed by the conference's rich tradition in football.
Not since 1952 when Forrest C. (Phog) Allen's Kansas Jayhawks defeated St. John's 30-63, had the conference produced a national champion in basketball — until last season.
Former Iowa State All-American and Big Eight television commentator Gary Thompson said coaches and media from across the country were raving about the quality of play after the first half, which produced a 50-50 tie.
It was Big Eight basketball's proudest moment. Oklahoma and Kansas meeting for the national championship in Kansas City's Kemper Arena. Kansas upset the Sooners 83-79 in a game that dispelled the myth that Big Eight basketball was unexciting.
"Being a Big Eight fan and having both teams in the finals, I wanted it to be a decent game," Thompson said. "People were talking about it at halftime saying it was one of the best halves of basketball in a championship game that they had ever seen."
1987-88 was a banner season for the Big Eight. Not only did the conference have two representatives in the final game, it also had three teams in the final eight and five teams invited to play. Missouri State were knocked out of the first round and Kansas State was defeated by the Jayhawks in the Midwest Regional Final in Pontiac, Mich.
Oklahoma coach Billy Tubbs said, "Had Kansas State not been in the regional with Kansas, we probably would have had three
Big Eight teams in the Final Four."
Besides having five of the best teams in the country last season, the Big Eight produced first five round draft choices in the nation more than any other conference in the nation.
the Big Eight also had more players on the Olympic team — Kansas' Danny Manning, Iowa State's jeff Grayer and K-State's Mitch Richmond — than any other conference.
Can the Big Eight duplicate last season's performance?
"It would be unfair to expect that," KState coach Lon Kruger said. "It was an ideal year, a dream year for the conference. But I think to follow that year up with a solid year would help to solidify our position on a national level.
"I think we can do that. I think we have teams in the conference that will have great years. The last few years we've had great representation in the NCAA tournament. If we come anywhere close to matching that again this year, we'll finally get over the hump to where people will give the Big Eight the respect it deserves."
"The Big Eight can be a dominant basketball league." Packer said. "But it will depend forever more upon the future performance of its teams. If the ACC (Atlantic Coast Conference) wasn't good for five years it would still be looked upon as a great basketball conference because of its performance over a long period of time.
CBS television analyst Billy Packer said last year's performance did not automatically make the Big Eight a dominant basketball conference.
strength at the top with (former coach Henry) Ibo's teams at Oklahoma State and of course Kansas has always had a great tradition. But when a conference is rated, it is looked upon as does it have good depth from top to bottom. To have multiple teams in NCAA is now the bench mark."
Despite last year's accomplishments, Packer said he would not rate the Big Eight as the best conference in the United States because he doubted "whether the number seven team in the Big Eight would have beaten the number seven team in the ACC or Big East Conference."
"The Big Eight has always had good
ABC and ESPN basketball analyst Dick Vitale said the Big Eight's accomplishments last season "exceeded my wildest expectations," he has a difficult time repeating that success.
"Last season they had the mega stars such as Jeff Grayer, Mitch Richmond, Derrick Brown, Danny Manning that brought great prestige and attention to the conference.
"The biggest problem that the Big Eight has is consistently getting the top talent. Conferences such as the Big Ten, ACC and Big East recruit great players every year to play in the conference. I don't think the Big Eight will be able to attract the big name players consistently."
Thompson, who has been a color commentator on Big Eight games for 18 years, said he had seen several changes occur recently as the Big Eight to improve as a basketball league.
"When Tubbs and (Iowa State coach Johnny) Orca came in (1980) they had a big effect on making it a more up-tempo game. People had always said you can never run successfully in the Big Eight. They have proven that you can run successfully.
The 45-second clock has also played a factor in the running game and I think most of the coaches in the league are better recruiters than before."
Missouri coach Norm Stewart said recruiting better players was the main reason for the increased success of the Big Eight.
"The era we had in '79 with (former Missouri center Steve) Stipanovich was very important and having very highly recruited players like (Wayman) Tisdale and Manning coming in behind him were important. Basketball was peaking at the same time and so we were really in stride with what was happening nationally."
Most coaches around the league said recruiting had been made easier because
Please see BIG EIGHT, p. 28, col. 1
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
KJHK FM 90.7
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
KJHK FM 90.7
BIG 8 BASKETBALL POLL
Points
1 Oklahoma (14) 140
2 Missouri (4) 130
3 Kansas 97
4 Kansas State 89
5 Oklahoma State 84
6 Nebraska 49
7 Iowa State 18
8 Colorado () number of first place votes
Tigers have the talent, seek team chemistry
Rv Mike Considine
Special to the Kansan
Last year Missouri seemed to have all the elements a basketball team could want. But when coach Norm Stewart tried to mix them together, there was no reaction.
"I'm really concerned from the standpoint of consistency," Stewart said. "The biggest problem we have to solve is our guard play. And we have to improve our defense.
together, they This season, the Tigers realize that they need to have a better understanding of team chemistry to win the Big Eight Conference.
"Sometimes it takes more than talent," Senior forward Greg Church said. "It's obvious we were missing something."
freshmen are pushing them to do that."
Coming off a surprising Big Eight championship in 1987-88, Missouri struggled to a 19-11 record and finished fourth in the league (7-7) last year.
defense
we can get those two things done, we'll be a good basketball team.
he said.
"They lead and push themselves," Stewart said. "We have a couple of seniors who haven't been that type of player, but the
Most coaches agree that Missouri has the best talent in the conference. A freshman class ranked ninth nationally by All-Star Sports Publications has surprised Stewart, he said.
the Tigers lost two starters, Derrick Chievous and Lynn Hardy.
"They played better when they played us without him," Iowa State coach Johnny Orr said. "With all those guys back, they'll have more cohesion than they had before."
Still, some think it was a case of addition by subtraction.
Chievous' heir apparent is 6-foot-4 freshman Anthony Peeller, who averaged 26.7 points, 11.4 rebounds and five assists at the University High School. He chose Musselow over Kansas.
Goneous, drafted in the first round by the NBA Houston Rockets, averaged 23.4 points per game last year and set the career scoring record at Missouri.
Peeler did not make a good first impression with the Tigers. He missed a few classes and was suspended from practice by Stewart.
"He's a great talent," Church said. "As long as he does what he's supposed to do, he refines his game down to his strengths and his weaknesses, he'll be a great player."
The leading returning scorer is shooting guard Byron Irvin, who averaged 12.9. Stewart said he expects Irvin to pick up some of the scoring load.
Peeler and junior John McIntyre should challenge Irvin for playing time.
Point guard Lee Coward could be a key player for the Tigers. Coward averaged 11 points per game as a sophomore and shot 53 percent from both the field and three-point range.
Missouri has two experienced centers in 7-1 senior Gary Leonard and 6-10 sophomore Doug Smith. Leonard averaged just 4.9 points and 3.4 rebounds in 95 games but had a career-high 17 points against the LSU team, and 13.1 points and 6.6 rebounds as a freshman. He was named a first-team selection on the UPI freshman All-American team.
"He made some crucial shots last year," Stewart said. "He's a very good competitor in the league."
"I feel I've improved my work ethic in practice," Smith said. "I need to work hard on things like defense and shooting."
Competing for starting positions at forward are senior defensive standouts Church and Mike Sandbothe, junior Nathan Buntin and freshman Maile Camelole.
Buntin started 25 games last season and averaged nine points and nearly five rebounds a game. Church scored eight points per game and Sandbette added five.
MIZZOU
Missouri Tigers
Coach: Norm Stewart
Record at MU: 400-217(21 yrs.)
1987-68 record: 19-11
Conference finish: 7-7 (4th)
KU leads series 138-78
Protected starters:
F-Mike Sandbothe 6-8, Sr.
F-Nathan Buntin 6-9, Jr.
C-Doug Smith 6-10, So.
F-Nathan Buntin 6-9, Jr.
C-Doug Smith 8-10, 50
C Lee Coward 6-1 Jr
G-Byron Irvin 6-6, Sr.
Comment:
The Tigers have more returning talent and experience than any other team in the Big Eight. Four returning starters and two blue-chip freshmen should help.
It all sounds great, but Missouri needs to prove it can live up to its visions of greatness. Until then, guess on 24 wins and a roll of the dice in the NCAA tournament.
ree
; finish their degrees
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. When told the major a lot of people were really!"
mister
ooting
bird was convicted in 1965 in the thirst of his wife, Sandy, who at first eared to be the victim of a trafficident at the Rocky Ford Bridge or the Cottonwood River nearperia. The investigation wassened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his feew from the bridge and tried topuise the slaying as a trafficident.
band was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he I to shoot my husband." she said. idridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried. was
subject of the CBS miniseries
under Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
abit today
University Daily Kansan ■ Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 13
habit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
ursush urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think out their friends and family, ag the recent death of his friend “A Chorus Line” collaborator Kleban. The lyricist, avy smoker, died of cancer lastember.
he event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in john Center, ended with two hants crushing giant plastic n cigarettes as the celebrities d nearby.
ne Tobacco Institute officially
peeled its "Great American
come" program in newspaper
gratuations Tuesday, but a
reasonable that the program
not planned as a rebuilts to
Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall City Hall. 642 Massachusetts St.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
EAST TEMPORATION OF CHRIST
DAYEH M NOV. M DEC.
Jeffrey Johnson/CANSAN
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
the Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to pro test."
John Wintrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Marv."
testify for Christ," he said
Picking up the pieces
OU still hoping for the biggest prize
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
Last year's regular and post-season Big Eight champions, the Oklahoma Sooners, achieved every goal except one - winning the national championship.
"Now, that tops our list and I would have to say this certainly could be a repeat performance," Sooner coach Billy Tubs said. "We have an excellent chance to be a good team, but first we have to replace three guys who played a big part in the success last year."
success last year
Tubbs is speaking of departed seniors
Dave Sieger, Ricky Grace and Harvey
Grant
"Stacey and Mookie are obviously two of the best in the country." Tubbs said. "Each had great season's last year and expect to better that this season.
Two players Tubbs have coming back, however, are Stacey King, a senior and preseason All-America selections center and senior point guard Mookie Blaylock.
"They could possibly be the toughest seniors I have ever had to replace," Tubbs said. "I'm not sure our program will ever have players like them again."
"I have always believed that when you have a legitimate inside player, like Stacey, and a guard who can do it all, like Mookie, there's no telling how far you can go."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
blocked shots
Blaylock led the conference in steals with 3.8 per game and was second being Grace averaging 5.9 assists a game
king was sixth in the conference in scoring with 22.3 points per game and was fifth in rebounding, pulling down 8.5 boards a game. He also led the conference with 103 blocked shots.
Despite all the preseason accolades that King has received, Tubbs said the 6-11 center would get even better with time.
coastal.
"Stacey has a lot of room for improvement," Tubbs said. "He knows that and we know that. His better years are probably two or three years down the road."
In Tubbs' opinion, there is no better point guard in the country than Blaylock.
BOUGHERS
Oklahoma Sooners
Coach: Billy Tubbs
Record at OU: 200-72 (8 yrs.)
1987-88 record: 35-4
Conference finish: 12-2 (1st)
KU leads series 111-52
Projected starters:
r-William Davis 6-6, Jr.
None of the protesters intere ed had seen the film or ned to see it.
F-Andre Wiley 6-8, Sr.
C Stacey King 6-11 Sr.
C-Stacey King, 6-11, Sr
G-Mookie Blaylock, 1-1, Sn
G-Terrence Mullins 6-3, So.
Comment:
Many national polls are touting the Sooners as a top-five team, but what if senior center Stacey King has a down season? It isn't likely, but Oklahoma would have to rely on many untested players to take up the slack. A safe prediction sees Oklahoma with about 25 victories and its seventh consecutive NCAA tournament appearance.
The battle for the off-guard position is between 6-3 sophomore Terrence Mullins and 6-6 senior Tyrone Jones. Tubbs said Jones had the inside track because of his consistent play during practice.
"The guy that's really emerged in practice is Tyrone Jones." Tubbs said. "He's been very consistent. He's perfect for our system and I love his attitude. He's been shooting in the 60 percent range from the field and I think he'll give us a real threat on the perimeter."
"For our system, Mookie Blaylock is the best point-guard in the nation," Tubbs said. "He makes things happen on the floor. I can't say enough good things about him. I wouldn't trade him for anybody out there."
12
OKLAHOMA
10
GOOVERS
STATE
Oklahoma guard Mookie Blaylock led the nation in steals last year and is one of many explosive Sooners this year.
Low predictions don't bother Orr
According to the Big Eight Conference preseason media poll, this supposed to be a down year for the Iowa State men's basketball team. The Cyclones are picked to finish sixth in the conference.
finish sixth in the conference. Try to tell Cyclone coach Johnny Orr that and he'll probably laugh. After leading Iowa State to the NCAA tournament in three of the last four years, Orr has earned a right to chuckle a bit.
By Ken Winford
Kansan sportswriter
"When I was in the Big 10 (as coach of Michigan, we were picked one year to finish fifth and we finished second," Orr said. "Another year they picked us eighth and we damn near won the national championship."
"Yes, we lost a great player in Jeff Grayer, but we have some very fine players that we think will get better as time goes by. I feel pretty good about this team. I thought we could be pretty good as the year goes by."
can be prefaced. In spite of Ors's optimistic outlook, the team will be hard pressed to replace Grayer. The second-team All-American tick was the leading score in the Big Eight.
In addition, the Cyclones will have to deal with the loss of center Lafester Rhodes and guard Gary Thompson. Rhodes was one of the most improved players in the nation last year averaging 22.5 points a game. Thompson had four goals and two assists selection by UPI, became only the second Iowa State player ever to reach 600 career assists.
Senior guard Mike Born, who made a team-high 36 three-point shots last year, said the Cyclones were a more complete team this season.
with a 25.3 average, a member of the 1988 Olympic Team and a first-round draft pick by the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks.
"Optimism is the best word to describe the attitude on the team right now," he said. "We don't have to many big names, but the talent from the top to the bottom of our roster is as good as it has been at ISU in a long time."
Arizona State.
Moore.
Looking to fill in for Rhodes at pivet is Victor Alexander and Darryl Spinks. Alexander, at 6-9 and 265 pounds, was the backup for Rhodes last season and played in 23 games.
Leading the way for the Cyclones this season will be the dazzling but sometimes streaky forward, Elmer Robinson. The 6-foot-5 senior averaged 11 points a game and had a career-high 26 points in a victory over
Brian State.
Other forwards returning for the Cyclones that made Mark Baugh, Norman Brown, Paul Doerreid, Robert Johnson and Adrian Moore.
Spinks, who sat out last year because of academic problems, was the backup to Sam Hill two years ago.
Joining Born in the backcourt are returnees Terry Words and March Urquhart. Woods, an outstanding playmaker, led the team in assists with 169.
team in assists for Urquhtar, who along with Born is co-captain of the Cyclones, said he would take his role as team leader seriously.
"There is a certain amount of pride I feel playing at home in front of our fans," he said. "My first year, we didn't lose at home and it meant a lot. I hope I can instill that kind of attitude into our younger players. We'll do everything we can to make this a successful year."
IowaStats
Iowa State Cyclones
Coach: Johnny Orr
Record at ISU: 124-114(8 yrs.)
1987-88 record: 20-12
Conference finish: 6-8 (5th)
KU leads series 132-45
Protected starters:
F-Elmer Robinson 6-5, Sr.
C-Victor Alexander 6-9, So C-Woods 5-9, Jr
G-JustisThigpen 6-2, Fr
Comment:
It's no big secret that the Cyclones will have to replace Jeff Grayer, Lafester Rhodes, and Gary Thompkins. Iowa State probably will have its weakest team since the 1981-82 team that finished 10-17. A tough non-conference schedule that includes Houston, Iowa, and Indiana probably will put the Cyclones around that record.
ree
3. finish their degrees
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said, y. Fairfax, va, senior, who the attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program · discontinued.
d with a lot of treeshmen and
who were interested in marrying
"he said. "When told the major
a lot of people were really
ister rooting
and was killed . . . 1 gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he
to shoot my husband," she said.
drieve. 3, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
bushard's life.
misshousa's niece
rod was逮捕 in 1983 in the
h of his life Sandy, who at first
could be to be the victim of a traffic
ident at the Rocky Ford Bridge
the Cottonwood River near
poria. The investigation was
sened after Bird's conviction on
solicitation charge. The prosecu-
contended that Bird threw his
from the bridge and tried to
uise the slaying as a traffic
ident.
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
rarder Ordained," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
habit today
habit of smoking is no longer in ion in New York City."
amishly urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think ut their friends and family, og the recent death of his friend ("A Chorus Line" collaborator ward Kleban. The lyricist, a vy smoker, died of cancer lastember.
he event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in coin Center, ended with two chants crushing giant plastic m cigarettes as the celebrities di nearby.
he Tobacco Institute officially ounced its "Great American come" program in newspaper erittements Tuesday, but a kesman said that the program not planned as a rebuttal to Smokeout.
14 University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
---
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ", the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Massachusetts St. 642, Massachusetts St.
LAST TEMPORATION OF CHRIST
RATES M NOV. 8-DEC.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God. To offset this charge, he offered to dissuade people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
laffrau Inhnsttn/KANSAN
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchnuehler, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la lea told the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
or the protesters inter- ved had seen the film or
Picking up the pieces
KING
32
Oklahoma's Stacey King was picked as the Big Eight Conference preseason Player of the Year.
KANSAN file photo
King has transformed into a scoring machine
Two years ago, Stacey King was a sophomore forward fighting for recognition on an Oklahoma basketball team loaded with talent.
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
potential.
Last season, King emerged as one of the top players in college basketball, earning second team All-Big Eight and All-America honors and helping the Sooners earn a second place finish in the Final Four.
The Sooners were dominated by stars such as Tim McCalister, Harvey Grant, Darryl Kennedy and Ricky Grace. King was labled as a player who had yet to reach his potential.
In his first two seasons at Oklahoma, King started only 10 games and averaged 6.5 points and 3.8 rebounds a game. But last season the 6-11 Lawton, Okla., native started in 38 of 39 games and posted the fourth best scoring season in Big Eight history with 869 points, averaging 22.3 points a game. He broke the single season record for blocked shots with 103.
What transformed King into an All-America caliber player?
“It’s harder for a reserve to go in and come off the bench because you know you’re in a for starter and you can’t afford to make those mistakes. You put a lot more pressure on yourself and it’s difficult to play that way.”
Because of last season's performance, King will face high expectations this season. King has been named as a first team All-American in most polls and was an overwhelming preseason pick as Big Eight player-of-the-year by the Big Eight media.
"Playing time," King said. "The more playing time you receive, the more confidence you'll gain. Being a starter on the team, I didn't have to worry about making a mistake and getting pulled out."
He has made the cover of three national basketball magazines, Inside Sports, The Sporting News and Street and Smith, and is an analyst for several analysts as a player of the year candidate.
"One of the major things Oklahoma has going for it is Stacey King," ABC and ESPN television analyst Dick Vitale said. "He has
Please see KING, p. 16, col. 3
WEAR
SPORTS WEAR
A COMPLETE LINE OF CHAMP~ IONSHIP SPORTS~ WEAR AS WELL AS ANYTHING UNDER THE SUN WITH A JAYHAWK!
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS
ree
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
4. finish their degrees
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
mplain it is academically weak
courses to continue", he said.
y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the
who attended the hearing, said
with Drury that the program
discontinued.
rd was convicted in 1965 in the h of his wife, Sandy, who at first sared to be the victim of a traffic dent at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River near poria. The investigation was ened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecunted that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to uise the slaying as a traffic dent
and was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he to shoot my husband. "she said, drridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
nister rooting
the story of Eldridge and Bird,
of whom have remarried, was
subject of the CBS miniseries
order Orainted," a movie filmed
and around Emporia. It aired in
1987.
habit today
habit of smoking is no longer in iion in New York City."
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988. 15
amblished urge smokers uncon-
sider about their health to think
ut their friends and family,
ag the recent death of his friend
"A Chorus Line" collaborator
vard Kleban. The yricist, avy
smoker, died of cancer last
member.
he event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in coin Center, ended with two shants crushing giant plastic in cigarettes as the celebrities did nearby.
the Tobacco Institute officially
ouced its "Great American come" program in newspaper
ertirements Tuesday, but a
not planned as a resulut to
Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall 642 Massachusetts St.
LAST TEMPYTATION OF CHRIST
INVITED A NOV. 8-DEC. 1942
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knell in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
directed by Martin Scorsece and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantakis, have focused on a scene that will be used by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
leffrey.johnston/KANSAN
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuehler, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Tempation of Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
move more. Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary,"
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher asks "how can you know what to say" da la Tour said.
Picking up the pieces
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or jailed to see it.
KING
Continued from p. 15
moved from my all-improvement team to my Rolls Royce squad. He can do it all—block shots, score in the lane and from the outside. I don't think there's another big man right now who can play the full 40 minutes and run the floor like Stacey can."
Despite the lack of playing time his first
tournament said it was a good
learning experience.
"It's a big jump from high school to college basketball, especially for a big guy," King said. "Guards tend to have an easier transition than big men because in high school, if you're a big man, you usually don't have a lot of other big men to contend with.
"When I got to college I realized that everyone could play. I knew I would get better with time and the I just worked hard day, day and things started to fall in place."
For King and the Sooners last season, everything fell in place except for the national championship. The Sooners won the Big Eight title and finished with a record of 35-4, which tied Kansas' 1966 team for best overall record in Big Eight history.
With all that talent, King said he still could not believe that the Sooners lost the national championship game to the underdog Jayhawks 83-79.
"That championship game really hurts the most," King said. "Kansas was a good team and they paid their dues, but honestly I didn't think that they were the best team.
The best team doesn't always win. It was a great coaching job by Larry Brown.
Basketball didn't end for King after that game, however. He was invited to the U.S. Olympic basketball tryouts in May and was selected by the last players cut from the team in August.
"It all happened so fast. We went into the game and weren't overconfident or anything, but we knew our chances of winning were very good. We went out, gave it our best shot and came up short. It's hard to accept a loss when you've beaten that team twice and they come from out of nowhere and beat you."
King was cut from the Olympic team because he suffered from a pulled groin muscle that hampered his performance.
King said he could have helped the
Olympic team offensively.
Having been in the limelight during the past year, King said he had been able to keep his ego in check.
"The main thing you have to do is keep everything in perspective," King said. "I have a very good family and teammates who help to keep my head on the ground. I couldn't be the player that I am now without the players that I have around me."
Another reason that King said he was happy to be a Sooner was because of coach Billy Tubbs' coaching philosophy, which includes a lot of offense and a lot of fun.
happy to be a Sooner was because of coach Billy Tubbs' coaching philosophy, which includes a lot of offense and a lot of fun. "I'm a fun guy," he said, "I like to have a lot of fun. The system we play in. Coach Tubbs allows us to free lance and do whatever we want as long as it doesn't
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--ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
ree
5. finish their degrees
16 University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairyra, Va., senior, and who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. 'When told the larger a lot of people were really
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
habit today
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was the subject of the CBS miniseries "Murder Ordnated," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in May 1987.
Hamlisch urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the aith of his wife, Sandy, who at first prepeared to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge er the Cottonwood River near emporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on e solicitation charge. The prosecutor contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to squisse the slaying as a traffic accident.
nister shooting
band was killed . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he to shoot my husband," she said. Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge t is already serving 5 to 18 years " an earlier unsuccessful plot on r husband's life.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokeswoman said that the program was not planned as a rebuke to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall Hill, Gallia. Massachusetts St.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DAVID K HOW M-DEC. 7
the protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for an hour on a night. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against them to distribute flies to disguise people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jeffrey Jobston/KANSAN
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchuhrer, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene in "The Inheritance" by bust toward Mary Galadene.
for the film earlier in the week.
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
testify for Christ," he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher asks, "What know what to say," de la tour said.
CU hopeful but also anxious
Picking up the pieces
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
None of the protesters inter- jewed had seen the film or joined to see it.
For the first time in four years, the Buffaloes are faced with the prospect of a season without center Scott Wilke.
Coach Tom Miller and his Colorado men's basketball team are looking toward the new season with hope but at the same time, with a little anxiety.
Wilke, who graduated, was Colorado's fourth all-time career scorer and was a key part of the team last year. He averaged more than 22 points and eight rebounds a game in Big Eight Conference competition.
In addition to Wilke, the Buffaloes, 7-21 overall and 3-11 in the conference last year, lost starting guard Michael Lee to graduation, and veteran guards Torrence Chapmon and Kerry Nash to one-year disciplinary administrative suspensions.
dry summer days.
However, Miller, who is in his third year as Colorado's coach, said he thought this team would be his best at Colorado.
"Losing two seniors, especially a player like Wilke, hurts us," Miller said. "We don't have one guy who can replace him, but we want everyone to contribute more in the process. Maybe this can help a situation to have tager players contributing. We won't be as focused on one guy and we'll have a more balanced attack."
Leading that attack will be senior Brian Robinson. The 6-foot-5 forward will be Colorado's leader in scoring and rebounding after averaging almost 11 points and six rebounds in conference play last season.
"We are a totally different team from the last few years," Becker said. "But that's not something that will hurt us. As a team, we feel more confident in what we're doing. We are stronger in all areas of the game and I think everyone is ready to pick it up."
Becker, who had a career-high 13 rebounds against Kansas last year, said he didn't worry about the preseason polls that had Colorado near or at the bottom of the conference race.
Robinson, who scored a career-high 20 points in Colorado's upset of Missouri last season, said he and his teammates wanted to earn the respect of the rest of the Big Ten.
"When we start winning some games, then the team will start getting some respect," he said. "We feel, with the group of guys we have right now, we can start turning things around here at Colorado."
Also key to Colorado's season will be senior Dan Becker. The 6-7 forward played in all 28 Buffalo games last season averaging more than seven points and four rebounds a game.
While saying this season would be a year of transition for Colorado, Becker said it would be a season of improvement as well.
"I don't try to read anything into those predictions," he said. "We haven't proven that we can win consistently, so I can understand why they chose us where they did. But what counts is how you do during the season, not where you're picked before it starts."
@J
Colorado Buffaloes
Coach: Tom Müller
Record at CU: 16-40 (2 years)
1987-88 record: 7-21
Conference finish: 3-11 (8th)
KU leads series 72-37
Replaced starters:
Projected starters:
rejected starters.
D-Barbock 5-7, Jr.
F-Brian Robinson 6-5, Sr.
C-Rodel Guest 6-5, So.
F-Dan Becker 6-7, Jr.
E Brian Robinson 6-5, Sr
Comment:
Colorado will probably have its best team in several years, but the Buffaloes seemed destined once again for last place in the Big Eight. Brian Robinson and Dan Becker are solid players in the front-court. Sophomore Steve Wise is a future standout guard. If Colorado finishes at or near .500, consider the season a success.
which pincea finishes seventh, there'll be seven teams in the NCAA (tournament)." Stewart said.
"Johnson and Manning have to have the best years of their careers." Nee said. "We need them to have a good, consistent year for us. We feel we have good young talent, but to win the Big Eight you need the juniors and seniors that have been to war."
Third-year Nebraska coach Dannynee said seniors Pete Manning and Eric Johnson, brother of Detroit Pistons guard Vinnie Johnson, were his key players.
Roundting out the returnees on the front line, which Miller said probably would be Colorado's strength, are Brent Vaughn and Rodell Guest.
NU could be underrated in preseason
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansan
Last year, Nebraska finished 13-18 overall and 4-10 in the conference, which tied it for sixth in the Big Eight.
Missouri coach Norm Stewart disagreed with the voting in the Big Eight media poll, which picked Nebraska for seventh place.
Johnson said, "Last year, we pulled together to beat Kansas and Missouri (in Lincoln), but when things got tough and we got to the top of the hill, some kids were not mature enough to give the effort we
situated in the Big Eight.
Stewart and many other Big Eight
coaches agreed that the Cornhuskers could be a surprise.
Please see NEBRASKA, p. 29, col. 3.
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University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 17
ree
; finish their degrees.
I should have been asked that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
emplain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y. Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
mister shooting
band was killed . . . I gave Tom
. . . 22-caliber Woodman that he
to shoot my husband, she said.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
t is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
r husband's life.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the ath of his wife, Sandy, who at first speared to be the victim of a traffic accident at the Rocky Ford Bridge near the Cottonwood River near imporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on e solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to insuse the slaying as a traffic accident.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was be subject of the CBS miniseries "Murder Ordained," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in may 1987.
habit today
Hamish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, sitting the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
---
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a law enforcement said that the program was not planned as a rebellion to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
EAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DAYE R M NOV. 24 DEC.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against them or to distribute flies to disenrage people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno."
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
leffrey_johnston@KANSAN
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
testify for Christ," he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher asks, "How do you know what to say," de la Tour said.
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or jotted to see it.
OSU has potential, but Cowboys looking for some experience
Picking up the pieces
By Mike Considine Special to the Kansas
Special to the Kansan
Oklahoma State is the Big Eight's mystery team.
Coach Leonard Hamilton's roster includes ten players without previous college experience.
The only returning starter from the last year's sixth-place team (14, 16, -4) is All-America candidate Iudson Crawford. The fourth-round guard Chuck Davis are the only others who played regularly.
If that weren't a big enough handicap, the Cowboys have been plagued by injuries during their preseason practices. Most of the team's five returning lettermen and the newcomers have been injured. Practice have been held with as few as six players.
"I've only had Royce Jeffries and Chris Gafney, two returning kids who've been injured, to help show the way for the young kids," said Hamilton, who is in his third year at OSU. "I don't think I'm making excuses, I was telling the players the injury situation and use it as a motivating factor just to get strong mentally.
The Cowboys have enough talent to over- come many of the negatives
Oklahoma State has potentially the best
frontline in the conference and a good freshman class led by forward Bryon Houston, ranked 29th nationally by Bob Gibbons of All-Star Publications.
Dumas, Houston, guard Darwyn Alexander, 6-foot-10 forward Thomas Jordan and 7-0, 260-pound center Johnny Pittman were high school All-Americans. Pittman was a consensus pick as the one of the top five players in the nation.
"I feel that this team is going to be a team that you're going to enjoy watching," Hamilton said. "I think that we have some very important the potential to do a lot of exciting things."
"Right now we're in such a teaching mode. We're trying to explain drills and trying to develop some chemistry and find some leadership."
Hamilton said his team's strong points work as strength, quickness and jumping ability.
The front line will be tall with Jordan and Dumas at the forward position and Pittman in the middle. But the size of the front line is greater than the rear. They have never played together as a unit.
"The they have physical things they can do." Hamilton said. "They can jump, they can run."
KANSAS
Oklahoma State sophomore Richard Dumas, guarding Kansas' Mit Newton, leads a powerful Cowboy squad this season that could finish in the top half of the Big Eight and make it to the NCAA tournament.
Dumas averaged 17.4 points and 6.4 rebounds per game. The Tulsa, Okla., native was named to United Press International's all-conference second team.
"It makes me feel good," Dumas said of
the recognition. "Now I have to live up to the reputation."
Jordan and Pittman were ineligible due to
Please see OSU, p. 28, col. 3
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706 E. 23rd 843-1341
ree
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
; finish their degrees
plain it is academically weak courses to continue." be said y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. When told the major a lot of people were really
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was the subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordained," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in day 1987.
minister
hooting
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the aft of his wife, Sandy, who at first speared to be the victim of a traffic evident at the Rocky Ford Bridge er the Cottonwood River near mporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on e solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to insuge the slaying as a traffic ceident.
band was killed . . . I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he
to shoot my husband, she said.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing
on second-degree murder charge
it is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
hour's life.
habit today
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamish urgled smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrites stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokesman said that the program was not planned as a result to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Massachusetts St. 642, Massachusetts St.
LAST TEMPOTATION OF CHRIST
DATED MON. M-DEC. 1947
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsee and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantakis, have focused on a scene from the movie by hust toward Mary Malgalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the death of three students in the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
affrav.inhustar/KANSAN
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Tempation of Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy. College and
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, I just want to see the movie."
"It made me want to see the movie more."
move more. Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher knows how what to say," said the La tour said.
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or planned to see it
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--finish their degrees.
that discontinued was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
University Daily Kansan■Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16. 1988. 19.
ree
; finish their degrees.
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
ed with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
iband was killed . . . I gave Tom
nister
hooting
habit today
band was killed . . . I gave 10m
. . . 22-caliber Woodman that he
to shoot my husband, "she said
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
t is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
husband's life.
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was be subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordened," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in May 1987.
Fhusband's life.
Bird was convicted in 1883 in the aath of his wife, who at first speared to be beheaded via victim of a traffic cidered by the Rocky Ford Bridge on the Cottonwood River near emperia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on ie solicitation charge. The prosecutor contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to squise the slaying as a traffic ceident.
Hamlish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Klehan. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokesman said that the program was not planned as a rebuttal to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
RAT TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
WEDNES M NOV. N DEC.
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall Mall. 642 Massachusetts St.
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the killing of four students at the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
directed by Martin Scorcese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzak, have focused on a scene in the movie by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSA
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
Jill Johns, a theater employee.
"It made me want to see the movie more."
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary,"
testify for Christ," he said.
Picking up the pieces
Henson and host of KSU newcomers will have to step forward this season
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher gives you a few things to know what to say," de la Tour said.
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or planned to see it.
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
When senior standouts Mitch Richmond, Charles Bledsoe, William Scott and Ron Meyer left Kansas State last May, they took almost 75 percent of the Wildcats' scoring and rebounding with them.
Wildcat coach Lon Kruger is counting on more offensive production from All-Big Eight Conference guard Steve Henson and fill the shoes of the departed seniors.
"We've got so many new faces," Kruger said. "This year's the opposite of last year in the sense that last year we returned a lot of people we've Henson we have very few certainties."
Henson, who led the nation last season with a 92.5 free-throw percentage, would be capable of taking the leadership for K State, Krazer said.
Although he might have to be both a playmaker and a scorer for the Wildcats, the 6-foot-1 Henson said he was not concerned about assuming a double role on the
"I don't know of any other player that is more valuable to our team than Steve," Kruger said. "There are better players on defense and better shooters than Steve. But when you look at the package as it floats over your team, I doubt any player could give us all that he does."
major problem. The Wildcats are hoping to get help in the backcourt from 6-1 sophomore Todd Stanfield, 6-2 freshman Jeff Malham and 6-1 junior college transfer LaKeith Humphrey, who can play either guard position.
Senior guard Buster Glover also might return to the Wildcats. Glover is a first semester disciplinary casualty whose status will not be determined until December.
FETE
"As long as I take good shots, we've got other people on the team who can score," said Henson, who averaged 9.1 points a game last season on 50 percent shooting from the field. "I don't think it will be a major problem."
Traditionally, K-State's frontcourt players have been relatively short and this season will be no different.
PARTY
Senior Fred McCoy at 6-7 is expected to
Kansas State Wildcats
Coach: Lon Kruger
Record at KSU: 45-20 (2 yrs.)
1987-88 record: 25-9
Conference finish: 11-3 (2nd)
KU leads series 130-83
Resolved strategy
rojected starters:
F-Reggie Britt 6-6, Jr
F-Billy Ray Smith 6-5, J C-Fred McCoy 6-7, Sr.
G-Steve Henson 6-1, Jr
G-Carlos Diggins 6-4, Sr.
Comment:
The Wildcats will rely on several newcomers this season, but they do have talent. Kansas State returns only one starter, but junior guard Steve Henson is a good player to build around. Kansas State will keep getting better throughout the season and will peak about the time it receives its third consecutive NCAA tournament bid.
start at center, but will be challenged by a pair of redshirts 6-8 junior Tony Massop and 6-9 freshman John Rettinger.
The Wildcats look to have the most depth at forward, where returning Wildcats 6-5 senior Mark Dobbins, 6-4 senior Carlos Diggins and 6-4 junior Lance Simmons will be challenged by junior college transfers 6-5 Billy Ray Smith and 6-6 Reggie Britt.
"Basically, what we have to do inside is get position and block out." Dobbins said. "We out-rebounded a lot of taller teams last season by working hard to get position."
Dobbins, who was the sixth man on last year's 25-9 team, said the lack of height was not a major concern for the Wildcats.
Last year, the Wildcats missed making the final play by one game, a 71-8 loss to Kentucky.
17
Kansas State guard Steve Henson led the nation in free-throw percentage last season and is the Wildcats' only returning starter this season.
Soviets tour United States after taking gold medal
The last time U.S. basketball fans saw these guys, Olympic gold medals were being hung around their necks. Medals that were supposed to be for the U.S. basketball team.
The Associated Press
arrived none.
"Basketball is No. 1 sport there," said guard Sharunas Marchuilionis, the Gail Goodrich look-alike who would love to play in the NBA. "All people were happy. They celebrate."
first time.
It went on to win the gold medal over Yugoslavia and put on a victory celebration usually reserved for NCAA championship games. It continued when the players arrived home.
The Soviet Union changed that with an 82-76 semifinal victory that kept the United States from the gold-medal game for the first time.
The Soviets started a nine-game tour against NCAA competition at North Carolina last weekend. And, with 10 of the same players from the team that won the gold medal, they beat the Tar Heels 104-93 and the Cavaliers will play Kansas in Allen Field House.
He did carry the U.S. flag in pregame ceremonies. Then Reid could only sit and watch Ariels Sabonis carry the Soviets to an easy victory with 23 points, 13 rebounds and an assortment of passes usually associated with much smaller than the 7-foot 2 Soviet center.
North Carolina was without J.R. Reid, who played in that semifinal game in Seoul. The junior forward had foot surgery and was out until conference play begins in January.
Sabonis, Marchionhil, Alexander Volkov and Valeri Tikhoneko are considered NBA caliber. Sabonis was a first-round draft choice of the Portland Trail Blazers.
They want to play in the NBA but can't.
"The government said no." Marchiluhnia said. "I don't know. It's over money, and whatever I get (the) government will get most of it."
Volkov is the only one who wouldn't need the consent of a club team in the Soviet Union since he is in the Army — until early December, that is.
"NBA people came to Moscow to watch me play," said Volkov, whose rights belong to the Atlanta Hawks. "I think a lot of people will see me in these games."
Volkov had 23 points and eight rebounds against North Carolina
"These games are good practice," Volkov said.
Khomichai said his countrymen didn't feel like potential gold medalists when the team won.
'Maybe you get third, behind United States and Yugoslavia,' he said. 'Then, when we lost first game to Yugoslavia, people said we had no chance.
When we left (for Seoul), people said,
"That's why it was fun to bring home the gold medal. There were some celebrations."
Gomelsky retired from the Soviet national team as he has three times before and has become coach of a team in Tenerife. Spain. He signed a two-year contract there, so it's unlikely he would be back for the 1992 Games.
Missing from the nine-game, 11-day tour is Alexander Gomelsky, the six-time Soviet Olympic coach who won his first gold in Seoul.
"Our Sports Committee meets in December to choose the new national head coach," said Yuri Salkov, an assistant to Gomelsky in Seoul and head man on the tour.
ree
4 finish their degrees.
I thanked students that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plaint it is academically weak courses to continue", he said y, Fairfax, Va, senior and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
"The story of Eldridge and Bird, of whom have remained, was a subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordained," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in May 1987.
Bird was convicted in 1865 in the aft of his hive, Sandy, who at first spared to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge or the Cottonwood River near emporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on ie solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to insuise the slaying as a traffic accident.
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
band was killed ... I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he
to shoot my husband," she said.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing
second-degree murder charge
t is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
hour's life.
Hamish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
20
habit today
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
nister shooting
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a judge said that the program was not planned as a result to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
RATED M GOV. N-DEC.
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ", the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold night to demonstrate at Hallia Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
directed by Martin Scorsec and based on a book by Nikos Kanzantzak, have focused on a scene where Mary is forced by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
move more Jill Johns, a theater employee.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la lauret said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
Women's Basketball
Fan support doesn't match success
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
Coach Marian Washington has a 269-174 record in 15 seasons at Kansas and has taken the Jayhawks to two consecutive NCAA tournaments.
CHRISTINA WESTHAM
The numbers speak for themselves.
Since Marian Washington became coach, of the Kansas women's basketball team in 1973, the Jayhawks have recorded a 269-174 record, have won five Big Eight Conference Tournaments and have had six seasons with 20 or more victories.
During this time, the Jayhawks have had two All-American and four regional AllAmerican choices, including Lynette Woodard, who is arguably the best women's basketball player ever.
As the fourth women's basketball coach in the University history, Washington has increased the number of scholarships for the team from zero to 15.
Kansas women's basketball program attempting to build larger following
Kansas has a 23-13 record in postseason play and has qualified for the NCAA tournament for the past two years.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
Yet, to a large degree, women's basketball at the University of Kansas remains an unknown commodity.
At a basketball-crazy university where the men's games regularly sell out the 15,800-seat Allen Field House, 10 of the women's 15 home games last year drew crowds of less than 1,000 people.
Washington, who served as Kansas" women's athletic director from 1973 to 1979, said much of the problem had to do with attitude.
"You have to have an attitude that helps to promote women's athletics," Washington said. "We are still having to combat what I call an outdated attitude toward women in sports. It's clear we need to go toward recognizing there is real value in women's athletics, and get away from the attitude that just tolerates it."
Iowa, Texas and Tennessee are universities which have recently made great improvements in promoting women's athletics, Washington said. She said competing against these schools was difficult when recruiting the country's best players.
"for us to get that kind of athlete, she has to feel the same as the male athlete feels," she said. "When the best players compare, they look at the programs that run promote. Women athletics are the same as men. They be on television, read themselves in the paper and play in front of fans who are really excited about them."
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or planned to see it.
too look over
"I've never met a person I had greater respect for as a person or a coach than Marian Washington," Wolfe said. "From the time she came here, I have made a commitment to try to let people know about women's basketball at Kansas. I have yet to bring someone to a game that hasn't become a fan. Marian is what we should expect every coach — man or woman — to be.
be.
"The public has to be told about the team and its games. That doesn't mean announce a game at 5 (p.m.) when it starts at 5:15. People need the information so they can plan their schedules around it."
Helen Wolfe, a former employee at the University, said she has been a fan of the women's basketball team since Washington took over.
does not get talked about a team that’s won the Big Eight two years in a row," she said. "Any time the men's team wins something, they have a packed field house. The women's team puts on a great show. The women's game can't be compared in some
plan their team and the women's basketball team does not get the respect that it deserves.
ways to the men's game, but it is just as exciting."
"People who appreciate skilled athletes, will appreciate the women's game," Washington said. "Some fans say they don't like the NBA because it's all one-on-one and they like college basketball because it involves strategy. Believe me, women's basketball has strategy."
Washington agreed that women's basketball has a lot to offer.
"It wasn't frustrating for me because I played for my own interests and the interest of the team." Shaw said. "I'm such a competitive person that I would enjoy playing if there wasn't anyone in the stands."
Sandy Shaw, who graduated last year after leading the Jayhawks with a 13.3 scoring average, said she learned to deal with the lack of support.
Shaw said all women's sports and not just
basketball were neglected at the University
“There are some talented women athletes at Kansas,” Shaw said. “Volleyball, softball and all women’s sports should be exploited because they may take awhile, but I think it will happen.”
In the past two years, the Jayhawks have won 44 games and have twice been crowned as conference tournament champions. Washington said many fans did not appreciate the difficulty the team had in reaching those achievements.
“There are some people that know what a challenge it was to win those two Big Eight tournaments, but many did not,” she said. “In terms of talent, we probably weren't the best team. But we had hard workers who kept trying and came through. That kind of effort really needs to be applauded.”
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions at the University, said the lack of support for women's athletics was a problem at universities nationwide.
"Women's basketball just doesn't have the support that men does," he said. "It's a national phenomenon, not just something that's happening here at Kansas. Publicity is a huge job. You have teams for the national tournament and they don't telesee until the finals."
"I have a 12 year-old son who went with me to the first-round tournament game last year against Middle Tennessee State. We were not in the zone, so a lot of people didn't even know about the game."
Linuvian said Kansas needed to get people who have never seen a women's game involved.
"Probably a lot of people don't understand the level of play of a collegiate women's game," he said. "Obviously, these people have to go to some games and recognize these young women deserve the same support the men have. Most people would be thrilled with the level of performance. It's outstanding basketball."
During the Thanksgiving break, the Jayhawks will play in the Aruba Shootout Classic where seventh-ranked Mississippi will also participate.
The Jayhawks will again play a top-notch schedule this season. Washington is hoping that a strong home schedule will generate some fan interest.
In December, Kansas will play in the Rutgers Invitational which will include national powers Tennessee and Rutgers. The Lady Vols, who won the 1987 NCAA Tournament, reached the final four last season for an unprecedented ninth time.
Iowa, who was the top-ranked team in the nation for most of last season and who is picked third this year by Street & Smith's magazine, will participate in the Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic in December.
Washington said that Kansas was a good place to build a strong foundation for the university.
"I've always thought that I couldn't imagine any place like Lawrence, in terms of building a strong athletic program," she said. "We have the perfect situation, and we don't seem to seize it. It's a matter of people being aware and sensitive. I don't know how to raise the consciousness unless you change the attitude."
While Washington found that winning the last two conference tournaments was satisfying, she said that she hopes to achieve more.
"If we just wanted to remain competitive in the Big Eight, I would have to change my
Please see WASHINGTON, p. 25, col. 1
ree
; finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said "When told the major a lot of people were really
plain it is academically weak courses to continue." he said, yi. Fairfax, Va, senior, and the attendee了 hearing the said with Drury that the program discontinued.
hooting
band was killed . . . I gave Tom . . . 22-caliber Woodman that he to shoot my husband . . . she said. Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge it is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on her husband's life.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the ath of his wife, Sandy, who at first speared to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge er the Cottonwood River near imporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on esolation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to insult the slaying as a traffic accident.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was be subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordained," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in July 1987.
habit today
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamlisch urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
University Daily, Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a report said that the program was not planned as a rebuff to the Smokeout.
21
---
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
EARLY TEMPORATION OF CHRIST
DAYED A NOV. 10, DEC. 25
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ", the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts Street.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for an hour on a night. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the death of a boy from the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
directed by Martin Scorsec and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzak, have focused on a scene in the movie by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jaffrev Johnston/KANSAN
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's"Academy, College and night.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuruel, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
testify for Christ," he said.
Women's Basketball
Fan support doesn't match success
By Ken Winford
Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
A
The numbers speak for themselves
Coach Marian Washington has a 269-174 record in 15 seasons at Kansas and has taken the Jayhawks to two consecutive NCAA tournaments.
Since Marian Washington became coach of the Kansas women's basketball team in 1973, the Jayhawks have recorded a 269-174 record, have won five big Eight Conference Tournaments and have had six seasons with 20 or more victories.
During this time, the Jayhawks have had two All-American and four regional All-American choices, including Lynette Woods, and the best women's basketball player ever.
As the fourth women's basketball coach in the University history, Washington has increased the number of scholarships for the team from zero to 15.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher says "Don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or planned to see it.
Kansas women's basketball program attempting to build larger following
the college from Kansas has a 23-13 record in postseason play and has qualified for the NCAA tournament for the past two years.
Yet, to a large degree, women's basketball at the University of Kansas remains an unknown commodity.
At a basketball-crazy university where the men's games regularly sell out the 15,800-stall Allen Field House, 10 of the women's 15 home games last year drew crowds of less than 1,000 people.
Washington, who served as Kansas' women's athletic director from 1973 to 1979, said much of the problem had to do with attitude.
author.
"You have to have an attitude that helps to promote women's athletics." Washington said. "We are still having to combat what I call an outdated attitude toward women in sports. It's clear we need to go toward recognizing there is real value in women's athletics, and get away from the attitude that just tolerates it."
take you to Texas and Tennessee are universities which have recently made great improvements in promoting women's athletics, Washington said. She said competing against these schools was difficult when recruiting the country's best players.
recruiting the college team. "For us to get that kind of athlete, she has to feel the same as the male player feels," she said. "When the best players compare, they look at the programs that really promote. Women athletes want the same as men. They want to be on television, read about themselves in the paper and play in front of fans who are really excited about them."
them".
Heen Wolfe, a former employee at the University, said she has been a fan of the women's basketball team since Washington took over.
took over.
"I've never met a person I had greater respect for as a person or a coach than Marion Washington," Wolfe said. "From the time she came here, I have made a commitment to try to let people know about women's basketball at Kansas. I have yet to bring someone to a game that hasn't become a fan. Marian is what we should expect every coach — man or woman — to be.
"The public has to be told about the team and its games. That doesn't mean announce a game at 5 (p.m.) when it starts at 5:15. People need the information so they can plan their schedules around it."
"as you're talking about a team that's won the Big Eight two years in a row," she said. "Any time the men's team wins something, they have a packed field house. The women's team puts on a great show. The women's game can't be compared in some
plan their game. Does the women's basketball team does not give the respect that it deserves.
ways to the men's game, but it is just as exciting."
"People who appreciate skilled athletes, will appreciate the women's game," Washington said. "Some fans say they don't like the NBA because it's all one-on-one and they like college basketball because it involves strategy. Believe me, women's basketball has strategy."
Washington agreed that women's basketball has a lot to offer.
"It wasn't frustrating for me because I played for my own interests and the interest of the team." Shaw said. "I'm such a competitive person that I would enjoy playing if there wasn't anyone in the stands."
Sandy Shaw, who graduated last year after leading the Jayhawks with a 13.3 scoring average, said she learned to deal with the lack of support.
Shaw said all women's sports and not just
there are some talented women athletes at Kansas, "Shaw said. "Volleyball, softball and all women's sports should be exploited to get them more likely to may take awhile, but I think it will happen."
basketball were neglected at the University
In the past two years, the Jayhawks have won 44 games and have twice been crowned as conference tournament champions. Washington said many fans did not appreciate the difficulty the team had in reaching those achievements.
"There are some people that know what a challenge it was to win those two Big Eight tournaments, but many did not." she said. "In terms of talent, we probably don't have the workers who keep trying and came through. That kind of effort really needs to be applauded."
Bruce Lindvall, director of admissions at the University, said the lack of support for women's athletics was a problem at universities nationwide.
"Women's basketball just doesn't have the support that men does," he said. "It's a national phenomenon, not just something that's happening here at Kansas. Publicity and exposure aren't the same. You have 48 teams for the national tournament and they don't teleseize until the finals."
"I have a 12-year-old son who went with me to the first-round tournament game last year against Middle Tennessee State. We were playing a lot of people, and I didn't even know about the game."
Lindvall said Kansas needed to get people who have never seen a women's game involved.
"Probably a lot of people don't understand the level of play of a collegiate women's game," he said. "Obviously, these people have to go to some games and recognize these young women deserve the same support the men have. Most people would be thrilled with the level of performance. It's outstanding basketball."
The Jayhawks will again play a top-notch schedule this season. Washington is hoping that a strong home schedule will generate some fan interest.
sometime before Iowa, who was the top-ranked team in the nation for most of last season and who is picked third this year by Street & Smith's magazine, will participate in the Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic in December.
During the Thanksgiving break, the Jayhawks will play in the Aruba Shootout Classic where seventh-ranked Mississippi will also participate.
In December, Kansas will play in the Rutgers Invitational which will include national powers Tennessee and Rutgers. The Lady Vols, who won the 1987 NCAA Tournament, reached the final four last season for an unprecedented ninth time.
Washington said that Kansas was a good place to build a strong foundation for women's athletics.
"I've always thought that I couldn't imagine any place like Lawrence, in terms of building a strong athletic program," she said. "We have the perfect situation, and we don't seem to seize it. It's a matter of people being aware and sensitive. I don't know how to raise the consciousness unless you change the attitude."
While Washington found that winning the last two conference tournaments was satisfying, she said that she hopes to achieve more.
"It we just wanted to remain competitive in the Big Eight, I would have to change my
Please see WASHINGTON, p. 25, col. 1
ree
; finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the larger a lot of people were really
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the path of his wife, Sandy, who at first speared to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge er the Cottonwood River near emporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on ie solicitation charge. The prosecutor contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to insuse the slaying as a traffic accident.
mister shooting
band was killed . I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodsmann that he
to shoot my husband , she said.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge t
is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
bush's life.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was be subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordained," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in May 1987.
habit today
University Daily, Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 23
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokesman said that the program was not planned as a rebuttal to the Smokeout.
---
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the killing of a girl and to dissuade people from seeing it.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
MATES IN NOV. M-DEC.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults
Ukrainians. We don't."
laffrev. Johnston/KANSAN
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchuemner, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ." about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was
want. They have the right to protest."
Many of the students refused comment. De la la said the policy stemmed from a similar context in the class.
testify for Christ." he said.
HARLEY
15
☆
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
Lynette Woodard
CITY OF WASHINGTON
Marian Washington invite you to shop their basketball specials:
Jayhawk shorts 15% off
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Featuring: Danny Manny Reebok shoes at 10% off
Kansas basketball sweatshorts 10% off
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843-0412
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Mon Sat 9:30-6:00 p.m.
Thurs 9:30-8:30 p.m.
Sun 12 noon-5:00 p.m.
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None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or planned to see it.
SPRING BREAK IN Cancun March 12-19, 1989
March 12-19, 1969
$617 Per person includes:
- Roundtrip air from Kansas City to Cancun
- 7 Nights accommodation at beach front villa
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Example of poor spinal structure
Act Now-Call 841-2218
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- Recurring Headaches
* Neck, Shoulder & Arm Pain
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Example of good spinal structure
ree
4 finish their degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, FairyA, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
isband was killed . . . I gave Tom
Pristinaeus, Pindasia, the Bird was convicted in 1865 in the Bird's case, a wife, Sandy, who at first spearched to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge er the Cottonwood River near imporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on ue solicitation charge. The prosecutor contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to吾se the slaying as a traffic accident.
22
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was be subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordnated," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in may 1987.
band was killed . . . I gave John
22-callier Woodman that he
to shoot my husband," she said.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing to
second-degree murder charge
it is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
rushman's life.
nister shooting
habit today
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16. 1988
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokesman said that the program was not planned as a rebuttal to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ", the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts Suite 1.
RAFT TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DATED M NOV. 28 DEC.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
The Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve pence in compensation for an offense against them to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno-
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Tempation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Many of the students refused comment. De la la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
testify for Christ." he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher asks what to know what to say," de la Tour said.
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or planned to see it.
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--finish their degrees.
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--finish their degrees.
ree
I think they deferred that discontinuation was a students because many wanted the program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
plain it is academically weak courses to continue." he said, y. Fairfax, vA, sen, who the attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
nister shooting
band was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he to shoot my husband," she said. Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge it is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on her husband's life.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the ath of his wife, Sandy, who at first speared to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge or the Cottonwood River near emporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecutor contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to insuse the slaying as a traffic accident.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was be subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordained," a movie filmed n and around Emporia. It aired in day 1987.
habit today
University'Dally Kansan■Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamilisch urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokesman said that the program was not planned as a rebuff to the Smokeout.
---
23
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts Institution.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for an hour about. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
INSTITUTED A NOV. 14, DEC. 31
the Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for those who were harmed by the film and to distribute flies to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
this marks our Lord. It is equal
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's College, College and
"It made me want to see the movie more."
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant pro
fessor of Army ROTC, also was
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher will know what to say "devil on the la tour."
one of the protesters intere-
had seen the film or
used to see it.
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finish their degrees.
ree
Infiltr his degrees.
ed that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no d in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
uplain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said." When told the major a lot of people were really
14 University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
nister
hooting
!band was killed . . . I gave Tom
The story of Eldridge and Bird, oth of whom have remarried, was se subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordained," a movie filmed in and around Emporia. It aired in lay 1987.
22-caliber Woodman that he
to shoot my husband," she said.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
t is already serving 5 to 16 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
Pindusha's mute Bird was disarmed in 1985 in the ath of his life, Sandy, who at first proclaims he be the victim of a traffic accident at the Rocky Ford Bridge er the Cottonwood River near emporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on e solicitation charge. The prosecutor contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to squite the slaying as a traffic incident.
habit today
ag habit of smoking is no longer in ashion in New York City."
Hamlisch urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, titing the recent death of his friend "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, saying that the program was not planned as a recruIT to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Liberty Hall. 642 Massachusetts
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the loss of their lives. The film and to distribute fliers on dissuade people from seeing it.
directed by Martin Seurcesse and based on a book by Nikos Kazantakis, have focused on a scene in *Mary* that he lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is schedled to run through Dec. 3.
it smokes our Lord. It impulse
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
ART TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
WATER M NOV. N DEC.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchuemeller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Tempation of Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger ones know what to do with the la tour said.
one of the protesters intere-
had seen the film or
eed to see it.
Women's Basketball
1988-89 Women's Basketball Roster
No./Player Pos. Height** Wt. Yr.
12 Lisa Braddy G 5-8 130 Jr.
14 Suzanne Schmidt G 5-8 123 Jr.
15 Jace Kawk G 5-7 125 Jr.
16 Tanya Bonham F 5-8 150 Fr.
17 Shannon Bloxom F 5-9 146 Fr.
18 Danielle Shareef F 5-9 147 Fr.
19 Gerl Hart F 5-9 115 Fr.
20 Michelle Arnold F 5-9 115 Jr.
21 LaTheria Nelson F 5-10 140 Jo.
22 Raj Page C 6-4 160 Fr.
23 Marjette McCloud F 5-10 197 Fr.
24 Marian Sandifer F 6-3 165 Fr.
Hometown (High School JC)
1987-88 Letterwinners lost
Sandy Shaw
Lisa Dougherty
Deborah Richardson
Lisa Baker
Judie Martin
Mesho Strougtier
Cheryl Jackson
Karen Morgan
Kansas City, KS. (Wya.-dotte)
Ortega, ME. (Ortego)
Battlesville, OK. (Battlesville)
Arlington, VA. (Washington-Lee)
Leavenson, WM. (Leavenson)
Palladium Gardens (Palladium)
Independent, KS. (Independent)
Hesston, KS. (Hesston)
Landover, MD. (Ballion)
Vista, MO. (Booker) Washington
Del Mar, MT. (Technical)
West Monroe, LA. (West Monroe)
--mind set," she said. "But I'm so competitive I want to do better than that. I want to advance past the first couple of rounds of the NCAA's To. Do that we need to recruit on the national level."
Coaching staff
Head Coach: Marion Washington
Asst. Coach: Julia Yeaer
Coach: Kevin Cook
1988-89 Lady Jayhawk Schedule
Home games are boldfaced
Day Date Opponent
Wed. Nov. 16 Australian Jr. Olympic Team*
Sat. Nov. 19 Alumni Game(dh)
Thu-Sat Nov. 24-26 Aruba Sunshine Shootout Kansas, Mississippi, Princeton Mercer, Aruban National Team Trinidad National Team
Fri.-Sat. Dec. 2-3 Lady Jayahawk Dial Classic Kansas vs. Oral Roberts* Grambling vs. Iowa Championship/consolation*
Wed. Dec. 7 Wichita State
Sun. Dec. 11 Minnesota*
Sat. Dec. 17 Creighton*
Thu-Fri. Dec. 29-30 Rutters Invitational Kansas vs. Rutgers Tennessee vs. Wake Forest
Wed. Jan. 4 Stephen F. Austin
Sat. Jan. 7 Oklahoma City(dh)
Tue. Jan. 10 Missouri-Kansas City
Wed. Jan. 12 Iowa State
Sat. Jan. 14 Oklahoma*
Wed. Jan. 18 Nebraska
Sat. Jan. 21 Colorado
Thu. Jan. 26 Oklahoma State*
Sat. Jan. 28 Kansas State(dh)
Wed. Feb. 1 Missouri
Sat. Feb. 4 Nebraska*
Wed. Feb. 8 Oklahoma State
Wed. Feb. 11 Missouri*
Wed. Feb. 15 Oklahoma
Sat. Feb. 18 Kansas State
Wed. Feb. 22 Iowa State*
Sat. Feb. 25 Colorado(dh)
Sat.Mon. Mar. 4 Big Eight Tournament
WASHINGTON
Location Time
Lawrence, KS. 7:00 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 5:05 p.m.
Aruban Islands tba
Lawrence, KS. 6/8 p.m.
Wichita, KS. 7:30 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 3:00 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 5:05 p.m.
Piscataway, NJ. 5:30/
7:30 p.m.
- Taned delayed broadcast by Sunflower Cable in Lawrence
Nacogdoches, TX. 7:30 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 12:10 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 7:00 p.m.
Ames, Iowa. 7:00 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 5:05 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 7:00 p.
Boulder, CO. 4:35 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 7:00 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. Noon
Columbia, MO. 7:30 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 1:00 p.m.
Stillwater, OK. 7:30 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 1:00 p.m.
Morgan, OK. 7:00 p.m.
Morton, Kansas. 7:00 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 7:00 p.m.
Lawrence, KS. 10:00 a.m.
Salina, KS. tba
So, while Washington has seen a lot of change in her 15 years at Kansas, she said she expected to witness greater changes in the coming years
Continued from p. 21
(dh) Doubleheader with men's team
KANSAN graphic
Shauna Nodieet/KANSAN
"When Lynette Woodard was here, I had five people on scholarship," Washington said. "Even after we had some success, things remained tough. If a player like Lynette felt strong enough about this program to stay here for four years, we shouldn't have a problem with involvement. It's time for us to get people un in the stands."
"We have to take pride in being a balanced institution. Why not be excited about being the best women's basketball team in the Big Eight?"
4
Freshmen Tanya Bonham and Danielle Shareef, along with six other newcomers, could see a lot of playing time this season for Kansas.
Washington touting Jayhawk newcomers
By Craig Anderson
Kansan sports editor
"Overall we have a more talented class with more potential than last year's group of seniors." Jayhawk coach Marian Washington said of this year's recruiting class. "We're expecting an awful lot from the freshman class."
It was high praise coming from someone who has seen almost everything in the Kanada.
Comparisons to last year's senior class put into perspective just how much is expected from the 1968 freshman class. It has a strong lead to follow.
The 1988 class — including Lisa Dougherty, Sandy Shaw, Lisa Baker, Jackie Martin and Mesho Stroughter — combined for 79 victories in its four seasons. Included in the accomplishments were two consecutive Big Eight Conference tournament championships in 1987 and 198 and two NCAA tournament appearances.
With last season's frontline wiped out by graduation and ineligibility, freshmen Danielle Shareef of Riviera Beach, Fla., and Marthea McCloud of Detroit have emerged as frontrunners for the starting forward spots.
It's time for the Jayhawks of the future to begin building their status. The chance will come soon, as Kansas must replace not only seven seniors from last season, but also last year's top freshmen. Richardson, Richardson, who was ruled academically ineligible before practice began this fall.
"I've been pretty happy with the past few weeks," said the 5-foot-9 Shareef. "I'm just concentrating right now on rebounding well and holding my player to a minimum
Please see NEWCOMERS, p. 28, col.1
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16. 1988 25
ree
finish their degrees.
labor hours he had said that discontinuation was a students because many wanted he program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
uplain it is academically weak courses to continue." he said, yi Fairax Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said." When told the major a lot of people were really
nister
hooting
;band was killed ... I gave Tom
band was killed . I gave Tom
22-caller Woodman that he
to shoot my husband, "she said.
Eldridge, 35, awas sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
it is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
husband's life.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the ath of his wife, Sandy, who at first prepeared to be the victim of a traffic cident at the Rocky Ford Bridge er the Cottonwood River near mporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on e solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to squife the slaying as a traffic ceident.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, both of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries Murder Ordained," a movie filmed in and around Emporia. It aired in lay 1987.
habit today
ag habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think bout their friends and family, iting the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a leavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic 'oam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokesman said that the program was not planned as a rebuttal to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Hall Mall. 642 Massachusetts St.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
LAST TEMPOTATION OF CHRIST
RATHER M NOV. 8-DEC.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for victims of the shooting, the film and to distribute fluers to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
'It mocks our Lord. It insults
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ." about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie
"It made me want to see the movie more."
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
for the film earlier in the week.
for the Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant pro-
fessor of Army ROTC, also was
not a pilot.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
testify for Christ," he said.
Women's Basketball
Kansas women facing heavy losses
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher knew what to save "la tour La tour."
New-look team will face pressure to produce early
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
After losing eight letterwinners, including four starters from last year's team, it would look as if the Kansas women's basketball team were in for a rebuild year.
A quick look at the facts would seem to back up that prediction. Gone is a senior class that accounted for more than 52 points and 28 rebounds per game. Among those absent from last year's team are seven of Kansas' eight leading scorers.
But an examination of those figures can't take into account the far-reaching influence of Kansas coach Marin Washington, who heads a 19-year head coaching career at Kansas.
coaching center Picked to finish last in the Big Eight Conference before the 1986-87 season, the Jayhawks won 20 games, the conference tournament and appeared in the NCAA tournament.
Kansas, 22-10 last year, repeated as Big Eight tournament champions and advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament.
Under the leadership of Washington, the Jayhawks have won five of 13 conference titles (1979, 1980, 1981, 1987 and 1988) awarded since 1976.
one of the protesters intere
had seen the film or
need to see it.
But with eight of the 12 Jayhawk players being newcomers, much of the load will fall on junior Lisa Braddy, Lynn Page and Michelle Arnold and sophomore LaTanya Nelson.
Braddy, a 5-foot-8 guard from Kansas City, Kan., is the only full-time starter returning from last year's team. As a sophomore, Braddy averaged almost 10 points and more than six assists a game.
washington said it was important that the team veterans contribute this season.
"We know that we are going to have to get something from these players." Washington said. "The experience that Lynn Page saw last year will be expanded by Lissa's talent. This year should be her final in terms of contribution to the program."
"I know I'm going to need to put the ball up more." Braddy said. "I'll shoot more simply because we won't have a Lisa Baker or a Jackie Martin to go.
"But I also see myself becoming a team leader both on and off the court. This is a
rebuilding year, but I'm looking forward to playing with this team."
Braddy, who was named the Big Eight Newcomer-of-the-Year after her freshman year, said she thought the Jayhawks again would be a competitive team this season.
"I'm not putting anything past this team," she said. "Our defense will be our strength. We will create a lot of turnovers. If we好 good defense, you can beat any body."
While Braddy will play from the top of the key, Page, a 64 center will be counted on for strong play in the inside.
Page's role became even more important earlier this fall when senior center Deborah Richardson was declared academically ineligible. In her sophomore season, Page averaged 4.4 points and 3.9 rebounds a game while sharing playing time with Richardson.
A physical player, Page scored in double figures five times last season, including a 10-point, 11-rebound performance against the Louisiana Tech in the NCAA tournament.
"The main thing I'm striving for is consistency," Page said. "I think I've made a lot of progress as a player here at Kansas. I credit much of that to the older players who helped me adjust when I first came here. I know how it feels to come in as a freshman, so I try to be as positive as I can with the new players and help them along."
Arnold, a guard who played in 29 games for the Jayhawks last year, said she thought the defense was not good.
“Our number one goal is to stay together as a team no matter what happens,” Arnold said. “We’d really like to bring back the (Big Eight Championship) trophy this year. How can we do it or not, but we always seem to get stronger as the year goes by.”
Starting last year as a redshirt, Nelson was put on the active roster when injuries depleted the Jayhawks' inside attack. The 5-10 forward played in five conference games, scoring two points against Iowa State and collecting four rebounds against Oklahoma State.
"They are young, but all of these freshmen have things in common." Washington said. "They have a great potential to grow. They all seem to have that kind of positive attitude and sensitivity that I hope will blend and help us mold together as a stronger unit. If that happens, our future will be very bright."
The newcomers on the team, including seven players from a freshman class that Washington said was one of her finest, likely included the role in the Jayhawks (orniths this season).
Payhawks 1 CYCLON 26
Junior Lisa Braddy is one of four returning letterwinners on the defending Big Eight Conference tournament champion Jayhawks.
Braddy becomes a leader in her junior season
By Jeff Eston Kansas sportswriter
Kansas guard Lisa Braddy is the only returning starter from last season's Big Eight Conference tournament championship team.
By JON LEEZER
Kansan sportswriter
sip team.
And though Braddy is only a junior, she said she has to display the leadership that the seniors usually provide.
"We don't have any seniors," she said. "So our juniors are our seniors."
"Right now, I don't think I like being put in a leadership role because everything falls on my shoulders. I'm hoping that I can help
the team in a lot of areas — on and off the court."
As a sophomore last season, Braddy averaged 9.8 points and 6.5 assists a game. In the process she set a school record for assists in a season with 207.
"I think I need to put the ball up a little bit more, just because we don't have a Lisa Baker to go to or a Jackie Martin or another one," she said. "Any time you have those three people
But with top three scorers from last year's
team, Braddy knows her role will
change this.
inside, why shoot the ball when you can pass it inside and get an easy score?"
The loss of Baker, Martin and Richardson also leaves the Jayhawks with a lack of size. So, Braddy said he hoped the team would run more this season.
"We are lacking in size, so I know we're going to have to rely on our defense and hopefully have a lot of turnovers and fast breaks." she said.
"I like the run-and-gun game. I don't like setting it up. I just like having the fast break and you score. Go back and steal the ball and score again."
Coach Marian Washington said Braddy would have to provide leadership for the Jayhawks because she was one of four juniors on the team.
"Lisa has had to mature in terms of her leadership role and I think she has gotten stronger over the last two years." Washington said. "But this year, she is going to have an impact on a number of young ballplayers and if she can maintain good composure out there and help them as much as I think she's capable of, I think this year will be one of
Please see BRADDY, p. 28, col. 3
ree
ad that discontinuation was a students because many wanted me program. Also, he said no program with the program's discontinuity.
finish their degrees.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring "he said "When told the major a lot of people were really
uplain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. y, Fairfax, Va., senior, who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program discontinued.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, th of whom have remarried, was a subject of the CBS miniseries *Turder Odnained," a movie filmed and around Emporia. It aired in ay 1887.
nister shooting
22-caliber Woodman that he had to shoot my husband," she said. Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving a 6 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on
band was killed . . . I gave Tom
r husband's life.
Bird was convicted in 1885 in the ath of his wife, Sandy, who at first被 to the be victim of a traffic cident at the Rocke Bridge Ford Bridge the Cottontown River near him. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecuto n contended that Bird threw his fe from the bridge and tried to iguise the slaying as a traffic evident
habit today
g habit of smoking is no longer in shion in New York City."
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
Hamilisch urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think out their friends and family, the recent death of his friend id "A Chorus Line" collaborator dwarf王blean. The lyricist, a savy smoker, died of cancer last ecember.
26
The event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in incin Center, ended with two ephants crushing giant plastic am cigarettes as the celebrities oed nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially nounced its "Great American /elcome" program in newspaper disentirements Tuesday, but a pokesman said that the program as not planned as a rebuttal to ie Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
RATED M UNIV. N DEC. 1932
the protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the use of force by the mob to dissuade people from seeing it.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
Jeffrey JohnstonKANSAN
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuelter, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
It mocks our Lord. It insults
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
for the film earlier in the week.
for the Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people
want. They have the right to protest."
John Wintrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was and was the
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la La tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
Women's Basketball
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students know what to do on the de la Tour said.
Former KU player sees academic side
By Mark ragan
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
one of the protesters inter-
ed had seen the film or
needed to see it.
Mary Myers speaks with the voice of experience.
As a player on the Kansas women's basketball team from 1980 to 1985, Myers saw the academic troubles that today's athletes face.
That's why Myers, an instructor in health, physical education and recreation at Kansas, is now addressing concerns about the relationship between college athletics and academics in her doctoral dissertation.
Well, sort of.
"You don't disclose your dissertation topic, because then someone else will do it," she said laughing.
But Myers, in her second year of doctoral work at Kansas, said she would be comparing three main aspects of a college athlete's life: academics, athletics and professional aspirations. And she already has formed some opinions.
"There are a number of athletes who leave college without degrees, but what do they do afterwards?" she asked. "Is there a place for them?" she asked. "Are degrees and those who don't? I don't know."
"If there isn't, why shouldn't they go hardship and get a million dollars? But if
there is, and more athletes without degrees turn into drug addicts and criminals, then more emphasis needs to be placed on academics.
"It's one thing to give them a scholarship, but its another to see them make it."
Myers said the problem should not necessarily be blamed on the athletes themselves. School administration plays an even larger role.
"They need to give the athletes back what they're giving them," she said. "At least give them a fighting chance to be successful. Everyone wants to be successful, but what happens after four or five years? What then?"
Myers plans to do something about that. She said she planned to be a coach and an assistant athletic director at a small Division I or NAIA school two years from now, when she finished her doctorate in sports administration.
myself as coach, I'd look at how many people I could help, how many people I could make a difference with," she said. "It may require for three, but you've got to be ready to help."
Coaches could start by being realistic in
GUNLY
Please see MYERS, p. 28, col. 3
Former Jayhawk standout Mary Myers teaches a men's basketball class at Robinson Center and is in her second year of doctoral study at Kansas.
Size leads to foul trouble for Jayhawk center
By Mark E. McCormick
Kansan sportswriter
Lynn Page cuts an intimidating figure on the basketball court at 6-foot-4. 260 pounds.
Especially when many of the appblonts weigh 5-10 and weigh no more than 100 pounds.
when I get the ball and turn toward one of the other players, they do literally bounce off. And I get called for the charge," Page said. "It's not like shooting, that's something you can work on. It's just a different kind of frustration.
But for Page, a Tulsa, Okla., junior, it has meant fault trouble and aggravation.
This type of disparity in size for a basketball player usually means domination of opponents, uncontested rebounds and easy finishes.
Officials were apprehensive in allowing Page free reign inside since she was bigger than most of her opponents, Washington said.
"Lynn has suffered from her size." Washington said. "Whenever she tried to be injured, the doctor would not."
"Teams saw this, and they'd stand behind me and when I'd make a move, the girl would just fall like she was knocked out. I'd be like, 'I barely moved, what happened?'
Kansas basketball coach Marian
wants his team's size advantage was
actually a disadvantage.
"It's a two-way street with officiating," she says, as she moves a move, they have to look at positioning.
Washington added, "They don't have a problem with men banging."
Page said that she didn't completely blame the officials.
But Page said she had been hounded by foul trouble since her playing days at Booker T. Washington High School in Tulsa. She couldn't believe the problem would follow her to Kansas.
"I've had this problem ever since I could remember," Page said. "I've just had to deal with it. I felt there would be more of my height here, but there haven't been."
Yet, when given an opportunity, Page has proven a lot for the opposition to deal with.
As a sophomore, Page started four games and had bad double figures in scoring five times and in rebounding four times, including two double-doubles in points and rebounds.
Page had 10 points and 10 rebounds against Iowa State, 13 points and 11 rebounds against Colorado, but her best game surfaced in the Jayhawks' loss to Louisiana Tech in the second round of the NCAA tournament.
"I felt comfortable in my game," Page said. "Their centers were my size and I could play aggressively without being called for it. It felt so natural."
"She was able to play and had one of her finest games," Washington said. "She was able to be herself. She was in the lane with other people her own size and she wasn't bouncing people off of her."
Page scored 10 points and had 11 rebounds against the Lady Techsters. Washington said Page seemed more comfortable during the Louisiana Tech game.
Shaw finding time to relax and just be a student
This year, about five pounds heavier Shaw is discovering what it's like just to be a student.
Last year at this time, Sandy Shaw was in top physical condition, a little tired from basketball practices and ready for the end of the season.
By Laura Woodward
Kansan staff writer
student.
"I'm more relaxed now," she said. "I'm usually an intense person. It's hard to explain, but when you're in competition, you're always tense. I know that I don't have to go in there and kill somebody."
to go in there. As a forward on the Kansas women's basketball team last year, Shaw was the leadener and was named the team's
“A part of me is really glad,” she said. “I'm pretty much my own person now. I was getting to the point where I didn't control my own life. I'm now in control of my life, and it's a big deal.”
The change from regimented days of classes and practice to a life of relative ease was strange for Shaw who, for the first time, was able to schedule an afternoon class this
most valuable player. Now a fifth-year
senior. Shaw has used up her four years of
career.
At the beginning of the semester, Shaw's strongest feeling was one of relief that she didn't have to get up at 5 a.m. for conditioning
"Especially the first eight weeks of school, I used to think of preseason conditioning and start to get psyched up," she said. "And then I would think, 'Wait, I don't have to do this.' It felt good not to have to do it."
Shaw may not be eligible to play, but it hasn't kept her from helping women's basketball coach Marian Washington on the sidelines.
"I still help out on the sides," she said. "I help out with whatever we need to do like getting the balls or helping with drills."
Shaw said her presence at practice provided leadership for this year's team.
"I think they like to see me in there because I'm aggressive," she said. "Coach
wants me in there because my presence is a veteran-type thing. I want to expect the dog to look in too.
Shaw can get so wrapped up in encouraging the players that she forgets they isn't on.
**reet like anytime you can have a former player help out, you should." Washington said "Especially when that player has been hurt, you're an asset to the team. Help out a lot and encourage the team."
Washington said she valued the contributions of former players like Shaw.
"It's really weird," she said. "I'll be standing on the sidelines and think it's time for me to go in and play. But it's no more playing — it's just watching."
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 27
ree
finish their degrees.
d that discontinuation was a students because many wanted be program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
nplain it is academically weak courses to continue"; he said, y'airfax, Va., senior, and who attended the hearing, saxl with Drury that the program discontinued.
d with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring " he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
The story of Eldridge and Bird, bth of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries Iurder Ordnained, a movie filmed and around Emporia. It aired in iv 1987.
nusbao's mute bird was conceived in 1963 in the path of his wife. Sandy, who at first peered to the victim of a traffic pederast in the Rocky Fork Bridge on the Cottonwood River near aporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his life from the bridge and tried to inguise the slaying as a traffic evident.
habit today
22-callier Woodman that he'd to shoot my husband," she said. Ridgele, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge, is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on
;band was killed . . . I gave Tom
habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
nister
hooting
'hamlisch urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think out their friends and family, ing the recent death of his friend d "A Chorus Line" collebrator ward Kleban. The lyricist, a avy smoker, died of cancer last seember.
The event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in neon Center, ended with two ephants crushing giant plastic am cigarettes as the celebritiesod nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American 'elcome" program in newspaper virements Tuesday, but a pokeman said that the program as not planned as a rebuttal to e Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts Street.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
directed by Martin Scorsec and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzak, have focused on a scene in the movie by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DATED A NOV. M. DEC.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno." *La Toura*
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation o. Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's College, College and
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3. Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he helped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
leffrey johnston/KANSAN
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuelter, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee,
gave about 20 people bought tickets.
for the film earlier in the week
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Wintrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
Many of the students refused comment. De la La tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
testify for Christ," he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
se of the protesters inter-
did had seen the film or
1 to see it.
MYERS
Picking up the pieces
Continued from p. 27
recruiting, she said.
"Success to me, as a coach, is to have everyone graduate, and for everyone to be ready for the real world when they graduate. Athletics are a very small part of life."
"First of all, you don't recruit a kid that can't make it in high school," she said. "A 0.8 GPA out of high school isn't going to make it at the University of Kansas.
Myers is working hard to prepare herself for the real world. She has a 3.5 grade point average in her doctoral work.
Myers said she is looking forward to an alumni basketball game pitting the present Jayhawk women's team against Jayhawk players from 1975 to 1868 on Nov 19 at Allen
But that's not to say she no longer plays basketball. One can still see Myers on the courts at Robinson Center, either teaching her men's basketball class or running the court in a pickup game at lunchtime with some male faculty members.
Field House.
"They're all calling me a has-been and an old lady," said the 26-year-old Myers. "I'm gonna have to come out of my shell and have them put their money where their mouth
In her senior season at Kansas, Myers led the Jayhawks in assists with 137 and steals with 70, and played in all 29 games at point guard. Her skills made she needed an education more than sports.
And never was that more apparent than after her freshman season, when she was competing in the National Sports Festival at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y.
"It was our first game," she said. "I blew my knee out in the first 36 seconds."
She redshirted the 1981-82 season to rehabilitate the torn cartilage in her knee. She said she was lucky it did not end her career.
"Athletics can get you there, but they can't keep you there," she said. "All the people in the world can get you to the top, but once it deteriorates, it can keep you there."
"I think our girls are very determined this year," she said. "They're freshmen but they're really good."
Braddy will be a leader for the Jayhawks' eight freshmen. After playing with the freshmen in practice this fall, Braddy said she had confidence in the team despite its youth.
Brady realizes that after winning the Big Eight tournament two straight years, the Jayhawks face a tough struggle. She remains optimistic, however.
us. Going into a game, they don't know what to expect. They don't think, 'I should be backing down from this player because this player made All-Big Eight.' They can go out and play because everyone is just a player to them."
"I think their lack of experience can help
Jordan weighed 200 pounds last year. He has been up to 253. He averaged 24.1 points and 12.2 reboundes per game at Baltimore Lake Clifton High School.
Pittman was considered the nation's best high school center two years ago. He averaged 21 points, 17 rebounds and seven blocked shots per game at Rosenburg High School in suburban Houston.
the NCAA's Proposition 48 guidelines as freshmen.
her finest in terms of her contribution to the program. And it won't be in points or assists; it mostly will be in her leadership abilities."
im is a rebuilding year for us," she said. "But the preseason schedule that we have is very hard and I figure that if we can hold our own then, we'll be fine during the Big Eight race. I'm not putting anything past our team this year. There's no doubt in my mind we can bring home the trophy again."
Continued from p. 26
Oklahoma State Cowboys
"Those guys show good athletic potential." Hamilton said. "Understanding how to play within the system has been difficult (for them) and we have not been able to put together very much because there were three or four days when we were going with three guards and those two big guys."
Coach: Leonard Hamilton
Record at OSU: 22-36 (2 yrs.)
1987-88 record: 14-16
Conference finish: 4-10 (T-6th)
KU leads series 77-41
Protecters starters:
OSU
Continued from p. 18
BRADDY
oSu
Dumas said, "Johnny's as strong as an ax inside and Tom has such long arms, it's tough to get a shot off over him. It should be a pretty good season if we can get together."
Point guard could be the key to the Cowboys' development. Junior Chir Gafney, Davis and Alexander are trying for the starting job. Davis and Gafney could have an edge, based on experience, although both averaged less than one point per game. Alexander averaged 24.5 points and eight assists as a high school senior.
Jeffries, 6-6, 220, averaged nearly six points off the bench last year. Houston was Oklahoma a Big School Player of the Year with 21 games played 21 points and 16 rebounds per game.
Von McCade, a 6-4 win from Iowa Lakes Community College, should start at off guard and help DeBrye win. Von McCade averaged 29.8 last year and had a 50-point game.
"Everybody is playing hard, they just
F-Richard Dumas 6-7, So-
F-Thomas Jordan 6-10, So-
C-Johnny Pittman 7-0, So-
G-Von Mcdade 6-4, Jr.
G-Chuck Davis 5-10, Jr.
Comment:
Potential abounds with high school All-Americans Thomas Jordan and Johnny Pittman joining sophomore standout Richard Dumas in the front-court. Expect some upsets and some disappointments before OSU enters the National Invitational Tournament with 18 victories. After this season the future is unlimited.
don't know what it takes in order to be good." Dumas said. "They're all used to coming from good teams where they don't bake to work too hard."
Hamilton said the team would have to develop consistency.
NEWCOMERS
"We're up and down. The effort basically is good, as good as it probably can be." Hamilton said. "It looks like we're slowly coming back and I feel that hope is where we are heading on to help us are going to be back and we'll be able to go hard."
Continued from p. 25
number of points on defense."
Shareef has the background that would seem to predict success early in her career. She averaged 26 points and 13 rebounds per game last season and was a second team all-star selection in Florida. Shareef narrowed her list of college choices to Tennessee and Long Beach State before deciding to sign with the Jayhawks.
The 5-10 McCloud had similar credentials in high school. She led Detroit Cass Technical to the Michigan Big State state championship last season, averaging 17 points and 15 rebounds per game. She was named all-city for three years and was a firstteam all-state pick her senior season
Washington has given McCloud glowing reviews.
reviews.
"She has the potential to be a powerful force in the lane," she said. "She compares to Jackie Martin in that respect."
- Marian Washington
1.
Also included with the frontline recruits was the tallest signe of them all, 6-3 center Marion Sandifer of West Monroe, La. Whether she's ready or not, Sandifer probably will see a lot of playing time now that Richardson won't return. Sandifer will back up 6-4 junior Lynn Page.
I've never played on a team this young before. No one knows what to expect from us. It'll be fun to build for this year and the future.'
Kansas coach
"It was a surprise," Sandifer said of Richardson's departure. "When I signed, we had a lot of experience (at center). Now we're looking for experience."
Experience will come from early-career playing time, not the chance to learn from veteran players. Washington said Sandifer still had to develop in her game performance, as well as physically.
In the backcourt, 5-9 Shannon Bloxom,
Leavenworth freshman, probably will see
heavy playing time at the guard spot. Bloxom
scored 10 points to lead her team in the
Jayhawks first intrasquad scrimmage in Salina.
"She's probably going to need some time on the weights so she can really develop," Washington said. "She's not very aggressive right now. And for her size, she's more of a finesse player."
While Kansas has backcourt experience in juniors Lisa Braddy and Michelle Arnold, Bloxom probably will see a lot of action early in her career.
"Shannon Bloxom has tremendous shooting ability." Washington said. "In terms of physical maturity, she's just starting to work on the weights."
Bloxom said she was prepared for the challenge.
Newton will be West, who in the first exhibition game of the season against the Spirit Express, collected 10 rebounds in only 16 minutes of play.
PLAYERS
"I've never played on a team this young before," she said. "No one knows what to expect from us. It'll be fun to build for this year and the future."
Continued from p. 5
At the guard position, the Jayhawks have three returning lettermen in seniors Lincoln Minor, Scooter Barry and junior Kevin Pritchard. Freshman Sean Tunstall will also look to provide strength in the Jayhawks' backcourt.
"I'm asking (Tunstall) to do some new things," Williams said. "I'm asking him to play point guard, and he never played point guard in high school."
Williams said Minor would be an off guard for the Jayhawks, while Barry and Pritchard would play both guard positions.
Last season, Pritchard moved from off-guard to point guard midway through the season and played a major role in the Hawks' drive to the national championship.
BIG EIGHT
Continued from p. 13
last year's success in the NCAA tournament.
"Obviously it's helped us." Oklahoma State coach Leonard Hamilton said. "But I'm sure that it is something that happens over a long period of time. We probably won't feel the effects of what happened last year until several years down the road."
"The Big Eight Conference received a lot of recognition prior to last year. I thought it was always well respected. But there are now some kids in the New York areas and eastern areas that are now saying they want to play in the Big Eight. I think we as coaches now have to go out and capitalize on it."
Colorado coach Tom Miller, whose team finished last in the conference last season said the accomplishments of the top conference teams last year had made his difficult
recruiting job a little easier
"Well, I think at least we can get our foot in the door now where we couldn't before."
Ort, who does most of his recruiting in Big
Territory, said it is better to recruit
it out.
Tubbs said people on the East Coast also have had a difficult time accepting that the Big Eight was now a basketball conference to be reckoned with.
ioship and they can't deny that. It kills them, but they can't deny it."
"They all know about the Big Eight now because they saw them play on TV," Orr said. "And we can tell them it's one number one and it will be number one until we play for the next national champ."
"The people in the Big East still don't accept that." Tubbs said. "They accept football, but they still think they have a lock on basketball. It's been that way for about 40 years and probably won't change. Have you ever tried to tell those people something?"
ree
finish their degrees
and that discontinuation was a students because many wanted ie program. Also, he said no I in the program's curriculum with the program's discontinu-
uplain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. "Fairfax, Va., senior, and the vhoo attended the hearing, said th Drury that the program discontinued.
3 with a lot of freshmen and
bo were interested in majoring
he said. "When told the major
a lot of people were really
aisse urged smokers uncon-
l about their health to think
their friends and family,
the recent death of his friend
A Chorus Line" collaborator
d Kleban. The lyricist, a smoker, died of cancer last
aber.
bit of smoking is no longer in n in New York City."
story of Eldridge and Bird, of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries der Ordained," a movie filmed 1 around Emporia. It aired in 987.
d was convicted in 1858 in the of his wife, Sandy, who at first pred to be the victim of a traffic ent at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River nearria. The investigation was ned after Bird's conviction on dilicitation charge. The prosecuntended that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to se the slaying as a traffic ent.
and was killed . . . I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he to shoot my husband," she said.
tridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge
i already serving 5 to 18 years
n earlier unsuccessful plot on usband's life.
abit today
ister rooting
28
University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawk's Basketball November 16, 1988
event, held under the big top "the Big Apple Circus" in center, ended with two units crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
Tobacco Institute officially needs its "Great American me" program in newspaper issements Tuesday, but a sman said that the program ot planned as a rebuttal to jokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts Suis
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
INVITED N EW M-DEC. 1943
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St...last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno in some way." de la Tour
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough." he said.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmueuler, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee, said about 20 people bought tickets
for the film earlier in the week.
for the film earlier Reb Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost every night
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary."
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher does know what to say," he told a La tour said.
ie of the protesters inter-
d had seen the film or
1 to see it.
Picking up the pieces
NEBRASKA
Continued from p. 17
Nee said an eight-game tour of Australia this summer strengthened his team. Forward Beau Reid, center Richard King and Manning all averaged over 20 points per game as the Huskers went 5-3.
The 7-foot-2 King gained 23 pounds in the offseason. Nee said the physical style of play Nebraska faced in Australia helped the sophomore.
sophnore. King averaged just 4.7 points as a freshman but 20.3 points and 8.4 rebounds in Australia.
force, but he does not Nebraska's strength will be its front line.
"He still has to keep improving and working." Nee said. "He's not ready to come into the Big Eight and be a dominant force, but he does have the potential."
Nebraska's strength will be its front line. Richard Van Poelegeat at 6-9, Manning at 6-8 and King give Nebraska three capable centers. Freshman Dapreis Owens, ranked 23rd nationally by All-Star Sports Publications, will see time at power forward.
Manning averaged 9.5 points and 5 rebounds per game, but finished the Big Eight season with a career-high 27 points against Oklahoma. Van Poelgest contributed 4.2 points and 2.9 rebounds per game
Reid, who averaged 8.3 as a freshman,
should start at small forward.
At point guard, Johnson said he wants to show that he has some of his brother's scoring ability. A defensive specialist, Johnson scored 8.8 points per game last season and 16.1 in Australia. He said
"I just want to play better," he said. The other backcourt starter could be 6-7 Ray Richardson, a transfer from Hiwassee (Tenn.) Junior College.
H
Nebraska Cornhuskers
Coach: Danny Nee
Record at NU: 34-30 (2 years)
1987-88 record: 13-18
Conference finish: 4-10(T-6th)
KU leads series 128-62
Projected starters:
F-Dapreis Owens 6-8, Fr.
F-Dapreis Owens 6-8, Fr.
F-Pete Manning 6-8, Sr.
C-Rich King 7-2, So.
G-Eric Johnson 6-2, Sr.
G-Clifford Scales 6-3, So.
The team has experience and talent at every position. Rich King, 7-foot-2 center, averaged more than 20 points per game in Nebraska's tour of Australia last summer and could be a big force in the conference.
Success for the Cornhuskers means 20 victories and an NCAA tournament bid.
"We're on time if you put it on a year-by-year basis," Nee said. "We're laying the groundwork right for a quality program, but sometimes we have setbacks."
The freshman class, led by 6-8 forward Carl Hayes, 6-3 guard Eric Dolezal and Owens, is the best Nebraska has ever had. Nee said. He said his rebuilding effort was on schedule.
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University Daily Kansap Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 25
ree
finish their degrees.
tribut their degrees
that discontinuation was a
students because many wanted
je program. Also, he said no
I in the program's curriculum
with the program's discontinu-
plain it is academically weak courses to continue," he said. Fairifax, Va., senior and the vho attended the hearing, said its Drury that the program discontinued.
1 with a lot of freshmen and ho were interested in majoring he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really
and was killed ... I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he
o shoot my husband," she said.
ridge, 5, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
already serving 5 to 18 years
a earlier unsuccessful plot on
usband's life.
1 was convicted in 1858 in the of his wife, Sandy, who at first red to be the victim of a traffic ent at the Rocky Ford Bridge the Cottonwood River nearria. The investigation was need after Bird's conviction on licitation charge. The prosecutionted that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to se the slaying as a traffic int.
isterooting
story of Eldridge and Bird,
if whom have remarried, was
object of the CBS miniseries
Ordeal," a movie filmed
l around Emporia. It aired in
987.
abit today
bit of smoking is no longer in a in New York City."
s in New York City
lisch urged smokers uncon-
about their health to think
their friends and family,
the recent death of his friend
Chorus Line' collaborator
d Kleban. The lyricist, a smoker, died of cancer last her
event, held under the big top he Big Apple Circus" in center, ended with two nts crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
Tobacco Institute officially acced its "Great American me" program in newspaper isements Tuesday, but a man said that the program planned as a rebuttal tookeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for an hour on an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
the rev. Herve de la Tour,
headmaster of St. Mary's, said the
protesters were there to pray and
serve penance in compensation for an offense against God, to protest the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
RATES IN NOV. M.-DEC.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno
Telfax: 18hinetnkiKANSAN
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
"It made me want to see the movie more."
move here.
Jill Johns, a theater employee.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last night.
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Laure said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Heil Mei."
Picking up the pieces
Continued from p. 7
STALLINGS
youngest full-time assistant coach in major college basketball
college basketball.
"He's one of the brightest young coaches in the country as far as being interested in and studying the game," Keady said.
Stallings said he thought Williams' experience as an assistant under North Carolina coach Dean Smith would add another perspective to his knowledge of the game.
spare.
"He's a great person. He's as honest as the day is long and he has a great capacity for work." Stallings said of Williams. "Also, I knew what his background was. You can't be an assistant to Dean Smith for 10 years and not learn."
"I like coaches who are well-rounded." Williams said. "I think he fell into that category."
Williams said he hired Stallings largely because he knew the young coach had contributed to Purdue's success. Williams said Stallings' knowledge of the game and preparation were important factors.
Williams said the two became acquainted on the recruiting trail and from games between Purdue and North Carolina.
"I think he's an excellent coach and an excellent teacher," Williams said. "He was able to talk to kids and understand their problems. And he was a very hard worker."
Stallings, who earned a bachelor's degree in marketing at Purdue, chose to go into coaching near the end of his playing career.
costing all the ways entertained other thoughts and other ideas." Stallings said, "but when it came down to the bottom line, I always wanted to coach."
need to coach
Williams said he thought Stallings was a
strong addition to his staff
strong addition to his staff.
"I felt very comfortable with him, I think he'll make a big contribution to this program."
gratitude
Sailings said he had set no time schedule
for becoming a head coach.
"I've gotten to this point pretty quickly," Stallings said. "Things have happened really nicely for me. I've been very lucky."
recruit.
"I think hard work had something to do with it, but I think luck had more to do with it than anything else. I'm not worried about when the opportunity comes."
In high school, he played for one of most successful coaches in the nation at Collinsville (ill.) High School. His coach, Virgil Fletcher, had over 700 career wins and Stallings was his best player.
Stallings, in 6-5 guard, Stallings was named to the alliance state team and was an honorable mention high school All-American. Collins-ville had a 84-4 record in his final two years. His team finished third in the state his senior year.
"It was a good year, but at the same time, we could have won a championship both years and we didn't get it done," Stallings said. "When I think of all coach Fletcher had done, it would have been nice to send him out the way he deserved."
Stallings said he modeled himself after Mare Fletcher, the coach's son who played at Kansas and Tulane University. "I think of
"When I look back on it, I don't think of personal accomplishments." Stallings said of his high school career. "I look at the influence of my coach. He was probably very responsible for what I'm doing right now."
After graduation, he selected the University of Minnesota over Michigan, Illinois and Tulane. However, he was unable to attend Minnesota for personal reasons.
STATEN BREIDENTHAILKANSY
Assistant basketball coach Kevin Stallings served on the staff at Purdue University for six seasons before coming to Kansas.
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University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988
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one of the protesters inter-
d had seen the film or
eed to see it.
Go Hawks!
RIVERCITYHAIRCO.
842-0508
1021 Mass.
ree
rs finish their degrees
ued that discontinuation was a students because many wanted the program. Also, he said no ed in the program's curriculum e with the program's discontinu-
complain it is academically weak e courses to continue." he said, ey. Fairfax, Va., senior, and the who attended the hearing, said with Drury that the program e discontinued.
ed with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring," he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really 1."
ministerooting
sand was killed . . . I gave Tom
22-caliber Woodman that he to
i shoot my husband" . she said.
drieve 35, awaits sentencing on
second-degree murder charge
is already serving 5 to 18 years
an earlier unsuccessful plot on
burbank's life
rd was convicted in 1965 in the h of his wife, Sandy, who at first aired to be the victim of a traffic nent at the Rocky Ford Bridge
the Cottonwood River near boria. The investigation was ened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecu- contended that Bird threw his from the bridge and tried to iise the slaying as a traffic lent.
e story of Eldridge and Bird, of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries rder Ordained," a movie filmed id around Emporia. It aired in 1987.
habit today
abit of smoking is no longer in on in New York City."
nisch urged smokers uncond about their health to think of friends and family
d about their health to think
their friends and family.
the recent death of his friend
'A Chorus Line' collaborator
kried Kleban. The lyricist, a
pioneer, died of cancer last
mile.
event, held under the big top The Big Apple Circus" in Center, ended with two ants crushing giant plastic cigarettes as the celebrities nearby.
Tobacco Institute officially enced its "Great American me" program in newspaper tisements Tuesday, but a sman said that the programot planned as a rebuttal to nokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall. 642 Massachusetts
the protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
ART TEMPORATION OF CHRIST
RATED M NOV. N DEC.
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.last Christ." about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
The Rev. Herve de la tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the death of a priest who film the film and to distribute fluers to dissuade people from seeing it.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno uncle."
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, I just want to see the movie."
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee. said about 20 people bought tickets
for the film earlier in the week.
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost every night.
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
My wife and I both believe that
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la Trau said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary," shown it the Kansas Union in
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger students don't know what to say," de la Tour said.
None of the protesters inter-
d had seen the film or
ed to see it.
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University Daily Kansan Kansas Jayhawks Basketball November 16, 1988 31
ree
is important due to discontinuation was a students because many wanted the program. Also, he said no in the program's curriculum e with the program's discontinu-
rs finish their degrees.
complain it is academically weak
courses to continue." he said,
ey. Fairtax, Va., senior, and the
who attended the hearing, said
with Drury that the program
e discontinued.
ed with a lot of freshmen and who were interested in majoring," he said. "When told the major a lot of people were really 1."
band was killed . . . I gave Tom 22-caliber Woodman that he d to shoot my husband. "she said, ldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on second-degree murder charge is already serving 5 to 18 years an earlier unsuccessful plot on husband's life.
hooting
bird was convicted in 1965 in the death of his wife, Sandy, who at first seemed to be the victim of a traffic incident at the Rocky Ford Bridge or the Cottonwood River near uporia. The investigation was opened after Bird's conviction on solicitation charge. The prosecutor contended that Bird threw his feet from the bridge and tried to guide the slaying as a traffic ident.
the story of Eldridge and Bird, b of whom have remarried, was subject of the CBS miniseries lurder Ordained," a movie filmed and around Emporia. It aired in 1987.
familisch urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think out their friends and family,ing the recent death of his friend d "A Chorus Line" collaborator ward Kleban. The lyricist, a smoker, died of cancer last avery.
habit today
; habit of smoking is no longer in thion in New York City."
The event, held under the big top "The Big Apple Circus" in neoln Center, ended with two phants crushing giant plastic am cigarettes as the celebritiesod nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially nounced its "Great American elcome" program in newspaper virements Tuesday, but aokesman said that the program as not planned as a rebuttal to e Smokeout.
---
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17,1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts.
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried banners and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
BEST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST
DEVIATED A NOV. 2-DEC. 1943
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him. It's sickening. It's porno
The Rev. Herve de la tour,
headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the death of a woman in the film and to distribute flies to disemploy people from seeing it.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough," he said.
Jeffrey Johnston/KANSAN
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchuemler, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
To protect the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'
Jill Johns, a theater employee.
"It made me want to see the movie more."
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people had protested the film almost
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
"Mv wife and I both believe that
Many of the students refused comment. De la Tour said the policy stemmed from a similar opinion on nationality shown at the Kansas Union in
testify for Christ," he said.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the teacher knows what to know what to say," de la Tour said.
None of the protesters inter-
viewed had seen the film or
planned to see it.
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majors finish their degrees.
major father also argued that discontinuation was a cee to students because many wanted or in the program. Also, he said no offered in the program's curriculum hange with the program's discontinu-
talked with a lot of freshmen and iores who were interested in majoring onnel," he said. "When told the major osed, a lot of people were really inted."
ple complain it is academically weak wn the courses to continue." he said. Torrey, Fairfax, Va., senior and the attent who attended the hearing, saideed with Drury that the program not be discontinued.
minister shooting
husband was killed . . . I gave Tom the .22-caliber Woodman that he used to shoot my husband," she said.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the death of his wife, Sandy, who at first appeared to be the victim of a traffic accident at the Rocky Ford Bridge over the Cottonwood River near Emporia. The investigation was reopened after Bird's conviction on the solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his wife from the bridge and tried to disguise the slaying as a traffic accident.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, both of whom have remarried, was the subject of the CBS miniseries "Murder Ordained," a movie filmed in and around Emporia. It aired in May 1987.
used to shoot my masturbation.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on the second-degree murder charge but is already serving 5 to 18 years for an earlier unsuccessful plot on her husband's life.
e habit today
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a spokesman said that the program was not planned as a reballet to the Smokeout.
Vol. 99, No. 59 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday November 17, 1988
200 protesters stage rally at Liberty Hall
LAST TEMPETATION OF CHRIST
DAVID R. NOV. 24-DEC. 20
To protest the local showing of the film, "The Last Temptation of Church gathered in front of Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St..last Christ," about 200 people from St. Mary's Academy, College and night.
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
"The Last, Temptation of Christ," the film that has sparked protests across the country, tempted about 200 people into the cold last night to demonstrate at Liberty Hall. 642 Massachusetts Si
The protesters, most of them from St. Mary's Academy, Church and College in Leavenworth sang hymns, carried bundles and knelt in prayer in front of the theater for about an hour. They arrived about one-half hour before the 9 p.m. showing of the film.
The Rev. Herve de la Tour, headmaster of St. Mary's, said the protesters were there to pray and serve penance in compensation for the death of a woman in the film and to distribute fliers to dissuade people from seeing it.
"It mocks our Lord. It insults him, it's sickening. It's pornographic in some ways," de la Tour said.
The protests against the film.
directed by Martin Scorsese and based on a book by Nikos Kazantzakis, have focused on a scene where Christ is tempted by lust toward Mary Magdalene.
De la Tour said he hoped the protest would halt the showing of the movie at Liberty Hall. It is scheduled to run through Dec. 3.
Jerry Kramer, a senior at St. Mary's, said he hoped the protest would keep people from seeing the movie.
"I hope we're blocking the doors enough" he said.
The protesters, however, did not stop Sarah Buchmuller, Overland Park sophomore, from seeing the movie.
"This guy was grabbing me and trying to get me to read this stuff," she said. "I said, 'I just want to see the movie.'"
"It made me want to see the movie more."
Jill Johns, a theater employee, said about 20 people bought tickets for the 9 p.m. showing. An average of 60 people had purchased tickets
for the film earlier in the week.
Rob Fitzgerald, assistant manager at Liberty Hall, said earlier yesterday that three to four people watched the film almost every night.
"It's a free country," Fitzgerald said. "They can do what they
want. They have the right to protest."
John Winfrey, KU assistant professor of Army ROTC, also was protesting the movie.
"My wife and I both believe that if people want to see the movie, they can see it. We're just here to
testify for Christ," he said.
Many of the students refused comment. De la La训 said the policy stemmed from a similar protest of the movie "Hail Mary," shown at the Kansas Union in spring 1987.
student who was in the seventh grade, and he didn't give the right answers. I think sometimes the younger one knows what to do on the tour.
None of the protesters interviewed had seen the film or planned to see it.
The press asked questions to a
Few mourn end of personnel administration degree
Prof wears armband to honor program
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
way it can be revived. This is a funeral or a wake."
"It's dead." Baumgartel said, wearing a black armband made out of construction paper to symbolize the death of the largest degree program in the college. "There's no
Yesterday's public hearing to discuss the discontinuation of personnel administration wasn't a discussion at all, according to Howard Baumgartel, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences.
At the three-and-a-half-hour hearing, the University Council committee on Academic Procedures and Policies listened to arguments about discontinuation of the personnel administration program.
The committee was required to hold the forum to comply with University Senate Rules and Regulations on discontinuity. On Dec 30, the committee will submit its recommendation to the University Council and Del Brinkman, vice chairperson for academic affairs. Chancellor Gene A. Budig will make the final decision.
make a 10-minute presentation at the hearing. The only speakers, however, were James Drury, professor of political science and director of the program; James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences and Baumgartel. About six people attended the hearing.
Anvone interested in the program could
Baugartmeld and Carothers spoke in favor of discontinued the inter-disciplinary program, and Drury spoke against discontinuation.
Baumgartel recommended discontinuation because of faculty shortages in the face of burgeoning enrollment.
"The simple facts are that the college has had to accommodate a 30-percent increase in the number of students without any additional instructional resources," he said. "In
recent years, the departments serving this major have been unable to replace faculty positions lost through retirements, deaths and resignations."
abn resignations:
Baumgartel praised the program and its students, saying that the curriculum and its requirements were sound.
"The faculty for the program have disappeared," he said. "If we could replace the faculty, the program would still be in existence."
Carothers did not wholly agree, however.
"Even with additional resources, I don't see the commitment coming from faculty." Carothers said. "Acquiring faculty is not a high priority in the departments."
Carothers told the college would do everything to help the 800-plus personnel administration majors finish their degrees.
Drury argued that discontinuation was a disservice to students because many wanted to major in the program. Also, he said no classes offered in the program's curriculum would change with the program's discontinuation.
"People complain it is academically weak but allow the courses to continue," he said.
Mike Torrey, Fairfax, Va., senior, and the only student who attended the hearing, said he agreed with Drury that the program should not be discontinued.
"I've talked with a lot of freshmen and sophomores who were interested in majoring in personnel," he said. "When told the major was closed, a lot of people were really disappointed."
KANSAS UNION
ALSTHOMENS
SERVE
STATEHOOD
END THE
OCCUPATION
Palestinian march
In a march of the General Union of Palestinian Students, Nader Mustafa, Jerusalem senior, left, and Sami Ayyad, Jerusalem senior, lead marchers from the Kansas Union. They were marching yesterday afternoon in celebration of the independence declaration of Palestine from Israel.
Israel. Palestinians have been celebrating the declaration since it was issued Tuesday in Algiers by the Palestine National Council, which acts as the legislature of the Palestine Liberation Organization.
Authorities charge minister with murder in '83 shooting
The Associated Press
Thomas P. Bird, 38, was taken from the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing to Geary County District Court where he was charged in the November 1983 shooting death of Martin K. Anderson.
Bird's bond was set at $250,000, but Geary County District Judge George Scott said Bird would return to Lansing between court appearances. Another hearing was scheduled Nov. 23.
JUNCTION CITY — A former minister whose love affair with his secretary was spotlighted in a television minieries was charged yesterday with first-degree murder in the slaving of the woman's husband.
Marvin K. Anderson
The long-delayed charge against Bird, former pastor of Faith Lutheran Church in Emporia, came less than two weeks after Anderson's former wife pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and implicated Bird in Anderson's slaying.
Bird was taken back to the prison, where he is already serving a life term for first-degree murder in the 1985 slaying of his wife and $2_{1/2}$ to seven years for solicitation to commit murder in an earlier, unsuccessful plot to kill Anderson.
"On Nov 4, 1983, Tom Bird and I agreed that I would stop my van on a road or highway in Geary County." Eldridge told the judge after she pleaded guilty. "I would pretend to lose my keys so that my husband then, Martin Anderson, would have to get out of the van to help look for them. This would enable Tom Bird to come up and shoot him."
Anderson's wife, Lorna Anderson Eldridge, pleaded guilty in Geary County earlier this month to a reduced charge of second-degree murder in her husband's death. The former church secretary testified at the hearing that she helped her former pastor kill her husband.
"I did as we planned, and my
husband was killed . I gave Tom the 22-caliber Woodsman that he used to shoot my husband," she said.
Bird was convicted in 1985 in the death of his wife, Sandy, who at first appeared to be the victim of a traffic accident at the Rocky Ford Bridge over the Cottonwood River near Emporia. The investigation was reopened after Bird's conviction on the solicitation charge. The prosecution contended that Bird threw his wife from the bridge and tried to disguise the slaying as a traffic accident.
Eldridge, 35, awaits sentencing on the second-degree murder charge but is already serving 5 to 18 years for an earlier unsuccessful plot on her husband's life.
The story of Eldridge and Bird, both of whom have remarried, was the subject of the CBS miniseries "Murder Ordained," a movie filmed in and around Emporia. It aired in May 1987.
Smokers urged to kick the habit today
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — An assortment of non-smoking celebrities, joined by two cigarette-smashing elephants, turned out yesterday to urge a 24-hour nicotine boycott for the 12th annual Great American Smokeout.
"I bet if you could show people who don't smoke have a much better sex life, most people would quit today," said sex therapist Ruth Westheimer, one of a dozen well-known non-smokers in attendance. "So let's pretend that's true."
Houshour.
Among those joining her at the festivities were composer Marvin Hamish, actresses Sylvia Miles and Celeste Holm, actor Glenne Head, Broadway performers Elene Foley, Dean Butler, Alison Fraser and Robert
Letters from Mayor Edward I. Koch and comedian Eddie Murphy urging participation in the Smoke-out also were read.
The Smokeout, being held today, is an annual event aimed at getting smokers to give up cigarettes for at least one day. The American Cancer Society, which sponsors the event, estimated that nearly 40 percent of the nation's 50 million smokers participated last year.
Murphy, who said he had never smoked, told smokers bent on kicking the habit, "Anything worth fighting for is certainly worth winning. And I can't think of a better prize than a healthy body."
Koch, on the other hand, used the opportunity to pat himself on the back for the city's anti-smoking legislation. "The health-harm
ing habit of smoking is no longer in fashion in New York City."
Hamish urged smokers unconcerned about their health to think about their friends and family, citing the recent death of his friend and "A Chorus Line" collaborator Edward Kleban. The lyricist, a heavy smoker, died of cancer last December.
The event, held under the big top at "The Big Apple Circus" in Lincoln Center, ended with two elephants crushing giant plastic foam cigarettes as the celebrities stood nearby.
The Tobacco Institute officially announced its "Great American Welcome" program in newspaper advertisements Tuesday, but a lawsuit said that the program was not planned as a robbery to the Smokeout.
---
2
Thursday, November 17, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
North Platte
45/19
Partly cloudy
Omaha
47/25
Mostly sunny
Goodland
48/24
Partly cloudy
Sallina
53/31
Partly cloudy
Topaka
50/32
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
48/33
Mostly sunny
Columbia
40/32
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
50/32
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
52/32
Partly cloudy
Wichita
53/37
Partly cloudy
Chanute
52/35
Mostly sunny
Springfield
50/37
Mostly sunny
Formerly by Jeff Garber
Temperate areas are today's
high and longer's best
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
Slightly warmer
High:50°
Low:32°
Today will be a little warmer with a high of 50 degrees under mostly sunny skies.
Tonight the low will fall to a chilly 32 degrees.
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
45/18
Partly cloudy
Omaha
71/29
Mostly sunny
Goodland
40/24
Partly cloudy
Salina
53/31
Partly cloudy
Toppeka
50/32
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
48/33
Mostly sunny
Columbia
40/32
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
50/32
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
40/24
Partly cloudy
Wichita
53/37
Partly cloudy
Chanute
52/35
Mostly sunny
Springfield
40/32
Mostly sunny
Foreword by Jeff Gerber
Temperature are today's high and tonight's low
5-Day
Friday
Partly cloudy
52/34
HIGH LOW
Saturday
Chance for showers
45/30
Sunday
Partly cloudy
48/28
Monday
Mostly sunny
50/33
Tuesday
Sunny
53/34
The nation
Seattle
46/23
Cold
Denver
47/23
Chicago
44/32
New York
56/99
Los Angeles
63/51
Phoenix
71/47
Dallas
96/54
Front! cool
cold
warm stationary
Warm
Miami
85/71
Lawrence weather Weather Service
Forecast Key
Slightly warmer
High:50°
Low:32°
Today will be a little warmer with a high of 50 degrees under mostly sunny skies. Tonight the low will fall to a chilly 32 degrees.
North Platte
4/19
Partly cloudy
Omaha
4/28
Mostly sunny
Goodland
4/24
Partly cloudy
Salina
5/31
Partly cloudy
Tokaka
5/30
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
4/33
Mostly sunny
Columbia
4/32
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
5/32
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
5/32
Partly cloudy
Wichita
5/37
Partly cloudy
Chanute
5/36
Mostly sunny
Springfield
5/37
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Jeff Gerber
Temperatures are today's high and tonight's low
Tulsa
5/43
Mostly sunny
Friday Partly cloudy 52/34 HIGH LOW Saturday Chance for showers 45/30 Sunday Partly cloudy 48/28 Monday Mostly sunny 50/33 Tuesday Sunny 53/34
Seattle 49/33
Cold
Denver 47/23
Chicago 44/22
New York 62/39
Los Angeles 63/51
Phoenix 71/47
Dallas 66/54
Warm
Miami 85/71
Frontier
cold
cold
warm
warm
solarway
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Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas meets at 7:30 tonight in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
On Campus
KU Christian Science Student Organization meets at 6:30 tonight in Parlor C at the Kansas Union.
The Champions Club meets at 6:30 tonight in Parlor A at the Kansas Union.
The Canterbury House offers the Holy Eucharist at noon today in Danforth Chapel.
Public Relations Student Society of America meets at 7 tonight in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
The Baptist Student Union meets at 5:30 tonight at the American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th St. A free dinner will be offered.
Campus Crusade for Christ meets at 7 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
The League of Women Voters of Lawrence/Douglas County is showing the film "The Wolf at the Door"
at 12:15 p.m. today at Immauel Lutheran Church and Student Center, 1204 W. 15th St.
**Latin American Solidarity is having a planning meeting for spring 1989 at 6 tonight at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 2014 Oread Ave.**
The KU Democrats meet at 8 tonight in 300 Strong Hall. Rep. Slattery will speak about his experience in Congress.
■ Paul Caponigro, photographer, is speaking on "Megaliths and Other Works" at 7:30 tonight in the Spencer Museum Auditorium. Afterwards, a public reception will be held in the Central Court.
- Don Steeple of the Kansas Geological Survey speaks at 3:30 p.m. today in 317 Lindley Hall on "Digital Geologic Mapping and Other Near-Surface Techniques at the Kansas Geological Survey."
A meeting of the Society for East Asian Studies scheduled for 4:30 p.m. today is canceled.
takes office on Jan. 9, 1989.
News Briefs
ANDERSON CHOOSES UNDERSHERIF: Loren Anderson, Douglas T. Dalquest as undersherif when he appoint Lawrence police Sgt.丹 Dalquest as undersherif when he
Anderson said that he and Dalquest started work at the sheriff and police departments on the same day 23 years ago.
the HOPE candidates was incorrect.
The HOPE award winner will receive $200 to $250.
Because of incorrect information supplied to the Kansan, an item in an article in yesterday's Kansan about
Correction
Police Record
Various tools, valued together at $3,311, were taken from the roof of the KU power plant building between Friday and Monday. KU police said.
Six apparently forged checks with amounts annotated. $278.25, were cashed at two area food stores and discovered Monday by an employee of The Bank, 955 Iowa St. The checks, which totaled $1,669.50, were made to appear as if
they had issued by Lawrence Memorial Hospital and were drawn on a non-existent account at The Bank. The incident is under investigation, Lawrence police said.
■ A video cassette recorder and three textbooks, valued together at $75, were taken Monday night from an apartment in Jayhawker Towers while the occupants were asleep, KU police said.
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FINANCIAL INCENTIVE PROVIDED
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP
You don't need your parents' money to buy a Macintosh.
Just their signature.
It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh $ ^{*} $ computer at school.
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether.
another thing altogether.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan to Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one.
Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800 831 LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
and send it. If they qualify, they'll receive a check for you in just a few weeks.
There's no collateral. No need to prove financial hardship. No application fee.
*Offer open only to full-time KU students
Best of all, the loan payments can be spread over as many as 10 years. Which gives you and your parents plenty of time to decide just who pays for it all.
Apple
Introducing Apple's Student Loan-to-Own Program
Loan applications are available in the computer store at the Burge Union.
© 1989 Apple Computer, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
Come by and talk to us about your computer needs today!
Burge Union 864-5697
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Lawrence, Kansas
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 17, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Law club plans directory to list agencies worldwide
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
Law students interested in working in Spain or Sri Lanka, Ireland or Indonesia will have a unique resource for job hunting next year.
The KU International Law Society is compiling a placement名单 listing law firms and agencies worldwide that would hire students with a background in international law. Society members will meet with placement officials today to discuss development of the directory.
"I kept getting besieged with requests from students who wanted an international law job," said Dario Robertson, associate professor of law and the society's faculty adviser. "And confronted with the limited resources available, I decided it (the directory) would be a good idea.
"It's a common question, and there's no source for it now. It'll be a first."
Robertson said the directory would be marketed to law schools, placement offices and law firms for $15 to $20. and to law students for about half that cost.
the proceeds will help develop a new project for the society; sending students overseas to study law or perform public interest work for organizations such as Amnesty International.
Anilies Internet Robertson expects the directory to be complete by next fall.
"We want to make it as completely comprehensive as possible," he said. "We want to list every international law firm on the globe."
Placement center workers have already compiled listings from two dozen countries, Robertson said. 500
listings from two dozen countries. The directory is expected to list a minimum of 400-500 firms and organizations. It will also list study programs in the field, both in the United States and overseas, and will include articles by international law practitioners and scholars.
The manual will list information about the size of firms, the percentage of international work, examples of representative transactions or cases, and contacts at the firms. It also may include advertising.
forms. It also may include a degree from Logan, Gaillard, a first-year law student from Sydney, Australia, said he and the two other editors of the directory would begin work during Christmas break.
directory wielded. Logically his position as treasurer of the Interna-
tional Society led to his involvement in the project.
"We anticipate that it's going to be a money-making event," he said.
Robertson, who teaches international law, said he developed the idea about mid-semester when he realized students searching for opportunities in the field were given incomplete direction.
complete direction. The University of Virginia markets an international law manual, he said, but it lists only U.S. law firms and does not include articles.
KJHK to interview applicants for station manager position
Bv Jeremy Kohn
By Jeremy Rom Kansan staff writer
The governing board for KJHK, KU's student radio station, decided yesterday to interview applicants for next semester's station manager position and hire someone on Nov. 29.
Sam Elliott, KJHK general manager, said eight people had applied for the position. Usually, two to three people apply.
apply.
Although the board declined to name the applicants, Jerry Howard, station manager, said Tuesday that he was a candidate. The board will elect an applicant who will keep the station on the same track it is now, he said. Howard is a board member, but will not vote for station manager.
"I'm getting feedback that people like what they are hearing" he said.
hearing," he said.
The station manager overseees the station's operation, does all of the and is responsible to the board. The station manager must be a KU student and must have one year's experience in radio.
Elliott said before the meeting that the station's goals to increase the number of student listeners
journalism majors on staff and professionalism on the job.
job. KJHK's faculty board decided in January 1988 that disc jockeys should play popular songs in addition to alternative style music.
Some staff members and listeners said Tuesday that they were angry about those decisions and Howard's leadership.
Jeff Morrow, Lawrence graduate student and KJHK staff member, said Tuesday that all the candidates he knew were eager to lead the station differently than Howard had.
Howard had told him. He said free communication between staff and his managers was needed.
Morrow, owner of Yello Shin and Glass Onion restaurants, 624 W.12th St., founded The Committee Representing Students That KJHK Serves, which sponsored forums about the station on Sept. 12 and Tuesday.
adopt the board comprises Mike Kautsch, chairman and dean of journalism; John Katic, faculty representative and assistant professor of journalism; Max Utsler, chairman of radio and television; Janet Cineli, broadcast students' representative; Dawn Abrahamson, Student Senate representative; and Howard.
United Way drive totals unclear
By a Kansan reporter
The Douglas County United Way drive ended Tuesday, but it left participants guessing whether the drive met the 1988 county goal of $696,640 and the KU goal of $100,000.
In a statement released yesterday, Howard Hill, chairman of the Douglas County drive, explained that the computer program designed to maintain campaign records was malfunctioning.
"I would like to emphasize that no pledges, checks or records have been lost, and the campaign is not in jeopardy," Hill said.
The records are being updated by hand. Hill predicted that United Way staff members would have accurate figures this week.
"My feeling is that we are not at our goal, but that it is attainable," Hill said.
Him said.
He said that some businesses, which usually gave to the drive.
Carl Locke, chairman of the KU drive, said 'tuesday that he didn't think KU had met its $100,000 goal. However, total donations probably would exceed last year's drive, although not as many people gave. Last year, the KU drive collected more than $86,000.
had not reported their donations yet.
"The people who are giving are giving more," Locke said.
Steven.
While digging a hole for a new utility pole at 15th Street and Engel Road, Chuck Griffith, Lyndon resident takes time to repair his auger. The Capital Electric Co. was working in the area yesterday afternoon.
Getting drilled
Regents to consider adding Washburn
By a Kansan reporter
The Board of Regents will discuss the possibility of bringing Washburn University into the Regents system at its meeting today in Topeka.
Other items relating to the University of Kansas include:
- plans to build office space for the University Press on West Campus.
office on
■ plans for additions to Spahr Hall, which houses
■ library holding books.
engineering library holdings.
plans to design a new water distribution system
waterline on the east side of campus, near the chancellor's residence. The line would provide water to the fraternities and sororites east of campus.
plans to design a new water distribution system
plans for a new fitness center at the University of Arizona
a review of the programs at the School of Engineering and other Regents engineering programs. The school also will present its request to charge students a $10 equipment fee for each engineering credit they are enrolled in.
Kansas Medical Center:
a request by the city of Lawrence to construct a
- a review of the African and African American Studies program.
The Regents also will consider raising its recommended credits in general education courses from 30 to 45 hours for community college transfer students.
Compromise fills campaign for State Senate Republican leader
by Barbara Joseph
Kansan staff writer
It's a job where the art of compromise reigns supreme. A job where one walks a tightrope between loyalty to party and loyalty to constituency.
alty to constituency.
On Dec. 5, by secret ballot, Republican state senators will decide the next Senate major leader. The contenders are State Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, and State Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ottawa.
en, Jim Ahel, Rovanaa
Others could enter the fray, including the
loser of the Senate presidential race. Contenders in that race are State Sen. Paul "Bud" Burke, R-Leawood, and State Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Pratt. Burke is the current majority leader.
sense assignments try to persuade their colleagues to vote for them by saying, "If you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours; if you vote for me, I'll guarantee you a seat on this committee," said Jim Parrish, state Democratic Party chairman.
The compromise begins even before the senator assumes the four-year job.
Once in the job, the compromise continues.
"You have to be a party loyalist and consider the people you represent," Parrish said. "It's a tightrope."
said. It is a fight for
Winter said that he forged compromises
constantly as an attorney, but that he has not
always voted along party lines.
Democrats
"I'm not thought of among Republicans and Democrats as a straight-line party fellow," Winter said. "Some senators look to you to be floor leader for the Party. That's not
a plus for campaigning (among senators)
but it's a plus for representing your district
The job of majority leader is considered the second-most important job in the Senate, second only to the Senate president, Winter said. The majority leader determines which bills will be debated when and runs the floor proceedings.
Winter said he wants the job so that he could be more influential for his constituents on such issues as job development and education. He said he does not intend to
The majority leader will need to heal bad feelings between the parties in the new Senate because of perceived negative campaigning, said Kerr.
"I think there is a lot of bitterness, and it will play a role in the operation of the Senate." Kerr said.
Allen reiterated the need to work with rural and urban and Democratic and Republican interests.
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Thursday, November 17, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Computer virus teaches a lesson in responsibilty
The tale of a computer virus that beleaguered more than 6,000 computers across the country recently took a strange and ironic twist last week when federal agents discovered that the source, a 23-year-old Cornell University student, happened to be the son of one of the government's top experts on computer security.
In 1983, Robert Morris Sr. testified at a Capitol Hill hearing that the nation's most important computer systems were safe from the then-new phenomenon called computer viruses.
The story of computer wizard Robert Morris Jr. and his 56-year-old father provides an interesting paradox.
Five years later, Morris' son gained access to computers that were connected to Arpanet, a department of Defense computer research network. According to the New York Times, Morris originally planned to spread a tiny program widely throughout the United States and have it secretly take up residence in the memory of each computer it entered. The program was supposed to propagate slowly from machine to machine, always hiding in the background to escape data.
But even Morris' legal difficulties have not kept him from becoming a folk hero for some computer programmers. At the age of 23, he reminded everyone, including his father, of the vulnerability of modern computer systems. Lest we forget, there is a machine behind the flashing cursor. And machines, no matter how well they are designed, can have flaws. They aren't infallible.
As a result, Morris is now the subject of an inquiry by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and U.S. attorneys from two states who are considering filing charges against him.
machine, always in the background. But a single incorrect number, which affected reproduction of the program, was incorrectly entered. It caused the program to spread madly out of control.
But this folk-hero status is dangerous, too. It illustrates the damage a single person with a single incorrect digit in his program can do to the nation's computer networks.
Although Morris had the access to computer knowledge that most computer students never could attain, his education and training is comparable to that of many KU computer science majors. Given the right circumstances, a KU student could create a similarly destructive virus. That ability is dangerous. Such intellectual energy must be funneled in constructive, not destructive, ways.
The Morris case should serve as an example to KU students that no matter how innocent their intentions may be, planting a virus into any computer system can have catastrophic consequences. Students have to realize how much responsibility they have and not abuse it.
Michael Horak for the editorial board
Other Voices
Who's responsible for KU athletics?
University of Kansas Chancellor Gene A. Budig is absolutely right. The Board of Regents ought not to regulate school athletics. In the aftermath of the National Collegiate Athletic Association severe penalization of Kappa Delta and other intrafactions, the role of the board in such matters.
Budig has said that the responsibility for watchdogging athletic programs ought to rest with the chancellor, not the board.
There already are too many fingers in such college pies. Besides the oversight of the NCAA, alumni, parents and fanatical supporters all wish to play a role in game plans and decisions left to coaches. On the field, the coach ought to rule. Off the field, the chancellor ought to rule over the athletic director who should rule over the coach. Under NCAA regulations, that should be enough regulating.
College sports programs and presidents get about the same amount of press. Too much. Considering the howling fans, angry parents and influential alums, sports programs do not go unnoticed.
KU's Larry Brown, a fair-haired boy if there ever was one, may have been the sort of coach whose popularity and incredible skills helped him to avoid the oversight of an inquisitive athletic director or chancellor. But let's face it, most university administrators would give away the ranch in order to acquire a coach of Larry Brown's stature. And in the process they give up a certain amount of objectivity as well.
But whatever happened on Larry Brown's watch did not appear as egregious as the penalties rendered. Nevertheless, the infractions take place and deserve to be punished.
place and deserve to place also the chancellor's business to change things within his camp, if changes are warranted, which, in this instance, does not appear to be the case.
The Hutchinson News Hutchinson
News staff
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Frey Fblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp ... Business manager
Draeb Cole ... Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper ... Continuous sales
Linda Prokop ... National sales manager
Kurt Messerith ... Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon ... Marketing manager
BradLenhard ... Production manager
Michelle Garland ... Assist production manager
Leighman Lehman ... Classified manager
Meine Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
faculty or staff members.
Guest column should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
image 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 fourth or staff position.
Opinion
writer will be photographed to the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They the Kansan resumes and the to Kansan the newsroom, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The mailed or brought letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, dailies during the regular school year, including Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday, during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lucknow, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the University of Kansan, 118
POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Sipuffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kanu. 60454
KLINE
George Bush's version of the Right to Choose.
When I transferred to KU this semester, the biggest shock wasn't the thousands of new faces in the enrollment line. Nor was it the terror of finding my classes or paying my own rent. Instead, the biggest shock to me was tolerating the wild pack of dogs that freely roam the campus.
No solution in sight for a ruff problem
Everywhere you look, there is a dog. We're up to our armets in canines. Everytime I go to class, I see at least a dozen dogs running wild, loitering in front of buildings, chewing on each others' ears and congesting a University that was intended to educate humans.
I know Kansas is the state where the deer and the antelope play, but our state song better add "wild canes" to its lyrics to tell the whole story.
1 note to use cliches, but there are more dogs here than you can shake a stick at. The dogs here are thicker than bugs on a bumper. There are more dogs here than Hare Krishnas at a metro airport terminal.
These packs of dogs are taking over the campus. I'm just waiting for the day when the Kansan prints a front-page story reading, "After watching several reruns of 'Planet of the Apos,' a pack of wild dogs overthrew the University Senate last night and proclaimed canine supremacy."
Or how about this promotional brochure sent to potential KU students: "Welcome to the University of Kansas, home of the national champion Jayhawks, home of Midwestern academic excellence and home of a plethora of pleniful pooches."
IRELAND
Staff columnist
Matt Taylor
There are big dogs. Small dogs. Mostly ugly dogs. They're available in all shapes, colors and smells.
Heck, I thought I knew what big dogs looked like until I got here. If bus fares should rise, you could saddle up a mutt and ride it to class. High-O, Rover, away.
Rover, a dog I've recently learned more about reproduction from shamefully watching dogs in heat than I did in a whole year of high school biology.
What the heck are these creatures doing on the Hill anyway? Don't they have anything better to do? Oh, to have the life of a dog. I can just imagine a conversation like this:
Collie A: "Well, buddy, what are you going to do today?"
today:
Collie B: "Oh, probably hang around Wescoe
and slobber. Then I may see how fast I can run across the campus and bark at garbage trucks. I guess I'll generally bother students and maintain my status as a nusance. How about you?
When my fiancée and I tried to watch a Jayhawk football game a few weeks ago under the Campanile, we saw more fighting between the loose dogs than we saw on the playing field. In fact, there were more dogs on the Hill than students in the stadium. Down below, I could have sworn I heard the chant, "Rock-Chalk-Dog-Bark-K-UUUU" rising from the crowd.
Collie A; "Probably the same."
But although the dogs seem to have plenty of fun, some of us would like to walk to class without dodging dog spit or worse. Some of us would like to sit at Wesco Beach without an occasional lick on the neck. Some of us would enjoy attending school without stray mutts.
But with a surplus of pooches, those dreams will probably remain as unattainable as a KU trip to the Orange Bowl.
Dogs may be man's best friend, but to some students, they're our worst enemy.
■ Matt Taylor is a Caney junior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
There will be an anti-Nazi/Klan rally at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow in front of Staffer-Flint Hall on the grassy area east of Wescoe Hall. Many different student organizations have given their support for the event. We urge individual students to get involved.
Anti-Klan rally
Ku Klux Klan activity is increasing in the Kansas/Missouri area. This activity is frightening. Klan organizers who spoke at the University last semester and other Klansmen who spoke on the Morton Downey Jr. show said they were organizing a KKK chapter in Lawrence.
At Northwest Missouri State University, the KKK has become so powerful that the administration has denounced the Klan's activity. They have said they want the KKK off the university campus. Klan organizers have refused this request. Black students actually have received notes slipped under their doors that read "NIGER LEAVE." Stand up against this activity before it infiltrates our campus and community!
Dan May
Join us in making a strong, united statement against racism and Nazi/Klan violence and for the universal respect of human rights. Let these evil groups stop abusing children and use their national right to speak out against their racist, exclusive and genocidal views. We hope to see you at Friday's rally.
A non-vote for Ingham
Darrell Piley Lawrence senior and three others for the Academic Freedom Action Coalition
This is to publicly thank Cynthia Ingham for her eloquent and insightful defense for not voting in the Nov. 8 Kansan. "My voice doesn't mean a damn to those who steal my money, whistle away at my rights and then tell me I have an obligation to sanction what is done in the name of 'democracy'" is the finest description I have seen of the politicians who recently squandered hundreds of millions of dollars on astonishingly shallow campaigns for our votes.
In regard to the presidential race, the thought of the ex-head of a secret police as president is frightening, but the Democrats, as always, offered no alternative. Dukakis showed his true colors when he chose Lloyd Tennant, a right-fronted Teapot and PAC special interests, as his running mate on the ticket of the party that supposedly represents the common person.
Ingham is right. The only political activity of value is done outside the voting booth — speaking out, resistance, etc. Those who say that people who don't vote have no right to complain are babbling irrelevancies. To complain about and agitate injustice is a condition of all conspiracy, furthermore, the government. They can be restricted by tyrannical governments and other forces, but they are not something benevolently awarded to some people for doing what they are told.
To those of us who believe that, no matter how many votes he received, George Bush has no mandate to continue robbing us of our freedoms in the name of national security or drug hysteria, no mandate to continue murdering Nicaraguans and other Central Americans in his fervor to install U.S.-subservient dictatorships (he calls them "democracies") and no mandate to continue helping the South African government agress against its neighbors: we lost the
election. But we never had a chance
Michael A. Vance visiting assistant professor of pharmacology and toxicology
Policies questioned
This is in response to a letter to the editor and a story recently published by the Kansan. My first comment concerns the Nov. 7 article written about the tragic death by hanging of a freshman in McCollum. The death of this young man surely must have been devastating for his parents, without the help of the Kansan alluding to apparent circumstances that might have led to that death.
c@mnsinstitute.
My second comment regards a letter to the editor which printed on the rights of the Ku Klux Klan to march in Philadelphia. This letter appeared in the Kansan in a cut version that left the authors' opinions about fascism diluted. Radical statements about fascism and the KKK were deleted, creating an editorial better suited to the tastes of the editorial board. Fortunately, the original version of the editorial has since been distributed about the KU campus.
Why do the editors find the renunciation of fascism too distasteful for print while they surreptitiously approve an article that increases the pain of those who knew and loved the student whose life was lost in an unfortunate accident? Your editorial policies seem dichotomous to me. Pain is intentionally inflicted by one article while the pain of past victims of fascism and the pain of ethnic and racial groups who are the current targets of the KKK is ignored. The Kansas's insensitivity regarding this article and letter is in need of introspection.
Stephanne Zale
Overland Park graduate student
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 17, 1988
Landlady suspected in deaths of 7 elderly tenants arrested
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - A 59-year-old landlady suspected in the deaths of seven tenants whose bodies were unearthed in the yard of her rooming house was arrested yesterday after a five-day search, police said.
Dorothea Montalvo Puente was taken into custody at about 10:30 p.m. yesterday by Los Angeles police who tracked her to a downtown hotel on the basis of a tip provided to a television station.
"This is definitely the person we are looking for," said police Officer Paul Von Lutzow.
She was arrested after a tipster called the television station, saying the woman police were seeking was drinking in a downtown bar, KCBS-TV reported. The station alerted police and officers closed in.
Police believe Puente killed tenants who lived in her Sacramento boarding house to collect their Social Security benefits. They have a list of two dozen people who live in the city and are accused of Puente's eight-bedroom house at one time or another.
Puente was taken into custody near a hotel where she had been staying since Sunday, the station reported.
had been staying since Sunday, the station reported. "She looked like she expected the police," Voutzow said.
One former tenant, Homer Myers, told reporters yesterday that he and other tenants unknowingly helped Puente dispose of the bodies by digging the makeshift graves.
ford for an april appointment.
She had not been seen since Saturday, when police allowed her to walk away from the house while they dug for bodies. State and federal authorities had been searching for her in Mexico and Las Vegas as well as California.
Myers, 74, said Puente first asked him to dig a hole in the back yard for an apricot tree.
The FBI late Tuesday got a federal warrant to allow FBI agents to join in the search. Documents supporting the warrant declare that she has 14 close relatives in Mexico and that she asked parole agents for permission to travel to Mexico in 1986.
to travel it did she had contacted a nursery and they told her she needed a hole that was four feet by four feet and five feet deep. I thought that was a little deep. Now I know why."
Digging was completed at the boarding house yard Tuesday and police searched the inside of the blue house. Detectives removed several items from the house, but would not say what evidence was found other than the seven bodies.
seven bodies.
Kearns said there has no decision whether to dig at any other sites, including a house several blocks away where Muere lived several years ago.
The coroner's office, assisted by several forensic anthropologists, is still in the process of identifying the bodies and performing autopsies to determine cause of death.
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Ken Burgett, Topeka-Shawnee County Emergency Preparedness director, said yesterday that officials were out assessing damage that hadn't been surveyed earlier. He said he was told the additional damage was not expected to exceed $200,000, added to the $3.68 million estimate.
The Topeka damage was the worst at least three tornadoes that touched down in eastern Kansas on Tuesday afternoon. Officials confirmed tornadoes in near Neocho State and near Huron in Atchison County.
TOPEKA — Damage from the tornado that skipped through Topeka on Tuesday afternoon probably will run to about $3 million, a civil defense official said.
KU
The Associated Press
Montgomery County had severe storm damage, as did
Franklin County, where witnesses reported seeing a tornado in the air. Captain Craig Davis of the Franklin County sheriff's department estimated that there was about $100,000 in damage, four-thirds of it at the Ron Hendricks farm near Ottawa, where a barn was destroyed and vehicles and outbuildings damaged.
Santa holding a clipboard.
Hendricks is convinced it was a tornado. Davis said he also was sure there was a tornado.
Davis said he also was sure there was a tornado. Col. Mahon Weed, deputy director of the division of emergency preparedness in the Kansas Adjutant General's office, said there was $110,000 in damage in Montgomery County. $70,000 in Neosho County and $38,000 in Cowley County.
At Topeka, cleanup continued from the storm that destroyed homes and businesses in the southwest area of the city.
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1969. It was the year when, if you were young, life was full of infinite possibilities. Music was never better. Friends were never closer
1969. The war in Vietnam was out of control and the battle in America reached every home.
1969. For three friends it was a time to learn about life and freedom.
1969. It was the year the country split apart but a generation came together.
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ROBERT DOWNEY, JR. KIEFER SUTHERLAND
FROM THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNING WRITER OF 'ON GOLDEN POND'
1969
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ROBERT DOWNEY, JR. = KEFFER SUTHERLAND = BRUCE DENN, "1989" MARRIETTE HARTLEY = THOMAS TEDDY
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Produced by DANIEL GROINN BILL BADALATO Written and Directed by ENNEST THOMPSON
ULTRA STENO
OPENS NOVEMBER 18TH
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 17 1980
7
Nation/World
Estonian parliament states sovereignty
The Associated Press
TALLINN, U.S.S.R. — Estonia's parliament declared the tiny Baltic republic sovereign yesterday, with the right to veto Soviet laws. Deputies said too much Kremlin control had ruined the economy and environment.
The vote of 258-1, with five abstentions, on the declaration of sovereignty followed a restrained, serious debate in the Supreme Soviet of the Baltic republic. Its declaration stopped short of complete independence, but calls for a treaty with Moscow that would "determine the status of Estonia in the composition of the Soviet Union."
Moscow gave no immediate indication of its reaction to the apparatus attempts subordinate Soviet law to the will of Europe.
Proponents of the Estonian action said it was consistent with President Mikhail Gorbachev for calls for greater democratization and local control and with ritual declarations of autonomy for the republics contained in the Soviet constitution.
Marju Lauristen, a leader of the Estonian People's Front, a grassroots political organization, acknowledged that Gorbachev might not be pleased.
that Governor Travis voted on the declaration after a full day of debate, in which they detailed the republic's need to control its own land, factories and laws. A vote on related amendments to the Estonian Constitution passed 254-7 minutes before the vote on the declaration. Among the amendments was one subjecting new Soviet laws to local control.
If the parliament upheld Supreme Soviet concurrence, the law would be declared void in Estonia, he said.
Space shuttle's secret launch set for Dec.1
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Space shuttle managers yesterday set Dec. 1 as the date for launching Atlantis and five military astronauts on a secret Defense Department mission.
The Associated Press
the program resumed Sept. 29 with the successful launch of Discovery.
The fanfare that surrounded Discovery's flight will be absent for satellite inauguration, withholding most information because of the military payload.
The flight will be the second for the shuttle program since the Challenger explosion that killed seven astronauts on Jan. 28, 1986. After a 32-month grounding for modifications,
until the landing. Defense officials said the secrecy would make it more difficult for Soviet ground and space systems to monitor the launch and the deployment of the payload.
The exact launch time and length of the mission will not be disclosed in advance, and once Atlantis is in orbit, there will be a news blackout
News Roundup
Sources said they expected a liftoff about 8 a.m. CST and report that the astronauts will deploy an intelligence-gathering satellite that will fly over 80 percent of the Soviet Union.
LASKER AWARD WINNERS ANNOUNCED: Two researchers who helped explain the chemical origins of life, a doctor who developed methadone treatment for heroin addicts and a U.S. senator were named recipients of the 1988 Albert Lasker Awards, it was announced yesterday. The Lasker Awards have been given for 43 years, and they have often anticipated the awarding of Nobel Prizes. Forty-six winners of the Lasker Medical Research awards have gone on to win Nobel Prizes.
BRAZIL ELECTION RESULTS: Leftists surged ahead for control of major cities in Brazil as ballots were counted yesterday from nationwide voting that indicated Brazilians' dissatisfaction with President Jose Sarney's government. Sarney's right-center Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, the dominant party since 1964, was taking a beating from both the right in early returns from Tuesday's municipal elections.
VIOLEENCE ON GAZA STRIP: Teen-agers on the occupied Gazia Strip challenged Israel's authority with songs, stones and flaming tires yesterday despite stepped up army patrols aimed at dampening violence fueled by the Palestinian declaration of independence. Six Palestinians were shot and wounded in Gaza City and the town of Khan Yunis, also in the seaside strip, hospitals said.
PRETORIA SHootING KILLS SIX: The South African government yesterday pledged to crack down on right-wing extremists after a shooting rampage by a white supremacist left six dead in downtown Pretoria. Barend Strydrom, the 23-year-old arrested after the shootings, quit the national police force in
February while facing misconduct charges.
BUSH WON'T TALK: Leaders of George Bush's transition team closed ranks publicly yesterday, refusing to talk about the reported selection of Washington outsider John Sununu as White House chief of staff. Bush asked aides to sign a pledge designed to prevent leaks and conflicts of interest. The vice president was mum about filling the chief of staff's job, saying no final decisions had been made.
DEFICIT REDUCTION URGED: The National Economic Commission opened its post-election attempt to break a seven-year deadlock on the budget deficit with repeated warnings yesterday that the deficit represents the nation's greatest economic threat. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, one of the leadoff witnesses before the bipartisan panel, said, "The deficit already has begun to eat away at the foundations of our economic strength, and the need to deal with it is becoming ever more urgent."
BHUTTO CLAIMS VICTORY: Benazir Bhutto claimed victory, today after early returns showed her populist party leading in Pakistan's first open elections in more than a decade. Bhutto, who would be the first woman to lead this Islamic nation, told a news conference in the southern city of Larkana that her Pakistan People's Party had won at least 80 of the 205 Moslem seats in the National Assembly.
AGENT ORANGE SETTLEMENT: Kansas Attorney General Robert Stephan announced yesterday that a settlement in a class action lawsuit involving Agent Orange, a chemical defoliant used in Vietnam, is now at $240 million.
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Thursday, November 17, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Living
Cold facts about winter exercise
Source Illustration by Christer Nedbjørn ANSA
Photo illustration by Shauna NorfleetKANSAN
Dress is important in avoiding illness, injuries
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
On frigid, wintry mornings, Joe Milanese likes to take a hot shower before leaving the house for his daily ing.
Milanese, an exercise physiologist from the Lawrence Memorial Hospital Wellness Center, said a shower helped loosen his muscles before he put them to work during the extreme cold of winter.
"A person's muscles are stifted during the first few moments after waking," he said.
But, he said, a shower is not the only necessary precaution people must take when exercising outdoors, especially during the winter months. Ignoring such things as proper dress can result in injury.
When dressing for outdoor exercise, Milanese said, it is important to wear more than a single layer of clothing. If a person becomes too warm, he or she may be uncomfortable and wearing just one heavy layer could be dangerous.
"Often, people will overreach for exercise and go into hyperthermia," he said. "Their bodies become sweaty and very agitated."
The layer closest to the skin should be of a material that draws out the perspiration, such as gortex or a light wool. This prevents moisture on the skin from acting as a cooling agent.
"During the summer, perspiration works to keep you cool," he said. "Obviously you don't need that during the winter. What really hurts, though is that it's going to bite right through a lot of clothing."
foming The outer layer should be of a windbreaking
material such as nylon, for protection from the wind.
Lymn Bott, athletic trainer for the University of Kansas, said that although the temperature in Kansas did not get extremely low, the wind could be vicious. The combination of wind and low temperatures can cause the wind chill factor to drop tremendously.
Quoting from "Modern Principles of Athletic Training," a textbook written by Daniel D. Arnheim, Bott said, "At 30 degrees Fahrenheit, with a headwind factor is actually 17 degrees Fahrenheit."
It also is important to cover the ears, nose, fingers and head. The head, Bott said, radiates a tremendous amount of heat so keeping it covered could prevent heat loss, and possible hypothermia.
He suggested wearing a stocking cap and mittens to protect the head and fingers.
"Mittens are actually better than gloves," Bott said. "Your hands are confined to one area and will retain heat."
Cold weather tends to constrict the blood vessels. In the extremities, such as fingers, where there are fewer blood vessels, cold weather could cut off the blood supply completely.
Milanese said appropriate exercise attire also could prevent frostbite. Frostbite is a freezing of the skin caused by overexposure to cold. The exposed bone comes brittle and painful or it may simply go numb.
"Frostbite can be very serious," he said. "You usually can't tell you have it until it's too late."
Milanese said frostbite could cause infection and possibly the loss of fingers or toes. If gloves or mittens are unavailable, some sort of moisturizer could be used to coat any exposed areas.
Milanese also said attention to other things, such as stretching and maintaining a balanced diet were just as important during the winter months as they were during other times during the year.
"You want to do gradual stretches, not the bounce ones you did in junior high," Milanese said. "Then exercise a little and stretch again. That's the best way to get carry over from one day to the next."
"And watch your diet. People tend to cook less during the winter and eat fatter foods. Keep away from that. Your diet should consist of 65 to 75 calories per day, including protein and the remaining percent could be fats."
Carole Schneider, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation, said using a bandana or ski mask to the nose and mouth might seem helpful to some people, but was not
She said that a common myth was that covering those areas would prevent the lungs from freezing. Actually, Schneider said, there was evidence to suggest that the lungs could not freeze.
"Cold air entering the respiratory pathway is 'conditioned,' which involves increasing temperature of incoming air 2 to 3 percent within the core temperature and maintaining moisture content within 2 to 3 percent of full saturation," she said in a cold room context. "Therefore the air is well above freezing."
However, Schneider stressed the importance of
avoiding overexposure to cold weather. Often, joggers will misjudge the distance they want to run and remain outdoors for too long.
She said people should use common sense.
She said exercising outdoors during the winter wasn't as dangerous as exercising during the summer. A person jogging at six miles an hour during the spring or fall would carry the same physiological workload as a person jogging at the same pace during the winter.
"It only seems like more work because of the bulky clothing." she said.
But this bulky clothing also tends to restrict people who are exercising. Schneider said it was important for joggers to watch their footing on ice and snow.
"When running on slick surfaces in heavy clothing and in cold weather, it is much easier to twist an ankle," she said.
It is difficult to have normal muscular control under those conditions."
All three of the experts agreed that outdoor exercise, if handled properly, could be safe and helpful. But for students who want to run in shorts, there are indoor track facilities available.
On campus, there are indoor tracks in Allen Field House and Anschutz Sports Pavilion. A representative from the athletic center said the track in the field house was available for student use from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the track in Anschutz was available from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m. and 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, November 17, 1988
Sports
9
Kansas loses to Australia, 64-54
Jayhawk basketball season opens with exhibition game
The Kansas women's basketball team intends to grow as the season progresses.
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
The young Jayhawks '64-54 season-opening exhibition loss to the Australian Junior Olympic Team last night at Allen Field House is one they can chalk up to experience.
But, Kansas coach Marian Washington said the Jayhawks showed some positive things.
"Overall, we had some good spots," she said. "I was glad we were able to get as many players as possible." The next time they shouldn't be as tight.
With eight of 12 players playing their first college game, Kansas mcly have suffered from first-game jitters against the more physical Australians.
Lucile Hamilton and Shelley Gorman combined for 36 of their team's 64 points,抽出 Australia's sixes and scored three of its tour of the United States.
54 21
Australian coach Trevor Cook said the victory would help the Australians for the rest of their tour.
The Jayhaws got off to a fast start, scoring the first eight points of the game, four coming from back-to-back Lynn Page layups.
"This should give us a little lift going into the other games we have left," Cook said. "We ran our transition game well tonight, and did a much better job under the boards. I think we're getting more used to the pushing and shoving that goes on here. We were able to control the tempo of the game and that made a difference."
However, the Australians battled back, and took their first lead at 16-15 with 7:25 left in the
half on a basket by Gorman.
With the game tied 21-21, Australia outscored Kansas 6-1 in the first 1-12 of the first half, taking a 27-22 lead at intermission.
Kansas freshmen Marthea McCloud, left, and Shannon Bloxom, right, pressure Australian Junior Olympic guard Michele Landon. Kansas lost to the Australian team 64-54 last night in Allen Field House.
2122 lee dawson at hamburg
Washington said that the Jay-
hawks tried to play too fast in the first half.
"I told them at halftime to slow down," she said. "A lot of the time they were trying to go before they had control of the ball."
The Australians built on their lead early in the second half. They outscored the Jayhawks 13-3 in the first five minutes, taking a 40-25
The Jayhawks rallied behind the strong play of freshman forward Marthe McCloud, who ended the game with 11 points off the bench.
Australia led by as many as 14 points in the final few minutes before settling for the 10-point victory.
German, who finished the game with 16 points, second only to Hamilton's 20, said she didn't really think about the importance of her three-point shot until the game was over.
"I really didn't know that I was that far out," she said. "I got the ball and saw I was free, so I shot. But we played well together tonight. It's a good feeling to get the win."
Kansas guard Lisa Brady, who scored 12 points, said she thought the Jayhawks handled themselves well.
"One positive thing I saw was the intensity we played with in the second half," she said. "I don't think a lot of our players were used to getting pushed around like that. But they kept going and more, we will put it together and get better as a team."
Australian Junior Olympic 64, Kansas 54
Australian Junior Olympic (64)
Bronze 7.0 1.6 German 7.0 1.6 Barges 3.9 3.8 Länder 1.0 2.2 Miter 1.0 2.0 Strush 1.0
Bronze 4.0 2.0 German 4.0 1.1 Barges 2.0 2.0 Roboden 0.0 0.0 Closes 0.1 0.0 Total 1.0
Bronze 5.0 2.0 German 5.0 1.1 Barges 2.0 2.0 Roboden 0.0 0.0 Closes 0.1 0.0 Total 1.0
Amald 01 01 21, Network 20.14.5, Page 6.13.1, Broader 9.2-12, Hart 1.0-02, MCloud 5.1-211, ShareIt 1.0-0
8.5, 11.2, 10.7, 10.5, 10.4, 10.3, 10.2, 10.1, 10.0, 10.0
Arnold 1 D. 12th | Neston 2 0.15, 5 Page 13, 5.11 | Bradley 9 2.33, 13 Hearn
Bloom 3 0.16, 8 Bosham 2 0.14 | Bradley 9 2.33, 13 Hearn
Bloom 3 0.16, 8 Bosham 2 0.14 | Bradley 9 2.33, 13 Hearn
Kansas 14 | Kansas 14, 5 Fauled outNome 3 point井 point
goaltainAustralia 2 (7) German 24 | Kansas 24, ReboundsAustralia 30 kills井 kills
Kansas 24 | Kansas 24, ReboundsAustralia 30 kills井 kills
Kansas 24 | Kansas 24, ReboundsAustralia 30 kills井 kills
Basketball team plays last intrasquad game
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Kansas sophomore Mark Randall and senior Mit Newton scored 19 and 18 points, respectively, to lead the Jayhawks' White team past the Blue team 69-58 before 500 spectators at Kansas City Kansas Community College last night.
It was the final intrasquad scrimmage of the preseason for the Kansas basketball team, which will play an exhibition game against the Soviet National team Saturday at 7:35 p.m. in Allen Field House.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was pleased with the performance, despite 34 turnovers between the two teams.
"I wasn't pleased with the first half," Williams said. "I thought in the second half we played smarter and took care of the basketball better. In the first half we had entirely too many turnovers and didn't seem ...
to be Concentrating for the Williams said the unusual playing conditions may have contributed to the Jayhawks' poor concentration.
"It was unusual because there
were people here, but it wasn't a real vocal crowd," Williams said. "We tried to treat like a practice, but yet you can't treat it like a practice."
Both teams shot well from the field. The Blue team shot 63 percent for the game and the White team hit 49 percent of its shots.
Williams said he also was pleased with the progress the Jayhawks had been making offensively, especially in shot selection.
"I think we've worked very hard on taking good shots," Williams said. "I don't think we've forced many. We did take a couple of quick ones tonight, but for the most part, we're taking good shots. They are unselfish kids."
The White team was led by transfers Ricky Calloway and Alonzo Jamison. Jamison scored 15 points and pulled down four rebounds, while Calloway added 13 points and five rebounds.
Neither Calloway nor Jamison are eligible to compete in games this season. Calloway must sit out because of the NCAA transfer rule, and Jamison failed to meet NCAA academic requirements for transfer students.
One recruit signs for KU
By a Kansan reporter
As the clock was running down last night on the first men's basketball letter of intent signing period, Kansas had no new recruits to report.
However, the Jayhawks still had a chance to sign a second high-yield ranked recruit. H-gold Miner, a 6-foot-5 guard from Inglewood (Calif.) High School, was deciding whether he would sign before the Wednesday deadline.
Inglewood coach Vincent Combs said Miner was considering Kansas, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh and UCLA. Miner was ranked the nation's 33rd-best high school player by All-Star Sports Publications.
Adonis Jordan, a 6-0 guard from Reseda, Calif., Cleveland High School, was the only player the Jayhawks have signed so far.
Lucious Harris, Jordan's teammate at Reseda Cleveland, picked Long Beach State over Kansas
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was frustrated although the Jayhawks could sign good players in the spring.
Sping- Chris Heller, a 6-10 center from Kansas City (Mo.) Rockhurst High School signed with Missouri. Heller ranked among All-Star Sports 'top 100 players, chose the Tigers over Kansas, Kansas State, Southern Methodist and UCLA.
Canseco is AL MVP
co is NU-OU game again will decide Big 8 title
21
78
David Brandt/KANSAN
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — While there have been various debates over the definition of what makes a Most Valuable Player, Jose Canseco more than qualified on all counts in 1988.
Canseco, the first major leaguer to hit 40 homers and steal 40 bases in one season, was selected unanimously by the American League DMP on yesterday.
"It takes a lot of the stout out of the World Series loss," Canseco, who went 1-for-19 in the defeat by Los Angeles, said from his honeymoon in Hawaii. "I was really surprised it was unanimous. It's really exciting."
6
The muscular Oakland right-fielder received 28 first-place votes and 392 points from a panel of 28 sports writers, two from each AL city.
Canseco is the seventh AL player to be selected MVP unanimously, and the first in 15 years. Hank Greenberg (1935), Al Rosen (1953), Mickey Mantle (1956), Frank Robinson (1966), Denny McLain (1968) and Reggie Jackson (1973) were the other unanimous selections.
Richard Bell and Tom Punt of Nebraska will play Charles Thompson and the rest of the Oklahoma team Saturday for yet another Big Eight Conference football championship.
Boston left-fielder Mike Greenwell, with 124 shots, was runner-up to Canseco, followed by Minnesota center-fielder Kirby Puckett with 219 points. New York right-fielder Dave Winfield with 164 points and Oakland reliever Dennis Eckersley with 156 points in the voting by the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
Canseco hit .307 with 42 homers and
[124 runs batted in while leading the
Athletics to the AL pennant and a
[104.58 record.
Unlike many players, winning the MVP doesn't mean a cash bonus for Cansse because he had no such clause in his $335,000 contract.
In three-plus seasons in the major leagues, Canseco has 111 home runs and 367 RBI.
"I'm an older player, if you consider that 24 is old." Canseco said. "Experience has helped. I know the pitching and I'm more comfortable." Canseco's 111 career homers, including five after a late-season call-up in 1985, are the 10th-highest total for a player at the end of the year in which he turned 24. The other nine players are in the Hall of Fame. Mel Ott, who had played eight seasons by that time, had 176 at Canseco's age. All-time leader Hank Haron had 140 en route to his record
and 50 points. This was by far Canseco's most consistent season, however, as he raised his batting average 50 points.
Bridenthal/KANSAN
There have been various debates over the definition of an MVP, but Canske more than qualified on all counts.
counts
Of his major-league leading 42 homers, 27 either tied the score or put the Athletics in the lead.
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportswriter
This year's annual showdown between No. 7 Nebraska and No. 9 Oklahoma isn't for the number one national ranking, just the Big Eight championship.
In fact, the battle marks the first time in more than 10 years that one of the two teams is not ranked among the nation's top five going into the game.
But Kansas coach Glen Mason doesn't see much difference between the two teams.
"Let's see, they both scored 63 on us." he said. "I a tossup."
Nebraska defeated Kansas 63-10, and three weeks later the Sooners won at Cincinnati.
The winner of Saturday's game in Norman, Okla., will represent the Big Eight in the Orange Bowl. This is the 27th consecutive year either the Sooners or Cornhuskers will have been tied for or won the conference
title.
If the Sooners win, Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer will become the first coach ever to win 100 conference games. Switzer's winning percentage of .846 is the best in nation. Nebraska's Tom Osborne is second with a winning percentage of .814.
witting persecution
Though Mason is not picking a winner, some Kansas players are making predictions.
making progress.
"Nebraska just can't beat Oklahoma," wide receiver Quintin Smith said. "It's psychological.
"Offensively Oklahoma (is stronger), defensively Nebraska."
"If Nebraska won, I'd be surprised," he said. "But then again, Oklahoma is a pretty young team this year. Nebraska's a little more experience, maybe the wires may maybe I'd pick it. Just because it's in Norman."
Kansas quarterback Kelly Donohoe said he also liked the Sooners, who are riding a 31-game winning streak in the Big Eight.
because it's in Norman
Kansas tailback Frank Hatchett
also picked the Sooners.
"That game could go either way, but I think Oklahoma will come on top," he said. "It's going to be a high-scoring game. Oklahoma doesn't have the secondary. Nebbens throws the ball, it might be close."
The Nebraska offense leads the nation with an average of 939 yards rushing per game. Oklahoma ranks fifth among the league of more than 102 yards per game.
Statistically speaking, the Cornhuskers seem to have the edge.
"Offensively there's no question
Nevertheless, the Kansas players said the Sooners had better talent on offense.
Oklahoma has one of the best offenses in the country, "Smith said. 'They've got two quarterbacks who are capable of running for 100 yards in any game against anybody."
D诺荷 said it didn't really matter whether senior Jamelle Holley or sophomore Charles Thompson played quarterback for Oklahoma.
"I think Thompson is just a step
quite high," he said. "Jamette has
more experience."
"I think (Nebraska quarterback) Steve (Taylor) is a better all-around quarterback. He can throw the ball. He's not the runner that Charles Thompson is, but he can do more things."
Nebraska's defense is 12th in the
nation and Oklahoma's 32nd. the biggest difference between the two is pass defense. The Huskers rank 10th nationally against the pass, while the Sooners are 66th.
The weakness of the OU defense, especially the secondary, is one reason Kansas cornerback Pe'da Samuel is picking the Cornhuskers.
"The OU defense gives up too much," Samuel said. "OU's defense last year was sweet. Their secondary "us for real."
was Donohoe, though he picked the Sooners, agreed Nebraska's defense was stronger than Oklahoma's.
"Oklahoma's more prone to get beat, especially in the secondary," said Donohoe, who twice beat the
The Sooners have defeated the Cornhuskers in the last four meetings and 13 of the last 17. Oklahoma's domination has many people wondering why Nebraska can't beat the Sooners on a more regular basis.
1 just think Nebraska players say, 'We can beat anyone on our schedule but Oklahoma. Oklahoma is going to be our toughest game,' "Smith said. "Then when they play Oklahoma, they just get tight. They get tight for that game. They (Nebraska) had the team last year and the team two years ago. They were physically better than Oklahoma."
KU VOLLEYBALL TONIGHT:
Sooner defense with long passes to Willie Vaughn in the Oct. 28 game against Oklahoma.
The Kansas volleyball team plays its last home match of the season at 8 ontun in Allen Field House against Kansas State.
After losing to Nebraska Tuesday, the Jahawys' record stands at 5-22 and 1-9 in the conference. The Wildcats are in 14-12 and 3-7. Earlier this season, Kansas State defeated Kansas in Manhattan 3-0 CHIEF'S BELL RETURNS
Defensive end Mike Bell was reinstated by NFL Commissioner Pete Roezle yesterday, ending his season with a season-high 26 points in the league's substance abuse policy.
Sports Briefs
league's substitute team player. is Bell, a 10-year veteran, is
expected to play this week against the Seattle Seahawks. He was suspended Oct. 20 after testing positive in a random test. The substance found in his system has not been identified. It was the first time that a suspected drug was suspended by Rozelle because of a previous conviction on drug charges in which he served a four-month prison sentence in 1986.
Bell issued a brief statement at Arrowhead Stadium yesterday, but refused to answer questions.
"Because of the National Football League's confidentiality, I won't be speaking any on the drug suspension itself," said Belford. "So I
personally would like to say it's good to be back. The past four weeks has been a tough experience, but I've been working out on a daily basis and keeping myself in good physical condition.
"I'm just really looking forward to getting back on the football field and doing what I do best and helping this team win.
KING MAKES FIRST TEAM:
Sean Elliott of Arizona, Stacey King of Oklahoma and Danny
helping me.
"And really, that's all I have to say. As far as the suspension itself, I have no comment. I hope you respect the fact it's a personal matter."
Elliott and Reid were All-Americans last season, while Ferry and Macon made the second team.
Joining the three senior forwards on the six-man team were sophomore guard Mark Macon of Temple, senior guard Sherman Douglas of Syracuse and junior forward J.R. Reid of North Carolina. Douglas and Reid tied for the final spot in the voting of the 65-member panel which selects the weekly Top 20.
Ferry of Duke — three players who were instrumental in their team's Final Four appearances last season — were the top vote-getters in the Associated Press' preseason All-American team announced yesterday
The 6-foot-8 Elliott was the top vote getter, having been named on 56 ballots, two more than King and three more than Ferry.
Macon was named on 30 ballots, while Douglas and Reid each appeared on 23.
NATIONAL STILL UNDEFEATED:
Joe Dumars scored 20 points, including 10 in the fourth quarter, and the unbeaten Dumars seventh straight game 94-88 over the straight Antonio Spurs last night.
---
The Pistons are the only unde feated NBA team.
Thursdav. November 17. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
LIBERTY HALL
642 Mass.
749
1512
THE LAST
TEMPTATION
OF CHRIST
DAILY 5:30, 9:00
SAT. & SUN. 2:00 MAT.
642
Mass.
HIBERTY
WALL
749
1912
D
TONIGHT!
Thurs. Nov. 17
from St. Louis
Big Fun
it's a Party Situation!
Don't forget
50° Draws!
Fri. Nov. 18
from Atlanta
db Recording Artists
The Coolies
with special guests
The Lonesome Hounddogs
**Don't Forget**
F.A.C.
Friday Afternoon Club
featuring
*free pool
Sat. Nov. 19
Jonathan Richman
and
*free food (compliments of the RED HOT GARAGE).
The American Music Club Adv. Tx. recommended.
*****COMING EVENTS*****
Sat. Nov. 26 Scruffy the Cat
Fri. Dec. 2 Trip Shakespeare
Wed. Dec. 7 James Harmon
Band
Sat. Dec. 17 The Bonedaddies
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
7:15, 9:30
Bottleneck 9997572
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Films presents...
Tonight 8:00 ONLY Brimstone and Treacle Sting stars in this British thriller about a household of people whose futures are changed by a sinister stranger who enters their lives.
Commonwealth
Bargain Matters • A Senior Consumer $2.50
Showings for Today Only
MOVIE INFO 841-7000
Granada 1020 Mass.
843-5788
BEFORE YOU BUY,
Check the KANSAN.
Our advertisers
might save you money.
7:15, 9:35
PUNCHLINE (R)
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843-1065
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842-8400
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WITHOUT A CUE (PG) 7:40 7:30 8:30
SCORE SOME EXTRA SAVINGS NOW
TOUCHDOWN SALE
Introducing DOMINATOR II Steel Belted Radial Tire
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P165 801R31 $36.95
P175 801R31 $42.95
P185 801R31 $42.95
P185 751R4 $42.95
P195 751R4 $46.95
P205 751R4 $46.95
Sale Price
P215/751R15 48.95
P215/751R15 48.95
P215/751R15 51.95
P215/751R15 51.95
P235/751R15 58.95
FREE MOUNTING AND BALANCING
EASTERN AUTOMOBILE
SERVICE SPECIAL
Lube, $16.99
Co-op Filter,
Up To 5 qts. Co-op Oil
(Most cars and light trucks)
Now Servicing Vehicles. Call For Appointment.
Open: 8:00-5:00 Monday thru Friday
0:00-noon Saturday
Edgerton Elevator 882-6251
NEED NOT BE A MEMBER TO BUY
VISA
MasterCard
Farmers Co-op Assoc.
Lawrence Haskell and 23rd 842-8222
board was considering the lack of parking around the school caused by students with cars. He said people in the neighborhood couldn't even hold a church meeting during the day because of the parking crunch.
Citizens say new high school needed
The majority of the people who spoke at the Lawrence School Board's public hearing last night said they would rather have two high schools than one middle school and one high school in Lawrence.
By Debbie McMahon Kansan staff writer
The hearing at Lawrence High School, which was attended by the board and about 35 other people, was the board's first public hearing in response to the recommendation secondary School Facilities Task Force.
The task force, in response to overcrowding, recommended that a new high school be constructed for grades 11 and 12 and that Lawrence High School be used as a middle school for grades nine and 10.
1983, the district's student population had increased by 200 every year, and that by 1995, the figure would reach 2,800
The task force also found that since
he task force found that since 1983, the district's student population had increased by 200 every year, and that by 1995, the figure would reach 2,800.
T.
Mary Loveland, school board member, criticized the task force for addressing only facilities problems and not curriculum questions.
Ken Fisher, facilities superintendent for the Lawrence School District, said that if Lawrence High School were turned into a middle school problem because most students wouldn't be old enough to drive.
would allow students to get a better education and graduate with higher self-esteem, he said, while larger classes might allow peripheral students to fall through the cracks.
Bob Russell, Lawrence resident,
said he would rather see classes
made smaller through the addition of
another high school. Smaller classes
He estimated the cost of contraction alone, for either type of school, to be between $20 million and $25 million.
Fisher said that the task force would release its final report including an official estimate of construction costs Dec. 1.
Max Rife, Lawrence High School assistant principal, did not attend the hearing. He said earlier yesterday that he favored adding a second high school but he didn't think voters would support it.
"There is a hidden expense that doesn't necessarily show up in the school budget," Russell said.
"I don't want a bond issue to fail, I'll go with the what voters agree to," he said. "I think they'd be more receptive to a fourth junior high school, which could eventually be a second high school."
'WKRP' episode inspires turkey drop in Indianapolis
INDIANAPOLIS — A radio station has decided not to drop its gift turkeys live from the sky Saturday in a stunt inspired by the television show "WKRP in Cincinnati."
The Associated Press
at a shopping mall in a canvas net, Kay Feeney, a producer for WENS-FM, said yesterday.
Representatives of the local and national Humane Society, and a Sacramento, Calif., group for the protection of turkeys called to complain about the "Lite Rock Turkey Drop."
In fact, they're not even going to drop the 97 birds, but lower them from a hovering helicopter
An ad for the drop includes excerpts from the
NEXT THURSDAY
Crack some nuts.
Welcome a turkey.
Mash some hot potatoes.
Carve out the time to thank the Giver of all.
And do the dishes...the cook deserves it.
Lutheran Campus Ministry
1204 Oread
by students and for students
original "WKRP" episode in which a biplane drops live domesticated turkes at a shopping center.
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
"There's no harm intended to anyone." Feeney said, "if you come home people who would be afraid to afford a dress."
---
ECM CENTER EVENTS
Ecumenical Christian Ministries
1204 Oread
Sponsored by
Unified Method Church
Presbyterian Church (USA)
Church of the Brehmens
Church of the Brethren
Nov. 17: Latin American Solidarity No Dinner Planning for Spring 1989 6:00 p.m.
Nov. 18: Friday Free Movie "Moonstruck"
Popcorn and Drink Provided
7:30 p.m.
Nov. 20: Sunday Evening Worship Thanksgiving Feast and Celebration 5:30 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
Nov. 23: No University Forum
SALT
Apple Seasonings
Macintosh Plus
Works
Macintosh Plus
Microsoft Works - word processor, spreadsheet and data base manager , all in one.
Motorola
Microsoft Excel - The ultimate in spreadsheets with outstanding graphics.
DOLLARS FOR SENISE
WHITMAN
Great pieces on disks, paper supplies (including postal cards, Rolled-offs), games, Word-Portray.
Panasonic printer for the Mac - Panasonic 1080\
with tractor and friction feed, excellent quality with Mac\
interface and 24 month warranty, all at $399
Downtown Lawrence
804 New Hampshire St.
843-7584
KU's connection for Apple enhancements from the professionals at:
Dollars & Sense - Home accounting system for money management and checkbook maintenance.
ConnectingPoint COMPUTER CENTER
72% of KU Students read Kansan Classifieds
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSELE. Reduce your stress and don't forget your GIFT CEREMONY when you begin offering applops. Don't gobble your budget needle to嫩 call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Remember you read! #kids! Call 841-621-Rem
Classified Ads
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP
Museum of Anthropology
Univ. of Kansas
M-Sat
9-5
Sun.
1-5
ETHNIC ARTS & CRAFTS
KU students, faculty, staff and family members:
Arts and Crafts Bazaar. Fill out an application in
the SUA office. Deadline: Mon. Nov. 21.
for more information call 864-3477. Supported by
SUA
Student Senate
--is accepting applications
Friday Nov.18 at 5 p.m.
Applications due in the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union by
Questions? Call 864-3710 Paid for by Student Senate
Paid for by Student Senate
w. TEACAM SKIN CARE* Dermatologist tested.
Mary Kay has a skin care system for you, Call today!
Nancy Armstrong, Mary Kay Beauty Consultant
841-4531
Questions or concerns about the KANSAN? Need to make a correction?
Call 864-4810
Todd Cohen, editor Michael Horak, managing editor
Congressman Jim Slattery
will discuss:
"Topics for the 101st Congress"
Thurs. Nov. 17
300 Strong Hall
*sponsored by the KU Democrats
Clip Kansan Coupons
Mary Kay Cosmetics, Contact Deeann Wilks at 841-9407
Greiving and Loss: The University Counseling Center is offering an information and support group for individuals who have experienced a traumatic life event, such as the loss. The loss may be due to a life threatening illness, death, relating break-up jobs, or a signature event. The group will be held Wednesday from 4pm to 6pm at Dr. Gary Price, 118 Barley Hall, phone 842-8901 if you would like the group or if you have questions about the group.
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
the best skis for your needs!
only $249 paid, plus round trip transportation
deconduit condominium with fireplace, jauzzi, ect.
1 block from lihts. Contact David 8431 6807
Out of State Students—Going home on vacations. Earn travel money and much more during your vacations by being our salsa rep in your home office. Become a teacher (including reorderers). New and exciting art card designs by AlpaLaina. See at the Union Bookstore or Lampighter Bookstore, 9th & NH
GOOD VIBRATIONS - the most affordable mobile service for any occasion. Call (Brain) 841-8494.
Handel's Import Repair will tune up your car. $35 part, mobile service, 841-8429
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound, Superior sound and light. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot Spins Maximum Party Thrust DJ Ray Valeau 841-7063
JOHN G SINGS Parties, B-days, singing messages. 841-1874
2 bermoon & 2 bath kit with microwave, ice maker and carpet plush. Call 842-5111
1 bedroom available on 24th and 9aar. Near bus-
route #842-965. Rent: $157 + 1 utility.
2 bedroom & 2 bath apt, with microwave, ice maker
2nd Semester Sublease - Naimith Place Apts - 2
bdrm. jacuzzi bathtub, furnished or unfurnished.
794-439
Affordable, spacious, 2 br. apt. Furn., on bus
houses, bacuccio 841-3880
2 rooms for rent, females only, near stadium. $125 a month, call Amy at 1-631-8668.
Available immediately. One bedroom apartment for male students between downtown & campuses and one or two bedroom apartments. Completely Furnished 1, 3, and 4-bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU, Call (805) 267-9111.
Completely Furnished Studios. 1-23 & a broom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call (604) 5285, or 749 2493. Mastercraft Studio.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: To share nice 2 bedroom apartment Spring Semester. Call 049-1955.
Female Roombear wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Available immediately. Apartment includes own bedroom, fireplace, and free fire. Please call 749-6031.
Female Roommate wanted to share large two story house. $200/month. All utilities paid.
841-6956
Female roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom
room. Located in beautiful great roommates, $125 *Qualities* 841-276-
FOR SPRING SEMESTER Nice furnished
studies $620 mo. Water and cable pad. Bus Route:
studio 452 no. Water and cable pad Bus Route Call 749 2806.
For Sublease: Large 1 bd., Colony Woods,
available now. Call 843-7680.
For sublease. Room brominate "needed"
$15 $60 month + £4 utilities available Dec 1 87
Michigan Desperate! Call 749-3798 Arlene
Fully furnished one bedroom, apartment Civil
Michigan Desperate* Call 749-2788. Arlene:
Fully furnished one bedroom, apartment. Civilly big enough for two. Must go in Nov. 10th.
Arkansas $340 • utility 841-7032 (709-4158)
House for rent January 1, 1989. $350 2 bedrooms,
garage, washdrive, A/C Located on Tennessee.
Call Toney at 749-7380
LUXHIX 2 bedroom 2 bath room available starting Dec, Jan. Large rooms, clean, quiet WD, hookups, fireplace, patio, wet bar, pool, tennis. 842-3025
Male or Female roommate wanted. Very niced
townhouse for 2nd semester. $210/mo + %
utilities. On KL bus route 411-4094
Moving to KCT Person needed to share 2 bedroom api. close to KU Medical Center. Prefer female. large bedroom 780³ + 4 utilities. 816-561-4167
NAMSIM HALL SUNSETE
Will give you money for deposit + one half month rent. Starting Spring Semester. Choi Chel (748-853)
Nice 2 bedroom duplex for sublease, on bus route,
garage, $990, call Scott at 843-8304
Nice 2 bedroom apt for lease. Naismith Park
Apartments. New appliances. Jacuzin built in.
Furnished rooms. £650 per room. Nice
Private room in large room for house-
for non-smoker. B43-949-699
vice two bedroom, bath, fully furnished apart-
ment; two additional closets to camp in
many great locations; laminated flooring.
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place
immediately. $800/mi. water, gas, and furniture.
University Daily Kansan / Thursday. November 17. 1988
11
Room available at semester very near campus.
Share kitchen, bath, $160 - deposit. Utilities paid. 842-6079
Single apartment for sublease 2 bikes from Union
$250/month 94-5546 best after 9.30pm
Spaciosa 2 br. apt. near campus. Take over lease,
$900ma. A41,127.
Spring Semester Sublease. 1 bedroom. W/D On bus route. $352/mo. Call eve. 749-4500.
Sublease immediately until May 89. A room with a view! Apple Lake Studio. Desperate! (913) 491-3036.
TRAILRIDGE
...
NOW RENTING
1 Bedroom Apartment
Pald Water & Gas, Patio
Laundry Facilities
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
3 Bedroom Town House
Fireplace, Carport, Patio
Washer/Dryer Hookups
on KU. Bus Route.
HILLVIEW APTS
NEW APIS
1733 West 24th 841-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
- 1 & 2 bedroom units
* Laundry facilities
- On bus route-near shopping
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available
by Thompson-Crawley
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
LOCATION Available Now!
Justice Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
842-4200
- Newly remodeled
- Great location
- Gas heat
- On KU bus route
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
26th & Iowa 843-6446
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 66044
913 - 843 - 8559
Convenience...
Convenience...
Luxury...
Privacy...
and more:
Naismith Hall...These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hassle free living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all worries.
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
For information and a tour come by or call today!
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
Sublease (Jan. 1, May 31): 2 bedroom, $1/₂
spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK
Families welcome: #843-04021
Sublease 1 bedroom apartment Starting December, Rent $853, electricity paid, 749-3852 or 642-2889 before 6:30 p.m.
Sublease: Large 2BR apt. on Bus Route. Can sleep 3. Call 841-3439.
Sunflower House is taking applications for Spring 98. We offer private rooms, TV/CHK, TV and laundry facility. Luv rent include all utilities. Call 799-6811 or 814-0448.
TRAILHIDE STUDIO available for sublease
spring semester Quit, clean (must location)
luxury, laundry, pool. Dillon's. Phone 748-4935
after 2pm or evenings in weekdays
*Unfurnished 2. bedroom apt. large bath,
dishwasher, dishwasher dryer up to $660/month -
utilities 3 blocks from campus. 5 or 8 month
sublease beginning午月 149-7383J
WANTED · Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 842-2537.
WANTED Person or persons to assume a lease at Colony Woods, 1 bedroom, at semester end. Call 843-3918.
*wanted immediately - Male roommate - Own
room $15 mo - t₂ utilities $150.dep. 13th & Kentucy.
Call Loren 749-3891.
FOR SALE
2 OU Nebraska game tickets, Nov. 19 in Norman
Call John between 7-8 pm. Best offer excepted.
841-1780
an absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade primitives, dolls, comic books, toys, tablecloths, fabrics, records, vintage clothing, cards, cone baseballs, slot machines, Maxfield Parnish, art deco, advertising items, clocks, watches, desks, anti-fraud materials, games that will blow you away! QUANTIZER'S FLAIL MARKET. 811 New Hampshire. Open every day. And 10am. For rental info call 842-6465.
AUDIO SALE- Cassette deskets, Teac, JVC, Sony from $75 - $150. Must sell. 841-9484.
Comic books, Playbys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
10-5.
For Sale: 78 Biancio Road Mountain bike, like new, 78 Hard Rock Mountain Bike. 841-809-
For Sale. Lowrey electric organ Python snakekin boots. Larry RM-8042
fREE information on New KA Police Photo
RADAR. NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE
$80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 radar detector that
will detect firearms new NaL. BK Al
Radar. P.O. Box 7214, BK Chicago, IL 60605
GOVT SURPULS! *New G.I. Overseases, Com-
munity Support* *Military Bases & miltiories, Fields, Jatroo-
ces, & WORKSHOPS*. M-9; Open Sunday, U-
K Christmas 124. St. Mary's Surplus Sales. St.
Christmas 123. St. Mary's Surplus Sales.
Go to Miami, Fl for Thanksgiving and or Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for a discount price. Call 749-5737 from 6:00 pm for more info.
Government Homes from $1.00 "U Repair". Also tax delinquent property. Call 805-644-9333 Ext. 769 for info.
MIR Correcting Selective II *w* extra ribbons, lift tape, and three type bands. Dictaphone dacalasse phone Half-height drive 306Kb Floppy 5.2 Call Bee at 433-8209
K2-516k 19cm. Salam 77 and 612T. Nordura 890 bsck 510, Rockford FO4 plate & fates. pod speakers. Camare classic series Pioneer EQ and CD. Price to Sell. Call K2 843-8677.
Minolta Xenon camera: aperture preferred,
50 mm 2 lens plus 75-105mm F3.8 zoom, camera
causa $175 or best offer. Evenings, weekends
841.4915
Naismith Hall contract for sale. Will pay deposit Call 749-4618 or 749-7403.
Now showing, Figi Graphics newest southwestern art. Catch the new wave at New Wave Futons. 11 East 84th Street, 842-7378.
Pevery Mystic electric guitar, excellent condition $200 and Crate G-40e amp, almost new; $200, 81-257.
Rock-roll - Thousands used and rare albums
10, to m. 5, to p. 5 every day and Sunday.
Quartillis Fife Market 811 New Hamshire.
Sleep with the best. A cotton Tofu for $88.89.
at New Wave Futons. 11 East 8th St. #423-7578
WATERBED Queen with six drawer pedestal.
Low mileage. Bargain! $190, $431-151.
AUTO SALES
1974 Dodge Maxivan, $7,000 mi, runs great. $750 or best offer. 841-1955.
1976 Olds. Omega, 350ci, cruise, tilt, rdefog,
AM/FM, Patr, Phk, Pwr, runs super, 106K mi,
k750 843. 0142 eyes, wnds.
1972 Ford Moverick, new tires, automatic. pts.
p., air. birt. mwr. indispens, depend. bd. 843-6948
1980 Toyota Terracer, 2 dr., 5 speed, AC, stereo, 21K
1823 Mazda 626, a/c/ AM/FM, 5-speed, looks and runs great!! 1920 OBO 800-814. 1868 Chris.
LOST-FOUND
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords. Mercedes Corvette Chevroil. Surplus
Guide (1) 857-887-600 Ext. S. 9738
Arthur Purters now hire line locks and prep cobs. Must be over loaded X-mas break and have previous experience. Startage wage $4.00 per hour. Accepts students of Massachusetts absurdly Bufalo's Smokebike.
APARTMENT LEASING: Challenge position for outgoing person with good customer relation skills and sales experience. Part-time position, work around school and work around class schedule 842-5111
AIRLINES NOW HIWING. Flight Attendants,
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $10KG. Entry level positions.
| | C) 195-887-6900 AE, U7938
HELP WANTED
Whomever found my I.D.'s and called me, please return them now! M. Carlson.
Banquet positions are now open at the Adams Ahunt Center. Applicants must be available to attend a banquet, which includes hartenders, & hostesses are needed. Above average pay & professional working conditions may be required.
Attention: Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above avg starting salary. Apply by 25-1618 W. 23rd.
Cottonwood, Inc. has staff position open in the Residential Program. Currently hiring Residen-
tial Program students, we offer an evening or weekday jobs for about minimum wage. If interested you fill out an application at 2601 W. Hobson St.
Calendar Assistant- Half-time student hourly position. Deadline: November 18. Contact Nora Nora. University Relations 864-3256
hours per week. Three-fourths time preferred.
Full-time rate of pay. $875 per month. Position
available for applications. May 1, 2019.
Latest possible start date. January 3, 1989.
Three-month probation period. March 6, 1989.
tracts, purchase orders, etc., filing; and assisting with spec project management to facilities of 100 students requiring 10 free procedures and practices. Ability to operate 10 key calculator and type 90 wpm. Demonstrate knowledge of computer software, some knowledge of business forms. Submit letter of application with resume to Lisa Wakim, Kattan Campus West. Lawrence KS 69046, or complete application form (attach resume) at Reception a bank, Moore Hall. Applications received by EO/AA employee. 2, 1865. be considered. EO/AA employer.
Immediate openings with flexible hours for
caterer at Farmers Co-op Association
convenience store. See June in person. 22rd and
Haskell.
Help Wanted (Office and Clerical)
DJ Produser for KLZR 9m-5pm, 30 m/wk
Previous experience required. Letters or
to Mr. Lee, P.O. Box 3007, Lawrence, Ka 6046E
JOB DESCRIPTION
GOVERNMENT NEEDD for 2 small children ages 7:15am to 6:00pm weekdays in my home. Reliable car necessary. Call after 6:00pm weekdays, anytime weekends. 814-9844.
Mass Street Dell. Near hiring limited number of cooking and waistwater positions. Must have day availability and be available over X-mas break. Apply at lt9 Massachusetts also Buffalo Bob's
Up to 490 per week. Positions northwestern; East,
West, South, Midwest. 1 year commitment.
1:800-722-4435. National Nanny Resource and
Referral
GOVERNMENT JOBS. $16,040-$58,230/yr. Now Hiring. Your Area. (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9758 for current Federal list.)
OVERSEAS JOBS. $300-$400 mo. Summer, Yr.
round. All Countries. All fields. Free Info Wife
ROUND. B$ 25 KS1. Corona Del Mar. CA 92825.
Part-time workers. Packet Carrier is examining the feasibility of having a tine production shifts: 12 midnight, 8 pm, 12 middnight, 12 midnight-4 am / hours/wk, start paying $4.95/hr. If interested
Part time data entry audit person needed 8 a.m.
to noon 6 days per week. Must be dedicated,
dependable, and a self-starter. Computer
experience a must. Send resume to Box 165, I99
3007, Chicago, IL 60620.
Part-time office assistant. 75% time demonstrated work process ability on Word SLAM, SMART or Microsoft software. 60 wpp training required. Participate in Prefer 1 year clinical experience. be able to work in an office environment. Joahmann, Beach Center On Families & Disability. 4189 Hlwath Hall 60454. Application deadline
RENORT HOTELS, Cruiselines, Airlines, & Amusement Parks, NOW accepting applications for summer jobs, internships and career position opportunities in the College of Engineering. Write a National College Recruitment Service. PO Box 1249, Boston, MA 02118
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews. Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59901
Part-time help wanted early evening hours cleaning commercial buildings. Sunday through Thursday. Above minimum wage. 843-6449.
Staying in town over break? Need $$$ Love kids? Apply to Children Learning Center 313 Main for teacher aid position. Flexible hours, $3.50/hour.
Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for Day & late night shifts. Above avg, starting salary. Apply between 2.5-1618 W. 23rd.
TACO JOHN$ _ now hiring Day & Earnings apply
al 3 locations 1063, Mass I, 928, or 110 I
w 6th, Mature, responsible persons need only apply
apply between 2.5 pm.
On TVs, VCRs, Jewelry, Stereos, Musical in-
instruments, cameras, and more. We honor
Viec/M.A.C.M.E.X. J-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry.
1804 W 749-1919
MISCELLANEOUS
Late night munchies?
Stop by Johnny's Classic Burgers!
Open:
10 a.m.-midnight
Sun - Tues.
10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
Wed. - Sat.
lohnny's
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquaters.
We're here because we care.
84 West 57th Mass.
We's always because us.
HAPPY HOTDOGS
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO BEALLY LISTEN
PERSONAL
Annie II and L. A. Abse, Adam and Eve, which is West. 99. Barry Bobble. How you's? Your's the weather up there? OK, no more height jokes. Winnie.
B. Happy Birthday, Study that Beer Chemistry?
Thanks for being my best bud from home. Love your girls.
Excuse me sir, "The What %" 'Is Goin' On?" Youbdy朱迪, you I'r 15 Happy B-day. The Gang. Hyum sunehain (Ryan B). Why is Mr. Happy bathroom wall conversation? The Roe knows
SWM, seeking romantic honest male with a full set of clubs for a romantic weekend in Palm Beach. Call Sunshine at 841-9419.
SWM, Grad Student, nice looking, somewhat
looks for friendly, sincere, nice SWM, 21-30
P. W. O. Box 442 043, Lawrence, KS. 6644
Photo appreciated
J. L.V. It's that time of year again. Congrats on everything. Love you, love it. -C
Burrito. Burrito. Burrito... Enchilada!
R.R. Rid you enjoy watching? Pat Boone P.S.
When do I go to watch you?
MAX. U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
Ron, your own personal Parachuting with you was an interesting experience. I enjoy you and our arguments very much. Cleopatra.
BUS. PERSONAL
To my "low-eyed" Teddy Bear: This first month is just the beginning, baby. I Love You! Your Cin namen Girl.
Government Photos. Passport. immigration, issuing Modeling, theatrical. Advanced fine art portfolio. Slides can be a valuable asset to your articlit future. Tum Swells 294-1611.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without parental testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
FALL Line ski & Snowboard Tuning
Complete tuning & repair. Home pickup and delivery.
Certified Tech. Call 842-5203
Dr.Jay J.Burlingame Optometry
Evening Hours
3111 west 6th
841-5288
Paying too much for car insurance because of Your Age?
American Optometric
Association
GATEWAY
INC.
Had a few tickets?
Need an SR-22?
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
dependents. 2 children with $25 deductible only
$55.66 month. With parent slightly higher. Kansas
Insurance Service #81-116.
Barb's Vintage Rose
927 Mass. 841-2451 M.R. 10.9-30 Thur. N.R.
SN CALOARDO / NESITE/NITRE 2. Ten cay log cabin/skirts cabinets, amber soap dish, bass boat, fish. Xcountry beach, Piscan Bay. CAIN MAIN LAKES COBE BRAZER/reservations. GRAND Lakes, COBEE BRAZER
Kansas Optometric Association
Vintage Christmas gifts
rhinestone jewelry, lace collars,
new cummerbund/bow tie sets;
For that personal touch Gateway Insurance
923 N. 2nd.
842-7841
HARPER
HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass.. Suite 201. 749-0123
"Dedicated to Excellence in Vision Care"
THE COMIC CORNER
NE corner of 23rd & inch 841-4294
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
SPRING BREAK '89
Trips Available Now
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT, CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
Don't Wait Until It's Too Late!
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
1-800-321-5911
THURSDAY Dollar Days
READING
Chef's Surprise
Cheap!
Domestics
$1.00
Imports
$1.50
lohny's
Up & Under
401 North 2nd
SERVICES OFFERED
Boubier Portraits are still the greatest gift idea.
Setts include glamorized makeup and over-full
assistance for. For more information call
Mike or Grace collect! 1-299-3789
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving school, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
K. U. INFORMATION CENTER 864-3506 Campus, community events; University procedures, SUICIDE/CRISIS HELP, referrals 24 hrs/day
community events, University procedures,
SUCE CRISIS SHELTER, referred to
processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W service.
PASSPORT 8.00. Art & Design Building.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.)
(p.m.)
Math tutor. Master's in math and six years
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 842-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and
Services. Overland Park...(913) 419-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
SHUTTLE Van to KCI Airport. Flying home for Thanksgiving or Christmas? $10. 864-2315.
Very experienced Spanish 104-216 tutor/translator. Results-oriented, systematic approach makes Espanol easier, even fun. B1-804-6754
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your serfilets into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-263, days or evenings
2 Smart Typesetting. Dissertations, Thesis,
Paper, Resumes and more. Spelled correcting
and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts.
Low typing prices. 749-290
412-4868 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before lipmil.
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses.
Leaving Town?
Absolutely fast accurate typing, Papers, theses, dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates 841-8633.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, those, thesis. mib. IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-9544
ACT NOW : Papers, resumes, & cover letters
WRITING LIFELINE: 841-3469
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience. Call evenings before 10.749.196
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary,
$1.25 double-spaced pic page. East Lawrence.
Mrs. Mattila 811-129.
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-4119 In Topeka Accelerate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality oriter
ATTN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS : Word processing service available near you. APA for mat experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak,
843 6708
Call R.J.'s SIP Service 84192-7048 Term
Papers, Legal Thesis, etc. No calls after P.M.
Dona's Quality Typing and Word Processing
resumes, applications, mailing list. Laser
resumes, graphics.
Expert Testt: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
IRON FETING TYPING. 841-8363
PEACE TYPING
Airline Tickets at airline counter prices no service charge
ON CAMPUS LOCATION
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 7291-
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
*841-9223 or 841-2279*.
*TYPING/WORD PROCESSING* Done on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes Letter Quality Printing Legal exp. Laura, 542.3738 Email Message
SPEEDTTERM Word Processing Service. Accurate and reliable, spelling checked. Call 843-2276.
***Ttyping at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 845-111-04. Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday. Typing word processing on p.c.LQ printer. Term papers, theses, dissertations, mice. Barb
in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
the WORDIOCTORS- Why pay for typing when you can have workforceoming. Legal, these, resumes, commercial, IBM PC, MAC, CIF, Wheelwheel, dot matrix, laser. Since 1983 McGraw-Hill.
749-0700
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also
writing projects. Call Anne: 822-7708
TYPING
WANTED
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ac-
curate and赁型 typing and wordprocessing.
Jud., 842794 or Lisa., 841-1953
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse. *re/entitutions, bus route, roadster, pool, water/drive, Call 784-9001*
Female roommate wanted second semester to
assume leave on large 2-bedroom apartment.
1822.900 mile $l_1 + l_2$ utilities. Close to campus and
downtown, Joplin 8432242.
Female roommate for Spring Semester. Good living arrangements very close to campus. Call 843.725.
campus can also be over time, and for now.
Now hiring part-time help. Apply in person Mon-
Fri., 2-4.1527 W. 6th.
Female roommate will want to share a 2 bedroom
apart, start Jan 1, 1989. Village Square Apts.
$177 per person + $1 utilities. After 5pm. Call
843-8533
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Non-smoking roommate to share house
Rent $350 + $ utilities. Fully furnished, VCR
Microwave. Computer and furniture, close to
camp. Call 843-789 on 6pm, ask for 1km.
Male or Female roommate wamed to share giant 2 BR apt, 1 bath, waher洗碗, dryer, pool, big balcony, on bus route $175/mo (negotiable) % utilities, Gary B-841-0677
Second Semester Female Roommate wanted.
$100 and 2 utilities. Walking distance or bus route. Call 842-7885.
One needed to share beautiful new townhouse.
Private room and bath with all amenities. On bus route, reasonable rent. 749-726.
Roommate wanted to share a bedroom apartm-
t at 842-635-0111, 842-635-1010,
842-635-1700, askies for kall, M48, 842-635-
8000. Roommate need. Very convenient & modern
apartment on bus route 100 - electric CCTV
(100)
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1. You will have your own bedroom and your own bathroom. Your female roommate wanted for Spring semester. Owner bedroom Surprise Village $123 $uillies.
Roommate wanted. Gorgetown apartments B-304
1280 sq ft. 1-bathroom, 2-car garage.
Roommate wanted for spring season. January
Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment. Great location!
$15,000/month plus 1 year! 749-381. $125
per month plus 1 year! 749-381. $125
Wanted: 2 roommates for cool Meadowbrook apartment or 3 to take over. 749-7299.
Wanted: Someone to provide night support for disabled man from 10.45 p.m. to 8.30 a.m. Pays $2.15 per day. 749-1729
Spring semester female roommate wanted Park
25, 2 hr. 1 bath $130 + t₂ utilities. 649-689 Leave message
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---
© 1986 Chronicle Features
Designated by Universal Press Syndicate
By GARY LARSON
"Gad, I hate walking through this place at night."
.
12
Thursday, November 17, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
During the week 82.3% of KU students read The Kansan
for a limited time only
Cocktail Gowns
Evening Gowns
Sequin & Beaded Dresses
25% off all new
Black Tuxedos
and accessories
in Stock only
We accept Mint C
for a limited time only
SPECIAL BRIDAL SALE
Save 40% -75%
Swan's is privileged to have on account...
Designer Bridal Gowns
over 900
Cocktail Gowns
Evening Gowns
Sequin & Beaded Dresses
Wedding Gowns
Bridesmaid Dresses
Mother's Gowns
Bras
Slips
Hats
25% off all new Black Tuxedos and accessories in Stock only
SWAN'S
FORMAL WEAR
INC.
1025 S. Kansas - (913) 232-7243
KS 800-432-3530
Other 800-255-3563
We accept MasterCard
VISA & American Express
All Sales Final • No Exchanges • No Refunds
ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PIZZA!
FAST 'N FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
FAST 'N FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
“NO COUPON SPECIALS”
Prime Time Special
3-Pizzas
1-Topping
4-Cokes
$10.00
Everyday Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cokes
$8.00
Special Offer
10-Pizzas
1-Topping
$25.00
$1.00 OFF
ANY PIZZA ORDERED
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME_
ADDRESS_
$.50 OFF
ANY PIZZA
842-1212
NAME_
ADDRESS_
Hours: Monday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday-Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
SWAN'S
FORMAL WEAR
INC.
ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PIZZA!
FAST 'N FREE DELIVERY 842-1212 FAST 'N FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
“NO COUPON SPECIALS”
Prime Time Special
3-Pizzas
1-Topping
4-Cokes
$10.00
Everyday Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cokes
$8.00
Special Offer
10-Pizzas
1-Topping
$25.00
$1.00 OFF
ANY PIZZA ORDERED
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME___
ADDRESS___
$.50 OFF
ANY PIZZA
842-1212
NAME___
ADDRESS___
Hours: Monday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday-Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sundav 11:45 a.m.
Prime Time
Special
3-Prizes
1-Topping
4-Oakes
$10.00
Prime Time Special
3-Pizzas
1-Topping
4-Cokes
$10.00
Everyday Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cokes
$8.00
Special Offer
10-Pizzas
1-Topping
$25.00
Everyday
Two-Fers
2-Pizzas
2-Toppings
2-Cakes
$8.00
Special Offer
10-Pizzas
1-Topping
$25.00
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH
An Incredible New Sportswear Store Is Opening In Lawrence... And Our Prices Set Us Apart From The Rest!
KANSAS
AUMAH
KANSAS
Sportswear City carries a full line of sweatshirts, T-shirts, shorts, boxers tie-dyes, KU & professional baseball styled hats jams, mugaphones, test prints, and much more at a reasonable price.
Take Advantage of our GRAND OPENING
KU students spend an average $244 per month on discretionary items
Specials!
Mass
E. 23rd
Barker Ave.
Sportswear City
Haskell JC
Haskell Ave.
SPORTSWEAR
CITY
Open: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Sat.
2240
SPRITSWEAR
2246 Barker Ave
How to stand out in a crowd.
POLICE
AMERICAN EXPRESS
0978
3712 6666 18 95006
100 MEXICO
The A
virtual
The American Express $^2$ card gives an outstanding welcome virtually, anywhere you shop; whether it's for a leather jacket or a leather-bound class. Whether you're bound for a bookstore or a beach in a bermuda. So during college and after its the perfect way to pay for just about everything you'll want.
How to get the Card now.
**How to get the job**
College is the first sign of success. And because we believe in your potential, we've made it easier to get the American Express Card right now.
Whether you're a freshman, senior or grd student, look into our new automatic approval offers. For details pick up an application on campus.
Or call 1 800 THE CARD and ask for a student application.
The American Express Card.
Don't Leave School Without It™
NEW
TRAVEL
RELATED
SERVICES
THE PARTY BALL
A PORTABLE, DISPOSABLE KEG ALTERNATIVE
Ih
It's the new way to party from Coors and Coors Light. It's filled with over five gallons of brewery-fresh draft beer it's portable. It's disposable. It's the preferred alternative for any party. It even comes in a box with its own liner, so you can ice it down and take it anywhere.
So get one and have a ball!
D
Coors
LIGH
Part
Coors.
Original Draft
PARTY BALL
Coors
LIGH
Part
Coors
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PARTY BALL
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PARTY BALL MAIL-IN REFUND $4.00
$4.00 REFUND
COORS DR COORS LIGHT
PARTY BALL
IT'S JUST NOT A PARTY IF YOU DON'T HAVE A BALL
Original Draft
PARTY BALL. MAIL-IN REFUND $4.00
$4.00 REFUND
COORS OR COORS LIGHT
PARTY BALL
REFUND OFFER EXPRES 12-31-88
---
-
Vol. 99, No. 60 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday November 18,1988
Bush names chief of staff, GOP chairman
WASHINGTON — President-elect George Bush named New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu as White House chief of staff yesterday and tapped willy campaign strategist Lee Atwater as chairman of the Republican National Committee.
The Associated Press
Bush's selection of Sununu as his top White House adviser prompted Craig L. Fuller to reveal that he would quit working for Bush after the transition ends in January.
Fuller said he informed Bush last month he would accept no post other than chief of staff. Fuller told The Associated Press that Bush gave him a day in Occupation Day that he was giving that job to Sununu.
Bush said he would like Fuller, co-chairman of the transition team and his chief of staff since 1982, to consider a role in his campaign. He added that because he was the "right man for the job."
See related story
"John Sunumu has the background and experience necessary to work not only with his former colleagues in the nation's state house of Congress, but also with him with the J. S. Congress," he said.
of President Reagan's term and return to Nevada to practice law.
Bush said Atwater's function will be "winnin elections." While Republicans have won the presidency in five of the last six elections, they have been less successful at the congressional level, where Democrats hold comfortable majorities.
"I'm a nuts-and-bolts politician." Atwater said, "I will be extremely campaign-monitoring."
The Republican National Committee will formally act on Bush's choice in January.
Bush made the announcements after meeting over breakfast with Mindy of Prime Minute.
weekly lunch with Reagan. Also on his schedule yesterday was an evening centennial banquet of the National Geographic Society.
Both Sununu and Alwater share reputations as adept players of political hardball.
Atwater is considered a master of negative campaigning, and was an architect of the strategy that helped Bush wipe out a 17-point poll lead by Democrat Michael Dukakis and ramp to a 40-state victory in the presidential race.
Sumum, 49, an engineer by training and a former Tufts University professor, has no previous experience in Washington. He has a reputation for being a quick study, highly
intelligent and assertive. Some also regard him as as arrogant and abrasive, traits that could hurt him in working with Congress.
Sunum made light of that reputation yesterday.
"I'm a pussycat," Sunum said. "Let me tell you about Washington. Certainly I have a tol learn in regard to the details. I think I'm a quick learner. I consider a great number of congressmen to be close friends, both Democratic and Republican."
Jewish lobbyists have criticized the New Hampshire governor for being the only governor to refuse to endorse a proclamation that would allow a resolution that equated zionism with racism
BURKE
darren Cook, facilities supervisor for the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, and D.W. Acker, KUAC maintenance worker, reinstate the goal posts at Memorial Staucium. Both goal posts were welded and repainted for tomorrow's game against Missouri.
Set for Saturday
'78 cult massacre taints .Jonestown
The Associated Press
GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Three charred poles rising from a thicket are all that remain of the jungle pavilion where the Rev. Jim Jones led more than 900 Americans to their death in a macabre ritual 10 years ago.
The Jonestown suicide-massacre still haunts this impoverished land of 780,000 on the northern coast *South America*, and its image abroad may be permanently tainted by one of history's most bizarre disasters.
"Once you leave the shores of Guyana, that's the first thing you have to face," said Alice Thomas, an editor for the independent newspaper Stabroek News. "Guyana and Jonestown go together."
Many Guyanese regard Jones' San Francisco-based Peoples Temple as an American aberration that had nothing to do with Guyana other than its location. Successive governments also associated themselves from the affair.
"It's really hard for us to explain what motivated 900 Americans to take their lives," said Patrick Denny, a government spokesman. "If the media didn't show any interest, we wouldn't have remembered that it was 10, years" since the tragedy.
But Cap, Gerry Gouviea, 32 clearly recalls the carnage wrought by Jones on Nov. 18, 1978, when the culprit leader urged his disciples to drink grape-flavored pouch laced with potassium cyanide. Most were poisoned, some forcibly. Some were shot by security guards.
In all, 913 people, including Jones, died. He was found with a bullet wound in the head. It is not known where he was shot or committed suicide
A second lieutenant in Guyana's air force at the time, Gouviea went in a few days later to help recover bodies for burial in the United States. Most lay at the roofed pavilion where Jones held communal meetings and twice-monthly suicide drills known as "White Nights."
"The magnitude of the thing was so great that you were hoping it was going to just rewind and everybody was going to get up and everything was going to be all right," Gouviea said.
"I remember looking at the children and feeling pity and wondering who were the adults who did this thing."
The massacre occurred hours after Rep. Leo Ryan, D-Calif., three news-
Please see JONESTOWN, p. 16, col. 3
Report says architectural engineering should be cut
By Debbie Miller
Kansan staff writer
By Debbie McMahon
TOPEKA — University of Kansas officials disagreed with a recommendation to discontinue the architectural engineering program at KU which was presented to the Board of Regents yesterday in Topeka.
The recommendation was one of several in a review that was conducted last summer by hired consultants. No action was taken yesterday, but the Regents will try to resolve the issue at its December meeting.
The report reviewed the engineering programs at KU, Wichita State University and Kansas State University
The report stated, among other things, that KU's architectural engineering project discontinued its construction and was affiliated by K-State.
Judith Ramaley, KU executive vice chancellor, said that although the review was helpful for further examination, accepting every recommendation would not be beneficial to the programs.
She said the report had errors. For example, the consultants didn't talk with Max Lucas, dean of architecture and urban design. She said 80 percent of the architectural engineering courses are taught in the School of Architecture and Urban Design, and the consultants looked only at the engineering courses.
Carl Locke, KU dean of engineering, said the judgments were made in too short of a time period.
Also, the review recommended reducing enrollment in chemical engineering and expanding aeronautical engineering. Locke said that information he had received about job placement said more chemical and fewer aeronautical engineers were needed.
Regent Norman Jeter also questioned consolidating the two programs if more resources would be needed for K-State to be the sole architectural engineering school. He also urged to compromise both programs by consolidating them.
Donald Rathbone, dean of engineering at KState, said the review was a good one, and that positive things could come from it. He said that the Regents should adhere to it in its entirety.
"Buy into the total or don't buy it at all," Rathbone said.
The architecture deans also requested that students be charged an equipment fee in addition to tuition.
Dean Locke and William Wilhelm, dean of engineering at Wichita State University, said that a $10 per hour fee would help with their equipment costs.
However Rathbone said that a 75 fee per semester would be better for his school's equipment needs.
In other matters, the Regents approved plans for a new University Press office building on West Campus. The $170,000 construction project would be self-supportive, funded by the University Press book sales income.
Representatives from the Kansas College of Technology in Salina and Pittsburgh State University said they would favor having a $10 per hour equipment fee for their engineering departments too.
Regents discuss plans for Washburn
By Debbie McMahon Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Board of Regents considered the fiscal implications of bringing Washburn University into the Regents system at its meeting yesterday in Tooeila.
The Regents took no action, but executive director Stanley Koplik said that lines of communication with organizations would remain open.
Three variables were considered in estimating the costs that could be incurred by the affiliation.
The time frame for implementation would affect the costs. By joining the Regents, Washburn would lose many of the funds it receives through tax levies, which now total about $6.2 million. However, the funds would be available while the university is in transition.
A second variable was the increase in Washburn's budgetary needs and the uncertainties of inflation.
A third variable would be the university's financing methods, which would change through state affiliation. Two basic factors separate it from the financing of Regents institutions.
One is the inclusion of local mil levies in the general use operating budget, which for the fiscal year 1989 is projected to be $6.3 million from two local operating levies. Another is that Washburn's higher tuition is projected to total $9.7 million in milleure, instate Washburn undergraduate pays $1,064 per semester.
The Regents considered four cost scenarios.
The first contrasted the various state affiliation options if the present methods of finance would be continued.
The second considered the immediate financing of Washburn as a Regents institution. It contained the cost of the immediate elimination of local property tax levies and the reduction of tuition and fees to 25 percent of the general use budget.
The third considered a six-year phase out of local property tax support for Washburn, with tuition waived. The University requests this option.
The fourth scenario considered keeping the existing methods of financing, but state financing would pay for any budgetary increases. This option is currently not being advocated by any party.
Increased funds proposed for research
Four new staff positions are part of KU's $160.000 Margin request
By Mark Fagan Kansan staff writer
Legislature in April 2014
■ the Tertiary Oil Recovery Project, which would
Research is listed as a priority in KU's budget proposal for next year because the University has not kept up with the financing of its peer institutions, a KU research administrator said yesterday.
day.
"Because we haven't had any money in the past, we have had less buying power," said Frances Horowitz, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service. "We're trying to recover; this is not going ahead."
Margret of Boeuf
The $160,000 is part of the proposed budget, now being reviewed by the state budget office in Topeka, that would allocate a total of $24.8 million for research. The total also includes some money for museums.
to recover, this time.
However, the University is trying to change things for next year, asking for $160,000 under the Margin of Excellence.
Four KU research groups that would receive Margin financing if approved by the Kansas Legislature in April are
gain an additional field engineer.
the Kansas Geological Survey, which would receive funds for either another research assistant or another scientist.
- the Institute for Life Span Studies, which would add another classified staff member.
the Institute for International Programs, which would gain another classified staff member.
The proposal under the Margin would provide $135,000 for the four new staff positions. The other $25,000 would go for operating expenditures including equipment, paper and chemicals.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three year plan to increase total financing of Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer institutions and faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
Horowitz said research had not received sufficient funds under the Margin. She was happy that the money was proposed but was unsure which group would receive the most money.
"When you have a drought and everything is thirsty, how can you say which is more important? This is not hard (definite)," Horwitz said of the proposal. "Sometimes we don't get all of it."
"If we don't, then we have to reset our priorities. We always reserve the right to allocate it as we see fit."
The Tertiary Oil Recovery Project, which extracts oil from ground previously abandoned by private oil companies, would gain an unclassified staff member.
Don Green, co-director of the project, said another field engineer desperately was needed. Right now, the project has one.
"He is extremely busy." Green said. "He just doesn't have enough time to get to it all. We need another to work with all the operators in the state."
The field engineer would act as a liaison between the project and Kansas oil operators. There already is a six project backlog, and the engineer has to coordinate the project with the engineer and coordinate special courses for oil companies.
Lanny Schooling, the project's lone field liaison engineer, is looking forward to the addition.
"I could keep him busy for the next year, just with what I have now." Schooling said.
Please see RESEARCH, p. 16, col. 4.
Under the Margin of Excellence, the University is asking for $160,000 to help finance four additional research staff and to cover some operating costs.
Research financing
finance four additional research staff and to cover some operating costs.
$45,000
This amount would pay the salaries of two additional classified staff for the Institute for Life Span Studies and the Institute for International Programs.
$25,000
This money would go toward operating expenditures, such as equipment, paper and chemicals.
$90,000
This money would pay for two more unclassified staff positions for the Tertiary Oil Recovery Project and the Kansas Geological Survey.
Source: KU Legislative Budget for fiscal year 1990
Dave Eames/KANSAN
---
2
Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
A new storm system
High: 52°
Low: 33°
Today we will see mostly cloudy skies and an increasing chance of rain, possibly mixing with snow tonight. Winds will be light and variable.
North Platte
29/21
Snow-bizzard
Omaha
14/28
Hail changing to snow
Topeka
10/31
Rain changing to snow
Kansas City
6/37
Cloudy
Columbia
58/43
Mostly cloudy
St. Louis
64/49
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
39/24
Rain
Wichita
48/30
Mostly cloudy
Chanute
50/32
Mostly cloudy
Springfield
62/42
Partly cloudy
Forecast by Mark L. Bogner
Temperature are today's high and tonight's low
5-Day
Saturday
Rain/early flurrieslate
44/29
HIGH LOW
Sunday
Clearing
47/28
Monday
Mostly sunny
55/34
Tuesday
Mostly sunny
50/36
Wednesday
Chance of rain
47/33
The nation
Seattle
4/40
Chicago
6/34
New York
55/38
Los Angeles
67/48
Phoenix
62/40
Dallas
70/50
Miami
84/74
Fronts:
cold
warm
solarny
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
Key
A new storm system
High:52°
Low:33°
Today we will see mostly cloudy skies and an increasing chance of rain, possibly mixing with snow tonight. Winds will be light and variable.
North Platte
29/1
Snow/bizzard
Omaha
48/30
Rain changing to snow
Salina
48/26
Rain changing to snow
Topeka
50/31
Rain rainy
Kansas City
49/37
Cloudy
Columbia
50/45
Mostly cloudy
St. Louis
56/49
Mostly cloudy
Dodge City
38/24
Rain
Wichita
48/30
Mostly cloudy
Chanute
50/32
Mostly cloudy
Springfield
60/42
Partly cloudy
Presented by Mark L. Bogner
Temperature are today's high and tonight's low
5-Day
Saturday
Rain/early flurry
Sunday
Clearing
Monday
Mostly sunny
Tuesday
Mostly sunny
Wednesday
Chance of rain
The nation
Seattle 48/40
H
Los Angeles 67/48
Phoenix 62/40
Chicago 63/44
New York 50/48
Dallas 70/50
Miami 84/74
Fronts:
wet
oaked
warm
stubborn
- The Peace Corps will have informational interviews from 8:30 to 5 today in the Placement Office of the Burge Union. All students taking part in the interviews are encouraged to bring completed applications. These applications can be picked up at the information table on Monday.
On Campus
The Academic Freedom Action Coalition will hold an anti-Nazi-Kralny in front of Stauffar-Flint Hall at 11:30 a.m.
■ The International Folk Dance Club will meet from 7:30 to 10 tonight at St. John's Gymnasium.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in the Pioneer Room of the Burge Union.
■ The Ecumenical Christian Ministries is showing a free movie at 7:30 tonight at the ECM building. The movie is "Moonstruck."
A Finance Symposium, sponsored
by the School of Business, will be from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Pioneer Room of the Kansas Union. "Financing Business in the 1990" features J. Thomas Burden, president and chief executive bank B&T trust, and Fenton Talbott, managing director of First Boston Corporation (New York).
■ KU Bible Study will have worship services at 10 a.m. on Sunday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The worship groups of Ecumenical Christian Ministries and Lutheran Campus Ministry will join for a Thanksgiving Feast and Worship Celebration at the ECM building. For information contact the ECM center.
Maranatha Campus Ministry will at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Police Record
A black watch value at $200 was taken Wednesday from a residence in the 1500 block of West 25th Street. Lawrence police reported
reported.
- A video cassette recorder value at $300 was taken Sunday from a residence in the 2000 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police
An AM-FM cassette stereo, a compact disc player, an equalizer and an amplifier, valued together at $2.426, were taken sometime between Tuesday and Wednesday from a car parked in the 1300 block of Westbrook Road, Lawrence police reported.
san. The academy is in St. Mary's Kan.
■ Because of an editor's error, the location of St. Mary's Academy was listed incorrectly in yesterday's Kan
Correction
Horowitz may be finalist for Minnesota position
The campus newspaper of the University of Minnesota reported Wednesday that Frances Horowitz, KU vice chancellor of research, graduate studies and public service, is rumored to be one of five finalists proposed by a search committee for president of the university.
By a Kansan reporter
Horwitz confirmed that she was one of about 200 nominees but said she did not think she was being considered as a finalist.
The search is being conducted under closed conditions, meaning that the candidates' names are not made public. No date has been set for announcement of finalists' names or of the final decision.
Weather information will be available over holiday break
The Minnesota Daily's report is based on a conversation in which Paul Quie, a search committee member, said he was happy that two
KU Weather Service will offer a Thanksgiving holiday forecasting service from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday.
weather information for any location in the United States.
Bogner said that student forecasters have taken phone calls and made forecasts every Thanksgiving and spring break for the past years. He said last year, he answered about 50 calls in two hours.
By a Kansan reporter
Mark Bogner, Penalosa junior,
said anyone could call the service
at 864-4329 or 864-5457 to find out
Horwitz, who will not comment to the Minnesota paper, emphasized that she had not heard from the University of Minnesota.
Two other committee members said Quie's information was incorrect, and Quie later retracted his statement.
Quie replied. "I liked them both." Quesmil said. "Do you think that reply that Horowitz was a finalist.
women were among the proposed finalists. A reporter asked Quie whom he preferred of the two women rumored to be finalists. The reporter then named Horowitz and W. Ann Reynolds, chancellor of the California State University system.
However, Victor Bloomfield, search committee chairman, said in regard to Quie's statement, "I can tell you that you are inaccurate both in regard to the number (of finalists) and in names."
IFC elects its new officers
The council elected Todd Fowler, Keninworth, III., junior and a member of the Phi Kappa Pi fraternity, 1602 W. 15th, as president.
By a Kansan reporter
The Interfraternity Council elected next year's officers in a meeting Tuesday night.
Fowler said he wanted to work with next semester's council to improve the greek system at KU.
The other new officers are: Derek Locke, Overland Park junior, and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity, 1501 Sigma Nu Place, as vice president of fraternity affairs; Brad Haag, Topeka junior, and a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity as vice president of membership; Jason
"I want to make sure I'm not directing policy, but guiding it in the proper direction." Fowler said.
Edmonds, Dodge City sophomore,
and a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity as vice president of public relations; Jay Cooper, Pittsburg junior, and a member of the Triangle fraternity, 1144 W. 11th, as secretary; and Clark Hamilton, Dodge City senior, and a member of the Theta Chi fraternity, 1011 Missouri, as treasurer.
Michael Shonrock, IFC adviser, said the council governs all national fraternities at KU and plans social programs. He also chairs charity fundraising programs with them.
The council representatives, chapter presidents and rush chairmen from each house voted in the elections.
All chapters except Phi Kappa Tau were present at the council meeting, which took place at the Sigma Nu house.
ALPHA CHI OMEGA snowball november 19, 1988
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THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON*
T. J. BROWN
"I don't have a style bold enough for some people."
At 10 p.m., Sunday through Thursday, Bill Thomas seats himself in front of a Mycro-Comp computer and begins styling copy for University Daily Kansan ads. The student advertising staff has input the copy earlier in the day. It's Bill's bill to study their advertising layouts and enter key commands so that the finished product presents a harmony of type and graphics that's perfectly balanced.
He sets a lot of bold type. In fact, he sets a lot of type. He's been working on Kansan ads for over 20 years and he's developed a sixth sense for fine tuning ad copy so that it looks just right. That means making some judgment calls
C
about how much bold type will enhance the ideas presented in an ad and how much is too much.
If you want to know about the ads in the Kansan, ask Bill. He knows them all. If you want to know how the Jayhawks are doing, you can ask Bill about that, too. He's one of the Jayhawk's biggest fans and he follows them every day in the sports pages of the University Daily Kansan.
Bill's bill may sound like a lot of late night typing to you but it's a skill to him. He cares about it. He cares about the Kansan. And most of all, he cares about doing a good job for you.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nobody else speaks your language.
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 18, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Faculty union yet an issue
Margin of Excellence financing will be a major factor
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
One year ago today, KU faculty and staff decided not to form a union, but a union organizer said yesterday that the issue was not dead yet.
"I think it will re-emerge," said Tom Madden, organizing director for the Kansas National Education Association.
On Nov. 18, 1987, faculty and staff decided with a 51.9 percent vote not to unionize the K-NEA received 25.5 percent of the votes, and the KU received 30.6 percent of the University Professors received 22.6 percent.
Kansas law prohibits conducting a second union election within a year of the first one.
Madden said that although he thought a second vote would be taken, the K-NEA did not have any plans in the works right now to call for an election.
"How soon that occurs I couldn't tell." Madden said.
Marion "Pat" Bickford, professor of geology and president of the KU Independent Faculty, a group that formed to oppose unionization, said that the group was only in skeletal form now.
"If the need arose, we could get
M $ \mathbf{2} $
Madden said that the Margin was a factor against unionization, but that the issue remained unresolved whether the distribution of Margin money to faculty was fair and equitable.
back together." Bickford said. "We hope never to do it again. I don't anticipate any renewed push for one as long as things go as well as they are now. It depends on what happens in Topeka and Strong Hall."
Bohn Hob, professor of education,
was spokesman for the KU-AAUP
last year during the vote. He said
that the KU-AAUP also would look
toward Topeka before deciding what
to do next.
"I guess we're going to wait and see how much support there is for us in the state legislature," Hohn said.
Bickford said that although the University of Kansas was not perfect, programs like the Margin of Excellence were helping.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring Regents schools to 95 percent of their peer
institutions in total financing and to 100 percent of their peers in faculty salaries.
Madden said that the Margin was a factor against unionization, but that the issue remained unresolved whether the distribution of Margin money to faculty was fair and equitable.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that the University had been successful.
"We are doing everything to distribute the money as fairly and equitably as possible," she said.
Ramaley said that a recent Regents review of the Margin's effects on all seven Regents institu- tions is being conducted to finan- cing fight was not over yet.
"We have a long way to go," she said. "I am certainly putting all my waking hours, one way or the other, on this research and more fundal for the University."
Ramalay said that KU had made some substantial gains but that work still had to be done to secure enough faculty financing.
"It is not enough to make me relax," she said.
She said that KU had made some substantial gains in the past year and that she saw a lot of support among faculty and staff.
Campus press group hoping magazine will make KU laugh
By Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
The Pinch Press Corps thinks humor should return to Mount Oread.
Mark Johnson, president and editor in chief, organized the registered campus group to produce a humor magazine. Five people attended the group's first meeting Wednesday night in the Kansas Union.
"We were looking to find stuff to fill in between the covers," Johnson said.
Johnson said that the idea of Pinch Press came to him at the end of September. He named the group Pinch Press for several reasons.
"The amount of puns you can derive from 'pinch' are amazing." Johnson said. "If we are ever in a jam, we can plagiarize under a column called 'Pinched.' But we're not going to do that."
Johnson, a Roland Park senior who is majoring in psychology and film, said he never had published anything that was on his mind. That he was discovering new talents.
At Wednesday's meeting, the Pinch Press decided on a 9-by-11 inch
magazine with 32 pages. Johnson said he didn't know when the first issue would come out because it was only in the planning stages.
The club is considering having about five fairly long humor essays in its magazine.
"Then we need what we call 'killer filler.' "' Johnson said.
Johnson and the press staff went to Student Senate for financing but probably ill be granted only enough money for office supplies. Student Senate will decide how much money the group will get next semester.
"Since we are a brand new organization, the odds of us getting $2,000 to $3,000 to print a humor magazine weren't good," he said.
So the Pinch Press will try to pay for the printing itself, a cost that Johnson said would run around $2,000.
Johnson said that anyone on campus was welcome to come to meetings and submit writing.
"We'll print anything if it's funny," he said.
Chris DeLong, the club's secretary and art director, said he was inspired
And the club brings a bit of lightness to DeLong's life as a senior in graphic design.
by his poetry teacher George Wedge,
who works on "Cottonwood of English,"
works on "Cottonwood of English."
"With the JKH format change, you're kind of depressed from time to time. The Wichita senior said, 'I feel like we're not ready and bring fun to the rest of campus.'"
DeLong would like a lot of satire in the magazine.
"we came up with some fun ideas at our first meeting." DeLong said. "We thought about putting up sheets in bathroom stalls so people would write one-liners on them. Then we'd go and collect them."
The staff at Pinch Press hopes that students will recognize its difference from "Disorientation," an alternative resource magazine.
"Our purpose is humor, while theirs is social consciousness," DeLong said. "'Disorientation' is a really valuable thing. It's pretty heavy stuff, but it's not really funny."
GARDEN JUNK
Shauna Norfleet/KANSAS
Joshua Dislmire, 2, and his brother, Jesse, 2; cruise through their neighborhood in a battery powered toy truck their grandmother bought for them. The two were out playing yesterday afternoon.
AT&T offering lower rates for students in residence halls
Kansan staff writer
Bv Jeremv Kohn
The University of Kansas' housing and telecommunications departments this week gave residence hall students another opportunity to make cheaper long distance calls through AT&T.
Company representatives registered 300 to 500 students yesterday and Wednesday at Ellsworth Hall and Gertrude Sellards Pearson-Corbin Hall for the new service, said Scott Jones, project manager.
The service, which provides reasonable long-distance rates for college students, began this August at KU when more than
T.
The service, called AT&T College and University Systems (ACUS), offers less expensive long-distance rates to students using a personal access code.
2. 100 students applied, Jones said.
2. IBD students applier:
The service called AT&T College and tuition (ACUS), offers less expensive long-distance rates to students using a personal access code.
"In all circumstances, the ACUS service
will be cheaper than a credit card call, and certainly a collect call," Jones said.
According to an A&T advertisement, a seven-minute ACUS call to Chicago, Ill., from KU would be $1.65 cheaper than a collect call, and 70 cents cheaper than a credit card call. Students would not have to pay any fees except their monthly bills.
Before the new AT&T program, residence hall students could only call collect or use credit cards for long distance calls.
Jones said each student would have a separate account, and could use the service only with their personal access code. Accounts have a $7 credit limit each month.
and service would be cut off if that amount was exceeded. However, students could use their credit card to make long-distance calls even if their ACUS account was full.
Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said he accepted the system because it offered a less expensive, direct-dial service for students.
Brent Lamb, KU telecommunications customer service coordinator, said telecommunications was responsible for the University's phone service and AF&T's contract with the University. He said the department accepted the new long-distance option for students because of its cheaper rates for
students.
Although cheaper rates mean less revenue for AT&T, Jones said the company would still earn immediate profits. One goal of the program, he said, was to familiarize students with AT&T so they would continue service after they graduated.
And at least one KU student's parent said she liked the service's credit limit and cheaper rates.
Lana VanGiesen, mother of Lori Van
Giesen, Poplar Bluff, Mo., freshman at GSP,
signed her daughter up for the service.
STORY IDEA?
"If we could lower the rate and keep it to $75, that would be great," she said.
Call 864-4810
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Kansas and Burge Unions
KU
KU
MOUNTAINS
---
Kansas Sport Club - Wrestling
Sign up:
Nov. 21, 1988
Place:
Room 202
Robinson Center
Time:
7:30 p.m.
If unable to attend: call 841-7594 Barry Hughes
---
---
4
Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Senate had weak reasons for grounding space club
Student Senate's reasons for denying financial support to the KU. Space. Program lack reason.
The program has a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to send five experiments into space aboard the space shuttle. Although complex, these experiments represent a solid, genuine interest among KU engineering students in the national space program. They also provide students hands-on experience not offered in the classrooms at the University. Such a unique experience could be used to attract potential engineering students.
But that effort was stifled Nov. 2 when the Student Senate's Finance Committee coldly rejected a request that would have supported the program. The request was for $10,393.
Paul Leader, co-chairman of the finance committee, offered three reasons why the committee killed the request. First, he said the amount requested was too much. But Senate is thinking unrealistically if it considers $10,393 expensive for designing, building and delivering five space experiments for a space shuttle flight.
The second reason Leader gave was that the KU Space Program did not appeal to a broad base of students. But most KU students would like the chance to be linked directly with a nationally recognized achievement such as the space shuttle.
Lastly, Leader said the committee considered the group's financial responsibility questionable. But the reason given for labeling the group as such was weak.
having the group Craig Citron, student body treasurer, said the group had misled Senate last year. But it is likely that was just because of a miscommunication, not because of any intent to deceive.
of a miscommunication to the student body and overseer of students' money. Senate should have reacted better to the KU Space Program.
Senate allocates thousands of dollars to such clubs as the University Dance Club, KU Sailing Club and the International Association of Students in Economics and Commerce. An attempt as noteworthy as space experimentation surely is as important as these groups.
If senators thought the funds should have been allocated through a different account or that the University should pay for the program, they at least could have financed the program partially or commended the program's efforts and endorsed its cause.
They didn't. But they should have.
Tony Balandran for the editorial board
'Temptation' in Lawrence
Just when you thought it was safe to go back to the movie theater again, "The Last Temptation of Christ" shows up in Lawrence.
It's about time
The controversial movie is scheduled to run until Dec. 3 at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St. Liberty Hall should be congratulated for being the only theater in Lawrence that hasn't been pressured and intimidated by protesters into not running the film.
The crowd of about 200 that stood out in the cold on Wednesday demonstrating against the movie should also be congratulated for asserting their opinions peacefully.
The key word is peacefully. Any attempt to block people physically from entering the theater, any threat of violence or any use of "stink bombs," similar to what happened when the movie "Hail Mary" was shown at the Kansas Union in spring 1987, defeats the purposes of the protesters, not the movie-goers.
Christine Martin for the editorial board
Although there have been no violent protests so far, the potential is present with something that has stirred so much indignation. Protesters need to remember for whom and for what they are demonstrating. Whether one thinks of Christ as a spiritual savior or just a historical figure, it cannot be argued that above all things, he advocated peace.
Correction
- Because of a editor's error, an editorial in Wednesday's Kansan gave the wrong figure for the amount of a contribution from the University for engineering laboratories. The correct amount was $90,000.
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Content sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Kurt Merskittsmith..Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Asst. production manager
Michelle Lehmann...Classified manager
Jane 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 staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The letter will be photographed.
can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stagger-Hill Hall,
Letters and columns are the writer's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the
views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan
editorial board.
writer will. The ans reserves the right to reject or edit letters and guest columns. They are mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 113 Staffer-Flint Hall.
The University Daily Kanaan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Finn Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, 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 commerce. Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee. Kanaan, 118
POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawrence, KC 60405
HE CAN CALL IT
"FLEXIBLE FREEZE"
ALL HE WANTS, BUT
IT LOOKS LIKE A
RUBBER SWORD
TO ME.
St. George and the Dragon, 1988
Porsche: Is there a substitute?
Although I've never met Frederick J. Schwab. I must assume that he's big heat in his line of work.
His stationery says he is Senior Executive Vice President of Porsche Cars North America, Inc.
President of Porsche cars North Amherst, I can
know this because he has sent me a personal
invitation to drive one of his Porsche cars. And
maybe buy one.
In a burst of enthusiasm he wrote:
"I imagine yourself behind the wheel of one of the most powerful and exciting automotive machines"
I did as he suggested. I closed my eyes and imagined myself behind the wheel of a Porsche 928 S4.
The imaginary vision didn't do too much for me.
I could hear my wife saying, as she always does,
"Do you mind not smoking in the car?"
Then I saw myself pulling onto the madness of the Kennedy Expressway, being wedged between a giant truck and a '69 Pontiac belching black fumes and everybody slowing to 5 miles an hour to gape at a family of 12, who share 20 teeth, standing on the shoulder of the road pondering a flat tire on their pickup truck.
then pickup it is.
As fantasies go, it wasn't much fun, so I opened my eyes and went on with Vice President Schwab's letter.
fetter.
"We've got one with your name on it, and I want to personally invite you to your Porsche dealer for a complimentary test drive.
Come and experience the incomparable handling, the smooth power, the pure excitement of driving this exceptional automobile. Sit behind the wheel and surround yourself with the sleek styling that made it famous.
"However, one word of caution: After you drive a new Porsche 928 S4, you may be compelled to own one."
Mike Royko
SALVATORE GARABOLE
Syndicated columnist
No, Mr. Schwab, I will not be compelled to own one.
After receiving your invitation, I called a Porsche dealer and asked how much your 928 $5 doo-dad costs. He said between $75,000 and $80,000, depending on what accessories I wanted in it.
But Mr. Schwab couldn't have picked a less likely prospect.
Not that I'm cheap but I consider $75,000 to with-
come the expense of a dish with "incompatible handling" and "smooth power."
How much incomparable handling and smooth power does one need to get around Chicago? The secrets of survival are to get out of the way of interstate trucks, to remember that Friday is drunken-driving night on the expressways and to never give the finger to someone with a tattoo on his arm who is driving a clunker that looks uninsurable.
And although I don't want to criticize Mr. Schwab's product, frankly I don't see where they get off charging $80,000 for something that small.
If I were going to throw that kind of money around, I would want something old and flashy — an old-time, fat, bloated Detroit gazzler. Then, with a big cigar clenched between my teeth and a pinky ring on my finger, I could pass for an alderman or a Mafia elder and get some respect.
But in a Porsche, people would justifiably assume I was a Yuppie who trades pork bellies or soybean futures, because those are the kinds of people who buy Porsches. Who needs that kind of humiliation?
As students of the auto industry tell us, once you pass a certain sensible, prudent limit in car buying, you are no longer buying just transportation. You are making a statement.
My cars always have made a statement. They are covered with bird droppings, soo, oat, grine. The inside is littered with ash, urine, grime and wipers I forgot to drop at the corner mailbox.
The statement my cars make is "Modern life requires that I own one of these things, but I don't."
But if I bought one of Mr. Schwab's trinkets, I would be telling the world, "Look everybody, I have paid $80,000 for a small car that is capable of going 150 mph, although the speed limit is 55 where I do most of my driving. And if I leave it unattended for more than two months, I will probably be about who gets to steal it. Therefore, the statement I am making with this car is, 'I am a real jerk.'"
Finally, Mr. Schwab, I have to tell you that I cannot buy your car because it is not made in this country. I don't buy cars made in Germany or Japan.
I'm not spiteful, and I believe in letting bygones be bygones. But I have a personal policy of waiting 100 years between wars before doing business.
Write me again in 2045.
■ Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist who writes for the Chicago Tribune.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Underliners beware
How many times have you checked out a book from the library only to find that some genius has already underlined all the pearls of wisdom contained in it? And how many times have you found that the genius was so sure of his selections that ink was his medium of choice? And further, if you were able to force yourself past the brilliance of these selections, how many times did you find other passages more relevant to your particular study? Too many times.
To those who insist upon decorating library books with underlines, parentheses, pontifications and graphics, I would like to argue the following:
Because you are only in temporary possession, of library books, spending time undercliming is a poor use of the student's most limited resource time. I suggest taking notes so that you remember what you have read and to insure that you are the one who has to suffer your selections.
Underlining passages makes the text more difficult to read and often goes unnoticed amid all the other lines you have made if you are going to be using them for a particular route. See suggestion above.
Underling entire pages is an even greater waste of time than that mentioned above. However, if you find each word so crucial, I would argue this is why God invented copiers
Finally, library books are collective or private property, therefore they are not yours to do with as you will. Writing in them constitutes vandalism and is an offense against others who use these texts and against anyone else who uses your own selfish interests and think beyond your own selfish interests and not burden others with a permanent record of what is so often an inept attempt to assimilate information.
Pam Detrixhe
Pam Detrixhe Lawrence graduate student
Averting disaster
In response to guest columnist Rias Mohamed's Nov. 10 article, I would say: Ever heard of a backup? Although computers are only as smart as the people who use them, they
do seem to have a mind of their own at times.
For those times, users must be prepared.
When you're working on an important document, make periodic backups. At the end of every session, copy the document onto a floppy disk and store it safely apart from the computer. If the editing session is particularly long, make sure to keep it safe by backing up backups take extra time, but when it comes to times like those Rias described, you'll be thankful for not having to start all over again
I learned the importance of backups when a friend, who knew I didn't have a backup, replaced my floppy disk with a blank disk as a practical joke. When the computer could not find my document on the disk, I started to panic. I thought that 80-plus hours of work was going down the drain, and I was going to have to start all over again. Just then, my friend walked in with my original disk, laughing all the way. What did I do first? I made a backup.
Other situations also warrant backups — power outages, power surges, accidental deleting; the list goes on and on — only proving that backups are worthwhile.
Emily J. Knoll programmer, office of information systems KU computer center
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 18, 1988
5
KU marine sergeant wins award
MARINE CORPS
Recipient surprised with results
David Brandt/KANSAN
Second Supply Unit Company non-commissioned officer of the year, Mike Schneider, Pekin, Ill. junior.
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
A KU junior and marine sergeant has been named the noncommissioned officer of the year of his unit.
"I was surprised that I received the award," said Mike Schneider, of Pekin, Ill. "The competition was extremely tough. I really thought that I had messed up because I didn't answer the first two questions."
Schneider was one of nine marines chosen to compete for the commendation. The nine marines are in the Detachment to Second Supply Unit Company in Topeka and were selected on the basis of a cumulative rating they received from their performance during the year. There are 140 people in the reserve unit.
The nine marines then went before a board of five commanding officers who asked them questions and judged them on such things as leadership ability, military bearing, appearance and the ability to handle stress. He received the commendation in October.
"He was by far the most outstanding," said Capt. Wayne Klawier. "His leadership abilities are very strong. He's a full participant and very motivated. The junior marines look up to him for leadership."
The commendation is given annually. Klawier said the unit began giving the award five years ago.
Schneider said he joined the marines out of high school because he wanted a challenge out of life.
"I definitely think this award is very important," Klawier said. "This commendation will be put into his record. I think that all the time and effort he has put into the marines is paying off."
"I wanted adventure," he said. "It really sounded good to me — the whole package."
He said he decided in 1986 to enroll at the University because being an enlisted man did not satisfy him intellectually. By going to college and completing officer candidate school, he would be accorded more responsibility by the military.
Schneider said his involvement with the military had made him a more disciplined person.
"I can make myself study if I don't want to," he said. "The qualities you need to have to succeed in the military are the same qualities you need to have to succeed in the civilian world: self-sacrifice and hard work."
KU to research integration of disabled
By Janell Good
By Sanfe Good Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas Bureau of Child Research received a 3-year grant last month worth $381,488 from the U.S. Department of Education to research the integration of disabled children.
The project will study the integration of preschool children with disabilities and those without disabilities into the same educational surroundings, said Bob Hoyt, KU associate director of communications in child research.
The grant will be used to pay for salaries, materials for the curriculum and expenses incurred during the research.
Hoyt said that the project, called Rural Alternatives for Preschool Integrated Delivery of Services, would be based at Parsons State Hospital, a training center in Parsons for the severely disa
bled.
The project is scheduled to begin in January, or as soon as KU research employees are hired, he said.
Lee Snyder-McLean, the project director, said the project involved 3-to 5-year-old children in rural Parsons. Forty-one children with disabilities will be integrated with 45 children that do not have disabilities in several day care centers and preschools in Parsons.
"Over the next three years we will try to find a model that will work in Kansas to keep children with disabilities from being segregated from their peers." Snyder-McLean said. "They are more like other children first, and handicapped second."
Snyder-McLean said the objective of the project is to explore ways to include children with disabilities in a home day care setting.
"Most day care facilities in rural communities are in homes, 'mom-and-pop operations,'"
Snvder-McLean said.
Researchers will also integrate preschools that were once used for only children with disabilities.
Vikki Howard, project consultant, said that the long range goal of the project was to reduce or eliminate the need for special education for children with disabilities.
"Teachers with only handicapped children tend to lower their expectations. But if teachers are surrounded by children with and without handicaps, they seem to expect more of all of them," Howard said.
"We want to give those with disabilities a chance for the same educational opportunities as those without disabilities have."
Protection for specified national rivers advised
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Federal agencies probably will recommend 250 to 400 rivers for protection in the nation's Wild and Scenic River System, according to a conservation group that said they were "looking up" with the election of a fisherman to the White House.
The Forest Service has identified 500 rivers in its 123 national forests that are eligible for protection and expects "that at a minimum 200 will be included," said Kevin Coyle of American Rivers, a conservation group chiefly interested in preserving rivers. Coyle said he was also speaking for George Leonard, associate chief of the Forest Service.
Leonard's flight was delayed and he could not be at a news conference sponsored by American Rivers.
Frank Snell, chief of the recreation, wilderness and cultural resources division of the Bureau of Land Management, said his agency was studying another 60 to 80 rivers on its lands. He did not say how many were expected to be recommended for protection.
The Wild and Scenic River System was established by Congress 20 years ago to prevent damming of free-flowing rivers and development or other harm along their banks.
So far only 119 segments totaling 9,200 miles have been protected, of which 44 rivers and 1,429 miles in Oregon were mandated by a bill passed by Congress and signed by President Reagan last month.
The 9,200 miles are only 0.2 percent of the total U.S. river system. W. Kent Olson, president of American Rivers, said the group estimates that 17 percent of the total has been dammed.
Justice Department reviews Cuban boatlift detainee cases
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Justice Department panels that were set up in the wake of last year's prison riots, have reviewed 28 cases of the 1980 Cuban boat detainees and plan to send at least 15 of them back to Mariel, Cuba, officials said yesterday.
The announcement aroused the anger of many in the Cuban community of Miami, and attorneys representing the prisoners flew to Alabama seeking to halt the repatriation process.
The 15 Cuban detainees are being held in a penitentiary in Talladega, Ala. No detainee will be scheduled for return to Cuba earlier than 72 hours after the government officially notifies each of the 15 detainees, the Justice Department said.
The department said the detainees who could be repatriated have
convictions ranging from petty larceny to second-degree murder. Most of them have more than one conviction.
The three-member panels will undertake further consideration of the remaining 13 detainees in the initial review group to determine whether they should also be returned to Cuba or be released
The panels were set up at the Justice Department because of last year's prison riots by Cuban detainees at Atlanta and Oakdale, La. The rioting occurred after a U.S. agreement with Cuban President Fidel Castro to resume sending many of the detainees back to the island. Departments of Mariel detainees from the United States to Cuba were suspended by Castro in May of 1985.
The detainees are among 125,000 people who came to the United States in 1980 in a boatlift from Mariel, Cuba.
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6
Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Rumors abound about Cabinet picks
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — When it comes to guessing who's going to be in the new Cabinet, the word from George Bush is not "read my lips" but "stay tuned." He's also sworn his transition staff to secrecy, but that hasn't put a dent in the production of the rumor mills.
They keep pouring forth endless lists of Cabinet possibilities, fed by what seems like every Republican politician in America, plus assorted Democrat credentials, self-promoters and other Washington idlers.
George Bush's all-purpose answer to the speculation is "stay tuned." That's what he said yesterday, just a few hours before he introduced New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu as White House chief of staff and announced that campaign funds would be used by chairman of the Republican National Committee.
Two Cabinet seats — the secretaries of state and treasury — already have been taken by James A. Baker III and Nicholas Brady, leaving the presidecant with a dozen other department heads to name.
Here is a look at some of the names that have bubbled to the surface of these rumor rivulets.
Frank Carlucci is the incumbent. Unlike some of his Cabinet brethren, he has not been lobbying to
stay on. Expressing an eagerness to return to the private sector, he is likely to get his wish.
Former Texas Sen. John Tower is at the top of most lists of possible defense secretaries, unless Bush opts for a corporate chieftain to straighten out the Pentagon procurement mess. Then the talk turns to folks such as Paul H. O'Neill, chairman of the Aluminum Co. of America, or former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumpel. Former Rep Jack Edwards, R-Ala., is a dark horse, along with retired Air Force Lt. Gen Brent Scroeworth.
JUSTICE
Attorney General Dick Thornburgh was one of the late additions to the Reagan Cabinet, replacing Edwin Meese III three months ago, and the former Pennsylvania governor is eager to stay on.
Bush insiders have sent mixed signals on Thornburgh's Cabinet life expectancy. Last week, they went out of their way to discourage reports that he was a shoo-in.
Some names tossed as possible replacements are William D. Ruckelshaus, a former deputy attorney general and Environmental Prosecutor, the administrator, and Illinois Gov. James R. Thompson.
INTERIOR
Secretary Don Hodel, one of the few Reagan Cabinet members to serve the full second term, is certain to go.
Sen. Dan Evans, R-Wash., who decided not to seek re-election, is a favorite in the rumor mills for Interior.
AGRICULTURE
Other possibilities include Nat Reed, a former assistant Interior secretary, and Rep. Manuel Luian. R-N.M.
Secretary Richard E. Lyng will be packing his bags after 2% years.
U. S. Trade Representative Clayton K. Yeutter is on everybody's list, although he has talked about hankering for the private sector. Yeutter, regarded as having done ably in his current job, is a former Nebraska feedlot operator and head of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
Secretary Ann Dore McLaughlin campaigned hard for Bush but is unlikely to retain the job she got just 11 months ago.
Rep. Thomas J. Ridge, R-Pa., a moderate from a blue-collar district in western Pennsylvania who has tried to forge GOP ties to organized labor, is preparing to run for re-election, with helped Bush carry the Keystone state.
Constance J. Horner, Reagan's Office of Personnel Management director, is said to covet the Labor seat, although shaky relations with government unions' workers could undermine her chances.
U.S. Bishops close controversial annual meeting
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The head of America's Roman Catholic bishops declared, "We are in a most serene time," even though they had just ended a week that included open dispute over their singing at the government.
Archibishop John L. May of St.
Louis was referring in particular on
Thursday to the U.S. church's relation
with Pope John Paul II and the
He pronounced the pope "bullish on the church in the United States" and dismissed public spats with Rome as mere stagnation, a church that is merely open.
In fact, he and fellow members of the National Conference of Catholic
Bishops seemed little troubled by any of the controversy that swirled about them during their annual meeting that concluded Thursday.
During the week, the bishops:
■ Took on the Soviet Union, decrying "sustained and comprehensive" religious persecution in Eastern Europe and encouraging new prospects of better relations as an incentive to win greater religious freedom.
■ Blasted a U.S. immigration law they say leads employers to hiring and firing Hispanics out of ignorance concerning potential penalties.
Criticized the Reagan administration for sending out thousands of foreclosure warnings to
family farmers a week after the
prize, and just before the
holiday season.
■ On their own turf, accepted but only grudgingly a Vatican intervention that kept them from voting on the resolution they had with theologians resolving disputes with the theologians.
■ Approved rules for lay preachers that either, according to which bishop you asked, made it easier for lay men and women to preach during masses or took one more slap at Catholic women by reiterating that they may not give the main sermon interpreting the gospel.
■ Finally, sent back a Vatican draft document as "unsuitable as a basis for discussion," thus rejecting both the scholarship of the draft ar-
its contention that national bishops conferences have no real authority in the church.
May had started the week by congratulating President-elect George Bush but then in the next breath assuring him the bishops would continue to speak out on public issues and not "only in praise and appreciation."
"We are sometimes criticized for being too concerned about the world, of pursuing an agenda that in the minds of some critics is secular, leftist or in some way 'ideological', to whom we expect the pope's own example showed it is not possible to have "too much social consciousness."
Trade accord with U.S. tests Canadian campaign
The Associated Press
MONTEREAL - Prime Minister Brian Muroney desperately needs to sweep his native province of Quebec to win a majority government. He will agree to provide the free trade agreement he signed with President Reagan
Pressed hard by opposition allegations that he sold Canada out, Mulroney has promoted the deal as the "passport to prosperity," an "instrument of economic expansion."
He tells crowds the choice is a simple, one between "John the Ripper" and "Liberal Party leader Liberator — and" "Brian the Builder."
Mulroney strives to portray Turner as an anti-American who opposes progress, and points to the prosperity of his four years in
"The cause of my life is to build a nation," he says.
Ed Broadbent, leader of the socialist New Democratic Party, said Reagan's remarks yesterday about burying theade agreement but bury Mulligan.
"It will remind every Canadian how close Brian Mulroney is to Ronald Reagan," said Broadbent, whose party is expected t finish third. "It will remind every Canadian the Americans got virtually everything they wanted in this deal."
Reagan said in a speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington, "As far as the United States is concerned, the Free Trade Agreement is an example of cooperation at its best. It is a testament to the commitment of our two governments to the principles of the open market and to economic cooperation."
Opponents of the agreement had said the Reagan speech could be
interpreted as interference in Canadian affairs.
Muironey's Progressive Conservative Party must win 148 of the 295 seats to ensure the agreement takes effect Jan. 1, eliminating power from the world's two largest trading partners over a 3-year period.
It has been approved by Congress but has yet to be considered by Parliament.
Quebec has 75 seats in the House of Commons, second only as a bloc to the 99 seats of Ontario, where opposition is stronger.
The free trade debate has dominated the campaign since Mulroney dissolved Parliament on Oct. 1.
At the time, he appeared headed for an easy victory. The Liberals, long a dominant force in Canadian politics, had sagged in what seemed to be a battle with the New Democrats for runner-up status.
But in a matter of weeks, Turner's persistent attacks on the free trade agreement as a threat to Canadian sovereignty and identity have revived his chances. Polls indicate that more Canadians oppose the agreement than support it.
The polls also put the Liberals and Progressive Conservatives in a dead heat.
Support for free trade has been strongest in French-speaking Quebec, but Turner has by no means conceded the province.
The opposition leader was in Montreal on Wednesday night and charged that the prime minister was willing to sacrifice textile workers, food workers and farmers "the alien of free trade."
The prime minister will spend the weekend on a final campaign swing through Quebec.
MARCUS R. LEE
"I just ran 21 miles in 2 hours"
1967
That's about how many miles of newsprint Otto Benson runs through the presses every morning in the process of printing the University Daily Kansan. The press starts running at 7 a.m. But by then the Kansan press operators have been at work for over an hour webbing and plating the press and getting ready to produce some 15,000 newspapers.
Once the presses have started rolling, their job has just begun. For two hours they continuously monitor quality, fine
tuning the settings on the press so that the reproduction of type and art in your Kansan is clean, crisp and clear. When things are running smoothly, they have time to read the Kansan during the pressrun. When they aren't, they take it home.
Otto's job may seem like a lot of ink, paper and black hands to you, but it's a trade to him. He cares about his trade. He cares about the Kansan. And most of all, he cares about doing a good job for you.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Nation/World
7
Bhutto wins power
... 21
Pakistani leader wants to form coalition
The Associated Press
KARACHI, Pakistan — Benazir Bhutto's populist party defeated the right wing in the first free election since a coup ousted her father 11 years ago, and she expressed confidence yesterday that she can form a majority coalition.
Bhutto said her Pakistan People's Party "has emerged as the largest party in the National Assembly as a result of Wednesday's parliamentary election.
"Given consultations with different groups and independent people, we are confident that we can get a simple majority," the 35-year-old political leader declared after arriving in this southern city for coalition talks. Site would be the first woman to lead a Muslim nation.
---
her party captured 92 seats in the 237-member assembly, compared with 55 for the nine-party conservative Islamic Democratic Alliance. The alliance includes supporters of Gen. Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, the military president killed in a plane crash three months ago.
At her family home in Larkana earlier yesterday, Bhutto urged President Ghulam Ishaq Khan to give her party the mandate to form a government.
She said she would begin coalition talks today, but would not name parties on the list. Likely candidates are some of her left-leaning partners in the former opposition alliance called the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy.
Estonian leaders called to Moscow
MOSCOW — The Kremlin summoned Estonian leaders to Moscow yesterday and expressed serious doubt about the constitutionality of the tiny Baltic republic's unprecedented challenge to its authority.
The Associated Press
In Lithuania, meanwhile, residents gathered outside their parliament building with banners and flags, watching on live television as their legislators convened a session at which they will debate a similar challenge to Moscow's authority.
In Latvia, the third of the uneasy Baltic republics, residents prepared for demonstrations and rallies today on the 70th anniversary of the birth of their short-lived independent nation.
their short-river independence State Department spokesman Charles Redman said in Washington, "The United States does not recognize the forcible incorporation of the Baltic states . . . The people of the Baltic states have been denied their basic human rights."
1ne Estonian Supreme Soviet, or parliament, overwhelmingly passed a constitutional amendment Wednesday requiring Estonian approval of
any new Soviet law.
the parliament also approved a "declaration of sovereignty" asserting Estonia's independence in all areas except defense and foreign affairs.
"The dialogue has begun," said Igor Grazin, the Estonian lawyer who wrote the amendment and will defend it before the federal Supreme Soviet's Presidium.
On their way to Moscow, Estonian leaders expressed satisfaction with a constitutional amendment reserving the right to review all new Soviet laws, and said they were prepared to argue the issue with Kremlin leaders.
"Perestroika is a hope and democracy is a hope, and every hope has a moment of unasee," the newly elected Estonian premier, Indrek Toome, said during a flight from Tallinn to Moscow.
The Estonian parliament made its challenge under the banner of the reform effort President Mikhail S. Gorbachev calls perestroika. The challenge illustrates Gorbachev's continuing serious problems with rising ethnic feelings, which, if successful, could spread to other areas.
Moscow's first reaction yesterday was measured but skeptical.
taking into consideration that the amendment and a number of other documents adopted by the Estonian parliament are at variance with the provisions of the current Constitution of the U.S.S.R., the Presidium of the U.S.S.R., or the above-mentioned issue at its next meeting, with representatives of the Estonian republic to be invited," the Tass news agency reported.
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The Presidium is the Soviet government's highest executive authority and Gorbachev serves as its chairman.
Tass said committees of the national Supreme Soviet were ordered to prepare an analysis of the issue, which it said "affects the initial principles of the building and unity of the Soviet socialist federation."
Tass did not say when the meeting would take place, but presumably it would be before the national parliament goes into session again Nov. 29.
Swiss Red Cross official kidnapped in Lebanon
SIDON, Lebanon — A Swiss representative of the International Red Cross was kidnapped yesterday in Sidon, and police said his captors might intend to swap him for an aircraft hijacker held in Switzerland.
The Associated Press
The Palestine Liberation Organization blamed the abduction on enemies trying to discredit its newly proclaimed state of Palestine.
In Geneva, the International Committee of the Red Cross appealed for the immediate release of Peter Winkler, 32. Joerg Bischof, spokesman, said other representatives had been kidnapped in Lebanon but were released after a few hours.
Police said Winkler was taken from his car at 8:45 a.m. in Hisbheh Square in Sidon, the provincial capital of south Lebanon.
The motive for the kidnapping might be to trade Winkler, head of Resistance and Russia, with Hussin Harari the Lebanese Shite Muslim hijacker held in Switzerland.
Hariir, 22, commandeered an Air Afrique jetliner on a flight from Rome to Paris and forced it to land in Geneva on July 24, 1987. He killed a French passenger before the crew overpowered him.
Fourteen other foreigners, including nine from the United States, are missing in Lebanon.
News Roundup
GOVERNMENT BANS EXTREMISTS: The South African government yesterday imposed its first ban on a right-wing extremist group, the same emergency regulations that have been used against black anti-apartheid organizations. The ex-policeman whose deadly shooter spree prompted the crackdown was sent to a mental hospital for tests.
NAVY IMPROVES HEALTH CARE: The Navy has launched a major overhaul of its health-care system designed to rebuild morale, treat more patients at its own facilities, and attract and train more doctors. Responsibility for the medical system is being shifted from the Navy Medical Command to fleet commanders. The plan is designed to attack what Navy officials acknowledge as a medical system approaching a point of crisis.
was acquitted yesterday in Bonn, West Germany, of complicity in the murder of 177 French Jews sent to Auschwitz. Count Modest Korff 79, was accused of ordering the deportations of Jews from the Chalons-sur-Marne region of north eastern France, where he served as Gestapo chief in 1942 and 1943. The five-member panel decided there was insufficient evidence to tie Korff to the deaths of 177 people.
IRAIQ DIPLOMAT EXPELLED: The State Department announced yesterday the expulsion of an Iraqi diplomat in retaliation against what was called an unjustified ouster of a U.S. diplomat in Baghdad. But spokesman Charles E. Redman stressed that the United States wanted to improve relations with the Arab country.
package carrying four experiments and 52 envelopes rocketed 14,000 feet high and was recovered despite parachute failure yesterday at Cape Canavaler in what was called the first private commercial space flight. The 10-foot rocket burned for 4.4 seconds in a five-minute course and dropped into the Atlantic Ocean two miles offshore.
FORMER NAZI ACQUITTED: A former Nazi
COMMERCIAL SPACE FLIGHT: A 30-pound
STADIUM BARBER SHOP
PROTESTS IN YUOSOLAVIA: About 10,000 protesters marched yesterday through Pristina, Yugoslavia, capital of the restive Kosovo province, after the Kosovo Communist Party president and another high official announced their resignations. The resignations brought to seven the number of top Kosovo leaders who said they were resigning after a meeting at which Serbian and provincial Communist leaders clashed over Serbian demands for a purge of Kosovo's ruling elite.
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Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee
Jazz Ensemble 1 Directed by Ronald C. McCurdy
with special guests
Frank Wess, Woodwinds
Basile Orchestra Alumnus
and
Bob Bowman, Bass
The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance Presents
"A Tribute to Count Basie"
--we have more
8:00 p.m.
Monday,
November 21, 1988
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale through
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For reservations,
call 913/864-3367
Public: $8.00
Students: $4.00
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Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Landlady admits she cashed checks, denies killing tenants
The Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - A landlady suspected of killing seven elderly tenants at her boardinghouse to collect their Social Security money said yesterday she had cashed some checks but was no killer.
Dorothea Montalvo Puente, who vanished Saturday after police unearthed the first body buried in her burial pit at a vankee yesterday but did not enter a plaza.
Clad in an orange jail jumpsuit, Puente listened quietly as the charge of one murder count was read and nodded her head to indicate she wanted a public defender to represent her.
"I have not killed anyone. I told you that. I have not killed anyone. The checks I cashed, yes," Puente told KCRA-TV reporter Mike Boyd.
Assistant District Attorney Dan Kinter said additional murder charges and special circumstances would be filed. Special circumstances may the penalty could be increased if prison without possibility of parole.
Boyd said he didn't ask specific questions about the murders, but only talked with Puente about general subjects.
Puente was arrested after CBS television told Los Angeles police that a viewer called to report meeting her in a downtown bar.
The case was continued until Dec. 15 and she was ordered held in jail without bail.
Puente, 59, was arrested at a downtown Los Angeles motel late Wednesday after a pensioner she had met touched in a bar became suspicious.
MOSCOW — A disease that caused 127 children in a Ukrainian town to lose their hair has been traced to high doses of thallium, a toxic metal probably carried by acid rain. a newsreader reported yesterday
Assistant public defenders Kevin Clymo and Peter Vlautin, surrounded by dozens of reporters outside the courtroom, questioned the propriety of an interview Puente gave KCRA-TV while the jet leased by the station was taking her and police back to Sacramento early yesterday.
"Since there are no sources of the discharge of thallium into the environment in Chernovitsy and its environs, a conclusion was drawn that the chemical nature of thallium is unknown to the Communist报纸 daily newspaper, Pravda said."
Despite the conclusion, authorities are continuing to investigate other possible causes for the disease, it repeats.
A criminal investigation has been initiated, Pravda said, indicating that if individuals were found responsible for thallium poisoning, they may face criminal charges.
Ten industrial operations have been suspended near Chernovsky, on the Soviet border with Romania, Pacific Ocean.
The Associated Press
reported that the number of cases of the disease continues to grow," it said.
"However, despite the measures being taken, it is
Soviet children bald from toxic metal
The disease was first reported in the Soviet media Nov. 6. On Wednesday, the weekly Literaturnaya Gazeta said the cause had been traced to thallium but did not name the source.
Thallium is a poisonous metathetic element that reacts violently in compounds in photometric cells or in pesticides.
Chernovytse is far from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and the areas downwind of it that suffered from radiation contamination after a 1986 accident.
Medical experts called in for the investigation were studying the "strange selectivity of the ailment which affected mainly weakened children and adolescents with blue eyes and blond hair." Prayda said.
Pravda said that the children not only lost their hair but that many experienced mild neurological disorders.
The children affected ranged in age from 5½ months to 14 years.
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University Daily Kansas / Friday, November 18, 1988
9
Scientists seek causes of depression
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Depression that afflicts hundreds of thousands of Alzheimer's patients may be caused by deterioration in parts of the brain that require it to keep people upbeat, researchers said yesterday.
The findings could have important implications not only for Alzheimer's patients, but also for millions of younger people who are depressed but unable to manage mental disorders, one of the researchers said.
Depression, a potentially debilitating disorder by itself, is still poorly understood, and current theories center on the belief that it is caused by low emotional messengers in the brain called neurotransmitters.
These neurotransmitters permit nerve cells to communicate with each other, and they are believed to be key in maintaining normal levels of appetite, sleep and interest in pleasurable activities.
Contrary to popular belief, it is not "normal" for
someone who suffers from Alzheimer's disease to become depressed, however devastating the disease, and only about 30 percent of Alzheimer's patients show depressive symptoms, according to Dr. Jacob H. Fox, director of the Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center in Chicago.
but that still means hundreds of thousands of the estimated 2.5 million people in the United States with Alzheimer's are depressed in addition to having a progressive mental disease that robs them of memory, judgment and physical mobility.
Alzheimer's accounts for about 60 percent of nation's cases of dementia, or loss of mental function, while multiple small strokes account for another 10 percent, a combination of the two another 10 percent and the remaining 20 percent have a "hodge-podge" of causes, Fox said.
To explore what might be causing depression, Pennsylvania researchers performed autopsies on the brains of 37 demented patients, mostly Alzheimer's victims, including 14 who were also diagnosed with major depression. For comparison
purposes, the researchers studied brain tissue from seven non-demented elderly patients.
The depressed subjects showed significantly more evidence of deterioration in two areas of the brain stem — the locus ceruleus and the substantia nigra — than the non-depressed subjects, the researchers found.
The researchers concluded that abnormalities in the neurotransmitter system may give rise to the depression in demented patients.
These parts of the brain produce two neurotransmitters believed to be important in keeping people free of depression — norepinephrine, which is involved in mood and sleep cycles, and dopamine, which is involved in physical movement.
One of the researchers, George S. Zubenko, director of geriatric health services at Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic in Pittsburgh, also suggested that the findings could help research into depression in general.
Aspirin labels to have new warning by FDA
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A stronger label warning against the use of aspirin by women in the last three months of pregnancy was proposed yesterday by the Food and Agriculture Organization that the painkiller can prolong labor and cause bleeding difficulties for boh mother and child.
Aspirin products currently must carry this standard pregnancy warning: "As with any drug, if you are pregnant or nursing a baby seek the advice of a health professional before using this product."
This additional wording would
be required under the FDA's proposal: "IMPORTANT: Do not take this product during the last three months of pregnancy unless directed by a doctor. Aspirin taken near the time of delivery may cause bleeding problems in both mother and child."
It could be several months — perhaps a year — before the FDA technically is able to require the stronger warning for aspirin. But as practical matter, agency officials said, aspirin makers probably will go ahead and start changing their labeling soon, now that the FDA has made clear its intention.
SYSTEM/2 S SALE
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A verification form can be picked up at the Jayhawk Bookstore or the Academic Computer Center. Complete the verification form, including payment in full and return to the Jayhawk Bookstore.
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ABOUT FINANCING!
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If you are a student interested in financing a Personal System/2, contact the Financial Aid Office today, 26 Rest Hall.
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An application for the IBM Credit Card (for students, faculty and staff) is available in the Jayhawk Bookstore.
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Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP
Gregory M. Cunneen and Stephanie Turner play Danny and Lizzie, an unmarried couple expecting a child in the Broadway Musical, "Baby." The musical is playing at Hashinger Hall each night through Sunday. Admission is free.
CARRY-
Hashinger on Broadwav
Group revives Baroque style, plans classical music concert
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
The Oread Baroque Ensemble will present a concert of 17th and 18th century classical music 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the Immanuel Lutheran Church, 15th and 1ath streets.
The ensemble is composed of three University professors from the department of music and dance, and two other artists.
well. Kimber has played with Kansas City area groups, and last January went to London to play in a Baroque concert.
"In recent years, musicians have been interested in getting back to the way it was really played." Kimber said. "The sound is very expressive, very appealing."
Michael Kimber, associate professor of music, said the Baroque Ensemble was formed three years ago and the members had participated in concerts both in Lawrence and Kansas City as well as internationally.
Boulton said interest in Baroque-style music, which includes works from the 17th and 18th centuries, had strengthened in the last 10 years. The Oread Ensemble not only plays classical works, but also uses replicas of period instruments.
The members of the ensemble have participated for several summers in the Baroque Performance Institute at Oberlin College Conservatory of Music in Oberlin, Ohio. The institute shows Baroque-style musicians how to master techniques of the period instruments.
"Baroque-style instruments are different from modern instruments." Boulton said. "But I think the playing style is easier to capture with them."
1 the group recently received the University's Research Improvement Award for establishing a program of Baroque chamber music study and performance at KU. The award includes a three-year grant to help with maintaining the program.
Kathryn Parke, a soprano soloist from Pittsburg, Kan., and Beth Titterington, Kansas City, Mo., who plays the viola da gamba, are the other members of the ensemble.
Kimber said the group played two concerts each year in Lawrence and each member was involved with Baroque-style concerts on his own as
tionally.
The faculty members of the ensemble are Kimber, who plays the violin; John Boulton, professor of music, who plays the flute; and Michael Bauer, assistant professor of music and dance, who plays the harpsichord.
The group recently received the University's Research Improvement Award for establishing a program of Baroque chamber music study and performance at KU. The award includes a three-year grant to help with maintaining the program.
Sunday's program includes Johann Sebastian Bach's "Sonata in B minor" and Heinrich Biber's "Sonata in E minor."
Admission to the concert is free.
Opera star to perform on Sunday
Samuel Ramey Bass
Colby native is one of best baritones
"His powerful bass, always eloquent, gloved like a trombone."
London Sunny Times
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Samuel Ramey, born in Colby, will perform in a concert at 5 p.m. Sunday in Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall.
John Stephens, associate professor of voice and opera and a professional opera singer, said Ramey became well-known during the mid-1970s. Since that time, he has sung with the most prestigious opera companies in the United States and has had roles written especially for him.
Although Kansas and the Midwest are not well-known areas for producing operatic greats, a Kansas native has become one of the foremost bass opera singers in the United States...
man.
He also has performed in "The Marriage of Figaro," "The Barber of Seville," and "Don Giovanni."
Ramey received his voice training at Wichita Sate University. He is noted for his vast vocal range from the coloratura bass of the bel canto to dramatic bass performances, a combination of abilities that is unique among male singers.
unique among male actors. As a dramatic bass, Ramey's specialty is the portrayal of evil characters. His dramatic roles have included portraying devils in Botto's "Mefistofeuile," Gounod's "Faust," and Offenbach's "The Tales of Hoffman."
when especially important. Ramey also has performed the title roles in "Attila" and "Carmen," which were specialized performances.
"He is arguably the foremost bass of our time." Stephens said. "He is at the absolute pinnacle of his profession."
During the next five years, Ramey's performance schedule includes the New York City Opera, the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Metropolitan Opera in the United States and opera companies in Hamburg and Berlin, West Germany, Venice and Florence, Italy, Paris, France, and at the Saltzburg Festival in Austria.
Ramey will be joined for Sunday's performance by pianist Warren Jones. The programs include selections from "Oedipus," "The Tempest" and "Attila," as well as song cycles by Franz Schubert, Benjamin Britten and Charles Ives.
All seats are reserved and tickets are available from the Murphy Hall box office. Prices are $15 and $13 for the public; $7.50 and $6.50 for KU and kindergarten through 12th grade students; and $14 and $12 for senior citizens and other students.
the
al
Lo
5:00 p.m. Sunday, November 20, 1988 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, additional support provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society, and the KU Endowment Association.
Presented by The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series
Public: $15 & $13; KU & K-12 Students: $7.50 & 6.50; Senior Citizens & Other Students: $14 & $12
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
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CARNIVAL
The University of Kansas Theatre Presents A Scaring Look At Contemporary Medical Ethics
A Searing Look At Contemporary Medical Ethics
WHOSE
IS IT ANYWAY
BY BRIAN CLARK
8:00 P.M. FRIDAY & SATURDAY,
NOV. 11-12 & 18-19, 1988
CRAFTON-PREYER THEATRE
Tickets On Sale In The Murphy Hall Box Office. All Seats Reserved/For Reservations. Call (913)864-3982. VISA And Mastercard Accepted. Special Discounts For KU Students And Senior Citizens. Partially Funded By The KU Student Activity Fee. This Production Is An Associate Entry In The 1989 American College Theatre Festival XXI.
4
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 18, 1988
11
Arts & Entertainment
EAST meets WEST
Oriental art work shown in Spencer
By M. Meredith Relph
Kansan staff writer
The strengthening of diplomatic ties between the United States and the People's Republic of China during the past decade has led to an exchange of artistic influences between western and eastern traditions.
One of the foremost painters in the cultural exchange, Chinese painter C.C. Wang, is the featured artist at Spencer Museum of Art through Dec. 11, Wang, 81, is a leading painter in both western and eastern art circles and has lived for 40 years in the United States, Chu-Tsing Li, Murphy distinguished professor of art, said that the influence of Wang's years that the influence of Wang's years had helped the artist develop his style, which had encouraged interest in modern art in China.
"He is very much respected by many young painters," Chu-Tsung said. "His work reflects a trend in China to turn toward western influences.
For Po'ster, curator of Oriental and Spencer, said that the Wang exhibition at Spencer had been planned for about two years. Wang attended the opening of his show, "Mind Landscapes," in October.
ences."
"That provides a real opportunity to study his work." Fister said. "He had produced a unique blend of traditional Chinese techniques and influences from the west. His work is very exciting."
Fister said the show had experienced one of the best attendances she had seen since its opening on Oct. 23. She adds, "I have a special collection of Chinese art also was being emphasized with Wang's paintings."
signed with the said Spencer's collection of Oriental art was strong, particularly for a university museum. Chu Tsung said U.S. museums had not gathered Chinese collections until the late 1970s, but in the past 10 years more collections of both traditional and contemporary Chinese art were being shown here
A hanging scroll, this C.C. Wang landscape is done in ink and color on paper.
TAKARA
nese art were being shown here. Tsui-Tsing said Wang's work represented a gradual cultural revolution in China because Chinese artists were virtually unknown until governmental ties between China and western countries were strengthened in 1978.
"Now, western culture has been absorbed selectively without losing Chinese traditions."
"During the 50s, Russia was the model for "China," he said. "Chinese art had been isolated for two decades.
Chu-Tsang said landscapes were a Chinese art tradition that involved strong spiritual influences for the Chinese people. He said that Wang fused western techniques with the Chinese to enrich the tradition of landscape painting.
Chu-Tsing said he and Wang had been friends since Chu-Tsing arranged a show for him about 25 years ago. Chu-Tsing also specializes in Chinese art and has written books on Wang's landscape painting.
Wang is a collector as well as an artist, and Fister said the display of his works included some of the works by other artists that had influenced him.
Other events have been scheduled at Spencer to supplement Wang's exhibition, including a film, "Climate Art After Mao," which will be shown at 3 p.m. Nov. 26 and 27 in the auditorium at Spencer Chu-Tsing will conduct a tour of the Wang exhibition at 3 p.m. Sunday after it will be a showcase of traditional Chinese brush and ink painting. Spencer Museum is open to the public from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
Landscape theme focus of exhibition
Fister said Wang's show was interesting and educational for KU students because it allowed them to learn about how the artist developed his work while viewing the paintings.
"When you can learn a little about the culture and the painter it helps you to better appreciate art," she said.
By a Kansan reporter
Two coordinating films, "Mystery of Stonehence" and "Cracking the Stone Age Code," will be shown at 3 p.m. Sunday, Wednesday and Nov. 30 in the Auditorium at Spencer.
"Mind Landscapes," an exhibition of landscape paintings by Chinese artist C.C. Wang is the focus of Spencer Museum of Art's fall season. The museum also has scheduled three additional shows that run through the end of the year.
England. The exhibit was organized by the School of Fine Arts of the University of New Mexico-Sante Fe.
An exhibition of screenprints and lithographs by Mexican artist Carlos Merida opened Nov. 1 and will run through Dec. 31. The show, "Carlos Merida: Prints," was compiled from Spencer's permanent collection and includes images of Mexican and Central American dances and traditional
A photographic show. "Megaliths: Photographs by Paul Caponigro," opened last Sunday and will be on display through Dec. 31. Caponigro is a contemporary U.S. photographer who has spent 20 years photographing megaliths in Britain, Ireland and northern France. His 75-photography show includes shots of the Stonehenge megaliths in England.
北岳迎春图
国水千峰
Sandra J. Watt KANSAN
This landscape by C.C. Wang is in the collection of Yien-Koo Wang King, it on display at Spencer Museum of Art.
costumes. Merida's work shows influences of European artists, including Pablo Picasso. The exhibit was assembled by Teresa Valero, Overland Park graduate student, and a museum intern.
In addition to the Chinese art exhibit, the museum has planned children's workshops in which China's painting techniques will be
taught using traditional materials.
They are for children ages 7 to 12 and will be conducted Nov. 20 and 27 from 2 to 4 p.m. The cost for children whose family are Friends of the Museum is $5 a class. The cost is $7 for other children. Guest artists who will assist the children are Alan Atkinson and Wan Quang from the Beijing School of Art.
12
Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Stanon Predeath KANSAS
Straun, Heidenhall/KANSA
Spinning glass
Richard Jolley, a professional glass blower from Knoxville, Tenn. works on a piece of glass at Chamney Barn on 15th Street.Jolley was in Lawrence yesterday for a demonstration sponsored by the KU Glass Club.
Condoms on Big 8 campuses
Students get them from vending machines, fishbowls, free packets
By M. Meredith Relph
Universities have increased efforts to educate students about AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
Kansan staff writer
At Big Eight schools, this includes making condom readily available to students.
The University of Colorado at Boulder opted to install condom vending machines in residence halls and other campus locations about a year and a half ago.
H. Rolan Zick, director of Wardenburg Student Health Center at Colorado, said 40 condom machines had been installed and sold a combined total of 800-1,000 condoms each month.
each other. We discussed it with the administration, and the idea was met with mixed emotions. "Zick said, 'But they agreed to put the machines in the student health center, the student union, the rec center and in the dorms.'"
Zick said his biggest concern about AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases was that many students did not really believe they could contract the diseases
"We may not be changing people's behavior by having the machines," Zick said. "But hopefully we may reinforce the seriousness of these issues."
He said that the only problem with the condom machines had been vandalism but that the problem had not been large enough to warrant removal of the machines.
Last spring, the KU faculty task force on AIDS suggested that condom machines be installed on campus. The idea was rejected in favor of educational programs for students and faculty. Residents in Hashinger Hall last January were denied a request to purchase a condom machine with hall money.
in that money. However, the Student Senate task force on AIDS passed out packets that contained condoms and information on safe sex practices during spring fee payment. The student affairs, said
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said
he thought having condom vending machines in residence halls was inappropriate. He said he was satisfied with the University's efforts to make condoms more accessible to students.
"KU was doing something about it long before the issue of AIDS came up and brought the matter out in the open." Amber said.
Alfondalo.
KU students may purchase condoms at both the Kansas and Burge Union bookstores and at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Candye Waitley, a nurse at Watkins, said condoms were becoming more widely used to protect against sexually transmitted diseases than only as contraceptive devices.
"Birth control pills are more popular with women, and they tend to forget about STDs", Waitley said.
they tend to forget about A.I. S.A.
Other Big Eight universities leave the job of making condoms available to students up to the university's health services.
审务 Services
Jim Oehm, director of pharmacy at the University of Nebraska, said officials at Nebraska wanted to make it easier for students to buy condoms without being embarrassed but did not choose to install condom vending machines on campus.
ve Maneh'kha braska, condoms are sold from a large glass fishbowl at the student health center, and students are trusted to leave money for them. Oehm added that as many women bought condoms from the bowl as men.
"It has increased sales tremendously," Oehm said.
"We sell about 10 times as many as we used to."
Pat Bosco, associate vice president and dean of student life at Kansas State University, said a K-State task force on AIDS last year made a series of recommendations, including one in favor of condom machines on campus.
"We have a standing university committee that discussed the idea and ultimately rejected it," Mosco said.
New center to help KC businesses
By Daniel Niemi
The new Regents Center planned for Johnson County will not only help fill an educational void in the Kansas City area, it will help attract new business, Kansas City and University officials say.
By Daniel Niem Kansan staff writer
and Universities have felt education was not what it should be, particularly for the size of the metro area," said Sam Hunter, manager of the research data center at Mid-America Regional Council in Kansas City.
"Businesses will look favorably at the new Regents Center and it will attract new business."
Mary Novaria, vice president of the Kansas City Area Development Council, said the council had conducted a study that showed businesses thought the area was deficient in education, particularly high-tech areas such as engineering and computer science.
as engineering and computer science. The center, which will be built on 40 acres at 127th Street and Quivira Road in Overland Park, will offer upper-level and graduate courses, research facilities and a satellite communications system. It is scheduled to open in three years.
improve the high-tech areas of education and lure businesses to Kansas City.
"I think the plans underway are excellent." she said.
"We are thrilled to see its progress and it is certainly filling a void.
thing a fool.
"We need to keep in mind, however, that there's no overnight fix. Both universities in Missouri and Kansas need to take a long-term approach to these programs."
Novaria agreed the Regents Center plan would help
Hunter and Novaria said businesses were often looking for training programs in high-tech areas, and that the Regents Center would help provide such programs.
"We've had instances in the past where programs at colleges and junior colleges have attracted businesses because of their training programs," Novaria said.
be4a5dbb with Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said the Regents Center would provide more access for businesses to research programs and could attract new business.
"As we have studied Kansas City, many businesses interested in settling there have looked at the quality of the educational system and the educational environment," she said.
Anti-racism rally today
By Cindy Harger Kansan staff writer
People in Lawrence and at the University of Kansas should take an active stance against the rising tide of racism and supremacist violence, organizers of an anti-racism rally said.
The rally against the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazis has been scheduled for 11:30 a.m today in front of Staufer-Flint Hall. The rally is being sponsored by Action Coalition, a registered KU organization aimed at promoting free speech and student protest on vital issues.
It's No Secret. It's Good Food.
"We're trying to get across a show of unity and strength that says violence and this kind of race hatred is not acceptable," said David Scheuer, Honolulu sophomore and one of the principal organizers of the rally. "This is a prominent, real issue on campus and in Lawrence and deserves broader attention."
Scheuer and other rally organizers said that they wanted to prevent racism from becoming a large an issue on the KU campus as it has become at Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville. Some allegedly racist incidents have occurred recently in Maryville, where a Klan organization is said to exist.
Organizers of the rally said they weren't sure how many people would be involved in the rally, but that they had contacted about 70 Lawrence and KU organizations and individuals.
Dan May, Lawrence senior, who is also a principal organizer of the rally, said that that the idea for the rally began a few weeks ago when he and four others sent an editorial letter to the University Daily Kansas. They said that they felt the letter wasn't treatise fairly. The letter was sent to a Penn School Collegian editorial reprinted in the Kansan on Oct. 31 that addressed a Klan march in Philadelphia.
May and Schener said that they also felt Kansan news coverage trivialized and neglected racial issues.
issues.
"We realize the UDK has to devote a fair amount of its attention to KU, but we don't think they should be ignoring life and death issues." Scheuer said.
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COMPUTER
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Connecting Point* "a Apple Team" has contracted to support KD departmental purchases. Call us for assistance in managing systems, software and technical purchases. Connecting Point now has a full line of Apple "Add Ons" from software to drives.
---
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 18, 1988
Sports
13
Jayhawks will play last game against Tigers
Missouri victory could insure coach's future
By Jeff Euston Kansan sportswriter
SALVATORE
Woody Widenhofer
Depending on who you listen to, tomorrow's traditional year-end football game between Missouri and Kansas will have a lot to do with whether Missouri coach Woody Widenhofer returns next season.
Widenhofer has been the subject of many rumors this season as the Tigers have struggled to a 2-7-1 record.
According to some rumors, Widenhofer's fate already may have been decided. Bob Stull, the coach at the University of Texas-El Paso, has been mentioned as a possible replacement.
But some, including Widenhofer and Missouri athletic director Dick Tamburo, insist that a decision has not been made.
"If it happens, it happens," he said. "I can't worry about it now. I just have to prepare like I normally do."
womennoter, in his fourth season at Missouri, has a career record of 11-31.1. But he said he was not planning on being fired.
"I don't want to say this is just another game, because it's not," he said. "I like rivalries because there's more hype to them. There's something a little sweeter than the usual rivalries take place in the last week of the season."
But both coaches agreed that the Missouri-Kansas game was more important than a "normal" game.
Though this game is not as crucial to Kansas coach Glen Mason as it may be to Widenhofer. Mason realizes the rivalry exists between the teams.
important than a 'low rivalry.' "It's a big rivalry," Widenhoffer said. "It's important to the alumni and the fans. And it's the last game of the season. It would be nice to end on a winning note so we have something to look back on during the winter as we prepare for next season."
in the last week of the year Mason also is sensitive to Widephofer's plight.
"They have potentially a good football team," he said. "T know their record does not show it, but they gave Oklahoma and Nebraska all, they
"If you see how close they could be
to being good, then I feel sorry for him in one regard because I would say that whoever the football coach is there next year, and I hope it is Woody Widenhofer, probably is going to have a good football team."
The Tigers have played inconsistently this season.
Missouri tied Indiana 24-24 on Sept.
24.
24 "We've been inconsistent throughout the year," Widenhofer said. "We haven't played to our potential, and I think that's because we've had a tough schedule and we're a young team."
tey this season.
Seven of Missouri's opponents this season will go to bowl games. Houston, Miami, Oklahoma State, Nebraska, Colorado and Oklahoma all have defeated the Tigers.
Missouri did give both Nebraska and Oklahoma scares this season.
The Tigers held the Cornhuskers, the nation's top rushing team, to only 116 yards on the ground. Missouri led 9-0 in the third quarter and 18-17 as late the fourth quarter before Nebraska scored on a 49-yard touchdown run and went on to win 26-18.
Last week, against the Sooners,
Missouri was in the game until late in
the second half before losing 16-7.
"It was a very close game," Widenhofer said. "We had better stats than them, but we didn't outscore them. They blocked one of our punts and got a field goal, and then
later (in the third quarter) we had a pass dropped in the end zone. I wasn't satisfied with the result because we lost, but I was pleased with our team's effort.[3]
with wide experience. Widenhofer has come under criticism for the Tigers' erratic performance. Despite strong showings against the Big Eight powers, Missouri also has played poorly at times.
In an Oct. 15 game in Columbia against Iowa State, Missouri was defeated soundly, 21-3.
Mason said he didn't know which Missouri team would show up tomorrow, but he was more concerned with his own team.
“What I think doesn't matter,” he said. “I can't do anything about it. I have my own problems. My whole approach has always been to get my team as motivated as best I can. If I can't do that, I won't matter how they come into the game anyway.”
Missouri comes into the game with Corey Welch, their starting quarterback. Sophomore Brad Fitzmair will replace Welch.
"Hopefully we'll be able to run the ball pretty well," he said. "We've tried to establish the run all season. That's been a key to our success."
The Kansas defensive players know they'll have to be prepared to stop the Missouri rushing attack, despite Kansas' ranking of last in the nation in rushing defense.
With the change at quarterback, Widenhofer said the running game would be important tomorrow.
"We'll have to play well, especially defensively," Kansas linebacker Curtis Moore said. "It's be a tough game for us to win. That's nothing new, though. Missouri's got a lot better team than a lot of people think they do.
"The last game of the season is always the one you remember all winter and all summer before next season, so you'd really like to win and end on a good note."
Missouri fullback Tommie Stowers needs just 87 rushing yards to move into 10th place in Tiger history. Stowers, only a junior, has 1,457 career yards.
Game 11
Kansas Jayhawks Coach Glen Mason Record 1-9/1-5
KU
Missouri Tigers
Coach Woody
Widenhofer
Record 2-7-1/1-5
WR-2 Quintin Smith, 5-11, 180, Jr.
LT-77 Chris Perez, 6-25, 270,
LG-53 Smith Holland, 6-3, 250, Fr.
OC-51 Chip Buddle, 6-25, 25o. So.
GR-59 Dave Gratton, 6-2, 250, Sr.
RT-76 Hill Hundel, 6-25, 25j.
TE-86 John Baker, 6-3, 235, Jr.
QB-5 Kelley Donohoe, 6-0, 180;
BF-34 Roger Robben, 6-0, 215;
TB-24 Tony Sandis, 5-16, 195;
WR-1 Willie Vaughn, 6-0, 190;
PK-93 Brad Fleeman, 5-11, 170;
SOL-84丹Newrough, 6,2-228, Fr.
ST-62 Dave Waller, 6-7,240, So.
MG-64 Matt Nolon, 5,6-225, Fr.
RT-69 Mark Koncz, 6,3-260, Fr.
LR-Jason Tyler, 6,1-210, Fr.
RL-19 Curtis Morris, 6,1-225, Sr.
SL-50 Mike Lom, 6,0-205, Sr.
WC-12 Troy Gregory, 5,9-170, Sr.
CC-80 Rodney Harris, 5,9-190, Sr
WS-23 Jason Priest, 6,0-180, Sr.
SS-40 King Dixon, 6,1-195, Sr
P-97 B.J. Lohsen, 6,3-215, Jr.
MIZZOU
Probable Starters:
Offense
Series:
Probable Starters:
Defense
TE-89 Tim Burton, 6, 237, So.
LT-73 Carl Bax, 6, 257, Srs.
LG-51 Pete Scott, 6, 4, 285, Jr.
C-50 Curt Wilson, 6, 3, 273, Sr.
RG-63 Jay Greerwood, 6, 4, 284, Jr.
RT-64 Andy Lock, 6, 3, 268, Jr.
Se-7 Craig Lammers, 5, 9, 163, Sr.
QB-17 Brad Fliuzmaure, 6, 0, 182, Sr.
FB-31 Tommie Stowers, 6, 3, 216, Jr.
LHB-32 Smiley Elmore, 5, 9, 202, Sr.
RHB-40 Michael Jones, 6, 2, 202, So.
PK-3 Jef Jacke, 6, 0, 190, Fr.
LE-81 Ben Corr, 6,2, 233, Sr.
LE-81丹 Daryl Carl, 6,2, 282, Sr.
RT-75 Kwain White, 6,4, 263, Jr.
RE-98 Lee Johnson, 6,1, 273, Jr.
LB-49 A.J. Miller, 6,1, 241, Jr.
MLB-55 Darren MacDonald, 6,1, 193, Jr.
RLB-38 Brian Reeves, 6,2, 208, Jr.
LC-2 Adrian Jones, 6,0, 184, Jr.
SS-36 Olis Smith,5-11, 180, Jr.
WS-12 Charles Murphy, 6,1, 198, Jr.
RC-23 Pat Ray, 5,10, 179, Sr.
P-35 Jim Michalski, 6,1, 184, So.
Missouri leads the series 45-42-9. The Missouri-Kansas series is the longest west of the Mississippi River. In games at Lawrence, Kansas leads 19-13-3. est week:
Missouri lost to Oklahoma 16-7, and Kansas lost at Oklahoma State 63-24. Miscellaneous:
The winner of the game is guaranteed a sixth-place finish in the Big Eight Conference. Last year, the Tigers defeated the Jayhawks 19-7 in Columbia
Coverage:
The Kansas-Missouri game will be carried by the Kansas Jayhawk Network. The game can be heard in Lawrence on KLZR(105.9 FM), KLWN(1320 AM) and KJHK(90.7). Kickoff is at 1:00 p.m.
Jayhawks to test progress against Soviets
Kansan sportswriter
By Arvin Donley
hawks have made
opponent.
Tomorrow night, they play the best amateur basketball team in the world.
For weeks, Kansas basketball coach Roy Williams and his players have been looking forward to testing their progress against a high quality opponent.
The Soviet Union National Team travels to Lawrence to play the Jayhawks at 7:35 p.m. in Allen Field House. The Soviets squad features eight players from the Olympic gold team that upset the United States squad 82-76 on Sept. 27 in South Korea. In that game, the Soviets held former Kansas All-American Danny Manning scoreless.
The game, Williams said, will help determine the progress the Jay.
Although anxious to play outside regular-season competition, Williams said he wished he had more time to prepare for the Soviets.
have made.
"It will be interesting to see how we stack up when we get out there against the Soviets," Williams said.
"It'll tell us something. We're tired of going against each other."
Since arriving in the United States on Saturday, the Soviets have defeated three highly regarded college teams. The Soviets defeated North Carolina 104-93, North Carolina State 87-11 and Ohio State 89-.
to play them." he said. "We're not ready to play them," he said. "But they'll be on the schedule, so we'll play. I don't know that many college teams right now are ready to play them."
Last night, the Soviets defeated
Vanderbilt b74-71, raising their record to 4-0 during their nine-game tour of the United States.
Kansas sophomore forward Mark Randall said the Soviets' impressive tour performances would not be a significant factor tomorrow night.
"We cann't at that," the foot 6-Randall said. "We're not North Carolina or North Carolina State, we're the University of Kansas. We're different players, so we've got to go play how we're capable of playing."
playing.
One concern for the Jayhawks inside players is the presence of 7-foot 2 Soviet center Arvidas Sabonis.
Randall said all three Kansas men — Randall, 6-0foot-7 Mike Maddox and 6-0foot-10 Sean Alvarado — would have to help Defend Sabonis
would have to help defend cabins.
"It will be a definite challenge."
Randall said, "I think a lot of our games this season will be a challenge because there are only three of us (6-foot,7 or taller)."
Williams said, "(Sabonis) would probably be the best center at the college level. The Portland Trailblazers thought so much of him that he drafted him number one, two years ago. He's really dominant inside. He makes it hard to get offensive rebounds, and he's so big, he makes you alter your shots."
Sabonis will play alongside fellow Olympic sports Aleksandr Volkov, Rimas Kurtainaitis, Sharunas Marchulanis, Valeri Tikitonkeno, Valeri Gobrov, Segei Tarakanov and Tit Sokk.
other games.
Senior forward Milt Newton also said he would not view the game on the Soviets differently than
"They're just another good team that we're going to try to beat," Newton said. "That's the only incentive I need."
Although the game against the Soviets is an exhibition game that will not count on the Jayhawks' regular season record, Randall said it was important.
"We're going to look at it as a regular game because I think we all understand we need competition to see how far along we are," he said.
Williams said he had yet to decide on a starting lineup for the game.
"I'm not one of those guys who believes in taking five guys and saying, 'You five guys are the starters,'" Williams said. "We're going to play a lot of people."
K-State overmatches 'Hawks in last home volleyball game
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
The Wildcats defeated the Jayhawks 15-10, 15-8 in a match played at Allen Field House. Kansas State improved its record to 4-7 in the Big Eight Conference and 15-12 overall. The Jayhawks dropped to 1-10 in the conference and 5-23 overall.
Kansas seniors Elisa Woods and Kim Robinson played the final home volleyball match of their college careers last night, but Kansas State spoiled their farewell.
"I tried to look at it as just another game" "Woody, a bitter for the Jayhawks," said. "It wasn't that much more important than other games. When it's your senior year you want to win them all."
Although it was the last home game of her career at Kansas, Woods said she viewed it as no different than other games.
"K-State played really well," Albiz said. "We just couldn't stop them. They just beat us. They're further along than we are right now."
the coprereason Kansas coach Frankie Albizt said the Jayhawks were simply overmatched by the Wildcats.
kind of sad. Robbins lost
The two teams exchanged points in
the first game and were tied at 10-10.
"It was really exciting, but it was kind of sad." Robinson said. pointed in
Robinson, however, said she was saddened knowing she would not play another home game as a dayhawk.
Kansas coach Frankie Albitz
State played really well. We just couldn't stop them. They're further along than we are right now.'
'K
The Jayhawks fought early in the third game to take a 4-1 lead on aces by freshman hitter Kris Kleinschmidt and Woods and two reception errors by the Wildcats. Kansas built its lead to 7-3, but K-State scored the next seven points and went on to win the game 15-8 and the match 3-0.
when the Wildcats scored five unanswered points to win 15-10.
In the second game, Kansas State grabbed a 9-3 lead and was never challenged by the Jayhawks, winning 15-6.
Kleinschmidt led the Jayhawks offensively with 13 kills and a 300 attack percentage. Woods added 11 kills to the Kansas attack. Kansas State was led by senior hitters Mary Kinsey and Shawnee Call, who had 16 and 15 kills, respectively.
Albitz said Kleinschmidt had become an offensive force in recent matches.
"One player who is really starting to pound on the ball is Kris Klein-
schmidt." Albitz said. "She has really become a strong player for us."
Despite the Jayhawks poor record, Albitz said she had seen improvement in all areas during the season. She especially was proud of the way the Jayhawks played last week in losses to conference leaders Nebraska and Oklahoma.
Against Oklahoma last Friday at the field house, the Jayhawks held a lead midway through the fifth game, but the Sooners rallied to defeat the Jayhawks.
Albitz said she hoped the Jayhawks could duplicate that performance when they closed out the season against Oklahoma tomorrow at Norman, Okla.
"I think we might bounce back," she said. "We can't practice, so it will have to be a mental thing. OU will be difficult to beat at home, but we see us bounce back and play like we have the last few matches."
Kansas State, meanwhile, will be fighting for a spot in the Big Eight postseason tournament tomorrow against league-leading Nebraska. The Wildcats must beat the Cornbushers to place fourth in the conference. The top four teams in the conference qualify for the tournament, which will take place in Salina, Nov 25-27.
Phil Carvalho/KANSAN
4
13
Kansas State
Kansas State's Amy Dodson looks on as teammate Leslie Kull spikes the ball against Kansas defenders Julie Woodruff, left, and Kim DeHoff. The Wildcats beat the Jayhawks 15-10, 15-6 and 15-8 last night at Allen Field House.
Old, new basketball stars unite
The past and the present of Kansas women's basketball will meet tomorrow when the Jayhawks play a team of former Kansas players in the alumni game.
author game
Twenty-one former Kansas players have committed to playing in the game that will precede the men's contest with the Soviet Union National Team. The women's game begins at 5:05 p.m. in Allen Field House.
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
A Kansas women's alumni game hasn't been played since the early 1970s, but Kansas coach Marian Washington said she was glad it was back on the schedule.
They are Sandy Shaw, Lisa Dougherty, Jackie Martin, Mesh Mohther and Cheryl Jackson. Shaw and Dougherty, starters throughout the 1987-88 season, were the Jahayh's leading scorers averaging 13.3 and 11.0 points a game, respectively.
"It's a good way to keep people in touch with the program," she said. "Some of our young players don't know about some of the players that have been here in the past. This gives them a chance to meet and play against them. I think it's something that everyone can look forward to."
Among the alumni that have said they would play in the game were five players from last year's Big Ten tournament championship team.
Washington said although the game was being played for fun, she expected both teams to play to win.
"I'm serious in terms of our team's approach to the game," Washington said. "We will be out there to work on getting better.
The alumni team will be coached by Marien Mawson, who was the Kansas women's basketball coach from 1968 to 1971. In those three years, the Jayhawks went 21-18.
Other alumni who have committed to playing tomorrow are Cheryl Burnett (1977-80), Paige Carney (1969-72), Cindy Platt-Christensen (1975-83), Margo Cortese (1975), Gail Goodwin-Giles (1979), Tammy Hoffman (1981), Jennifer Lutz (1976-77), Vickie McAuley (1974-76) and Keri Mueller (1981, 1984-87), Schneller (1975-76), Angie Taylor (1981, 1983) Sheila Vann (1977), Debra Webb (1975-76, 79) and Chuck Knapp, manager. (1986-87).
---
14
Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
OSU violated rules, station says
Allegations rejected by OSU director
The Associated Press
STILL WATER, Okla. — Oklahoma State University's athletic director branded yesterday as "inaccurate" a television report that the alleged violations for which the school is under NCAA investigation included
BENNIE KIMBERLEY
Dykes
"It is apparent from (Wednesday night) its' inaccuracy report, by chap.
giving cash and automobiles to at least one player and using eight ineligible players.
nelive (KOCO-TV, Oklahoma City) that the source of the information was not privy to the actual allegations considered by the NCAA Committee on Infractions last week in January. Myron Roderick said in a statement
---
The KOCO-TV report said the NCAA originally turned up 63 alleged violations in Oklahoma State's football program, some of which have
been thrown out.
The Tulsa World on Sept. 4 published a similar report outlining the same NCAA allegations.
Earlier this week, Roderick said the NCAA was considering "serious penalties" against Oklahoma State's football program.
Oklahoma State has a history of prior NCAA probation and sanctions from 1978-1982. Roderick said that the current allegations "are serious and serious penalties will be deliberated."
He described the allegations currently under investigation as "proven, admitted and self-reported."
In an attempt to placate the NCAA, Oklahoma State three years ago fired assistant coach Willie Anderson, who had been linked with a number of alleged violations.
In yesterday's statement, Roderick said:
"It is disappointing that Channel Five would not, out of respect for Oklahoma State University and its athletic programs, give us an opportunity to review the information to insure its accuracy before airing the report. A great deal of the information we have received were not part of the allegations considered by the NCAA Committee on Infractions in Tucson, Ariz."
Roderick's statement did not say which parts of the television report
were incorrect and he was unavail able for comment yesterday.
KOCO-TV said the allegations primarily concerned wide receiver Hart Lee Deyes, who allegedly received $5,000 cash, a new car and monthly payments for signing with Oklahoma State under the direction of Oksana Oksana. Oklahoma State's recruiting coordinator at the time of his dismissal.
The station also reported on NCAA allegations that cash and a cost-free car were offered to former Mangum High School star lineman Robert Lee Conner, who signed with Oklahoma and is now at a Texas junior college.
According to KOCO-TV, the NCAA said most of the academic problems occurred from 1982-85.
The report said the NCAA contended that John Chesley, Arthur Price, Harry Roberts, Ken Zachary, Charles Crawford, Tavie Hampton, Mark Moore and Dana Hawkins participated in several regular-season and postseason games while they were academically ineligible.
The station said former Oklahoma State assistant coach Paul Jette, now defensive coordinator at the University of Texas, was named several times in the official inquiry for such alleged violations as offering recruits $600 for ostrich boots to telling a recruit that he had "a briefcase with money to buy a recruit a car upon graduation."
Former coach Jimmy Johnson (1979-83) and current coach Pat Jones were not involved in the allegations, the station reported. Johnson is currently coaching at the University of Miami.
In a statement on Tuesday, Roderk offered no details of the probe but indicated the NCAA was conducting an investigation which he described as "among the most thorough ever conducted."
The NCAA sent Oklahoma State and official letter of inquiry in April listing allegations of violations in the football program. The university resisted legal attempts to make the allegations public.
After the Tucson meeting with the Committee on Infractions, Roderick said there was a "positive side" to the investigation.
"No serious violations were found during the past three seasons and no members of our current coaching team were in any substantial violations." he said.
Roderick indicated that Oklahoma State bootees may have caused seismic damage.
"We simply will not and cannot tolerate any so-called supporters of OSU violating NCAA rules," he said. "We are very clear that a major violation in any sport will mean a loss of competition in that sport."
Swim coach wants team effort today
By a Kansan reporter
Kansas swimming coach Gary Kempf would like to see the men's and women's teams rise above last weekend's performances in today's tri-meet with Southern Illinois and the University of Illinois in Carbon-dale, IL.
"I think anytime you beat a quality team, you're going in the right direction." Kempf said of the men's defeat of 19th-ranked Arizona in Tucson, Ariz. last Friday. "But we need to make continued success. We need to take a step forward every time we compete."
Although the men managed to defeat Arizona and swam well in a loss to Arizona State in Tempe, Ariz., on Saturday, Kempf said he'd like to see more consistency in their performances.
The Jayhawk women lost to both Arizona and Arizona State last weekend.
U.S.S.R. TICKETS AVAILABLE:
"For us to be as good as we can, everybody has to be hitting at the same time." Kemp said. "But every now and then, we tend to lace up a dependency on some of the stronger swimmers."
U.S.S.R. TICKETS AVAILABLE:
A limited number of general admission tickets are available for the exhibition basketball game between Kansas and the Soviet Union National Team at 7:35 tomorrow night in Allen Field House.
Tickets are $10 and are on sale at the Kansas ticket office in the east lobby of the field house. Tickets also may be purchased at the ticket windows at Memorial Stadium tomorrow afternoon during Kansas' football game against Missouri.
The game against the Soviet Union is included in the student season-ticket package.
PEETE OUT WITH MEASLES:
Pat O'Hara, a redshirt sophomore who has thrown only seven passes for Southern California, probably will start at quarterback for the second-ranked Trojans and they meet their crosswown rival.
Southern California quarterback and Heisman Trophy candidate Rodney Peele has the measles and might not be able to play in tomorrow's showdown against sixth-ranked ULA for the Pacific-10 conference championship and a trip to the Rose Bowl.
Sports Briefs
"It's an exciting opportunity if it comes about," O'Hara said. "Playing in a game like this is what I came to USC for. I don't
know the extent of Rodney's illness, but if it comes down to me playing on Saturday, I'm prepared to go out and do my best.
"I don't know for sure if I will (start), but I'll prepare to play just like I do every week."
O'Hara played in one game last season, taking six snaps late in the Trojans' 48-14 victory over Oregon State. He didn't throw a pass.
This year, the 6-foot-3, 195-pounder has played in three games and completed five of seven pass for 61 vards with one interception.
The Trojans bring a 7-2 Pac 10 record and a 9-9 overall mark into the game at the Rose Bowl. The Bruins are 6-1 and 9-1.
If the Bruins win, they will face 12th-ranked Michigan in the Rose Bowl game. If the Trojans win or lose, they will face the Wolterines on Jan. 2.
BIRD TO HAVE SURGERY:
BIRD TO HAVE SURGERY:
Larry Bird will have surgery to remove bone spurs on both heels and is expected to be lost to the struggling Boston Celtics for at least three months.
The team made the announcement late yesterday afternoon after Bird sought a medical opinion from a doctor unaffiliated with him.
The Celtics didn't say when the surgery would be done but said it would be handled by Roger Mann and Arnold Scheller, the team
physician, at New England Baptist Hospital in Boston. The operation was expected to be performed as soon as the doctors and the hospital could work it into their schedules.
**SPINKS CONVICTED:** A Superior Court jury convicted former heavyweight champion Michael Buck of drunken driving yesterday.
Spinks, who announced his retirement after being knocked out by Mike Tyson in Atlantic City, N.J., on June 28, was financed $200 and had his license revoked for one year.
The New Castle County Superior Court jury deliberated about five hours before returning the verdict.
LEONARD-LALONEDE ATTENDANCE: Sugar Ray Leonard's knockout of Donny Lalonde drew a crowd of 5,500, about one third of capacity at the Caesar's Palace outdoor arena, according to figures given by state boxing
A report submitted by Caesar's Palace showed paid attendance of 5,590 with total gate sales of about $2.8 million.
Chuck Minker, executive secretary of the Nevada State Athletic Commission, said Caesar's reported it distributed another roster to its top casino patrons, which casinos normally do for big fights.
PIZZA
1 POUND
SPAGHETTI
GARLIC TOAST
32 OZ. COKE
$ 4.95
$4.95
LARGE PIZZA
ORIGINAL OR DEEP PAN
1 TOPPING
plus 32 OZ COKE
ONLY $7.95 + TAX
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Futin
A
PIZZA
Shoppe
pub
WESTRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
601 KASOLD
843-2600
PIZZA Shoppe
CORRECTION
Summer Institute
Immerse yourself in German life while earning 9 hours of German KU credit studying German language and culture in Eutin.
For more information contact the Office of Study Abroad 203 Lippincott 864-3742
ITIN
For more information call collect
383-3294
Hit The Slopes!
Nov. 24-28 Keystone-Sleeper, 3 day stay in condo, $189
Dec. 23-27 Summit Sleeper, 3 day stay in hotel, $186
Dec. 23-27 Winter Park-Sleeper, 3 day stay in condo, $231
Jan. 2-8 Copper-Sleeper, 5 day stay in condo, $226
Jan. 5-9 Crested Butte-Sleeper, 3 day stay in hotel, $200
Jan. 12-16 Winter Park-Sleeper, 3 day stay in condo, $185
Jan. 13-17 Steamboat-Sleeper, 4 day stay in condo, $225
Jan. 26-30 Copper-Sleeper, 3 day stay in condo, $178
*Trips will be shuttled to Vail daily for World Cup Championships
Call for ticket information.
ask for Sandi
EUTin
Our 3 or more day trips include lodging, ski rental and sleeper transportation. We offer discounts on lift tickets. $75 deposit required to reserve space.
Dec. 9-12 Winter Park-Sleeper, 2 day stay in condo, $117
Jan. 6-9 Summit-Sleeper, 2 day stay in hotel, $122
Jan. 13-16 Winter Park-Sleeper, 2 day stay in condo, $124
Jan. 20-23 Vail-Sleeper, 2 day stay in condo, $136
Jan. 20-23 Winter Park-Sleeper, 2 day stay in condo, $124
Jan. 27-30 Summit-Sleeper, 2 day stay in hotel, $122
All 2 day trips include lodging and sleeper transportation.
You can rent ski equipment at The Slope. Call for details,
883-3294. $25 deposit required to reserve a space on 2 day trips.
SKI KC/THE SLOPE
Skiing
Call 864-4810
More times
than not, a
diamond
advertised
elsewhere at
30, 40, even 50%
off can be purchased
for less at our
store. Before
you buy, check
our everyday prices .
DIAMOND JUBILEE
Fifth Carat $195-$400
Quarter Carat $275-$550
Third Carat $350-$750
Half Carat $800-$1950
Three Quarter Carat $1100-$3000
One Carat $1900-$15,000
you'll be pleasantly surprised.
Many larger stones available
Remember these are everyday prices
Marks JEWELERS
Quality since 1889
817 Massachusetts
843-4266
STORY IDEA?
10% Student Discount on Kansan Classifieds*
- Valid with K.U.I.D.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Don't be a TUKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce your stress and don't forget our GIER CKT - holiday shopping easy. We won't gobble you up! Call 811-6249 - Remember you knelt!! For confidential information, refer and support for AIDS concern. Call 811-2434. Head to www.tukey.com.
Grieving and Loss: The University Counseling Center is offering an information and support group for individuals who are ill or are close to someone they loss. The loss may be due to a life threatening illness, death, relationship breakup or a sign of a broken heart. Wednesdays from 4:00 p.m. Contact Dr. Gary Price, 118 Barley Hall, phone 844-9301 if you would like to join a group or if you have questions about the group.
Student Senate
Classified Ads
is accepting applications for the following positions
-Treasurer
-Administrative
Assistant
KU Students, faculty, staff and family members. You are invited to participate in the annual Women's Leadership Conference hosted by the SUA office: Deadline: Mon, Nov. 21. For information about Hour 843-3477, Sponsored by UNA Artists.
Applications due in the Student Senate Office, 105 Burge Union by
Friday Nov.18 at 5 p.m.
Questions? Call 864-3710
Paid for by Student Senate
Out of State Students—Going home on vacations.
Earn travel money and much more during your vacations by being our sales rep in your home office (including reorders). New and exciting art card designs by AlphaLight. See them at the Union Bookstore or Lampplighter Bookstore, 9th and 8th Floor.
Preparing for Final Study Skills Workshop
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Strategies): Wednesday, November 30,
7:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m. Storm Free 'Student
Hours'
SUICIDE INTERVENTION. If you feel like you want to end it all, or if you are concerned about who might,叫 814-2343 or drop by 119 Westman Ave. in Los Angeles. "Confident and always open."
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI BEENNIGDE; January 1, 2018-4:48 p.m. Bridge condiments with truffle butter, jacuzzi, a block from Ijfst. Contact David 84216 Limited.
WE TEACH SKIN SCARE® Dermatologist tested.
Mary Kay has a skin care system for you, call today!
Nancy Armstrong, Mary Kay Beauty Consultant
481-4531.
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVES Metropolis Mobile Sound, Superior sound and lighting. Professional radio, club DJ DJs. Hot Spins Maximum Party Thrills DJ Ray Valexia 841-7833
GOOD VIBRATIONS - the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call (Brian) 841-9484
Handel's Import Repair will tune up your car. $33 plus parts, mobile service. 841-4629
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B-days, singing
musses, 841,18A
Ves Dudes the Windingstair on #1! on SATN, Nov. 19, 8:00 p.m. tll 7:2! 2 live bands featuring the MALHOBS and Kill Creek. At The Outhouse, Mass Street to 15th street and go on east 16th street.
The Congo Bar
50 c Draws
Every Saturday
520 N. 3rd St.
9:00 am- Midnight
Female Roommate wanted to share large two
story house $280/month. All utilities paid
FOR RENT
1 bedroom available on 24th & Iowa. Near bus route $8429765 Rent: $157 + $2 utilities.
2 berenb 2 bath apt, with microwave, ice maker and plush carpet. Call 842-5111.
2nd Semester Sublease - Naismith Place Apts. - 2
dbrm, jacuzzi bathh, furnished or unfurnished.
749-4429
3 bedroom-compatibility fits &-warranted Dec 11-Surprise Villa washer/gardage/grade 2+ bath AC-temps court. pool microwave-off ef thresh. Call 8641-9041vimee
Available immediately. One bedroom apartment for male student between downtown & campus.
Affordable, spacious, 2 br. apt. Furn., on bus route, taccuzzi 841-3800.
available imbued with connection between downtown & campus no pets $240 plus electric and deposit .181 2. Available jan. thru May Two bim apt wiforplaid 87 Michigan San Juan Place Free Deposit
Completely Furnished 1.3, and a bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call to day 84-121, 84-125, 84-125N, or 784-215I.
Complete. Furnished Studios. 1-2 & 1-bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call Mastercraft or 789-4291. Mastercraft Management
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: To share nice 2 bedroom apartment Spring Semester. Call 249-1655.
Female Roomsite wanted to share beautiful apartment in Peppertree Park. Available immediately! Apartment includes: own bedroom, private bathroom, fireplace, and free water. Please call 749-083
LOCATION Available Now!
M-F 8-5
Sat 8-5
Sun 1-4
meadowbrook
15th A. Cresting 842-4200
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
Female roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom duplex. Overwinter Park 2 blocks from bus stop. Female roommate (graduate student, non-smoker preferred) Shared first floor of house available immediately. Own room near campus, near campus, down park. Call 789-3679
FOR SPRING SEMESTER Nice furnished studio $265/mo. Water and cable paid. Bus Route Call 749-2806
For Sublease: Large 1 bd, Colony Woods,
available now. Call 843-7680
For subsuite. Female roommate needed.
$15.00/month + 1 months' utilities Available 1.87
Michigan Desperate! Call 749-798-3 Arlene
Fully furnished one bedroom, apartment.
Big enough for two. Must go to Nov. 11th,
$360. $480. utilities - 847-752 or 49-415
Janette
- 1&2 bedroom units
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 814-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 182 bedroom units
* Laundry facilities
* On bus route-near shopping
* Water paid
* Some with gas paid
* Ample off-street parking
* Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
House for rent January 1, 1989 $350 2 bedrooms.
garage, washer dryer, A.C. Located on Tennessee.
Call Tortoise at 749-7800
Male or Female roommate wanted. Very niced
townhouse for 2nd semester $210/mo. + _3
utilities. On KU bus route 841-4044
Moving to KC? Person need to share 2 bedroom apt to close KU Medical Center. Prefer female Large bedroom $175 - 1 units; 816-504-616
Nice 2 bedroom dormitorium for bus, on bus route
2 bed room apt. for lease, Naishtime 3
Apartments. New appliances. Jacuzzi built-in
area. Available Jan 1. $86 mo. $41-988
Nairy pool in large room for large families.
New rooms.
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
Nice two bedroom, bath, fully furnished apartment, available after finals, close to campus and downtown. Please call for details. One large bedroom for sublease at Haverock Place immediately. $300 mo. wateraid, and furnished bathroom. Call 212-645-7898.
Room available at semester very near campus
Share kitchen, bath $160 + deposit. Utilities
paid. 842-6579
Spring Semester Sublease. 1 bedroom. W/D. On bus route. $352/mo. Call eve. 749-4560
Sub-lease immediately until May 39. A room with a view! Apple Lane Studio Desperate! (913) 491-306.
Sublease (Jan. 1, May 31) 2 bedroom, 1/2
spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK
Families welcome $843.0821
sublease; Large 2BR apt. on Bus Route. Can sleep 3. Call 841-3430.
TRAILBIRD
TRAILRIDGE
B. B. B. B.
NOW KENTING
1 Bedroom Apartment
Paid Water & Gas, Patio
Laundry Facilities
3 Bedroom Town House
Fireplace, Carport, Patio
Washer/Dryer Hookups
On K.U. Bus Route
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
1
University Daily Kansan / Friday, November 18, 1988
15
We Bring More Roommates Together by Splitting Them Up.
Colony Woods realizes the closer you are to your roommate the farther apart you want to be. Knowing this, we separate our 2 bedrooms and a kitchen and living room.
You can still save money by sharing the rent and keep your privacy too!
2 Bedroom 2 Bath $395
Ask How We Can
Save You $$$.
Colony Wooods
apartments
1301 W. 24th & Nalsmith
842-5111
Sublease 1 bedroom apartment. Starting December 8, rent $253, electricity paid. 749-3885 or 842-2897 at 6:30 m. e.m.
Sunflower House is kitting applications for Spring 2018. We offer private rooms, TV/VR game, and laundry facilities. Low rent, include all utilities. Phone 769-4917 or email cooperator with a living at 769-4917. #8812
TRAILHIGH STUDIO available for sublease
spring semester琴班, quiet, clean location (bus
route, laundry room, balcony), Phone 749-858
weekend, bedroom 2 bedroom apt, large hot
bedroom. 2床卧室
caterised 2. bedroom apt, large bath,
dishwasher, dishwasher dryer lookup $100/month
+ utilities 3 blocks from campus, 5 or 8 month
sublease beginning Jan. 1 749-3823
WANTED: Person or persons to assume a lease at Hammer Place at semester end. If interested call 842-257.
CALL 621-242-3250
WANTED Person or persons to assume a lease at Colony Woods; 1 bedroom, at semester end. Call 850-799-3901.
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 60044
913 - 843 - 8559
Convenience...
All these Advantages and more!
Luxury...
Privacy...
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
Naismith Hall...These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hasslefree living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all your worries
For information and a tour come by or call today!
FOR SALE
1 way jacket on American West to Tucson, AZ
from KLUE 11/22, best offer. 943, 8016.
2 OU Nebraska games. Nov. 19 in Norman.
John call between 7:08, pm. Best after excepted.
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and vintage used furniture, picture frames, jewelry, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playmats, toy figures, children's clothing, books, combo baseballs, slot machines. Maxfield Parrish, art decoration, tools, Royal Daimon, and as much more stuff as you will need to play with. It will be joy you will love. The museum is located in Humphrey. Open every Sun and Sun 105. For booth rental info call 842-736-3595.
AUDIO SALE - Cassette设备 Teac, JVC, Sony
from $75 - 180. Must sell. B41-9484
Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Comics: 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
For Sale # 86 Banish Road Bike, like new, . 88
Back Mountain Bike 841-809
FREE information on the NaK Police Photo radar. NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE 80$ on the BELL VECTOR 2 radars detector that will detect the vehicle. NOW in use. BELL OT-24, LX 744. Ks. 60433
For Sale: Lowrey electric organ Python
snakekin boots Larry 843-8034
GONT SURPULIS! New G.I. Overshoes, Combat boots, and safety loteo woln (Wollins gloves, socks, & mittens). Field Mats. Overcoats, Camouflage Clothing. Workwear. WORKWEAR. Open Sundays 10pm Christmas. 124 St. Marys Surplus Sales St. Marys Ks. 414-373-274
Go to Miami, FL for Thanksgiving and/or Christmas. Two round trip tickets available for a discount price. Call 749-5733 after 6:00 pm for
Inexpensive bridal boutique has lots of beautiful wedding costumes to offer. Call 842-8922, 2499 Iowa
| K2Ka |
| :--- |
| 195 cm Skin 195cm Slaton 77 and 61D, Nordir 80Bs Roots 50L, Rockford Fogate 163x plates Pods Portable. Camaro can convert Si Premier EQ and X Series to Call, Send 843 837 838
Underdogs to Minolta XGM camera, aperture preferred,
90mm f2 lens plus 70-130mm f3.8 zoom, camera
条件, A715 or best offer. Evenings, weekends
revey Mystic electric guitar, excellent condition $300 and Crate G-400 amp, almost two, $200, 841-297.
AUTO SALES
Moving Sale
Sun, 11:20 g:30a.m. to 7
Rock - roll! Thousands of used and rare albums to 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day, and Sunday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Every night. Sleep with the best. A cotton Futon for $88.88 (only at New Wave Futons, E1 8th St. E8 8th Street)
1974 Dodge Maxivan, 87,000 mi, runs great. $750 or best offer. 841-1955.
Now showing, Fig. 6 Graphics news southwestern art. Catch the new wave at New Wave Futsons. EI. North 82. 743 5778
Naismith Hall contract for sale. Will pay deposit Call 789-7401 or 749-7403
2713 Bonanza
Inside if bulm weather.
2714 Student needs!
1976 Olds. Omega, 350ci, cruise, tilt, rrefog,
AM/FM, Ptrr, Phrk, Pwnd, runs super, 160 mK,
750 ORD, 803 evens, wink
1979 Ford Mayverick, new tires, automatic, p.s. h,
wr, air blower, wired alarm, steering wheel,
drive assist, 2 d. speed, aCD, stereo, 78k maxi.
equipment condition, 11600-HOO Cal 814-7690
1983 Manzana, am FM/FM looks and
speaks well, aCD, steering wheel,
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords. Mercedes. Corvette. Chevys. Surplus.
Buyers Guide (1) 805-647-4000 Ex. S-178. Fiat.
Must sell. 1966 Ford. 78,000 miles. Run well.
LOST FOUND
Whomever found my I.D. s and called me, please return them now! 'M. Carlson.
$50.00 REWARD
No questions asked.
Leading to return of ladies full-length black leather coat.
black leather coat.
Great sentiment value,
lost on campus first
of November. Call
864-3851 from
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
HELP WANTED
APHARTMENT LEASING: Challenging position for outgoing person with good customer relation skills and sales experience. Part-time position, flexible with "Willing to work around class" facilities.
Arthur Porters now hire line lines and prep cooks. Must be available over X-mas break and have previous experience. Startage wages $4.00 per hour. Students of Massachusetts about Buffalo's Smokehouse.
Attention: Sub & Snuff has immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above, avg start salary. Apply between 2-5.168 W. 22rd
Calendar Assistant- Half-time student hourly position. Deadline: November 18 Contact Nora Cieland, University Relations 8643256
cottontown, inc. has staff positions open in the Residential Program. Currently an Assistant Attorney at Law is available on a weekend evening for above minimum wage. If interested please fill out an application 2001 8623-7005.
DJ/Producer for KLZR 8am-5pm, 30 min/wk.
Previous experience required. Letter or resume to Mr. Lee, P.O. Box 307, Lawrence, KS. 69460.
Freshmen, sophomores, and juniors; train in the summer to become Marine Corps officers after graduation. Avitation and financial aid available. Call 841-1821.
GOVENESS NEEDED for 2 small children ages 346 - 7:15am to 6:00pm weekdays in my home. Reliable car necessary. Call after 6:00pm weekdays, anytime weekends, 841-8448
help with car wash and carpet cleaning. One balcony has twice time (20:30 hours per week) three fourth-time (20:30 hours per week) four-three-time (20:30 hours per week) available December 12, 1986 through June 30, 1987. Three month-probation service. Serve as a custodian for a third
fice duties such as scheduling subcontractors, etc.; filing and assisting with special projects relating to the company's work; knowledge of procedures and practices. Ability to operate in key calculator and typewriter at interview. Prefer
tion of typing skills required at interview. Prefer some knowledge of business forms. Salary: $25,000 per hour. (Adapted from Kampas Geological Survey, 1983. Constant Avenue, Kasap, Georgia.) Formats: KS 6064, or complete form (attach a copy to desk). Applicant's desk. Moore Mall. Applications received by 4:00 p.m., Friday, December 2, 1988, will be mailed to:
Immediate开销s with flexible hours for
Farmers, Co-op Association
convenience store. See June in person. 23rd and
Haskell
Mass Street Dell. Now hire limited number of staff and watering stations. Must have dry availability and be available over X-mas break. Apply at 179 Massachusetts above Buffalo Bills fc.
VERSESA JOBS $900 $200 mo. Summer, Rm. All Counties, All fields. Free info Write UC PC JOB B5 K25N1. Corona Del Mar, MF. Examining the learning of having a time production shifts m-12 noon, 12 noon-4pm, 4 pm-4pm, 4 pm-12mldh, 12 midnight-14am, 4 pm-12mldh. Help with starting/writing $4.25 hr. If interested please call 8430-4300. Ask for part-time work
Part-time office assistant. 75% time.
Demonstrated word processing ability on Word
for the purpose of preparing reports, writing,
Accuracy and dependability. Enrolled in KU.
Prefer 1 year clinical experience. Be able to work
on projects for a variety of clients.
Johanning, Beach Center On Families & Disability.
4138 Hawthorn Hall 6045. Application deadline
Part time data entry/ audit personnel needed ma. to mo.六 days per week. Must be储备. dependable, and a self-starter. Computer experience a must. Send resume to Box 165, I19 8460.
DOCUMENTS
in town in over break? Need $$$ Love Kids? Apply to Children Learning Center 311
main for teacher and position. Flexible hours,
$5.10 per hour.
RESORT HOTEL, Cruisesmen, Airlines, & Amusement Parks. NOW accepting applications for summer jobs, internships, and career opportunities with a writing college Recreation Service: Write a
Part-time help wanted early evening hours clean-
ing commercial buildings. Sunday through Thurs-
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Reliable babyssist needed at home day-care Part-time, very light work, minimum wage. Contact: 842-2088
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TACO JOHNSON - now hiring Day & Earnings apply
all 1 locations 1068, Mass. 1628, or 110, W1
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10 a.m. - 3 a.m.
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Stop by Johnny's Classic
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PERSONAL
Amini H. and L. Adbe. Adam and Eve, which way is Wes. West, 99 Barney Rubble. How yours? 'How' the weather up there? OK, no more height jumps. Winnie
Be Ho.. Only 50 days to go! Sorry I missed the 100? luv always, JA BA.
\.M. Going slow is great with me. I enjoy every moment as it comes. I'm falling. J.
Burrito, Burrito, Burrito... Enchilada!
Gud, Happy, Today you cheese. Go Big!
Deder. These first two years are only the beginning.
Happy anniversary! I love you lots. Let's make the next fifty even better. Love, T-ster
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barrero, barrero, barrero
Curd. Happy B day you cheese. Go Big Red! The brew is for you! Club Wed.
Dl To a very special girl, HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
Ian Steve
Super Finally, you're 21 so go out and have fun! Happy Bithday Sweette! Love, Spanky
Fluff, Fluff, Fluff, Thanx Chuck. Sorry Tony I'm All Tied up. Remember - right inside
Room of doom - Sat. night N.F.C., Please - Way Cool JR.
MAX I: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT??
Nikki - Have a great day and Avoid Evil.
Thanks for being such a good friend during my
AT 6:00 LOVE YA, CONTINUE
J.L.V. - It's that time of year again. Congrats on everything. Love you lots. -C.
JEFFREY - HAPPY BIRTHDAY! BE READY
AT 6:00 LOVE YA, CORTEZ
Hey sunshine (Ryan B.) Why is Mr. Happy bathroom wall conversation? The Rose knows why.
Cool 17.
R.R. Did you enjoy watching? Pat Boone. P.S.
When do I get to watch you?
CALL 749-3490 to wish Scott a Happy 21st
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SUPERMAN, I LOVE YOU PUNKINHEAD.
SWEEN, romantic seeking男士 with a male full of clubs for a romantic weekend in Palm Beach. Call Sunshine at 841-9419
To Ory and How, What can you say. What can you do. The KTO ZELIQ was a dream come true! Unbelievable, huh? Congrats! Love, Nic You cannot be that of 'man' steel. Fat right.
BUS. PERSONAL
FALL Line SKI & Snowboard Tuning Complete tuning & repair. Home pickup and delivery Certified Tech. Call 842-5202.
GREAT DEAL Before you leave for Thanksgiving or Christmas break, be sure to have your all changed, the radiator Pushed and have those tires rotated and spin balanced. These are important. Remember that if you ever go anywhere, Phillips 66 wants to get acquainted by offering you these and more services for only $10, just to get to know you, and you. It’s a great deal! Call us 423-858-9157, W: 4 (m) 12am, F: 12pm.
delivery Certified Technician
Government Phone, Immigration,
Government Photo, Advanced fine art
portrait. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
artistic future. Tum Swell 749-1611
SKI COLODRADO $25/NITE FOR 2 Ten cozy fireplaces, kitchen/some fireplaces, Gamerium room, HBO pool table, sauna, Fish. X country ski. Ski Winter Park. Silver Lake. LAKES LODGE. Breeze/reservations. Grand Lake, Gates. 1-800-637-4248 Call today!
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
dependent - children with $25 deductible only
$66 month With parent slightly higher Kansas
Medical Insurance $79, 1161
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Low rates on scheduled flights worldwide
Call 1-800-777-0119
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
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The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
From MEISNER & MILSTEAD LIQUOR
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SERVICES OFFERED
Attention College Algebra Students - Need help?
Experienced math tutor available. 842-8499
Experienced math tutor available 842-8498.
Bodior Portraits are the still greatest gift idea.
Setting allows glamourized make-over and full posing assistance. For more information call
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
KR PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES Eckhahncase
FLEXIBLE TECHNOLOGY
PASSPORT $6.00 . Art & Design Buildin
Grounds
K. U. INFORMATION CENTER 864-3506 Campus, community events; University procedures, SUICIDE/CRISIS HELP, referrals 24 hours/day
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.)
prompt contraception and abortion services in lawrences. 841-5216.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 845-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbed into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of etter-quality type. 843-263, days of service.
SHUTTLE H from KC I Airport. Flying home for Thanksgiving or Christmas? $10. 843-2315.
Main Tasks Master in Masonry or other teaching experience. Call Alex at 841-7661.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Ser-
...y experienced Spanish 104-216
tutor/translator Results oriented, systematic approach
makes Espanol easier, even fun. 841-0574.
Toyota Quality Service
1 plus Typing. Letters, resumes, thesis, law typing, etc. 13 years experience. Call Terry 842-4754 or 843-2783 evenings and weekends.
2 Smart Typetting, Dissertation, Thesis,
Businesses and more. Spelling corrected
and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts.
Low lying types, 749-240.
Oil Change Service
842-3668 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm.
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses,
dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates
841-8633
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc. IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-6044
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Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable hours. Ten years experience.
Call evenings before 10.749-1961.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced pix page. East Lawrence.
Mrs. Mattila 841-1219.
$14.95
Dr. B.J. S'- Typing Service 841-5942 Term
Pound Laurel Thesis & Essay, etc.答后9价M.P.
ATTEN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS : Word processing service available near you. APA format experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak,
843-6708.
Papers, Legal. Thesis, etc. No calls after 9 P.M.
Dona's名校 Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, application forms. 862-747-271
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 723-4119. In Topeka. Accurate professional word processing service. IBM letter quality printer.
services. How often quality checks are
Expert Typist: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
HONOR EXEC TYPING. 841-8383
PEACE TVING
Toyota vehicles only, coupon required
PEACE ITINERARY
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 729-
Massachusetts, Wordpressing, Spelling check.
841-9232 or 841-2279.
SPEEDTERM Word Processing Service. Accurate and reliable, spelling checked. Call 843-276.
Any repairs or maintenance performed in our shop.
exd 12/1/88
**TYPED WORKPROCESSING.**Done on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes Letter-Quality printer. Legal exp. Laura, 542.3738. Leave Message.
TOYOTA QUALITY
**Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at**
***84-1091 Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday.
Type-writing word processing on p. C. lqr printer. Term
paper; theses, dissertations. Term papers.
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WDRHCTROPRS -Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these, resumes, commercial, IBM PC, ACP CPM Daisywho, dot matrix, since 1893
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TYPING
1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy, 847.7943 or Lisa, 841-195.
WANTED
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume base of two-bedroom townhouse. bus route, bus fireplace, pool, other driver, Call: 749-0993.
female roommate for Spring Semester. Good living arrangements very close to campus. Call 843-275.
Water closet. **Call**
Female roommate should second semester to
room, and male roommate a large 2 bedroom apartment.
$18.00/month + ½ utilities. Close to campus and
downown. Joelle 483-2324
Female roommate wanted to share a 2 bedroom apt. starting Jan. 1, 1980 Village Square Apts. $177 per mo. * 3* utilities. After 5pm. Call 312-654-3070
remote roommate wanted second semester. Own large bedroom and bathroom. On campus. Call Jackie 843-8068
Now hire part-time help. Apply in person Mon-
Kr. 2, 127, W. 6th.
2 M bac female roommate to save giant 2 BR apt. 1, bath/water/dryer, pool, huge balcony, on bus route 173/mo (negotiable), 2 utilities. Gary 841-0677
Non-smoking roommate needs to share house. Rent $150 + 3 utilities. Fully furnished, VCR, Microwave, Computer and furniture, close to campus Call 845-789-2800
Second Semester Female Roommate wanted
$180 and t2 utilities. Walking distance or bus
route 642 7885.
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1. You have to have your roommate's phone number: calls 823-7519 Male roommate wanted for Spring semester (women) Survise Village for $153 - 4 utilities outdoors Survise Village for $153 - 4 utilities outdoors
Roommate will move to share 4 bedroom apartment. Sublease avails a new room on his route #M4, Burger 849, Roommate need very Convenient & modern apartment on his route $100 • electric car
114 236
One needed to share beautiful new townhouse.
Private room and bath with all amenities. On bus route, reasonable rent. 749-7286
Rommate wanted Geretown Apartments 812-$974 a month · *upsets* Calm Tui 841-1666
Rommate wanted Broom apartment · Great location !
brops from campus & close to downtown $155
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spring semester female roommate wanted. Park
25, 2 hr. 1 bath. $180 + t₂ utilities. 604-699 Leave message.
SINGERS Well-known Motown-style a capella group re-forming. May need more info, high tenor with falconet 74214 for more info.
4-room 2 rooms for cool Meadowbrook
winter and also a lake after 749-7298
---
**160**
wanted: Someone to provide night support for disabled man from 10 a.m. to 8 a.m. Pays $12.90 per day. 749-1729
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119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By
By GARY LARSON
11. 18 Laison
16
Friday, November 18, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
AT&T sponsors space calls
Satellite dishes beam public's audio-visual messages at speed of light
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Earthhings who dream of reaching and touch extreater extraterral beings can thrust their voice and image billions of miles into space by making a special long-distance call.
By using "space phones" set up today through Saturday in the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. building atrium, the public will have a chance to communicate with anyone they are interested in, even they're dead, said AIT&T spokesman Brian Monahan.
About 30 hours of recorded audio-visual messages will be beamed to outer space by the telephone company's satellite dishes from Thanksgiving to New Year's during the early morning hours when they aren't being used for
Monahan said AT&T has 30-meter dishes across the country armed with communications satellites, and one or more of these satellites are deployed.
"They're very powerful," he said. "We're gonna crank these up."
The messages will travel at the speed of light in a straight line until they run into something. Monaha
me once until they run into something. Monahan said, "I think it appeals to the imagination — the idea of harling messages at the speed of light." he said. "And, of course, it's free, so if people don't get a call back they
communicate with possible extraterrestrials. When the Voyager spacecraft was launched in 1977, it carried a digital record of 118 photographs of Earth, 90 minutes of the world's greatest music and greetings in almost 60 human languages and one whale language.
can't be upst. The space phones are not the first high-tech attempt to
But what is new and exciting about this latest communication effort is that it is the first time non-scientists will be using it.
sending messages into space.
The messages are recorded as callers speak for 30 seconds into a microphone while being filmed by a television camera, he said.
"We thought it would be fascinating to find out what people would say if they had a chance to leave a message long after they were gone," said Monahan. "We expect to get some very serious thoughts on life, people's hopes, possibly for the coming year but also for the future of the universe."
the first day of AT&T's "Call the Universe" program coincided with the opening of its newest phone center at the company's headquarters and the 25th anniversary of its introduction of push-button phones.
As part of today's celebration, Michael Collins, a veteran of the Gemini and Apollo space missions, Terry Hart, a mission specialist on a flight of the space shuttle Challenger, and New York Mets pitcher Ron Darling were invited to appear and talk to the long-distance callers.
The Kansas Geological Survey also needs another unclassified staff position. Only this time, the agency's manager here is what the new employee will do.
RESEARCH
Continued from p. 1
"It's too early to tell," said Don Steeple, director of the geological survey. "It depends on several things, like how much money we get. We have no control until it comes out of the Legislature."
The survey needs to expand its water recovery programs, the budget said. Steeples said the map production and computer services
portions of the survey also needed additional funds.
"Every year we have a request in for additional staff," Steeples said "We only get it on rare occasions."
In his 13 years the survey, in his additional staff came in quite three of them.
The Institute for Life Span Studies, which employs more than 250 faculty and graduate students, would receive a staff member under the proposal.
"We have an incomparable amount of work with children and
older citizens at KU," Horowitz said. "We have a broad umbrella out of that institute.
But Richard Schiefelbush, the institute's director, won't worry about it until the institute gets the money.
“Until you get something like that, “it is so nebulous,” Schiefelbush said. You don’t formulate a committee to deal with that until you actually get the money.
The Center for International Programs also would add another classified staff member.
JONESTOWN
Continued from p. 1
men and a Temple defector were shot to death in an ambush at nearby Port Kaituna airstrip, Eleven people, including Richard Dwyer, a U.S. diplomat in Guiana, were wounded.
Ryan had flown to Guyana to investigate reports that Jones was abusing his followers.
Jonestown ranged over 300 acres carved from dense tropical rain forest 140 miles from Georgetown, the
capital. Dozens of cottages, workshops
and dormitories sat in tidy
rows.
Pursuring the ideals of socialism and racial harmony, Jones and his 960 disciples - 70 percent of them black, 25 percent white and the rest mulatto, Hispanic, American Indian and Asian - cultivated a grove musc
ESQUIRE BARBER SERVIC
TRACEY GARCIA
Haircuts .. $6.50
For appointments call 842-3699
2323 Ridge Court
The site is littered with artifacts: a rusted filing cabinet where Jones'
and vegetable garden, raised chickens and pigs, made their own shoes, educated their children, and cared for the old and sick.
Saxophone
Now, Jonestown has all but vanished, stripped by villagers and consumed by a fire a few years ago.
Tonight at the Jazzhaus
FRI & SAT NOV.18&19
THE HOMESTEAD GRAYS
The Jazzhaus
3265 Massachusetts 749-1120
Lawrence, Kansas
OUR WOOLENS
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ADDRESS ADDRESS
Hours: Monday-Thursday 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Friday-Saturday 11 a.m.-3 a.m. Sunday 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH
NAME___
ADDRESS_
You can win a 1989 red Pontiac LeMans (am/fm radio, 5-speed, 2dr. car)
10,
Be at the KU-MU Football Game on Saturday November 19th,Kickoff at 1:00 p.m. With a valid student,faculty,or staff ID,you can get into the game for $1.00
Car courtesy of Pontiac and certain KS and MO Pontiac Dealers. All KUAC employees and their immediate families are not elegible to win. Further details available the day of the game. *Vehicle winner must have a valid driver's license, be able to produce proof of insurance and be responsible for appropriate taxes required in the state of registration.
---
---
Vol. 99, No. 61 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday November 21,1988
Protesters rush U.S. Embassy in South Korea
The Associated Press
SEOUL, South Korea — Protesters armed with iron pipes attacked the U.S. Embassy's information office early today after gaining entry following an explosion at the main gate. Eight police officers were injured overpowering the assailants, officials said.
About 15 people rushed the building in the heart of Seoul after "a loud explosion" at the front door, accorded with police officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.
No U. S. diplomats or other building staff were injured in the attack on the office of the United States Information Department (U.S.), the embassy said in a statement.
There was no immediate word on the identity of the attackers, but some Korean officials said they were involved in a radical students or dissidents.
The attackers forced their way into the building's lobby, but did not get into the building itself, the diplamets told the reporters. "It's the interior of the corridor" apparently.
using iron pipes," an embassy statement said.
Korean police used tear gas against the assailants and then overpowered them in a struggle. Eight police officers were injured, one seriously, in the incident, which talked about 15 minutes, officials said.
Anti-American radicals have attacked American targets in Seoul in recent months. Students set fire to nine vehicles in an attack Thursday under the guise of a military housing complex in Seoul and injured two American soldiers.
The USIS office, which provides a library and other services for Koreans, has been attacked several times by radicals in recent years.
Radicals are demanding the withdrawal of the 42,000 U.S. troops based in South Korea under a mutual defense treaty.
American forces have been based in South Korea since U.S. forces intervened to aid the south against a 1950 invasion by communist North Korea that triggered the Korean War.
Road to freedom hard for refugees
After riot, many Cubans still waiting
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — A year after Cubans from the Mariel boatlift rotted at two prisons for a chance at freedom, thousands are out on parole, but more are falling back into what could be lifetime custody.
Many of the thousands of Cubans held by the Immigration and Naturalization Service will be freed more quickly because of changes made in the review process as a result of the agreement that ended the riots, but others will have to await new laws or the whim of the Cuban government.
Critics of the process acknowledge it has increased the number of Cubans freed but say it has other problems.
"We're not saying some of (the Cuban prisoners) in there aren't bad," said Gary Leshaw, Legal Aid lawyer who has represented the detainees. "We're saying we're not sure the system is designed to sort out the people who do not belong there."
The detainees are a minority among the 125,000 Cubans who were held captive in Manila from Florida'1984' from the Cuban port of Mariel in 1980. Many of those who
A few were arrested on arrival for crimes committed in Cuba. Others were convicted of crimes here and turned over to the INS for deportation after finishing their sentences. But Cuba wouldn't take them back.
arrived were criminals or mental patients freed from jails and hospitals.
Since the detainees never were officially admitted to the United States, they have existed in legal limbo as "excludable aliens." Courts have tried to release them and have to released and could be excluded without legal protections.
Then rioting erupted at federal prisons in Oakdale, La., and Atlanta after the State Department's Nov. 20, 1987, announcement that Cuba had agreed to take back more than 2,500 of the 3,000 Mariel refugee lockups up in Guatemala. The army wielding crudely-fashioned weapons, took 145 hostages and burned several buildings. One inmate was killed in the 11-day uprising in Atlanta.
The uprisings ended Dec. 4 after the government agreed to a moratorium on deportations and a one-year停业 period in the treatment review of each INS decision.
STRESSING OUT
Pressure overload may yield ailments
PRATT © B
By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer
Scott Hendrick barely has time to talk about how much school work he has to do in the next few days.
"Man, I'm flooded," the Lawrence junior said, leafing through a Reader's Guide in Watson Library. "I've got two tests and a speech to do Friday, and a 10-page paper due on Monday. Here it is Wednesday and I'm just starting to research my paper."
He's not alone.
As finals and project deadlines approach, many students are in academic overdrive. Frantic with too much to do and too little time to do, Kansas students can be stressing out all over campus.
And while some experts say stress is natural and can be a motivator, in excess it can yield emotional and physical consequences.
"Stress is known to cause severe anxiety, where a person is just not able to do anything. It can cause depression and it can cause ulcers, among other things," said Janine Demo, coordinator of health services at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Add to that list ailments such as headaches, insomnia, muscle tension, acne, constipation and shortness of breath. If you find yourself unusually irritable or apathetic, or if an other minor illness leaves you bedridden, stress might be a factor.
Arvella Frazier, Lawrence graduate student, is the co-director of KU's Wellness Center. The Wellness Center, 138 Robinson Center,
provides nutrition analysis, computerized stress inventory and
tapes at no cost to students.
Illustration by Gary Pratt/KANSAN
Frazier said that a person's college years often were the most stressful.
"A lot of times people are suffering stress from an unhealthy relationship," she said. "Or maybe they aren't getting the kind of support they need from their family."
could be frustrating as well.
"Sometimes a person's grades aren't where they need to be, their scholarships are on the line and they're going to blow it," she said.
James Lichtenberg, director of the counseling center, said that people sometimes sought the help of the counseling center, 116 Bailey Hall, when they had precious few hours until their deadlines.
"Usually we try to help them examine their alternatives," he said. "But when they're at that
point, we try to help them with time management, so they will use their remaining time wisely."
In cases of extreme hardship,
Lichtenberg said that counselors had spoken to instructors to delay a deadline.
Although Hendrick said his situation wasn't that severe, anxiety about failure and procrastination was there, he then paralyzed in front his books.
Please see STRESS, p. 8, col. 1
Stress may affect immune system
Kansan staff writer
By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer
affects the immune system.
Several KU researchers have joined scientists across the country investigating the mysteries surrounding the relationship of stress to the body.
Can breaking up with a girlfriend or boyfriend really make it more likely you will catch a cold? Researchers have been learning how the human body measures intangibles such as an emotional state.
Douglas Denny, professor of psychology, and his colleagues have been examining the relationship between a person's recent traumas and their impact on anxiety. He has been trying to establish how extreme stress
Although psychoimmunology, the study of the brain on the immune system, is somewhat controversial among science purists, researchers continue to gain more empirical data.
by employing common, but unreliable questionnaires. The questions such as "Do you feel sick?" were paired with questions asking whether something bad had happened.
"We found that those who had recent life stress events consistently reported that they were sick," he said. "But the questionnaires left us unsatisfied."
Denny and his associates began their research
"We never knew how much of that was'Well, I
Please see IMMUNE, p. 8, col. 1
HOPE winner credits his students
1985
Valentino J. Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, celebrates after winning the 1988 HOPE award. Stella's award was presented by the senior board of class officers and Chancellor Gene A. Budig before Saturday's football game against Missouri at Memorial Stadium.
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
For Valentino J. Stella, winning the HOPE award reflects the strong relationship between him and his students.
"The HOPE award is a two-way street," said Stella, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry. "If students genuinely think you are concerned about them, and if you teach effectively, they will band together."
"I'm absolutely honored," Stella said yesterday. "It's one of the neatest things that that's ever happened to me. I feel so humbled by the whole situation—knowing that the students feel that way about our teaching."
That's exactly what Stella's students did, selecting him to receive the Honor for Outstanding Progressive Educator award. Before the football game Saturday, the senior batch of class officers and Chancellor candidates were interviewed with the award. Seniors voted for the award Wednesday and Thursday.
"I encourage them to come see me," he said. "I try to make them understand that anytime they are feeling overwhelmed or are in open-door policy. That's genuine, that's not playing up to the students."
Stella said being available to his students was one aspect of his teaching that appealed to his students
Lance Good, Dodge City senior, agreed that Stella's approachability was one of his strong suits.
"He's always available, whether
Stella said he always tried to remain human for his students, laughing at himself when he made mistakes.
Stella's sense of humor is another appealing quality, Good said. He said he tried to relate the material to humorous stories.
"If I make a mistake in class, I
admit it." Mr. Zuckerberg said, minding
in a gaze of humor.
it's in his office or in the hall." Good said.
Stella said he worked to achieve a middle ground in laughing with his students and being an authority figure.
"Some teachers are too close to their classes, and some are too stand-offish. I try to balance the two roles and make a role-model for my students."
Stella provides an inspiring example through his breakthrough research on a drug to be injected into emergency seizure patients. The drug, which he hopes will be approved in the next year, is safer than the drug now used for the treatment of seizures.
He said what was special about his research was that very few drugs were developed at the university level. Instead, most are developed with multi-million dollar budgets by corporations.
"It gives me credibility as a researcher and as a teacher," Stella said. "You can balance the two, but it takes a lot of work."
Kansan staff writer
Families share feast with foreign students
By Deb Gruver
For about the past ten years, the Homestay program has placed foreign students in the homes of families during Thanksgiving break.
The Homestay program at the University of Kansas is making sure that 44 foreign students won't have to eat turkey sandwiches out of a vending machine this Thanksgiving break.
Sara Martin, assistant director for foreign student services at KU, said this year foreign students' response to the Homestay program, which will be from Nov. 23 to 27, has been larger than usual.
"A typical year sees about 20 to 25 students placed and about 15 to 20 families" participating in the program, Martin said. "I think the increase in part is due to word-of-mouth."
Mohammad Sattar, a sophomore from Karachi, Pakistan who participated in last year's pro-peacejoy監察 his stay in Overland Park.
"We were on the road the whole break," Sattar said. "I enjoyed that a lot. I got to see a lot of museums and historical places, like Harry S. Truman's house. I had an excellent time."
To be placed, Sattar had to sign up in Martin's office and go through a brief interview with her.
"I just try to make sure that they understand what the program is," Martin said. "We talk about etiquette types of things."
Martin matches students with families in early November. Most families hear about the program from other families who have previously taken part in the program.
This year 33 families are participating. About two-thirds of these families have been hosts to students before.
"The responses from families are overwhelmingly positive," Martin said. "These kinds of reactions really can stand the test of time."
Alice Bennett, a Shawnee resident, was host to a woman from Malaysia last year and has invited her to dinner. The husband and son during this break.
"We found it to be a really good experience," Bennett said. "You can both learn an lot from it."
The foreign student placed with the Bennetts this year will spend Thanksgiving with their immedi-
---
Please see GIVING, p. 12, col. 3
2
Monday, November 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
Clear and crisp
High: 47°
Low: 26°
We should see mostly sunny skies today with a high of 47 degrees. Tonight's low will fall to 26 degrees.
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
4/20
Mostly sunny
Omaha
4/21
Mostly sunny
Goodland
4/28
Mostly sunny
Salina
4/25
Mostly sunny
Topska
4/24
Mostly sunny
Columbia
4/27
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
4/28
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
5/28
Mostly sunny
Wichita
4/26
Mostly sunny
Chanute
4/26
Mostly sunny
Springfield
4/26
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Leigh Anne Stout.
Temperature we today's high and tonight's low.
5-Day
Tuesday
Mostly sunny
4/28
HIGH LOW
Wednesday
Mostly sunny
50/29
Thursday
Mostly sunny
49/29
Friday
Partly cloudy
48/27
Saturday
Partly cloudy
48/28
The nation
Seattle
6/38
Denver
4/26
Phoenix
70/43
Dallas
54/42
Fronts:
one occluded
warm stationary
Forecast
Clear and crisp
High:47°
Low:26°
We should see mostly sunny skies today with a high of 47 degrees. Tonight's low will fall to 26 degrees.
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
42/20
Mostly sunny
Omaha
44/21
Mostly sunny
Goodland
48/25
Mostly sunny
Salina
45/24
Mostly sunny
Topaka
46/24
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
47/28
Mostly sunny
Columbia
48/27
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
47/28
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
50/28
Mostly sunny
Wichita
49/26
Mostly sunny
Chanute
48/26
Mostly sunny
Springfield
50/29
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Leigh Anne Stout
Temperatures are on a Monday's high and tonight's low.
Tuesday Mostly sunny 47/28 HIGH LOW Wednesday Mostly sunny 50/29 Thursday Mostly sunny 49/29 Friday Partly cloudy 48/27 Saturday Partly cloudy 48/28
Seattle 49/38
Denver 46/26
Chicago 41/22
New York 44/26
Los Angeles 60/50
Phoenix 79/43
Dallas 54/42
Miami 73/69
Frants:
cold
occluded
warm
stationary
Late-season storm nears Florida coast
The Associated Press
MIAMI — A late-season Caribbean depression grew into Tropical Storm Keith off Mexico yesterday, and forecasters expected it to reach hurricane strength as it veered northward through the Gulf toward Florida.
The National Hurricane Center upgraded the system to a tropical storm, the 11th of the season, at 11 a.m. EST yesterday, and forecasters said western Cuba would be pummed by the storm later in the day.
Tropical storm watches were posted for neighboring Belize and Mexico's Yucatan.
Winds of 50 mph, accompanied by up to 10 inches of rain, hit islands off the Honduran coast yesterday and another day later. In a poor northernrior of that Central American nation.
Forecaster Jim Lushine said data indicated that Keith would curve through the Gulf of Mexico and hit Florida coast by early tomorrow with fights of 75 to 80 mph. It should back head out to the Atlantic tomorrow夜.
"It should be at minimal hurricane strength when it hits Florida," he said anywhere from the Florida Keys to Louisiana, that's the major area of concern.
Keith was expected to reach minimal hurricane strength over the next 24 to 36 hours, with top winds reaching 80 mph. Lushine said.
Suspect in rape sought
By a Kansan reporter
Lawrence police are searching for an unidentified man who raped a local woman in northwest Lawrence Thursday night.
At a press conference on Friday, Lt. Mike Hall of the Lawrence Police Department said that a man approached the woman outside of her home at about 6 p.m. Thursday. The man gained the woman's confidence by telling her that he was the brother of her paper boy. The man said he was collecting bills for his brother because it was dark.
"The incident is unusual in Lawrence in that it's a rape and robbery of a woman in a residential area." Hall said.
The suspect is described as a white male in his late 20s, who is about 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs about 180 pounds. He has dark-brown, crew-cut hair that has been greased or moused to stand up.
Hall said that raps usually did not occur in that area, northwest of Sixth Street. He said it was also unusual because of the man's approach.
"We don't wish to release a lot of details of the crime now," Hall said. "We are still in the early stages of the investigation."
The police ask anyone who has seen the man or has information incident to call 911 or the detective division of the police department.
Hall said the woman was in her 20s and did not live alone, although she was alone at the time of the rage.
The man took several items from the home and left the area on foot, Hall said. He did not say what the man took.
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A suspect attempted to gain entry to a house in the 1200 block of Kentucky Street early Friday morning. The suspect $80 damage. Lawrence police said.
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■ A color television and stereo equipment valued together at $1,785 were taken early Friday morning from an apartment in the 900 block of Kentucky Street, Lawrence police said. The suspect gained entry to the apartment by kicking in the door, causing $50 damage.
First snowman
Police Record
- An unidentified man pointed a handgun, which may have been a starter's pistol, at two people who
Claudia Andres, 2, builds a snowman outside of Stouffer Place. Claudia saw snow for the first time yesterday after a snowstorm blanketed Lawrence with 1.31 inches of snow Saturday night.
Sandra J. Watts/KANSAN
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were walking in the 800 block of New Hampshire Street early Saturday morning. The man reportedly pointed the pistol and said, "You have a lot of nerve," then got into the passenger seat of a car which then drove away. Neither of the two victims recognized the man, Lawrence police said.
- Carpet valued at $8,800 has been taken from a warehouse in the 200 block of Perry Street over the last two months. The building is kept locked and there was no evidence of a break-in. Lawrence police said.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 21, 1988
Campus/Area
3
College enrollment reopens tomorrow
General education classes still available
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
by Gloria Hobs
Kansan staff writer
Trying to appease 3,200 students, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is reopening enrollment tomorrow.
Students who did not get 15 hours during their first enrollment appointments may return to the enrollment center from 8:30 to 11:45 a.m. and 1 to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow for completion enrollment.
But general education requirements are not always what students need. Howard Hoeven, Lenexa senior, is enrolled in 12 hours, despite enrolling the third day, and needs two courses in his major to graduate next December. When he left the enrollment center, he was frustrated.
Courses that were closed initially are still closed, but many courses that fulfill general education requirements are open, said James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences.
"I felt like completion enrollment was just going to fill up my schedule when courses I didn't need — just to give me a complete schedule," said Hove.
Hoeven needs two communication studies classes to graduate with a personnel administration degree, but both classes were closed when he said he was concerned he wouldn't get them in time to graduate.
Carothers said college administrators were doing everything they could help seniors.
Adams said that students would get classes they need if they are willing to be flexible.
"We will continue to work with graduating seniors to assure the completion of their degrees," he said.
, A
Departments that closed the fastest, in order of number of turnaways during enrollment, were communication studies. English, psychology and sociology. Others were political science, human develop-
sciences
Robert Adams associate dean of liberal arts and
ment and family life and history
But for many students, classes are available, Carothers said. For freshmen and sophomores, some courses that are open are anthropology, economics, geography, geology, U.S. history, chemistry and Western Civilization 203.
To get the most from enrollment completion, Carothers suggested to: ■ not try to enroll in the same classes as before.
■ read the catalog to learn what alternates fill general education requirements.
- check the closed/open class list outside the enrollment center
■ use the enrollment assistance system prior to going to the enrollment center to determine courses that are available.
Coalition stages anti-racism rally
With EAS, the computer enrollment system, students may determine in advance which open courses will fill their individual requirements. Students may obtain an individualized diskette in 102 Strong Hall.
Robert Adams, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said the program was updated twice a day during enrollment, and will continue to be updated for completion enrollment.
Adams said that students would get classes they need if they are willing to be flexible.
Chants of "Hey, hey. Ho, ho. Klan violence has got to go." were shouted as about 250 people attended an anti-racism rally Friday morning on the lawn in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall.
By Cindy Harger
Kennan staff writer
"They may not be the courses they want at the times they want, but they will get classes." Adams said.
Kansan staff writer
Dan May, Lawrence senior, speaks against racism, discrimination and supremacist groups at a protest in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall. The protest, which was conducted Friday afternoon, was sponsored by the Academic Freedom Action Coalition.
The rally, which was sponsored by the Academic Freedom Action Coalition, was staged to let supremacist know that the university is not located at the University of Kansas or in Lawrence, truly organizers said.
"We're not trying to say that they have the right to speak or don't have the right to speak," said David Scheuer. Honolulu sophomore and one of the principal organizers of the rally, "What we're trying to say today is that this is not the place for them to organize."
The rally began at 11:30 as about 40 people marched in a circle on the lawn. The marchers carried signs and yelled anti-supremacist slogans, such as "NO KKK; no fascist USA."
Maryland State University
Dan May, Lawrence senior, who was also one of the principal rally organizers, said that he hoped the rally would stop the Klan from organizing in Lawrence. May said he was worried that they might organize here because he saw Klan members at the rally on Wednesday, that they were considering Lawrence for a claver.
He said he also wanted to prevent racial conflicts in New Orleans, Missouri State University in Marrueche.
May said racism already existed at the University of Kansas. He said he received two threats on his telephone answering machine after he began working there, and that said, "Anyone with views like you should die."
Thursday night, before Friday's rally, "white power was saddled on them; they were around caught in a conflict."
"They may just seem like recruiting schools, but to minorities it's a bloody threat," May said.
As the crowd of mostly KU students gathered, several speakers began taking their turns addressing the group from the top of a table outside. Some of the speakers who were there came out of the crowd to give their onions.
David Katzman, professor of history, said that David the Klan to speak on campus took away academic freedom.
Controversies from last year's Klan visit to KU were rehashed as some speakers debated the Klan.
"You have no obligation to invite people on campus when they are going to intimidate members of the campus community." Katzman said. "We should not be encouraging it."
He said that the Klan only became public when
they were given an open forum. He compared them to cockroaches. In the light of day, they
But William Dann, Lawrence resident, spoke to
baying the Skim from speaking.
"This is not to voice support for the Klan, or racism violent or Nazis, but it's a basic right that every citizen has." Dann said. "No matter how right or how wrong he is, he should be allowed to
voice his opinion."
Judging by crowd reaction, Aaron Lucas, a Chattanooga, Tenn., senior* had the favored opinion. He said he didn't think the Klan should be speak, because they actively opposed minorities.
"We are all people, whether we are white, black, green . . . we all want to live, but anyone opposed to us living, we should do something about." Lucas said. "To live, that's what I'm worried about."
MELANIE ROBERTS
For the talent segment of the Mr. Ebony contest, Michael Brown, St. Louis sophomore, performed his Michael Jackson impersonation Saturday night at the Kansas Union.
Black explosion Ms. Essence, Mr. Ebony for 1988 selected
By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer
Two KU students were honored Saturday night for their integrity and grace in Black Explosion 1988, this year's Ms. Essence and Mr. Ebony competition.
More than 250 people gathered in the Kansas Union Ballroom, which was decorated with balloons and streamers, for the seventh annual pageant sponsored by the Black Student Union.
Delynn McGibbray, Wichita sophomore, was crowned Ms. Essence. Kevin Harrison, Wichita sophomore, was named Mr. Ebony after saying that blacks should encourage each other to rise to greatness. McGibbray said she planned to help people who are underprivileged after she graduates.
The pageant's purpose was to provide the campus with black student role models and promote cultural awareness, said Ardra Tippet, coordinator of the pageant.
Each of the nine candidates spoke briefly during the open casual wear competition
Contestants competed in three areas: a talent competition, a casual wear competition in which they addressed the audience and a business wear section in which they answered impromptu questions. They also performed a group dance routine.
W,
We need to encourage our brothers and sisters to be the next Malcolm X. So we can truly say out loud, 'I'm black and I'm proud.'
— Kevin Harrison
Wichita sophomore
Mr. Ebony 1988
about ways in which black students could unite and further enhance minority support systems at the University of Kansas.
Clarissa Jackson, a Wichita freshman who was named first runner-up to Ms. Essence, said people need to work together to erase discrimination at KU.
"I think black student leaders are especially important on a predominantly white campus like KU," she said.
Contestant Byron Myrick. Chicago junior, performed a comedy routine for the pageant's talent portion, but injected strains of seriousness into his five-minute routine.
"Here tonight, we are starting to come together as a race on this campus, and I think that's important," he said. "I love it."
Several acts received standing ovations during the talent competition. Onlooker Pamela Jones, Kansas Cjty, Kan., junior, said this was the highlight of the pageant.
"I have been very impressed with all of the contestants," Jones said. "They've done a really nice job."
Harrison, who was chosen by the judges as Mr. Ebony, said the advancement of blacks in society hinged on black unity.
"We need to encourage our brothers and sisters to be the next Malcolm X," he said, as the crowd began to applaud. "So we can truly say out loud, 'I'm black and I'm proud.'"
Elonda Gatewood, who participated in KU's Ms. Essence and Mr. Ebony pageant two years ago, and attended last year's pageant, said Saturday's pageant was the best she had seen.
"Parts of it could've run smoother," said Gatewood, who is now a junior at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. "But I thought it came off very nicely."
Kevin Benbow, Kansas City, Kan. freshman, was named first runner-up to Mr. Ebony, and Michael Brown, St. Louis, Mo. freshman, was second runner-up. Coleen Dodson, Little Rock. Ark. freshman, was second runner-up to Ms. Essence.
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Monday, November 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
-
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Students deserve a break earlier than Thanksgiving
Opinion
It's not likely that it will ever happen. In fact, it's practically impossible.
Still. it would be nice. Really nice.
It would be a "Fall Break." A stress-free week during the beginning of November would be a welcome addition to the calendar.
for eight weeks before Spring Break.
Spring Break is a needed chance to be relieved of responsibility and pressure caused by classes, tests, job hunting, etc., for just a week.
for just a week.
This fall, KU students leave Wednesday for a brief and very welcome Thanksgiving vacation after completing 11 consecutive weeks of class.
It has been a long stretch of classes. And it is followed by a brief, family-oriented holiday. For some, it is a relaxing holiday. For others it is mainly a chance to catch up on homework.
Thanksgiving vacation is a welcome break from school. But wouldn't it be nice if it had come about three weeks earlier?
Considering all the pressures on students today, a break from class would give students more time to recharge the brain and use a break.
But this probably will remain a pipe dream because the fall academic calendar is scheduled tightly. Classes already start before Labor Day and end only two days before Christmas. Adding a week for vacation would mean starting classes around Aug. 15.
An easier solution — except that it would require national legislation — would be to move Thanksgiving to October. After all, that would be close to the end of harvest. And it would be farther away from the Christmas holiday. And it would be about eight weeks after the semester starts.
Many students would be more than happy to give thanks for such a break.
Todd Cohen for the editorial board
NASA can't allow cover-up
The good feelings still remain from the last successful space shuttle launch. Americans' spirits got a much-needed boost from the Discovery launch in October after the Challenger disaster in 1986. On the surface, it appears that NASA successfully has restructured its management system and is on its way back.
But there are insinuations that NASA hasn't come forward with all the details of the Challenger disaster and that the administration is covering up flaws in the system that some think will lead to another shuttle tragedy in the next two to three missions.
Robert Hotz, a member of the presidential commission that issued a report on the disaster, said recently that NASA was so smug about never having had an accident that it had no plans or organization capable of handling one.
Because NASA was not prepared, many say, it decided to cover up most of the facts about the tragedy.
up most of the ocean. For example, NASA told the media that the Challenger crew cabin was vaporized at the time of the explosion. But recent reports have mentioned evidence that the astronauts were alive for up to $2_{1/2}$ minutes after the explosion and didn't die until the cabin struck the ocean.
But NASA managed to convince the nation that the astronauts were killed instantly.
As one newspaper report said, the image of the shuttle crew, conscious, aware of their fate, plunging for $2_{1/2}$ minutes toward the ocean at 200 mph was the last thing NASA needed.
Some people believe that not only did NASA hang tough in not revealing all the information from the Challenger disaster to the presidential commission,but that any future mistakes will be covered up, too, until another disaster forces another investigation.
"We have the feeling that nothing much has changed," Hotz said. "The problem is not that they'll get one (shuttle) off. They'll get one off and maybe two or three, but they're heading for trouble down the road."
for trouble down the road. That trouble could take the form of anything from launch delays to another disaster involving loss of life, something that surely would ground the shuttle for an indefinite amount of time, maybe permanently. And that is the last thing NASA or the United States needs.
Mark Tilford for the editorial board
News staff
Todd Cohen ...Editor
Michael Horak ...Managing editor
Julie Adam ...Associate editor
Stephen Wade ...News editor
Michael Merschel ..Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ..Campus editor
Craig Anderson ..Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ..Photo editor
Dave Eames ..Graphics editor
Jill Press ..Arts/Features editor
Tom Ehlen ..General manager, news advisor
Business staff
Greg Knipp ...Business manager
Debra Cole ...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper ...Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop ...National sales manager
Missarasuthith ...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon ...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart ...Production manager
Michelle Garland ...Astill production manager
Michael Lehman ...Classified manager
Jane Hines ...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be type, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
writer will perp. him.
The will reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Letters, columns and cartoons are the opinion of the writer or cartoonist and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials, which appear in the left-hand column, are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, KA. 6045, 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 awareness, KA. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
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Postmaster/Mail, Lawrence, Kanus, 66045
Shaffer
"THEY SURE LOOKED LIKE
SANDINISTAS TO ME."
CONTRA
CIVILIANS
KLINe
Modern warriors' battle cry: Charge it!
Remember "The Day After"?
Filmed in Lawrence, the movie employed a realism unequalled until "Roger Rabbit" to show the effects of a nuclear attack on the United States. Remember "America!"
In this 1967 movie, Kris Kristofferson fought almost single-handedly against oppression by stormtrooper-like United Nations forces that, under Soviet control, occupied the United States.
Remember "Red Dawn"?
After Soviet and Cuban paratroopers invaded North America, a band of teenage guerrillas calling themselves "the Wolverines" attacked the enemy from a stronghold in the Rockies. In the end, the United States repelled the invasion and erected a monument to the young heroes.
Hollywood is particularly good at holding up an object — they say it's a mirror, but it's really a surrealistic sketch — and showing how we are doomed to destroy ourselves.
We're still alive and intact as a nation. And the cinema prophets of cataclysm have slipped from favor with Siskel & Ebert. Themes of invasion and destruction, real or not, are hackeyed and dull.
Derek Schmidt
But more salient warnings brought by these doomday productions still linger. The three movies shared another common element: destruction of automobiles.
S. K. Shah
Concern is high about the risk war poses to cars. Just ask select holders of Citibank Preferred Visa cards.
A pamphlet recently sent to some cardholders told them that they had earned auto rental insurance as a bonus for their membership. But the policy was somewhat limited.
Staff columnist
"This plan does not cover losses caused or contributed to by; operation of the vehicle contrary to terms of the rental agreement; wear and tear; gradual deterioration; insects or vermin; inherent vice or damage; hostile or warlike action in time of peace or war; any weapon of war employing atomic fission or a radioactive force; insurrection, rebellion; revolution, civil war; usurped power or action taken by government or public authority in hindering, combatting or defending against such an occurrence; seizure or destruction under quarantine or custom regulations; confiscation by order of any government or public authority; transportation of contraband or illegal trade; nuclear reaction, nuclear radiation or radioactive contamination."
So the Defense Department should not rent a fleet of Ryders and drive them into battle.
And if you rent a Pinto from Hertz and take it on vacation in Beirut, you do so at your own risk. Don't park it near Cheronobyl. And don't expect to be charged for smuggling drugs from Mexico in the hatchback.
I suppose that such a contract should be reassuring. At least the company is concerned about having claims to settle in the aftermath of a nuclear exchange. But insurance that explicitly-
refuses to pay in case of military disaster must be at least uncommon, perhaps unprecedented.
Romans' charit insurance probably would not have invalidated itself in case of barbarian attack. And few historians believe that William the Conqueror had to study the fine print of his insurance policy before launching his invasion north from Normandy.
When President Eisenhower warned about the military-industrial complex, the insurance industry probably was not the cause of his concern. And few opponents of increased defense spending have argued that it would have a negative impact on automobile rentals.
Paul Kennedy's recent bestseller "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers" documented the historical relationship between military spending and the civilian economy. But even his research did not predict that the historical trend would manifest itself in the form of rental insurance.
Perhaps, then, this is true: Where academics fail, comedians succeed.
It it took the Citibank Preferred Visa pamphlet to suggest the military-auto insurance link.
This newest form of the evolving relationship between strategy and peacetime finances was forecast in 1985 by Jan Barrett in the comedy trade paper "Just for Laughs." What Ceasar would have said in attacking 20th century America:
"Veni, vidi, Visa." (I came, I saw, I went shopping.)
Derek Schmidt is an Independence junior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Bugged by article
We, two concerned Miller Hall residents, would like to respond to the article," "Students share space with cockroaches," which appeared in the Nov. 10 Kansan.
When she first glanced at the headline, one of our fellow Millerites said, "Egad! Who has to share space with cockroaches? That's terrible!" Upon reading the article, she, as well as many other Miller residents, were surprised and appalled to discover that the article was referring to Miller Hall.
We were all a bit confounded as to where the figures concerning our "cockroach problem" came from. According to the article, it is common to see three cockroaches an hour in the cafeteria at Miller. First of all, we have no cafeteria. Instead, Miller has seven small, individual kitchens. This is actually an advantage to controlling the cockroach population. We don't have the quantities of food that cafeterias have to attract cockroaches.
Second, unless the observer of cockroaches in our "cafeteria" tagged each one, how can she claim that she saw three different cockroaches an hour? Third, we'd like to know who had the
time or desire to sit down and count cockroaches as a nightly extra-curricular activity. Even if there were three different cockroaches, unless she was there observing them every night, such observations cannot possibly be consistent.
we admit that we spotted cockroaches at the beginning of the year. However, the problem was greatly minimized because of daily cleaning and weekly spraying of the kitchens. Ken Stoner, director of student housing, said in the article that some cockroaches always survive extermination attempts. The goal, he is said to control and minimize the pests. And we feel that this has been accomplished. We resent the negative implications about Miller Hall, which probably have had a significant impact on students who are considering applying for residence here, especially since the "problem" is virtually non-existent.
Yvonne Guzman Augusta sophomore
Megan Crawford Wichita sophomore
"Pud"? Hardly
I would like to respond to several comments made in the recent article on "pud" classes.
First, having taught several undergraduate human development and family life classes and having some knowledge of a number of others, I can safely say that I don't know of any that
quancy to "pud" status. This includes the self-paced courses which, semester after semester, continue to be an unwelcome surprise to students who enroll in them thinking that little work will be required for a good grade.
Second, having bachelor's and master's degrees in engineering from the Illinois Institute of Technology and Brown University, respectively, and now being a doctoral candidate in HDFL, I also can safely say that psychology has as much substance as any other discipline, and that psychology classes can take as much time as engineering classes.
Yes, the average engineering class is "harder" than the average psychology class, on both the undergraduate and graduate levels. But I have used my calculus from engineering in my studies as a basic researcher in animal learning, and using it to develop knowledge of biology and philosophy of science as challenging in their own way as the theories of strength of materials and fluid mechanics.
Let me end this letter with a plea to those of you who have steered away from psychology because of its image as one of the weaker sisters of science. If qualified and dedicated individuals do not work to advance the understanding of human behavior, what good will all our knowledge in other areas do? We will have poisoned the natural environment beyond the capability for a technological fix and/or blown ourselves up in the meantime.
Susan Schneider Lawrence graduate student
BLOOM COUNTY
OUR ORGANIZATION
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---
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Buckling down on buckling up
Study looks at compliance with state's mandatory seatbelt laws
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
Adeyanju, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation, spent from July 1987 to July 1988 studying motorists and their compliance with Kansas' mandatory seat belt law.
"The state did a very good job of educating the general public about the law," he said. "But we still have a long way to go. Although we are capable of getting people to comply with the law, we are not doing excellently."
Matthew Adeyanju thinks motorists still need convincing to buckle up.
Kansas' mandatory seat belt law went into effect on July 1, 1987. Under Kansas law, failure to wear a seat belt carries a maximum fine of $10 for front seat occupants. But front seat occupants may be issued a ticket for non-compliance only if the vehicle is stopped for another reason.
During the 12-month study, about 16,500 drivers and front seat passengers were observed for seat belt use. About 2,500 motorists were interviewed about their seat belt habits and beliefs.
Of those interviewed, 66 percent who were 50 or older said they regularly ate at a restaurant and 59 percent who were 35 to 49 years old, and 51 percent of those 16 to 34.
About 47 percent of the motorsists observed in July of 1988 were wearing seat belts. This was an increase of about 10 percent from July of 1987, when the seat belt law went into effect.
Adeyanu grouped the state in three categories for his study: metropolitan areas including Kansas City, Kan., and Topeka; medium-sized cities including Lawrence and Salina; small cities including Baldwin and Paola.
The study was financed by a $5,000 New Faculty Award from the University's general research fund.
Wayne Osness, department chairman of health, physical education and recreation, said faculty research was important in his department.
Adeyanju also found that more females, 60.4 percent, used seat belts regularly than do males, 45.9 percent.
"I stationed observers at various intersections," Adeyani said. "In Lawrence, we observed at 23rd Street and Massachusetts Street and two other intersections. We looked to see if motorists were buckled up. If we couldn't make a judgment, we ignored the car."
Only about 37 percent of the motorists questioned said they wear seat belts because it is the law. A number of those interviewed who regularly wear seat belts said they favor stiffer enforcement of the law.
One surprising statistic is that 15 percent of the motorists interviewed said they never would comply with the law. Adevanji said.
"It's important in many ways, but primarily we are interested in faculty members being involved with research," Ossmead said. "Research such as Adeyanju's add knowledge in the health sciences. It is especially important because we are currently seeking doctoral status."
"What we need to do is to target these 15 percent," he said.
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Tuesday
■ Maranatha Campus Ministry will meet at 7.30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
22
No Classes.
Wednesday
The KU Undergraduate Anthropology Association will meet at 4 p.m. in 617 Fraser Hall.
23
Thanks giving Dav. No Classes.
24
Thursday
■ Thanksgiving Day. No Classes.
■ The Lawrence Inter-Dominational Nutrition Kitchen (L.I.N.K.) will serve its annual Thanksgiving dinner from 1 to 3 p.m. at the First Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky St. The dinner is free and
Friday
25
everyone is invited. Volunteers are welcome to help serve dinner and deliver the meals to homes of shut-ins. Call Pam Casagrande at 843-9543 during the day or 842-9699 during the evening for more information.
No Classes.
Saturday
26
The General Union of Palestine students will have Solidarity Day with
Sunday
Palestinians at 6 p.m. at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries building.
27
KU Bible Study will have worship Room at the Kansas Union services at 10:30 a.m. in the Jayhawk
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Monday, November 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansen
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at 15th-16th & Kentucky.
Please call 1-816-474-TIPS, you may remain anonymous; or call Lawrence P.D.
841-7210 case # 88-10554.
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TOPEKA — Rep Jim Slattery, D-Kan., said he thinks George Bush must be hardline stance behind Central Asia taken by President Reagan.
Conference told Bush will aid Central America
The Associated Press
"I believe Bush is going to be more realistic about the peace negotiations and more cooperative with Congress, and that's key." Slattery told about 170 people who attended Saturday on Central America.
Also attending was Costa Rica's ambassador to the United States, Daniol Jimenez, who said Bush will make greater strides in bringing peace to Nicaragua and other countries in the region.
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Audio-Reader moves to new home
Chancellor Gene A. Budig takes a ribbon from Carl Gump, center, chairman of the Louis W. and Dolpha Baehr Foundation, and W.C. Hartley, trustee of the foundation, at the dedication for the Baehr Audio-Reader Center on Friday.
At opening, Budig praises volunteers
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
KU's Audio-Reader Network was launched in 1971, the first on a university campus, using radio station KANU's subcarrier frequency to broadcast readings of magazines, books and Kansas City and Topeka newspapers to visually impaired or disabled listeners.
The nation's first university audio- reader program continued to grow up Friday as KU's Audio-Reader Network moved into a new house.
hours a week. The readings were recorded in the network's three studios located in a mobile home between KJHK-FM 91 and the Triangle fraternity house, off Eleventh Street.
other informational programming.
Audio-Reader is broadcast on the signals of five Kansas public radio stations and on some cable TV systems. Listeners need a special receiver to hear the broadcasts.
The 17-year-old network's new center, the former Phi Kappa Tau fraternity house at 1120 W. 11th St., was dedicated with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and comments by University administrators and representatives of the foundation that helped finance it. The project cost $375,000.
About 250 receivers were distributed and Audio-Reader broadcast 80
The Louis W. and Dolpha Baehr foundation contributed $150,000 to finance part of the remodeling of the library gifts financed the rest of the project.
In its new home, the network has six soundproof studios for recording.
Programming expanded to 24-hours a day in 1985 and now reaches about 5,000 people with readings of several newspapers, interviews and
"Skeptics among us used to say Audio Reader would never have an adequate home," said Chancellor Gene A. Budig. "They can be forgiven now even though they forgot to properly report things about this particular program.
"It was inevitable that today would come. all it would take would be a
"They forgot how tenacious the staff and many volunteers could be. They forgot how Audio Reader began, grey and prospered."
benefactor." Budig said.
In addition, the Baehr Audio-Reader Center, as it is now called, will initiate a personal taping system to record items for print-handover. The materials will charge $1.50 to cover the cost of the cassette tape and handling costs.
Also, the network plans to start a program to read regional newspapers for eastern and western Kansas.
"There are over 150 Audio-Reader volunteers," Turner said. "This dedicated group puts in over 10,000 hours per year to bring readings of newspapers, magazines and current books to blind and handicapped Kansans.
"Without the dedication of the Audio-Reader family, this program would never have achieved a level of success and would never have deserved this outstanding support." Budig said.
Budig described the network as an example of dedication to service by the network's staff, volunteers and the Baehr foundation.
"I also want to express the thanks of those who are not here, thousands of people throughout Kansas whose schools are being built in a way by Audio Reader." Budig said.
Ralph Turner, chairman of the Audio-Reader Advisory Committee, thanked the volunteers who produce the readings.
"Without this hard work by my fellow volunteers, much of the success of Audio-Reader Network would not have been possible. Reader organizations that use this problem is holding on to good volunteers. This is not a problem we have here at Audio Reader."
Relax. Round trip flights from Kansas City, Mo., and bus tickets from Lawrence to five U.S. cities were still available as of yesterday afternoon.
Getting there Half the fun for twice the price
News Briefs
United Airlines said a coach seat on a flight from Kansas City to St. Louis would cost $802 while a first class flight would cost $1,264. A spokesman for the airline explained that United flights are not direct to St. Louis, but must first go through Chicago.
However, because of the late date, the costs for many flights and bus fares are astronomical. Reduced rate flights are no longer available on some airlines and reduced fare tickets on buses must be purchased three days in advance.
By a Kansan reporter
Spokesmen from Branif Airlines and American Airlines said there were plenty of seats available on flights leaving Kansas City International Airport on November 22 for St. Louis, Chicago, Denver, Boston and New York. Return seats on November 27 were also available.
With the Thanksgiving holiday season knocking on our door, many students may be scurrying around trying to make last-minute travel plans.
Normal flight prices to these areas ranged from $209-$212 for St. Louis, $88-$304 for Chicago, $159-$356 for Denver, $412.50-$538.50 for Boston and $435-$616 for New York.
Tim Jensen, spokesman for Greyhound Bus Lines, said bus tickets for these areas were also available.
2 ARRESTED FOR ARSON: Two people were arrested Friday on charges of aggravated arson in incidents, Lawrence police said.
A 32-year-old man, listed on Douglas County jail records as a transient, was arrested in connection with a Nov. 12 fire in an apartment building at 807 S. 9th St., where he was sleeping in the fourplex when the fire started at 3 a.m. escaped uninured, according to police records.
In a separate incident, a 42-year-old rural Tongan woman was arrested in connection with a Nov. 10 fire in the entryway of an apartment building at 1121 Ohio St.
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Reserve your place in history. Back by popular demand.
The Jayhawker Yearbook photographer will be here from Nov.28 to Dec.2 Seniors this is your last chance.
Monday 11-3,4-8
Tuesday 9-12,1-5
Wednesday 9-12,1-5
Thursday 11-3,4-8
Friday 8-12,1-4
Walk-ins only
Burge Union - by the candy counter
---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 21, 1988
7
Nation/World
Train car ruptures
Officials evacuate town after acid spill
The Associated Press
GARDEN CITY, Ala. — Authories evacuated more than 500 people Saturday after a train carrying hazardous chemicals derailed in north lababama, and one car began leaking ulphuric acid.
Officials built a sand levee to try to prevent the acid from flowing into a early creek, said Lee Helms, director of operations for the Alabama emergency Management Agency. "Some of it leaked into a swamp rea that has leaked into a creek," helms said. "We were able to dam it
Hels明 said the creek fed the Mulberry Fork River, and officials wanted to make sure that the acid did not contaminate area water supplies.
up pretty well, but some of it did get into the creek."
"The river is quite a ways downstream, and not enough of the acid has leaked into the creek to have an impact," he said.
Mulroney leading polls in Canada
The CSX train derailed for undetermined reasons about 5:30 p.m. near Garden City, about 35 miles north of Birmingham.
TORONTO — Supporters and opponents of the U.S.Canada free trade agreement combined last-minute electioneering yesterday with a final advertising blitz on the eye of national elections.
The Associated Press
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, buoyed by recent pollss that showed his Progressive Conservative Party back in the lead, toured his native Quebec while his leading rival, Liberal Party leader John Turner, campaigned in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Both have focused on the trade deal - the major issue in today's race.
Mulroney said Saturday at a news conference in Quebec that he would call Parliament back into session quickly to proceed with final passage of the pact, which Turner has vowed to reject.
In an interview with this week's Maclean's magazine, Mulroney was quoted as saying that he would try to pursue the trade agreement even if his party can only form a minority government.
"The trade deal is a must for Canada's future," he said. "It's a visionary instrument of job creation and new wealth and it is clearly something that is on the right side of history."
But Turner has received his campaign by saying the pact threatened to make Canada a U.S. colony,
Speaking at a campaign rally Saturday, Turner repeated his call to "keep Canada Canadian for Canadians" and cancel the pact with a vote for his party.
In this week's Maclean's, Turner was quoted as saying the pact "would radically change the direction of our country. It yields the economic
levers of sovereignty: our energy, our investment policy, our capital markets, supply-management of agriculture."
The socialist New Democratic Party also opposes the agreement that President Reagan and Mulonney signed in January, so only a majority of the government ensures that it will proceed as scheduled.
The 10-year agreement would start phasing out all remaining tariffs between Canada and the United States on Jan. 1. It has passed the U.S. Congress but still needs Canadian parliamentary approval.
Mulroney spent the campaign's last weekend in his native Quebec, where he is counting on support for the free trade agreement to come through with a solid showing for the province's 75 seats.
Christina Onassis, 37, dies
he Associated Press
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — several dozen friends of billion-dollar airress Christina Onassis attended a private Greek Orthodox funeral last for her yesterday.
The 37-year-old daughter of Greek
kipping tycoon Aristole Onassis
ed Saturday of an apparent heart
tack at the home of friends. There
as no word on whether results of an
itis would be released.
in Piraeus, Greece, a spokesman in the family's Springfield Shipping company. Miss Omasa will be buried on her home in Corpios, off northwest Greece by the
end of the week.
The spokesman said that the Onaiss fortune had been left to the daughter born in 1985 to Miss Onassis and her four husband, Thierry Roussel and Red Roussel in March 1984 and divorced eight months later.
Miss Onassis was the stepdaughter of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, the widow of President John F. Kennedy, who married Aristotle Onassis.
Miss Oasisa was visiting the country home of longtime friend Marina Djokovic, 25 miles outside of this South American capital when she was stricken.
News Roundup
'SKINHEADS' CHARGED: Three men belonging to the 'skinhead' gang were charged in connection with the beating death of an Ethiopian immigrant in Portland, Ore. a week ago, police said yesterday. Police said it was a bomb and unprovoked attack on Muluga Terasel, 27
SNIERS PILL TOURIST: At least two snipers, firing from Mexican cliffs along the Rio Grande, opened fire on three rafters in Big Bend during a drug war, leading to the other two, authorities said yesterday.
The river guide walked through thick brush after Saturday's attack in southwestern Texas, and was seen by a farmer when he reached a highway yesterday morning. A woman who was shot hid in brush overnight. A spokesman said it
was the second time this year that U.S. tourists in the area have reported being shot at from Mexican bluffs.
HOSTAGE REPORTEDLY BEATEN: Alann Steen, one of nine American hostages being held in Lebanon, was caught and beaten when he tried to escape his terrorist captors, according to a published report. Fellow hostage Mithileshwar Singh, who was freed in October, told U.S. officials that Steen managed to get away from his captors but he was spotted and turned in by neighbors in the Beirut suburb where he was beld last year.
U. S. URGES OPEC ACTION: Representatives of the United States' energy-producing states urged OPEC yesterday to reach a new produc-
tardic accord so crude oil prices could rise and help their states' ailing economies. Ministers of the organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries tried in a third day of closed-door talks to resolve a dispute between Iraq and Iran that has been delaying work on a new production agreement. The accord would limit the amount of oil of the 13 OPEC countries could produce in an attempt to limit breakneck production that has caused a glut and sent prices downward.
ESTONIA PRESSURES LEGISLATORS: Estonian activists press up pressure on their legislators and resorted to threats to win approval for a challenge to the Kremlin's authority over their Baltic republic, an Estonian lawmaker was quoted as saying yesterday.
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Monday, November 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
The women of Delta Delta Delta want to extend a Thank You to the ATQ's for being such fantastic partners in Rock Chalk '89
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P. S. Let's keep out fingers crossed.
THE FILM'S BEST ACTRESS OF 1978
Hendrick said lack of time because of procrastination made him feel less confident about his abilities.
Stress factors
Many people suffer the physical ailments without realizing that stress is part of the problem.
Continued from p. 1
STRESS
Dean Kerkman, a clinical psychologist at Watkins, said that between 60 and 70 percent of physician office visits can be traced to stress-related illnesses.
"Of course, there are a lot of factors involved in stress-related disorders," he said. "For example, many times a person under stress won't eat right now, but if you make more problems on too the original stressors."
Stressors are the individual factors causing a person to experience stress.
Missed meals, particularly breakfast, can harm the body in invisible ways.
In their book "Stress? Find Your Balance," Lynn Ostermark, a research associate at the KU gerontology center, and Allan Press, associate professor of social welfare, say that although missing breakfast might save time in the morning, it costs time later in the day.
"The fine work for miss breakfast shows up as lowered work output, lack of energy, or feeling fatigued."
Busy students also may resort to grabbing a quick meal, usually junk food, from a vending machine. "Stress? Find Your Balance" said that some food sold in vending machines was healthy, and that it was important to make sure the body's nutritional needs were met.
Demo said students typically don't get enough exercise, either. In a flurry of study, students often perch behind a desk for an entire night, which can worsen their situation.
Breaks are crucial to mental health, she said.
After blankly staring at the same sentence a door opens, she looks at her phone.
If this were a mirror, she'd see fat.
Neglecting sleep also helps stockpile stressors. Bill Early, St. Louis sophomore, has orders from his doctor to get at least eight hours of sleep each night. Last year Early became ill, he said, because he worried too much about his school work and didn't sleep enough.
Of course, each person can handle different levels of stress. And a sense of priorities can be the difference between coping or not coping.
"You may not be able to change the stressful situation, but you can change the way you react to it."
And she'll turn down meal after meal to get rid of fat that isn't there. Or clean out half the refrigerator, make room for more food or become damnely obsessed with exercise.
"I was always tired and run down, and I couldn't figure out what was going wrong," he said. "My doctor said that I was suffering from too much stress.
"This year, I have rearranged my priorities. Grades aren't as important to me."
Learn to escape
St. Louis sophomore
"When I need a study break, I like to get it, the car and drive to the lake or something," she said. "It doesn't really matter where I'm going, I just like to get away from where I am."
A drive to the lake, or just a brisk walk around the lake is a useful study break and it can release tension.
Eating disorders like anorexia or bulimia are psychological problems that can be physically dangerous - even deadly. The Eating Disorders Clinic located at the Charter Counseling Center of Lawrence is specifically designed to get at the underlying psychological problems, while teaching healthy new eating habits.
"When you exercise, you release a hormone called catecholamine, which helps relieve muscle stress," she said. "Also, you release epinephrine, which is the same as adrenaline, and it can help you get reved back up."
Kerkman operates the biofeedback machine at Watkins which gauges stress. Biofeedback machines take body temperature, heart rate and pressure to evaluate the pressure a person is experiencing.
Under the machine's eye, a person can watch the stress level increase and decrease as it happens. The goal, Kerkman said, is to learn mental control over body stress without the machine's help.
The initial biofeedback consultation is free, although enusing visits cost $5 each.
KU students have an abundance of resources designed to help them cope with stress. The Wellness Clinic; the Counseling Center; the Mental Health Clinic at Watkins; the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, 218 Bailey Hall; KU Psychological Clinic, 315 Fraser Hall; Watkins Health Education; and KU Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall, each serve different needs, although all are aimed at helping KU students handle stress.
Mo., junior, said that it was time to take a break.
(913) 841-6000
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If you suspect any of the above signs of an eating disorder, call the Charter Counseling Center of Lawrence at 841-6000. Treatment is usually covered by insurance
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I was always tired and run down, and I couldn't figure out what was going wrong. My doctor said that I was suffering from too much stress.'
"People learn stress, and people can unlearn stress," he said.
Kerkman said that people needed to take control of their internal condition
Through learning techniques such as relaxation and meditation, Demo said, people can reduce their stress while remaining in stressful situations.
"It's important to set goals that you can attain; and when you reach a goal, sit back and enjoy it," she said. "When you survive a tough situation, feel about it instead of always putting yourself down."
"You can catch yourself tensing up, or using creative imagery helps," she said. "Creative imagery is when you mentally put yourself in a scene, like imagine you are at a beach, or something."
"Become aware of your surroundings. Look out the window or walk outside and think something."
Demo said that having fun can be the best cure for the overly stressed and through a healthy dose of self approval, people can learn not to compound their situation with internal stress.
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Continued from p. 1
Denny and his associates began to look at other, more concrete methods of analyzing the effects of stress. They decided to examine the effect on the system, the body's natural defense network.
feel horrible and yeah, my back hurts, too.' We wanted to find some data that didn't rely on self-reporting."
Research problems, however, are common for psychioimmunologists. Since many things affect the immune system's effectiveness, iso-effects of stress on immunity is a challenge.
"Finding a methodology that could narrow the effects such that we are sure that stress is causing the changes in immunity is tricky," he said.
They decided to use persons suffering major depression under the care of the department of psychiatry at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"We carefully matched them up with others of the same age, sex, background, race, whether they smoked — things like that," he said. "But persons in the comparison group had no history
of psychiatric problems."
Researchers compared blood samples of the same people with the blood of the comparative group.
Scientists long have known that particular white blood cells, called lymphocytes, have the capability to initiate the appropriate body defense.
Denny and his colleagues started with what they knew.
Lymphocytes come in two categories: T-helper cells, which amplify an infection so that the body will defend itself; and T-suppressor cells, which ston the body's response.
This delicate balance works when the two types keep each other in check. It backfires when one type overreacts.
"Allergies are the classic example of an overreactive immune system." Denny said. "With allergies, T-helper cells send a message that it is being attacked, when, in fact, it is not."
Conversely, he said, T-helper cells fail in Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome patients.
Denny's research contradicts traditional scientific thought.
Scientists had assumed that stress decreased the amount of T-helper cells in the blood system, thus weakening the defenses, he said.
"What we have found instead is that the total number of T cells, both helper and suppressor cells, is substantially lowered by stress," he said.
Interestingly, he said, the more depressed the patients said they were on the questionnaire, the better.
Dean Kerkman, clinical psychologist at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said the effects of the mental state often had an effect on the results of things such as questionnaires.
"The mind and the body act as one," he said. He affected the way a person responds to his word.
The research is ongoing, and Denny said that he has been tested that it would take another interesting twist.
$
"I think we will find that the answer is not a deficiency in the neurological system, rather we will find that it is a chemical deficiency."
$ave Your Money Shop the Kansan, Daily.
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Just their signature.
It never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh* computer at school.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan-to-Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one.
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether.
Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800-831 LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 21, 1988
9
CHRISTOPHER H. KIMBERLY
John Kiefer
Changing courses Businessman gave up engineering for record business
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
John Kiefer was about to get a bachelors degree in engineering at KU when he decided the field wasn't for him.
So he did an about face. He decided to open a small record store instead.
Now, 30 years later, he operates one of the largest stores of its kind in the country — one of a handful of stereo and record stores that carries more than 100 lines of merchandise
Most customers of Kief's Discount Records and Stereo Supply, 2100 W. 25th Street, go there simply to shop for merchandise, but some take the opportunity to learn from Kiefer's business sense.
During the past few years, Kiefer has been invited to speak to a class in the School of Business and has lectured several times for the KU chapter of the Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs, or ACE.
Some of his attraction as a speaker stems from his enthusiasm about the stereo business. Kiefer was took time out of his schedule to speak to KU students simply because he enjoyed doing it.
And Todd Gentle, president of ACE, said students came away with a lot from a talk with Kiefer.
Gentle first heard Kierfer speak in a spring presentation by ACE. He said the organization had invited
"He's very helpful." Gentile said. "He didn't get a business degree, and most of the students in ACE aren't in business. They're in political science or something. And the University doesn't offer any
entrepreneurial classes."
Gentle said that when Kiefer was starting out, he was influenced by people similar to himself now — those who started out small and made it big. Now, the Kiefer is influencing young entrepreneuries in turn.
Kiefer kept a low-key attitude about his lectures, which are actually more like conversations with colleagues.
"I just tell them about all the goofy things I've done, all the mistakes I've made," he said.
Kiefer said most students who came to hear him speak were looking for insights into starting their own businesses, but they also wanted to know about the stereo business. He gives them a little of both, from advice about starting out to an explanation of the details of price markup. He surprises them with statements such as 'I've never seen any such thing as a markdown' – such as his way to introduce the mathematics of markdown.
Kiefer said his beginnings interested many budding entrepreneurs.
"A lot of them are kind of relieved to find out that there are guys like me, that weren't walking around with me."
Kiefer is living proof that a successful businessman doesn't even have to be in the top 50 percent of his class. If he had been more interested in engineering, he said, he would have done better in school. That experience translates into another piece of advice.
"If you're not doing what you want to do," he said,
"It may be a lot more difficult to succeed."
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10
Monday, November 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Sports
Tigers' running game rolls over KU 55-17
Season-ending loss to Missouri drops Jayhawks' record to 1-10
29 6 40
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas freshman strong safety King Dixon tries to stop Missouri sophomore fullback Tom White Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
It was a long end to a long season for the Kansas Jayhawks football team Saturday.
The Missouri Tigers rushed for nearly 500 yards and defeated Kansas 55-17 in Memorial Stadium.
The Jayhawks finished the season with a record of 1-10, while the Tigers finished 3-7-1 and were unsure if they would body indefender would return next season.
"This was a big game," Widenhofer said. "It was good for the alumni, fans and the students. It was a nice way to end the season. I have no idea how this game will affect me."
Missouri's 55 points were the most scored by the Tigers during Widehofer's four seasons as coach, but the performance may have come too soon.
Speculation began two weeks ago that Bob Stull, head coach at the University of Texas-El Paso, would replace Widenhofer.
The Tigers' rushing attack worked nearly to perfection Saturday. Missouri controlled the ball for more than 60 minutes and rolled up 41-74 yards on the ground.
Pleased up the Kansas defenders, who spent much of the game on the field, said they were impressed.
"Missouri has talent," Kansas linebacker Mike Long said. "They have no business being 3-7-1. WWith the talent they had, they should have been in the running for bowl games." Jason
Kansas freshman safety Jason Priest was more direct.
"They drove it down our throats," he said.
Missouri twice scored on drives of more than seven minutes. The Tigers' workhorse was sophomore halfback Michael Jones, who was averaging just 30 yards rushin-
through the first 10 games of the season.
Jones ran for 110 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries in the first quarter Saturday. He finished with 172 yards on 24 carries.
"Our offensive line did a great job and we can't do a thing without them," Jones said. "We saw what we can do as a team."
The Kansas defense, as a team, ended the season with a dubious record. The Jayhawks finished the season with an 11-game total of 5,896 yards allowed. That average of 536 yards per game broke the NCAA Division I record of 532.5 set by Northwestern in 1981.
Northwestern in 1958.
The Jayhawks defense also surrendered an average of 45.1 points per game, breaking the previous school record of 37.7 set by the 1954 team that finished 0-10.
"We've been overmatched in every game we've played this season," Mason said. "We had to get ready to play every game this season because if we didn't, we得 glown right out of the stadium."
Just as they have many times this season, the Jayhawks appeared ready to play in the first quarter.
Ready to After Missouri took a 7-0 lead, Kansas started a crisp drive of its own
Sophomore tailback Frank Hatchett, continuing his early-game heroics, picked up 43 yards on two carries, including a 15-yard touchdown run that tied the game at 7-7.
Last week at Oklahoma State,
Hatchett scored on an 84-yard touchdown
run on Kansas' first possession.
And Nov. 5 against Kansas State,
Hatchett ran for 78 yards in a Kansas
score driving that opened the game.
Kansas then briefly appeared to take control of the game when Missouri senior Craig Lammers fumbled the ensuing kickoff and Kansas freshman King Dixon recovered the loose ball at the Missouri 24 yard line.
But the Jayhawks did not capitalize.
Kansas wasted a first-and-goal
opportunity from the three yard line. Hatchett and freshman tailback Tony Sands both were stopped short of the goal line, and on third down, quarterback Kelly Donoho's pass to Willie Vaughn fell incomplete.
The Jayhawks were forced to settle for Brad Fleeman's 20-yard field goal and did not score again until they trailed 31-10 in the second quarter.
The inability of the Kansas offense
to control the ball hurt the Jayhawks, Kansas center Chip Budde said.
"We didn't control the ball near what we're capable of," he said. "I think that was probably the biggest factor in their offense being so successful. The defense was out there almost 30 minutes nonstop."
"I didn't play well," Donohoe said. "I wasn't on page with my receivers some of the time and they messed up coverage-wise.
Donohoe shouldered some of the blame for the ineffectiveness of the offense.
"It's really painful and really embarrassing to finish out a year like this, but we've got a lot coming back and I'm excited about our chances next year."
ahead.
"I think you always have to weigh the positives against the negatives," he said. "This game was a negative. But that doesn't totally negate the things we accomplished.
"We have a number of problems.
With every step we take forward, we take a step backward. We knew coming in it would be a tough go but we played hard and didn't give up."
Seniors close out careers on losing note
Mason, too, said he was looking
Associate news editor
Bv Elaine Sung
mixing the ball again, but managed to recover it.
It wasn't a glorious ending to the college careers of 13 Kansas seniors in the Jayhawks 55-17 loss to Missouri on Saturday.
For wide receiver Villeman Vaughn, it was a terrible way to end a distinguished career at Kansas. He fumbled twice in the second quarter, and his team's touchdown that gave the Tigers a 28-10 lead.
Vaughn ended his career with school records for career receptions at 133 and career receiving yardage at 2,266, which is also good for third place on the all-time Big Eight list. Vaughn finished the day with three receptions for 42 yards.
Vaughn didn't appear at the post-game press conference.
Brehm run straight for the first-down marker 24 yards away and barely made it before being
For punter John Brehm, one of the highlights of the game came late in the second quarter. Kansas was facing a fourth-and-long situation, and Brehm was sent in to punt. But when he took the snap, he looked up, looked around, saw that he was wide open and he ran.
pushed out of bounds.
"We watched the special teams films on Thursday, and Coach Mason pointed out how their defense just turned around and didn't wait to see the kick. Coach told us that if we got the chance to run, let's run." Brehm said.
Brehm, who has also seen some action at Kansas as a wide receiver, said he wanted to do his part in helping the young team grow in its first year under Mason.
"You could tell from the beginning that it was going to be a rebuilding year for us," Brehm said. "I wanted to make sure I could contribute in any way so that we improved."
"Personally, I felt I contributed today. As a team, I know we didn't play as well as we could have. But I think the guys will come back strong in a year or two."
Brehm's fake punt gave Kansas a first-down opportunity and resulted in the Jayhawks' second and final touchdown, courtesy of senior tailback Arnold Snell.
Snell ran the last seven yards on a first-and-goal with 1:22 left in the half. It was the last touchdown of his collegiate career and the last time the Jayhawks would score in the game.
tell the day why he had won. "We would have liked to win." Snell said. "We went out there and made a whole lack of mistakes. I think it was just a lack of concentration."
tion. Teams get like that."
"I'd like to try and get to the next higher level," Snell said. "Hopefully, I'll get my chance somewhere and I'll make it."
Senior inside linebacker Mike Long, a Rockhurst High School graduate, was a walk-on in 1984. He got the starting job when sophomore Tony Barker was sidelined with an injury in early October.
On Saturday, he finished up his career with 12 tackles against Missouri.
Snell said he has hopes of getting drafted and playing for a professional football team.
"It's weird. I kind of feel like I made it through here in five days and kept my head up." Long said. "I feel like I really accomplished something. Things didn't always go so good, losing year in and year out like we have.
I think we made progress this season. If you look at the youngsters we've got out there, the size, what can you say? All you can ask is that they ask best. And I think they've done that all season.
Also finishing their careers with Kansas were cornerbacks Peda Samuel, Tony Gregory and Rodney Harris; safety Rob Newson; wide receiver Byron Hornung; guards Dave Grattan and Ken Trossen and tackle Chris Nielsen.
Fiesta Bowl to decide who's No.1, provided Notre Dame beats USC
The Associated Press
Southern California and Nebraska settled two conference titles and four bowl matchups Saturday, while Notre Dame moved one step closer to a possible national title and a Fiesta Bowl showdown with West Virginia.
tung against Cleveland, hoping to play for the national championship when it it faces West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl Jan. 2, ran its record to 10-2 by crushing Penn State 21-3. The Irish will wind up the regular season next Saturday at Southern California, which clinched a Rose Bowl berth against Michigan by defeating UCLA 31-22 for the Pac-10 title.
title.
UCLA will go to the Cotton Bowl against Southwest Conference champion Arkansas. The Southern Cal victory also means that Florida State will go to the Sugar Bowl against the Southeastern Conference host, either Louisiana State or Auburn.
Nebraska defeated Oklahoma 7-3 to capture the Big Eight Conference crown and clinch a berth in the Orange Bowl against Miami, the defending national champion. Oklahoma will head to the Citrus Bowl for a Jan. 2 meeting against Clemson.
Bowl bids were officially extended Saturday evening. Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz said he was trying not to think about the Mountaineers yet.
think about the Mountaineers. "They seem to be a very good team, better than us right now," Holtz said from South Bend, Ind. "The primary thing on our mind at this time is Southern Cal. We have to play against a great team out there and beat them."
College Bowls
Nebraska and Oklahoma lead four Big Eight teams
Despite suffering a 38-24 loss to Boston College in a game played in Dublin, Ireland, Army will take its 8-2 record to the Sun Bowl Dec. 24 to meet Alabama.
The bowl season begins Dec. 12 when Western Michigan plays Fresno State in the California Bowl. On Dec. 23, Southern Mississippi and Texas-El Paso will battle in the Independence Bowl.
Colorado, a 56-14 winner over Kansas State Saturday, will go to the Freedom Boom Dec. 29 to meet Brigham Young, Oklahoma State, which defeated Iowa State 49-28 Saturday, will face Wyoming in the Holiday Boom Dec. 30.
On Christmas Day, Washington State will play Houston in the Aloha Bowl. Houston, 8-2, defeated Texas Tech 30-29 on Saturday.
playing in bowl games this season.
Indiana, which swamped Purdue 52-7 Saturday to run its record to 7-3-1, will face South Carolina, a 29-10 loser to Clemson, in the Liberty Bowl Dec. 28.
Illinois, 6-4-1 after defeating Northwestern 14-9, will take on Florida in the All American Bowl at Birmingham, Ala., on Dec. 29.
The only game to be played on New Year's Day, a Sunday, is the Gator Bowl in Jacksonville, Fla. Georgia will take on Michigan State, which swamped Wisconsin 36-0 Saturday to increase its record to 6-4-1.
On Jan. 2, the bowl games overflow, capped by the Nebraska-Miami contest in Miami's Orange Bowl.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TOP COLLEGE TEN FOOTBALL
Points
1 Notre Dame (8) 10-0-0 89
2 USC (1) 10-0-0 81
3 West Virginia 11-0-0 69
4 Miami(Fla.) 11-1-0 63
5 Nebraska 11-1-0 49
6 Florida State 9-1-0 47
7 Auburn 9-1-0 33
8 UCLA 9-2-0 25
9 Arkansas 10-0-0 23
10 Oklahoma 9-2-0 8
() nume voles
The weekly top 10 poll is voted on by the sports staff of the University Daily Kansan.
Nebraska beats Oklahoma, takes conference title
The Associated Press
"our defense just stuffed them when we had to," said Huskers coach Tom Okorine, who will take 11-10 against play Miami in the Orange Bowl.
Nebraska just wouldn't let Okla home turn the corner.
The seventh-ranked Cornhuskers stopped the Oklahoma wihbone cold Saturday, taking a 7-3 victory in Norman to buy an Orange Bowl ticket with the Big Eight Conference championship.
Elsewhere in the Big Eight, No. 13 Oklahoma State stunned Iowa State in the fourth quarter 49-28, and Colorado kept Kansas State winless 56-14.
the weekend left Oklahoma in the Citrus Bowl against Clemson, Oklahoma State in the Holiday Bowl against Wyoming and Colorado in the Freedom Bowl against Brigham Young.
Nebraska, 7-0 in the Big Eight, beat Oklahoma for the first time in four years to win its first outright Big Eight title since 1883. A 31-game conference winning streak was ended for the ninth-ranked Sooners, who finished 9-2 and 6-1 in the league.
"We couldn't do anything offensively, that's the trouble," Sooners coach Barry Switzer said. "Our inepneity on offense didn't allow us to compete in the ballgame.
"Our defense played well enough to win. If you had told me we were only going to score three points, I'd have gotten them, I've got have gotten the hell out of us."
Nebraska took the opening kickoff 80 yards for the only score of the game, played through intermittent rain in 35-degree weather. Quarterback Steve Taylor scored from 1 yard away.
Oklahoma, averaging 368 yards rushing per game, was held to 86 yards on the ground and 137 total yards. The Sooners failed to score a touchdown for the first time in 62 games, getting only a 29-yard field goal from R.D. Lashar.
Oklahoma State 49
Iowa State 28
Sanders rushed for 293 yards on 32 carriers to set a Big Eight record with 2.296 yards this season, scored four touchdowns to extend his NCAA sea
Barry Sanders took his show to Ames as Oklahoma State turned back Iowa State.
Big 8 Football
son record to 35 and established another NCAA record with 2,897 all-purpose yards for the season.
The Cowboys, 8-2 and third in the Big Eight at 5-2, trailed 28-21 in the fourth quarter when Sanders ripped off an 80-vard downtown run.
The Cowboys then added three more scores, including another Sanders touchdown, to subdue Iowa State. 5-6 and 3-4.
"I think the turning point was when the best player in college football made an 80-yard touchdown run." Cowbys coach Pat Jon Jones said. Barry Sanders told them take three open.The team would defense 4-ydared us to death most of the game, but then the decision-makers decided the game."
Colorado 56 Kansas State 14
"Our game plan was to take time off the clock while moving the ball up the field." Cyclones coach Jim Walmiland. "The only time I have seen Barry Sanders stopped is when he is sitting on the bench."
The Cyclones actually outgained Oklahoma State by a yard, 417-416, and held the ball for 18 minutes longer.
Kansas State coach Stan Parrish survived to go on to other things, but just barely. Parrish, who announced his resignation a month ago, closed out an 11- season and will leave Kansas State with a 2-3-1 record.
"I put an incredible amount of effort into just keeping us going, but keeping us goin' isn't the name of the person arraised said after the trip to Boulder.
"I'll miss the kids, my staff more than anything in the world, but the rest I won't miss a lick." Parrish said.
Colorado coach Bill McCarthy said the Buffs had reached a plateau with their 8-3 season, 4-3 and fourth in the Big Eight.
"We did what good football teams do; we got better as the season went on." McCartney said. "I think we've laid the foundation for future CU teams to win eight or nine games every year."
---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 21, 1988
Sports
11
Soviets outlast KU in overtime remain undefeated on U.S. tour
Sabonis' three-pointer to begin OT boosts USSR
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
The last time the Soviet National Basketball Team played Kansas was in 1986, when Danny Manning scored two and led the Jayhawks to an 14.78 ppm.
Saturday night the Jayhawks were without Manning, and the Soviets were hoping for an easier game. But their 93-84 overtime victory in front of 15,000 fans in Allen Field House was anything but easy.
"This was the most difficult game so far on our trip," said Socio coach Vuri Selkohm, whose team now is 5-0 in the tournament. "We had a lot of United States exhibition schedule.
The Soviets defeated North Carolina, North Carolina State and Ohio State by comfortable margains during the first three games of their tour. Eight of the 12 Soviet players and all five starters were on the Olympic gold medal team that held Manning scoreless and upset the United States team 82-76 in Seoul, South Korea.
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was thrilled with Kansas' effort, despite the loss.
despite the loss.
"Those kids worked their tails off," Williams said. "Man for man it was difficult for us to match up, but they played so hard and got after it defensively."
The Jayhawks outbounded the taller Sufferi 46-45 and committed five turnovers, compared with 24 for the Soviet team.
"It's hard to measure heart," William said. "Our kids really didn't match with them, but when the ball goes on the board a lot of times, it is a matter of desire, and our guys really went after it."
Kansas sophomore forward Mike Maddox, who had 15 points and five
'This was the most difficult game so far on our trip.
rebounds, credited the Kansas guards with a good rebounding effort.
"It's a real tough team to rebound against because they shoot a lot of long range shots which causes a lot of long rebounds." Meedox said. "Our guards did a great job of boxing out."
Williams said he especially was pleased with his frontline players, who were matched up against 7-foot 2 Soviet center Arvidas Tasman and 12 points grabbed 12 rebounds and blocked seven shots in 36 minutes.
At the beginning of the overtime,
Sabonis was left alone. He calmly
stepped behind the three-point line
and sank a shot to give to the Soviets a
79-76 lead. The Jayhawks never
regained the lead.
regions Williams and the Jayhawks said they were surprised to see Sabonis convert the three-pointer.
Maddox said, " (Sabonis) is a better shooter than I expected. I didn't expect him to be able to hit a three-pointer like he did."
"It's hard to guard Sabonis because he's so big," Williams said. "He plays well under the basket for them and, at the same time, he goes out to the three-point line and makes you wont see many 7-foot-2 guys who can go out to the three-point line and make it."
poker to the final nine-point margin of victory was the largest lead of the game for the Soviets. During the first half, the Soviets and Jayhawks went back and forth with neither team
Soviet National Basketball Team coach
holding more than a six-point lead.
The Soviets scored the last five points of the first half on a slam dunk by Valeri Goborov and free throws by Titl Sokk to take a 73-17 lead.
In the second half, the Soviets extended their lead to 41-33. But the Jayhawks outscored them 15-2 in the next 4:30 to take a 48-43 lead.
With 21 seconds remaining, Saborn had an opportunity to extend the Soviets lead of 76-74, but missed the front end of a one-and-one free throw. The Jayhawks grabbed the rebound and with 6 seconds left, got the ball into center Alvarez on a skid on a spinning second book over Saborn.
Williams praised the 6-10 Alvarado for his effort against Sabonis.
"Sean's a kid who's worked his tail off and tries to do what we ask him to do." Williams said of Alvarado, who had eight points and six rebounds in 25 minutes. "I'm big on a young man understanding his limitations, and Sean realizes he does have some limitations."
The Jayhawks had an opportunity to win the game during regulation when Maddox stole a pass from Sabonis with 3 seconds left and called a time out.
Maddox passed the ball in to senior Lincoln Minor at half court, and the Jayhawks called another time out with 2 seconds left. Williams wanted to set up a three-point shot for Minor, but Sokk deflected the inbounds pass.
Senior guard Scooter Barry said he was not satisfied with coming close to
the Soviets, but did thinks something positive would come from the game
"It's not a moral victory because we lost," Barry said.
The Jayhawks next game is Nov. 25, when they play Alaska-Anchorage in the opening round of the Great Alaskan Shootout in Anchorage.
Soviet Union 93 Kansas 84
Kansas
M MG F7 FT F4 R A F T1
Randall 37 6-16 3-4 5 1 5 11
Newton 37 8-22 0-0 6 0 3 2 6
Alvarado 37 8-29 0-2 6 0 3 2 8
Barry 23 2-4 3-4 6 1 0 1 8
Minor 24 6-16 3-4 6 3 1 1 4
Minor 23 7-6 3-4 6 3 1 1 8
Maddux 24 7-15 1-1 5 2 3 1 5
Guelderen 14 7-15 0-0 5 2 3 1 5
West 7 0-2 0-1 0 0 0 0 0
West 7 0-2 0-1 0 0 0 0 0
Insults 22 34-97 11-0 14 8 20 0 84
Percentages: FG, 350; FT, 733. Three point goals: 5-19 (Newton 4-11). Blocked shots: 2 (Aviano, Berry) 1. Turnovers: 2 (Guader, Berry) 2. Technicals: None.
Soviet Union 93
| | M | FG | FT | FT | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Volkov | 25 | 3-4 | 1-4 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 7 |
| Tarakovon | 23 | 2-2 | 4-4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 2 |
| Sabons | 23 | 1-8 | 1-4 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 19 |
| Ibom | 19 | 7-8 | 1-3 | 5 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 19 |
| Sook | 39 | 4-7 | 5-5 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 14 | 16 |
| Khomichius | 39 | 4-7 | 5-6 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 14 | 16 |
| Kurtinliai | 18 | 0-2 | 4-4 | 1 | 5 | 2 | 4 | 1 |
| Miglinjes | 18 | 0-0 | 4-1 | 1 | 5 | 2 | 4 | 1 |
| Glembek | 12 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 1 |
| Gobboš | 9 | 2-2 | 0-0 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Totals | 22 | 30-50 | 28-34 | 45-21 | 4 | 1 | 9 | 13 |
Percentages: FG, 800, FT, 823. Three-point goal percentage: 70%, 67%, 54%. (1) (Sabonita 7), Turnovers: 24 (Sabonita, Marchulenius 8). Stails: 3 (Marchulenius, Vokov, Konomichi 1). Technicals: Tarakanak
NOV.
Half: Soviet Union 37-31. Officials: Bain,
Nichols and Samford.
ANSAS 29
Station Breidenthal/KANSAN
Soviet Union center Arvidas Sabonis dunks the ball as Kansas forward Mike Madko watches in the Jahwaks' 93-84 overtime lost Saturday.
KU women's team gets lift, defeats alumni 92-71
By Ken Winford
Kansan sportswriter
Saturday night was a time to remember the past and think about the future of Kansas women's basketball.
The Jayhawk varsity and 13 former Kansas players met at Allen Field House in an alumni game.
It was a game that will likely boost the confidence of a young Kansas team. Freshman Danielle Shareef scored 20 points, leading the Jayhawk varsity to a 92-71 victory over the alumni. Late in the second half, 20 points were added to the alumni score to keep the game competitive.
to keep the game going.
In spite of the lopsided score, Kansas coach Marian Washington said the Jayhawks didn't take the team alumni tightly.
"I made sure that our club understood that these former players were and still are fine athletes," she said. "We knew they were going to be a fine team. We just want to make sure that we keep improving whether we win or lose.
"We were consistent in our play tonight. We moved the ball very well and were balanced in our shot selection. Hopefully, we're going to keep seeing these things that reflect progress."
Angie Taylor, who played for the Jayhawks from 1891 to 1983, and Sue Berens, who played at Kansas in 1977, led the alumni team with eight points apiece.
Other leading alumni scorers included Mesbo Strongher with seven points and Mary Myers, Jackie Martin and Evette Ott with six points each.
with skin tips.
Taylor, who led the Jayhawks in steals during the 1982-83 season with 88, said she was surprised how easy it was to get back into the flow of the game.
"Just getting out there and competing again was really a good feeling," Taylor said. "It was especially nice getting to play with quite a few players that I didn't know. I think it's great they had this alumni game. It's a good way for us to keep in touch with the team."
the team.
Taylor, who is a postal carrier in Kansas City, Mo, hit three of six shots and both of her free throw attempts.
"I play a little basketball on Monday nights, but nothing organized," she said. "Walking eight to 10 miles a day delivering the mail probably helped me keep up tonight."
Berens, who scored six of her eight points in the first half, said she thought the alumni
"We've had some very fine athletes at Kansas," she said. "What's sad in collegiate athletics is that the young men and women are playing their best basketball after they are out of college. I noticed Mesho Stroughter and Lisa Dougherty looked a lot stronger now, and they've only been gone a year."
game would attract interest from other former players.
Dougherty, a key player in the Jayhawks' drive to two consecutive Big Eight Conference tournament championships the last two years, said this year's Kansas team would develop into a solid team.
"From what I've heard, there are a lot of former players that live in this area." Berens said. "I would think there would be a lot of interest in keeping these alumni games going. I know it was special for me to be able to come back and play."
Berenis, who coached high school basketball in Sioux City, Iowa, after leaving Kansas and now works as a bookkeeper in Kansas City, Kan., said she missed basketball.
City, Kail, said she shed "I would love to get back into coaching basketball," she said. "It's been awhile since I've played organized ball, but once you get involved in the game, you really don't ever stop loving it."
Washington said she wasn't surprised by the good performances of some of the alumni.
Although the alumni team only had a few hours to prepare for the game, Mawson said it plaved well.
"It was a very nostalgic evening," she said. "The way I feel is that once you're a coach, you're always a coach. The University of Kansas has played a special part in my life."
"We really weren't in a position to try to press them real hard," she said. "But we were in pretty good shape. I think an athlete is always serious about playing. We did a good job sticking to the fundamentals of the game."
Coaching the alumni was Marlene Mawson, who had a 19-16 record as the Kansas coach from 1968 to 1971.
"When I first came here, we had eight freshmen on the team too." Dougherty said. "They have a lot of things to work on this year, but you can see that they are talented. They are going to get better and better all the time."
Mawson said getting back on the sidelines brought back a lot of memories.
name.
Kansas led the alumni team 47-26 at
naftime. Besides Shareef's 20 points,
LaTanya Nelson scored 16, Lisa Braddy
scored 13 and Marta McCloud scored 10.
sucked in Karen Schneller, who played for Kansas from 1973-76, said things had changed since she played.
she played.
"When I played, nobody ever came to the games," she said. "It was nice to actually play in front of some people."
please.
"You leave that court and think you won't ever go back. That's why this game was so special. Being recognized again was a real nice feeling."
Kansas 92 Kansas alumni 71
Kansas alumni (71)
Kansas (92)
Kansas (92)
McCormick 14, 10 Nelson 3-4, 8 Page 2-6, Hare 1-0, 0-8, 0-
Barnet 5, Barrett 10, Banett 2, Bradley 4,曼德利 3, Sandler 1,
4, Armel 2,1-1, 2Aring 1,0-2, Bonham 0,2-5, Schmidt 0,2-2, 2
Total 36, 16-16 29
Taylor 3-2-2-8 Gloorhunter 3-1-2-7 Benner 3-2-3-6 Dougherty 1-2-1
3 Meyers 0-1-0-0 Gloorhunter 0-1-0-0 Martin 2-0-0-0 Hfootman 0-0-0
10 10.2 McCauley 0.0-0.0 Off 3-0-6 Jackson 2-1-2.5
21 9-11.7
Totals 21 91 37
Kansas 16, Kansas 16, Kansas 14
Fouled out. Three point. Fourth place.
McClendon 17, Nelson 8, Kansas 51 (Page 14).
McClendon 10, Nelson 8, Kansas 37 (Memphis 6), Kansas 21 (Brandy 9), Kansas 13 (Technica 6).
6
Lowery's field goal gives Chiefs victory
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Nick Lowery's 40-yard field goal with 46 seconds left boosted Kansas City past Seattle 27-24 yesterday. It was the Seahawks' seventh straight loss in Arrowhead Stadium.
Seattle tight end Mike Tice fumbles near the Seahawk goal line after being pressured by Kansas City linebackers Dino Hackett and Jack Del Rio.
NFL Roundup
The Chiefs, 3-4-1, drove 51 yards in 13 plays to set up Lowery's heroes after the Seahawks, 6-6, tied the score 24-24 on Dave Krieg's 14-yard touchdown pass to Brian Blades.
Steve DeBerg's 1-yard touchdown run on a quarterback bootleg play gave the Chiefs a 24-14 lead less than a minute into the third period.
David Brandt/KANSAN
a few minutes later, Grant Feaseil's low snap went through the legs of Seattle punter Ruben Rodriguez, and the Chiefs took over on the Seahawk 19. On third and six from the 15. DeBerg went to the y-line play on a quarterback draw play and then scored on the bootleg for a 24-14 lead.
Also yesterday, hard times continued for three of the NFL's most successful franchises. Dallas lost its eight straight game, 38-24 to
Norm Johnson's 32-yard field goal made it 24-17 with 10-13 left and was followed by Seattle's seven-play, 59-yard drive that tied the score 24-24.
Cinnati; Pittsburgh fell to 2-10 with a 27-7 loss at Cleveland, and Green Bay was beaten 19-9 at home by Detroit.
In other games, it was Chicago
27, Tampa Bay 15, Houston 38,
Phoenix 20, Atlanta 12, the Los
Angeles Raiders 6; New Orleans
14; Seattle 11; Detroit 9;
York jets 6 in overtime; Philadel-
dite
phia 23, the New York Giants 17 in overtime; San Diego 38, the Los Angeles Rams 24; Minnesota 12, Indianapolis 3, and New England 6, Miami 3.
KU swim teams may move into top 20 poll Hawks defeat SIU, Illinois teams handily
By Mark E. McCormick
Kansan sportswriter
"There's no doubt that we're one of the top 20 teams in the nation," said Kansas swim coach Gary Kempf. "We've lost to two very, very good teams (the men), and each time we took them right down to the wire. I think we that good; whether or not they vote like that is another thing."
After a strong showing last weekend against Southern Illinois and Illinois, the Kansas men's and women's swim teams could move into this week's national top 20 poll.
The women's team sank the University of Southern Illinois 67-44 and the University of Illinois 71-40. When it did, they beat SIU 61-51 and beat Illinois 77-31.
At the weekend meet in Carbondale, Ill., up- and coming team members contributed to the strong showing. Kempf said.
Kempf said the women performed well even without the services of standout Sue Spry, who was out with a back injury.
"People like Tony Rockette and Jeff Branton swan real well," Kempt said. "These are people who didn't win events, but have moved into an area that the team needed them to move into. We run this program by making progress every week and I think they see progress."
The Jayhawk men were close to
"We needed the medley relay to win the meet and we didn't get it." Kempf said. "They beat us by one second."
Allan Chancy, Fairbanks, Alaska senior said the team was pleased with its performance and didn't seem bitter over the close loss.
upsetting the Salukis, but lost the crucial medley relay.
"I don't think anyone was frustrated because most everyone improved," Chaney said. "We beat them last year and we knew that they'd be ready for us."
Despite losing the medley early, the team continued to swim hard to the end of the meet, Chaney said.
"We kept our heads up," Chaney said. "It was a big thing for us to win the last race. It kept the score real close."
Although he was pleased with the team's effort, Kempf said the men's team lost races it should have won.
"I believe if we're with even in meters to go, we shouldn't lose," he said. "I think we're in good enough condition, we shouldn't lose in the last 10 meters."
---
The team will rest for two weeks and then head to the Harvard Invitational in Boston, Mass., which will play six men's and six women's teams.
12
Monday, November 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Kathy Wismer/KANSAN
runswick
John Noll, a participant in the Special Olympics, anticipates a strike during his bowling game. Noll, who used this device to help him bowl, was one of about 1,200 Special Olympians from eastern Kansas who were in Lawrence this weekend.
Special Olympics helped by Lawrence volunteers
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Everyone was a winner at this weekend's Kansas Special Olympics competition in Lawrence.
More than 1,200 mentally handicapped athletes received medals and ribbons for their participation in the U.S. Tournament for eastern Kansas.
Beginning at 8:30 a.m. Friday, athletes from the eastern half of the state took turns bowling at Royal Crest Lanes, 9th and Iowa streets. Meanwhile, in Robinson Center, other groups showed off their teamwork skills in a volleyball tournament.
Doug McCauley, area coordinator for the Olympics, said everyone who participated in any event received either a medal or a ribbon. First, second and third place winners received gold, silver and bronze medals respectively. All others got placement ribbons.
"We think all the athletes deserve recognition," McCaulley said. "It's great. They treasure the ribbons as well as the medals. Lots of them have boxes at home that are filled with those things."
Most of the athletes practice for about a month before the state
"It wouldn't be fair for a high-functioning volleyball team to beat a low-functioning team 15.0," he gain anything, "either team would gain anything."
matches, McCaulley said. The state office for the Olympics puts the athletes in categories according to their skill levels, thereby keeping the activities competitive and fun.
18. 45 Margie Young, volunteer coordinator, said she was pleased with the community support for the event. helped more than 380 volunteers out with the bowling alone.
"It's wonderful," she said. "The number of volunteers have been increasing every year."
McCauley said about 75 percent of the volunteers are junior high, high school and college students.
"The volunteers have almost as much fun as the athletes," he said. "They pay start off thinking they can't handle working with the mentally retarded, but it becomes infections. It gets in your blood."
Students re-create battle in Hoch
KU society remembers Middle Ages
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
For six hours Saturday afternoon. Hoch Auditorium's stage was transformed into a medieval battlefield.
Men and women in armor fought each other to the death with axes, swords and laces.
However, it wasn't quite the Knights of the Round Table. The fighters were the KU Students for Creative Anachronism; the weapons were made of bamboo; and everyone walked away after dying.
David Putz, Bettendorf, Iowa, graduate student, who is known in SCA as Lord Steffen, the group was educational.
we're interested in re-creating the medieval ages rather than just reading about them," he said. "Most everything they ever did, we do."
Putz said that the group, which has been in Lawrence for about 10 years, met almost every weekend to actively study the Middle Ages.
in addition to fighting, about 50 members also danced, made beads, and displayed pottery, calligraphy and other artwork.
However, Putz said, the group doesn't try to get too close to the reality of the Middle Ages.
"We try to stay away from the not-so-good things," he said.
re said that members didn't want to do without such modern luxuries as running water. If fact, some members were drinking out of goblets, but they were only washing down their delivered pizza.
rather than just reading about
creating the medieval ages
'We're interested in re-
'W
them.'
David Putz Bettendorf, Iowa, graduate student
Another feature of the Middle Ages that the group doesn't want to emulate is the violence. The groups' weapons are made out of rattan, a solid bamboo. Also, the members wear homemade armor to absorb the fire.
That kind of safety-consciousness has made the fighting more sport than violence.
Putz said that a few years zgo, an insurance company evaluated the group. "We rated somewhere around ping-pong as far as severity of inju-
Still, the idea of the fight is to kill, but that is based on an honor system, said Carol Putz, David's wife.
"If you get hit in the arm, you put your arm behind your back and fight without it," she said. "If you get hit in the legs, you fight on your knees."
D. H. M.
one said that a solid shot to the head or the body was a killing blow but that each person was on his honor to admit that he was dead.
Society for Creative Anachronism members Greg Anderson, Boulder, Colo. resident, left and Richard Jones, Lawrence resident, joust at Hoch Auditorium Saturday afternoon. Both are KU graduates.
Trick question: Has Bush been elected president?
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Suppose, just suppose, that after his election as president two weeks ago, President-elect George Bush dies before the Electoral College meets in December. Who would become president?
Or suppose that the Electoral College has met, but Bush dies, resigns or is disqualified before Congress counts the electoral votes on Jan. 6. Or, after the votes are counted, some dire fate befalls the president-elect before Inauguration Day on Jan. 20.
elected on Nov. 8, not even Bush. No matter how the ballot was phrased, votes were cast for the electors who will choose the president and the vice president when they meet in their individual states on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December. This year, that's Dec. 19.
Who would become president? Vice President-elect Dan Quayle? Don't be too sure.
"Until the electors meet, there is no president-elect," says Thomas H. Neale, an analyst in American government for the non-partisan Congressional Research Service.
Under Democratic and Republican party rules, if the presidential or vice presidential candidate dies or resigns between the nominating conventions and the electors' meetings, the national committees fill the vacancy.
It is not clear what would happen if the winning candidate dies, resigns or is disqualified between the time electoral votes are cast on Dec. 19 and the votes are counted in Congress on Jan. 6.
The first question is a trick. No person was
"There is a school of thought that there really is still no president-elect or vice president-elect until the votes are counted in Congress," says Neale. "It is a report for Congress on presidential elections."
THANKSGIVING
Continued from p. 1
Families can request a male or female student or a student from a specific country.
ate family and with Bennett's parents. Bennett said her 5-year-old son had a lot of fun with the student they met last year.
"It's really nice because he just accepts people as they are," Bennett said. "He's really looking forward to it."
Students can request either a city or small town setting.
Families like the Bennett can specify preferences when they talk to Martin. She said that most prefer non-smoking students.
Mattias Brust, a student from West Germany, and his wife will get a little bit of both settings this break. They will be spending Thanksgiving with a family who lives on a farm near Wichita.
placed in a city setting, he said the are happy to have the chance to see both farm life and Wichita.
Although Brust and his wife preferred to be
"We're both looking forward to meeting an American family." Brust said.
He said the typical Thanksgiving dinner with turkey, stuffing and mashed potatoes is not a part of his culture. Celebrating Thanksgiving with a turkey will be a new experience for Brust and his wife.
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849 land, plain roundroom, transportation
Deluxe condominium with fireplace, jacuzzi,
1 book from lock, Contact DAVID 842-165. Limited
SUICIDE INTERVENATION. If you feel like you want to end it all, or if you are concerned about someone who might, call 814-2543 or by click 911. Mass Healing Center. We're comfortable, and always open.
Hey KU! Want a challenge? Try Adams Campus Challenge Course. Call Ree. Services at 864-3546.
WILDLIFE
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
UNIQUE GIFTS
Ornaments, Cards, Toys
Mon.-Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 864-4450
Don't be a TURKEY try MESSAGE. Reduce your stress and don't forget your GIFT CERPITCHATE make holiday shopping easy now. Tip: Call 811-602-6622. Remember, you knew it!
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JAN 2-7 Steamboat Bill or Wayne 841-8155
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13
WE TEACH SKIN CARE® Dermatologist tested. Mary Kay has a skin care system for you, Call us today! Nancy Armstrong. Mary Kay Beauty Consultant 841-351
ENTERTAINMENT
GOOD VIBRATIONS: the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call (Brian) 841-9448.
Handel's import Repair will tune up your car. 835 plus parts, mobile service. 841-6299
FOR RENT
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B-days, singing messages. 841-1874
1 bedroom available on 24th & Iowa. Near bus route. #842-965. Rent: $15 * helpfuls.
2 bedroom apartment for rent second semester
100% financing. shopping On bus route Call
844-8495
2 berroom & 8 bath apt. with microwave, ice maker and plush carpet. Call 842-5111.
3 bedroom-comfortably fits 4+ availability Dec. 31 Sunrise Village washer washer-garage-garage 2-baths AC-tennis court court microwave-off 8th Street Call 84136 4031 anytime.
2d. Semester Sublease - Nismish Place Apt 2s
894-4251 bathroom, bathhouse furnished unfurnished
794-4259
Affordable, spacious, 2 br. apt. Furn., on bus route, jacuel! 481-3800.
Available. One bedroom apartment with studio bed and student bed. No pets. 842 kbps plus electric charge. 841.1207 Available. Jan thru May. Two bdt apartm. Free WiFi. Free space. Free cable. rent negotiable. Call 843-9048
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4 bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call today 841.1212, 841.5255, 841.1429, or 749.2415.
- Completely Furnished Studios. 1-2-3 & a bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 652-7855, or 749-2415. Mastercraft Management
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: To share nice 2 bedroom apartment Spring Semester Call 749-1955.
Female Roommate wanted: to share beautiful apartment in Pepperett Park. Available immediately. Aartment includes: own bedroom, fireplace, and free water. Please call 749 8038.
Female Roommate wanted to share large two
store house. $200/month. All utilities paid.
841-956.
Female roommate wanted for nice 4 bedroom duplex. Overlocks Park, 2 blocks from bus. 3 great roommates. $125 + utilities. 841.2746.
Female hotelmate (graduate student, non smoker invited; first floor of house on dorm room) Dwn room Washer dryer, great location near campus, downtown, park Call 749-8697
For Sublease: Large 1 bd., Colony Woods available now. Call 843-7830.
Fully furnished one bedroom, apartment. Civilic
big. Double for two. Must go in Nov. 10th &
Arkansas. $340 - utilities. 841-0732 or 794-2415
Janette
Male or Female roommate wanted. Very nice
townhouse for 2nd semester. $210/mo. +1/2
utilities. On KU bus route. B41-4904
House for rent January 1, 1989 $50; 2 bedrooms.
garage. garage/wdryer, A/C. Located on Tennessee. Call Tonya at 749-7380.
Moving to KC? Person needed to share 2 bedroom apt. close to KU Medical Center. Prefer female.
Large bedroom $175 + utilities $81,640,417
Nice 2 bed rental duplex for sublease, on bus route,
garage, $390, call Scott at 843-8304
NAISMITH HALL. Sublease. Will give you money for deposit + one half month rent. Starting Spring Semester. Call 749-248-4956.
Nice two bedroom, bath, fully furnished apart-
ment with large window, many wi
reatly great locations, laundry, call 841-9611.
One large becom for sublease at Haveron Place
with water, paid and, furnished
Bathroom 841-1212
New York, New York. Nassau Place Apartments. New York City. Build in study area. Available in午 1.850 $ usm for house. Nice private room in large furnished house for non-smoker. Call 843-9699.
Single apartment for sublease 2 blks from Union
$250 month 812-5546 best after 9:30pm
Sublease: Large 21R apt. on Bus Route. Can sleep 3. Call 814-3400.
Sublease (Jan 1, May 31): 2 bedroom, 1½
spacious DUPLX at MEADOWBROOK
Families welcome. @843-0821.
Sub-lease immediately until May '98. A room with a view! Apple Lane Studio. Desperate! (913) 491-3036
Sunflower House is taking applications for spring '89. We offer private rooms, VTV/CRV game, and lady facilites. Live rent includes all utilities, and facilites. We also facilitate a living try. Call 749-8671 or 814-8444.
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
- 182 bedroom units
* Laundry facilities
* On bus route-near shopping
* Water paid
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th B1-51797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- Water paid
- Some with gas paid
- Some with gas paid
* Ample off-street parking
* Rental furniture available
* jameson-Crawley
by Thompson-Crawley
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowhawk.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
WANTED Person or persons to assume a lease at Lawndy Woods, 1 bedroom, at seminal call. End September 25th.
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. large, bath,
dishwasher, dishwasher dryer up to $960/month +
utilities 3 blocks from campus. 5 or 8 month
seasonal beaterium 14.789-3832
Two MOD studies for sublease. Dec. 15th? 1203
Oread. Across from Yello Sub. 749-085. 749-2916.
749-3782.
TRAILRIDGE STUDIO available for sublease
spring semester. Quite clean, great location (on
route, laundry, pool, Dillen'). Phone 749-4393
at 2pm evenings or weekends.
*WANTED* - Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 842-237.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 60044
* 913 - 843 - 8559
Convenience...
Luxury...
Privacy...
All these Advantages and more!
Naismith Hall... These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hassle free living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all your worries.
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
For information and a tour come by or call today!
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Newly remodeled
- Great location
- On KU bus route
- Gas heat
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 21. 1988
26th & Iowa 843-6446
We Bring More Roommates Together by Splitting Them Up.
Colony Woods realizes the closer you are to your roommate the farther apart you want to be. Knowing this, we separate our 2 bedrooms and a kitchen and living room area.
You can still save money by sharing the rent and keep your privacy too!
FOR SALE
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
Ask How We Can Save You $$$.
Colony Woods
AUDIO SALE: Cassette decks, Teac, JVC, Sony
from $75 - $150. Must sell. 841-9484.
Comic books, Playbys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun. 10-5.
1-way ticket on American West to Tucson, AZ
from KCI, Lease 11/2, best offer, 843-3016
apartments
glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and decorate jewelry, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, record albums, vintage clothing, books, baseball records, vintage clothing, books, basketball art descriptive items, clocks, beauty tools, royal Daulet, and so much more stuff used in crafting. **MARKET 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sun. 10 to 5.** No rental info until # 826 6617.
For Sale: Lowrey electric organ Python snakekin boots. Larry 843-8043
For Sale: **86 Biancini Road Bike**, like new, '88
Hard Rock Mountain Bike. 841-0099.
FREE information on New Ka Police Photo
NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE
$80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 radar detector that
is available at Enterprise, P O Box 274, Kailua Kodai 6003.
Sleep with the best. A cotton FUTon for $88.88 at
New Wave Futons. 11 East st. Eighth Bldg. 823-7278
Vector Research 35W stores, infinity speakers,
all brand new. Cont $40.00; Sell for $250. 749-3692
GOTV SURPLUS! New G.I. Overstances, Com-
panions, clothing & sampons, & mennonet JFets, Overstances,
Mennonet Clothing Also CARHARTT Mennonet
Clothing Also MARYS Murray Sales. S.
Marys肌肌 14-372374
Inexpensive bridal boutique has lots of beautiful wedding costumes to offer. Call 842-8922, 3449 Iowa.
Now showing. Fig. Grafics newest southwestern
futures at New Wave Futures 11.
East 8th Bld. 942.7378
Friday, Jan. 5th
Minolta XCJM camera, aperture prepared,
5mm f2 lens plus 70-150mm f.8.0 zoom, camera
case, 4175 or best offer. Evenings, weekends
841-4215.
Naisimh Hall contract for sale. Will pay deposit.
Call 749-4618 or 749-7403.
Rock-n-roll : Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. over Saturday and Sunday Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hamshire
Pavey Mystic electric guitar, excellent condition
and Craft C140 amp, almost new, $200,
$250, $300.
1976 Olds. Omega, 355i, cruci, lilh, rldefog,
AM/FM, Phrk, Phrk, Pwnd, runs super, 106 kI,
$750 OBD. OH4 - 843-292 evs, wknd
1974 Dodge Maxivan, 87,000 mi, runs great. $750 or best offer. 841-1955.
AUTO SALES
1980 Toyota Tercel, 2 d. speed, 5 km/h, ac stereo, 278 i.m. excellent condition, $168-$OBO. CAir 841-7698 Mazda 628 z. am./FM, 5 speed, looks and runs great! **1230** $80 OBI 841-7698 Chris.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100.
Mercer, Mercedes, Coveys, Chevroli,
Buyers Guide. (1) 865-687-4000 Ext. S-9738
LOST-FOUND
HELP WANTED
Must sell: 1976 Camero, 78,000 miles. Runs well.
V-8 engine, good condition. $580. Call 843-0757.
Lost! gold snip机 $4, "long near Yello Sub, Nov.
3 sentimental valve, 843-649-63.
Enteral Intravenous ASSISTANT
Enteral intracavitary assistant and ambitious person to work part-time. 25 to 30 day - as an administrative assistant. Individually assigned tasks with good typing skills, and be able to work effectively in a fast paced environment. If you are interested in a position, call at 814-1200 between s and m. Mon. frri Fri.
Arthur Porters now hire line cooks and prep cooks. Must be available over X-mas break and have previous experience. Start wage $4.00 per hour. Students of Massachusetts above 80 Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse.
JD/Producer for KLZH 8:30 am-, 30 hr/wk
(25 hrs/wk) on Monday through Friday.
to Mr. LEE, P.O. Box 3007, Lawrence KS 60440
(801) 782-9700
Cottonwood Inc. has staff positions open in the Residential Program. Currently hiringResidential Assistants who work every other weekend will fill these positions. Please interested please fill out an application at 2801 N. 76th St.
Freshman, sophomores, and juniors: train in the summer to become Marine Corps officers after graduation. Investial and financial aid available 925 Iowa. Call 641-1821
Attention: Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for full-time day positions. Above avg, starting salary. Apply between 2- 158.168 W. 2xrd
Help Wanted (Office and Clerical)
K. U. student One-half to four-thirds time (20:30 per week. Three-thirds time prefers Monday availability. Three-thirds time available December 12, 1988, through June 30, 1989. Three-month probationary period. Service as assistant professor in the College of Education.
Mass Street Deli. Now hiring limited number of cooks and waitstaff positions. Must have日 availability and be available over X-mas break Massachusetts above Bobo Buff's Smokehouse.
Immediate openings with flexible hours for
security store. See June in person. 23rd and
34th floors.
with special projects relating to facilities.
Previous office experience with knowledge of off-
ice equipment and computer systems, 10-key calculator and type 60 wpm. Demonstration of typing skills required at interview. Prefer
some of typing skills required at interview. Prefer some knowledge of business forms. Submit letter of interest to the office of the campus Geological Survey, 1930 Constant Avenue, Campus West, Lawrence KS 46486, or complete application at the Geology Technologist's Desk, Moore Hall. Applications received by a 4-dip in, Friday, December 2, 1988, will be forwarded to the library.
OVERSEAS JOURS $900 $300 mo. Summer, All counts. All countries. All fields. Free info Write UC, DC B2 K52 K10 Corolla Dal CA, M925 workers. Worker Packet Plastic is examining job candidates.
Staying in town over break? Need $50 Lovekids Kita? Apply to Children Learning Center 311 for master teacher aid position. Flexible hours, $3.50 hour.
RESORT HOTELS. Cruiselines, Airlines, &
applications for summer jobs, internships,
for more information and an application;
write National College Recreation Service, PO
800-259-3100.
Beliable babysitter needed at home day-care.
Part-time, very light work, minimum wage. Interested,
call 842-2088.
8 a.m. 12 noon, 12 noon 4p-m, 4 p.m 4p-m,
8 p.m. 12 midnight, 12 midnight 4a-m,
8 p.m. 12 midnight, 12 midnight 4a-m.
wk.starting pay $2/4r if unattendance
please call 842-3000 Ask for part-time work
Part-time help wanted early evening hours cleaning commercial buildings. Sunday through Thursday. Above minimum wage. 843-649-6100
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Open-
ings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send
Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. W. Wyoming,
Kalispell. MT 99001
TACO JOHS - now hiring Day & Earnings apply
al 3 locations 1068 Mass. M28, 192d, or 110 W
6th, Mature, responsible persons need only apply.
Apply between 2.5 pm.
Sub & Stuff has immediate openings for Day &
late night shifts. Above avg.Starting salary. Apply
between 2.5, 1618 W, 23rd.
85 pgs. O-temp/Cold; 18 left, fed culture—no antibiotics, no aloeiness, nursing aid, milk education, moved shed, ceder (skept apart). Video when like freshly, early in temperature, compressed, compatible, controlled aggregated, comfortable all temperatures, immature, immunoable (unappropriate) immune survival, mutual temperature (immuneable) survival, constant Summer-time kept clean avoid wailows. Introduced Summer-time kept clean avoid wailows (function slippage) occurs repeat cult.
W T C. S. The local battered women's program is looking for a full-time community facilitator, who can raise funding for community networking, representation to battered women and their children. Women are formally battered women, and differently abled women available at Headquarters, Women Studies, Job Service Center, Husky Health Center, or another location. A candidate must be postmarked by Wed, Dec. 8th, 1988.
MISCELLANEOUS
BEY, SELL. LOAN CASI
On Tvs. KS, Jewelry, Sterios, Musical instruments, chords, and more. We honor Visa/M.C.M.E.X. J. Hawk Fare & Jewelry,
Wb 6.08 H 749-195
PERSONAL
Annie H. and L. Adee. Adam and Eve, which is West. 999 Barney Rubble. How yours? 'How's the weather up there? OK, no more height jokes Jinken.
Art. Welcome back! I missed you like crazy,
honey. Thanks for believing in us. Love you very
much. Boom. Boom
Burrito, Burrito, Burrito...Enchilada!
Kliener - Roadtrip '88 Coolers from Shopko,
Kroel's Shooters, Marg's and Married, Pike's,
Kroel's (top 40, trusty fuzzburzer), bury the
spedometer, Thanx. Your, Sayah, Sarah.
Sarah.
Catera L. you Far East bare. double Bobea and a blonde. I must be doubly blessed. - CRK
LISA. You can borrow my jacket anytime! How can borrow ME for an evening? Please call T. S.
A.U. HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT? **B.**
I want chick chick chck Cockadeo doole
Happy Birthday LOVE, LOVE, Chimp
R. D. I will enjoy you. Pia Bone, P.
When do I get to watch your?
J. C. One year ago today we met. Thanks for being so special. Remember, you'll always be my favorite volleyball player! Love, Scott.
LIZ. Don't be afraid. All I want is to know you.
Call me, please. - M.M.
BN'S. In or out, we gave it our oil and had a BLAST! Thanks for everything. Stewart and Preston, the greatest! Love. The AX's
Pression, you're the greatest! Love, The AX's. SWM, sweet romantic honest male with a full set of clubs for a romantic holiday in Palm
The five finalists: Have a Happy Thanksgiving.
It's been a pleasure. Prince.
BUS. PERSONAL
Alarm Lite. It is screensa for help. Carry in pocket,
protect for land. Protect alarm makes it an excellent attention getting device. Excellent for campus protection. $9.95.
FALL Line Shi & Snowboarding Tuning
Complete tuning and repair. Home pickup and delivery. Certified Tested. Call 842-3027.
Government Photo: Passport immigration
visas. Modeling, theatrical. Advanced fine art partitions. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Swells 749-181.
Low cost Major Medical Insurance for
dependents. 2 children with $25 deductible only
$35 $68 month. With almost higher Kansas
Insurance Service $82 $118.
International Student Travel Low rates on scheduled flights worldwide
Pin Strip Gatchet Socket Socket screwdriver Eight socket wrenches, AWL two double stills Spperc screwdriver Zipped gift box. Fifteen piece compact tool kit. Price $9.65
CLOSIARO D'LAZAR $NITE/FOR T2 Ten coy log oak cabin. 90' x 18' x 36'. GAMESMORE, fireplaces, HOO, pool, spa. P, Country ski .SKI Winter Park, Silver Lake. Boat rentals. BOAT RENTALS. Brochure/reservations. - Lakes Granada, CO. Brochure/reservations. - Lakes Granada, CO.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
THE COMIC CORNER
NE corner of 23rd & hour | 941-8944
Role-playing & War Games 100's of miniatures & modules
The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
HARPER
HARPER LAW OFFICES
1101 Mass., Suite 201, 749-0123
SPRING BREAK '89
Trips Available Now
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT, CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
Don't Wait Until It's Too
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Breaks
1-800-321-5911
Dr.Jay J.Burlingame Optometry
American Optometric
Evening Hours
3111 west 6th
841-5288
Kansas Optometric Association
"Dedicated to Excellence
SERVICES OFFERED
Bouder Portraits are still the greatest gift; sets include Glamour gimbalized make-up and full posing assistance. For more information call Mike or Gracie collect 1-299-3789.
Attention College Algebra Students - Need help?
Experienced math tutor available. 842-8409.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling; For free, confidential, 24-hour referrals, call KU info at 864356 or headquarters at 841-2345 Sponsored by GLSOK
KP PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ekatchen
PROCESSING within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT $6.00 Art & Design Building,
Room 206 864-4767
K U. INFORMATION CENTER 864-3506. Campus, community events; University procedures, SUICIDE/CRISIS HELP, referrals 24 hrs/day.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A. $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.)
teaching experience. Call Aix at 641-7861
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services.
Overland Park...(913) 491-6878.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5718
SHRUTTLE Van to KCI Airport. Flying home for Thanksgiving or Christmas? $10. 864-2315.
Very experienced Spanish 104-216
tutor/translator. Results oriented, systematic
approach makes Espanol easier, even fun. 841-0574.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy. 842-7945 or Liaa. 841-1915
TYPING
2 smart typesetting. Dissertations, thesis,
Paper, Resumes and more. Spelling corrected
and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts.
Low tpr vinyl prints: 749-2740.
i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your sentences into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843/263, days or nights
ACT NOW - Papers, resumes, & cover letters.
WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3469.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, mice. IBM correcting Selectric, spelling corrected. 843-9654
Accurate word processing. Meadrowbook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience. Call evenings before 10.749-1961.
Typing and Word Processing
term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser
Printer. Spelling corrected. 492-2747.
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses, dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates 841-8633.
842-1668 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25 double-spaced pic page. East Lawrence
Mrs. Mattila 841-1219
ATTN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS - Word processing service available near you. APA format experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak. 843-6708.
Call R.J.'s Typing Service 8419-5942. Term papers, Legal, Speeches, etc., No thesis after a P.M. Domna's Quality Typing and Word Processing. Term papers, letter, description, letter.
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-4119. In Topka. Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality writer
Expert Typist: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203.
IRON FENCE TYPING. 841-8583.
SPEEDTERM Word Processing Service. Accurate and reliable, spelling checked. Call 843-2376.
TYPNING/WORD PROCESSING. Done on computer, saved to disk for easy corrections/changes. Letter-Quality Print. Legal exp. Laura. 542.378. Leave Message.
***Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 843-1011. Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday. Typing word processing on p. C. lqr printer. Term *P*. dissertations, music. msc. Barbara 842-210
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne. 842-7708.
THEWORDOCTORS- Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these, resumes, commercial, IBM-PC, MAC CDP, dml matrix, dml text. Lisen 1808 8431-347
Female roommate for Spring Semester. Good living arrangements very close to campus. Call 843-2725.
WANTED
Female roommate wanted second semester to
assume lease on large 2-bedroom apartment.
8128/000 mn + 1$_x$ utilities. Close to campus and
downtown. Joel 843.2234
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse. r/rent/utilities, bus route, fireplace, pool, washer/driver. Call 749-6991.
Now hiring part-time help. Apply in person on
Fri, 2-4 1527 W. 6th.
Female roommate will share a 2 bedroom apt, starting Jan 1, 1989. Village Square Apts. $177 per mo. + ½ utilities. After Spm. Call 843-8333
Female roommate wanted, very nice two bedroom apartment completely furnished. $187 + 2 utilities. 749-3208
Female roommate wanted second semester. Own large bedroom and bathroom. On campus. Call Jackie 843-8088
House Share, Private Room, W & D, furnished, 3
blks from campus all the comforts of home,
749-7515.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
**LOOK-1** must sublease my half of two bedroom apt. rent only $145/month. Many amenities. 842818 Hurry!
Personal roommate needed for second semester.
Assume lease of private bedroom/bath of 3-bedroom apartment. 13利用率, $170/month.
Bus route and bus number: 842-1436. Lauren.
Non-smoking roommate needs to share house. Rent $100 + 3 utilities. Fully furnished, Microwave, Computer and furniture, close to campus. Call 843-7892 after 6pm, ask for Scott
- Policy
One needed to share beautiful new townhouse
Private room and bath with all amentions. On bus
route, reasonable rest. 749-726.
Male or Female roommate want to save giant 2 BR apt. 1, bath. wash(dryer, pool, huge balcony, on bus route. $75/mo (negotiable). $1 utilities. Gary B-941-0677
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1. You will have to pay $250.00 for each route. $190.00 + $49.00 = Utilities. Male roommate wanted for Spring semester. Owner bestows: Village Survice $4.00 + $4.00 =Utilities.
Roommate wanted to share 4 bedroom apart-
ment and a van. avail a room at $170/month.
170 month + $25/month. Roommate needed. Very convenient & modern
apartment on his route $100 - electricity
SINGERS Well known Motown-style a capella group re-forming. May need bass. high tenor with falsetto. 784-9241 for more info.
Ranimate wanted Georgetown Apartments B-2D $800 a month + utilities. Call Tim at 416-1066 or visit www.ranimates.com for details. Sublease. 2 bedroom apartment. Great location. 30 blocks from campus close to downtown. $150 a month. Call 416-1066.
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified notes are based on the following criteria:
Wanted: Someone to provide night support for disabled man from 10:45 p.m. to 8:30 a.m. Pays $12.50 per night, 749-1729
Spring, Semester Quit, roommate roommate
wages $145 per month *+* utilities. Bate 842-1628.
Spring semester female roommate waged. Park
message. Bate $10 *+* utilities. 860-698 Leave
message
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University Daily Kansas
Lawrence 516 66045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1990 Cronicle Features
Distributed by Unique Press Syndicate
11-23
---
14
Monday, November 21, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
KU
PERSONAL SYSTEM/2 CAMPUS SALE
IBM The Bigger Picture. © IBM CORPORATION 1988
SHOW THEM THIS
You've shown your folks where you eat, where you sleep, and where you go to class, now show them what's going to help you study.
what's going to help you study.
The IBM Personal System/2 is the best way to show your parents just how serious you are about your grades. It's easy to learn and easy to use, and can help you organize notes, revise papers, produce high-quality graphics, access information from the library and much more. And eligible students, faculty, and staff have the opportunity, during this limited time, to purchase a new IBM Personal System/2 at special low prices.
special show phrases
Show them what counts.
TO ORDER
A verification form can be picked up at the Jayhawk Bookstore or the Academic Computer Center. Complete the verification form, including payment in full and return to the Jayhawk Bookstore.
the payhawk bookstore Payment should be in the form of Certified or Cashier's check, made payable to "IBM Corporation"
or
or Credit Card (IBM Credit Card, Mastercard, VISA, Diners Club, or American Express). Split payment will not be accepted between credit card and cash payment.
ABOUT FINANCING
Loan Assistance
If you are a student interested in financing a Personal System/2, contact the Financial Aid Office today, 26 Strong Hall.
IBM Credit Card
An application for the IBM Credit Card (for students, faculty and staff) is available in the Jayhawk Bookstore.
JAYHAWK PACKAGE #1
KU PS/2 CAMPUS SALE PACKAGES
Model 25 Monochrome
8086 Processor
2 - 3.5 " Diskette Drives
12 " Monochrome Display
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Orders accepted from November 1 to December 7, 1988.
M
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. Lawrence, KS 65044
(913)8-3438 3826
I'll just use the prompt text.
1
Vol. 99, No. 62 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday November 22,1988
Mahatma Gandhi
JFK
Campus recalls Nov.22,1963
By Terry Baurou
Kansan staff writer
On a typical Friday morning in late November 1963, tests and papers were due, students were busy making plans for Saturday's football game and Thanksgiving vacation was only a few days away.
But the afternoon brought a silence that would soon envelop the campus.
The news came that President John F. Kennedy had been shot in Dallas.
net. For those old enough to remember Nov. 22,
the moment is frozen in time.
"I can remember it with crystal clarity," said John Stuckey, chairman of KU's All-Student Council in 1963.
Council in 1963. Stuckey said he had fallen asleep on the floor of his room when he was awakened by a newscaster's voice.
newBaster's son.
The tone of the voice was dreadful. The response that Kennedy had been shot, "Stuckey said." "I picked up the phone to call someone and there was no dial tone. The phone system was swamped with everyone trying to reach out to someone else."
Stuckey said that within 15 to 20 minutes everyone on campus had heard.
everyone on campus had heard
"For the next 72 hours no one on campus
was allowed in." He added, "else he said.
For the next 72 hours no one on campus thought or talked about anything else," he said.
The mainstream campus life stopped, and the mood was one of disbelief and sadness.
mood was. Students walked home from canceled classes in freezing rain. Students and faculty crowded around the nearest radio or television hoping that someone would say that President Kennedy was alive.
was alive.
Like most other football games scheduled for Saturday, KU's 72nd meeting with the University of Missouri was postponed.
One of KU's most prominent sports figures, Gale Sayes, an All-American in 1963, was quoted as saying, "How can you play football when you can't must fight mast for the Presidium of the United States."
Marsha Dutton, who was a senior at KU in 1963, was in Boston listening to the Boston Symphony Orchestra when the conductor announced that Kennedy had been shot.
Please see JFK1. p. 10, col. 4
'Camelot' image tarnished with time
By Terry Bauroth Kansan staff writer
Twenty-five years have passed since the assassination of John F. Kennedy, but the event continues to touch people.
confinement. As党中央 was the youngest president ever elected. He served almost three years before he was shot and killed in a Dallas motorcade on Nov. 22, 1963. Many people still remember him with a striking sense of loss.
Francis Heller, professor emeritus of law, recalls his feelings at the time of Kennedy's death.
theory's denomination.
"He was three months older than me. He was my generation. This was my generation's chance and it had gone down the drain." said Heller, who taught at the University of Kansas at the time.
University of Kansas He said that young people felt positive about Kennedy because they could identify with his optimism.
"It was his manner they could identify with," Heller said. "Kennedy managed to articulate a sense of let's do something good for the country, and in those days a lot of students responded."
For instance, Kennedy established the Peace Corps in 1961. And Heller said that people lined up to interview with the Peace Corps when they came to the University of Kansas campus.
hasis camps
Food for Peace, the Alliance for Prog
ress, economic aid for underdeveloped nations and for the dissident Communist regimes of Yugoslavia and Poland also were programs inaugurated or increased by his administration as part of its more flexible strategy in the Cold War.
He was credited with the resolution of the Cuban missile crisis when the Soviets agreed to remove offensive missiles from
Please see CAMELOT, p. 10, col. 1
Mulroney wins in Canada
The Associated Press
TORONTO — Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's Conservatives won a majority of seats in the House of Commons, more than enough needed to save the free trade pact with the United States, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. projected last night.
duan Broffcasting Corp. project. The CBC projected the new House of Commons would have 170 seats for Mulroney's Progressive Conservative Party, 22 more than needed for a majority in the 295-seat House of Commons.
it projected that John Turner's opposition Liberals, who fiercely attacked the trade pact, would win 84 seats and the socialist New Democratic Party of Ed Broadbent, which also opposed the accord, would win 41 seats.
seats.
Without giving specific figures, the public network said its breakdown of the popular vote showed the Conservatives with 43 percent, down by 7 percentage from 1984; the Liberals with 36 percent, up 8 percentage points, and the New Democrats in third with 18 percent.
16 per cent. The President Reagan and Mulroney signed the trade agreement last Jan. 2 and Mulroney needed a majority in the Commons to keep it alive. The U.S. Congress has approved the pact, but Parliament has yet to do so.
do so.
The plan is to take effect Jan. 1, 1989, and phase out remaining tariffs over the next 10 years between Canada and the United States, whose two-way trade is worth $150 billion a year.
Judge asks for decision President could order closing of North case
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The judge in the tran- contra case yesterday appealed for President Reagan to decide once and for all whether to let Oliver North stand trial and thereby risk the disclosure of national security secrets.
U. S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gessell warned that if the former White House aide went to trial, probably in late January, the court would have "very little control" over the testimony of many witnesses "acquainted with high-security matters."
The judge invited a final administration decision on the problem, noting the dangers posed by public questioning of current and former government officials who would be called to testify as prosecution witnesses.
court. Geseil was not suggesting, as some of North's supporters have, that the president consider pardoning North before he even goes to trial. Rather, the judge was referring to the president's discretion as the nation's chief law enforcement officer, either directly order that the case be dropped or by invoking secrecy laws to prevent disclosure of classified information.
Hopper, county commissioner, dies
By Jeremy Kohn Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff write
Douglas County Commission Chairman David C. Hopper lost his fight against cancer yesterday morning and died at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He
PETER E. BALDWIN
Hopper
Hopper was forced to enter the hospital Nov. 13 because of lung and brain cancer.
brain
washs McKenzie, county administrator,
said the disease began to trouble Hopper about eight months ago, but he slowed down only when
Bill Martin, head of economic development at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said Hopper convinced other commissioners to pay for a $200,000 water tank in Eudora. The tank ensured that UARCO Co. a printing firm, would move to Eudor*
Colleagues said the Eudora Democrat was a power behind some of the county's business development and its corrections program.
pain compelled him. During a hospital visit last week, McKenzie said that Hopper wanted to cast votes for the next commission meeting.
District Court Judge Mike Malone said Hopper convinced other commissioners to implement the county corrections program, which supervises the rehabilitation of nonviolent offenders for the police, which began in March 1987, the court had to decide between prison and probation.
pritting out, would be. "If it hadn't been for David's work on that project, the company would now be in Iowa," Martin said.
"I head an incredibly bright outlook on life," McKenzie said.
"I know it wouldn't have happened if it hadn't been for his initiative," Mone said. "He saw it as a chance to help the lives of some individuals."
Martin said Hopper also helped develop the East Hills Business Park in Eudora and projects in Baldwin and Lecompton.
McKenzie said that the Douglas County Democratic Party Planning Commission must appoint a commissioner to replace Hopper until county Commissioner-elect Mike Amyx takes office in January.
Hopper won his commission seat in 1984, after retiring from Haskell
takes an active parish rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. today at Warren-McElwain Mortuary. The Rev. Charles Andalikiewicz will preside at the funeral services at 10 a.m. tomorrow at Holy Family Catholic Church in Eudora. Burial will be in Holy Family Cemetery.
Hopper is survived by his wife, Patricia; two sons; three daughters; a sister; and 13 grandchildren.
War games company seeks land permit
Indian Junior College as a vocational education instructor. He did not seek re-election this year.
By Mark Fagan
December 7, 1988, is a day that could live in infancy for Lawrence resident Curt Baxter.
Kansan staff writer
"We hope that we are actually going to some community of Lawrence," he said, noting the significance with the same day in 1941 when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.
Boumman Pearl Hearst
The Douglas County Commission will vote Dec. 7 on a request for a conditional use permit, which would allow Baxter and his roommate, Glenn Skulberstad, to organize their war game company, "Splatter Inc."
The game would be an elaborate "capture the flag," in which two teams would wage战 against
each other with guns armed with paint pellets.
In June, the planning commission unanimously recommended denial of the game's original site just west of the Cedar Hills subdivision, about three miles south of Lawrence.
For Baxter and Skulburstad the day would not signal the beginning of a war, but rather the end of one. Their plan for the game has been shut down as Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission.
On Wednesday, however, the commission approved a plan to place the game on a 47-acre tract of land northwest of Eudora, just south of the Kansas River and north of the far reaches of East 15th Street.
areas. The Jad帕斯.
“There are no other residential uses around there. There’s probably a half mile to the nearest house.” Banks said. “They’re down to the last ship.”
Price Banks, city planning director, said the planning commission approved the second plan because the site was not near any residential areas. The plan passed 4-3.
step. But the last step could be a big one, Baxter said. He still must meet with Eudora residents, most of whom are opposed to the game.
The Eudora Planning Commission recommended denial of the latest plan, but its role was
Please see GAMES, p. 8, col. 3
Kansan staff writer
Man chooses pigs over mobile homes
When John Fisher announced plans to build a mobile home park across the street from a housing subdivision earlier this fall, he met the resistance of community members and the Franklin Township zoning committee. In contrast, he threatened to build a pig farm developed land instead. Yesterday, he said he would act on his threats.
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
After months of trying to rezone his land, a Wellsville man has decided that the hassle is hogwash.
Wellsville is about 17 miles southeast of Lawrence.
Peter Nicholson, Ottawa resident and zoning administrator from Franklin Township, said that the county commissioners could
his ears.
"They think they want a pig farm." Fisher said. "They thought it was cute. The hell with them. We're going to go ahead and put in a pig farm."
On Oct. 26, the Franklin Township zoning board voted against the proposal to rezone Fisher's land But yesterday, the Franklin County commissioners decided to reconsider their decision, referring the proposal back to the zoning board.
either have accepted the decision or reconsidered it. They decided to reconsider because if the land is rezoned, Fisher would need a special use permit to build his proposed mobile home park, Nicholson said.
The board will reconsider the proposal tomorrow.
Merle Haas, Wellsville resident and Franklin County commissioner, said the townpeople wanted the pig farm instead of the mobile home park because they were afraid of the influx of people to their housing area.
"Anytime you have more people, you have more trouble." Haas said. "It's just as simple as that." So Fisher is going to give the
It is just as simple as that. So Fisher is going to give the people what they want.
---
people what they "After they smell it a while, I'm sure they'll come around."
The proposed mobile home park would have come with a swimming pool, clubhouse, playground and other features. Fisher said he was trying to develop the community with his park.
"I don't care about the people of Wellsville anymore," he said. "This is the third time the mobile home park has been turned down. If they don't want to help their economy, that's fine."
2
Tuesday, November 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather Thanksgiving weather Hotline: 864-4329 or 864-4547
A turkey of a forecast
**LOW: 35**
Skies will be sunny today with a high of 58
degrees and be out of the southwest at
5-10 miles per hour. Tonight, clear with
a low of 35 degrees
North Platte 59/32 Sunny Omaha 55/23 Sunny Goodland 60/36 Sunny Salina 60/35 Sunny Topeka 54/38 Sunny Kansas City 71/26 Sunny Columbia 58/35 Sunny St. Louis 57/34 Sunny Dodge City 63/38 Sunny Wichita 62/36 Sunny Chanute 60/38 Sunny Springfield 59/37 Sunny Forecast by Dan Willis Temperature on Monday is high and tonight low Tulsa 56/43 Sunny
SUNDAY
Wednesday
Sunny
59/38
HIGH LOW
Thursday
Sunny
57/37
Friday
Partly cloudy
59/40
Saturday
Showers
49/39
Sunday
Partly cloudy
53/30
The nation
Salt Lake 64/41
Denver 59/31
Chicago 45/30
New York 48/27
Los Angeles 74/50
Phoenix 74/44
Dallas 61/44
Miami 82/71
Fronte:
cool included
warm stationary
Pumpkin Pie!
Free Samples!
Take us home for the Holidays
Louisiana Purchase
Louisiana Purchase
Shopping Center
843.5500
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
From My Point of View
MEXICAN FIESTA
Tues. & Sun. 1$00 Margaritas
Wed. 1$25 Mexico's
Finest Beer
Sun. Nite 2$90 Student's
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Special
BECERROS
2515 W. 6th 841-1323
The KU Undergraduate Anthropology Association meets at 4 p.m. today in 617 Fraser Hall.
■ The Lawrence chapter of Results, an international grassroots lobbying organization working to end hunger in the world, has its monthly meeting at 7 tonight at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St.
Maranatha Campus Ministry meets at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
The Kansas Union holiday hours will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday and closed Thursday through Sunday.
A graduate seminar on "New Strategies for Immunosaws" by George Wilson will be at 12:30 p.m. today in 6031 Haworth Hall.
8. a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and noon to midnight Sunday.
On Campus
The Burge Union will be closed
The Lawrence Inter-Dominican Nutrition Kitchen will serve its annual Thanksgiving dinner from 1 to 3 p.m. Thursday at the First Christian Church, 1000 Kentucky St. The meal is free and everyone is welcome to help serve or deliver meals to shu-tshes. Call Pam Casagrande at 843-9543 during the day or 842-9699 during the evening if you would like to help.
The General Union of Palestine Students will have Solidarity Day with Palestinians at 6 p.m. Saturday in the Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
A wallet containing $22 was taken Saturday from a room in Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall, KU police reported.
Wednesday through Sunday.
An affirmative action workshop will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
KU Bible Study will have morning worship services at 10:30 a.m. Sunday in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
bin. KU police reported.
■ An unidentified man exposed himself Friday to a female student on the east side of Robinson Center, KU police reported.
An unknown suspect called the Lawrence police department Sunday saying there was a bomb in GSP-Cor
Police Record
A German navy flag valued at $800 was taken sometime late Saturday or early Sunday from a residence in the city of Baltimore to hold a party. Lawrence police reported
Stereo equipment valued at $600 was taken sometime between Nov. 12 and March 20, the police found the 2000 block of East 19th Street, Lawrence police reported.
Legal Services for Students
News Briefs
TEE NAMED: Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, last week announced the names of 12 new deans. The new dean of the School of Law.
LAW SCHOOL SEARCH COMMIT-
At the group's first meeting Nov. 30, it will review applications and recommend a replacement for Michael J. Davis,
professors of law; Peter C. Schanck, professor of law and director of the Law Library; Reginald Robinson, associate professor of law; Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism; Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs; Cindy Riling, law school registrar; Colin Eek, law school instructor; Jean law student; Kevin Kelly, Lawrence third-year law student; and Robert L. Driscoll, law school alumnus from Mission Woods.
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
Members of the committee are David Gottlieb, Edwin W. Hecker, John C. Peck and Elinor Schroeder.
In K.C. for Thanksgiving?
visit
O'Leary's
Taproom
642-1999
7938 Santa Fe
O.P., KS
Old jack's
8:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
148 Burge Union 864-5665
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Many other services available
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee.
good food
- Preparation & review of legal doc.
- Notarization of legal documents
SUN
KU Printing Service
864-4341 2425 West 15th
lifetime warranty by insulfilm inc.
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Thanksgiving break to open fund drive, Christmas shopping
By Craig Welch
The group's drive will incorporate volunteers from about 25 organizations, including some area clubs and churches. Churchill said about 250 to 350 volunteers were expected to help collect money outside shops in Lawrence from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily.
Sam Sheply, store manager for Wal-Mart Discount City, 2727 Iowa St., said he expected more than 20,000 shopper Friday.
The first day of the Christmas shopping season also will begin Friday. Some area merchants are one of the beers of the busiest of the year
Lawrence Parks and Recreation will offer a Thanksgiving party for children. Lynn Frasheski, special
The following list of closings was compiled from information provided by the University of Kansas Information Center:
Kansan staff writer
area banks will be closed Thursday.
John Churchill, core officer for the Salvation Army, said the bellringer's fund drive would begin at 11:30 a.m. in front of the First National Bank of Lawrence at Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
MEDIA CONVERSION SERVICES
Lawrence residents will be reminded of the spirit of giving when the Salvation Army kicks off its holiday fund drive Friday.
events supervisor, said the event,
open to children from ages 6 to 12,
will be from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.
complex, 2702 Lawrence Ave.
all libraries except the Science Library in Malott Hall will be closed Thursday. Watson Library's online catalog and circulation system will not be available Friday through Sunday.
buses will not run Wednesday through Sunday
- city and county offices will be closed Thursday through Sunday.
- KU's Computer Center will be open 24 a day, but the Main Frame will be down beginning Thursday at 11:55 p.m.
- the U.S. post office in Strong Hall will be closed Thursday through Sundav.
Watkins Memorial Health Center will be closed Thursday, but the emergency room will be open 24 hours a day during the vacation.
Clarification
A story in yesterday's Kansan reported that 3,200 students are eligible for completion enrollment, which begins today. Those students must present the pink enrollment form they received when they first
enrolled. Those who qualified for completion enrollment were students who did not get 15 hours, except freshmen and sophomores who failed to list alternate courses on their enrolment cards.
72% of KU students read Kansan Classified
The University of Kansas Printing Service Announces
translator I tell I'm
wool over 30cm
cooler like
you can't pull the wool over an old
told more tales than yours truly
IN THESE HERE PARTS, its common knowledge no one has walked more trails or
www.museum.buffalo.edu/artists
'THE MOST INCREDIBLE YARN
I'VE EVER BEEN HEARD TOLD!'
Trailblazer's got some fancy varn called High Trek' Sad it'll suck the
in dry
Even though
Adirondack winters
The boy give me
a free pair to try Hoc
That boy w
sweat right off my toes and keep em warm
n dry
Even through them
Adirondack winters
The boy give me
a free pair to try Hoodyee!
That boy was right! Trouble is, when it comes
to spinnin' great yarns, appears I
done met my match"
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. November 22, 1988
Campus/Area
3
---
10
Stephen Wade/KANSAN
Sunset solitude
Two boaters at Clinton Lake use the last rays of daylight to fish. The KU Weather Service is forecasting a warming trend, but with continuing cold nights. The service is predicting a high today of 56 degrees and a low tonight of 29. For more details, see weather forecast on page 2.
Rock Chalk acts announced; Fraternity finally breaks jinx
By John P. Milburn Special to the Kansan
Winners of the five acts for the annual Rock Chalk Revue were announced last night, including one group that will make its first appearance since 1968.
"We've finally broken the jinx," said Brian Lisle, director of P1 Kappa Alpha's act and Clarinda, Iowa, sophomore.
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, with its partner Chi Omega sorority, ends 21 years without an appearance in the annual fundraiser.
sophora Lisi said the key to breaking the jinx was the way the two groups worked together.
worked together.
Other winning acts are Beta Theta Pi and Alpha Delta Pi, Phi Kappa Psi and Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha
Kappa Lamda and Alpha Omicron Pi, and Sigma Nu and Alpha Chi Omega.
Noelle Applegate, spokesman for the Rock Chalk selection committee and Hays senior, said 11 groups auditioned for the February 1989 show. They presented musical acts on the theme "It's Classified." The groups were judged by a board of seven members from Lawrence, Topeka and the Kansas City area.
The five winners of the between-act segments will not be known until December.
an effort was made by the Rock Chalk board to include the entire KU campus, Applegate said. The production has developed the image of being strictly a greek activity, although it
never was meant to be that way, she said.
To change the image, the board added two male members from residence halls and one female from the Black Student Union. The board visited all living groups to encourage participation. However, the 11 entries for the main acts were greek groups.
Pay raises scheduled for some KU workers
All money raised by the event will go to the Lawrence United Fund to benefit local programs. Last year, Rock Chalk was the second largest donor to the fund, raising nearly $17,000. This February, the group would like to contribute the most.
"We've set our goal at $20,000 to $25,000." Applegate said. "It will be tough, but we think we can make it."
Hayden implements plan to increase salaries of about 300 employees beginning in February
oy Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
After a two-year wait, about 300 KU classified employees in custodial and food services will receive a pay increase, to begin in February.
But about 40 KU employees with the same classification — mostly in law enforcement and security — will increase. June to receive a similar increase.
David Lewin, director of KU personnel services, said base wages for food service workers were about $125 per worker and for custodial workers, $10,056.
The pay raise falls under Phase III of a statewide reclassification of classified employees, begun under former Gov. John Carlin. Phase III will be implemented Dec. 18 by the governor's order after two trips through the Legislature failed to obtain the financing.
Lewin said most of the employees would receive a pay raise of about 2.5 percent. But some, mainly new employees in entry-level classes, could receive a raise as high as 10 percent.
Gov. Mike Hayden said partial implementation statewide would cost $6.9 million this year and $16 million in fiscal year 1990.
to bring salary ranges for state employees closer to those in the private sector.
The reclassification is an attempt
private Sector.
Judy Tomei, president of Classified Senate, explained the variation in size of the raises.
"Those (entry-level) classes are so far down on the pay scale, and they make such terrible wages. Those are the ones that need the most assistance," she said.
Tomei said she wished law enforcement and security classes would have been implemented at the same time, because those employees also faced salary problems. Classified Senate will continue to push for further implementation of the reclassification plans, she said.
sincere talk. Sgt. John Brothers of KU police and past president of Classified Senate, said he was glad to see implementation after a two-year delay.
But he said, "I'd like to see some assurances in writing for the people who haven't been (included) yet — something in stature."
Brothers said he was grateful to Hayden for having the courage to implement it essentially on his own, by executive order. At the same time, Brothers expressed some skepticism because of the delays.
"I don't think anybody's going to
spend it until they see it on their check," he said.
Carmela Sibley, legislative committee chairman for Classified Senate, said some KU classified employees still would need to be reclassified after Phase III was completed.
Phase III includes more than 8,000 state employees in direct care classes, primarily at Social and Rehabilitation Services institutions, in service work and in law enforcement and security.
Spud Kent, head of the compensation and classification unit for the state Division of Personnel Services, said Phase I, which included clerical classes, was implemented in December 1966. Phase II, implemented in December 1987, included labor and trade classes and also some health care classes originally for Phase IV.
Frank Ybarra, deputy press secretary for Hayden, said Hayden decided to issue the order rather than wait for the Legislature because the state's improved financial condition allowed immediate implementation.
Hayden last year vetoed an act by the Legislature that would have implemented Phase III in a limited scope and for a limited time.
Designing information
Lecturer works to make data less complicated
By M. Meredith Relph Kansan staff writer
Saul
M. M. K. A.
"Most of the stuff around us looks like an airport, but it doesn't inform," it said.
Richard Saul Wurman has a singular passion in life — to make things understandable.
he said. "We react in a knee-jerk way to catchwords, but we really don't learn anything."
Wurman, an architect, designer and author, has spent 27 years trying to make information make sense to people. He spoke last night to about 100 people at the Spencer Museum of Art as part of the Hallmark lecture series.
Tom Allen, professor of design,
said the Hallmark lecture series was
designed to bring the best artists and
designers from all over the world to
“(Wurman's) business is understanding information.” Allen said. “He stands alone in his field.”
Wurman's company, Accesspress
Ltd., has offices in New York and San Francisco. He helps design Pacific Bell Yellow Pages, informational booklets and maps. Many of his booklets are color-coded and indexed by category and location rather than in alphabetical order.
Wurman said that a simple structure made things more understandable, but most data was too complicated.
ms work includes a medical information booklet that was named one of the 10 best medical books in the United States, and was the only book of the 10 not written by a doctor.
But Budig says KU still needs significant state support
Officials praise KUEA gains
By a Kansan reporter
University administrators are pleased with the increase in the Kansas University Endowment Association's assets but say KU needs to continue pursuing private support.
plum. "It was another good year," said Chancellor Gene A. Budig about the association's annual report released last week. "It is a clear reflection of confidence by many people."
According to the report, the value of the association's assets increased about $15 million to $207,460,992. That endowment leads Big Eight schools and KU's peer schools.
A.
"A state institution cannot be excellent in this day and age without significant private contributions," Budig said. However, Budig added, that the association could not solve the University's fiscal worries.
"It the assessee legislatures of state support," he said. Paveley, executive, vice chancellor, echoed
Budig said the association's support had given KU an edge over other universities.
" (The association) does not and should not replace legislative, levels of state support," he said.
A state institution cannot be excellent in this day and age without significant private contributions.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, echoed
-Gene A. Budig Chancellor
Budig's comment about private contributions to the University.
"Private support is vital to our future." Ramaley said. "It allows us to be more than we could ever be on our own."
Ramaley said private support developed scholarships and grants that attracted quality students and financed research.
"Our research mission will never be sustained by the public sector alone." Ramaley said. "Private support gives us that extra amount of energy."
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said the increase in asset value would allow the association to continue developing its University support programs.
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4
Tuesday, November 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Now is not the time to balk on funding for Margin plan
Twenty miles west of Lawrence, figures are being shuffled in an effort to maintain what has been called "fiscal integrity".
There is talk within the Legislative and University systems that money will be in short supply for the next fiscal year.
that money will be in short supply for the next fiscal year. Michael O'Keefe, state budget director, said last week that the state could not afford to finance all of the 113 state agencies' requests and still return the remainder of an income tax windfall to taxpayers at the same time.
tax without the support of taxpayers Members of the Legislature, before they convene, need to remind themselves of the importance of financing institutions of higher learning through the Margin of Excellence, a plan designed to restore what has been called "educational integrity."
The Regents plan is only in its first year, but already there appears a threat that the second will be forsaken.
And recently, a few examples that demonstrate a lack of funding have surfaced at the University. Approximately 600 students have been placed on a waiting list for closed communications studies courses, and the chairman of that department attributed much of the problem to a lack of faculty that caused a shortage of communications classes.
In addition, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is reopening its enrollment so that 3,200 students who were turned away from closed classes may complete their schedules.
Although there's no guarantee that the Margin plan will eliminate such problems, the program is still the best effort in the Regents struggle to maintain quality education and quality faculty.
If the Legislature decides to cut the Regents budget, and in effect, cut the KU budget, then the Regents will be dealt a harsh setback that will take even more years to correct.
When they consider what parts of a course they should be taught, he said, desperate cry for help from K1. Faculty, students and administrators last year.
And if the cry is ignored, the first year of the Margin of Excellence program will have been in vain. And the state's flagship university, as well as the rest of the Regents schools, will continue to drift away from quality and toward mediocrity.
Tony Balandran for the editorial board
Saving Lawrence's homes
Lawrence has long prided itself on its beauty — from a bustling but pleasant downtown to streets lined with Victorian homes.
And while many people have worked to bring major industries to Lawrence, others have tried to keep pieces of Lawrence's history in use, including the beautiful restoration of the Eldridge Hotel and the effort to save the old train depot in north Lawrence.
But the interests of industry and preservation — both of which improve Lawrence — have caused conflict in the past when the growing downtown business district has expanded into the old neighborhoods that surround it. Old homes have been destroyed for a bank building or for parking lots.
Lawrence city commissioners responded last week by creating a Historic Resources Commission and guidelines for protecting historic structures in the city. It is a wise move that should be commended.
but now for the latter.
As could be expected, the same disagreements that caused bitter arguments in the past were raised when the membership of the Historic Resources Commission was determined
But now for the hard part: implementation.
The city wisely decided that the Commission should comprise two professionals in preservation and three members-at-large. That will provide for a fair and balanced board that isn't stacked in favor of either preservation or business growth.
But preservationists who pushed for the Commission complained. One even said "I don't want balance on the . . . Commission."
That isn't the proper viewpoint to have. Both sides need to recognize that both preservation and growth are needed if Lawrence is to retain its high quality of life.
It means that some old houses are not worth saving. That some growth is needed. And it means that not all growth is worth destroying homes that are works of art and are not replaceable.
Both sides need to give the Commission a chance. And the City Commission needs to watch the Commission and take an active role in ensuring that it does its work fairly.
Todd Cohen for the editorial board
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen ... General manager, news advice
Business staff
Greg Knipn .Business manager
Cole Debe .Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper .Campus sales manager
Linda Prokop.National sales manager
Kurt Mestershall .Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon .Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart .Production manager
Michelle Garland .Assist. production manager
Linda Leishman .Classified manager
Jennine Hines .Sales and marketing adviser
faculty or staff positions should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
survey will be photographed.
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
writer will be photographed. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons that are being remailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer Hall, Letters, columns and cartoons are the opinion of the writer or cartoonist and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editors, which appear in the left-hand column, are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Steufer-Fint-Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, including Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods, Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Kansas, Kan. 60404 Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
subscriptions MASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118
POSTMASTER-Fint Halt, Lawrence, KC. 68045
MR. BADGER by ADlong
THE MANDATE
I have a mandate.
Read my lips!
Excuse me.
Who are you?
I'm the nominee of the Nonvoters.
So?
So, nonvoters outnumber voters in 24 states and the District of Columbia, for an electoral vote total of 304. And, we were 50.9% of the popular nonvote.
Which means?
Read our lips.
No mandate.
MR. BADGER by A.D. Lang
THE MANDATE
I have a mandate.
Read my lips!
Excuse me.
Who are you?
I'm the nominee of the Nonvoters.
So?
Who are you?
I'm the nominee of the Nonvoters.
So?
So, nonvoters outnumber voters in 24 states and the District of Columbia, for an electoral vote total of 304. And, we were 50.9% of the popular nonvote.
So, nonvoters outnumber voters in 24 states and the District of Columbia, for an electoral vote total of 304. And, we were 50.9% of the popular nonvote.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Fighting bigotry
Thursday evening I made a quick trip to my office in Wescohe to get some materials I had left there. But so upsetting was the experience I had on that pleasant November evening, I found it difficult to attempt the work I had planned.
I used the elevator, went to my office, returned to the elevator and found that in those few minutes its wails had been plastered with stickers bearing the swastika and white power slogans. Had I called the elevator but a few seconds earlier, I might have stood face to face with one of the cowardly bigots creeping through our town. Mild-mannered, older than 60 but stubbornly of the belief that right is right and wrong is wrong, I am sure that I would have confronted the beast and ended up bloody but unbowed.
That lovely November night fell between the anniversary of Crystal Night, a half-century ago, and the quarter-century anniversary of a president whose stand on civil rights was unequivocal. Yet we have watched the spectacle of our most recent election, one candidate ridiculing the other's membership in a civil rights group, the other backpaddling as fast as he could. Clearly, we need to recover our principles in a hurry.
Which means?
Read our lips.
No mandate.
What are we coming to? Do we know nothing,
see nothing, remember nothing?
The poet Marianne Moore described the fault and the cure very well:
Have married heart, O heart of iron,
Iron is iron until it is rust.
There never was a war that was
not inward, I must
fight till I have conquered in myself what
causes战, but I would not believe it.
I inwardly did nothing,
O Iscariot-like crime!
Beauty is everlasting
and dust is for a time."
opening to a friend a few minutes after leaving Wescoe, I found my eyes watering out of proportion to the event, and these lines from Moore ran through my mind. I do not get to see such messages of hate if I have fought my own war through to its end. And I assert to you at the Kansan and to all your readers that any increase in hateful activity in a community is a consequence of our own failures in fighting the battle against our own complacency. We don't get to have the beautiful community we have unless we fight to preserve what is beautiful in us.
A charrined part of me says we have met the enemy and he is us.
George Wege
associate professor of English and linguistics
The KU Space Club has been a challenging and rewarding experience. There is a lot to be done outside of class, but the reward makes it worthwhile. Club members are rewarded when they reach a common goal. The experience gained is comparable to assistantships in research and research campuses, and are not available to undergraduates, and if they are only go to the top members of the class.
Space club support
NASA has given the University a great opportunity. The cost is approximately $10,000. This is a small price for the benefits the University would acquire if the program were implemented. The Senate chose to look the other way when the KU Space Program asked for
Student Senate argued that the KU Space Program does not appeal to a broad base of students, but it has given money to other programs with even less-broad appeal. Our members include biochemistry, computer science, slavic studies and math majors in addition to engineering students.
Not only does the club provide a real-world application to one's classroom knowledge, but the club's work goes to a cause that most admirers of the U.S. space program find highly valuable.
help. We ask the Senate to reconsider the program's efforts to expand our knowledge of our space environment and the reputation of KU.
Jaime Prieto
Overland Park senior
Sheryl Wood
Atlanta freshman
Article caused pain
I feel the need to add to the concerned students who responded to the Nov. 7 Kansan article about the accidental hanging of a KU student. This unfeeling article brought back a flood of memories for me. Five years ago, when I was 14, I found my brother's face only difference from my brother and the KU student was that my brother didn't do this by accident; it is called suicide.
I can sympathize with this family of the boy the Kansan wrote about. The pain they are feeling is unbearable, and it doesn't help to see details of their family member's tragic death so heartlessly splattered in a university newspaper. After he was accidental or not, I would not wish the pain I experienced, and still try to deal with, on anyone.
I hope the Kansan staff realizes that they not only hurt that student's family deeply, they have brought back painful memories for others. I wish the Kansan staff would stop worrying about who gets the scoop on a "great" story. This kind of reporting will not work in a big-time newspaper, or even small time. Try thinking of others, involved in the "scoop" or not.
Lori Wright Bird City sophomore
Options available
After reading the article on non-traditional student Standra Stokes, I felt compelled to write.
I, too, am a non-traditional student and single parent. I have always received respect from my professors and have never felt I wasn't being taken seriously.
taken seriously.
College is as serious as the job to which it eventually leads. Would you take your child to your workplace?
The article didn't state whether you have a job. Ms. Stokes. I take 14-16 hours of class each semester and work 20 hours a week. It's not easy, but there are other alternatives to taking your child to class, options that are better for you and your daughter. I urge you to look into them.
Not only are there scholarships available through the Douglas County Child Care Association, but day-care help is available through the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services.
Kathleen Thomas Lawrence junior
Don't be a butthead
Thursday was the Great American Smokeout, a day when smokers are urged to set aside their habit and possibly quit for life.
But one nasty habit of smokers is often overlooked: the habit of dumping used cigarettes onto the ground without regard for the health of others. It is more ugly than smoking in the first place.
Walk around and look at the areas near bus stops, in front of buildings, on street corners and in elevators. Dumped cigarette butts are everywhere.
Our campus and our world are too beautiful to be covered with this litter, and putting an end to this habit isn't difficult. If an ashtray is nearby, use it. If a trash can is nearby, put out your cigarette and stick the butt into an aluminum can. Or stick the butt back in with the rest of the pack to dispose of properly later. Just please don't toss that butt onto the ground.
So kick two habits for now and the future. You may be happy that you've given up smoking. But we can all appreciate your giving up unsightly dumping.
Brett Stone Florissant, Mo., senior
Ruffin' up Taylor
I would like to address Matt Taylor's column on "a ruff problem" in the Nov. 17 Kansas, Mr. Taylor stated that he was "shocked" by wild packs of dogs at KU. Are there no dogs where you come from, Matt? And are the KU dogs really wild? They don't look like dingos to me. Mr. Taylor also said that dogs "are taking over the campus." Come on, Matt. You know humans would never give the Earth back to the animals. so far as watching dogs in heat: Don't watch!
I was pleased when I first saw the 'wild packs of dogs' during my first visit to KU. I get as much joy from watching the dogs play as I do from watching the wild packs of squirrels. I don't consider it a nuisance when a dog comes up for me at a bit of my sandwich or a potato chip.
I'm sure I'm not the only one who feels the way I do. Also, in the three semesters I've been at KU, I have never seen "dog spit or worse" on the sidewalk. I do see a lot of trash, cigarettes, and people spit, however. I believe our campus dogs are an asset, not a nuisance. I only hope one does anything to take away our furry friends.
As far as dogs being ugly, Mr. Taylor, do you also judge people by their looks? If so, you must be "unattractive" inside.
Troy D. Alldaffer Colby freshman
Play is about choice
Glen White's Nov. 16 guest column, "Nothing dreadful about disability," would be praeworthy if it weren't so virtuous. He criticized the play, "Whose Life is it Anyway?" wondering if audiences might "... come away with the perception that many people with severe physical disabilities devalue their lives and would rather choose death to 'being confined to a wheelchair' or 'relegated to a bedridden existence.'"
There is nothing in the play that implies, as White suggests, a generalization regarding disabled persons' bravery or lack of it, or even whether a recently disabled, or long disabled person for that matter, should choose to go on living. Rather, its focus is on the people who are a community face when one of us chooses to reject treatment even if the consequence is death.
White and others are free to choose life from whatever perspective they wish, the premise of the sanctity of life or the position that a person should live in God's will is one of one's ability. That is their choice to make.
Our courts are hearing many cases in which the issue is the person's right to choose to die sooner, in peace and with dignity, rather than later, with one's dignity being insulted by the intrusions of self-appointed arbiter们 of human values or by the pompous, patronizing preferences of professional life-savers. That is the plawlry generalization.
I would hope that White and others who carry the "holier than thou" banner will speak up for what they choose for themselves and have the graciousness and compassion to respect others' right to see it differently and to choose for themselves.
Stan Sterling associate professor of social welfare
Disgusting cartoon
I was thumping through the Kansan skimming the articles when I got to the Nov. 17 editorial page. The editorial cartoon on "George Bush's version of the right to choose" was the most disgusting thing I have seen in print in quite a long time.
The political point here is lost because the moral issue is so grossly distorted. What a "males only" point of view. Having an abortion is something no man, no matter how sensitive, can ever fully comprehend. I found the statement made in the Kansan to be very offensive, and I am appalled that the editors would support a cartoon of this nature by printing it.
You should all be ashamed!
Jill Norris
Wichita junior
BLOOM COUNTY
THAT'S IT!
NO MORE!
FINI!
THERE A PRESUMPSHUN
AROTT THAT ALL THE
AVERAGE AMERICAN HAS
ON HIS MIND IS
POLITICS!
by Berke Breathed
LEMME TELL YA...
THERE'S MORE TO
LIFE THAN POLITICS...
LIKE LOTS AND
LOTS AND LOTS
OF BAD TV.
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 22.1988
5
Nation/World
U.S. to visit Soviet clinics
Dissident claims political activists held in mental institutions
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - U.S. psychiatrists will visit Soviet institutions where the Reagan administration claims human rights activists are wrongly detained, the State Department announced yesterday.
The inspections probably will be held in January, with the Soviets having the opportunity to make a reciprocal to the United States "to study and analyze the U.S. payment process." department spokesman Charles E. Redman said.
Soviet dissident psychiatrist Anatoly Koryagin said last year that he knew of 183 musical activists detained in his custody.
Koryagin was imprisoned for "anti-Soviet agitation" in 1981 after detailing numerous cases in which political dissidents were confined in Soviet mental hospitals. After examining many, he diagnosed them as sane.
During his imprisonment, he was tortured, mentally abused and given powerful psychotropic drugs. Koryagin sat.
Leading Soviet dissident Andrei D. Sakharov, during a visit to Washington last week, called detention in psychiatric institutions for political purposes "one of the most acute abuses of human rights" in his country.
JERUSALEM — U.S. and Canadian Jewish groups yesterday began fighting a proposal that would accept only Orthodox conversions to Judaism and limit converts who can immigrate to Israel.
Koryagin, who was freed in February 1987, said there were 16 such institutions
The Associated Press
Jewish groups fight proposal
Four U.S congressmen who met with Foreign Minister Hilton Pimen said adopting a coded "Who is a Jew" message.
News Roundup
Matthew McIlugh. D-N.Y., told reporters the past week an engender-sen scholar which would not be healthy for the engender-sen relationship.
His congressional delegation, organized by the U.S.-based Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, was one of three U.S. and Canadian Jewish groups lobbying in Israel against the amendment.
The amendment would give Orthodox rabbis exclusive authority to approve conversions to Judaism.
Ultra-Orthodox political parties are demanding the change as a price for supporting either the right-wing or left-wing Labor party. The 18 parliament seats they won in Nov. 2013, mean them the power to choose who heads the next government.
STORM MOVES INTO GULF OF MEXICO : Troi
STORM MOVES INTO GULF OF MEXICO: Tropical storm Keith, just short of becoming the year's sixth hurricane, soaked the Yucatan Peninsula yesterday and moved into the Gulf of Mexico on a course expected to move toward Florida, forecasters said. Keith's top sustained winds were reportedly hovering at about 65 mph. The threshold for a storm to be upgraded to a hurricane is 74 mph.
BUCHWALD SUES PARAMOUNT: Humorist Art Buchwald builfed a $5 million lawsuit against Paramount pictures yesterday, accusing the studio of stealing his summer films in coming to America,' one of last summer's biggest hits.
'AMELIA BEDELIA' AUTHOR DIES: Margaret C. 'Peggy' Parish, the author of dozens of popular, educational and entertaining children's books including the "Amelia Bedelia" series, died last week at age 47.
SMOKING BAN OPPOSED: Lawmakers in Kentucky, the nation's leading tobacco producer, are pressuring the University of Louisville to drop its plan to restrict smoking, days after a government report showed the state had the nation's highest smoking-related death. The dispute grew out of the university's consideration of banning smoking in classrooms, reception areas and elevators, and pressuring only in designated areas of most other buildings.
REAGAN BREAKS GROUND FOR LIBRARY: President Reagan yesterday helped break ground for the library that will house his White Paper papers, saying he hoped historians would judge him favorably. The 153,000-square-foot, Spanish-style facility will be built
on a 100-case site about 45 miles northwest of Los
Angeles and donates from the press. Ready
Regional Library requests $85 per call.
BHUTTO SEEKS PARTNERSHIP: Benazir Bhutto of Pakistan met with the leaders of an immigrant party yesterday about a possible governing partnership, and her conservative rivals said they also were trying to form a majority coalition. Bhutto's populist Pakistan is among the most populous in a stake in National Assembly elections Wednesday.
TRANSPORT STRIKE IN PHILIPPINES: A transport strike in the Philippines stranded thousands of people and forced schools in Manila and Cebu to close yesterday, as President Corazon Aquino marked her first 1,000 days in office by promising economic revival.
ALBAMANS CONTINUE PROTEST: At least 7,000 ethnic Albanians angered by the ouster of two leaders defied threats of a crackdown and took to the streets in Albania. They also waged a wave of ethnic protest for a fifth consecutive day.
BUSH RETAINS TWO OFFICIALS: President-elect George Bush retained Dick Thornburgh as attorney general and Lauro F. Cavazos as secretary of education. He also named former White House aide Richard G. Darman to head the Office of Management and Budget.
SOVIET COMMISSION RECOMMENDS CHANGES: The commission of the Supreme Soviet recommended dropping language that gave a new national council of the Soviet republics adopted by legislatures of the 15 Soviet republics.
---
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DENVER (FSI). The Hyundai Corporation has selected Connecting Point Computer Centers as their exclusive authorized dealer in Lawrence and Manhattan, Kansas. This selection follows the signing of a major supply contract with the 180 store Connecting Point chain here last month.
Hyundai, the $24 billion company known for its high quality, economic cars, has been a major producer of microcomputers for the past several years.
Hyundai's Super 16TE line of PCs follows their automotive tradition of price/performance. Myles Schachter, Connecting Point President, said that he chose the Hyundai product line because of its great price, high speed and excellent software bundle. Each Hyundai, he said, is fast at 10 MHz or twice as fast as the original PC; has a full 640K memory, 12" or "14" flat amber screen and a 101 keyboard.
The Electric Desk software included with every computer is a quality word processor, spreadsheet and database. The system also comes with Keyworks, a program to store keystrokes.
Dr. Rhonda Ross, the firm's Customer Support Manager, has found that the price has not compromised the construction of these powerful PCs. She states that the systems appear to be trouble free and highly compatible. She said this explains the manufacturer's 18 month warranty - in excess of the industry standard
TOSHIBA
Hyundai Super 16TE
Due to the new Connecting Point-Hyundai contract, the Manhattan and Lawrence stores are introducing these PCs at more than 20% off already competitivecompatible prices with training included with every purchase. Already,United Telephone Midwest Group, Meninginger's Foundation and PARS Service has selected Connecting Point to provide Hyundai PCs to their employees.
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6
Tuesday, November 22, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
The Kennedy Assassination
November 22,1963 in review Journalists remember the events of Kennedy's assassination
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Young CBS correspondent Dan Rather was standing just over a ridge from Dallas' Deane Plaza, holding a yellow sack, waiting for a bus. He cameraman in President Kennedy's motorcade
"I saw what I thought was the president's and it seemed to make a wrong turn. Rather it turned for the better."
"I knew something was wrong. You know when you know something, but you don't know why you know it? I went back over that ridge and saw an incredible scene. Some people were on the ground, some people were trying to cover children. It was a scene of great confusion."
Rather looked for a telephone but couldn't immediately find one to sprint to KRLD, the airport.
CBS anchor Walter Cronkite was in New York, working in the newsroom.
"I happened to be standing at the printer when the UP bulletin came across that shots had rung out in Dealey Plaza," he said. "As soon as we got that first report, we ordered up lines and got into the announcement booth . . . and started interrupting with voiceover bullets on the ongoing program. And then we got the camera up there I think in about 10 minutes."
While Crankite read wire reports on the air, Rather was at KRLD trying to confirm rumors that Kennedy was dead. The Parkland Memorial Hospital switchboard told him Kennedy was dead. KRLD's Eddie Barker had the head of the hospital saying he was dead. Rather finally got a surgeon and a priest who were in the emergency room to
confirm that Kennedy was dead. Rather told New York. Crankle went with it on the air.
“There wasn't any doubt in my mind,” said Rather, who had beaten the opposition on the biggest story of their lives. “The official announcement was that they another 17 minutes. It was a very long 17 minutes.”
After those 17 minutes, Crankite was handed a piece of wire copy. "From Dallas, Texas, the flash, apparently official," he said solemnly, removing his glasses. "President Kennedy died at 1 p.m. Central Standard Time. Two o'clock Eastern Standard Time." Crankite choked up for a moment, on camera.
"It was when you finally had to say the word, initially, that he was dead that it really impacted in the way I think," she said.
Cronkite walked off the air after six hours and just wanted to call his wife, Betsy. The phone lines had been tied up all afternoon. A line came free for a second, and he grabbed it, only to hear a woman ask to speak to "someone in charge of the news department."
"She said, 'I'd like to complain about having that Walter Cronkite on the air at this time crying his crocodile tears when everyone knows he hated John Kennedy.' I said, 'Madam, what is your name?' She gave me her name and address on Park Avenue. I said, 'You are speaking to Walter Cronkite, and you, madam, are a damn idiot.' He hung up.
On Sunday, the networks were covering the movement of accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald from the Dallas City Jail to the county jail. Only NBC was on live when Jack Rubie stepped out of
the crowd and shot Oswald at point-blank range.
Tom Pettit was the correspondent on the scene.
"I clearly saw the shooting which was about a feet from where I was," he said. "I had a clear visual field to see somebody fire a revolver into Oswald's lower abdomen. I did not see Jack Ruby come through the crowd. I did not see anybody; I just saw the gunshot.
"What I was seeing was coming out of my mouth. It was the only time I've really experienced doing eyewitness reporting while you're live on the air."
Pettit said he has never seen his own coverage of the Oswald assassination and doesn't want to.
"You know, it's a kind of a historic event in broadcasting, the first televised murder, but for me it was so horrendous a situation to be in and so emotional and so charged with fear, concern and a sense of pending doom that I would not like to relive it.
"I remember hearing our coverage when they had the casket at the rotunda of the Capitol. No narration, just symphonic music. Television really distinguished itself in that time, I think, really devoted itself to the notion that it was holding the country together. Whether it was in truth or not, who am I to say? But at the time, we certainly felt that responsibility."
"It was a major moment of course in our history and in our television history," Cronkite said. "I think we responded as an industry well. We showed our capabilities technologically and substantively as well — what we covered, how we covered it, the decorum with which we approached the story."
Conspiracy authors dispute findings of Warren Report in JFK's murder
The Associated Press
The body of John F. Kennedy has been in its tomb 25 years. The identity of his slayer has still not been put to rest.
Conjuring up "Who Killed Kennedy?" theories has been a cult industry. Several hundred books have been written about the assassination. Conspiracy authors have been the darlings, along with UFO eyewitnesses, of late-night talk shows and supermarket tabloids. Scenarios have involved the CIA, KGB, Fidel Castro, Texas oilmen, Lyndon Johnson, midgget marksmens, Jack Ruby, the Maria or phalanxes of ghostly gunmen as the real killers.
The public seems capable of accepting that Squeaky Fromme and John Hinckley were driven by their own private demons when they shot at presidents. Peculiarly, the public has had difficulty accepting the Warren Commission's conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald, an ideological supporter of Nov. 22, 1963, in Dallas. Conspiracy finds a believing audience.
Yet there is also something peculiar about conspiracy theorists. They dismiss the Warren Commission's finding. But, by and large, they base their own theories on the very same 26-volume Warren Report and its thousands of witness transcripts and affidavits and FBI reports. Conspiracy theorists footnote the
report scrupiually. They have not been as thorough in footnoting ALL the pertinent data
An illustration of the technique
Mark Lane may be the best-known critic of the commission. In his book "Rush to Judgment," Lane at one point tries to undermine the testimony of Harold Norman. Norman was an order filler at the Texas School Book Depository, as was Oswald. The commission concluded that Oswald fired three shots at the president's motorcade from the sixth floor of the Depository. Norman was one floor down watching the motorcade with two co-workers.
Lane: "Although the three men withdrew from their position at the windows into the quiet of the deserted fifth floor, they were unable to detect any sound of movement above. Yet Norman claimed that while he was still at the window he was able to hear the action of a riffle bolt and the sound of empty shells hitting the floor above."
Mark Lane did not include this further testimony to the commission of Bonnie Ray Williams, one of the men at the window with Norman.
Williams: "Probably the reason we didn't hear anything is because, you know, after the shots we were running, too, and that was making a louder noise."
Grassy knoll
A favorite sniper's nest among conspiracy theorists is the "grassy knoll" area. The motorcade was approaching it when Kennedy was shot. If there were another rifleman there as well as Oswald to the rear in the Depository, the plot must thicken.
Lane several times cites the testimony of S.M. Holland who was standing near the grassy knoll: "... (Holland) saw a puff of smoke come from the trees." Lane does not quote Holland's further testimony: "... and I heard three more shots after the first shot, but that was the only puff of smoke I saw."
"Clemon E. Johnson told FBI agents that he had observed 'white smoke' around the knoll. Lane does not tell his readers, but Clemon E. Johnson also told the FBI he "felt this smoke came from a motorcycle abandoned near the spot by a Dallas policeman."
Lane quotes liberally from at least 34 witnesses who thought they heard gunfire from the knoll area. He does not quote liberally from the more than 60 who favored the Depository. Nowhere in "Rush to Judgment" is the testimony of F. LEE Mudt: "... from the direction of the Depository. ..." or Marion Baker: "... high up, pretty sure from the Depository..."
Lane:
Archives contain files, memories of assassination
There is the 6.5mm, Mannlicher-Coernbolt bolt-action rifle that Lee Harvey Oswald was bought for $20 through a mail order house. It is still in production. The label from the Warren Commission's investigation a quarter-century ago.
WASHINGTON — Stacked on institutional green metal shelves in a dreary, off-limits nook of the National Archives is virtually every shred of evidence of the crime of the century, assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Behind a vault door are hundreds of gray cardboard boxes filled with materials used in two government investigations, from tedium bureaucratic documents to chilling reminiscent stories. In Dallas in 25 years ago today.
The Associated Press
There are the three shell casings that Oswald left at his six-floor perch in the Texas School Book history overlooking Dealey Plaza.
There's the bullet, an incredibly unblemished copper clug, which the Warren Commission said killed the president and wounded then-Gov. John Connally of Texas as they rode in the motorcade. Conspiracy theory officials identified the bullet, found on a stretcher at Parkland Memorial Hospital, could not have pierced both Kennedy and Connally and remained virtually intact.
A piece of Dallas
There's a piece of Dallas in the collection, a one-foot chunk of concrete street curb removed from Dealey Plaza because of an early suspicion that it contained bullet fragments. The curb was found to contain items of lead but not the copper of the kind of bullets used by Oswald.
Scattered among reams of FBI and Secret Service reports are fragments of the lonely life of Oswald, a Marxist who lived in obscurity and died in Harper's Warren Commission concluded while alive when he killed Kennedy.
There are his academic records from the first grade, FBI interviews with junior high school classmates, and his student assistant, and his smudged, handwritten diary.
The Warren Commission, appointed by President Johnson shortly after the assassination, transferred its estimated 360 cubic feet of records to the National Archives in late 1964.
More than 95 percent of those records, along with physical evidence presented to the FBI and other government investigators, is available to researchers.
The House Select Committee on assassinations also has its records, another 300 cubic feet of materials, housed in the same room. Most of the House panel's records have been sealed for 50 years, and a small band of Kennedy researchers have failed in their tireless efforts to persuade Congress to open them for public scrutiny.
In the 1960s and early 1970s, the National Archives was seen as a gold mine of clues for authors and self-styled sleuths who were convinced they could unravel the mysteries of the Kennedy assassination and prove that Oswald was part of a conspiracy.
Conspiracy theory
Interest in the materials was renewed in 1978 when the House committee concluded that Kennedy probably was killed as the result of a conspiracy. The panel's finding that there was more than one gunman has much controversy as the Warren Commission's lone gunman conclusion.
There is little activity involving the records these days, according to Marion Johnson, a government archivist for 40 years and chief overseer of the Kennedy Records. He said no authors or scholars are conducting regular research on the assassination at the National Archives.
Some of the Kennedy assassination materials are off-limits.
The slain president's clothing, including his monogrammed pin-stripe shirt soaked with blood, are preserved by a mission from the Kennedy family.
The same is true of the 52 black-and-white and color photos of the autopsy. A set of the graphic photos, made clandestinely at the time of the autopsy by a Secret Service agent who was one of the few people who had access to them, have appeared recently in a reprint of a conspiracy theory book and on a segment of public television's "Nova" series that was devoted to the assassination.
Also available at the archives is the Zapruder film, a grainy home movie taken by a Dallas dress manufacturer Abraham Zapruder that has provided the best, though far from perfect, video evidence of the slaying.
But the film can be reproduced only with the permission of the Zapruder family. Zapruder's son, a Washington lawyer, is selling rights to the film clip to TV producers for up to $30,000. He was sued last month by researchers who claim the historic film is part of the public domain.
CONGRATULATIONS — KELLY MOORE
You and Orel Hershiser are going to Disneyland because you've passed the California Real Estate Exam. Now pass those classes, graduate and bring that winning Jayhawk spirit to sunny, Southern California. There are many $$$$ waiting for you!
Leon and Maggi
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday. November 22,1988
7
Shareef has ability, coaches say
Riddick
Kansas coaches are expecting big things from freshman forward Danielle Shareef.
Says her goal is team success
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
In the first half of the Kansas women's alumni basketball game, freshman forward Danielle Shareef took a pass at the top of the field took a shot and moved by three defenders to the basket for two points.
Shareef said she saw the need to do as much as possible to help the Javhaws.
That type sequence was repeated throughout the course of Saturday's game at Allen Field House as the 5-foot-9 Shareef ended the game with 20 points to lead all scorers.
Shareef averaged 26 points, 13 rebounds and five blocked shots a game during her senior year at Palm Beach Gardens High School in Riviera Beach. Fla. She was a second team all-state selection and was named her high school's plaver of the year.
During her sophomore and junior years, Shareef played for Lincoln Academy in Kansas City. He played for the University and 12 rebounds a game as a junior.
Although the transition to collegiate basketball hasn't been easy, Shareef said she was starting to adjust to her new surroundings.
"Saturday night was the most comfortable I've felt on the floor," she said. "It seemed like things flowed, I wasn't thinking so much about making mistakes. When I am playing play loose I think I play better."
Kansas coach Marian Washington said Shareef would play a major role for the Jayhawks this season.
"She's an outstanding athlete with tremendous ability," Washington said. "Danielle is a
player that tries so hard and has such high expectations for herself. When you are a high achiever, you can expect to hear too much pressure on yourself."
Washington said that was probably the case Wednesday night when Shareef scored only two points against the Australian
Junior Olympic team.
"I think her first game she was extremely tight," she said. "But we knew when Daniele got confidence, things would flow for her. I knew there have had a lot to look forward to from Daniele in the years to come."
of the smaller players along the front line, Shareef said she looked forward to playing around the basket.
"I love to rebound," she said. "I know there will be bigger players than me, but that makes it even more of a challenge. The roughe play under the basket, the better I'll become as a player."
Washington agreed that Shareef could develop into an explosive rebounder.
"Danielle has tremendous jumping ability and is quick off the floor," she said. "Offensive rebounding is probably one of the hardest areas of the game to teach. Danielle is one of those kinds of players who just lasted when you have that kind of player, it makes your team that much more of an offensive threat."
Assistant coach Julia Yearet said Shareef, who was an honorable mention academic All-America team. "Academy, was driven to succeed."
Although she usually will be one
"She is very talented and that shows even when she's not as productive," Yeater said. "Both in practice and in the classroom, she sets high standards for herself. She's one of those types of players that wants to get the job done and you want to have on your side."
Although she is a freshman, Shareef has already proven to be a positive influence on the Jayhawks, according to Washington.
"Something about Danielle makes you feel good about her," she said. "She's so disciplined that she feels she can take on any challenge. Because she works so hard and puts in the time, Danielle is going to develop into a fine basketball player."
If individual success indeed comes to her, that's fine with Shareef. However, she said the team would always come first.
"I if I have any goals for this season it's to help my team be the best it possibly can be in the Big Eight Conference," she said. "It's my job to help this team any way I can."
'Hawks expect difficult game against Alaska
By Arvin Donlev
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Roy Williams said he was expecting a difficult game from the Seawolves.
It will be last year's NCAA division I champion against last year's NCAA division II runnerup when Kansas meets Alaska-Anchorage in the first round of the Great Alaskan Shootout Friday in Anchorage.
"All I know is they went all the way to the finals last year and that one poll has them picked to finish fifth this season." Williams said. "They're going to be playing at home and it's going to be a tough game."
Alaska coach Roni Abegglen played down his team's home-court advan-
"I don't think there's that much of a home-court advantage, since the tournament is played in a gym that we're not familiar with in downtown Austin," he said. The other advantage is that we'll have a few more fans cheering for us."
The game begins at 12 a.m. CST on Saturday and will be televised by ESPN
The winner of the Kansas-Alaska game will play the winner of the Florida-California game at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. The losers will play at 6:30 p.m. Saturday.
In the other bracket, Kentucky plays Iona and Seton Hall plays Utah.
Despite Alaska's 4-record, Abegen said his team was trying to keep it up.
"We only have one returning starter off last season's team," Abeglen said. "So I don't want anyone feeling sorry for Kansas losing Danny Manning. We lost our entire front line to graduation and lost our starting point guard this season to an injury."
Since Abegglen took over as coach of Alaska two seasons ago, the Sea-
wolves have placed fourth in the Shootout each season. In 1986, the Seawolves upset Texas and Washingtope, but last year they defeated Miami, Fla
An Alaska upset in this year's Shootout would be difficult, Abegglen said.
"I think it is a very tough field," Abegglen said. "Everybody has a shot. They're all very evenly matched except for us. We just don't have the physical talent that the teams do. We are the underdogs."
Kansas guard Lincoln Minor said he was looking forward to playing in the tournament.
"I like the Alaskan Shootout," Minor said. "It's probably the most prestigious prescene tournament in the country, but we us a lot of good national exposure."
The Jayhawks are hoping to have more success in the Shootout than they had in last season's preseason tournament, the Maui Classic in Hawaii. The highly touted Jayhawks that tournament with a 1-2 record.
kansas forward Mike Maddox said he was not concerned about having to play three games in three days.
"It will be a tough tournament because there are going to be a lot of teams there," Maddox said. "We'll be able to prepare for Alaska during the next couple of days and try to take each game one at a time."
KU volleyball has worst season
Williams also said playing in a competitive tournament would be good for his team.
"I just like to play." Williams said. "Our players are getting tired of beating on each other in practice. Playing in games is what it's all about."
By Arvin Donley
Kansan sportswriter
Oklahoma wasn't the only opponent the Kansas volley ball team had to compete with Saturday night.
After losing to the Sooners 3-0, Kansas coach Frankie Albizt had to drive the team bus for six hours in a snowstorm between Norman, Okla., and Wichita. Albizt said it was a treacherous journey.
"We tried to stop and get a motel several times, but everything was filled." Abitz said. "Between Norman and Wichita, it took us six hours because much of the time was spent on getting to the motel." Norman at 10 p.m. and arrived in Lawrence at 7 a.m.
For Alibitz and the Jayhawks, the entire 1988 season has been a long and difficult journey.
is a long the season for the loss to the Sooners marked the end of the season for the Jayhawks, who finished last in the Big Eight Conference with a 1-11 record and 5-24 record overall. That is Kansas worst record since 1984, when Bob Lockwood was coach and the Jayhawks finished at 5-30
Albitz said she was still searching for answers to why the Jawhaws had such a disappointing season.
"It's been confusing to me," said Alibiz, who guided the Jayhawks to a 26-9 record in 1966 and 13-20 last season. "I'm not sure why we got so down. Maybe asked them to do too much with too many young players."
Despite having only one senior on next year's squad, Albitz she hoped to see more leadership.
Begin or the 12 Kansas players on this year's roster were freshmen or sophomores. The Jayhawks lost three seniors — hitters Elisa Woods and Lisa Christoph and setter Kim Robinson.
"Leadership wasn't a real strength on this year's team." Albitz said. "Jodi Ocllschler will be our only
senior on next year's team, but I'm hoping someone can
sten forward and be a leader on this team."
Albita also said that Kansas' 0.7 start at the beginning of the year made it difficult to bounce back.
"We played fairly well early on and lost a lot of close matches." Albiz said. "I think that might have been discouraging to them."
With several new recruits and many young, but experienced players returning, Albitz said she hoped for improvement on next year's squad.
"We're a bit better than we were at the beginning of the year," Albitz said. "But we'll need to improve for next season because you never know if the other teams will improve or not. I think we have a good group of kids and if we add several quality players in recruiting, we'll be improved."
Freshman Kris Kleinschmidt said the Jayhawks showed progress late in the season and would continue to improve next season as they became more familiar with each other.
"Late in the season we had more of a set lineup and to know each other better," Kleinschmidt said. "We got to know how each other played and adjusted to it. We'll know each other even better next year, which will make
Although Robinson will not be with the team next season, she predicted that the Jayhawks would make drastic improvements in the next couple of years.
There's a lot of talent out there," Robinson said. "They just need time to develop their skills. They're going to be good in about two years. Their junior and senior are going to dominate the Big Eight. I guarantee they'll do it."
Speculation over at MU, Widenhofer resigns post
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, Mo — Woody Widenhofer, 45, resigned under pressure yesterday as Missouri football coach with a four-year record of 12-31-1.
"I want to thank my football players and coaches for hanging in there. It was tough here the last seven or eight weeks . . . lots of adversity and lots of things going on." Widenhofer said in a brief statement at a news conference. I love the University of Missouri. I'm still a Missouri Tiger, and I'm going to support this football program 100 percent."
Chancellor Haskell Monroe told reporters that a search would begin immediately for a replacement, and he hoped to have the successor identified by Dec. 1. He said he had agreed to expedite the usual 30-day hiring period. University affirmative action policies require that faculty be when a search for the full period specified would cause a serious disruption of a university program.
Widenhofer's resignation followed weeks of speculation that his contract, which expires Jan. 31, would
not be renewed after finishing 3-7-1
overall in his fourth season. The Tigers showed consistent improvement each season until the one. His first year the Tigers were 61 and was followed by marks of 38 and 5-6.
Ironically, Widenhofer closed out his Missouri career Saturday with a 55-17 victory over arch-rival Kansas, the highest point total his teams ever rang up.
After making his statement yesterday, Widenhofer left without answering questions.
"He said this is the way he wants to handle it. He wanted to go out in style. It was stricly his decision," said athletic director Dick Tamburo. "I respect Woody's decision. Woody is a high quality person. This action by him demonstrates that. I have enjoyed working with him."
"He improved the academic quality of the student-athletes entering the University of Missouri. His resignation shows just how much he cares for the university and leaves us with
Minores said the university would be looking for a college coach with a proven record and said the search would extend throughout the country. He said Tamburo would spearhead the search committee and that the intercollegiate Athletic Committee would serve as a screening committee, meeting with those Tamburo thinks should be considered.
There had been some grumbling among the players, who were solid in Widenhofen's corner, that many would not return if he left. But Tamburo said he met with some of the players yesterday morning.
"That was never discussed," Tamburo said.
"I think this has been going on for so many weeks. I'm kind of glad it's over," said junior tight end Tim Bruton. "I don't know what my future's going to hold. I don't know what the new coach will expect of me as a player and a person."
KU HOCKEY VICTORIOUS: The Kansas hockey team defeated Drake 8-4 Saturday and 8-4 Sunday to even its record at 4-4. Senior Craig Sherman had two goals and two assists in Saturday's game. Senior Brian Farrell had three goals and one assist in Sunday's game.
HUSKERS HONORED: Nebraska running back Ken Clark and noseguard Lawrence Pete were named Big Eight offensive and defensive players of the week yesterday for their part in the Huskers' 7-3 victory over Oklahoma for the conference championship.
championship. Clark became the first Nebraska back since 1983 to rush for more than 100 yards against Oklahoma, carrying 24 times for 167 yards. He ended the regular season with 1,497 yards.
a very positive outlook as we look to take another step forward in our football program."
Sports Briefs
CONNORS WILL MISS MASTERS
Seventh-ranked Jimmy Connors will
undergo foot surgery that will force
him to miss the season-ending Masters tennis championship, tournament director Eugene Scott said yesterday.
past day
Connors' attorney, Ivan Blumberg.
Pete, a senior noseguard, had eight solo tackles and helped hold the Sooners to 137 total yards. It was the first time since 1942 that Oklahoma failed to score a touchdown against Nebraska.
said the player will have surgery within 10 days to remove bone spurs from both feet and repair ligament damage in his right foot.
HUBBELL DIES FROM AUTOMOBILE INJURIES: Carl Hubbell, who won 253 games as a left-handed pitcher for the New York Giants, died yesterday, two days after being critically injured in an automobile accident in 84.
With Connors out of the Masters,
there are now two spots open in the
eight player, round-robin tournament.
Sunday 10:30 at 30 at Madison Squire Garden.
"We assume he died from injuries and trauma suffered in the accident, but we don't have official word on the causes," said hospital spokesman Julia Adams.
Hubbell was injured Saturday when he lost control of his car while driving near his Mesa, Ariz., home and the vehicle struck a metal pole.
PEETE HAS LARYNGITIS: Quarterback Rodney Peele, who led second-ranked Southern Cal to a 31-22 victory over rival UCLA last Saturday in an upset, then threw the game sles, now has laryngitis, it was announced yesterday.
Peee, who will guide the Trojans against top-ranked Notre Dame this season, has been an integral part of the team.
seum, has been ordered by the Trojans' medical staff to retrain from talking until Thursday.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL POLL: The University Daily Kansan/KJIK FM 90.7 college basketball poll will be published every Monday throughout the season. The poll is voted on by the sports staffs of the Kansan and KJIKH.
Tim Tessalone, the school's sports information director, said Peete couldn't speak above a whisper yesterday morning.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KJHK
KANSAN FM 90.7
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
TOP TEN
PONTS
1. Duke (10) 182
2. North Carolina (2) 140
3. Georgetown (2) 118
4. Oklahoma (2) 115
5. Syracuse (1) 112
6. Michigan 85
7. Iowa 83
8. Illinois (1) 74
9. UNLV 74
10. Arizona 37
11. first place voice
The weekly top 10 poll is voted on by the sports staff of the University Dalkan Kaisan and JKHK F9.07.
Fewer pheasants disappoint hunters in area,official says
By Ken Winford
Kenson sportwriter
Kansan sportswriter
Many of the estimated 100,000 hunters that participated in opening day of the pheasant season two weeks ago may have gone home disappointed.
Mike Miller, a representative of the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, said the banner season expected for beastant numbers never materialized.
"hanc般 we are a little disappointed in the pheasant hunting this season," he said. "Earlier this fall we were expecting a lot of uniformity in the numbers and that just hasn't been the case."
Miller said that although pleasant hunting had been good in the south central part of the state, in other areas — especially the northwest — the numbers had been low.
The pheasant and quail season will continue through Jan. 31
"It's difficult for the hunters because they expected a record year like we did," Miller said. "But most of the hunters we've heard from said the areas are either not any better or not as good as last year."
Jan. 31.
Although many of the hunters that took to the field during the last couple of weeks were after pheasant or quail, others were hunting different game.
The archery deer season opened Oct. 1 and will continue through Nov. 30, when the firearm season begins.
The second segment of the duck season began Nov. 10 and will run until Dec. 4. The snow peeseason, which begins in February, lasts through March 5.
"Like always, opening weekend was our busiest time of the year." Miller said. "It always slacks off during weekends and closes up for a weekend. But it still looks like Kansas is drawing a good number of in-state and non-resident hunters."
With more hunters out in the weeks around the opening of the pheasant and quail season, the chances of accidents occurring becomes greater according to Miller.
"We've had reports of a few accidents across the state," he said. "For the most part, it involved people getting hit by stray shot pellet. The more hunters you have, the more dangerous it gets. That's why its important to follow safety rules."
Miller said wearing a blaze orange hunting jacket was a simple and effective way of cutting down the chances of hunting accidents.
The number of hunting violations were surprisingly low, according to Miller.
---
"The most common violation we saw was the illegal transportation of birds," he said. "This usually involved transporting birds with no means of sexual identification. The easiest way to do this would be to leave their legs untouched because the males have spurs and the females don't."
Tuesday. November 22. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
It's No Secret.
It's Good Food.
RUNZA
STAIRD
2700
lowa
642
Mass.
LIBERTY
HALL
749
1912
THE LAST
TEMPTATION
OF CHRIST
DAILY 5:30, 9:00
SAT. & SUN. 2:00 MAT.
U.S. COMMONWEALTH
THE ARTS
Bargain Mattresses! & Senior Citizens $2.50
Showtimes for Today Only
MOVIE INFO 841-7000
Granada
1020 Mass.
843-5788
GOOD MOTHER (R)
7.30, 9.30
Varsity
1015 Mass.
1065
ACCUSED (R)
7.15, 9.35
Hillcrest
9th & Iowa
842-8400
THEY LIVE (R)
'4.50, 7.10, 9.30
MYSTIC PIZZA (R)
'4.30, 7.15, 9.25
EVERYBODY'S ALL
AMERICAN (R)
'4.35, 7.30, 9.40
HIGH SPIRITS (PG13)
'4.45, 7.25, 9.35
WITHOUT A CLUE (PG)
'4.40, 7.20, 9.20
Cinema Twin
31st & Iowa
842-6400
LAND BEFORE TIME (G) *5:00, 7:15, 8:45
CHILD'S PLAY (R) *4:30, 7:10, 9:20
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
800 Mass.
740.4333
14 kt. Chain
Repair
Kizer
Cummings
jewelers
800 Mass.
749-4333
TONIGHT!
Tues. Nov. 22
Random Aztec
w/ special guests
Kill Creek
*Don't forget
50* draws!
Wed. Nov. 23
The Rythm Kings
Lawrence's Own
Blue's Master's
Fri. Nov. 25
Diekreuzen
with
Mud Head
and the
Guard Rails
**special all ages show**
Sat. Nov. 26
Be Sure To Come Back
Early From Break For This One!
Relativity Recording Artists
from Boston
Scruffy the Cat
special guests
Phraug
'Don't Miss It'
**Special All Ages Show**
Bottleneck
237 New Hampshire * Lawrence * 844-9233
GAMES
Continued from p. 1
"I don't anticipate any opposition," Baxter said. "As far as the Eudora township goes, they just want improvements in the road. They may throw that up in their (the count commission's) face."
advisory on this issue
"In essence, we've drawn attention to the area," Baxter said. "They're pretty much using us as a political scapegoat."
Baxter is referring to improvements to East 15th Street, which is in need of better traffic flow. He said area residents were worried about added traffic the game would draw.
If approved, the game would represent the realization of a childhood dream for Baxter and Skulburstor, who went to high school together. Baxter graduated from KU last year, and Skulburstor graduated from Kansas State.
"it's kind of like a childhood fantasy," Baxter said. "We both wanted to represent ourselves in our own business, and with the advent of paint guns, we figured, 'What a perfect way to do something we enjoy and make money at it.'"
Story Idea?
Call 864-4810
Steve Wade
Elaine Sung
news editors
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Local campaigns cost less than others races in state
By Barbara Joseph
Local candidates in the recent election did not follow a state trend toward higher campaign expenditures, officials from the Kansas Public Disclosure Commission and the Republican party said yesterday.
Kansan staff writer
"We have seen, generally speaking, an increase in spending and money received by candidates," said Carol Moyer.
Current records of state campaign expenditures cover the period between July 24 and Oct. 29. Final figures could change because the reports on campaign expenditures for state seats are not due until Dec. 10.
winnans said most campaign advertising blitzes began about a week before the general election.
Williams said both Republicans and Democrats spent a lot this year because they wanted their own people in the state Legislature to battle with reapportionment. Reapportionment is one of electoral districts, which could affect representation.
In some race states, parties tried to outspend each other to capture or maintain a seat, Williams said.
local candidates, however, didn't match up with the higher spending trend. Part of the reason was the lower cost of advertising in Lawrence than in Topeka or Kansas City. Kan.
Cathy Whitaker, executive director for the Kansas Republican Party, credited the state's mark increase in campaign spending to more serious candidates and greater contributions by political action committees.
She also noted that spending by local candidates was low.
"I think a lot of the candidates did more door-to-door campaigning and that local newspapers covered them better," Whitaker said. "It's also different in a university
town because there are more opportunities for candidate forums and debates. Candidates can draw a crowd without using expensive media."
No one was available for comment at the state Democratic headquarters.
candidates for state senate in the 2nd and 11th districts spent more than $2,100 from the primary to the general election. According to commission reports for the 2nd District from July 24 to Oct. 29, Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, spend $19,979.77, and Democratic candidate Mike DuPree from Lawrence spend $2,709.38.
"That's pretty low spending," Williams said. "Some candidates spend $50,000 to $60,000. Winter spent about as much as a State House of Representatives candidate."
In the 10th District, Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ottawa, spent $3,674.88, and Democrat contender Walter Myers from Baldwin spent $1,846.35. Williams described both figures as very low.
State representatives for the 44th, 45th and 46th House Districts spent more than $22,000 between July 24 and Oct. 29. In the 44th District, Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, spent $11,512.67. Her challenger, Republican Renee McGee of Lawrence, spent $679.63.
In the 46th District, Rep. Betty Jo Charlton.
In the 38th District, Rep. Robert J. Bulkenger
in the 19th District, Bernie Norrie, spent $4,841.18
For the 45th House District, uncontested candidate John Schobh, D-Lawrence, spent $700.
Campaign expenditures from Jan. 1 to Oct. 19 of candidates for U.S. Representative for the 2nd Congressional District totaled more than $800,000, said John Renning, electronic information officer for the secretary of a office.
Reinhart said Rep. Jim Slattery, D-Topeka, spent $246,576, while his Republican challenger from Topeka, Phil Meinhardt, spent $63,997.
KU receives four-star rating
Bv James Farquhar
Kansan staff writer
The 1989 Fiske Guide to Colleges says KU can compete with more expensive schools in areas including "excellent faculty, strength in a variety of disciplines and a shortage of campus parking. KU's not perfect, but it's been winning the battle against mediocrity for years."
The University of Kansas has received a four-star rating from a widely circulated college guide, which said some of the Midwest's "best and brightest" are turning down invitations from prominent Eastern schools to attend KU.
This is the second year KU has received the four-star rating, said Robin Eversole, director of University Relations.
Five stars is the highest rating.
"They update their guide every two years," she said. "This is the same description and rating they gave us last year."
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said such positive ratings made the school look good.
"Reports like this one get your name in front of people who might then become interested in coming to
The guide, edited by Edward Fiske, New York Times education columnist, grades schools in academics, social activities and quality of life. To reach his evaluations, Fiske sends questionnaires to universities across the country, Eversole said.
KI received four stars in all three categories
Oklahoma University received three stars in the three categories, while the University of Nebraska-Lincoln got three in academics, four in social activities and three in quality of life. The University of Missouri-Columbia received two stars in academics, four in social activities and three in quality of life. The University of Colorado-Boulder received three in academics and five each in social activities and quality of life.
Reserve your place in history. Back by popular demand.
The Jayhawker Yearbook photographer will be here from Nov.28 to Dec.2 Seniors this is your
last chance.
Monday 11-3,4-8
Tuesday 9-12,1-5
Wednesday 9-12,1-5
Thursday 11-3,4-8
Friday 8-12.1-4
Walk-ins only
Burge Union - by the candy counter
Natural Fiber Clothing
RAYS
NATURALWAY
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSEY. Reduce your stress and don't forget the GIFT CERICTICALS make holiday shopping easy. We also have free turkey tacos and call 814-6921. Remember, you knead it!
For confidential information, referral and support for AIDS concerns Call 841-2345. Headquarters counseling center.
Hey KU! W want a challenge? Try Adams Campus Challenge Course. Call Rec: Usec.宿息 804-354-354 Out of State Students--Going home on vacations. Earn travel money and much more during your time in our campus. Visit town and vicinity. Full 29% commission (including rebookers). New and exciting art card designs by AlphaLight. See them at the Umea Museum, Lamplighter Bookstore, 90 and MI. Mail 740-1737-217
Preparing for Final Study Skills Workshop.
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing Strategies)
Wednesday, November 30,
10:30 a.m.
Assistance Center, 113 Strange B-4644
JAN 2-7
Steamboat
Bill or Wayne 841-8155
SUICIDE INTERVENTION. If you feel like you want to item it or all, if you are concerned about someone who calls, call 844-2543 or drop by 1419 Mass. headquarters center for center.
WE TEACH SIN SKARE! Dermatologist tested Mary Kay has a skin care system for you, Call today; Nancy Armstrong. Mary Kay Beauty Consultant 841-4351.
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound Superior sound and lighting. Professional club radio D'l's Hot Spins Maximum Party Threat DJ Rav Valleau 841-7083
GOOD VIBRATIONS: the most affordable mobile voice for any occasion. Call B141-894481 Handel's Import Repair will tune up your car. $35 northeast, mobile service. $41-8628
For Men, Women, & Children
JOHN G SINGS Parties, B-days, singing messages, 841-1874.
820 MASS.
841.0100
2 bedroom apartment for rent second semester.
Near laundry, shopping. On bus route. Call
843-6495.
- seroom & 2 bath kit, with microwave, ice maker and blush carpet. Call 842-5111.
3 bedroom-comfortably fits 4-aisable Dec.
11-Sunrise Village washer/ dryer garage+2/
half-acties court-pool microwave-off 6th
Street. Call 843 401 anytime.
Affordable, spacious, 2 bf. apt. Furn., on bus
route, accursi 841-3890.
Beginning January 2. Sublease 2 bedroom, 2 bath
apartment. Option for direct lease in May. 14th &
Kentucky. 79-3823 or 841-1212
Available immediately. One bedroom apartment for male students. 2-bedroom unit with electric and plastic electric. 841-1207. Available Jan thru May. Two bapm apart w/fireplace in basement. Free Place Rent. Call 843-9044. Call 843-9043.
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4-bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call to day 841-121, 841-5255, 841-1429, or 749-2415
Complete! Furnished Studios. 1-2 & 3 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1122, 841-1125, or fb: 849-245. Mastercraft
Boardwalk apartments BE PLEASANTLY SURPRISED... COME SEE THE BEST KEPT SECRET IN TOWN!
MON. - FRI. 9-6
SAT. 10-5
SUNDAYS 1-5 p.m.
842-4444 524 Frontier Rd.
(Off of 6th Street)
*Moving to KC* Person needed to share 2 hredeon apct, close center Center. Prefer female nurse on night shift 10/30-17/31.
*NASHTH HALL* Sublease. Will give you money for deposit + one half month later. Starting $15 per month.
New 2 bedroom apt. for lease. Nainash Place
New apartments. New appliances. Jaccard built-in
study area Avaria. Large kitchen area.
Private rear room in large furnished house for
rent. Call 843-9090
two bedroom, bath, fully furnished apartment,宴会 area, fully furnished apartment, local laundry, call 814-963-7121. One large bedroom for sublease on Haver Place immediately 3000 sqm. water pad, and furnished.
Quiet, female roommate wanted to share two bedroom apartment. Walking distance to campus $4 month plus 1_2 utilities. Start Jan. 1st.
Single apartment for sublease 2 dbl from Unison
842-536-9266 best after 9.30pm
Spring Semester Sublease, thr WD, on bus rt.
Call Gems, 744-656-1052 Deperate!
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th 814-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 1&2 bedroom units
two bedroom apt: Washer/dryer hookups.
garage. 3419 Harvard Drive. 841-8223. Small pets allowed.
Two MOD studios for sublease. Dec 15/17 12:30
Oread. Across from Yello Sub. 749-6065. 749-2916.
749-3782
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. large bath,
washroom dryer洗器 up to $800/month -
utilize 3 rows from campus. 5 or 8 month
sublease beginning Jan. 1 749-3832
- Some with gas paid
- On bus route-near shopping
- Water paid
- by Thompson-Crawley
- Ample off-street parking
- Rental furniture available
wanted. Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 892-2357
Sunflower House
Student Co-og
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
Sub-lease immediately until May '89 A room with a view' Apple Law Studio. Desperate! (913) 491-3036
Sublease (Jan. 1, May 31): 2 bedrooms, 1-2
spacious DUPLEX at MEDOWBROOK
Families welcome. #843-8021
*oubless. Large 2HR apt. on Bus Route. Can sleep 3. Sleep 414-340.*
Sunflower House is baking applications for Spring 2019. We offer private rooms, TV/VR, game, and laundry facilities. Low rent, includes all utilities, and encourages cooperative living at VR. Contact us at noon on or before mktg #1404.
TRAILRIDGE STUDIO available for sublease spring spring. Quiet, clean location (use) in laundry, pool, Dillen's. Phone 749-4838 start date/weekends or weekdays.
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
15th Crestline 842-4200
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: To share nice
2 bedroom apartment Spring Semester. Call
728-1964.
vienna Roemale wanted to share beautiful partiment in PepperTree Park. Available immediately. Appartment includes: own bedroom, living room, fireplace, and free laundry. Please call 749 8065.
female Roommate wanted to share large two
tory house. $200/month. All utilities paid.
414-0566
female roommate (graduate student, non-
member preferred): Shared first floor of house
available; immediately. own room
available; nearby. use campus.
downtown park. Call 749-5879
Fully furnished one bedroom, apartment. Civilized.
Big enough for two. Must go in Nov. 10th.
& Arkansas. $34 + must. 841-7032 or 749-2415.
Janette.
House for rent January 1, 1989 $350 2 bedrooms,
garage, washer/dryer, A/C. Located on Tennessee
Call Tony at 749-7300.
For Sublease: 1 bedroom $\frac{1}{2}$ bk from KU Union.
Available January 1. $335/mo. Kurt 749-3854
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 66044
913 - 843 - 8559
Male or Female roommate wanted Very nice townhouse for 2nd semester $210 mo. - 'u' utilities. On KU bus route: 841-4604
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, custom Playmobil sets, rock-n-tell playsets, clothing bags, clothing books, combs, baseball cards, slot machines. Maxfield Artcrest, art decoration items, clock and jewelry more so much it will blow you away! QUANTILLA'S FILE MARKET. (81) New Hampshire. Open every Sun and Sun. 5/8 for booth rental info 814-626-9700.
All these Advantages and more!
Convenience...
Luxury...
Privacy...
Convenience...
AUDIO SALE-Cassette decks, Teac, JVC, Sony
from $75 - $150 Must sell. 841-9484.
from $75 - $139 Must sell. 841-9494
Comic books, Playbills, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
FREE information on New KA Police Photo
camera NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE
$80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 1 radar detector that will detect all radars including New KA, BaL
Radar.
FOR SALE
For information and a tour come by or call today!
WANTED Person or persons to assume a lease at Colony Woods, 1 bedroom, at semester end. Call 835-9318.
Inexpensive bridal boutique has lots of beautiful wedding costumes to offer. Call 842-8922, 2449 Iowa.
For Sale: Lowrey electric organ. Python snakekin boots. Larry 843-804
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
Naismith Hall...These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hassle-free living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all your worries.
For Sale: '86 Bianchi Road Bike, like new, '88
Hard Rock Mountain Bike. 841-8099.
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
SPRING Semester
Enterprise, P.O. Box 1074
GOVT St. Louis G.I. Overlays, Com-
panies and sea-ice soot (air beds), Wool (blankets,
gloves, soaks, & miters). Field Jkts, Overcams,
Camouflage Clothing. Also CANHARMIT
WORBEWAN Mon Sat sr. Open. Chapel Sales.
Salt Lake City Church Sales. St. Mary,
Ks. 143-273-472
Minolta XGM camera, aperture preferred,
camera lens 20 plus lens 39.0mm 8.18 zoom, premarket
carrier, $75 or best offer. Evenings, weekends
41-0715
Now showing, Fig Graphics newest southwestern art. Catch the new wave at New Wave Putons. 11. Eighth St. 82-737. 5239
Peyve Mystie electric guitar, excellent condition $200 and Crate G-40c amp, almost new, $200, 814-287.
Naismith Hall contract for sale. Will pay deposit.
Call 749-4618 or 749-7403.
Vector Research 35W stereo. Intelliplex speakers all brand new Cost $400. Sell for $250 749-3698
Rock-n-roll. Thousands used and rare albums 10, a.m. to 5, p.m. ever on Saturday and Sunday. Quarantiln's Flea Market. 811 New Hammond Sheep. Slept with the best. A cotton Fouton for $88.88.
1976 Olds, Omega, 358i, cruise, lth, rldefog,
AM/FM, Pirst, Pdrk, Pwnd, runs super, 106 km,
$250, OHD 843, 203 eyes, wkind.
Quinn is a neat best friend.
Sleep with the best. A cotton Futon for $88.88. Only at New Wave Futons. 11 East 8th St. 842-7378.
1974 Dodge Maxivan, 87,00 mile, runs great. $750 on best offer. 841-1955.
1860 Toyota Corolla, 2 dr. lsp. 3 speed, acc. stercer 19xm. excellent condition. $1064 Call 801-7489. Mazda 625, a/c, AM-FM, 3 speed, looks good! 18200 OBD 041-801 Chris.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100.
Fords, Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevys. Surplus.
Buyers Guide (1) 805-6490-6000 E-mail S-9758
Is It True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government? **Get the facts today!** Call 1-877-323-1147 Ext. 3204
Must sell. 1976 Camero, 78,000 miles. Runs well.
V.8 engine, good condition. $550. Call 434-0757.
LOST-FOUND
Lost, gold snake pin, *4 long near Yello Sub, Nov*
*10. Sentimental value* 843-6495. Reward.
HELP WANTED
ADMINISTARTIVE ASSISTANT
is looking for a friendly or
Entertec Inc. is looking for a friendly, energetic, and ambitious person to work part-time. 25 to 30 hrs/wk - as an administrative assistant in the Food Processing department with good typing skills, and be able to work effectively in a fast paced environment. If you are interested please call Craig Sail at 841-1200 between 9 and 5
Cottonwood, inc. has staff positions open in the Residential Program. Currently having a full-time position on weekends evenings for up to above minimum wage. I interested please fill out an application at 2801 S. Riviera Drive.
Arthur Porterns now hire line cooks and cooks. Must be available over X-mass break and have previous experience. Starting wage $4.00 per hour. Apply at 171 Massachusetts above Buffalo
Immediate openings with flexible hours for
Farmers Co-op Association
convenience store. See June in person. 22rd and
Haskell.
Mass Street Dell. Now hiring limited number of cooks and watertasting positions. Must have day availability and be available over X-mass break. Apply at 17 Massachusetts above Buffalo Rocks.
Graduate Student needed to manage 18-unit apartment building in Olathe. Salary and apartment furnished. Phone 1-492-4496.
CRUISER SHIPS Now hiring all positions. Both skilled and unskilled. For information Call (615) 282-6900 Ex 1694.
local mortuary desires to hire a KU student to work every other night and weekend. Duties include answering phone & door, light janitorial duties and assisting with daily care of individual needs to be real, have good communication skills and desire to serve others. This position requires a Bachelor's degree and paid positions. Available Occasion:
Pre-law Seniors, first and second year law students: Go to OCS this summer to become a Marine Corps Judge Advocate after passing the 600-694 exam (C811.1891)
Up to $40 per week. Positions northwest; East,
West, South, Midwest, 1 year commitment.
1-800-722-4553. National Nanny Resource and
Referral.
Reliable babysitter needed at home day-care Part-time, very light work, minimum wage. Interested, call 842-2008.
Shipment Hall Director, 78% time. live in student position at the University of Kansas. The Director is responsible for the general supervision and coordination of staff on campus. Hall is a 50-student cooperative living unit. Duties include menu planning reports to the Residence Life office of 18-294.
Part time help was needed early evening bees commercial buildings. Sunday through Thursday. Above minimum wage. 843-6449.
For additional information and an interview, call 842-1121 and ask for Larry or Phil
OVERSEAS JOBS $100 $200 amo. Summer, Jr.
allround. All Countries, all Fields. Free info. Write
JC POP Bk $25 K216 Corona Del Mar CA 8028
Part-time work temps:
4 pm - 8 am, 12 pm - 14 am, 12 pm - 14 am,
8 pm - 12 am, 12 pm - 14 am, 8 pm - 12 am,
8 pm - 12 am, 12 pm - 14 am, 8 pm - 12 am,
wk start. Pay $2.45 hr. If interested
please call 843-300. Ask for part-time work
Staying in town over break? Need $33! Kids? Apply to Children's Learning Center 311 Main for teacher aid position. Flexible hours, $3.50/hr.
Student Housing Department. Required Qualifications: Bachelor's in residential group living experience, and be enthusiastic about the 1989 Spring Semester for no more than six hours a week. $400 per month plus room and board for the period of five months. Letter of application, including group living experience, must be submitted by 3:00 p.m. in November 2016. To reapply, Staff Assistant, D.J. Griffin, must complete Life. Suite 252, McCullin Hall, 109 Engle Road, Student University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings in National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Send Stamps For Free Details. 113 E. W. Wyoming, Kaiserslaupe, MT 59901
TACO JUNIOS - now hiring day & EVENINGS apply
al 13 locations 1065, Mass I29, Mass B21, or 110 W
8th. Mature, responsible persons need only apply
apply between 2.5 cm
W. T.C.S. The local battered woman's program is looking for a full-time community facilitator. Dibs include grant writing, raising ransacking money and providing education to battered women and their children. Women of color, formally battered women, and different racial backgrounds are available at Headquarters, Women Studies, Jail Service Center, Haskell Health Center, or must be postmarked by Wed., Dec. 8th, 1988.
MISCELLANEOUS
65 pigs (Otemp ICold, 18 left, fed culture-effects, changes head, body, B.T.R.M. aloesness, fever, Eden-like lifestyle, eden-like intelligence, balance, by passed early; artics; calm, composed, compatible, controlled aggression, avoid confrontation, comfortable environment (unuspoikable) survival mutilation, constant euphoria, constantly standard bushogues, defensive behavior when ADM. syndrome (function slippage) occurs repeat culture
BUY, SELL. LONDON CNY
On TVs. UCRs. Jewelry. Sterios. Musical.
welcome to VCU. J-i-kaw Pawn & Jewelry.
W/A/M/C AME 7. J-i-kaw Pawn & Jewelry.
W/A/B. 6/01. 749-1891.
JEH M. You are the light of my life. You are my sweetest breath. Happy Birthday. You look HOT today!
PERSONAL
Kittens $5 each. Light brown Tabyte male: Black
Tabyte male: Grey Tabyte female: 842-6088
Happy Birthday to Amy the ketchup queen and Carole the long hair worshipper. From your adorable roomies, Sona and Kat.
JENNY, Happy 21st Birthday! Can you believe this day is finally here? I'm not sure who is more excited, you or me?! Just kidding Love Ya. Lvda.
KRIS - Thanks for the great time at formal!
hopefully someday things will change. Love,
Todd.
MU: MAX. HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT?*M* Met at three, Love by six, Now we at Nine, and twelve will make one. HAPPY TWENTY.TWO BECOME I LOVE YOU!*
Murph. Hey chick chick cluck Cooakdooed to Happy Birthday II m ja lays I love, LOVE, SWM. seeking romantic honest male with a full set of clubs for a romantic week in Palm Beach.
o' ozzy and Bob. What can you say, what can you do. The FKI ZOZ1 was a dream come true! 'inbelievable. hw" Congrats! Love. Nic
BUS.PERSONAL
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 22, 1988
sarm Lite. It screams for help. Carry in pocket,
for protection. Lound alarm makes it an exellent attention getting device. Excellent for camus protection. $9.95.
FALL Line Ski & Snowboard Tuning
Complete tuning & repair. Home pickup and
delivery. Certified Tech. Call 842-5202
knowledge
immersion Photos, Passport, immigration,
modeling, Theatural, Advanced fine art
articles. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
artistic future. Tum Swells 794-1611
International Student Travel Low rates on scheduled flights worldwide
SKI COLORADO $25/NITE FOIL 2 Ten couy cabinets / cabins / cabins / cabins / HOO, pool in Fish. Fish. Xountry ski in Fish. Xcountry ski in Fish. MAINS LODGE BRECHureasurement - Grand Lakes, CO
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K.U. INFORMATION CENTER 864-3506, Campsa community events; University procedures
SUICIDE CRISIS HELP, referrals 24 hours/day
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Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
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Math tutor. Master's in math and six years
studying experience. Call Alex at 841.7661
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc. IBM correcting Selective, spelling corrected. 843-0554
Room 206 08/14/19
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Very experienced Spanish ios 10-216
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Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of two-bedroom townhouse. 2 rent/utilities, bus route, fireplace, pool, waterdrive. Call 749-6993
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remote roommate wanted, very nice two bedroom apartment completely furnished. $187 + utilities. 249-5266
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LOOK 1 must sublease my half of two bedroom apt. rent only $145/month. Many amenities. 829-3818 *Hurry!*
Now hire part-time help. Apply in person Mon
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One needed to share beautiful new townhouse,
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Male or Female roommate wants to share giant
Male or Female roommate wants to share giant
bath, wash器(dryer), pool, huge balcony on bus route 175/mo (negotiable).
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M roommate needed starting Jan. I will have your own bedroom and you can rent it 869 3719 M roommate needed for spring semester O roommate Bedroom Surprise Village $150 q utilities
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Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1930 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Glenwag Press Syndicate
"Hey! Look what Zog do!"
10
Tuesday, November 22. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
JFK
Continued from p. 1
"We left to go to a bar to see if we could find a story on TV. We just couldn't believe it," Dutton said, now an editor at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
Returning to KU on Saturday, Dutton said she remembered that the longues in her sorority were told with people watching television.
Francis Heller, professor emeritus of political science, also remembers that Friday.
"The weather had cleared but nobody seemed to notice." Dutton said. "I remember a heavy sense of gloom."
Heller said he learned of the assassination after eating dinner with a colleague.
"As we were crossing Mississippi Street a car came along with a student who knew Professor Barton the teller. He answered why he appeared so pale. The student answered, 'the president has been shot.'
"I can't think of any other day when everyone's mood was so affected."
Heller said that he remembered the crowd that was packed in Hoch Auditorium the next Monday for a convocation commemorating Kenta-
"It was so crowded that people were standing." Heller said. "It was very emotional but very appropriately done."
Calder Pickett, professor emeritus of journalism, said the convocation was one of the most memorable occasions in University history.
"It was hard to take. Everyone was quite overwhelmed at the statements," Pickett said. "The most moving part was when the congregation sang the 'Navy Hymn.'"
"I could not see how anyone could sing, I was too choked up and
crying."
At the time, Pickett, was editorial page adviser for the University Daily Kansan. He recalled that he had been in the Hawk's Nest when someone ran in and said that he'd better get back to the Kansan because the president had been shot.
The newsroom became hectic and frantic as it soon filled with students and faculty. Kett said. "It was a bit of a delay so the toy could be assembled.
story club be assigned.
W. Clarke Wescoe, chancellor in
1963, delivered the address at
the convocation. And John Stuckey
read statements on behalf of the
students.
The following paragraph was taken from Stuckey's statements at the convocation:
Dutton said, "I found myself very impressed and moved by his talk. It was an auditorium packed full to hear an ordinary person speak about the president we had lost."
"Finally, I realized that this is the first national tragedy that most of my generation can remember. Few of us were born when Pearl Harbor was attacked. We were, at best, infants during World War II. Franklin D. Roosevelt's death most of us still too young to realize its significance. Then came the Korean Conflict, which we really cannot recall with any certainty.
"All these crises occurred over a relatively short span of years before we reached a rational age. From that time until now, although the news has been occupied with tensions and conflicts, nothing has happened to really shake the American people in a manner similar to the violent and terrible assassination of our President."
Dallas prepares for anniversary Hundreds to remember JFK
The Associated Press
Kennedy was traveling in a motorcade through downtown Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, when shots rang out across Dealey Plaza and wounded him. Today, a stone slab inscribed with Kennedy's name and surrounded by partial walls stands near the site as a memorial.
DALLAS — Hundreds of people came to the John F. Kennedy Memorial in downtown Dallas yesterday, as the city where he was killed 25 years ago prepared to mark the anniversary with private remembrances but no official ceremony
It was to this slab that visitors came yesterday to pay tribute to a president some of them were too young to remember.
"It's something that I can tell my kids what happened," he said. "I'm going to tell them that 25 years ago this event changed the history of the United States, the history of the world."
Ernest Saucedo of Dallas wasn't born when the president was assassinated but visited the memorial anyway.
traul Miranda, 40, was in Dallas for a convention when he recalled the anniversary and decided to visit the memorial before going home to Los Angeles.
"I just made it my business to come by," said Saucedo, 20. "I understand he was a good president. I just feel I needed to come by. This is history."
history On Sunday, 30 former Green Berets and 150 onlookers gathered at the
A round table discussion is planned for today at Parkland Memorial Hospital, where Kennedy was taken after being shot. Five doctors and nurses who were at the hospital when the president arrived will take part in the discussion.
memorial to remember Kennedy.
The members of the U.S. Army
Special Forces wore their berets
the ones Kennedy had authorized in
1961—as they saluted four wreaths
laid at the memorial.
cade
The attention given to the 25th anniversary has aroused more interest than usual in the site, said Gary Mead, who drove one of several tour buses that stopped at the memorial yesterday.
the assassin at Dealey Plaza, a small American flag with a bouquet of flowers lay in front of a plaque, about 200 yards from the memorial and across the street from the Texas School Book Depository Building, where authorities say Oswald fired from a sixth-floor window into Kennedy's motorcade.
the discussion.
Dallas-area painters, poets, performance artists and musicians plan a series of exhibits and live performances today at the Texas Theater, where assassin Lee Harvey Oswald was apprehended only hours after the assassination.
"They're very much aware of it," Mead said. "They don't want to miss this part of the tour."
Darrell Jordan, a Dallas native, was making his first visit to Dealey Plaza. He spent about an hour yesterday touring the areas.
Poll rates Kennedy as best president
called But Kennedy's exalted place in history rests more on his potential and his personal qualities than on his accomplishments in office. In the national survey he was rated far higher on charisma than on other attributes.
NEW YORK — Americans rank John F. Kennedy as the nation's greatest president, remembering him with a striking sense of loss a quarter-century after his assassination, a Media General-Associated Press poll has found.
The Associated Press
Slightly more than one-fifth of the 1,125 adults surveyed picked Kennedy as the greatest U.S. president, more than named any other Only Franklin D. Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln came close in popularity.
popularity.
Among all respondents, a plurality
Kennedy as a good president,
not a great one. Still, a
majority said they believed that
Most striking, however, was the depth of feeling associated with the slain president. More than six in 10 respondents said they still felt a personal loss from Kennedy's assassination, including many who were children or were not yet born in 1963. Among his contemporaries, seven in 10 feel a loss.
nearly served nearly three years before he was killed Nov. 22, 1963. Twenty-five years later, his name is invoked and his words are quoted by politicians seeking to assume his mantle of popularity.
had he lived and served a second term, the United States would be a better place today.
In another gauge, the poll asked if respondents remembered where they were when they heard Kennedy had been killed. Of those 30 and older now — meaning they were at least 5 years old then more than 90 percent said yes.
Continued from p. 1
CAMELOT
Cuba, and he initiated a limited nuclear test ban agreement with Moscow
Heller attended the address that then-Senator Kennedy gave to a capacity crowd in Hoch Auditorium in 1957.
"It went over tremendously well. There was something energetic about the man. He was someone who said 'yes' to the world." Heller said.
Heller said that Kennedy's Camelot image survived about five years after his death.
"The story of Camelot is one inspired vision which fails, but for a short moment there was a dream," Heller said.
"After his assassination, it became impossible to say anything against him," Stuckey said, now the director of academic computing at Northeastern University in Boston.
death.
John Stuckey, senior at KU in 1963, said that everyone became a Kennedy supporter after his death.
"I was a big supporter of him. A lot of people who would not have defined themselves on the Thursday before he was assassinated as a Kennedy supporter, now would."
a memoir. "In the 1960s, we saw a spark that we haven't seen in the presidency since then."
"Today's generation has heard how young and vigorous Kennedy was," he said. "As events go beyond one's experience, people have to have a simplified explanation of it. The details that complicate the picture are gotten rid of."
Gretchen Crites, Wichita sophmore, said that recent information has somewhat tarnished her image of Kennedy.
"However, I still have a positive image of him that I got from the media and history books." Crites said.
said.
Theodore Wilson, professor of history, said that the positive text-book image of Kennedy would probably continue for another 10 years.
"I'm not surprised to hear the students react to the continuation of the Camelot myth," Wilson said,
"which clearly is a myth; he was not a very good president."
"Many of us grew up during the time with Eisenhower as a backdrop," he said. "Kennedy looks good in comparison with what we had, and a great many of the students today pick up on that."
Kennedy's election was the first to be played out on television and his boyish good looks and glamorous family excited viewers and brought the word "charisma" into vogue.
Calder Pickett, professor emeritus of journalism, said that he had a great deal of admiration for Kennedy and he thought there was a kind of legend associated with him today.
"I don't think kids know enough about him today. He was a young guy who caught the attention of kids in the 1960s." Picktall said. "He was someone the kids could look at.
look a bit.
"He was a war hero and a handsome athlete. He had a beautiful wife, cute kids and a brother who was a war hero who had been killed," he said.
In the aftermath of the assassination, Kennedy's popularity reached heights surpassed in the century before only by Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt.
However, in more recent years, the Kennedy image has crumbled a bit with reports of extramarital meetings of meetings with a Maria boss.
John G. Clark, professor of history, said that he thought less of Kennedy now then he did then.
"After his death he was blown up to be some super person with all the good values. No one knew how dishonest or nical he had Clark said."
been, Clark said.
The Kennedy myth that lived after his death has been tarnished since the 1970s because of the fact that Kennedy increased U.S. involvement in Vietnam, and because his economic views have since been questioned, Clark said.
"He didn't really leave a legacy because he was not there long enough, but that's not to say he wouldn't have." Clark said. "Kennedy had that charisma that it takes to guarantee him a place in history."
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Vol. 99, No. 63 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1880 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAK
Monday November 28.1988
Bush not part of visa denial
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President-elect George Bush was not consulted in the Reagan administration's decision to deny a visa to Palestinian leader Yassir Arafat, a spokesman said yesterday.
The spokesman, Stephen Hart, said the decision to deny the chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization entry into the country to give a speech to the United Nations was a State Department decision.
Related story p. 8, col. 1
"In that answer is the fact that he was not consulted," Hart told reporters traveling with the vice president on Air Force Two as he returned from a four-day Thanksgiving vacation in Maine.
Asked if Bush supported the mo. Hart declined comment.
But Hart added, "It was an administration decision and he has been a loyal supporter of the administration."
Secretary of State George P. Shultz said Saturday that Ardat would not be given a visa because he and the president had been in touch with Reagan endorsed Shultz's action.
Bush, his wife Barbaria and family spaniel Millie, returned here from the oceanside family vacation home in Kennebunkport, Maine.
Barbara Bush said that she planned to accompany the vice president Dec. 7 when he travels to New York City for the Republican convention. The Soviet Leader, Mikhail S. Gershberg.
She said she was looking forward to meeting Gorbachev's wife, Raisa.
Earlier yesterday, the Bushes,
accompanied by daughter Dorothy
LeBloom, attended morning worship
at the Church of Neenkunbetturg.
Church of Neenkunbetturg.
Plan would aid museum budgets
By Mark Fagan Kansan staff writer
In a proposed budget of $229.7 million, science museums certainly deserve $60,000, a KU official said recently.
"The museums have a lot of potential," said Bob Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service. "They're underfunded. There's no question we can justify the need for $60,000."
Science museums are part of the $21.3 million academic support portion of the University of Kansas' budget proposal for fiscal year 1990. The proposal would allocate $60,000 for science museums as a mission-related enhancement under the Margin of Excellence.
Although Bearse, who oversees the science museums, said he was happy with the Margin overall, he said the museum's staff had received treatment during fiscal year 1989.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to raise total financing of Regents schools to 95 percent of their student bodies and salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
"They did not get what they needed out of the Margin, and they will probably not get all of what they need during fiscal year 1990." Bearse said.
This year's proposal asks for $45,000 to help finance 1.5 additional full-time positions and $15,000 for other operating expenditures.
Last year, the mission-related enhancement portion of the budget request asked for $100,000 for science museums. The museums actually received $125,000, which went for four full-time equivalent employees.
In the budget proposal, museums that would receive money from the Margin are
■ the Museum of Anthropology which would receive money to finance the salaries of a collection manager, an outreach coordinator and a contract archeologist. The positions were partially funded in the
fiscal year 1989 budget
■ the Museum of Entomology, which would add a collections manager.
■ the Museum of Natural History, which would add staff members to relieve the strain on graduate students working at the museum.
Bearse said the Herbarium, the botany museum on West Campus, also would receive money to hire a new director.
However, exactly how all the needs would be met remains undecided. Bearse said appropriations would not be approved and the concrete approval the budget in April.
KU's proposal now is being considered by the state budget office in Topoca. Gov. Mike Hayden will preside over appointments to the Legislature in January.
The Museum of Anthropology would receive additional funds for positions now funded mostly by money from research grants from the Institute of Museum Services, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Historic Preservation Office in Tokyo.
Alfred Johnson, director of the Museum of Anthropology, said the grant money could be used to increase the number and quality of exhibits and improve collection care management instead of paying the salaries.
"Grants will still be coming in, but they'll allow us to do other things that we otherwise wouldn't be able to do," he said.
Steve Ashe, director of the Museum of Entomology, said he accepted his present position at KU after receiving assurances that staff would be added. He came to KU on Oct. 25, after leaving the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.
At the Museum of Entomology, the retirement of two leading entomologists has focused attention on staffing problems, the budget proposal
Please see MUSEUMS, p. 5, col. 1
BROADWAY HUNTING
PARKS
Horsing around
TOP: Sam Hines, center, master of the foxhounds, and five riders, take hounds to the hunting grounds. The Fort Leavenworth Hunt Club met Saturday and has fox hunts every weekend and Wednesday from October to April. The hunt is for pleasure riding only, and no game animals are killed. The Hunt Club is a not-for-profit organization that is supported by the dues of the members. LEFT: Michel Phillip, Kansas City, Mo., jumps her horse over one of many fences encountered in the chase of the hounds. ABOVE: A rider tightens the girth on her saddle to ensure its stability for jumping.
Senate faces majority leader decision
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Democrats gained only a single Senate seat in this month's elections, but the chamber is likely to undergo a personality change with the choosing of a new major leader this year.
efficient schedule and to make other reforms.
While none of them have Byrd's knowledge of the rules, the candidates have appealed to fellow Dancers.
The current majority leader, Robert C. Byrd, D.W.Va., is stepping down to become chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, taking with him his parliamentary expertise and style.
Running to replace him in one of the toughest elections they may ever face are Sens. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, J. Bennett Johnston, D-La, and Linda C. D Maine. The election takes place tomorrow.
Inouye, 64, is the oldest of the three and the most senior in the Senate. His served his first term as a senator in 1962.
While he won praise for his eloquence and incisiveness during the 1973 Watergate hearings, Inouye's reputation was seen by some to be tarnished when the Iran-Contra hearings he helped direct turned into a televised platform for White House aide Oliver North. He has also been criticized in a spreading bill $8 million in federal aid for a school for North African Jews living in France.
Inouye, once favored to replace Byrd, is now considered the long shot.
Johnston is perhaps most like Byrd in his command of the legislative labyrinth, but he is also
the most public in pushing for change.
The 56-year-old senator, in his third term, has been rapidly gaining influence. He is chairman of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee and chairman of the Appropriations energy subcommittee. He has paid a lot of difficult bills on the Senate floor for retiring appropriations chairman John Stennis, D-Miss.
Johnston has the support of Southern senators including Lloyd Bentts, D-Texas, and Sam Nunn. D-Ga. If that conservative wing of the party is supported by Mr. Cruz, he will help the Democrat's势头 a less liberal image.
George Mitchell, 55, has only been in the Senate for eight years but has quickly developed a reputation as a thoughtful and well-spoken lawmaker.
Campus planners advise Ramaley about priorities
T H E
F U T U R E
OF
K U
Planning for tomorrow
By David Stewart and Laura Woodward Kansan staff writers
Such developments are the result of clear-sighted planning. As Allen Wiechert, director of facilities and planning, said, the University is moving out of a building mode and into a renovation mode.
KU officials have peered into their crystal balls and have seen the year 1992.
Science students will be using their new library; companies will be sending their employees to the new Regents Center; enrollment on the Lawrence campus will stabilize around 26,000 students; and telecommunications will be the educational buzzword.
But not so long ago, the crystal ball was muddy.
On March 6, 1987, Sid Shapiro, chairman of the Planning and Resources Committee, said the University would have an organized plan for the future.
By then, most people who attended the University of Kansas in 1888 will have graduated and moved on.
Del Shankel, then acting executive vice chancellor, said that planning did occur but that it had to be done on a one-year-at-a-time basis. He said that the University of Kansas did not permit a university to be or a published plan for the future.
"The University doesn't plan, as far as we can tell," Shapiro told the University Senate Executive Committee.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that Shankel was reflecting accurately how hard it was at that time to plan ahead.
"It's very hard to plan without a
date when you have rocketing ad-
missions."
Now, KU's total enrollment is down; 28 fewer students attend the Lawrence campus now compared with fall 1987. Also, this year KU received money from the Margin of exchange and received extra finances as compensation for the expanding enrollment of earlier years.
Please see PLANNING. p. 12, col. 1
KU to stabilize enrollment until '92
Kansan staff writer
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
From 1983 to 1987, KU was getting fat, and its buttons were nooning.
By 1992, Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, plans to have the situation controlled, but not through a diet for the University. Instead, KU will stabilize its size at the fall 1987 amount and increase the size of its belts.
The University of Kansas experienced an unprecedented 6.6 percent population boom between fall 1983 and fall 1986. Although that could prove KU's popularity, it also created a strain on the University.
In fall 1987, Del Shankel, then acting executive vice chancellor, set up a 12-member enrollment planning team.
According to KU's fiscal year 1989 budget, "An enrollment increase of the magnitude experienced by the University of Kansas impacts not only the instructional mission of the University but also the academic and institutional support functions and the student service sector of the institution."
This year, Ramaley told the enrollment planning group that she wanted the enrolment to stay within 1 million.
That way, she said, the University's financial base could catch up to its population.
But Brower Burchill, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the stabilization game wasn't as easy as it sounded.
fall 1987, until about 1992.
"I think the University would like to believe that it is possible to come up with procedures that would allow the University to be more involved."
This fall, he said, the numbers looked good. Enrollment on the Lawrence campus was down by 286 students, overshooting Ramaley's 1 percent goal by 23 students.
But, he said, "Maybe more luck was involved than skill."
Still, the task remains with the group to try to find how much to attribute to luck or skill.
Burchill said that the group was analyzing what happened with this year's enrollment but that it was a wave of new students.
"You can't have a trend with one year's figures," he said.
Please see ENROLL, p. 12, col. 5
2
Monday, November 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast Key
Chilly and clear
High:38°
Low:23°
Today's high should reach 38 degrees under mostly sunny skies with winds from the southwest at 10-15 miles per hour. Tonight the temperature will fall to 23 degrees.
North Platte
39/22
Partly cloudy
Omaha
39/22
Mostly sunny
Goodland
42/23
Mostly sunny
Salina
39/22
Mostly sunny
Topska
37/24
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
39/23
Mostly sunny
Columbia
38/26
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
37/26
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
44/26
Mostly sunny
Wichita
39/26
Mostly sunny
Chanute
38/26
Mostly sunny
Springfield
39/27
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Leigh Anne Stout
Temperature are today's high and tonight low.
5-Day
Tuesday
Partly cloudy
41/28
HIGH LOW
Wednesday
Chance for snow
36/28
Thursday
Partly sunny
38/26
Friday
Mostly sunny
37/24
Saturday
Partly cloudy
38/27
The nation
Seattle
34/18
Deliver
31/22
Phoenix
64/40
Dallas
49/30
New York
28/12
Los Angeles
48/33
Fronts:
oak
occluded
warm
stationary
Lawrence weather Forecast Key
Chilly and clear
High:38°
Low:23°
Today's high should reach 38 degrees under mostly sunny skies with winds from the southwest at 10-15 miles per hour. Tonight the temperature will fall to 23 degrees.
North Platte
39/22
Partly cloudy
Omaha
37/23
Mostly sunny
Goodland
42/23
Mostly sunny
Salina
39/23
Mostly sunny
Tokaka
37/24
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
39/23
Mostly sunny
Columbia
36/28
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
37/26
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
44/26
Mostly sunny
Wichita
39/26
Mostly sunny
Chanute
39/26
Mostly sunny
Springfield
39/27
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Light Anne Stout
Temperature is today's high and tonight's low
Seattle 34/18
Denver 31/12
Chicago 33/12
New York 28/12
Los Angeles 46/33
Phoenix 64/40
Dallas 49/30
Miami 50/39
Fronts:
cold occluded
warm stationary
KU freshman dies
An 18-year-old KU student was killed and his roommate was seriously injured in a two-vehicle accident late Saturday night in Overland Park.
Bv a Kansan reporter
Michael T. Hickey, Mission freshman, was declared dead at 12:35 a.m. Sunday at Shawnee Mission Hospital, a hospital spokesman said.
Hickey's roommate, Mark S. Honigman, 19, Kansas City, Kan., freshman and a passenger in the car driven by Hickey, was listed in serious condition at the hospital in Kansas Medical Center, a hospital spokesman said.
Two other passengers in Hickey's car also were transported to the Med Center, and a third escaped uninjured.
the accident occurred at 11:50 p.m. Saturday at 69th Street and Metcalf Avenue in Overland Park when the Honda Prelude driven by
Hickey ran a stop sign and was struck on the left side by a Ford pick-up, an Overland Park police spokesman said.
Hickey graduated in 1987 from Bishop Miege High School in Mission. He is survived by his father, Michael Hickey of Fairway; his mother and stepfather, Carol and Ernest Cattaneo, Mission; his brothers Daniel P., James A. and John M. Hickey; and his stepbrothers John E., Michael J. and Kevin A. Cattaneo.
Funeral services for Hickey will be at 10 a.m. tomorrow at St. Agnes Catholic Church in Roeland Park. Burial will be at Johnson County Memorial Gardens following the funeral.
Donations may be made to the Michael T. Hickey Memorial Fund at Bishop Miege High School, 5041 Reinhardt Drive, Mission.
Mulvenon said the accident occurred at the intersection of 31st and Iowa streets when the 1985 Honda driven by Lata turned left to meet the road. The truck driven by Douglas S. Dister, 19, of Topeka.
Stinson married Joel Stinson on June 4. The couple was expecting their first child in May.
Elizabeth L. "Betsy" Stinson graduated from Lawrence High School in 1984. She was a member of Trinity College and a volunteer in the Lawrence Salvation Army.
Jamie D. Lata, 22, Stinson's identical twin, was listed in serious condition yesterday at the Med Center, a hospital spokesman said.
Elizabeth L. S. Stinson was pronounced dead at 4:47 p.m. Tuesday at the university of Kansas Medical Center, Lawrence, Lawrence police spokesman, said
Dister was not injured.
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A 22-year-old Lawrence woman was killed and her twin sister was seriously injured Tuesday when their car struck a pick-up truck pulling a stock-trailer.
By a Kansan reporter
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 28, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Law school enters computer age
Dario Robertson, law professor, has developed legal software for Apple Computers, Inc.
KU professor a pioneer in software to teach law
By Katy Monk
Kansan staff writer
A KU professor is helping to bring law into the educational mainstream of using computers as teaching tools.
"The legal profession doesn't know computers, and law schools aren't much better," said Dario Robertson, associate professor of law. "You don't realize the potential of educational software."
Robertson is one of 75 Apple Computer Inc. legal fellows who develop educational software for legal study. Working with $20,000 in Apple equipment granted to the law school for his project, he is beginning this semester to develop computer tutorials in various areas of law.
Al Johnson, associate dean of law, said Robertson was the only KU law professor who was dead.
"Dario is certainly the pioneer in the area," Johnson said.
Daryl Weiner, manager for strategic projects higher education marketing for Apple, said the company had started supporting educational software development three or four years ago. Law has become an area of focus only in the last year.
Robertson is planning a library of tutorials for every aspect of some courses he teaches. This semester he gave students the option of earning online tutorials within the course's subject matter.
He plans to use "CourseBuilder" and "VideoBuilder" authoring systems to develop interactive tutorials in areas such as corporations, manufacturing, moot court and international trade law
An authoring system is a software tool that allows the user to create a customized program without knowing a programming language. The computer generates the program.
Robertson now is using Oyster and CourseBuilder to develop the tutorials. An Oyster tutorial consists of a hypothetical situation allowed by a set of multiple-choice questions.
"i say 'agree', it gives me an explanation and then another question: 'Do you agree or disagree with the explanation, and why? It tells us through the reason for your judgment,' he said.
Of the two authoring systems, CourseBuilder is the revolutionary one, Robertson said.
"The things you can do with this, you would normally have to know a programming language that is used."
CourseBuilder allows a user — even one with only basic word-processing skills — to manipulate the content of a tutorial while using it. The system can analyze the changes instantaneously and respond to them, making it an interactive system.
For example, using CourseBuilder and VideoBuilder, a related system, a user could act as an attorney involved in a legal case on the user's actions influence how the case proceeds.
Although Robertson is working with Apple-donated equipment, he said he intended to copyright the software and distribute it free to people in related fields. Eventually he would like to market it at a competitive price, with proceeds going to the school for more research and development and possibly for a legal technology center.
Ted Briscoe, higher education account executive for Apple, said, "Robertson) is one of a handful of people working on legal software for
us. It's extremely significant in the legal field for Apple."
Teaching with tutorials, which allow students to learn law "hands on," could make KU a leader in computer usage in law. Robertson said. Students would benefit in several ways.
First; he said, complex areas of law would become easier to understand and more interesting to learn. Tutorials make education more fun and more accessible.
Third, students would have a more significant competitive advantage in the marketplace, even as a solo practitioner.
Second, law firms now place a premium on hiring students who understand information
Racial suit filed against Haskell
Former teacher alleges infractions
By James Farquhar Kansan staff writer
A former instructor at Haskell Indian Junior College has sued the school, alleging that his March 4 firing was racially motivated.
John is suing U.S. Secretary of the Interior Donald Hodel; Assistant Secretary Ross O. Swimmer, who heads the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs; and Haskell's president; and Charles Haskell, Haskell's dean of instruction
Kenneth Robert John, Lawrence resident, filed a suit in U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Kan., on Nov. 15 because he said Haskell administers a plan to work more than with American Indian employees in similar circumstances.
He is seeking damages in excess of $10,000.
The District Court, however, as of last week, did not yet have records of the case. Goboe said that he had not been charged with assault and would not comment further.
John said Haskell administrators fired him last spring because he returned to Haskell about a half-hour late two times a week from teaching a sociology course at the University of Kansas.
He was an instructor in life sciences and sociology at Haskell. During the fall 1887 semester, he was a temporary sociology lecturer at KU but is no longer employed by the University.
John said his dismissal was inappropriate for, what he termed, a "minor infraction" because Indian employees had broken more serious regulations and received lesser penalties.
John, who is white, said it was common for Haskell faculty and administrators to take long lunches and make up meals either before or after classes. He spent 10 hours.
However, the extra time almost never was made up, he said, because administrators rarely monitored the computers locked before and after business hours.
"Coming in late twice a week is an infraction of the rules," he said. "But I can point to a dozen more serious Indian teachers have broken, and they have gotten off scot-free or with just a repr*mand."
C
Coming in late twice a week is an infraction of the rules. But I can point to a dozen more serious rules Indian teachers have broken, and they have gotten off scot-free or with just a reprim-
— Kenneth Robert John Former instructor at Haskell Indian
Junior College
John said he could document more serious infractions by Indian faculty members that were treated lightly.
"I won't have any trouble finding enough evidence for the court case," he said.
John also contends that Haskell officials did not follow proper channels for disciplining federal employees.
"They completely violated all bureau guidelines for disciplining them, but I gave me absolutely no warning that they were considering any action.
"They basically gave me the death penalty for the first offense."
On April 1, John appealed his dismissal through the federal employee appeals process. The process requires that a complainant wait six months for the government to investigate before filing a law suit.
"I've waited a half a year, and they haven't done a damn thing," he said. "I decided I wasn't getting any out of them and so I live like it."
Gipp, who has been temporarily assigned to the Washington, D.C. office of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, was not available for comment.
In a separate case, Gipp is under investigation for a complaint that he ordered his daughter's failing grade in records management class last spring be changed so she could graduate. His daughter, Denise, then was hired by the school and given a $600 bonus along with her co-workers.
Hodel and Swimmer both were unavailable for comment.
3,200 return for completion enrollment
Kansan staff writer
By Grace Hobson
For 3,200 students, enrollment headaches did not end when main enrollment did on Nov. 21.
Instead, those students had to return to the enrolment center Tuesday to try to fill their
During main enrollment, 3,200 pink forms were issued to students who had less than 15 hours. On Tuesday, the forms were their tickets to the second round of enrollment.
Some students were successful in their bids for more classes.
"I got exactly what I wanted," said Kristin Leavard. Leavard said the first thing they put in computer, "got."
Deerer said Tuesday wasn't her first experience with completion enrollment, but it was by far the easiest. Last year, she said, the line wound through a group of students to complete circle back to the enrollment center.
James Carothers, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said that at its longest on Tuesday, the line was half as long as it was the year before and was gone by 11:30 a.m.
Edith Guffey, assistant director of the office of student records and in charge of the enrollment center, said the average wait to enter the enrollment center was about 45 minutes.
F.
For freshmen and sophomores who say 'I can't find anything — everything's closed,' you know it can't be right. Then you learn that 9:30 is too early in the morning, and 1:30 is too late in the afternoon. They aren't interested in anything but what they've known all their lives.'
Assistant to the dean of liberal arts and sciences
Not all students shared Deeter's positive experience with completion enrollment. Justin Phar, Scott City senior, said he didn't get any of the requirements and needed to complete his maor requirements by August.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences set up a "trouble" room to advise ill-fated students, who Ke Phar, didn't get the classes they needed the school had. He attended schools in the University, the college office, the
"I've got two choices," Phar said. "I can drop out or transfer schools."
college honors program and the Advising Support Center volunteered to help students find classes to fill their schedules.
Pam Houston, assistant to the dean of liberal arts and sciences, worked throughout Tuesday in the "trouble" room, which was located across the street from the hospital. The students who were flexible, the advisers were helpful.
"For freshmen and sophomores who say 'I can't find anything — everything's closed', you know it can't be right," she said. "Then you learn that 9:30 is too early in the morning, and 1:30 is too late in the afternoon. They aren't interested in anything but what they've known all their lives."
Houston and many other college officials emphasized that students shouldn't expect to take only popular classes. Students should look at classes like anthropology and geology.
But not all students' enrollment problems are solved by finding alternate courses. Many seniors found that their upper-level major classes were closed. For those students, the advisers suggested add/drop or going straight to the departments to get the classes they needed.
Another troubled group on Tuesday consisted of students needing to enroll in sequence courses, such as Spanish 108. Although enrollment officials could not issue closed class openers, Carothers said the college would do everything possible to insure those students would get their classes.
Transient is competent for trial, judge decides
By a Kansan reporter
John William, the 27-year-old transi-
tion者 who faces first degree murder
charges for the death of a 9-yea-
r-old Lawrence boy this summer,
on Wednesday was found
mentally competent to stand trial
by Judge James Paddock, Douglas
County District Court.
A preliminary hearing was set for Dec. 28, said Jim Flory, Douglas County District Attorney.
The ruling came after staff members at Larned State Hospital reported that William had attained competency, and despite the opinion of an expert witness for the defendant that William was not competent.
According to Kansas statute, a person is incompetent to stand trial if, because of mental illness
or defect, he is unable to understand the nature and purpose of the proceedings against him or is forced to assist in making his defense.
William was arrested July 14 after the mutilated body of Richard D Settlemy was found in a river near River near the turnpike bridge.
A competency examination carried out by the Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 336 Missouri St., found that William was unable to assist in making his defense. On Aug. 12, he was found incompetent by Paddock and committed to Larned.
Flory also filed An alternative first degree murder charge, felony murder, and a one count of felony kidnapping on Wednesday.
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Monday, November 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Opinion
McMurry case teaches KU that cheating really can pay
The man who embezzled more than $257,000 from KU on Wheels between 1978 and 1982 still hasn't paid up.
KU on Wheels is funded by Student Senate. McMurry, a former coordinator for the program, has paid only $2,860 in restitution since he was convicted in June 1983. He was sentenced to one concurrent and four consecutive two- to five-year prison terms for embezzlement. In November 1983 the sentence was modified to five concurrent two- to five-year terms. He was granted parole in February 1985 after spending 17 months in prison.
Because McMurry has completed his criminal sentence, the only way the University can hold him to payment is through a civil suit, said Mary Prewitt, KU assistant general counsel. The University won a judgment in a civil suit filed against McMurry in 1984, but Prewitt did not comment on any action to enforce the judgment.
The payments McMurry has made and a $50,000 payment from the insurance company that bonded him is being held in a contingency fund by the KU on Wheels program.
Somehow, the judicial system is cheating the University. Shouldn't there be a law that when you steal something, you give it back when you're caught?
McMurry embezzled the money over a five-year period. It's about three years since he was released from prison on parole. At the rate of his payments, it will take him close to 200 years to repay the money.
Why should the University be responsible for forcing McMurry to pay what he owes?
With McMurry's record, the University shouldn't be expecting to get its money back. For KU it was a tough lesson, but lawmakers should look at ways to protect other institutions from getting cheated this way.
Christine Martin for the editorial board
Other Voices
Children are victims of Reagan veto
President Reagan recently vetoed a measure that would have reinstated much-needed restrictions on children's television programming.
The bill intended to limit advertising during children's programming to 10.5 minutes an hour on weekdays and 12 minutes an hour on weekends. It also would require broadcasters to provide educational and informative programming as a stipulation for license renewal.
These reasonable limitations had existed under Federal Communication Commission rules until 1984, when it removed them to allow the market to determine what was best for children.
The market has determined that commercial breaks as long as the inane plots of most of today's cartoons are best. The market also has determined that violent, realistic cartoons featuring characters such as professional wrestlers are best for children.
Without supervision, the market has determined that what is best for children is what is best for the market; in other words, what is best for toy manufacturers and big business.
The FCC's deregulation was responsible for catalyzing other changes in children's television that lowered the quality of programming. Toy manufacturers now use children's television as a vehicle for advertisements to sell toys and other products to children, such shows in exchange for a percentage of the product's profits.
Reagan justified his disapproval of the bill on constitutional grounds. He stated that "it cannot be reconciled with the freedom of expression secured by our Constitution." Since when was our president an established scholar on the Constitution? If his administration were sincerely behind family values and education, Reagan would have let it go unchallenged in government, the judiciary, could then decide on the bill's constitutionality.
President-elect Bush, behaving like the wimp he was once known as, has not publicly opposed Reagan's pocket veto. This silent assent raises an important question: Is this what Bush meant when he declared himself to be an education president?
Perhaps if Bush sat down some Saturday with his grandchildren and saw the excuse for children's entertainment flashing between the seats, he might have been amused.
We have seen the Reagan administration's penchant for turning urgent matters into partisan conflicts with the environment. Now they are focusing on environmental issues.
While each side argues about whose view is correct, the people we are trying to help, our children in this case, are the real losers.
Indiana Daily Student
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sport editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jil Press ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Ebbin ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Dreola Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Campus sales sales
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
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Michelle Garland...Assist production manager
Michael Lehmman...Classified manager
Hunt...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.
**ta**
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
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The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stuffer-Flint Hall. Letters, columns and cartoons are the opinion of the writer or cartoonist and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editors, which appear in the left-hand column, are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Strauß-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 6045, 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, Kan. 6044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student contributions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
subscriptions to POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045
To tell you the truth,
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KU post office crucial to defense Government stronghold as important to defend as Nicaragua
Most of us are aware, by now, that the post office in the basement of Strong Hall is not open for business as long as it used to be. Our government, in a well intended display of frugality, has decided that you, me and our 30,000 friends here at KU don't need a full-time post office.
What's more, the future of the post office itself seems in doubt. From what I'm told, if the government has its way, we'll soon have no post office at all. I think that prospect is unfortunate.
It's not that our government doesn't have the money. I can vouch for the fact that Uncle Sam has at least $1,000 stashed away somewhere. I know because I gave it to him during the last year or so. And even if our government doesn't have the money right now, has that ever kept us from spending before? So why should a little cash flow problem stop us now?
No, the problem isn't money; it's prioritizes. Our government has the money to keep our post office open; it just doesn't want to very badly. So how can we do that? It needs to care as much about our post office as we do?
I can tell you from experience that rational debate won't work very well, especially where money is concerned. I tried to reason with the government's tax collector, the Internal Revenue Service, about a $10 difference of opinion in my taxes. After IRS personnel repeatedly ignored my letters and I repeatedly answered theirs, they finally threatened to put a lien against everything I ever thought of owning. So I gave up the rational debate and gave them more of my money.
Ramesh Bhardwaj
No, rational debate won't work. Instead we have to convince our government that our post office is not open.
Think about the past election campaign (I know it's painful). What was one of the few things Bush
Mark
Jost
Staff Columnist
and Dukakis agreed on? Answer: The need for a strong national defense. Clearly that issue is one of our highest national priorities. That issue is also the salivation of our post office.
Unknown to our government, and perhaps to you, the KU post office plays an important part in our nation's defense. Let me explain.
Since World War II, our nation's foreign policy has revolved around the assumption that nearly all conflicts in the world are actually confrontations between East and West, communism and democracy. This reasoning helped legitimize the fight against the Communists 25 years ago and the fight against the Nazis more than a century ago. We argue that if not for our presence, communism would continue its program of world conquest.
What's more, if we are willing to go to the Persian Gulf to defend the interests of ourselves and our allies, shouldn't we protect our own mail? Even if you are extraordinarily open-minded about communism, given the poor condition of the Soviet economy, are you sure you want the Soviets in charge of the KU post office? The thought of Dan Quayle as president may make some people nervous, but the thought of communists controlling the delivery of my correspondence scares the
So if our government abandons the KU post office, who do you think will take it over? The
daylights out of me.
Even if the role of the post office weren't important, think of its location; right smack dab in the middle of the United States. If a friend (but distant) Nicaraguan government is worth hundreds of millions of dollars to us, how much is a friendly Kansas post office worth? Uncle Sam may scoff now, but just wait until those Soviet missiles start arriving C.O.D. The KU missile crisis will make the Cuban missile crisis look like a friendly game of penny poker. Suddenly you can hold dollars a month or whatever it takes to keep the post office open doesn't sound like very much, does it?
Let's also look at the defense issue from a personality perspective. We supported and still negotiate with Panamanian pusher/president Noriega. We also support the often repressive and brutal Duarte government in El Salvador. If our government can support these rulers and others like them, why can't it support the employees of the KU post office?
I've talked to these employees. They're quite nice, even when I can't decide how many stamps to buy while a line of 20 impatient customers waits behind me. I haven't checked with Amnesty International lately, but I'd be willing to bet that the number of human rights violations at our post office is dramatically less than in El Salvador or even Cincinnati, for that matter. Aren't our postal workers worth at least a few million dollars a year, if for no other reason than congeniality?
So much for my defense. Now it's time to let the government know how we feel. It seems to me a letter might be appropriate.
Mark Jost is a Lawrence graduate student in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Cartoon ironic
knows when life begins . . . I find this rather blatant contradiction hypocritically ironic.
I'm responding to the political cartoon Kline illustrated in the Nov. 17 issue of the Kansan depicting George Bush holding two hangers. I thought it was crude and in poor taste. It also justifies the irony I find in the popular political philosophies on this campus.
We're aggressive for equality and minority rights. We express concern for the homeless and disadvantaged. We want animal rights for laboratory mice and parade around with "Save the Whales" buttons. Yet when we come to the subject of our own unborn, the sense of compassion is heightened. We are the helpless member of our society and of our own species. Still we justify their extermination: a woman has the right to her own body; we need legalized abortion for safety measures; no one
Pro-choice advocates argue that they don't want other people's morality "imposed" on them in the million children program. They want Wade to expose of these advocacy's morality. Where does the true imposition lie?
Again I express disdain for Kline's cartoon. Pro-life and many pro-choice advocates, alike, were not amused.
Laura Heim
Topeka sophomore
Peaceful forum
On Nov. 18, a protest was staged in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall to combat the racism problem that has plagued society.
Although I wasn't able to stay for the duration of the event, I stayed long enough to realize one
thing: I love a protest. It's something unique on the college campus. There may be protests outside (in the "real world") but none contains the fervor, emotion and feeling of a college protest.
How many times have you seen protesters march to call attention to the use of bricks in a building? None. The point is that we, as students, don't necessarily protest just for the sake of protesting. These are important issues that are brought to the forefront for debate and decisions. Issues that will definitely play a role in our future.
Nonetheless, I favor Martin Luther King Jr.'s forum: the peaceful demonstration. Freedom of choice is an important factor in our constitutional rights, and no one should have another's views forced on them.
Despite what you may think, I have never been involved in a demonstration of any kind. I hope I have put into words the feelings of the average student as he listens to these protests.
Doug Rieman Lawrence sophomore
BLOOM COUNTY
THE LAST THINGS OPUS
REMEMBERED AT THE
BACK-ALLEY LIPOSUCTIONIST:
STEP INTO THE
OPERATING
ROOM!
by Berke Breathed
THATLL BE
500.
I'M PUTTING
MYSELF
THROUGH
MEDICAL
SCHOOL!
YOU'LL FEEL
A TEENY
WEENY
PRICK...
OKAY! I'M OFF
TO SCRUB UP!
BACK IN A
SEC!
---
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 28, 1988
5
MUSEUMS Continued from p. 1
"They were real critical issues." Ashe said, "I felt the museum did not have adequate support in order to support its role for the graduate students, professors and the general public."
Ashe said a good start would be to elevate a secretary from a half-time position to full-time.
"It is essential to handle the increased activity of the museum," he said. "It (the museum) is a major systematic resource. In order to fulfill that role, we need to add the staff."
Ashe said the salary for the present collections manager was paid for by a grant from the National Science Foundation. The grant has paid the manager's salary for the past three years, but it runs out in May.
He said the salary would be taken
over by Margin funds, but the source of the money really didn't matter.
"The important thing is that the University supports the positions they promised," he said.
The Museum of Natural History,
meanwhile, needs to add staff to
relieve the strain on graduate stu-
dents working at the museum.
Bearse said.
Bearse said adding staff, rather than raising salaries, would better remedy the situation.
"The graduate students are grossly underpaid," he said. "But we would not use money to raise salaries; it's just that we've got so many jobs for them to do that we need to add more people."
"We're spreading the money further rather than thin," he said.
Bearse said the Herbarium needed a new director. He was unsure whether money from the Margin would help finance it.
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"We are not sure what resources we will have to commit to get that," he said.
Hyundai Computers Introduced to Kansas
DENVER (FSI). The Hyundai Corporation has selected Connecting Point Computer Centers as their exclusive authorized dealer in Lawrence and Manhattan, Kansas. This selection follows the signing of a major supply contract with the 180 store Connecting Point chain here last month.
Hyundai, the $24 billion company known for its high quality, economical cars, has been a major producer of microcomputers for the past several years.
Hyundai's Super 167E line of PCs follows their automotive tradition of price/performance. Myles Schachter, Connecting Point President, said that he chose the Hyundai product line because of its great price, high speed and excellent software bundle. Each Hyundai, he said, is fast at 1 MHz or twice as fast as the original PC, has a full 640K memory, $12" or $14" flat amber screen and a 101 keyboard.
The Electric Desk software included with every computer is a quality word processor, spreadsheet and database. The system also comes with Keyworks, a program to store keystrokes.
Dr. Rhonda Ross, the firm's Customer Support Manager, has found that the price has not compromised the construction of these powerful PCs. She states that the systems appear to be trouble free and highly compatible. She said this explains the manufacturer's 18 month warranty - far in excess of the industry standard.
A
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Due to the new Connecting Point-Hyundai contract, the Manhattan and Lawrence stores are introducing these PCs at more than 20% off already competitive compatible prices with training included with every purchase. Already, United Telephone Midwest Group, Menninger's Foundation and PARS Service has selected Connecting Point to provide Hyundai PCs to their employees.
ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM A
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NOW?
call Kathy Gorman immediately at
Watkins Memorial Health Center (913)864-9595 to see if you qualify for a medication study
Museums to receive financing
FINANCIAL INCENTIVE PROVIDED
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP
Under the Margin of Excellence, three science museums on campus would receive a total of $60,000. This year's proposal asks for $45,000 to help pay for salaries. The other $15,000 would finance operating expenditures. The Herbarium may also receive some money to hire a new director.
The Museum of Anthropology would receive money to finance the salaries of a collection manager, a contract archeologist, and a outreach coordinator. The positions are already partially financed in this year's budget.
Skull
The Museum of Entomology would receive money to add a collections manager.
---
SHARK SKULL
The Museum of Natural History would add staff members to relieve the strain on graduate students working at the museum.
Source: KU 1990 Legislative Budget
Dave Eames/KANSAN
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NEW from Hewlett-Packard The HP-28S Advanced Scientific Calculator
ELECTRONIC CIRCUIT CONTROL BOARD
1. CONTROL MODULE
- Contains the logic and control signals for the circuit.
- Uses a microcontroller to process data from sensors, actuators, and other components.
- Connects to external devices such as power supplies, analog inputs, and digital displays.
2. DIALOGUE DISPLAY
- Displays information about the circuit's operation.
- Features buttons, switches, and LED indicators for user interaction.
- Supports various languages and fonts.
3. RELAY MODULE
- Connects the circuit to other components or systems.
- Uses relay coils to control the flow of current.
- Requires a power supply and signal generator.
4. POWER SUPPLY
- Provides the necessary voltage and current for the circuit.
- Can be used with various types of power sources, including AC generators, DC batteries, and solar panels.
5. INTERFACE SUPPORT
- Supports multiple devices and platforms, including PCs, tablets, smartphones, and IoT devices.
- Compatible with various operating systems and software environments.
6. EXTENSION PORTS
- Connects the circuit to additional input/output devices.
- Supports USB, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and other wireless connections.
7. FAN CONTROL
- Controls the speed of fan blades or motor rotors.
- Utilizes sensors to monitor temperature and humidity.
8. Timer SWITCHES
- Controls the timing of events in the circuit.
- Requires a digital timer or delay switch.
9. LED DISPLAYS
- Illuminates information through LED lights.
- Supports different color schemes and brightness levels.
10. COMMUNICATION MODULE
- Connects the circuit to communication networks (e.g., Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS).
- Uses protocols such as RS-485, UART, and I2C for data exchange.
11. ERROR DETECTION
- Identifies and handles errors in the circuit.
- Uses advanced error detection techniques to ensure safe operation.
12. POWER SUPPLY MANAGEMENT
- Manages power supply constraints and ensures efficient use of energy.
- Requires monitoring systems to track power usage and identify potential issues.
13. BATTERY CHARGING
- Charges the battery automatically when needed.
- Requires a charger with proper compatibility and safety features.
14. TRANSISTOR CONFIGURATION
- Configures the transistor settings for optimal performance.
- Requires knowledge of transistor characteristics and characteristics.
15. SOURCE OF INPUTS
- Uses sensors, sensors modules, and sensors drivers to gather data.
- Requires accurate data collection and processing.
16. OUTPUTS
- Provides output signals to other components or systems.
- Requires appropriate connectors and interfaces.
17. SENSOR CONFIGURATION
- Configures sensor properties and settings.
- Requires knowledge of sensor technology and sensor sensors.
18. PROTECTIVE MATERIALS
- Uses protective materials to shield the circuit from dust, moisture, and physical damage.
- Requires appropriate storage conditions.
19. ADAPTIVE SOFTWARE
- Uses adaptive software to improve the circuit's performance and reliability.
- Requires knowledge of programming languages and technologies.
20. TESTING PROCESS
- Conducts tests to validate the functionality and performance of the circuit.
- Requires thorough testing and troubleshooting procedures.
21. RESPONSE AND NOTIFICATION
- Notifies users of any issues detected during testing.
- Requires reliable notification systems.
22. STORAGE OPTIONS
- Provides options for data storage and management.
- Requires appropriate storage solutions.
23. ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
- Requires suitable environmental conditions (temperature, humidity, light) for operation.
- Requires protection from weather extremes and other hazards.
24. LABELING AND NAMING
- Provides labels and names for components and circuits.
- Requires careful labeling to ensure accuracy and consistency.
25. VERIFICATION PROCESS
- Verifies the correctness and functionality of the circuit.
- Requires thorough verification procedures.
26. REPORTING AND UPDATE PROCESS
- Reports findings and updates on the circuit's performance and status.
- Requires efficient reporting processes.
27. Troubleshooting PROCESS
- Identifies and resolves problems in the circuit.
- Requires thorough troubleshooting procedures.
28. SOLUTION PROCESS
- Solves problems using the appropriate solutions.
- Requires detailed solutions and documentation.
29. REPAIR PROCESS
- Repairs damaged components and components.
- Requires proper repair procedures and tools.
30. REVIEW PROCESS
- Review the circuit for any new issues or improvements.
- Requires thorough review procedures.
31. CONFLICT RESOLUTION PROCESS
- Resolves conflicts between different components or components.
- Requires effective conflict resolution strategies.
32. PREVENTION PROCESS
- Prevents future issues by implementing preventive measures.
- Requires proactive prevention strategies.
33. SAFE OPERATION PROCESS
- Ensures safe operation of the circuit.
- Requires secure operation practices.
34. ACCOUNTING PROCESS
- Tracks performance and maintenance activities.
- Requires accurate accounting procedures.
35. LEARNING PROCESS
- Learns new skills and techniques.
- Requires continuous learning and development.
36. EMULATION PROCESS
- Emulates real-world scenarios.
- Requires realistic simulation environments.
37. HYBRID PROCESS
- Combines hybrid technologies.
- Requires hybrid technologies.
38. AI PROCESS
- Utilizes AI algorithms.
- Requires AI algorithms.
39. DATA PROCESS
- Processes data efficiently.
- Requires data processing techniques.
40. ENGINEERING PROCESS
- Designs and builds circuits.
- Requires engineering skills.
41. DEVELOPING PROCESS
- Develops and implements new technologies.
- Requires developmental skills.
42. USER OVERHAUL PROCESS
- Serves users with support and assistance.
- Requires user overhaul procedures.
43. SUPPORT PROCESS
- Provides technical support and assistance.
- Requires technical support procedures.
44. EQUIPMENT PROCESS
- Provides equipment and tools.
- Requires equipment and tools.
45. WORKSTOP PROCESS
- Resumes work after a break.
- Requires work stoppage procedures.
46. RECOGNITION PROCESS
- Recognizes achievements.
- Requires recognition procedures.
47. ACADEMY PROCESS
- Enrolls in an academy.
- Requires admission requirements.
48. COLLEGE PROCESS
- Attends college courses.
- Requires college attendance.
49. UNIVERSITY PROCESS
- Attends university courses.
- Requires university attendance.
50. TEACHER PROCESS
- Provides teaching and training.
- Requires teacher training procedures.
51. ASSISTANT PROCESS
- Assists with tasks.
- Requires assistant assistance procedures.
52. ADMINISTRY PROCESS
- Manages administration tasks.
- Requires administrative procedures.
53. SOFTWARE PROCESS
- Develops software applications.
- Requires software development procedures.
54. EVIDENCE PROCESS
- Collects evidence of activities.
- Requires evidence procedures.
55. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT PROCESS
- acknowledges contributions.
- Requires acknowledgment procedures.
56. REGISTRY PROCESS
-登记用户信息。
- Requires registration procedures.
57. LICENSE PROCESS
-取得许可证。
- Requires license procedures.
58. WARRANTY PROCESS
-提供 warranties。
- Requires warranty procedures.
59. INTERRUPTION PROCESS
-处理故障。
- Requires interrupt procedures.
60. PERFORMANCE PROCESS
-评估性能。
- Requires performance procedures.
61. SUCCESS PROCESS
-实现目标。
- Requires success procedures.
62. IMPRESSION PROCESS
-展示成果。
- Requires impression procedures.
63. FEEDBACK PROCESS
-收集反馈。
- Requires feedback procedures.
64. CONSULTATIONS PROCESS
-进行咨询。
- Requires consultation procedures.
65. ANALYSIS PROCESS
-分析数据。
- Requires analysis procedures.
66. DEVIOS PROCESS
-发现问题。
- Requires deviations procedures.
67. EVALUATION PROCESS
-评估效果。
- Requires evaluation procedures.
68. INSPECTION PROCESS
-检查设备。
- Requires inspection procedures.
69. MEASUREMENT PROCESS
-测量性能。
- Requires measurement procedures.
70. RECORDING PROCESS
-记录数据。
- Requires recording procedures.
71. PROBLEM SOLUTION PROCESS
-解决难题。
- Requires problem solution procedures.
72. REFERENCES PROCESS
-引用相关资料。
- Requires reference procedures.
73. COPYRIGHTS PROCESS
-保护知识产权。
- Requires copyright procedures.
74. LICENSE HOLDERS PROCESS
-获得授权。
- Requires license holders procedures.
75. LICENSE APPLICANT PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applicants procedures.
76. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
77. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
78. LICENSE REGISTRY PROCESS
-注册执照。
- Requires license registries procedures.
79. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
80. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
81. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
82. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
83. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
84. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
85. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
86. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
87. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
88. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
89. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
90. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
91. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
92. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
93. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
94. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
95. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
96. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
97. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
98. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
99. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
100. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
101. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
102. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
103. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
104. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
105. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
106. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
107. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
108. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
109. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
110. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
111. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
112. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
113. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
114. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
115. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
116. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
117. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
118. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
119. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
120. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
121. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
122. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
123. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
124. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
125. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
126. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
127. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
128. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
129. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
130. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
131. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
132. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
133. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
134. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
135. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
136. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
137. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
138. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
139. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
140. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
141. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
142. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
143. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
144. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
145. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
146. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
147. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
148. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
149. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
150. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
151. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
152. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
153. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
154. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
155. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
156. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
157. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
158. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
159. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
160. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
161. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
162. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
163. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
164. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
165. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
166. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
167. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
168. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
169. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
170. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
171. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
172. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
173. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
174. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
175. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
176. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
177. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
178. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
179. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
180. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
181. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
182. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
183. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
184. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
185. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
186. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
187. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
188. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
189. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
190. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
191. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
192. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
193. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
194. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
195. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
196. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
197. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
198. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
199. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
200. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
201. LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
202. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
203. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
204. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
205./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
206. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
207. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
208. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
209./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
210. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
211. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
212. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
213./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
214. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
215. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
216. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
217./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
218. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
219. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
220. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
221./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
222. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
223. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
224. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
225./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
226. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
227. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
228. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
229./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
230. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
231. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
232. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
233./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
234. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
235. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
236. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
237./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
238. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
239. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
240. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
241./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
242. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
243. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
244. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
245./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
246. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
247. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
248. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
249./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
250. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
251. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
252. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
253./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
254. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
255. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
256. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
257./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
258. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
259. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
260. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
261./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
262. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
263. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
264. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
265./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
266. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
267. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
268. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
269./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
270. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
271. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
272. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
273./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
274. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
275. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
276. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
277./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
278. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
279. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
280. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
281./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
282. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
283. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
284. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
285./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
286. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
287. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
288. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
289./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
290. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
291. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
292. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
293./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
294. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
295. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
296. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
297./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
298. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
299. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
300. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
301./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
302. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
303. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
304. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
305./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
306. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
307. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
308. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
309./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
310. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
311. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
312. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
313./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
314. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
315. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
316. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
317./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
318. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
319. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
320. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
321./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
322. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
323. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
324. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
325./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
326. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
327. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
328. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
329./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
330. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
331. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
332. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
333./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
334. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
335. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
336. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
337./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
338. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
339. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
340. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
341./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
342. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
343. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
344. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
345./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
346. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
347. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
348. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
349./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
350. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
351. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
352. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
353./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
354. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
355. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
356. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
357./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
358. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
359. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
360. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
361./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
362. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
363. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
364. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
365./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
366. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
367. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
368. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
369./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
370. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
371. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
372. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
373./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
374. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
375. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
376. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
377./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
378. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
379. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
380. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
381./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
382. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
383. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
384. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
385./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
386. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
387. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
388. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
389./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
390. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
391. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
392. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
393./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
394. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
395. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
396. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
397./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
398. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
399. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
400. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
401./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
402. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
403. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
404. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
405./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
406. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
407. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
408. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
409./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
410. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
411. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
412. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
413./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
414. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
415. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
416. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
417./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
418. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
419. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
420. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
421./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
422. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
423. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
424. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
425./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
426. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
427. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
428. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
429./LICENSE AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
-批准执照。
- Requires license authorizations procedures.
430. LICENSE DISPOSITION PROCESS
-分配执照。
- Requires license dispositions procedures.
431. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
432. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
433. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
434. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
435. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
436. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
437. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
438. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
439. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
440. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
441. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
442. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
443. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
- Requires license issuers procedures.
444. LICENSE APPLICATION PROCESS
-申请执照。
- Requires license applications procedures.
445. LICENSE ISSUE PROCESS
-通知执照。
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Monday through Thursday 9:30 to 10:30 to 9:30
- 50¢/pound
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* Monday Night Football
25¢ draws with a load
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KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Village Hall
Monday
28
The KU Trombone Choir has a fall concert at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
"Women and Oppression in Asia" is showing at 7 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
Admission is $1. The program is a part of the Third Asian American International Film Festival sponsored by the Center for East Asian Studies.
29
Tuesday
A panel discussion on "Why Isle Wesley relevant to Us, Our Classes and Our Community?" is at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union.
Narachana Campus Ministry meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
Wednesday
■ "Asian American Narrative Films," the second program of the Asian American International Film Festival, will be shown at 1:30, 1:50, 2:15 and 2:35 p.m., and a lecture at 3 p.m. in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
"Suitable images," the third program of the Asian American International Film Festival, has film critique and a discussion at 7 p.m. in Dyche Audio-
- Dungeons and Dragons meets at 6 p.m. in the Pioneer Room at the Burge Union.
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders meets from 6 to 7:30 p.m. in room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
30
The Art History Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in the Eastern Seminar Room at the Art and Architecture Library.
The KU Chess Club meets at 7 p.m. in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
An introductory meeting for Global Bridge is at 7:30 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. Global Bridge is a grassroots network of people who educate the public about world events of independence and third World conditions.
The KU chapter of BACCHUS meets from 7 to 8 p.m. in Alcove G at the Kansas Union.
- "Preparing for Finals," a Student Assistance Center workshop, is from 7 to 9 p.m. in 300 Strong Hall.
Thursday
The Student Alumni Association meets at 7 p.m. in Adams Hallman Center. Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, will speak.
Psi Chi meets at 6 p.m. in 547 Fraser Hall.
1
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas meets at 7:30 p.m. in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
"Asian American Documentary Films," the fourth program of the Asian American International Film Festival, will be shown at 1, 1:55, 2:20, 3:15 and 3 p.m. in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union.
KU Christian Science Student
Cape Cod University 30 p.m. in
the Carnegie Hall at the College
for the Deaf Kaye Gaulks
The Champions Club meets at 6:30 p.m. in Parer A at the Kansas Union.
The Canterbury House offers the Holy Eucharist at noon in Danforth Chapel.
*The Baptist Union meets at 5:30 p.m. at the American Baptist Campus Center, 1629 W. 19th St. Dinner will be served.*
Campus Crusade for Christ meets at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
"Japanese History through Film," the fifth program of the Asian American International Film Festival, has a prologue in Dyche Audium Awarding is $15.
2
Friday
the Burge Union.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship meets at 7 p.m. in the Pioneer Room at
"Experimental/Animated/Narrative Film," the sixth program of the Asian American International Film Festival, is at 130 p.m. in the Pine Room at the Palace Theater.
■ "For Your Entertainment Only," the seventh program of the Asian American International Film Festival, is at 7 p.m. in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. The movie "Dust in the Wind" will be shown.
He Wanted to Play in the Major Leagues
Robert Redford
in The Natural
© 1984 Tri Star
Pictures.
ROBERT RELFORD started college at the University of Colorado on a baseball scholarship. But when he decided on an acting career, he knew there was one place to be, one school where he'd get the best training. The American Academy of Dramatic Arts.
Since 1884, the American Academy of Dramatic Arts has been training professional actors—actors who have won nominations for 89 Oscars, 60 Tony and 142 Emmy Awards. Many alumni, including Peter Weller, Kate Jackson, Gary Sandy, Cleawon Little, Christine Ebersole, Stepfanie Kramer and Scott Valentine, came to the Academy after attending traditional colleges for a year or more and then deciding to study acting full-time. The Academy offers a two-year Professional Training Program, an invitational Third Year performing program, and a six-week Summer program.
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91
6
Monday, November 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Police stage phony drug seizures
DEA says false news reports help agents gain confidence of drug lords
The Associated Press
HOUSTON - The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration says it has directed local law enforcement agencies nationwide to stage phony drug seizures and generate false news reports about them to help DEA agents gain the confidence of drug lords.
DEA spokesman Maurice Hill in Washington, D.C., said the technique was employed in high drug traffic areas across the country, including Texas, the Houston Chronicle reported yesterday.
"It's a procedure that is used, but I can't begin to tell you with what frequency." Hill told the newspaper. "It's not a new technique, I can tell you that."
Staging bogus seizures and feeding the information to reporters apparently came into practice several years ago to resolve a problem for undercover drug agents posing as cocaine importers for Colombian drug lords, according to the Chronicle.
Often the DEA operatives, posing as middlemen, deliver the drugs to local dealers according to instructions from Colombian exporters. They then keep the shipment under surveillance in the hope of intercepting it before it hits the streets, officials said.
But, the newspaper reported, the DEA sometimes ensures that drugs never reach the street
another way: by having local authorities seize the drugs before they are delivered to the local dealers. In some cases, even the officers making the seizures don't realize that busts were planned in advance by their superiors.
Newspaper clippings on the fake seizures help convince the traffickers that the seizures are for real, according to the Chronicle, which determined that they were seized in the Houston area had been staged.
"The Colombians, the only way they'll believe you is to show them the stuff (drugs), the money or the newspaper clips." Hill said.
Harris County Sheriff Johnny Klevenhagen, whose office cooperated in at least two staged seizures, said local police agencies used the tactic only at the request of the DEA. He praised the bogus seizures as "very productive in taking illicit drugs off the street."
drugs on the skull
Klevenhagen added that withholding information was a common police procedure, and that it did not constitute lying for officers to withhold the true origin of drugs when discussing a staged seizure.
seize. While many law enforcement agencies defend the ruses on grounds that they preserve investigations and protect agents, journalists say the scams raise ethical questions about government deception of the news media and the public.
of the news media and its partners.
If the DEA is willing to lie to the media and
public about this issue, what else might they be willing to lie about?" asked Tony Pederson, Chronicle managing editor.
"There seems to have been no accountability in the entire process," Pederson said. "At least some type of judicial review has always been necessary for other elements of law enforcement deception, the key example being wiretaps. But who, if anyone, has reviewed this process?"
The newspaper described two phony seizures in the Houston area.
"raud LaRocque, an assistant journalism professor at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, asked, "How can the public trust what they read in a book that her has been converted to an arm of government?"
In 1984, DEA agents helped smuggle 952 pounds of cocaine into Harris County, then abandoned the van containing the contraband at a prearranged roadblock set up by the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Chronicle repaint. In 1984, the public department alerted news that the troopers had found a cache of drugs described at the time as one of Texas' largest seizures.
On Sept. 29 of this year, 60 kilograms of cocaine was planted in an abandoned car at another spot in Harris County, and left to be discovered by deputy sheriffs, who notified reporters.
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The shooting victim, a 13-year-old boy, was wounded in the neck and throat and listed in satisfaction. Vincent's Hospital, police said
"It was at that time a man from the consulate came out. He had a pistol and he iried two shots," Feherran said. "As a result of that, one of the demonstrators — the 13-year-old boy — was shot in the throat."
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Heffernan said police officers tried to contain the youths, who turned to the demonstrators and incited them to chant slogans.
The shooting occurred as 1,500 protesters demanding a Croatian
In a separate demonstration earlier yesterday, some of the 2,000 protesters threw eggs and placards at a limosine carrying visiting Greek President Christo Sartetziket. The protesters demanded that Greece grant Macedonian autonomy.
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The consulate claimed diplomatic immunity for the shooting, said Sgt. Wayne Bottom, a New South Wales police spokesman.
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The Associated Press
SYDNEY, Australia — Hundreds of ethnic Croatians demanding a homeland demonstrated outside the Yugoslav Consulate yesterday. Police said a gunman shot and wounded a teen-ager as several protesters climbed the wall of the compound.
Sgt. Peter Heffernan said about five youths tried to scale the walls of the consulate in the Sydney suburb of Woollahra.
homeland marked Yugoslav National Day, the anniversary of the communist government.
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Reserve your place in history Back by popular demand.
The Jayhawker Yearbook photographer will be here from Nov. 28 to Dec. 2 Seniors this is your last chance.
11-3, 4-8
9-12, 1-5
9-12, 1-5
11-3, 4-8
8-12, 1-4
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesda
Thursday
Friday
Walk-ins only
Burge Union - by the candy counter
THE KU BOOKSTORES PRESENT: The Fred Terry Macintosh Seminar
4
PETER TURNER
Fred Terry is a contributing editor to MACazine, and wrote a graphics column for the magazine. He has written for MacUser, MacWorld, MacWEEK, Computer Shopper, and Personal Computing. He is a contributor to The Macintosh Bible, 2nd ed
"Using Microsoft Excel"
- The Basics
- Setting up a Spreadsheet
- Pasting Functions
KU
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- Constructing a simple Database
- Linking
Saturday, Dec. 3
Burge Union 864-5697
10 a.m. - Noon
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
Free Admission!
Open to all KU students, faculty and staff
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 28, 1988
7
Nation/World
Thailand drenched
Mud slides hit villages, kill hundreds
The Associated Press
BANGKOK, Thailand — Soldiers yesterday unearthed villages buried in mud slides after a week of heavy rains that caused Thailand's worst natural disaster in recent decades, officials said.
Soldiers found 370 bodies, but at least 800 people are thought dead from the floods that hit southen provinces, said Col. Bunchorn Chavarsni, spokesman for the Fourth Army region.
Chavarni said 689 people were missing and thousands were homeless.
About 14,000 people remain in emergency relief centers, down from the 60,000 people at the height of the floods, he said.
Ten helicopters and 12 boats transported the troops and rescue teams yesterday to villages in the southern Nakhon Sri Thammarat province. The team was sent by He said planes dropped food and supplies to isolated villages.
Drug use at weapons labs reviewed
The dead deaths were in Nakhon Sri Thammarat the Phipon district, where mud and logs charged down the road, and the residents into homes and crushing people.
WASHINGTON - A congressional panel has expanded its investigation of security and personnel problems to include the Los Alamos nuclear weapons laboratory after a senior computer operator there was arrested on marijuana charges, a House aide said yesterday.
The Associated Press
As part of the investigation, Rep John Dingell, D-Mich., has asked for the cooperation of Energy Secretary John S. Herrington, whose department oversees the energy industry, and Livermore, Calif. Both are being scrutinized.
The department also has been plagued by problems that have shut down production at two major nuclear weapons materials laboratories,
the Savannah River Plant in Aiken, S.C., and the Feed Materials Production Center in Fernald, Ohio. Production has stopped on two key weapons materials, tritium and plutonium.
Dingell, chairman of the Energy and Commerce subcommittee on oversight and investigations, has asked why the management at Lawrence Livermore abruptly halted an undercover investigation that turned up the names of 127 employees suspected of using or dealing drugs.
The investigation was expanded to Los Alamos after the arrest on Oct. 12 of a senior computer operator allegedly carrying 205 pounds of marijuana in his truck, said Jeffrey Hodges, a Dingell aide.
The New York Times, which reported the expanded investigation yesterday, identified the computer operator as David Blossom, 36, and quoted an Energy Department spokesman as saying that Blossom held a high-level security clearance.
Energy Department spokesmen could not be reached by telephone in Washington, or at regional offices in San Francisco or Albuquerque. N.M.
Authorities also are investigating the failure of Livermore managers to investigate the disappearance of a chemist, Ronald K. Stump Hodges said when he was employed there had been embuzzing from Livermore Lawrence.
Mexican protests erupt
The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY — Opposition party supporters seized city halls throughout the state of Michaocan and demanded the resignation of the governor, who is a member of the ruling party, officials said yesterday.
Democratic Front supporters occupied 19 city halls Saturday afternoon to force the ouster of Gov. Luis Martinez Villicana, according to a
state government statement. Villicana is a member of the governing Institutional Revolutionary Party.
The government newspaper El Nacional quoted Marciano Razo Amecuzia, leader of the Democratic Front in Michaacan, as saying that the state had "unfettered treasury" and "fomented political hatred" in the southwestern state.
News Roundup
BLACK LEADERS RELEASED: The release of two elderly black leaders capped a week of South African government moves that earned international praise. But domestic critics said yesterday that the goodwill gestures must be followed with a dismantling of apartheid. The government, citing "medical-humanitarian reasons," on Saturday freed two seriously ill leaders who were colleagues of jailed African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela.
ARABS, ISRAELI CLASH: Islamic fundamentalists called yesterday for strikes to mark the first year of the Palestinian uprising, and hospital officials said 25 Arabes were shot and
wounded in clashes with Israeli soldiers. A 20-year-old man was seriously injured when a tear-gas grenade hit him in the chest in Gaza's Jabaliya refugee camp, hospital officials said. An army spokesman said he had reports of only five men being shot and wounded in the Gaza Strip.
ARAFAT DECISION PROTESTED: Several European and Middle East nations blasted the United States yesterday for refusing to allow PLO Chairman Yassir Arafat to address the United Nations, France, Norway and Sweden urged the United States to reconsider the decision to deny Arafat a visa, while Italy
summoned a senior American diplomat and demanded an explanation. Jordan announced yesterday that it will work with Egypt to move this week's General Assembly session out of
DEFICIT CONCERNS CANADA: Economists predict that Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, just like President-elect George Bush, will have a short honeymoon unless his new government can bring down the budget deficit. Concern about the deficit is troubling forecasters in both countries despite the Canadian economists' general optimism produced by the favorable election outcome for the Canada-U.S. free trade agreement.
AIM HIGH
ATTENTION BSN CLASS OF 1989.
The Air Force has a special program for 1989 BSNs. If selected, you can enter active duty soon after graduation—without waiting for the results of your State Boards. To qualify you must have an overall 2.75 GPA. After commissioning, you'll attend a five-month internship at a major Air Force medical facility its an excellent way to prepare for the wide range of experiences you'll have serving your country as an Air Force nurse officer For more information, call
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KOREAN DANCE
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At 8:00 P.M., SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4,
In the SWarthwout Hall Call
Admission $2.50 for students
$3.50 for the public
Tickets available at the Murphy Box Office.
Telephone: 864-3982
Sponsored by IPAC, Dept. of Music and Dance, ITSC, and CEAS
EASTERN HORSEHIDE
Double Cheeseburger only 99c (ketchup, mustard, pickles, & onions)
We use 100% fresh ground Kansas beef.
layhawk Bookstore
843-3826
Bocky's
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Orders accepted from November 1 to December 7,1988.
Come as you are...Hungry 2120 West Ninth offer good thru Dec. 1. 1988
1420 Crescent Rd.
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---
8
Monday, November 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
FALLY
Light up the town
An estimated 275,000 people came to the annual Thanksgiving Plaza be the largest to date to attend the ceremonial beginning of the lighting ceremony in Kansas City, Mo. Thursday's crowd was said to Christmas shopping season.
Bush asks old friends to fill key posts
The Associated Press
KENEBUNKPORT, Maine — George Bush's top advisers are most longtime friends and loyalists whom he trusted for strategy during his campaign and to whom he now turns for advice as
But today, Bush will have to reach beyond this inner circle to try to forge a working relationship with a former political rival, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole of Kansas.
The meeting could be an early test of Bush's ability to work with Congress. The two are to meet for lunch in Bush's vice presidential office in the Executive Office Building.
There is one new face in Bush's inner circle — New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu, who will be White House chief-of-staff. Otherwise, Bush's closest associates are for the most part those who advised him during the campaign, including James A. Baker III, Nicholas Brady, Lee Awater
and Robert Teeter.
Some members of Bush's inner circle have already been rewarded for their loyalty with Cabinet posts, including Baker who will be secretary of state.
Baker, 58, is one of Bush's best friends. The friendship goes back more than two decades to when they forged a social and political alliance in the 1960s that led to the Vietnam race and his 1980 and 1983 presidential bids.
Baker, it has been widely reported, could have had any job in a Bush administration he wanted; Bush announced him as secretary of state the day after the election.
Another longtime Bush friend already holding a Cabinet job is Treasury Secretary Brady — whom Reagan chose last August to fill the vacancy created when Baker resigned to oversee Bush's general election campaign. A New York investment banker, the wealthy Republican also represented New Jersey in the Senate from 1980-82.
Sununu, 49, was not a member of Bush's inner circle previously, but was an early and tireless campaign volunteer.
Bush is known to credit Sunium at least in part for his comeback victory in last winter's New Hampshire primary — which, coming after Bush's heat in Iowa, put him squarely on the victory trail.
Teeter, 49. a Republican pollster who worked full-time in Bush's campaign and is currently co-director of the Bush transition team, is another Bush confidant.
Atwater, 37, the brash and innovative political operator who was Bush's campaign manager, is another close adviser whom the president-elect consults frequently. Bush has named Atwater, who is chairman for Sten Srom Thurmond, R.S.C., as chairman of the Republican National Committee.
Call 864-4810
Join the KU Chapter of BACCHUS!
Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of University Students
STORY IDEA?
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
Study Skills Workshop
PREPARING FOR FINALS
Wednesday, Nov. 30 7 - 8 p.m.
Alcove G, Level 3 (North end)
Kansas Union
- Boosting Confidence
* Test-Taking Strategies
* Concentration
Students
- Time Management
Wednesday, November 30
Join this University organization and help insure that students make informed, responsible decisions regarding the use or non-use of alcohol.
Reviewing
* Memory
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It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh* computer at school.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan to Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one.
Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800 831 LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 28, 1988
9
Woman faces battle after son abducted to Iran
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In the week since he was hospitalized, Sharon Hadadi has been haunted by a wolf.
One has her trapped in Iran, the country she fled years ago, and where authorities believe her son Joey is living today. The second depicts a life without her son, who is also have been abducted in Kansas City by his Iranian father and flown out of the country.
Hadladi, 32, is trying to find her son and Kansas City. But international obstacles make it difficult.
The United States and Iran have no diplomatic relations and Iran prevents federal authorities from extraditing Hossein Haddadi, Sharon's former husband. His custody rights are protected by the laws of his homeland.
To find her son, Haddadi may be forced to do what her ex-husband's relatives wanted, which is return to Iran and reunite with Joey's father.
She said she seriously was considering
helping her dog to get grazed Joey in
trrap and bring him back.
"My worst nightmare is going back to Iran," said Haddadi, a pharmaceutical technician. "No. no. My worst nightmare is to live without my son."
On Nov. 18, Joey's father arrived at his mother-in-law home to pick up Joey for the weekend. He had been granted visitation when Jackson County Judge William Ely visited her in March. The visits were on the condition that he not take the boy out of the state.
Hoseine Haddadi pr o mised to take his son to a pizza parlor, which kept Joey from crying as he usually did when his father took bim for the weekend. Sharon Haddadi said.
But on the afternoon of Nov. 20, Haddadi did not bring the boy back to his grandmother's home, which was required in the divorce decree.
The boy's mother and grandmother rushed to Hossein Haddadi's home *saw* one in no one
the house. A neighbor later told them that a taxi had been idled outside the home the day before while a child waited on the front porch.
Since then, police have confirmed that a cab took Haddad, 40, and a child from the house to Kansas City International Airport, in connection with the Mills of the Kansas City Police Department.
"We have no reason to doubt they are in Iran." Mills said.
Sharon Haddadi was certain of this Friday when she and a reporter telephoned her ex-husband's relatives in Isfahan, Iran. A relative told her the father and son were in Iran, and urged Sharon Haddadi to move to Iran to be with Joey and her former husband.
In Iran, fathers have the legal and religious rights to keep their children in certain conditions, authorities said. Civil law generally provides a son's custody to the father if he becomes a mother in 2 years. Paternal custody of a daughter is granted after she reaches age 7.
The U.S. State Department offered little encouragement, with a spokesman saying his best advice is for Sharon Haddadi to find a good lawyer. Police in Kansas City were preparing an arrest warrant against Hossein Haddadi for interference of custody, but they were not optimistic it would do any good.
The couple met when Sharon Haddadi was 17, and working at a taco stand in Kansas City. They married in 1974 and moved to Wichita.
In 1978, the couple moved to Iran where he pursued a career and she learned the Persian language. The next three years were marked by national unrest and horror for her as the Ayahollah Ruhullah Khomeini grew more powerful. Curfews were imposed, dancing illegal, women wore black, and Sharon Haddad learnied to dack at the sound of gunfire.
The Haddadis returned to Kansas City, where Sharon gave birth to Joey, whose full name is Mortaza Joseph Haddadi, in July 1984. But her husband lost his job, and
family returned to Iran for a few months in the midst of war with Iraq.
In less than a year, the family returned to Kansas City.
One year ago, Haddadi accused her husband of physical and verbal abuse. She and her son moved out.
Judge Ely said when he granted Hossein Haddadi extensive visitation rights, he thought it was proper at the time.
"You do your best to exercise good judgment." Ely said. "I wouldn't have done it had I been convinced at the time that this would happen."
But Millard Aldridge, the mother's attorney, disagreed with the ruling, saying that Hossein Haddadi had lost his job and had no clear reason to stay in Kansas City.
"In the judge's chambers, I said, 'This guy is emotional. He's from Iran. Let's see if he settles down and gets a job here,' but Ely discounted the argument, Aldridge said.
69% of KU students spend over $150 a month beyond tuition and housing costs
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Workkins Mental Health Center
Sponsored by The Emily Taylor Women's Research Center For further
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Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center. For further information contact Kishana Gathaura at 804-3522 or stop by 218 Street
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Sports
KU plays for tournament title
'Hawks win their first 2 games of the Great Alaskan Shootout
By Arvin Donley Kansas sportwriter
Kansan sportswriter
Although Kansas has been barred by the NCAA from defending its national title this season, the Jayhawks also have a prestigious preseason tournament.
The game will be telecast live by ESPN
Kansas plays Seton Hall in the championship game of the Great Alaskan Shootout at 10:30 tonight in Anchorage.
The game against Soton Hall is the first meeting between the two schools. Last season the Pirates were 22-13, finishing fifth in the Big East Conference, and received their first NCAA tournament bid. The Pirates are knocked out in the second round of the NCAA tournament by Arizona 84-55.
The Jayhawks advanced to the championship game of the Shootout by defeating Alaska-Anchorage 94-81 on Friday and California 86-71 on Saturday. Seton Hall defeated Utah 86-68 in the first round and nipped Kentucky 63-60 to advance to the championship game. California will play Kentucky at 8 p.m. in tonight's third place game.
Against California, which had updash 15-18-ranked Florida in the first round 73-38, the Jayhawks had to defend the Cavaliers' trouble to defeat the Golden Bears.
With the Jayhawks leading 52-42 at 13.08, Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard became the fourth Jayhawk starter to receive his fourth foul. Milton Sean, Alvarado and Mark Randall had already picked up four fouls. The four played the remainder of the game without outfeting.
The Bears cut the lead to 61-59 with just over eight minutes remaining.
our newton answered with one of his four three-point field goals to give the Jayhawks a 64-59 lead. The Jayhawks also scored three three-point shots against the Beans.
The Jayhawks made 15 of 18 free throws during the final 7:30 to pull away. For the game, Kansas was 25 for 29 from the free throw line.
Pritchard led the Jayhawks in scoring with 17 points, playing 33 minutes at point guard without committing a turnover. Pritchard and Scooter Barry led the Jayhawks with five assists each.
Junior forward Freeman West and Newton added 15 and 14 points, respectively, for the 2-0 Jayhawks.
California's Keith Smith led all scorers with 22 points.
Playing before 6,513, the largest crowd in the tournament's 11-year history, the Jahyws turned back Alaska-Anchorage, a Division II school and host it. The team isn't an easy victory for the defending NCAA champions
The Jayhawks led the Seawolves 41-33 at halftime. But Alaska, which was the NCAA Division II runnerup last season, came back to tie the score at 48 with 14:30 remaining in the game.
During the next five minutes the Jayhawks built their lead to 11, but the Seaowels once again battled them, trim the lead to 84-81 with 1:30 left.
Once again, the Jayhawks made important free throws and won the game. During the last 1:30 Pritchard touchdown, Jayhawks sealed the victory for the Jayhawks.
Newton led the Jayhawks in their first victory of the season, scoring 24 points and getting 10 rebounds. Randall added 19 points and Peleka-
scored 17 for the Jayhawks.
After tonight's game, the Jayhawks will return home for two days
Kansas 94
Alaska-Anchorage 81
Kansas
| | M | FG | FF | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Newton | 33 | 9-16 | 4-15 | 10 | 5 | 1 | 21 |
| Randall | 27 | 6-12 | 3-40 | 3 | 0 | 5 | 19 |
| Barry | 11 | 6-12 | 3-40 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 8 |
| Barry | 21 | 3-4 | 2-12 | 10 | 5 | 1 | 8 |
| Pritchard | 34 | 4-17 | 9-11 | 3 | 6 | 2 | 10 |
| Mindox | 21 | 4-17 | 9-11 | 3 | 6 | 2 | 10 |
| Mindox | 26 | 3-47 | 1-7 | 10 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| West | 17 | 4-15 | 2-44 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| Guildefen | 10 | 5-14 | 2-44 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| Guildefen | 20 | 33-56 | 26-38 | 35-20 | 18 | 2 | 9 |
Percentages: FG, 589, FT 684. Three point goals: 2-4 New York, 3-Prince William, 0-1 (Barry) 4-Maddox, 4-Prichard, 3-Newton 2-Albion, 2-Maroni 2, Randall 2. Stearals:
Alaska-Anchorage
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Miles | 28 | 7.8 | 2.2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 29 |
| Fisher | 36 | 8.4 | 10.0 | 10 | 0 | 4 | 17 |
| Fisher | 38 | 8.4 | 13.3 | 10 | 0 | 4 | 17 |
| Johnson | 30 | 5.1 | 1.2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 13 |
| Carpenter | 24 | 0.3 | 0.0 | 2 | 5 | 1 | 1 |
| Brinkerhoff | 5 | 0.2 | 0.0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
| Johnson | 12 | 1.3 | 0.0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 1 |
| McGae | 4 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| Myers | 4 | 1.1 | 2.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
| McCleery | 21 | 0.2 | 0.0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Stewart | 2 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 200 | 24.52 | 25.33 | 9 | 30 | 81 | 10 |
Percentages: FG, 461; FT, 757
point goals: 8-17 (Mails 4-4; Fischer 2-4;
Summer 1-3); 9-12 (Mails 2-3; Summer 1-3);
0-Block Shots. 0-Turnovers.
16 Johnson, 5 Miles, 3 Fischer, 2 Carpenter, 2 Fisher, Brinkenhoft, Sommer, McClieny).
6: Staircase (technical). 6: Johnson,
technical.)
Half: Kansas 41-33 Officials: Wilson, Simp son and Stuvek A. E. 512
of practice before playing Seattle University at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Allen Field House
Kansas
Kansas 86 California 71
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Newton | 19 | 5.9 | 0.0 | 2 | 1 | 4 | 14 |
| Randall | 20 | 6.0 | 0.0 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 4 |
| Rainand | 19 | 0.2 | 0.0 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 4 |
| Bax | 30 | 0.4 | 0.4 | 5 | 0 | 5 | 7 |
| Pritchard | 33 | 4.9 | 6.7 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 17 |
| Maddux | 33 | 4.8 | 6.7 | 3 | 5 | 4 | 17 |
| West | 24 | 5.7 | 0.0 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 15 |
| West | 16 | 5.7 | 5.5 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 15 |
| East | 16 | 5.7 | 5.5 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 15 |
| Centerville | 200 | 2.8 | 0.0 | 3 | 10 | 5 | 44 |
Percentages: FG 531, FT 862 Three-point goals: 9-16 (Nixon 4-10, Prichard 3-5, Minor 1-0, Maddox 0-1, Guelderin 2-4) Block shots: 2 (Maddox 2) Turnovers: 15 (Randall 3 Barry 3 Akwande 2 Miron 2), 17 (Barry 3 Akwande 2 Miron 2), 17 (Barry 3 Akwande 2 Miron 2), 17 (Barry 3 Akwende 2 Miron 2), 17 (Barry 3 Akwande 2 Miron 2), 17 (Barry 3 Akwande 2 Miron 2), 17 (Barry 3 Akwe
California
| | M | MG | FT | R | A | F | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Beeuwesert | 36 | 6-13 | 58 | 11 | 3 | 1 | 17 |
| Fisher | 33 | 3-7 | 1,1 | 3 | 4 | 2 | 7 |
| Taylor | 36 | 3-9 | 6,1 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 11 |
| Smith | 34 | 2-5 | 5,8 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 22 |
| McDoughence | 21 | 1-8 | 0,6 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| McDoughence | 10 | 0-1 | 0,1 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| Elleby | 2 | 0,0 | 0,0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Walton | 23 | 4-8 | 0,0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 9 |
| Ortmann | 2 | 0,0 | 0,0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Reynolds | 2 | 0,1 | 0,1 | 0,3 | 1 | 1 | 7 |
| 200 | 22 | 0,1 | 16,14 | 33 | 13 | 1 | 61 |
Percentages: 45G, FBCT 58F, 367 Three-point goals: 9-12 (Beauwoudt 9, Smith 1, Besh 13, Walthon 14, Reyes 11) Blocked shots: 5-7 (Beauwoudt 6, Smith 1, Besh 11, mani 1) Turnovers: 13 (Beauwoudt 2, Fisher Taylor 5, Smith 3, Drew 3, McDonough 1) Saves: 3 (Beauwoudt 2, Fisher 1, Taylor 5) Technicals: None
Half: Kansas 34-32. Officials: Monje, Holtz
ind Dodge.
KU women move into Aruba finals with two victories
By Ken Winford Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team made its way to the finals of the Aruba Sunshine Shootout ground-court victory over Princeton.
The victory sent the Jayhawks into last night's tournament final against the winner of the other semifinal between Mississippi and Mercer. The results for this game were not available as of deadline.
In the first round of the tournament the Jayhawks overpowered Surinam. 61-39 Friday night.
Kansas won the battle of the three-pointers against Princeton. The Jayhawks converted five of eight attempts while the Tigers' Sandi Bitter scored all four of the hits. The Cincinnati Battles bettle all scorers with 26 points.
Junior guard Lisa Bradley, who led Kansas with 15 points, made two of three attempts. Freshman guard Shannon Bloxom converted three of four three-pointers and finished with 11 points.
The Jayhawks dominated play in the first half and built a 42-21
advantage. Kansas out rebounded Princeton 48-39. Junior center Lynn Page paced Kansas with nine rebounds in the game.
Two freshmen forwards scored in double figures for the Jayhawks. Martee McCloud scored 12 and Danielle Shireef scored 10 points.
Braddy, McCloud and Bloxom shot well from the field. Braddy made six of 10 attempts, McCloud made four of 10 attempts, Bloxom made four of six attempts.
Overall, the Jayhawks shot 46 percent from the floor, making 31 of 67 field goal attempts. Princeton cut off with a three-percent conversion, converting 25 of 61 shots.
Three Jiahawks scored in scoreballs in Kansas' victory over Surinam. McCloud led all scorers in the game with 14 points.
Kansas got 20 points from the center position as Page and freshman Marion Sandifer each scored 10 points.
Braddy added eight points for the Jayhawks in the game against Surinam.
Kansas 73. Princeton 64
Cancer research benefits from tennis pro auction
McQuaid 6-13, Brady 6-11, 1-54en 4-2-4, Bloom 4-0-11, Page 4-0-2, Sandier 1-0-0, Annelio 4-1, Newton 2-0, Neton 1-4, Hart 2-4, Bammon 2-2, Total 3-11 6-173
**Princeton (64)**
Battle 6-16, Bruno 6-13, 1-11 en 4-2-4, Bull 3-0-6, Malcamery 1-2-4, Eades 1-0-0, Shenkel 2-0, Newton 2-0, Total 10-14 6-4a
Haffner Kansas 42-21 Three point goal, Kansas 5-8 (Braudy 2-3, Neton 0), Boxwood 3-4, Princeton 4-9 (Battle 4-3), Rebounds Kansas 48, Princeton 39
Agassi is star of the show in tennis exhibition
By Jeff Euston Kansan sportswriter
Andre Agassi, an atypical teenager from Las Vegas, Nev., has become a favorite of tennis fans since the late 1980s. He was born on his 16th birthday in May of 1986.
KANASS CITY, Mo. — When you are 18 years old and people will pay $700 for a pair of your denim shorts, you should you’re successful.
Agassi, who has assumed the mantle as the leader of tennis in the United States, was in rare form against Ivan Lendl on Wednesday night in the Jones Store Tennis Classic at Municipal Auditorium. Though won the match 63, 3, 6, 7, Agassi clearly was the star of the show.
An auction benefiting cancer research for children before the match illustrated Agassi's extraordinary popularity.
Agassi's tennis racket drew a price of $800. A pair of his trademark denim shorts shows $700, $200 and $150. The $150 a spectator paid for tenled' s racket
Banners proclaiming "Agassi is Awesome" and "Agassi Is No. 1" hung from the upper deck. Agassi playfully stuck out his tongue at a line judge who called a foot fault on him and even chased down a loose
Agassi showed up for Wednesday's match wearing a yellow University of Missouri-Kansas City jacket. He smiled and waved to nearly every section of the stands at Municipal Auditorium, where the UMKC Kangaroos play their home basketball games.
"I'll never relate my Christianity or God with winning, but I think that it offers me the peace of mind and understanding that I need to go out there and take the talent I've been given as far as I can. In that sense, it's probably the best for me."
Andre Agassi professional tennis player
ball for a ballboy between his first and second serves.
After the match, Agessi tried to get the stoic Lendl to trade the first-place cup for his second-place plate.
"I really enjoy myself out there, and that's the most important part," said Agassi, who this year already has won more than $625,000 in prize money and moved from No. 20 to No. 3 in the world rankings.
"Last year I came a long way and a lot of things have come quick for me. I've done my best to keep things in perspective and I think so far I haven't gotten too carried away with all of the recent success."
Early in his career, Agassi had a moody attitude and a brilliant but erratic game. He was best known for his punkish two-tone haircut, not his ability. In May of 1987, he turned to Christianity.
Now Agassi attributes the ability to handle his success to being a borneain Christian.
"I think that religion plays a part," he said. "I'll never relate my Christianity or God with winning, but I think that it offers me the peace of mind and understanding that I need to go out there and take the talent I've been given as far as I can. In that sense, it's probably the best for me."
Agassi represented the United States in Davis Cup competition and then advanced to the semifinals of the French Open, where he lost to Mats Wilander, the eventual champion. At the U.S. open in Paris, Agassi and fellow Covinors in straight sets before falling to Lendl in the semifinals.
But Agassi still is looking to get better.
"Next year I look forward to hopefully improving my game," he said. "Not only in the areas that I'm good now, but I want to add more to my game and to maybe go a little higher in the rankings."
But Agassi said he would not play at Wimbledon again this year. Last year, Agassi chose to return home to Las Vegas rather than play in the world's most prestigious tournament.
"Hopelessly in 1990 I'll play Wimbledon," he said. "Right now it doesn't look like it's going to fit into my schedule next year."
The tournament officials at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club allow only predominantly white clothes to be worn by the players, so Agassi's denim shorts would not be welcome.
"That's just one of the few reasons I haven't played Wimbledon," he said. "But if i do play Wimbledon, I'll be wearing white denim."
CHIEFS SUSPEND PALMER: Kansas City Chiefs running back Paul Palmer was suspended from the team yesterday, apparently because of comments he made on the team bus about the coaching staff, according to some players.
suspect A Chiefs player who requested anonymity told the The Kansas City Star and Times that Palmer was suspended because he said he did not think the coaching staff would return next season. The comments, made on a team bus Saturday, reportedly were overheard by strength and conditioning coach C.T. Hewgley.
continuing career.
Neither Chiefs General Manager Jim Schaaf, Hewgley, nor Coach Frank Gansw would comment on that
Palmer, the team's leading rusher and second-leading receiver, was suspended just before the Chiefs' game with the Pittsburgh Steelers for "conduct detrimental to the team." He returned to Kansas City alone and would not discuss the suspension.
Sports Briefs
Kicker Nick Lowery would not confirm any comments made specifically by Palmer but said many of the players on a bus going to a practice ground were also joking. "Some things were said that they were taken wrong," Lowery said.
CU LOSES FIRST TWO: Mark West scored 15 of his 21 points in the second half yesterday as the Washington Huskies opened their basketball season with a 97-87 victory over Colorado at the 21 points of Shaun Vandiver.
Asked whether his suspension had anything to do with his complaints about his playing time, Palmer said, "Leave me alone, please."
report when contacted after the team returned to Kansas City last night.
When Palmer arrived in Kansas City yesterday, he told the Star and Times that he had nothing to say.
"I don't know why I didn't play today. I really have no comment."
Dion Brown added 18 points, 14 in
the opening half, for the Huskies, who lost an exhibition game at Hec Efmdunson to the Soviet Union's Olympic team Wednesday night.
The Big Eight Conference Buffalos trailed only 38-37 at halftime.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN COLLEGE BASKETBALL TOP TEN
POINTS
1. Duke (5) 2-6
2. Georgetown (1) 2-0
3. Michigan 2-6
4. Oklahoma 2-0
5. Syracuse 4-0
6. Iowa 3-0
7. Illinois (1) 1-0
8. UNLV 1-1
9. Missouri 3-1
10. North Carolina 3-1
(number of place wins)
The weekly top 10 poll is voted on by the sports staff
JTC 80
Andre Agassi has found celebrity status as the No. 3-ranked tennis player in the world.
Boxing champ Tyson baptized before crowd of 700 onlookers
The Associated Press
MAYOR
Tyson
CLEVELAND
— Heavyweight champion Mike Tyson was baptized yesterday in a ceremony held by Rev Jesse Jackson, boxing promoter Don King, and guard of all.
about 700 people at a Baptist church on Cleveland's east side.
Tyson, wearing a white robe, stepped into a pool of water and immersed himself, then embraced him. The pastor of Holy Trinity Baptist Church
Last month, Tyson attended services at the church and prayed with Payden, who gave him a Bible. "Mike, you have a way of knocking men down. But Jesus has a way of knocking men down." Payden told the chummon at the time.
"mike, now your job is to take the message of Christ to the people," said Payden, who presided with
Jackson at a four-hour service that ended with the baptisms of Tyson and 24 other people.
The champion had appeared at the church on Wednesday to give away 500 free turkeys.
Tyson did not speak during the service, nor did he make any comment to the press before or after the service.
Paiden said then that he had been called by King and Cleveland City Council President George Forbes, the pastor. "Mike needs your help."
The boxer has been beset by personal problems since he knocked out Michael Spinks for the undisputed heavyweight championship in June.
He suffered a broken hand in a street brawl with heavyweight boxer Mitch Green, a concussion when he rammed his car into a tree, then became involved in divorce proceedings with actress Robin Givens, whom he had married in February. His career also is caught in a tug-of-war between his manager, Bill Cayton, and King
---
Tyson, who yesterday appeared to have gained considerable weight since the Spinks fight, has been living in the Cleveland area since he was a teenager. The King the promoter has a training camp about 40 miles east of the city-
University Daily Kansan / Monday, November 28, 1988
Sports
11
No.1 Fighting Irish do the unexpected
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - West Virginia, beware.
Expect the unexpected from Lou Holtz and his top-ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish.
On the eve of Notre Dame's showdown with second-ranked Southern California, Holtz suspended two playoffs and pushed rusher its leading receiver.
Then, on the Irish's first play from scrimmage Saturday, Holtz made a risky call, having his quarterback throw deep from his own end zone.
As the game wore on, Notre Dame kept the Trojans off balance with a go-for-broke blitz against quarterback Rodney Peete.
Virtually everything out of Holtz's bag of tricks worked.
Notre Dame came away from the Coliseum with a 27-10 victory to maintain its perfect record for a Jan. 2 Festa Bowl date with the nation's only unbeaten team, fourth-ranked West Virginia.
The Irish's game against Southern Cal actually began unfolding Friday night, when tailback Tony Brooks and flanker Ricky Watters were 40 minutes late for dinner, not the first time this year it has happened, and they were beamed by Holtz that they were flying back to Indiana morning.
"I thought my decision to suspend the two players might be a divisive influence because we had been close all year," Holtz said.
"This was something the team agreed on, the coaches agreed on," Notre Dame linebacker Wes Pritchard said of the suspensions. "And I think it was a positive motivating event, it brought the team together."
The suspensions were unprecedented in Holtz's coaching career. At Arkansas, he suspended several starters the week before the 1978
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TOP COLLEGE TEN FOOTBALL
TOP COLLEGE FOOTBALL Points
1 Notre Dame (8) 11-0 80
2 Miami(Fla.) 9-1-0 67
3 West Virginia 11-0-0 57
4 Florida State 10-1-0 51
5 USC 10-1-0 46
6 Nebraska 11-1-0 40
7 Auburn 10-1-0 33
8 Arkansas 10-1-0 26
9 UCLA 9-2-0 17
10 Oklahoma 9-2-0 10
() number of first place votes
The weekly top 10 poll is voted on by the staff of the University Daily
Orange Bowl, and the Razorbacks went on to stun Oklahoma 31-6.
When the Irish got the ball for the first time against Southern Cal, Holtz came up with another surprise. The Trojans had taken the kickoff and driven into Notre Dame territory, then pinned the Irish on their own 2-yard line with a well-placed punt.
Forgoring the usual formula of three runs into the line and a punt out of danger, Holtz's play choice called or quick back to deep in the deep end and throw downfield to freshman wide receiver Ragib Ismail.
The result was a 55-yard completion that took the steam out of the Troians' early momentum.
, was tinkering with the idea of throwing deep all week." Holtz said. "When we got the ball at our 2, I wanted to give it a good chance to get out of a hole."
Then there were the constant Notre Dame battles during the game, the main reason the Trojans were limited to a touchdown and a goal field.
"We felt we had to mix it up with blitzing." "101tz told. "All year, I've been on ask on my call in talk show host Jerry Lewis. It was the most we've blitzed all year."
The Trojans, unbeaten going into the game, were thrown out of sync both offensively and defensively by their teammates, having their worst game of the year.
Southern Cal, which now has lost six straight to the Irish, lost two fumbles and two interceptions. One of Notre Dame's touchdowns was set up by a fumble recovery and another came on an interception return.
Trojan coach Larry Smith called the loss the most bitter of his coaching career because "we didn't give ourselves a chance to win."
"Whenever you play a big game like this, you can't make big mistakes and that's what we did," he said.
"Part of that is that they are a good football team and they force you to do those things." Smith said.
USC outgained the Irish 356 yards to 253, including 225 passing yards by Pete.
"Our goal was to win the national championship, and we were ready to play. We just didn't play well," Peete said.
"Right now, this loss is just tough to take because the seniors on this team never beat Notre Dame and we have to live with that for the rest of our lives."
Ex-QB picking up the pieces after stints in NFL and CFL
Schlichter living without football and gambling
The Associated Press
"I'm just trying to pick up the pieces," he said in a story published in yesterday's edition of The Columbo patch "it's a continuing state for me."
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Art Schiehter, the former Ohio State quarterback who was suspended twice by the NFL for gambling, is living near his parents' farm and holding three jobs after trying unsuccessfully to come back in the Canadian Football League.
Schlicher is working for an athletic equipment manufacturing company, an automobile dealer and a car manufacturer. Whenever he is a part-time reporter announcer.
His release from the Ottawa Rough Riders came on Oct. 11, one day after he ended a 30-day stay on the reserve list because of a rib injury he sustained in one of the five games he started for the team.
"It keeps me busy, and that's really what I need to do," Schlichter said.
for the year, he completed 41 passes in 89 attempts for 658 yards and three touchdowns and had seven
'W e don't question him
we don't question him as a person at all. We really had high hopes for Art. But from a coaching standpoint, how far can you go waiting for the talent to come back?
— Bob Weber
Ottawa Rough Riders football coach
passes intercepted.
"What led up to the release was the fact he was not very productive." Rough Riders coach Bob Webel told us that the agent he was, was very unproductive.
But Schlichter said a personality conflict developed when, 10 days into his rehabilitation, Weber criticized him for not practicing. He said Weber might have been trying to rush him into the lineup because the coach was still training. Otherwise he finished with a 2-16 record, worst in the CFL this year.
"I've played hurt about as much as anybody during the course of my career," said Schlichter, who set most of Ohio State's passing records
"You can put me down for a lot of things, but it bothers me when some ones ask."
between 1978-81 and played for the Baltimore and Indianapolis Colts in the NFL.
Schlichter and Weber differ on the nature of the injury. Schlichter said
torn cartilage under his rib cage caused pain so severe he had trouble breathing and sleeping on his back. Weber said the area was deeply bruised but there was no physical damage.
Rumors that Schichler had been gambling again circulated at the time of his release, but Weber said he heard nothing along that line and Schichler said it "was never mentioned and it didn't happen."
Weber said, "We don't question him as a person at all. We really had high hopes for Art. But from a coaching standpoint, how far can you go waiting for the talent to come back?"
Such rumors "are going to be wherever I go." Schlicter said. "But nobody ever brought evidence to me that anything happened."
1988 KSHSAA STATE CHAMPIONS
Daniel Starting/KANSA!
Maurice Benson, Manhattan running back, raises the 6A Kansas High School Championship trophy. Benson rushed for 115 yards in the Indians' 14-7 victory over the Lawrence Lions Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Manhattan uses stingy defense running game to keep Lawrence from third consecutive 6A title
By Jeff Euston Kansas sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
The Manhattan Indians won the Kansas 64 state football title Saturation at Memorial Stadium.
They got some revenge at the same time.
the Indians, who lost the title game to the Lawrence Lions last season in Manhattan, defeated
17
69
Lions' quarterback Greg Ballard tries to complete a pass under heavy pressure from Indians' defenders. Lawrence was unable to win a third consecutive state championship.
Lawrence 14-7 in the rain.
Manhattan finished the season 12-0, and Lawrence, which had won the last two state titles, finished 10-2.
Lawrence was trying to become the first 5A or 6A team to win three straight titles since Wichita Southeast did it from 1976 to 1978.
Lawrence had struggled this season in comparison with the last two. Five of its victories came by a combined margin of 23 points.
Manhattan rushed for 218 yards to Lawrence's 65. The Lions managed just two first downs in the first half and six in the game.
"We didn't have any offense," Lawrence coach Bill Freeman said. "We got beat on the line, and when you get beat on the line like that, we're lucky to get beat 14." It's amazing we stayed as close as we did.
Lawrence was hurt by penalties throughout the game, but the most costly led to a Manhattan touchdown in the first quarter.
The Indians' drive halled at the Lawrence 37-yard line, but the Lions were penalized for roughing the kicker, which gave Manhattan a first down Five plays later. The Redskins scored on a five-yard run. The extra point attempt was wide left, and the Indians led 6-0.
In the second quarter, Manhattan took control.
Benson broke through the right side of the defense for a 69-yard run to the Lawrence one-yard line.
"He's a great football pre-
Freeman said of Benson, who ran
for 115 yards on 14 carries. "The
difference between them and us
was every time they run the ball,
they had three or four or five yards
and a first down. We would be one
or two or minus two."
Pittsburgh holds on against Kansas City 16-10
Chiefs miss last-second touchdown
Pittsburgh's Gary Anderson ended three long driving drives with field goals and Merril Hge scored on a 10-yard run yesterday as the Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Kansas City Chiefs 16-10, only their second victory in the last 12 games.
The Associated Press
The Chiefs managed only a field goal by Nick Lowery on two fourth-drive minutes inside the Steelers' 7-yard line at Pittsburgh broke a four-game loss streak and two-two game win streak. The game ended an incomplete pass in the Pittsburgh end zone after Kansas City had driven to the Steelers' 14.
The Steelers, 3-10 and headed for their worst season since they were 1-13 in 1969, need to win their final home game on Dec. 18 against Miami
Kansas City, 3-9-1, has lost seven games this season by seven points or less and remain 0-5-1 on the road.
to avoid their first losing home record since moving into Three Rivers Stadium in 1970.
Anderson ended two lengthy drives with field goals of 23 and 20 yards as the Steelers took a 6-10 lead by keeping the Chefs' offense off the field for all but four first-quarter plays. The Steelers had third quarter and made his past 30 attempts inside the 40 yard line, including all 18 attempts this season.
with the Chiefs leading 6-7, Hoge scored from the 10-yard line on a third-and-two play with 1:06 left in the first half, ending the Steelers' only touchdown drive. The score stood at 13-7 at halftime.
Steve DeBerg hit Stephone Paige on a 4-yard touchdown pass play midway through the second period, but DeBerg, who recently replaced Kenney as the Chiefs' starting quarterback, couldn't get the Chiefs
Anderson's 23-yarder completed a 19-play, 74-yard drive that lasted nearly eight minutes and included two short throws to Hope on a second-and-nine play.
Louis Lipps' 32-yard run on a reverse, the longest against the Chiefs this season, led to Anderson's 20-yard.
in the end zone from inside the Steelers' 7 twice in the fourth quar-
DerBerg's 38yard completion to Emile Harry gave the Chiefs a first down at the 10oarly in the period, but he did not score at DerBerg at the 10on third down from the 7.
DeBerg last hit Jonathan Hayes for 21 yards and a first down at the Steelers' 4, but the Chefs settled for Nick Lowery's 26-yard field goal with remaining after a running play and no incomplete nets only a yard.
New York Giants 13 New Orleans 12
Paul McFadden kicked a 35-yard field goal with 21 seconds left, and two backup quarterbacks combined to score the victory over the New Orleans Saints.
San Francisco 48 San Diego 10
Joe Montana three three touch down passes, including a club-recore 96-yard completion to Jerry Rice, as the San Francisco 49ers strengthened their playoff hopes with a 48-10 victory over the San Diego Chargers.
Delver 35 Los Angeles Rams 24
Denver 35
John Ehlwey threw three touchdown passes, two of them in a span of just 15 seconds in the third quarter, and 18 of them in the fourth. He defeated the Los Angeles Rams 35-24.
With the victory, the Broncos, 7-6,
moved into a half-game lead in the
APC West over the Seattle Seahawks
and the Los Angeles Raiders, who
meet tonight. The Rams surrendered
fourth straight loss and fell to 7-6.
Indianapolis 24 New England 21
Dean Biasuesi put indianapolis ahead with a 28-yard field goal with 2:22 remaining, and New England's Jason Starvovsky missed a 27-yard time as expired to preserve the Colts' 24-21 victory.
Cincinnati 35 Buffalo 21
Baltimore 21-7 Cincinnati quarterback Boomer Esiason completed 17 of 25 passed for 238 yards and the Bengals ran for another 232 yards as they defeated Buffalo 35-21.
We know we have the best offense
in the NFL. We think we can run on anybody," Esiason said.
Ickey Woods ran for 129 in 26 carries and scored three times. James Brooks ran for 93 yards and 14 touchdowns. The team allowed 101 yards rushing per game.
Philadelphia 31 Phoenix 21
Philadelphia held on to a tie for the NFC East lead as Ron Johnson caught two touchdown passes and set up a third in a victory over Phoenix.
Cleveland 17 Washington 13
The Eagles, who have won seven o their last nine, boosted their record to 8-5 and dropped the Cardinals out of a three-way tie for the division lead at 7-6.
Cleveland virtually ended the play-of hopes of the defending Super Bowl champion. Washington Redskins won a tiebreaker with a touchdown with 1:49 remaining.
Chicago 16 Green Bay 0
Neal Anderson scored his second
touchdown of the game on an 80-yard run in the third quarter to lead the Bears past the Packers. The Bears clinched at least a wild-card playoff spot with a 11-2 record, while the Cubs clinched 2-11 with their sloth straight defeat.
New York Jets 38 Miami 34
The New York Jets, who had struggled offensively while losing their past three games, got a an NFL-record 39 first days and a eam-record 597 yards against Miami, which lost its fourth straight game despite five touchdown passes from Dan Marino.
Atlanta 17
Tampa Bay 10
Rookie Michael Haynes caught a 37-yard touchdown pass while sliding on a rain-soaked turf in the fourth quarter of a 17-10 victory over Tampa Bay.
---
Haynes lost his footing at the Tampa Bay 2-yard line, caught the pass team Chris Miller on his back as he broke a 10 toie with 11:20 left, breaking a 10 toie with 11:20 left.
12
Monday, November 28. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
THE FUTURE OF KU
KU explores televised classes Telecommunications offer remote-site teaching for the 1990s
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
In the classroom of the future, professors may have to worry more about their hair and makeup than their lecture notes.
Telecommunications have opened a whole new arena of teaching, which will join other current technology such as computer-assisted instruction in the University of Kansas by 1992. UK officials say
the technology will be used mainly at the proposed Regent Glen and Park, which have been built in the early 1980s.
Telecommunications would allow professors to lecture to students, via satellite, on a television screen. Students may be allowed to respond or ask questions through computer hookups or by telephone.
Evelyn Swartz, professor of education and presiding officer of University Council, said that kind of educational process would be a big part of the future.
"Instructional technology is going to have a big effect," she said. "This will become an important resource."
Swartz said educational technology in the form
of computer-assisted instruction was widespread, especially in the elementary schools.
But the use of technology such as computer-assisted instruction and telecommunications hasn't been perfected yet.
"I think the challenge is how to use this effectively." she said.
Swartz said that telecommunications could be used effectively in two ways: to save time and to address large groups.
Mary moore, professor of civil engineering and a chairman of the Campus Planning Advisory Committee, said that a telecommunication system could work, "but only marginally so."
"I don't think there will ever be a superior technology in teaching than having the teacher there," he said.
Moore said telecommunications raised complex issues, such as how students would ask questions of the teacher.
"It suggests that there's more to it than just wheeling a TV camera into a classroom and just setting it up," he said. "It creates the need to develop the class presentation in more of a production mode. To do that very well is expensive."
Moore said that teaching methods would have to change, even in some ways that few people think about.
For instance, he said, it is perfectly acceptable for a teacher to turn his back on a class long enough to write on the chalkboard, but that has been found ineffective on TV.
Moore said that the tradition of the Regents Center probably would call for professors to teach personally at Overland Park anyway.
"These advances don't replace teachers," she said. "You still need the real person to interact with students."
However, Bob Jerry, professor of law and chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said that the new technology could be used in ways other than reaching the Regents
"We can put the resources of this University in places they've never been before," he said. "That strikes me as a great opportunity; I see great possibilities there."
Jerry said a telecommunications system could be used to teach groups in places such as Garden City or Wichita.
Landscaping. renovations slated for KU
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
Ahem Wiechert says it's an administrative rule of thumb that if 23 percent of a plan is accomplished, someone has done well.
By that standard, with 80 percent completed of a long range campus campaise plan developed in 2003, the program is now underway.
But the University director of facilities and planning said it was time for a new plan.
In the next four years, Wiechert said, the University will move toward a renovation mode, rather than the current building mode.
By 1922, the science library and a new Regents Center should be completed; Snow Hall renovation should be finished; and a parking garage and the
Dole Human Development Center should be in use. The University also will work to complete a new performing arts center on West Campus. Other plans include renovations of halls such as Strong and Bailey, Hoch Auditorium and the rest of the interior in the Kansas Union.
The renovations will provide needed space for classrooms, research and library expansion.
The University's campus is expanding at a tremendous pace, and he did not allow his students to grow the growth step any time.
"I don't think a university can afford not to grow." he said.
One problem University planners will face with continued growth is competition between buildings and open space on campus.
"I would like to create more landscape, furniture-type settings on campus, places that are intimate." Wiechert said. "People need to have a place to go where they can find some solitude."
Wiechert plans to emphasize landscaping. He
said many areas on campus were planted as many as 20 years ago and are now overgrown.
Alton Thomas, landscape architect under former KU Chancellor Deane Malott, said Malott had great interest in developing the campus.
Thomas said the Kansas University Endowment Association financed development.
Many of the physical changes, including land-scaping, that will occur in the next few years will not change the campus radically but give it a more unified look.
"We spent thousands on flowering trees," he said.
Wiechert cited the exterior graphics system, which includes street signs and campus lighting, as previous projects which were not readily noticeable but that unified the campus.
To complete the planned projects, the University will seek financing from federal grants and internal sources such as revenue from parking and private sources.
Continued from p. 1
"I have the luxury of having a planning group," she said.
Besides those perks, Ramaley said, she has something else to make looking into the future easier.
She was referring to the Campus Planning Advisory Committee, a 16-member group with student, faculty and staff representatives. The committee was formed this year to advise Ramley on the implementation of a planning process for the Lawrence campus.
Ray Moore, professor of civil engineering and a planning committee chairman, said that so far the committee had focused on creating a survey to find out the campus opinion on various planning goals.
The planning committee originally had planned to have the survey results ready for Ramaley before Thanksgiving, but problems with creating a valid opinion poll have pushed the deadline back. Moore said he hoped to have the survey out sometime next semester.
PLANNING
The committee will advise Ramaley on all the planning goals for the University for 1992 and
beyond, although its deadlines for doing so are not yet set.
Although the committee may be a little slow in finding its footing, it already is forming a relationship with another campus group that is concerned with computer resources. Resources Committees of University governance.
The resource committee reports directly to SenEx. The planning committee, which is appointed by Ramaley, reports to her.
Ramaley summed up the relationship of the two committees: "CPAC helps us decide where to go. P&R helps test whether we went where we said we were going to."
This dual planning committee setup wasn't planned, but those involved say that it has worked
In an Oct. 20 letter to Ramaley, Shapiro wrote,
"This arrangement is probably not the one which you (or I) would design if we were creating a committee system from scratch. It may, however,
be a functional system to accomplish both . . . your objectives and those of governance."
Shapiro said recently that the relationship between the planning committee and resource committee would continue, "probably because we're already doing it this way."
Moore agreed with the setup of the two committees but said that he didn't know whether the planning committee would continue beyond this academic year. When the group was formed, everyone accepted a one-year appointment; Ramaley has said she would like to try to keep the group going.
until that decision is made, the planning committee will continue to advise Ramaley. Moore said the group would do that by posing questions and avoiding suggesting the answers.
"We'll just give the questions to properly calibrate the direction." Moore said.
He said that the planning committee would be asking questions to direct Ramalay on such issues as enrollment, the Regents Center in Overland Park and minority affairs.
For the resource committee, which has studied subjects such as distribution of money from the Margin of Excellence and fiscal year 1989 budget requests, a definition also is emerging.
Evelyn Swartz, presiding officer of University
Corporal, served on the first resource committee.
"I think their work is enormously important to the future of the University," she said. "It's important that (the resource committee and the planning committee) work together."
Regents Center links KU to KC
By Laura Woodward
Ten years ago, the boundary between Lawrence and the Johnson County area was defined. Now, it has become blurred by increasing growth along Interstate 435 and Kansas Highway 10.
Kansan staff writer
Elaine Tatham, a demographer and the president of ETC Institute in Overland Park, compiled research that indicates that 20 people move into Johnson County every day. That translates into an average of about seven households each day.
Because of such growth, many University officials think that KU should have a larger presence in the greater Kansas City area by
One of the biggest efforts to date to increase KU's profile in Johnson County is the planning of a new Regents Center at 127th Street and 134th Street in fact. Ramayah said, KU's presence is anchored on the new center.
"When I came to KU, one of the things that interested me the most was how well we could develop our urban mission," said Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor. "It is a challenge to incorporate into our structure the growing needs of a metropolitan area."
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said in October that he hoped to see it open by fall 1990. It will be constructed for about $5 million.
Mary Gersh, director of the Regents Center, said proper planning could link the KU campus with the eastern part of the state where much of Kansas' economic growth was occurred.
"My opinion is that K-10 (highway) is a conduit," she said. "There are only 23 miles between Olathe and Lawrence."
Although drivers coming from Lawrence can reach most places in Kansas City within one hour, the distance hasn't made much of a difference in increasing the University's profile.
"The University has a medical center and the Regents Center in the Kansas City area, but they
haven't added up in people's minds as the University of Kansas," Ramaley said.
In addition to increasing the University's profile, the new Regents Center was important, she said, because it would attract companies to the Kansas City area and would stimulate economic growth.
Ramaley said she couldn't explain it, but cited the Kansas-Missouri state line, the preeminence of the Missouri side and the effect of two legislatures on one area as possible causes.
"Companies arriving or trying to expand in the area cannot attract new employees unless there is a strong educational environment for research work and support for research and development," she said.
But the short distance is not the only factor that will bring Lawrence and the Kansas City area closer together. Advanced telecommunications at the Regents Center also will connect Lawrence and Kansas City with the university already has been budgeted for by the University.
"The graphic possibilities are real. We must plan thoughtfully and the firstly so that we can finish and the 21st century with style." Gersh said.
She said that interactive communication was the wave of the future.
For example, the business school could tell before the stock exchange opened what markets would be like that day, she said.
"With such equipment, the University could literally move its classroom anywhere in the United States," she said.
Because of advanced telecommunications equipment and the short distance separating Lawrence and Johnson County, it is not inconceivable that the two could merge one day. The need to establish KU in the Kansas City area before the merge occurs.
Continued from p. 1
ENROLL
KU this year had used several factors that may have contributed to the enrollment decrease, such as earlier application deadlines, increased consideration of grade point averages and higher ACT score requirements.
Ramaley has told the group not to change any of those factors for the next year, which Burchill said would help in the analyzing process.
help in the studying process. "We don't have to worry about fine-tuning." Burchill said.
Ramaley said that it was important to keep the enrollment within 1 percent of 26,306 because the University couldn't predict whether the budget would allow much of an increase.
"I can't expect to win that game," she said.
She said that enrollment control probably would be KU's plan until 1992 or 1993.
"That strategy will be beneficial to the University for the next five years," Ramaley said. "But there's no crystal ball. I reserve the right to recalibrate."
10% Student Discount on Kansan Classifieds*
*Valid with K.U.I.D.
ELIE WIESSEL
The Elie Wiesel Continuing Discussion Series
Why is Elie Wiesel relevant to us, to our classes, to our community?
Tuesday, November 29, 1988 Big Eight Room, Kansas Union 7:30 p.m.
Panelists: Dr. David Amber, Vice President of the American Civil Liberties Union; Dr. Robert Holt, Director of History Hall Center for the Humanities; Dr. James Woolfe, Director of the Western Civilization Program; Dr. Robert Sauer, Director of the Library of Congress.
C
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
For confidential information, referral and support for AIDS concerns - Call 841-2345. Head quarters counseling center.
Adult Children of Alcoholics meets from 3:30:4:30 today at Watkins Memorial Health Center, Room
Story Idea?
Call 864-4810
SOME PEOPLE RETIRE WITH MORE THAN JUST A GOLD WATCH.
several years the Amer-
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ducting more research
in certain lifestyle
and exposures which
could increase cancer
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You work hard all your life and what do you get?
So know the risks.
Don't smoke.
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
do you get? Well,depending
Well, depending on where you work, you could get cancer.
How you live may save your life.
This space contributed as a public service
Hey KU! W want a challenge? Try Adams Campus Challenge Course. Call Res: Services @ 864-354-166.
Join us for a show slide on West Coast communities by the founder of Stardance community in San Francisco, Wed., Nov. 7 at 3:00 pm, Sunflower House, 146 Tennessee $2.00 donation
Out of State Students -Going home on vacations
Earn travel money and much more during your
vacations by being our sales rep in your home
location. We have a dedicated team (including
receivers) New and exciting art card
design by Alphia Light. See them at the Union
Lampiher Bookstore, 9th and NIL
744-8377-317
Preparing for Final Study Skills Workshop.
(Time Management, Reviewing, Testing
Strategies): Wednesday, November 30,
2015. www.finalstudyskillsworkshop.org.
Leadership Center, 121 Storm 864-4664
Hillel בְּפָנ
Events of the Week
Monday, Nov. 28
AIPAC Program
7 p.m., Hillel House
Tuesday, Nov. 29
Tuesday, Nov. 29
Elie Wiesel Continuing Discussion Series
Panel Discussion
7:30 p.m., Hillhouse
Wednesday, Nov. 30
Hanukah Table with Kabbalah Friedman
1:13 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Kansas Union
Wednesdav. Nov. 30
Little Brothers & Little Sisters
Pre-Hanukkah Party
6:30 p.m. Hillhouse House
3:50 p.m.
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
Friday, Dec. 2
AEI $\pi$, ZBT, $\Sigma\Delta T$, Hillel
Shabbat Dinner
5:10 p.m.
RSVP required by Wed. Nov. 30
Lawrence Jewish Community Center
RSVP required by Wed. Nov. 30
For rides, RSVPs and more information
For rides, RSVPs and more information Call Hillel House. 749-4242
SPRING BREAK '89
Trips Available Now
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UGR
The Undergraduate Review, a campus literary magazine, is seeking contributions for the summer 1989 issue.
— photography
- short stories
— poetry
— artwork
Any undergrad may submit:
essays
research papers
Interested student should stop by Nunemaker's front desk or call 864-4225
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SUCIDE INTERVENTION If you feel like you want to lend it all - or if you are concerned about someone who might: call 814-2546 or drop by 418-7253, please send your information confidential, and always open.
The AOA workshops will be held from 3:00 to 4:00 at Waltham Health Center, second floor, room 7. on November 28, and December 12. The meetings are free.
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Mary Kay has a skin care system for you, Call today!
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841-831.
MACE MIGHT MISS A STUN GUN
---
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For free brochure write to:
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University Dailv Kansan / Mondav. November 28, 1988
13
JAN 2-7
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ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVES Metropolis Mobile Sound Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's Hot Spins Maximum Party Thrush DJ R. Ray Velasquez 841-7838
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Handel's Import Repair will tune up your car. $35 plus parts, mobile service, 841-6429
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B-days, singing messages. 841-1874.
2 bedroom apartment for rent second semester. Near laundry, shopping. On bus route. Call 843-6495.
2 berenom 2 & bath apt. with microwave, ice maker and plush carpet. Call 842-5111
*room-coronelightly fits 4-available Dec 31* Sunrise *Village washer/ garage dryer* 2-6hbs-acTiNem court-pool -microwave off 6hb Street. Call 843-4503忽
Affordable, spacious, 2 br. apt. Furn., on bus route, jaccuzi! 841-3880.
Available Jan. thru May, Two bdmr apt,
w/fireplace. 837 Michigan, Sunrise Plane
Free cable, rent negotiable. Call 843-9034
Beginning January 2. Sublease 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. Option for direct lease in May. 14th & Kentucky - 749-3932 or 841-1212
Completely Furnished 1,2, and 3-bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call today 841-1212, 841-1255, 841-1429, or 749-2415.
HILLVIEW APTS.
1733 West 24th, 81-5797
NEW LOW PRICES
STARTING AT $255
- 182 bedroom units
* Laundry facilities
* On bus route-near shopping
* Water paid
* Some with gas paid
* Ample off-street parking
* Rental furniture available by Thompson-Crawley
**Complete:** Furnished Studios, 3-2 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, designed and designed with you in mind. Call 814-1212, 814-6152, or 749-2415. **Mastercraft**
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: To share nice 2 bedroom apartment Spring Semester, Call 749-1953.
Female Roofmate wanted to share beautiful apartment in Peppercorn Park. Availiable immediately. Apartment includes, own bedroom, laundry, kitchen, fireplace, and free water. Please call 749 6036.
Female Roommate wanted to share large two story house $200/month. All utilities paid. 841-9656.
Female roommate (graduate student, non-smoker preferred): Shared first floor of house available immediately. Own room. Wather/driver, great location; near campus.
Dobson, princeton.
from campus $12 + 1 utilities, noWD, W/D;
must like cats, non-smoker. Contact Julie at
843-974 or mail to 843-9623 before, after lttp.
For rent. 2-br. tkt - in great location, on bus
line to Princeton. For details: 843-4125,
'May. Call for details: 843-4125'.
For Sublease: 1 bedroom; 1 bikm by KU Union.
Available January: 1 $335/mo. Kurt 749-3854
Fully furnished two bedroom, apartment. Civilized.
Big enough for two. Must go to Nov. 10th &
Arkansas. $340 - utilities. 841-7032 or 749-2415
Janette.
Large 1 br apt. for rent spring semester 1 block north of Union. Furnishings available. $320/mo.
942-8100. best after 9 pm.
Male or Female roommate wanted. Very nice townhouse for 2nd semester. $210/mo. +¹% utilities. On K2 for route. 841-4964.
Nice private room in large furnished house for non-smoker. Call 843-9508.
Male roommate wanted for Spring semester to share spacious apartment: own bedroom, dryer,洗衣; dryer to campus; on bus route, hotel; 1675 mile + 1½ miles. Call Hauy AT 843-6693
Nice two bedroom, bath, fully furnished apartment, available after finals, close to campus and shopping district. Non-smoking roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom on house on Campus. Preferably a grad student.
NAISMITH HALL Stublease. Will give you money for deposit + one half month start. Starting Semester. Call 749-4855
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place immediately. $330 mo, water paid, and furnished.
Call 842-1272 or 842-3556
Quiet, roommate wanted to share two bedroom apartment. Walking distance to campus $135 month plus 1₂ utilities. Start Jan. 1st. 842-8476
Room in nice house very near campus. Share kitchen, bath $160, utilizes paid deposit. 842-597-6891 Single room for sublease 2 bays from Union. 831-543-6564, after 9:30am.
- Sending Semester Sublease. bwr, DW on bus rt
$tpcall$i.Call tcp 749-650 Desertate!
South Pointe APARTMENTS
- Newly remodeled
- Great location
- On KU bus route
- Gas heat
- 1 to 4 bedrooms available
LOCATION Available Now!
26th & Iowa 843-6446
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
adowbrook
Sub-lease immediately until May 89 A room with a view! Apple Lane Studio. Desperate! (913) 491-3086
Families welcome. #843-0621
Sublease. Large 2BR apt. on Bus Route. Can sleep 3. Call 841-3430.
Sublease (Jan. 1, May 31): 2 bedroom, 1/2 spacious DUPLEX at MEADOWBROOK
Families welcome . #843-0621
sleep 3. Call 841-3430
Sublease. Nice 2 br duplex, 5yrs old, dishwasher.
Sublease. Nice 2 br duplex, 5yrs old, dishwasher. Call 841-1990.
Sunflower House is taken applications for Spring 89. We offer private rooms, VTV,CRV, game and lady facilities. Low rent, all included in utilities. We offer cooperative living. Try Call 749-8149 or 841-4844.
Boardwalk apartments
BE PLEASANTLY
SURPRISED...
COME SEE THE
BEST KEPT SECRET
IN TOWN!
MON. - FRI. 9-6
SAT. 10-5
SUNDAYS 1-5 p.m.
842-4444 524 Frontier Rd.
(Off of 6th Street)
TRAILRAGE STUDIO available for sublease spring semester. Quit, clean, great location (bus route, laundry, pool, Dillons). Phone 749-363 at 2pm evenings or weekends.
.oo bedroom apt.: Washer/dryer hookups.
garage. 3419 Harvard Drive. 841-8223. Small pets
allowed.
We Bring More Roommates Together by Splitting Them Up.
Colony Woods realizes the closer you are to your roommate the farther apart you want to be. Knowing this, we separate our 2 bedrooms and turn it into a kitchen and living room area.
You can still save money by sharing the rent and keep your privacy too!
2 Bedroom 2 Bath $395.
Ask How We Can Save You $$$.
Colony Woods
1301 W. 24th & Naismith
842-5111
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. large bath,
dishwasher, dryer look up $800/month
+ utilities 3 blocks from campus 5 or 8 month
sublease beginning Jan. 1 1982-3822
Two MOD studios for sublease. Dec. 15th? 1203
Oread. Across from Yello Sub. 749-6805. 749-2916.
749-3728.
NAISMITHHALL
WANTED - Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 842.2537.
Luxury...
Privacy...
All these Advantages and more!
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 60444
913 - 843 - 8559
Naismith Hall...These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hassle-free living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all your worries
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
For information and a tour come by or call today!
WANTED Person or persons to assume a lease at Colony Woods, 1 bedroom, at semester end. Call 843-3918.
FOR SALE
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture frames, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, books, vintage clothing, toys, vintage clothing, books, baseball cards, slot machines, old Parish art, art decoupage, tools Royal Doulton, and so much more. Use tools Royal Doulton, and so much more. **MARKET 181 New Hampshire. Open every Sat and Sun 9-5. For rental info call 842-663-6861.**
Private individual offers riffle audio cassette course in French descendant course. Basic plus advanced tapes and manuals. List price $60; special offers available. Call 800-298-5803 or call 800-298-5803 for 1 p or all day calls.
Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun. 10-5
For Sale: '86 Bianchi Road Bike, like new. '88
Hard Rock Mountain Bike. 841-809.
Inexpensive bridal boutique has lots of beautiful wedding costumes to offer. Call 842-8222, 2449 Iowa.
GOVT SURPLUS* | *New G.I. Overcams, Combs and safety tools, and safety gear*. OVERCAMS Clothing. OVERCAMS Overcamps. CAMOUFLAGE Clothing. Also CARHARTT Carhartts. Christmas 124. St. Mary's Sales. Sales. Christmas 124. St. Mary's Sales.
southern. FigGraphics news southwest.
southern. FigGraphics news new Wave Fiber.
southern. Si 847-7527.
si 847-7527.
Minolta XOM camera, aperture preferred,
50mm f2 lens 75 plus 175mm f.8 zoonook,
camera 175 or best offer. Evenings, weekends
841-4715
Pevvey Mystic electric guitar, excellent condition
$200 and Crate G-40c amp, almost new, $200,
841-257.
AUTO SALES
175 Fiat, cream cooked, great condition, commitment 790 OBO Eagle to sell. Call Nyansi 841-6941 (323) 790-6941 www.nyansisales.com Excellent condition, 6108-OBO Call 841-9892 Mazda 625 am, u/MFAM/Shooks and looks great. Call 841-9892 (323) 790-6941 www.nyansisales.com
Rock-n-tell . Thousands of and rare albums
at 10 a.m to 5 p.m every Saturday and Sunday
with a special guest. Sleep with the best. A cotton Fuson for $88. Only
at New Wave Futs, 11 Eighth Ave. 942-7378.
GOVENMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100.
Fords. Mercedes Coventry Surplus
Buyers Guide (1) 8(053)647-6000 Ext. S-944
Must sell 197 Cameron Motor. S-944
Well sell 197 Ford Motor. S-944
LOST-FOUND
Lost, gold snake pin. 4" long near Yello Sub, Nov
1. Sentimental value. 89,658. Reward
HELP WANTED
AIRLINES NOW HIRING. Flight Attendants.
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $10k per月. Level position levels.
Call ( 815) 427-6900 Ext. A7938
Do you need a job for next semester? **Nepping**
you need a day care worker, a carer or a tutor,
take applications and use taking applications for
part-time aide positions. We will be training in
nepping at the Grichard Corner Nepping Center.
On the Grichard Corner Nepping Center. On the
Freshmen, sophomores, and juniors: train in the summer to become Marine Corps officers after graduation. Attend financial and financial aid available. 65% Iowa. CALL 811-1821.
OVERSESAJES JOBS 8000+ $200/month. Summer Yr. 2015-2016. Job Code: 31032. Email: info@overseasonals.com. KS & BSO KS10. Corolla Da Mar, CA 82502. Part-time workers. Packer Packet is examining medical specimens for the HIP. 49 pm - 5 am. 12 pm - 12, 2noon - 4pm, 4 pm - 5 am. 25 pm - 4 pm, 4 pm - 5 am.
Graduate Student needed to manage 18-unit apartment building in Oakland. Salary and apartment furnished. Phone 1-426-4906.
Local mortuary requires to hire a K.U. student to work every offer night and weekend. Duties include: answering phone & door, light janitorial cleaning, laundry, food service, care of dividual needs to be near, have good communication skills and desire to serve others. This work will be in exchange for a salary, furnished apartments, and benefits.
Part-time help wanted immediately Tuesday,
June 27, at 10 a.m. Job #18533 started paying $6.50. Apply in person or by phone at (714) 925-2222.
49. a.m.
4a. 3m. a.m. Mon.-Fri. For a minimum of 20 hours wk.starting pay $4.25/hr. If interested please call 840.330. Ask for part-time work.
TACO JOHNs - now hire day & Elevens apply
al all locations 10kms Mass, 108 km, W2rd, or 110 km
W4th. Mature, responsible persons need only apply.
Apply between 2.5 km.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Stamp. For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kaiserslau. MT 59001
Staying in town over break? Need $$$ Love Kids? Apply to Children Learning Center 311 for master teacher aid position. Flexible hours, $3.50 per hour.
Reliable baby sister needed at home day-care Part-time, very light work, minimum wage. Interested, call 842-2088.
For additional information and an interview, call 843.1192 and ask for Larry or Phil.
MISCELLANEOUS
65 pigs (O-temp) Cold; 11 fall, fed culture-effects, changes head body, B.T.R.M. heat-stimulation, incubation, cinder, sleep apart, Eden-like lifecycle, early intelligence, balance, take early play; art, calm, compost, compatible, controlled aggressions, physical behaviors at high temperatures, immune-disease, alimentic, panus (unapproach) survival mutilation, constant euphoria, constantly study conventional hogs. Temperature-stimulated definite longevity. When ADM syndrome (functional slaughter) occurs repeat culture
W T C S. The local battered woman's program is looking for a full-time community facilitator. Duties include grant writing, raising funding through grants and scholarships to battered women and their children. Women of color, formally battered women, and different types of battered women are available at Headquarters. Women Studies, Job Service Center, Haskell Health Center, or other sites. Applications must be postmarked by Dec. 31, 2015.
You are a student concerned about responsible behavior in the classroom. Come to the organizational meeting Wednesday November 30, 7:38 p.m. G. Level, K. University Call 614-866-406 for more information.
Chuck, Scooter, Benny, Baldo, Jr.: Three down.
How many more to go? Do you have an itch yet?
Honey Phoenix.
Yorkshire Tennis.
When I died on the cross, my love
4U would be the greatest love of all eternity.
These past 18 months are only a grain of sand!
Zachel B.
SPECIALTY CONSOLE
On Tvs, VC8s, VC10s, musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Visa/MC4 M.E.X. J Hawk Pawn & Jewelry.
1800 W 6th Floor
512-783-8900
Buddy. I missed you, ya big Goon! Get excited for Oklahoma. Let's make it unforgettable! Love you! The Big "W".
Kittens $ each. Light brown Tabby male. Black
Tabby male. Grey Tabby female: 942.6088
Alarm Lite it screens for help. Carry in pocket, purse for protection. Loud pressure makes it an excellent attention getting device. Excellent for camcorder. $95.9. P.O. Box 7146, Lawrence, KS.
PERSONAL
BUS. PERSONAL
KRIS - Thanks for the great time at formal!
Hopefully some day things will change. Love,
Todd
FALL Line Shi & Snowboard Tuning
Complete tuning & repair. Home pickup and delivery. Certified Tech. Call 842-502.
government. Photos, Passport, immigration,
viasing. Modeling, theatrical. Advanced fine art
portfolio. Slides can be a valuable asset to your
art future. Tern Neak 724k1.1611.
Pictol Grip Batchet Socket Screwdriver Set
Instal gun socket wrenches, AWL two slot with Phillips screwdriver Zipped gift box. Fifteen piece com-
mander kit. $95.99. P.O. Box 310,
Lawrence Ks.
SKI COLORADO $25/NITE FOR 1 Ten cyan boat
SKI GATES/WATER POOL $40/Aqua room,
games room/grepple, HBO pool, table, ana-
lysis room, lodge, cabin, ski lift
CREEK Creek MOUNTAIN LAKES LOCAL Lakes
Brockureascres, Grand Lake, COs,
Brookureascres
MAX U. HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
GIFTS
THE BEACH HOUSE
9 EAST 8TH LAWRENCE, KS
American Optometric
Dr. Jay J. Burlingame Optometry
Evening Hours
3111 west 6th
841-5288
Assocation Kansas Optometric Association
"Dedicated to Excellence in Vision Care"
-
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
HARPER
HARPER LAW OFFICES 1101 Mass., Suite 201, 749-0123
THE COMIC CORNER
NE corner of 23rd & iracl .841-4294
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
*The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Lawrence!
SERVICES OFFERED
K. U. INFORMATION CENTER 845-306. Campus, community events. University procedures. SUICIDE/CRISIS HELP, referrals. 24 lrs/day.
KOP PHOTOGRAPH SERVICES: Ekatachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT 80.00. Art & Design Building, Room 200. 844-7677.
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr, 843-9032
(p.m.)
matutor. Master's in call and six years teaching experience. Call Alex at 841-7661.
Parts and services for BMW, Motoguzzi
Harley Davidson motorcycles. We accept Visa
and Mastercard. B.C. Auto & Cycle, 315 N. 2nd,
841-6655.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park (313) 491-6878
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing
QUALITY TUTORING ECONOMICS
STATISTICS, MATHEMATICS. All levels. Call
Dennis 842-1055
Service your car before winter arrives with cooling system, tune up and heater checks. All makes and models. We accept Visa and MasterCard. B.C. Auto & Cycle. 315 N.2nd. 841-6655.
Students: add color to papers, projects, graphics,
drawings and reports with the only full color
copier on campus. Call 864-9244.
very experienced Spanish 104-216 tutor/translator. Results-oriented, systematic approach makes Forsand easier, even fun. 841-6574
Toyota Quality Service
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.
i derm W Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-263, days or evenings
2 Smart Typeeting. Dissertation. Thesis, Paper, Resumes and more. Spelling corrected and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts. Low typing prices. 749-2740.
842-4868 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm.
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses, dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates 841-9633
Winterization Special only $2995
ACT NOW : Papers, resumes, & cover letters
WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3469
WRITING LIFELEAP, 841-739-6599
Accurate, efficient typing experienced in term papers, theses, mice, IBM correcting Selective, spelling corrected. 843-8654
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary. $1.25 double-spaced pic page. East Lawrence. Mrs. Mattia 841-129
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location.
Reasonable rates. Ten years experience.
Call eavings before 10.749-1961.
MTM ABEWBROOK RESIDENTS - Word processing service available near you. APA format experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak, 843-6708.
EXPERT TYPING. Mary Daw 273-4119 In Topake Accurate professional word processing services. IBM letter quality printer.
- Drain cooling system and replace anti-freeze for protection to 20-30 degrees below zero
Call R.J.'s Typing Service 841-5942. Term Papers, Legal, Thesis, etc. No calls after 9 P.M.
**Computer Science Word Processing**
Dona's Quality Typing Word Processing
datasheets, dissertations, letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists.
Laser Print. Spelling corrected. 842-7247
for protection to 20-30 degrees below zero.
* Check all fluid levels.
- Check all fluid levels.
- Check battery and startle.
Expert Typist: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203.
IRON FENCE TYPING: 841-8583.
- Clean & inspect battery terminals/cables.
- Toyotas only
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum; 7291
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
*841-9223 or 841-2279*
Ellena Toyota 2300 W. 29th Terr.
THEWORDEROCTORS - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these, resumes, commercial, IBM-PC, MAC, DCP dandely wheel, dot matrix, laser. Since 1863.
***Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 8431-0111, Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday. Typing word processing on p.c. L-Pqr. Term papers, theses, dissertations, misc. Barb
TOYOTA QUALITY
WHO COULD ASK FOR ANYTHING MORE!
exp 12/31/88
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne. 842-7708.
WANTED
Female non-roommate roommate needed second semester to assume lease of two bedroom townhouse, $rent and utilities. On bus route. Call Liai 841-3532
Female roommate will share a 2 bedroom
age, starting Jan. 1. 1989. Village School Apt.
$177 per person + ½ utilizes. After Spen. Call
643-258-0878
Female roommate wanted second semester. Own large bedroom and bathroom. On campus. Call Jackie 843-8388
*emale roommate wanted, very nice two*
*edroom apartment completely furnished. $187 +
utilities.* 249.5206
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Female roommate needed for second semester.
Assume lease of private bedroom/bath/hall of 3-bedroom apartment. $y$ utilities, $170/month.
Bute room and pool. 842-492-8496.
LOOK- I must sublease my half of two bedroom apt. Rent only 814/month. Many amenities. 842 816 Hurry!
Female roommate for Dec 1st, to share townhouse, $135 per month + 4 utilities $641-742. House Share, Private Room, W & D, furnished, 1 bays from camp all the comforts of home,
Rosmire wanted Georgetown Apartments 8 FDR 609 a.m. - utilities 8 FDR 411-868-1686. Sublease 2 bedroom apartment. Great location 3 blocks from campus & close to downtown $13 a month.
Roommate will want to share a bedroom apartment. Sibileve available at 1, Deposit paid $150. Roommate will want to share a bedroom roommate. Need very convenient and modern apartment. On bus route 10-2 = electricity
Female roommate wanted IMMEDIATELY to share gorgeous Trailgate shop on KU bus route. Own room. Share bathroom w/ one room. $10-$15. utilities w/o Dc.租金: 789-3727.
o female or female roommate to save giant 2 BR apt. 1 bath, wash/dryer/pool, huge balcony, on bus route. $175/mo (negotiable). ½ utilities, Gary B. 841-607-663
- Policy
Spring Semester. quiet, studious roommate wants $145/month plus 3 utilities. B48-1626-126
Wanted: someone to provide night support for disabled man from 10 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. Mpa's only.
*(You must have internet access.)*
Spring roommate wanted. Eddingham, pool,
laundry, bus route 8210 plus ½ utilities. Call Alan
841-1564.
Words set in ALL Bold face count as 3 words
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Fence Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Bold Fonts count as 3 words
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00 for sale 500 help wanted
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THE EAR SIDE By GARY LARSON
THE FAR SIDE
1
11.28 Loren
© 1940 Coronado Features
"Hold still, Carl! . . . Don't . . . move . . . an . . . inch!"
14
Monday, November 28, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
STUDENT LOANS Faster Than A Speeding Bullet.
The First
BRAIN
Well, we wouldn't go that far, but we do promise speedy turnaround time on the processing of your student loan application. And thanks to our low guarantee fee and helpful loan staff, getting a loan at First National Bank doesn't require a superhuman effort.
So whether it's a PLUS, SLS or other type of loan, we can help you apply for and get the money you need simply and quickly.
Stop by today or call our Student Loan Department at
865-0278
We think you'll rate our services "super"!
The First
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE
Motor Bank, Ninth & Tennessee South Bank, 1807 West 23rd
Lawrence, RS 66044-0428 MEMBER DFC Equal Opportunity Lender
Can You Offer a Creative Contribution to Your Field?
Enter the Zenith Data Systems
MASTERS of INNOVATION COMPETITION
Win a $5.000* Zenith Computer System.
COMPUTER
We're searching for tomorrow's innovations.
If you've developed or used software or hardware—that is compatible with Zenith Data Systems products—to creatively address a problem or task in your field of study, we want to hear from you.
$10,000 worth of computer equipment for your college campus given in your name, and national recognition from your peers.
For More Information And Official Rules, Call 1-800-553-0301. Competition Ends March 1, 1989. Void Where Prohibited.
ZENITH
data systems
THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON*
Deer hunt planned by Navy protested
The Associated Press
Only people in wheelchairs are eligible for the hunt, which started Wednesday and could last until Dec. 11 at the Navy's Manchester Fuel Center in southeast Wetest of Seattle across the Puget Sound. Two deer were killed Saturday.
SEATTLE — About 85 animal welfare activists demonstrated Saturday against a bow-and-arrow deer season for hunters in wheelchairs, condaining as inhumane the hunt in a mostly fenced-in Navy yard.
Hart dabbling in big finance
The Navy said the deer have overpopulated the 234-acre enclosure and many died of starvation in recent years.
The activists walked in front of the main gate at Sandpoint Naval Station
DENVER — Gary Hart, the former Colorado senator and Democratic presidential candidate, is playing a quiet game in the big-stakes marketplace, helping foreign trade and investments.
in Seattle carrying sign reading, "Deer Today, Gone Tomorrow." "Bamb Watch Out," "How Deer You," "U.S. Navy Hold Your Fire." "The Deer Slaughter," and "Bow Hunting Tame Deer Inhumane."
One demonstrator was dressed in a deer costume pierced with a number of arrows, while another protester wore a brown form and carried a bow and arrows.
Mitchell Fox of the Progressive Animal Welfare Society, which organized the demonstration, said the deer were easy targets because it could scare people. Officials estimate 40 to 60 deer live inside the enclosed area.
Hart, who turns 52 today, has been spending about half of his time on the road.
Hart, who works for the prestigious Denver law firm of Davis, Graham & Stubbs, now spends much of his time with "a very large Taiwanese client." The client, he says, is a group of 27 billion dollars "that is looking at large investments in the United States.
The Associated Press
Advertise in the Kansan
Pumpkin Pie!
Free Samples!
Take us home for the Holidays
Louisiana Purchase
Shopping Center
843-5500
I Can Receive
YOGURT!
Please Please Pay
Pier 1 imports associate store
APlaceToDiscover:
738 Massachusetts
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Dec. 1 Douthart Scholarship
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Hall 6:30 p.m
The difference is you!
SAVE $75 AND WIN AT BodyShapes FITNESS CLUB
Register to win a GT-ALL TERRA mountain bike from GRANSPORT plus other prizes with every new Term memberships.
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Vol. 99, No. 64 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1869 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday November 29,1988
Arafat denied visa
U.N. may move session to Geneva for PLO
The Associated Press
UNITED NATIONS — Arab nations said yesterday that the U.N. General Assembly session would move to Geneva so PLO chief Yasser Wassan would attend the United States reverses itself within 48 hours and grants him a visa.
In Washington, the State Department said the U.S. decision to deny the visa was "firm and final." It gave reluctant consent to move the debate on Palestinian issues, scheduled to begin Thursday.
U. N. legal counsel Carl-August Fleischauer told a U.N. committee that the United States was violating the 1947 U.S.-U.N. Headquarters agreement to require the host country to grant visas to people invited by the United Nations.
"I am of the opinion that the host country was and is under an obligation to grant the visa request of the chairman of the executive committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization, an organization which has been
granted observer status by the General Assembly, *Fleischauer* said.
"The agreement does not contain a reservation of the right to bar the entry of those who represent, in the view of the host country, a threat to its sovereignty and security," the lawyer said.
Patricia Byrne, alternate U.S. representative, said the U.S. government disagreed with Fleischhauer's interpretation. She did not elaborate.
The U.N. Committee on Relations with the Host Country, which Fleischauer addressed, heard many speakers condemn the U.S. decision. The chairman, Ambassador Constantine Moushoutas of Cyprus, said in a summary of the "thematic majority" of leaders felt the United States had violated the Headquarters Agreement, but the committee took no action.
The Soviet Union and China, and U.S. allies Britain and France, told Moushoutas' committee that Arafat should allow to speak. Most
nations urged Washington to reconsider, saying the U.S. action was harming prospects for peace in the Middle East.
On Saturday the U.S. government barred Arafat on grounds of being an accessory to terrorism.
A senior U.N. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said a resolution probably would be submitted to the assembly shortly calling on Washington to reconsider its decision. He said a vote may be taken today.
If the United States still refuses to grant Arafat a visa, another resolution probably will call for moving the assembly to Geneva, he said.
Only Israel applauded the U.S. denial of a visa to Arafat. Other nations argued it violates the Headquarters Agreement. They said that it counters what they describe as the Israeli claim that its declaration of Palestinian independence that implicitly recognized Israel.
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Helping to collect money for the Salvation Army, Rodney Reinder takes time out to play with Matthew Dick, age 5. The collection, sponsored by Hallmark Inc., will be used to purchase food for local people in need. Sherry Dowaia, Lawrence resident, was dressed as Rodney yesterday at Wal-Mart, 2727 Iowa St.
Rowdy reindeer
Aid program to help many who were ineligible before
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
A new loan program at the University of Kansas can help parents who might have been able to save enough money for their children's education but didn't.
Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, said last week that up to $2,000 from a Parent Assistance Loan from United Student Aid Funds, Inc., in Indianapolis, Ind., would be available as soon as next semester to students whose parents already have the Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students (PUJS).
To be eligible for the loan, parents must first get a PLUS loan, Weinberg said. Then they must send a credit application to USA Funds. The company does a credit check.
GRIT CHECK. KU's responsibility is to ensure that the student has a minimum grade point average of 2.0 and a need for the additional aid.
the auditorium
The loan's interest rate is tied to that of the PLUS, which is now at 10.45 percent. The interest rate is reevaluated yearly on June 30.
The loans would help solve the problem of some students who did not receive much financial aid because of good financial statements from parents, he said.
Weinberg said that the interest rate, which was low compared with a 21 percent rate for some other educational loans, was projected to stay between 10 and 11 percent.
But those parents frequently do not save enough money to send their children to college because they decide to spend it in other ways to make their families comfortable, such as a nice house or a car. Weinberg
wemberg said that the financial aid office had been aware of the problem for several years because it heard from parents during one-on-one financial aid meetings during summer orientation.
"We've known that there's this group of students who has been denied financial aid because of some special circumstances."
Weinberg said that ability of the parent loan to satisfy the financial needs of non-resident students was diminishing.
"That $4,000 has become smaller and smaller over the years," he said.
He said that this loan also would help students who study abroad, where the value of the dollar is shrinking, and resident students may become more interested as school-related costs continue to rise.
"We have a flexibility to adjust for future circumstances we can't even guess about." Weinberg said
situations we can use for gather data.
For instance, Weinberg said, the loan could be used to purchase a computer or cover any other education-related costs in the future.
KU has the power to make adjustments to the assistance loan program, so it will be able to make important changes if necessary. However, this ability, and the loan program itself, did not come easily.
$95 million donated to KU Campaign Kansas nearing its five-year goal
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
A $1 million donation from the Southwestern Bell Foundation has pushed commitments to Campaign Kansas to more than $95 million, on schedule to reach its goal of $150 million in five years, campaign officials said recently.
"We're right on target," said Jim Martin, executive vice president of the Kansas University Endowment and charge of the campaign's fund raising.
Campaign Kansas was launched publicly in May with $76.4 million already committed to the $150 million goal. With the campaign in its second year, more than $65 million has been pledged to the campaign.
"I feel extremely positive as to where we are and about the status of our country," he said, "and national campaign chairman and director of Fourth Financial Corp., in
Wichita. "We have identified people who have the interest and ability to participate at higher levels of support."
One of those participants is Southwestern Bell, which announced a $1 million donation Nov. 22 to create two endowed professorships, one each in the schools of engineering and business. The $1 million will be paid in five yearly installments of $200,000 beginning in 1989.
"Education has always been one of our focus areas," said Alice Antoos, Southwestern Bell's district manager for media relations. "Anything we can do to better education helps Kansas."
Aanstoos said quality education would attract new business to Kansas and would ensure a well-educated work force.
Martin said the campaign was concentrating on leadership and major gifts, such as the Southwestern Bell donation. Leadership gifts
are $500,000 and above, and major gifts are $100,000 to $500,000.
"As we go along, there will be an opportunity for every alumnus to be a part of Campaign Kansas. That includes those who are in a position to give $10 or $25 or $50." Martin said.
Martin said the campaign was scheduled for five years and that the goal could increase.
"It would be a pleasant problem to discover we were doing well and look at revising the goal upward," he said.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig also said he was confident that the campaign would reach its goal.
"It is apparent that alumni and friend's continue to believe in the institution's future." Budig said.
"The efforts will enhance our academic standing, and we will be able to attract and retain able graduate and undergraduate students and attract and retain the very best faculty."
Lawsuit over census planned
By Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
The Douglas County Commission passed a resolution yesterday outlining the steps it will take in suing the state of Kansas over the state census figures.
The commission is planning to file both a state and federal case tomorrow over state census figures that
According to the resolution, the commission will participate in and finance up to one-fifth of the amount of a lawsuit challenging the 1988 state census figures and the constitutional amendment on which they are based.
To combat this, the resolution stated that the census showed a substantial reduction in the populations of Lawrence and Douglas County. The commission said the census takers didn't count students and military personnel, which led to the undercount in the area.
The final census figures pegged Douglas County at 59,441 and Lawrence at 44,980.
The census battle is an attempt to save Lawrence's representation in the state Legislature. If the census figures are recognized, the Lawrence area could lose a state representative, said Chris McKenzie, county administrator.
The commission has appropriated up to $4,000 for the lawsuit and will ask other groups to join in the lawsuit.
The Lawrence law firm of Riling, Norwood, Burkhead, Fairchild and Nitcher will handle the case. Patti Hackney, the assistant county counselor, said the lawsuit would be filed by five main entities.
Hackney said those include Leavenworth County, Riley County, Douglas County and the city of Manhattan. The Lawrence City Commission will vote tonight whether to join the lawsuit.
John Reinhart, press secretary for Secretary of State Bill Gravas, said that they expected the lawsuit.
"We have anticipated this," Reinhardt said. "We'll sit down with the attorney general and prepare our legal defense. Many of our programs have been geared in this direction. But we aren't sure what they want. Are they attacking the way we conducted the census? Are they attacking the law?"
The original request to reconsider the figures came from state Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence; state Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence; and state Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence.
Undergrads request better parking board representation
By Mark Fagan Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Bill Moseley said that even though he was a student, he could see the issue of parking at the University of Kansas from other perspectives.
sity community.
"We could have been a lot more radical, like asking for student parking in the center of campus," said Moseley, Lawrence sophmore. "But that's not what we looked at. We tried to make it as unbiased as possible. We just don't feel the students are getting as fair of a deal as they could."
Moseley, chairman of the undergraduate student subcommittee on parking and coauthor of its report to the parking board, said that his report considered the entire University community.
Morris Faiman, chairman of the parking board, created six subcommittees this fall. Each subcommittee was to examine KU parking as it related to its constituency
most of the subcommittee reports were submitted to Faiman last week, and all will be distributed to parking board members at their meeting tomorrow morning.
and undergraduate students and medical patients.
participate. The subcommittees represent faculty, unclassified and classified staff, graduate
The reports will be incorporated in the board's recommendations to the University Board.
The student report, put together by a committee of 12 students, was the first submitted to Faiman.
"It's totally inappropriate," he said. "It's an unofficial document. It’s merely a work of fiction."
Fainam would not comment on the contents of the student report.
- parking board philosophy. The report contends that the board has no formal philosophy, which hampers proper decision-making.
Several issues included in the document are:
student representation on the board. The
report calls for six students on the board, to more accurately reflect the percentage of campus workers who are students.
■ allocation of spaces in the new parking garage. The report says that students, faculty, staff and visitors should all have the opportunity to purchase guaranteed parking. ■ yellow permit purchases. The report says faculty and staff should not be allowed to purchase "student" permits.
purpose, support or promotion
Moseley said the philosophy of the parking
board, or lack of one, was the most important
part of the subcommittee's report.
"Until the parking board can come up with a basic philosophy, they really cannot make decisions with some goal as an end," he said. "They can only make random decisions."
The report said the board lacked a "sense of direction" because it was "inherently biased, through its structure, toward the concerns of faculty and staff members."
The report cited a recent example of board bias: the rezoning of part of lot 62, Sunnyside Avenue and Illinois Street, from a yellow
zone to a red zone. This summer, the board changed the designation to make up for the loss blue and red spaces caused by construction of the Robert Dole Human Development Center.
Yellow zone users, mostly students, lost 74 spaces ant were not properly compensated.
Students still are underrepresented on the parking board, the report said. Three of 10 board members are students.
The report proposes increasing student representatives from three to six, which would make it a 13-member board.
The board voted to change lot 62 back to yellow after studies by parking services showed lack of use by blue and red permit holders.
The report said that students accounted for 76.8 percent of all parking permits sold, and provided 56.1 percent of the revenue, yet received only 30 percent of membership on the board. Faculty and staff, meanwhile, have seven board members.
Allocation of spaces in the new 776-stall parking garage, now under construction north of Allen Field House, should accommodate all parking groups at KU, the report said.
"On the bond itself it says that parking needs to be provided for students, faculty, staff and visitors." Moseley said.
The $4.4 million garage is financed by the revenue bonds and should be finished by next
he said his subcommittee supported a proposal from Don Kearns, director of parking services, that would allow students, faculty and staff to purchase guaranteed parking in the garage, while some spaces would be set aside for visitors.
Another concern in the report is the purchasing of yellow permits. The report proposes limiting purchases to students, in combination with barring blue and red permits from yellow zones. At present, students, faculty and staff all can purchase yellow permits, which cost $40 a year.
---
2
Tuesday, November 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
Still in the refrigerator
Sun
Low: 26°
Cloudy skies this morning will give way to bright sunshine this afternoon as our high reaches 45 degrees. Tonight, expect clear skies and a frigid low of 28 degrees.
North Platte
40/18
Light snow ending
Omaha
40/24
Light snow ending
Goodland
43/21
Sunny
Salina
44/25
Clearing
Topake
45/23
Clearing
Kansas City
40/28
Cloudy
Columbia
45/29
Cloudy
St. Louis
46/30
Cloudy
Dodge City
46/27
Sunny
Wichita
46/26
Sunny
Chanute
45/27
Clearing
Springfield
46/31
Sunny
Force by Brent Shaw
Temperature are today's high and tonight's low
5-Day
Sunday
wednesday
Sunny
46/21
HIGH LOW
Thursday
Partly sunny
45/30
Friday
Ch. of rain/
snow late P.M.
50/32
Saturday
Light snow ending
41/21
Sunday
Sunny
45/23
The nation
Seattle 51/41
H Denver 44/20 Chicago 40/26 New York 44/34
Los Angeles 75/48 Phoenix 71/41 Dallas 57/37
Frontier code included warm stationary Miami 76/64
David Shulenburger has been named as a new associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, Del Brinkman, vice chancellor for academic affairs, announced yesterday.
New associate vice chancellor for academic affairs is named
Shulenburger said the business school would conduct a search to find someone to replace him and that he was not replacing anyone in academic affairs.
By a Kansan reporter
shulenburger, professor of business and associate dean for academic affairs in the business school, will begin the job Jan. 2.
"This is a new position in the office," he said.
Brinkman said Shulenburger's main responsibilities would be in
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"That's the one thing at the University that really excites me," he said. "UW's whole reputation as Harvard on our campuses on good undergraduation education."
Maranatha Campus Ministry will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
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Reflections
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 29, 1988
Campus/Area
3
Prof studies AIDS volunteers
Motivations for working with terminally ill examined at KU
A.
Allen Omoto, assistant professor of psychology, reads through a book on AIDS. Omoto is doing research on people who volunteer to work with AIDS patients.
By Grace Hobson Kansan staff writer
A KU professor has added a new twist to AIDS research by studying something less talked about — AIDS volunteers.
Alen Omito, assistant professor of psychology, is working with the University of Minnesota to discover what motivates a person to study. He asked his background in social psychology helped spur the research.
"AIDS is clearly a very important issue," he said. "People would like to think about it, but an attempt in any way to ameliorate the epidemic."
Oromo and a group of KU undergraduate and graduate students have been testing students and AIDS volunteers to learn why people are at risk and people attitudes are concerning volunteering and AIDS victims.
This is Omoto's first semester doing the research at the University of Kansas. He started it when he was a doctoral candidate in Minnesota. A one-year, $50,000 grant from the American Foundation for AIDS Research financed Omoto's research.
Omoto's research involves three stages: the motivations for volunteering, the experience of volunteering and the personal consequences of volunteering. The group is currently completing the first stage and is gearing up to
research actual volunteers.
David E. Peterson, Arkansas City junior, a member of Omoto's research team, said that the research had long-lasting implications.
Omoto said there were many applicable implications of their research. For example, by tracking the motivations of volunteers, organizations can use the information to appeal to potential volunteers.
"It's very important to study volunteers who work with AIDS." Peterson said. "We must study the effects of volunteering with particular attention to how to get more people involved."
One study the group did to understand the attitudes and motivations of the volunteers involved giving students a profile of a terminally ill patient. Half of the group was told the patient had cancer, and the other half was told the patient had AIDS.
The researchers then monitored the study's participants' responses to the patient. Whether the patient had cancer or AIDS did make a difference in students' attitudes about volunteering with the patient, Omoa said.
The study dealt with a common problem facing AIDS victims as well as AIDS volunteers. The study also found that hurdle society must overcome in battling the epidemic and caring for its victims, Omoata said.
Donating blood to yourself reduces risks
By Terry Buroth Kansan staff writer
Although the nation's blood supply is becoming increasingly free from the AIDS virus and other infectious diseases, blood bank officials still recommend precautions for people planning to have surgery.
whenever you have known or elective surgery, you should donate your own blood if blood is going to be needed in surgery; "I want to see who chair medical officer at the American Red Cross in Wichita.
Peggy Brown, supervisor of the blood bank at University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., said there was an increased
interest in self-donation all over the region.
"There should be more interest in self-donation because it is the safest way to go." Brown said.
Self-donations have to be approved by the physician, but that is usually not a problem, she said. Patients have an input and should discuss how they feel about a transfusion with their physician.
Palko said, "Transfusions will never be 100 percent safe. But the safest blood is that donated by oneself for oneself."
In the United States, the chance of being infected with AIDS through the transfusion of a single unit of blood, Palko said, ranges from one in 40,000 to one in a
million, depending on the region.
He said that the Midwest region fell into the one in a million category because AIDS was not as severe there as on the East and West coasts.
"The first thing you have to remember is that a transfusion has a lot of risks involved with it, but AIDS is not one of them," Palko said. "The risk is with non A-non B hepatitis."
The chance of contracting non A-non B hepatitis through the transfusion of a single unit of blood is not said, and that risk is nationwide.
Kalen Larson, assistant director at the American Red Cross in
Wichita, said that it was almost impossible to get AIDS from a transfusion because blood banks had been screening blood donations for AIDS antibodies.
"Douglas County has been testing for AIDS antibody since March 1985. We have tested more than 300,000 pints of blood and we have had fewer than 20 confirmed positive with AIDS antibody results," Larson said.
Palko said that blood donations were down at blood banks in the Midwest because of the losses from testing and because people thought incorrectly that AIDS can be contracted by donating blood.
Couples trying marraige on for size Poll indicates most people under 30 approve of cohabitation
By Craig Welch Kansan staff writer
Most college-age people approve on living with a person of the opposite sex, according to a poll released last week.
In fact, the Gallup poll said that about 62 percent of people between the ages of 18-29 approved of cohabitation.
Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, said the poll was probably an accurate reflection of the opinions students at the University of Kansas.
However, he said the effectiveness of combustion could not easily be detected.
"It depends on the reasons the people got together," he said. "Some get together for sex, some get together for convenience and some
get together to try out marriage. Some times it works, some times it doesn't.
"However, when half of all marriages go down the toilet, it should be no surprise that some of these relationships don't work."
Dailey said one of the problems often involved in cohabitation was a lack of commitment. People who get together experimentally, with no future commitment, tend to run into problems.
Tony Younger and Stacy Whitaker, both Overland Park seniors, have been sharing a one-bedroom apartMENT beginning of the 1988-89 school year.
"It was basically for convenience," Younger said. "We could spend more quality time together without having to arrange our sched-
utes around roommates. Now, we are free to do whatever we want, whenever we want.
Younger's schooling is being paid for through a trust fund and Whitaker's parents help her financially. The parents found the arrangement acceptable.
"Her parents actually encouraged it," Younger said. "They felt she'd be safer with me than with three other girls."
"It was also the only opportunity we'd have to live together while someone else was footing the bill."
However, Younger said the two didn't move in together for a trial run at matrimony.
But Whitaker said moving in together had strengthened rather than strained their relationship. They are both more confident about
Whitaker said the only thing she missed was being able to talk regularly with her best friend.
"We've been very fortunate"
Witkeraid said. "We don't have many
problems."
"My best girl friend is married now," she said. "But that's okay because Tony is my best friend now. I like to be comfortable and be myself with him."
the prospect of marriage because o. the past few months.
But Whitaker said she would not necessarily recommend this type of living arrangement for other couples.
"It depends on the couple," she said. "If you fight often, living together could make it 10 times worse."
University hires athletic auditor
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
The University of Kansas has hired a 1984 KU graduate, effective Dec. 1, as an administrative assistant and in the Kansas athletic department.
Janiele Martin, the new auditor, and Richard Konzem, athletic director, will work together to NCAA and Big Eight rules.
In addition, Konzerm said Martin's responsibilities would include administering financial aid to student creditors in the security and filling out compliance forms.
"She will audit travel reports to make sure that we are in compliance with NCAA rules in recruiting." Konzem said. "She will talk to our coaches and make sure they know how long a recruit can visit the University and during what time periods of the year and also what recruiting expenses can or cannot be paid."
Martin has worked for the past three years as an assistant sports information director at Northern Illinois University.
Konzem said Martin was hired because she was familiar with the University's athletic department, having worked as a student assistant in the sports information department at Williams Fund as an undergraduate.
"One of the things we were looking for was somebody who was familiar with NCAA and Big Eight rules and with the history of the University," Konzem said. "Janelle
Konzem said the University had always had a strong compliance program from a financial standpoint, but when Pat Collinson retired in June after 15 years of service, the university decided to expand the duties of the auditor.
qualifies in all areas."
He also said that the NCAA investigation of the men's basketball program prompted the University to improve the auditor position.
Konzem said the ever-growing complexity of the NCAA rule book was one reason that a rules auditor was needed.
"We got word of the inquiry and during our part of the investigation we cited that this area could be improved," Konzem said. "We decided to redefine the position and get the best use out of it as possible."
"You have some rules that are excellent in intent and are worded clearly. Others are excellent in intent, but it is difficult to understand," he said.
Konzem said the new NCAA rule book, which will be voted on in January, appears easier to read and better organized than past rule
Konzem said he was confident that Martin would help to reduce the chance of future NCAA rules violations.
"I think it will help us to do a better job in educating the coaches about the rules," Konzem said. "It will also help us in the enforcement part of the program. This coach has broken a rule, we should be able to catch it immediately."
KU student raped
Schuyler Bailey, KU police community services sergeant, said the victim was riding a moped eastbound on Sunnyside Avenue at about 11:15 p.m. when she heard the suspect calling for help. She parked the moped and walked down the steps east of Robinson, approached the suspect, whose back was turned to her, and asked what was wrong.
By Jay A. Cohen Kansan staff writer
The suspect said he hurt his ankle. When the victim came closer, the suspect, who was wearing a ski mask, turned and grabbed her by the throat and dragged the victim into some bushes. Bailey said.
foot, walking south.
Bailey said the suspect raped the woman and made small cuts on her chest and face with an unidentified sharp object. The suspect then left on
A 21-year-old female KU student was raped late Wednesday near the east side of Robinson Center. KU police said.
The victim then went to a friend's house and contacted the police. She then went to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where she was treated and released, Bailey said.
The suspect was described as a white male, about 5-foot-7, of medium build, about "college age." He was wearing blue jeans, a blue denim jacket and tennis shoes and a dark colored ski mask.
Bailey said no arrest had been made in the incident was still under investigation.
He said police had no reason to believe this incident was connected with other sexual assaults on campus.
According to KU police statistics, there were no rapes reported in 1987, three in 1986, one in 1985 and two in 1984.
This was the third rape reported on campus in 1988. One of those reports was later determined not to have been a rape, Bailey said.
Lawrence man charged with biting woman during church
During the week 82.3% of KU students read The Kansan
By a Kansan reporter
A 29-year-old Lawrence man accused of biting a woman during services at a Lawrence church Friday night pleaded not guilty to misdemeaneur counts of battery and criminal damage to property in Douglas County District Court yesterday.
Larry E. Tubbs, 1318 E. 25th Terrace, was arrested Sunday morning, according to jail records.
Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said that the incident occurred Friday evening at the second Christian Church, 1245 Connecticut St.
Mulvenon said that Tubbs apparently became unruly during services and when the 45-year-old victim attempted to intervene, Tubbs allegedly tore her dress and bit her on the abdomen and the left leg.
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4
Tuesday, November 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Palestine Liberation Organization recently took an encouraging step toward peace in the Middle East, even though peace wasn't its only motive.
PLO's recognition of Israel isn't perfect, but it's a start
peace wasn't its only motive. On Nov. 15 the PLO accepted United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 which implicitly recognizes Israel's right to exist. This is important because the PLO's refusal to recognize Israel has been a barrier to negotiations for a Palestinian homeland for decades. The resolution, which originally would have helped to provide both Israel and Palestine with a state, was rejected by Palestinians in 1948.
However, the PLO released another statement on Nov. 15, that cheaped the sincerity of the acceptance of the resolution. It declared Palestinian independence and claimed the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as a Palestinian state.
The Israeli and U.S. governments stated that the PLO was too tame about Israeli recognition and that the PLO has not rejected and separated itself fully from terrorism. In fact, the U.S. government denied PLO leader Yassir Arafat a visa request because of his organization's links to terrorism against U.S. citizens.
The United States and Israel have rejected the recognition of Israel and the declaration of independence because they saw the moves as attempts to put Israel on the defensive and to gain international support without actually conceding anything to Israel. They say the PLO recognized Israel only to soften opposition to the declaration of independence, not as a true move toward peace.
But despite its motives, the PLO recognition of Israel is a move that shouldn't be ignored. Violence and bloodshed have continued too long. The Palestinian uprisings during the past year have shown that the homeland problem must be dealt with soon. The PLO at least has begun to move toward negotiations.
Julie McMahon for the editorial board
Pakistan and the bomb
Signing a treaty to reduce nuclear weapons in the United States and Soviet Union was a step in the right direction for the leaders of those two countries.
But recently published reports saying Pakistan now has the capability to produce nuclear weapons takes the whole world a step back.
step back.
The arms race that the United States and the Soviet Union started years ago set the example, and other countries have followed. Three other countries — China, France and Great Britain — admit they can make nuclear weapons. Several others, including Israel and South Africa, are suspected of having that capability. Now that Pakistan apparently has joined the ranks there is even more cause for concern.
India, which also is believed to be able to build nuclear weapons, and Pakistan have fought three wars in the 41 years since they were created by the separation of colonial India from Britain. The unpeaceful history of the two countries creates apprehension about what would happen should they become involved in another war.
become involved in an attack. The United States has a special interest in the situation because of the aid it sends to the region. U.S. officials are pushing Pakistan not to develop nuclear weapons.
But it is hypocritical for the United States to tell Pakistan to not have nuclear weapons when the United States has a surplus. This is like a parent telling a child to "do as I say, not as I do."
The United States cannot tell Pakistan to do what the United States would not do itself. The treaty signed by Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev is a good start, but both countries have to do more.
to do more. If the United States truly expects Pakistan to eliminate their weapons, it should set an example by actions. And other countries should follow that example.
A dramatic decrease in nuclear weapons by the countries that set the example in the first place may cause other countries to do the same. And any decrease in nuclear weapons increases the chances of survival for the whole world.
Julie Adam for the editorial board
The editorial board consists of Michael Merschel, Mark Tilford, Todd Cohen, Michael Horak, Julie Adam, Julie McMahon, Christine Martin, Tony Balandran and Muktha Jost.
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jesk ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Ebm ... General manager, news advisor
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Drake Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Contract sales manager
Linda Prokop...National sales manager
Kurt Messeruth...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhard...Production manager
Michelle Garland...Assist. production manager
Leisha Lohnman...Classified manager
Janne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
faculty or start post.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The
images will also be photographed.
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The University Daily Kanan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Sheraton Finst Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, 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. 66044 subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the University Daily Kanan, 118
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WE RECOGNIZE ISRAEL'S RIGHT TO EXIT
I'M SURE HE MEANT TO SAY "EXIST"...
MUST BE A TYPE...
-PLO
The EXPERTS
WISHFUL THINKING IN THE MIDDLE EAST.
A spreading crisis for the whole nation
Peanut butter and jelly a dangerous combination - when they share the same jar
I'm worried about my children.
For well known people:
Before those who know me start fainting in clusters, let me qualify that statement. I don't have any vet.
SHAWN SMITH
have any yet.
And I don't plan to for a while, though procreation is on my list of things to do. I remember writing it on the schedule just last year. It's somewhere after my next political science exam, graduation and — call me old-fashioned — marriage, but before buying the retirement condo in Tampa.
ships.
But now I may forget about the whole thing.
But now I may forget about the whole thing. I've never worried much about the gloom-and-doom predictions put out by some members of our society. Cries that future generations will be living on top of garbage dumps using welfare money to service the national debt and cleaning up after a nuclear holocaust while watching the oceans rise from melting icecaps in their spare time don't move me. I'll worry about those problems enough during my own lifetime.
during my own experience.
Besides, who cares if our kids have rotten lives?
It's better to have lived and lost than never to have lived at all right?
lived at an upper right.
I believed that until a few weekends ago. Then I came face-to-face with my children's oppressor, and it stared me down.
It was not a corporation. It was not a disaster, an epidemic or a government gone amok.
Derek Schmidt
pleasure of a governmental person.
It was peanut butter and jelly; mixed
Nestled innocently between the Smucker's and the Peter Pan, its purple label hardly betrayed the fiend lurking so near. It glared at me from a
Staff columnist
supermarket shelf right here in Lawrence
resembling Aqua-Fresh in a jar, it had alternating swirls of peanut butter and grape jelly. Nauseating.
I shuddered. If the thing could have spoken, it would have mocked me.
"Quiver, you oaf," it would have shrieked. "I am the future and you cannot stop me.
"And never again will children struggle to find just the right balance between the peanut butter and the jelly because I control all proportion. I think for them, and they'll never know it. I am Big Brother in a spread."
"No more will Mr. Rogers teach children how to create sandwiches. Neither will Sesame Street. Now I have that power."
Eighteen ounces of pure evil.
Eighty-seven inches.
As I pondered the jar's message, I looked around the supermarket. The process had begun already. Pre-baked pies, ready-to-heat breaded fish, individually wrapped Twinkies and ready-to-spread frosting surrounded me.
I wondered how many of us could bake a chocolate cake from scratch. I mean really from
scratch — wheat, eggs straight from the chicken,
cocoa beans, milk warm from the udder, butter
churned from that milk, unprocessed water and
some sugar cane for sweetening?
I couldn't
Of course, processing and distributing such commodities is what society is all about. Wisely we have learned to simplify most of life's processes.
But mixing our peanut butter and jelly is going too far.
If we don't take a stand, a pre-fab disaster will overtake us. Expect pre-assembled Lego kits or already-completed jigsaw puzzles. Christmas will lose its flavor as toys arrive without assistance; require replacement to fall behind politically as young Rockwells start out on pre-colored paint-by-number sets.
Even the kitchen is no longer sacred. Soon we'll see pre-mustard bread, pre-ketuped french fries and pre-brewed coffee in gallon jugs. Pre-milked cereal can't be far behind.
There is no right more fundamental than the right to build one's own peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich. Except the right to mess up trying.
Only child doesn't decrease no less.
Our children deserve it too.
I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me individual ingredients or give me something else to eat.
Derek Schmidt is an Independence junior majoring in journalism.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
This letter is in response to Tony Balandran's Nov. 18 editorial concerning Student Senate funding for the KU Space Program. He states that "an attempt as noteworthy as space experimentation is surely as important as (the International Association of Students in Economics and Commerce, (AIESEC))."
Editorial careless
is Balandran aware that AIESEC is the world's largest, totally student-run organization? Is he aware that we are open to students in all fields of study, not just economics and business? Does he know that we work closely with business and community leaders when marketing our reciprocal international internship exchange program, and that 6,000 students are exchanged annually through this program? Finally, does he know that AIESEC was founded after World War II in hopes of averting another world war and that our goal is international
by grouping AIESEC with the University Dance Club and the KU Sailing Club, Balandran gives readers the impression that we are merely a social group, when in fact he lacks any understanding of AIESEC.
cooperation and understanding? Believe it or not, most people would consider AIESEC just as noteworthy as space exploration, if not more so.
noteworthy as space exploits. Although the arguments in favor of the KU Space Program are well taken, the thoughtless grasping of organizations to group together was abusive, flagrant and insulting. In the future I hope the editorial board is more careful when writing editorials that concern student organizations such as AIESEC.
Tim Damewood Marketing director AIESEC-Kansas
Denial of funds correct
Tony Balandran assumed an informed position when he wrote his editorial Nov. 18. Unfortunately, his commentary reflected his true ignorance of the situation regarding the $10.393 request by the KU Space Club. As a member of the finance committee who voted against this request, I would like to offer the analysis that substantiates that decision.
I would first like to concur that the three-point analysis offered by Paul Leader, Finance Committee co-chairman, does have some flaws. The Senate's insatiable appetite to appropriate a high percentage of the unallocated account early in the semester should be faulted. Lack of funds is not the fault of the KU Space Club.
rules is not the objection that the group
Furthermore, the objection that the group
does not represent a broad base of students
represents a minor "check" that should be used
to ensure that the broadest range of KU students benefit from the activity fee. Although I do agree that this should be a consideration, I do not believe it can be offered as a substantive reason to reject such a request.
My agreement with the editorial ends at this point. Before it appropriates money to any group, the finance committee, by its very nature, must ensure the fiscal prudence of the group. The space club, beyond the shadow of a doubt, showed that it possessed little, if any, fiscal management ability.
In attempting to deceive the committee, the group passed out a petition requesting support and proceeded to identify it as a membership petition. Another example of their puerile behavior.
When group members were questioned as to why several major capital expenditures, totaling in excess of $5,000, were not requested during the budget hearings in the spring, their collective response was "I guess we weren't aware that they were necessary."
If this project was truly regarded with the importance that the editorial board would have us believe, a much more thorough study of the necessary costs would have been conducted. The finance committee should not be faulted because the Space Club overextended itself.
Not only was the committee right in rejecting this request, but it also exercised a responsibility it has to the students at the University of Kansas.
Jamie E. Elmore Lenexa junior
BLOOM COUNTY
HAD AN
ILLEGAL NOSE
LIPOSUCTION!
OPUS
DID
WHAT?!
SOME BLACK MARKET
QUACK SURGICALLY
VACUUMED HIS SHNOZ
FAT RIGHT OUTTA
HIM!!
by Berke Breathed
AT THE MOMENT.
HE IS NOT FEELING
UP TO SNUFF...
SPEAKING OF SNUFF.
CAN YOU EVEN INHALE THROUGH THAT THING?
SNORTPH!
SNORPHE!
SNOPTH!!
NO.
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 29, 1988
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6 Kansas City firemen missing after early morning explosion
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Authorities say six firemen are missing and unaccounted for following two explosions at a quarry or construction site on the southern edge of Kansas City shortly after 4 a.m. today
Fire Department spokesman Harold Knabe said the firemen had been fighting a blaze in a truck when the explosions occurred. The first blast, Knabe said, involved an estimated 30,000 pounds of ammonia nitrate and about 20 minutes later there was a second explosion that involved about 15,000 pounds of ammonia nitrate.
Authorities said windows have been blown out of homes and
businesses over a wide area.
Roger Ware, manager of a service station in the neighborhood, said the first blast "lifted my cash register about three inches off the counter. It knocked a lot of merchandise over or off my shelves."
Power was knocked out in the area for about one hour.
Several residents said the explosions almost lifted them out of their beds.
Early reports indicated the fire department had been called to fight a fire in a truck of some kind at the site. A second pumper truck was dispatched to the scene and was involved in fighting the fire when the explosions occurred.
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Orders accepted from November 1 to December 7,1988.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 29, 1988
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208 Robinson 840-3546
6 Kansas City firemen missing after early morning explosion
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Authorities say six firemen are missing and unaccounted for following two explosions at a quarry or construction site on the southern edge of Kansas City shortly after 4 a.m. today
Fire Department spokesman Harold Knabe said the firemen had been fighting a blaze in a truck when the explosions occurred. The first blast, Knabe said, involved an estimated 30,000 pounds of ammonia nitrate and about 20 minutes later there was a second explosion that involved about 15,000 pounds of ammonia nitrate.
Authorities said windows have been blown out of homes and
businesses over a wide area
Roger Ware, manager of a service station in the neighborhood, said the first blast "lifted my cash register about three inches on the counter. It knocked a lot of merchandise over or off my shelves."
Power was knocked out in the area for about one hour.
Early reports indicated the fire department had been called to fight a fire in a truck of some kind at the site. A second pumper truck was dispatched to the scene and was involved in fighting the fire when the explosions occurred.
Several residents said the explosions almost lifted them out of their beds.
843-6282
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No. 2786100
Congratulations!
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Payment should be in the form of Certified or Cashier's check, made payable to
"IBM Corporation"
Credit Card (IBM Credit Card, Mastercard, VISA, Diner Club, or American Express). Split payment will not be accepted between credit card and cash payment.
ABOUT FINANCING!
Loan Assistance
If you are a student interested in financing a Personal System/2, contact the Financial Aid Office today. 26 Strong Hall.
IBM Credit Card An application for the IBM Credit Card (for students, faculty and staff) is available in the Jayhawk Bookstore.
IBM
The Bigger Picture.
THE CORPORATION 1988
$ \textcircled{2} $ IBM CORPORATION 1988
IBM and Personal System/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation
6
Tuesday, November 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Nation/World
TORNADOES STRIKE NORTH CAROLINA:
TORNADOES STRIKE NORTH CAROLINA:
Tornadoes struck without warning yesterday morning in Raleigh, N.C., smashing homes, churches and a K-mart before heading into rural areas. Four people were killed and at least 151 injured. About 500 people were left homeless and more than 6,500 houses were without electricity for several hours.
News Roundup
FITZWATER WILL CONTINUE AS SPOKES-MAN: President-elect George Bush announced yesterday that Marlin Fitzwater, President Reagan's spokesman for the past two years, would continue in his job. Transition sources said they expect the naming of former Sen. John
Tower as defense secretary and Texas oilman Robert Mosbacher as commerce secretary this week.
SOVIETS ENDORSE CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES: The Soviet Communist Party Central Committee endorsed constitutional changes yesterday. Critics say that these changes give the Kremlin too much power. The endorsement sets the stage for approval despite the objection of several Soviet republics.
COUNTDOWN CLOCK SET FOR ATLANTIS:
NASA set an invisible countdown clock in motion yesterday for Thursday's launch of
space shuttle Atlantis with five military men who reportedly will deploy the $500 million Lacrosse satellite to spy on the Soviet Union. The flight and cargo have been called top secret, but reports have circulated widely about the satellite.
BETHLEHEM CANCELS CHRISTMAS CELEBRATION: The Palestinian town of Bethlehem, where Christ was born, has canceled its traditional Christmas celebrations in solidarity with the yearlong revolt against Israeli occupation. Cancellation would be a blow to Israel at a time when much of the world focuses its attention on Bethlehem.
OPEC limits output
The Associated Press
VIENNA, Austria — OPEC oil ministers ended nearly two weeks of tense discussions yesterday with a formal agreement to limit production and pump prices back toward the cartel's benchmark of $18 a barrel.
But before the day was out, one oil minister indicated his new quota was not official, causing prices to back off after a sharp runup.
The accord, which ended the winter meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, set
an output ceiling of 18.5 million barrels a day for the 13 OPEC members well under the 22.5 million barrels they mainly pump the cartel is currently pumping.
The agreement also resolved a key issue in the talks by giving former combatants Iran and Iraq equal quotas of 2.64 million barrels a day.
After the agreement was announced, futures prices for West Texas Intermediate, a major U.S. stock, are as high as $15.00 dollars a barrel.
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at 15th-16th & Kentucky. Please call 1-816-474-TIPS, you may remain anonymous; or call Lawrence P.D. 841-7210 case # 88-10554.
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Compatibility Defined
IBM-Compat'ibil'ytty adv. 1. Capable of existing together. 2. Able to use most common software; usu. of the business/research world. 3. Growth & flexibility. 4. Hyundai 16TE.
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Sample Systems:
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COMPUTER
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KU's "Seoul" Authorized Hyundai Dealer
ConnectingPoint. COMPUTER CENTER 804 New Hampshire St. Downtown Lawrence 843-7584
Attention KU Apple Purchasers:
Connecting Point's 'Apple Team' has contracted to support KU departmental calls. Call us for assistance in managing Apple products (via Mail) (Not avail for personal purchases) Connecting Point now has a full line of Apple "Add-Ons" from software to drives.
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You don't need your parents' money to buy a Macintosh.
Just their signature.
It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh* computer at school.
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan to Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one. Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800-831 LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
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Come by and talk to us about your computer needs today!
Burge Union 864-5697
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, November 29, 1988
7
Sports
KU blitzed in Shootout final
By Arvin Donley Kansan sportswriter
Shooting a blistering 56 percent from the field and 92 percent from the free throw line, Seton Hall defeated Kansas 92-81 in the championship game of the Great Alaskan Shootout in Anchorage.
Kansas, which trailed at halftime 46-40, took a 54-13 lead on a hook shot by center Sean Alvarado with 15.08 points. Javahaws would lead in the game.
The Pirates went on a 12-4 run to take a 65-18 lead. Jayhawk forward Mike Maddox answered with a jump hook to pull Kansas to within five at 65-60, but the Jayhawks would get no closer the rest of the game.
The Pirates went on another 12-4 run to take a commanding 77-64 lead, highlighted by the play of 5-foot-4 point guard Pookey Wigington. During that stretch Wigington had a three-point play and two of his game-high seven assists to spark Senat Hall.
Wigington was forced into the lineup when starter Gerald Greene got into early foul trouble. Wigton had nine points, including 7 of 7 from
the free throw line, and also had three steals.
Kansas coach Roy Williams praised the play of the little Seton Hall guard.
"The smallest player on the court had the biggest impact on the game." Williams said.
Seton Hall coach P.J. Carlesimo agreed.
"Pookey won the game, there's no question about that," Carlesimo said. "We were struggling and he got us going."
Wigington, who has had two operations on his right knee and has to have it drained every game, said his team had something to prove.
"They picked us for seventh in the Big East," he said. "We think we're better than that."
Junior Andrew Gaze led the Pirates with 18 points, 13 of them in the first half. Gaze had four three-pointers. He was followed by center Ramon Ramos who scored 10 of his 16 points in the third. John Morton added 13 for the Pirates.
Kansas, who had defeated Alaskan Anchorage and California to advance to the first round.
down the streach, which is something Williams was not pleased with.
"Until tonight, I thought we executed well down the stretch," Williams said. "We didn't do that tonight as well as we have been doing."
Junior guard Kevin Pritchard chiled Kansas in scoring with 17 points. Mark Randall and Mill Newton had two shots each, but no one for the Javahaws, who are now 2-1.
Randall and guard Scooter Barry grabbed eight rebounds a piece to pace Kansas, which outbounded Seton Hall 32-30.
Seton Hall, now 3-0, made 32 of 58 shots from the field. Kansas was 28 for 63 from the field for 44 percent. The Pirates were 22 for 24 from the field. Kansas also shot well from the line, hitting 22 of 25 charities for 88 percent.
In the third place contest at the 11th annual Shootout, Kentucky came from behind to defeat California 89-71.
Kansas became the third Big Eight team to take second place in a preseason basketball tournament. He played for the second Big East school to win a
Syracuse defeated Missouri to 86-4 in overtime to win the Big Apple NIT tournament in New York on Friday. Syracuse won 91-49 in nine games, 91-49 in the Maui, Glastonbury Sunday.
preseason tournament.
Kansas returns home to play Seattle University at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Allen Field House. It will be the first meeting between the two schools.
The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
Seton Hall 92, Kansas 81
Gaze 6.2 2-18, Walker 2.2-26, Ramos 0.0-16, Greene
0.5-6, Mornon 3.5 1-15, Wingington 17-79, Volley 3-5 4,
Cooper 5 0-10, Tanner 34 22-24 92
Seton Hall (92)
Kansas (81)
Newton 5 11, Randall 6 4, Randall 6 4, Alvorda 2.2-2.6
Baylor 9 10, Barrie 7, Barrie 7, Macleod 3.2-2.8, Wheat
2.2-4.8, Minor 0-0.0, Minor 2-4.8, Totals 28-29-36
Halftime Haltemin Set 64-10. Total fours Hit 20, Karen 20 Fouled out 40. None three-point field goals.
Newton 35, Pitman 15, Moni 0, Madison 10. Gubler 2, O'Brien 2. Rebounds Set 30 (Coppe 32 (Randall, Bathy 8) Assists,
Halifax 22 (Bathy 8) Rebounds, Bathy 6 (Bathy 6).
Technicals have Attended 5,372
KU loses final game in Aruba Sunshine Classic
By Ken Winford Kansan sportswriter
By Ken Winford
The Kansas women's basketball team gave No. 9 Mississippi a scare before running into trouble in the second half of its 61-40 defeat Sunday in the finals of the Aruba Sunshine Classic.
The Jayhawks, on on Saturday beat Princeton 73-64 to reach the finals, battled the Rebels early and held a 30-25 beat at halftime.
Kansas, however, found the going much tougher in the second half. The Jahyhaws scored only 10 points in the first half and one 13-minute span in the ball.
Mississippi, which lost only one letterman from last year's 24-7 team, led by as many as 23 points before getting the 21-point victory.
"I think in the first half we surprised Mississippi and maybe ourselves a bit," Coach Marian Washington said. "In the semifinals against Princeton, I thought we played well for 16 minutes and then lost steam."
Washington said the Jayhawks ran into troubles when they couldn't maintain their level of play. Washington lost both half against Mississippi.
"We played a solid 20 minutes against Mississippi." she said.
against Mississippi,” she said. Kansas guard Lisa Braddy led all Jahayawk scorers against the Rebels with 17 points. The 5-foot-8 Kansas City, Kan., junior was named to the Aruba Sunshine Shootout all-tournament team.
The Jayhawks, now 2-1, will open the home portion of their season at 8 p.m. Friday at Allen Field House against Oral Roberts in the first round of the Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic.
iowa, ranked third in Street and Smith's magazine preseason poll, will play Grambling at 6 p.m. in the other game Friday.
CALIFORNIA FOOTBALL
Kansas football looks to a hopeful future, faces rebuilding and recruiting challenges
The losers of Friday's games will meet in the consolation finals at 6 p.m. Saturday while the winners will play in the championship game at 8 p.m.
By Jeff Euston
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas coach Glen Mason and the Jayhawk football program face an uphill struggle, but the team did make positive strides during the 1988 season, players say.
KANSAN file photo
Nobody ever told Glen Mason that football team comes going to be easy.
When Mason left his job as coach at Kent State to come to Lawrence last winter, the Jayhawks had had one winning season since 1976. They hadn't had consecutive seasons above .500 since 1975-76 and hadn't been better than .500 three straight years since 1960-62.
As records go, the Jayhawks took a step backward this season, falling from 1-9 in 1987 to 1-10 this year.
But according to most of the players, this season represented a change for the better for the Kansas football program.
"This year obviously hasn't been the best year," said linebacker Curtis Moore. "But I think there's some real noticeable changes, such as excitement and playing hard and playing aggressive. We haven't always come out on top, but I think the fans see the change. We can see the change, and I think it's a positive move."
The primary reason for the change in attitude has been the influence of Mason, Moore said.
Entering the season, the outlook for the Jayhawk offense was bleak.
Offensively, the Jayhawks took positive strides this season.
"He's gotten us excited." Moore said. "I think we're headed in the right direction. There's no doubt we'll be better next year."
Under coach Bob Valesente last season, the Jayhawks scored only 14 touchdowns and were last in the conference in rushing offense, averaging just 110 yards per game. Kan sas ranked 101st of 14 Division I-A schools in total offense, averaging just 274 yards per game.
But this season, Kansas moved the ball well, averaging 131 yards of total offense per game this year, ranking 86th in the nation.
Kansas will lose its biggest offensive weapon, wide receiver Willie Vaughn, to graduation. Vaughn had six touchdown receptions and averaged more than 20 yards per catch. He finished his career with 133 catches for 2,266 yards, both school records.
With the exception of Vaughn and right Guard Dave Grattan, however, all of the remaining starters on offense will return.
Another bright spot on offense for the Jayhawks was the play of tailbacks Tony Sands and Frank Hatch.
ett.
Sands, a 5-foot 1.155-pound freshman from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., flounced his way to a team-leading 480 vards on 103 carries.
Hatchett, a sophomore, averaged more than seven yards per carry in limited action. He carried the ball to 47 yards for 417 yards and two touchdowns.
Quarterback Kelly Donohoe will return next year for his senior season. Donohoe completed 50 percent of his passes for 1,844 yards this season while throwing nine touchdown passes and 13 interceptions.
Among the other starters returning are wide receiver Quintin Smith, center Chip Budde and tight end John Baker.
The Jayhawks' offense scored an average of 17.1 points per game, nearly a five-point increase from last
season.
But that improvement was offset by the Kansas defense, which surrendered a school-record average of 45.1 points per game. That total was an average of nearly 10 more than last season and ranked as the worst among the 104 NCAA Division I teams.
The Kansas defense, a makeshift collection of freshmen, walk-ons and people playing out of position, surrendered 5.896 yards in 11 games, for an average of 536 yards — the worst in NCAA Division I history.
But that wasn't the only dubious distinction held by the Jayhawks.
Many of the young players forced into key roles this year will return.
Kansas will lose just two seniors:
starting defensive backs Rodney
Henderson.
'T
This year obviously hasn't been the best year. But I think there's been some real noticeable changes, such as excitement and playing hard and playing aggressive. We haven't always come out on top, but I think he fans see the change. We can see the change, and I think it's a positive move.'
Curtis Moore Kansas linebacker
are led by Moore, who led the Big Eight Conference with 160 tackles.
The Jayhawks' returning starters
Joining Moore is strong safety Deral Boykin, who was selected as the Big Eight's defensive newcomer from Kent, Ohio, made 87 tackles.
One of the youngest spots on the team is the defensive secondary, Josh Reynolds and freshmen Dong Terry, Jason Prentice and Tim Hill all gained experience.
As many as eight different freshmen started on defense at one time or another this season.
Kansas also looks forward to the return of starting outside linebacker Lance Fiskhambach, who played in the game season before suffering a knee injury.
Flachsburgh's injury was just one of many that hurt the Kansas defense this season. Starters such as linebacker Tony Barker and free safety Doug Tory also were out for extended periods. Things were so bad that Mason started 23 different players on defense during the season.
Depth also will continue to be a problem for Mason next season. With the departure of the 11 seniors on scholarship, Kansas will be down to 50 scholarship players. Even if the Jayhawks sign the maximum of 25 new players in the spring recruiting season, they still will have just 75 scholarship players, 20 below the NCAA limit.
Of the 61 players on scholarship this season, 34 were either freshmen or redshirt freshman. Next season's class will be composed of seven universities and seven tennonons on scholarship.
Those numbers make Mason's recruiting crucial. But judging from the recent past, he faces a struggle in that area also.
have been many examples of promising high school players from Kansas and Missouri who have chosen to attend schools other than Kansas.
The most obvious example is Barry Sanders of Oklahoma State, the likely Heisman Trophy winner. Sanders, from Wichita North High School, was not even actively recruited by Kansas.
Bryan Carpenter, a 5-foot-10, 200-pound junior backfall from Olathe, started for the Big Eight champion Nebraska Cornhuskers this year. He rushed 57 times for 429 yards (an average of 8.3 yards) downs. Freshman backlance Lewis of Scott City backed up Carpenter for most of the season.
Nebraska starting cornerback Lorenzo Hicks is another example. Hicks, a senior, from Southeast High School in Kansas City, Mo.
Nebraska senior nose guard Lawrence Pete is from Wichita South High School. Pete was a starter for the Cornhuskers this year and made five quarterback sacks, more than any Kansas player.
Former Kansas City City Rockhurst stars Mark VanKeirsblick and Kenyon Rasheed are now at Oklahoma. VanKeirsblick, a junior offensive tackle, started for Oklahoma and was one of nine men defensive back from Raytown south High School in Missouri, also is playing for the Sooners.
At Colorado, sophomore linebacker Terry Johnson from Center High School in Kansas City, Mo., and junior fullback Erik Kissel, from Shawnee Mission West in Overland Park are playing.
Mason certainly has made progress in improving the team's attitude, but he still faces an uphill struggle.
The Jayhawks have won just five games in the last three years, and the prospects for rapid improvement in the Big Eight are slim. A conference schedule that includes always-tough powers Oklahoma, Nebraska and Oklahoma State will make the late season tough for Kansas.
During the last four years, there
Early on, though, Kansas will play Baylor, Kent State and Louisville — three teams that the Jayhawks have a good chance of beating.
But Kansas still needs to prove that it can win against those types of opponents. With the numbers and tradition that the Jachwaks are fighting, no victory can be taken for granted during the 1989 season.
Palmer's future still uncertain Chiefs say
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City running back Paul Palmer remained on indefinite suspension by the Chiefs yesterday and his status for Sunday's game against the New York Jets was unknown.
The second-year pro, the Chiefs' leading rusher and second-leading receiver, was suspended Saturday prior to the game against Pittsburgh for reasons that are still not clear. His suspension includes a prohibition from practice and locker room facilities, and the Chiefs may put him on the reserve-suspended list so he would not count against the 47-man roster.
Coach Frank Gansz and general manager Jim Schaaf declined comment yesterday. On Sunday in Pittsburgh, the Chiefs announced Palmer had been suspended for "conduct detrimental to the team" after making remarks to assistant coach C.T. Peters and calling for a change of practice. Schaaf said Sunday that Palner's status would be reviewed on a week-to-week basis.
Palmer reportedly had been miffed at running second team behind Herrman Heard. Mark Adickes, the Chiefs' player representative, met yesterday with Gansz on Palmer's behalf.
"As a player rep, it is my responsibility to definitely call the union to see if they have anything they can do to help him and hopefully this thing will be resolved within the week." Adickes told the Kansas City Star.
"As Frank said Sunday, it is an indefinite suspension, which means it could last up to four weeks, which would be the remainder of the year." Mr. Ford's director of public relations. "At this point, we are just leaving it open."
The Chiefs can ill afford to lose anybody off their squad. After losing 16-10 to the Steelers, they are 3-9-1 and reeling from injuries, particularly on defense. Nose guard Mike McCarthy is in position because of injury, went on Sunday with a pulled hamstring. His status is doubtful for Sunday.
In addition, linebacker Dino Hackett, the Chiefs' second-leading tackler with diagnostic arthroscopic surgery today, knee and could be out for the year.
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8
Tuesday, November 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Sports Briefs
NEW KSU COACH NAMED: Bill Snyder, offensive coordinator at Iowa, will be named head football coach at Kansas State this week, according to published reports yesterday.
The Manhattan Mercury and the Kansas City Star both identified Snyder, a long-time associate of Iowa Coach Hayden Fry, as the choice to replace Stan Parrish at Kansas City State. The son but finished the year and compiled a three-year record of 2-30-1 at Kansas State.
Sports information director Ken Mossman, refused to confirm or deny the newspaper reports.
Snyder, 47, has been with Fry for 11 years, including one year at North Texas State and 10 years at Iowa.
The new man will be Kansas State's 12th head coach since 1945. In that period, the Wildcats have had only four winning seasons.
others who had been mentioned as finalists are Memphis State coach Charles Bailey and Milan Voleitch, coordinator at the Naval Academy.
MU GETS HOME VICTORY:
Sophomore forward Doug Smith had 15 points and eighth-ranked Missouri held Tennessee-Martin to just 21 points in the second half, as the Tigers defeated the Pacers 97-55 last night in Columbia.
Missouri, which lost 86-84 in overtime to Syracuse in the finals of Big Apple NIT on Friday, moved to 4-1 on the year.
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University Dailv Kansan / Tuesdav November 29. 1988
---
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Join us for a side show on West Coast communities by the founder of Stardance community in San Francisco. Wed. Nov. 10, 7:30 pm, Sunflower in Tennessee $2.00 donation appreciated.
Out of State Students - Going home on vacations.
Earn travel money and much more during your vacations by being our sales rep in your home office, as well as hosting (including reckers). New and exciting art card design by Alphight. See the at the University of Illinois - amplifier Bookstore, 9th and NlH 749-3737.
Preparing for Finals Study Skills Workshop (Time Management, Reviewing, Testing Strategies) Wednesday, November 30 Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong, 864-4644
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
only $30 for land play round trip transportation;
condominium condiments (freepack, jacuzit,
1 back from lift). Contact David 84216.161. Limited
SUCIDE INTERVENTION. If you feel like you want to end all or if you are concerned about someone who might call 842-2556 or drop by W49. We are free, confidential, and always open.
WE TEACH MARY CANE' Dermatologist tested.
Mary Kay has a skin care system for you, Call today!
Nancy Armstrong. Mary Kay Beauty Consultant
841-4515
JAN 2-7
Bill or Wayne 841-8155
JAN 2-7
Steamboat
Hillel
לּוֹן
Events of the Week
Wednesday, Nov. 30
Tuesday, Nov. 29
Ellie Wisee
Continuing Discussion Series
Panel Discussion
7:30 p.m. Hillell House
(Houston)
Hanukah Kabble Table
with Rabbi Friedman
11:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Kansas Union
Little Brothers & Little Sisters
Pre-Hanukah Party
6:30 p.m. Hillouse
Shabbat Dinner
6 p.m., Hill House
RSVP required by Wed. Nov. 30
for RSVPs, and more information
Friday, Dec. 2
ENTERTAINMENT
Handel's import Repair will tune up your car $35
plus parts, mobile service; 841-4629
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobile Sound Superior sound and lighting Professional radio, club DJ DJs. Hot Spots Maximum Party Thrill DJ RV Jayela 841.7083
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B-days, singing
wears 841167A
FOR RENT
2 bedroom apartment for rent second semester.
Near laundry, shopping On bus route. Call
843-6495
2 beroom & 2 bath apt, with microwave, ice makers and plush carpet. Call 842-5111
3 bedroom-comfortably fits 5-available Dec.
31-Sunrise Village washer/dryer-garage-24
bath-acuities court-pool-microwave-off 5h
street Call 843-603 anytime
1. Jan rent bed 2nd sem subleave 2 bedroom,
jewellz-bath. furnished unfurnished 764928
spacious, spacious, 2 br apt Furn. on bus
Available Jan thru May. Two bdm apt w/fireplace 837 Michigan. Sunrise Place. Free cabel, rent付票. Call 845 9634
SPRING BREAK '89
Trins Available Now
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND, TX
STEAMBOAT CO
DAYTONA BEACH, FL
MUSTANG ISLAND, TX
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC
Don't Wait Until It's Too Late!
Call Sunchase Beach & Ski Break
1-800-321-5911
Beginning January 2: Sublease 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment. Option for direct lease in May. 14th & Kentucky - 749-3832 or 841-1212.
Completely Furnished 1.3, and 4-bed apartment
immediate availability near KU. Call
telephone 814-1212, 814-1251, 814-1429, or 749-2415.
Complete Farmed Suite 1.23-4 a bedroom apartment. Many great locations, all energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-1213, or 794-1291. Masterstay
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED To share nice
3 bedroom apartment Spring Semester Call:
299-1955
Female Roommate wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Available immediately in parment includes: own bedroom, bathroom, free and free floor. Please call 749-6036.
Female roommate (graduate student, non-smoker preffered). Shared first floor of house available (immediately). Own room. Use campus, own desk, down park. Call 749-5879
Female romantine must share a house blocks from campus. $215 + 8 utilities, $200 deposit required. Applicants must have 64-307 days or 84-622 before last, after 11pm, on campus. Need a location, on bus route. We need something.
For Sublease: 1 bedroom ½ blk from KU Union.
Available January 1. $335/mo. Kurt 749-3854.
Available January 1. $350/mo Kurt 79-384.
Fully furnished one bedroom, apartment. Civilized big enough for two. Must go in Nov. 10th. Arkansas $40 » must 841-702 78-6415
Large 1 br apt for rent spring semester: 1 block north of Union. Furnishings available. $320/mo.
842-8100. After a9 p.m.
tale or Female roommate wanted. Very nice
ownhouse for 2nd semester. $210/mo. + ½
tables. On KIU bus route 814-4044
Male roommate wanted for Spring semester to share spacious apartment; own bedroom, washer dryer, close to campus, on bus route loot. Roommate needs 3 months - t = 12 weeks. Call Hugy at 843-6677
NAISMITH HALL Sublease. Will give you money for deposit • one half month rent. Starting Spring Semester. Choi Cai 701-4855
Need Sublease. Nice 2 br. $1 block from Union.
Water paid. Laundry. Parking place. Available Jan.
1st. $865/month. Call 841-3142.
Non-smoking roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom house on campus. Preferably a grad student. 842.5345
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place immediately. $330/mo, water paid, and furnished.
Call 841-1222 or 843-3856.
Quit, female roommate wanted to share two bedroom apartment. Walking distance to campus. $155/month plus $1_2 utilities. Start Jan. 1st. 842-8476.
Broom in nice room very near campus. Share kitchen, bath, $160; utilities deposit. Deposit #42 8579 5197 apartment for sublease 2 625 units from Union
$240 month, 642-539-8000 after a 3.50mph
Spring Semester Sublease. 1br, WD on bus rt.
SUBLEASE: Studio in Berkeley Flats, five
minutes to campus. Water/gas paid. $285/month.
740.795.837.976
Sublease: Large 2BR apt. on Bus Route Can睡 3. Sleep 841-3400.
Sublease: Nice 2 duplex, yrs old, dishwasher,
close to campus. $380/month. Call 842.1220
Sumflower屋 is taking applications for Spring 8. We offer private rooms, VTV, CRV game, and facility leases. Funds not rent, include all utilities. We also provide a living or living in a company of living. Call 749-84671 or 841-0448.
TRALRIDE STUDIO available for sublease spring semester. Quite, clean location (bus route, laundry, pool, Dillen's) Phone 748-4361 at 2pm evenings or weekends.
Two bedroom apt. : Washer/dryer hookups.
garage. 3419 Harvard Drive. 841-8223. Small pets allowed.
Two MOD studios for sublease. Dec. 158th' 2003
Oread. Across from Yello Sub. 749-6805. 749-2016.
749-3782.
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. large bath,
dishwasher, water dryer hook up $600/month
+ utilities 8 blocks from campus 5 or 8 month
sublease beginning Jan. 1 749-3822
WANTED · Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 829.7907
BONDED Person or persons to assume a lease to Colony Woods, 1 bedroom, at semester end. Call 430-9318.
Sunflower Hous
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U. and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
LOCATION Available Now!
Boardwalk apartments
meadowbrook
NAISMITHHALL
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 60444
913 - 843 - 8559
MON. - FRI. 9-6
SAT. 10-5
SUNDAYS 1-5 p.m.
Convenience...
Luxury...
Privacy...
842-4444 524 Frontier Rd.
(Off of 6th Street)
5th & Crestline 842-4200
BE PLEASANTLY
SURPRISED...
COME SEE THE
BEST KEPT SECRET
IN TOWN!
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
Naismith Hall...These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hassle-free living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all your worries
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
For information and a tour come by or call today!
FOR SALE
An absolutely aweesome array of antiques,
art prints, furniture framing, precious and contour jewelry,
handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books,
gadgets, art supplies, vintage clothing, books, coins,
cards, slot machines, Matches Parrish, art deco,
tools, vintage Royal Doulton, and so much more stuff
that tools, Royal Doulton, and so much more stuff
IN THE MARKET! 911 New Hampshire Street San
Hudson, Sun. 105. For booth rental info 842 64616
AUDIO BUFFS: extremely rare-brand new unassembled kit allows offered by private inventors. Suitable for mono-power amplifier $199 each, i.Dyna K750 watt power amplifier $24
Private individual offers rare audio cassette course in French developed by US dept. of state University of Texas at Austin. Tapes and manuals. List price $405, special offer $325. Call 386-393-8389 for 1pm or all day. Call 386-393-8389 for 1pm or all day.
AUTO SALES
Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's
Comics. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun.
10-5
For Sale: '89 Bianchi Road Bike, like new, '88 Hard Rock Mountain Bike, 841-8009.
GOVT SURFLIES* New G.I. Overstairs Combat Bombs, and safety toole (wool) Bloots, gloves, socks, & mittens] Field Jks, Overcovers, Camouflage Clothing Also CARHARTT WORKHEAR Mon Sat 9-15 Open Sundays to Saturday Sales Salem STs 1437-2737 Sales Sts K马斯 Ks 1437-2737
**FREE information on New. Ka Police Photo
RADAR. NOW in use. Also special offer to SAVE
$80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 2 radar detected at
TWO SECONDS. FOR INFORMATION, ENTER:
O.P. 204, L71aming Ks. 66431
Rock-coll. Thousands of and rare albums 10 a.m to 3 p.m every Saturday and Sunday Quantrill's Fire Market, 811 New Hampshire. Quantrill's Fire Market, 811 New Hampshire. New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New Wave Fest, 811 New WAVE FEST
Inexpensive bridal boutique has lots of beautiful wedding costumes to offer. Call 842-8922, 2449 Iowa.
1880 Toyota Tercer, 2dr. d, 5pt. se, AC, stercer, 78mi. excellent condition. $109.00 USD. Call 841-7698 GOVPERMINT SEIZED from $100
GOVPERMINT SEIZED from $100
Beware of thieves! (Debenhams)
Buyer Guide (U.S.) 183-657-8670 Ex. S/78
Now showing. Fiji Graphics newest southwestern art. Catch the new wave at New Wave Futons. 11 East Eighth St. 842.7578
Pewsey Mystic electric guitar, excellent condition $200 and Crate G-46 amp, almost new, $290, 841-2387.
Must sell: 1976 Camero, 70,000 miles. Runs well.
V-8 engine, good condition $590. Call 843-0757.
HELP WANTED
Do you need a job for next semester? **Stopping**
their training so they can apply for the job?
& pre-schoolers is now taking applications for part-time
admission positions. We will be training in
various areas, including Math, Science,
and the Orchard Corner Sleeping Center On the
Lakefront.
AIRLINES NOW HIREING - Flight Attendants-
Travel Agents, Mechanics, Customer Service-
Listings. Salaries to $105k Entry level positions
(1) (615) 834-8000 Fst. A. O'Rourke
Do you like to sing? Dance? Create a good time?
Then singing Telegrams are for you! Super part-time job. Call Cd94 729-258
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings: National Parks; Forests; Fire Crews; Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Weymouth, Kalispell, MT 59061
Entertalk, Inc. is now hiring 20 daytime and 60 evening telemarketers. No experience necessary.
Earn $15 or $4 per hour. Call to set up interview.
841-1290.
Graduate Student needed to manage 18-unit apartment building in Glathe. Salary and apartment furnished. Phone 1-492-4496.
OVERSEAS JOBS $900 $400 mo. Summer, Rm. All Counties. All fields. Free Write In, Part-time workers. Packer Plastic is examining the feasibility of having 't's production shifters: m-12 noon. 12 noon-4pm. 4 pm-8pm. m-12 noon. 12 noon-4pm. 4 pm-8pm. m-12 noon. 12 noon-4pm. 4 pm-8pm. m-Fri. For a minimum of 20 hours/wk. starting pay $2.45/h. If interested please call 842-3006 Ask for part-time work
Local mortgage needs to hire a KU student. To work every other night and weekend, Duties include answering phone & door calls, supervising assistants, handling this individual needs to be neat, have good communication skills and desire to offer the work. We will also provide salary benefits and paid utilities. Position Available Desc
TACO JOURS - now hiring Day & Earnings apply
all 3 locations 10685, Mass. 1628, wrd. 110 or 11
6th, Mature, responsible persons need only apply.
Apply between 2.5 pm.
GOVERNMENT JOB: $16,040-$59,230.yr. Now
Hiring Your Area. (1) 803-687-6000 Ext. R 9758
current for federal List.)
Up to $40 per week. Positions nationwide, East,
West, South, West. Midwest, 1 year commitment.
1-800-722-4435. National Nanny Resource and
committed.
Pre-law Seniors, first and second year law
students: Go to OSC this summer to become a
Marine Corps Judge Advocate after passing the
Baccalaureate. Call 841-1421
W. T.C.S. The local lathatter women's program in Dallas offers opportunities for facilitators Dates include grant writing, community networking, representing tissuemanagement organizations, formally battled women, and different forms of coloratura battered women, and different levels of participation.
Part-time help was needed immediately Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday to continue spring semester. Starting pay $8.3r. Apply in person African Adored, E Sixth 7th.
65 pigs (0-temp) -18°C, in left, fed culture-conditioned. all nausea, olition nursing, adult care, moved shedd, cudder), depart aphid, Eden-like lifestyle, early intolerance, calm, compressed, calm, composed, controlled aggression, avoid confrontation, comfortable all the time (unspoookable) survival mutilation, constant euphoria, constantly condom conventional life, definite long-term, definite longency. When ADAM syndrome (*funciona
Staying in town over break? Need $$$ Love Kind? Apply to Children's Learning Center 331 Main for teacher aid position. Flexible hours, $3.50/hour.
MISCELLANEOUS
ably abled women to apply. Applications available at Headquarters, Women Studies Job Service Center, Haskell Health Center, or by contacting the department, must be postmarked by Dec. 18, Wed.
Are you a student concerned about responsible use or non-use of alcohol? Get involved in KU's Alcohol Awareness Program, which meets Wednesday November 30, 7:38 pm. G level 5, Kansas University. Call 844-4094 for more information.
For additional information and an interview, call 843-121 and ask for Larry or Phil.
Pastors Peace Convoy
needs $2,500 to truck hurricane relief to
Nicaragua
Please call 843-6827
Lawrence
for information
On TVs, VCJs, Jewelry, Stores. Musical in-
storms, cameras, and more. We honor
Visa/MCA M A E X . J-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry.
1804 B 6, 749-1919
Kittens $5 each. Light brown Taby male. Black
Taby male. Grey Taby female: 842-6088.
PERSONAL
Are you adventurous, fun-loving, imaginative? Dorothy G want to share a non-traditional learning experience with you. Watch next Tuesday's Karsae for details.
Habibie Connie, Happy 1st year anniversary.
Looking forward to see you tonight. Love you
forever. Yaroh.
MAX&U.: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
BUS. PERSONAL
Alarm Lit. It screens for help in pocket, alarm protection for landguard. It makes an excellent attention getting device. Excellent for canteen equipment. **95.-$ P.O. Box 7176. Lawrence Ave.**
FAIL Line Ski & Snowboard Tuning
Complete tuning & repair. Home pickup and
delivery. Certified Tech. Call 842-5202
Delivery Certified Ielts 1942-2022.
Government Diplomas in Communication,
Theatre, Mathematical Advanced line art portfolios. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Tum Swells 794-1611.
Pictured Grip Hatchet Socket Screwdriver Set
Eight socket wrenches, AWL two slot of Phillips screwdriver Zipped Gift box. Fifteen piece com-
partment kit. $95.95 P.O. Box 201, Lawrence Ks.
International Student Travel
Low rates on scheduled flights worldwide
Call 1-800-777-0112
SKI COORDINATES/NEITE FOR 2 Tens yoyo cabins/kitchen/some fireplaces
cabin/kitchens/Ski Park/Ski Fountain, Xunxiong ski, SKI Winter Park, Silver Lake, Colorado
Brachure/reservoirs, Grand Lakes, CO
Ski Resort
Students: add color to papers, projects, graphets,
drawings and reports with the only full color
copier on copier. Call 864-3244
The Most Extensive Collection on back-issue comics in Lawrence!
THE COMIC CORNER
100's of miniatures & modules
NE corner of 23rd & Iowa * 841-4294
Role-playing & War Games
100's of miniatures & modules
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-236.
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7749
K. U. INFORMATION CENTER 864-3506. Campus, community events; University procedures, SUICIDE/CRISIS HELP referrals 24 hr/day.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing.
Judy. 842-7945 or Lisa. 841-1915
Plastic Laminating
Howell Creative Studios 1203 Iowa 842-9289
Add professional polish to class projects, maps and posters (up to 25 inches wide)
2 Smart Typewriting, Dissertations, Thesis,
Paper, Resumes and more. Spelling corrected
and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts.
Low typing prices. 749-2146
corner of Orchard Lane & Iowa 1 BLK south of Capitol Fed.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scriveline into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter quality. #843, 286, days or evening.
for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm.
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses, dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates 841-9633
ACT NOW - Papers, resumes, & cover letters.
WRITING LIFELINE. 841-3469
Accurate word processing. Meadowsbrook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience. Call evenings before 10:40-19:11.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES : Ektachrome processing within 24 hours. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT $6.00. Art & Design Building, Room 206. 844-8767
math tutor - Master's Call in math and six years teaching experience Call Alex at 844.7661
accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25/double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence
Mrs. Matthia 841-1916
MATH TUTOR since 1976, M.A., $6/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.).
AARONI AARONI
BADBOOK RESIDENTS. Words processing service available near you, APA for experience, spell check. Call Pat Matuk, 84376081.
Call R.J.'s Typing Service 84192 3948
Papers, Legal, Telecomm. etc., No calls after P.M.
Computer-typed papers $1.00 per paper 84192-694
Doma's Domain Typing and Word Processing
Term papers, theses, dissertation letters,
resumes, applications, mailing lists
Electronic forms
teaching experience. Call Alex at 841-766-
Parts and services for BMW, Motoguzzi and
Harley Davidson vehicles. We accept Visa and
Mastercard. B.C. Auto & Cycle, N35 I n.2d
Expert Typist: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3283
IRON FENCE TYPING 841-8583
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park...913) 491-6878
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum: 7291-
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check.
*841.922 or 841.229*
Prompt contraception and abortion services in l-warpeep, 841-3716.
Service your car before winter arrives with system, tuneup and heat checks. All makes and models. We accept Visa and Mastercard B.C.
Aid, Cycle 31 N. 2nd. Nz. 840-6755.
QUALITY TUTORING ECONOMICS
STATISTICS MATHEMATICS All levels. Call
*benni* 842-1055
***Typing at a reasonable rate. Call Barbara at 8413-011. Monday Thursday and 9 on Friday. Typing word processing on p. LQ printer. Term paper, thesis, dissertations. Term Barbara
theWORDOCTOR2- Why pay for typing when you
thewordprocessing.com/legal, theses,
resumes, commercial, IBM PC-MAC, CIP
datas, dot matrix, data. Since 1863.
843-3147
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also
tutoring writing projects. Call Anne. 842-7708
WANTED
Female non-smoker roommate needed second semester to assume lease of two bedroom townhouse, $ rent and utilities on bus route Call Liai 84-3352
Room roommate wanted to stay a 2 bedroom
apartment, start Jan. 1, 1980. Village Square Apt.
$177 per mo. = % utilities After Spm. Call
643-8353
Female roommate wanted second semester. Own large bedroom and bathroom. On campus. Call Jackie 843-8298
Female roommate wanted, very nice two bedroom apartment completely furnished $187 •
utilities. 749-5206.
Room female roommate IMEDIATELY to share gorgeous Trailridge townhouse on KU bus over the room. Share bathroom w/one other in utility, w/0 Dec. 789-871. Keep trying!
House Share, Private Room, W & D, furnished, 3
blks from campus all the comforts of home,
749.7515
LOOK- I must sublease my half of two bedroom apt Rent only $143/month. Many amenities 842 9618 Hurry!
Female roommate wanted second semester to assume lease of three-bedroom house. 352 E. 12th. St. $165 a mo. + utilities. Call 842 7726.
Female roommate for Dec. 1st to share room with male roommate. Female roommate for Dec. 1st to share room with second semester to lease of two-bedroom townhouse *r* rent;公寓, his route; placeful, place.
Male roommate needed starting Jan. 1. You will have your own bedroom and your own bathroom. Your roommate will rent the rooms. Roommate wanted Georgetown Apartments 4 B $37 a month . . . nights. Call Tom A 816-1866. Roommate wanted two bedrooms. Sublease. 2 bedroom apartment. Great location 3 blocks from campus & close to downtown. $15 a night.
Roommate wanted to share 4 bedroom apart-
ments. Roommate has $120/month,
a 'utilities' allowance for Mair. Murray, 942-859-6636.
Roommate wants Very convenient & modern
roommates on his route $100 - electricity
over bridge 842-859-6636.
Male or Female roommate wanted to share giant 2 B hr Appl. 1 bath, wash (dryer pool, huge balcony, on bus route 8175/mo (negotiable), *2* utilities, Gary 841-6977
Wanted: Someone to provide night support for disabled man from 10-6p. to 8:3a.m. Pays $12.50 per night. 749-7129
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Spring roommate wanted. Eddingham, pool,
laundry, bus route $210 plus $2 utilities. Call Alan
841-1364
- Policy
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
Prepaid Order Form Ads
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
*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.
Tear sheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are for free three days, no more than 15 words.
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication.
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.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 3 Weeks 1 Month
0-15 3.10 4.55 6.50 10.80 16.15 20.40
16-20 3.60 5.40 7.60 12.20 17.85 22.40
21-25 4.20 6.25 8.75 13.60 19.55 24.40
26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00 21.30 26.35
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 16.45 22.95 28.35
Classified Rates
001 aa...uncremens
entertainment 300 for sale
entertainment 310 auto sales
autosales 700 personal
autosales 800 tipping
auto sales 900 tipping
Name.
Classified Mail Order Form
Address
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 Dalkan Kansas
Amount paid ___ 118 Stuafford Law
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
Good morning,
Mr Johnson
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
Tuesday, November 29, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
C
O
POPCORN TINS Great X mas Gifts!
S
16" DELUXE (sausage, pepperoni,
mushrooms, onions & green peppers)
+ 2 Soft Drinks
$7.99 + tax
(no substitutions; expires 12-23-88)
POPCORN TINS - Great X-mas Gifts!
POPCORN TINS ° C
• 61/2 gallon — $3.00 OFF
• 4 gallon — $2.00 OFF
• 31/2 gallon — $1.50 OFF
• 2 gallon — $1.00 OFF
• 1 gallon — $ .50 OFF
(no substitutions - expires 12:23-88)
Dine in, Carry out, Free Delivery
with coupon Reg. $22,95
with coupon Reg. $18,95
with coupon Reg. $13,95
with coupon Reg. $11,75
- $ . 50 OFF with coupon Reg. $ 5.95
Expires 9, 1988
C H E C K E R S
Sub&Stuff CHEESE FRIES! Sandwich Shop
49¢ plus tax
with this coupon
not valid with other offers
expires 12/31/88
1618 West 23rd
CHFCKERS PIZZA
6 East 9th THE ALLEY POPPER 749-0202
SubEast Crust
Breaded with Cheese
25¢ OFF any 6" SUB
50¢ OFF any 12" SUB
75¢ OFF any 20" SUB
(expires 12.23.88)
Dine in, Carry out, Free Delivery
CHECKERS
3 MOVIES FOR 2 DAYS
FREE TOPPING with the purchase of 1 Yogurt!
FROSTED CHEESE
ONI.Y $400
THE ALLEY POPPER
6 Fast 9th Eynies Dec. 9, 1988 749-0202
VIDEO BIZ
Good Mon., Tues.
& Wed. through
December 25, 1988
Not valid with other offers
749-3507
9th & Iowa
2 16" 2-topping pizzas
+4 soft drinks
$9.99 + Tax
(expires 12-23-88)
22/14 TUE
T/ESDAY SPECIAL
CHECKERS
Dine in...Carry out...Free Delivery
BORDER BANDIDO Buy any menu item get a second one FREE 1528 W. 23rd (across from post office) 842 8861 valid with this coupon only thru Dec. 23rd
TACOS 49ᵃ
841-8010
(Limit 10 with this coupon)
OFFER EXPIRES 12/31/88
Get a FREE Runza
Sandwich or 1/4 lb.
Hamburger with the
purchase of French Fries
or Onion Rings.
TCOJOBSY
1101 W. 6th 1006 Mass. 1626 W. 23rd
--good
1989
May 1989
Restaurant
any other offer
1820 W. 6th
(just east of Iowa)
749-2770
RUNZA
DRIVE INN RESTAURANT
Cheese, double, deluxe and mushrooms extra.
One coupon per visit,
with one additional offer.
BORDER Buy One Get One
BANDIDO FREE
Taco Bar*
2700 Iowa Lawrence, KS
Cornucopia
Restaurant
1801 MASSACHUSETTS MONDAY-FRIDAY 11 A.M. 10 P.M.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M. 9 P.M.
Expires: December 4, 1988
1528 W 23rd (across from post office) 842-8861
*valid with this coupon only thru December 23rd, 1988
EXTRAORDINARY FRUIT, SOUP & SALAD BAR $3.75 WITH COUPON
PIZZA Shoppe
1 POUND
SPAGHETTI
GARLIC TOAST
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---
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Selection of Earrings in Lawrence
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Thurs 9:30-8:00 p.m.
Sun 12:00-5:00 p.m.
SPORTS UNLIMITED
FROZEN YOGURT, ICE CREAM & BAKERY
701 W. 9th
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& Blowdry...$13
longer hair (reg. $15)
slightly higher
Fred Spirital Examination
This time, we are going to be braced for a spinal examination at the Anthony Chiropractic Clinic.
50c off any crepe
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017 W. 6th Street, Lawrence 841-2218
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---
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Vol. 99, No. 65 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wednesday November 30,1988
6 killed in KC blast; arson suspected
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Investigators suspect someone deliberately set fires that caused construction trailers loaded with 45,000 pounds of a fireball in dynamite in downtown; exploded yesterday, killing six firefighters, police said.
The explosions ripped large craters in the ground and shattered windows up to 10 miles away.
Detectives investigating the deaths as possible homicides questioned four people last night to "evaluate their alibis," said Sgt. Gregory Mills, a police spokesman. There were no arrests, he said.
The first trailer was filled with an estimated 30,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate, which is used to make dynamite explode more evenly, authorities said. The second trailer was storing about 15,000 pounds of the material. A third explosion occurred moments later in what was believed to be a portion of the first trailer that had been blown apart.
The blasts left two very large craters, 30 to 40 feet wide and 6 or 7 feet deep and a smaller one about 15 feet across and 4 feet deep.
“It’s the worst thing I've ever seen,” said Battalion Chief Marion Germann.
Debris is scattered over several acres around the construction site in south Kansas City and onto nearby police spokesman Sgt. Greg Mills.
"The remains of one fire truck is sitting very close to one crater," said Fire Department spokesman Harold Knabe. "There is another vehicle of some sort, a large red truck. The other fire truck — there is absolutely no evidence that it was ever there."
Windows, some of them large plate-glass panels, were broken in scores of businesses and homes. One merchant, Stan Katz, said looters took items from the office market, where several large windows were shattered.
A woman at a motel about three-quarters of a mile away said the force knocked her from her bed to the floor.
A man stands on a ladder, holding the flag of the United States in front of a tall pole. The American flag is waving to the right, while the white flag is fluttering behind it. The background consists of bare trees and a snowy landscape.
Please see BLAST. p. 9, col. 4.
PLATTE COUNTY
2 MILES
Flags were lowered to half-mast yesterday
Police cordoned off a 10-by-20 block area surrounding the site. Emergency workers evacuated an area between 75th Street and Bannister Road, and between Prospect Avenue and I-435. I-435 and Bannister Road both were closed for two hours after the first explosion but were reopened by rush hour. U.S. 71 between 75th Street and Bannister Road remained closed to traffic at midmorning. Power was out for an hour for about 800 customers in an area from 81st to 101st streets and Fremont to Grandview roads.
Residents reported windows broken doors knocked out of jams, plaster falling from cellings, loose household items and objects knocked down and broken. Some people were knocked out of their beds.
JOHNSON COUNTY
2-5 MILES
Windows were broken in many businesses along Troost Avenue south of Meyer Boulevard, and some windows were out in businesses as far north as Brush Creek Boulevard and Troost and in the area of 47th and Main streets.
OUTER LIMITS
The blasts were heard as far north as Kearney and Richmond and felt as far east as Warrensburg.
CLAY COUNTY
35
RAY COUNTY
435
K.C.
GLADSTONE
435
PARKVILLE XI
MISSOURI
RIVER
KC
635
KAW RIVER
435
INDEPENDENCE
70
SHAWNEE
40
EXPLOSION SITE
RAYTOWN
87th St.
JACKSON COUNTY
35
OVERLAND PARK
GRANDVIEW
71
OLATHE
CASS COUNTY
5-10 MILES
In Raytown, residents and businesses reported broken windows.
Blasts were heard and felt in Overland Park east of Johnson County Community College, and in Lee's Summit and Independence.
Police officers in downtown Kansas City, Kan., saw a flash and heard both explosions.
Residents in Grandview reported hearing the blasts, but no damage was reported.
Houses shook, burglar alarms were set off and windows in homes were broken. The blasts were heard and felt in the northeast area.
Planners predict downtown growth
Kansan staff writer
By Deb Gruver
Although subtle changes will occur throughout the entire city, the most noticeable changes are in the downtown area, say city planners.
When this year's freshman class has graduated, the city in which it has spent four years won't look much different than it does today.
Price Banks, city planning director, said that by 1929, downtown Lawrence would have gone through some redevelopment. But Banks do not expect a boom growth in the next four years.
He said that he expects the population in Lawrence to grow from its current estimate of 61,000 to about 65,000 in 1992.
Changing the look of LAWRENCE
Ron Schneider, a Lawrence resident who has been involved with historic preservation, said he will visit Lawrence by 1992.
my 1992, the riverfront development will be nice and shiny and new. Banks said "There'll be a lot of people on day and day night activity."
Lawrence is going to become a
100%
popular weekend place and rendezvous place," Schneider said. "I imagine that about a half dozen beet and breakfasts will go
He said the riverfront project will encourage this activity. The project, which should be commissioned by local retailers and retail outlet stores. Because of it
development, planners believe the biggest changes in Lawrence will occur in the city's main shopping area.
Most development will occur in the northern section of downtown, Banks said. The city planners are encouraging optimum property use around the 600 block of Massachusetts Street.
"There will be changes in land use - revitalized and healthier," he said.
Banks predicted more theaters would appear in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street and more in other cities for shopping and social activities.
I think the Mayflower building will be redone. It will be an entertainment place or a restaurant place, a people place." Banks said.
Gary Toebben, president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, agreed with Banks.
Jeff Dodge/KANSAS CITY TIMES
The Mayflower building is the closest building to the Kansas River.
"I think the riverfront will be the catalyst for new development in the northern area of town," Toeben said. "Four years isn't a very
long time in the life of a community, but the downtown will change."
Banks said the publication of the federal census two years from now will offer solidity to his plans. Planners need to know how many people would frequent new developments.
He said he was looking forward to working with federal numbers, rather than with state census figurers. Many county officials consider unreliable.
"By then we'll know a lot of things we don't know now." Banks said. "That'll be neat information to play with."
Although they aren't prophets, both Banks and Toebben believe that no matter what the census says, downtown and North Lawrence will have gone through some face-lifts.
Once a separate city, North Lawrence will change its junkyard look to a row of fast food places, Banks said.
"Along the highway, there will be service types of places." Banks said. "Everything will be pushed back from the highway and will
have nicer entrances."
Although the northern end of downtown will be growing, its planners hope that the 1000 block will grow as well.
"We'll be seeing changes down there and a lot of development." Banks said. "A lot of the downtown isn't used to its potential."
Downtown and North Lawrence will also be easier to get by 1992.
The Lawrence City Commission has been working to gain better traffic access to the downtown area and to the riverfront project.
Sixth Street, currently under construction, will be the major transportation route in Lawrence.
Banks anticipates that more firms would settle into the city's research park in East Lawrence and have more residential development.
"Sixth Street will have four lanes all the way out to Wakarusa Road." Banks said. "And traffic will pick up around Wakarusa."
"This will be a focal point from the West," Banks said. "People will drive in and see homes now, and the city will have a nicer edge."
Suburban mall worries business owners
Riverfront project development stalls 'cornfield' plaza plans, official says
By Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
Whether Lawrence's future will include a suburban mall is probably the greatest concern of Lawrence's businessmen.
The underlying message of downtown owners is to keep a suburban mail out of Lawrence.
"If we can keep a suburban mall out of here, downtown can go nowhere but up," said Jeff Arensberg, an employee at Arenseh Shoes, 825 Massachusetts St.
berg Snobs, 825 blissdale street,
Price Banks, city planning director, said plans for a suburban mall in Lawrence aren't expected by 1992.
"I don't see that we would be in the position to agree to one before 2010." Banks said. "It would take substantially more growth."
Arensberg said the key to the success of Lawrence's downtown was voting down a "cornfield" mall. Most of the downtown market has unique goods to Lawrence's customers.
Although Banks cannot foresee a suburban mall in the next four years, downtown owners still worry.
"In malls, you have the same stores with the same stuff." Arensberg said. "The service is not good."
"It's a very unique atmosphere that the downtown has created." he said.
Maintaining the essence of downtown is the goal of many Massachusetts Street store owners.
Arensburg is a member of the Downtown Lawrence Association retail steering committee. Businesses can elect to be a member
of the DLA, which encourages downtown promotion.
Brensberg, representing both concerns of a downtown owner and of the DLA, is confident that the downtown area will remain strong for the next four years.
But Mike Everett, owner of Kid's Stuff, 814 Massachusetts St., won't be a downtown business owner in 1992. He expects to close his 1-year-old store sometime in February.
"My rent is already out of the world, my little guy like me. I can't afford to show her."
Everett's decision to leave downtown was spurred by a property tax increase. He said reaproaisal triggered the tax increase.
Also a member of the DLA, he said he had been pressured to stay open on Sundays and later in the evenings.
"There's a lot of pressure to keep mal- type hours." Everett said.
type holds. LEVERBACK
One of Everett's main worries is that the downtown will grow too fast to accommodate the smaller businesses.
"Some people are willing to play that game. I'm not," he said.
Many downtown business owners don't worry about the area's rate of growth.
worry about the area?
The owner of The Etc. Shop, 732 Massachusetts St., is looking forward to the increased activity that the riverfront project is expected to bring about.
Lester, whose store opened in the 700 block of Massachusetts Street seven years ago, said the stores closest to the project will benefit the most.
Please see OWNERS, p. 10, col. 6
Mitchell elected majority leader
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — George Mitchell of Maine was elected Senate major leader yesterday by Democrats seeking a forceful new spokesman during yet another Republican reign at the White House, and he quickly
promised George Bush his initiatives would be met with "interest and enthusiasm."
Mitchell, the 55-year-old former federal judge, easily feated the
A. R. H.
Johnston of Louisiana and Daniel Inouye of Hawaii. He succeeds Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia, who was the Republican leader as the Senate's Democratic leader.
Asked if he would cooperate with Bush, Mitchell said he planned to meet soon with the president-elect and "We hope to move forward on a broad range of issues," including the health care, day care, and the environment.
Mitchell also planned to meet today with Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, who was re-elected by Republicans to form an as their earlier earlier yesterday.
Mitchell received congratulatory calls from Bush and Vice President-elect Dan Quayle, as well as President Reagan.
"The Democrats await with interest and enthusiasm the proposals of the next administration," Mitchell said.
Mitchell, who was just elected to his second term in the Senate, has a liberal record but promised that his lawmakers in developing a broad agenda."
Mitchell, a janitor's son who worked his way through college, was looked to by many colleagues as a solid, articulate leader and speaker who can serve as a spokesman for all Democrats.
---
2
Wednesday, November 30. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Lawrence weather
From the KU Weather Service
Forecast
Key
Sunshine most of the day
High:44°
Low:28°
Skies will be mostly sunny in the morning, clouding up by late afternoon with a high of 44 degrees. Tonight, a slight chance of snow flurries with a low of 28 degrees.
North Platte
44/18
Mostly sunny
Omaha
40/21
Mostly sunny
Salina
45/24
Mostly sunny
Topska
46/30
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
42/28
Mostly sunny
Columbia
41/28
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
42/30
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
46/23
Mostly sunny
Wichita
47/27
Mostly sunny
Chanute
48/28
Mostly sunny
Springfield
48/30
Mostly sunny
Tulsa
52/30
Sunny
Forecast by Mike LaPoint
Temperature are today's high and tonight's low.
5-Day
Thursday
Mostly sunny
44/22
HIGH LOW
Friday
Mostly sunny
49/28
Saturday
Mostly sunny
51/31
Sunday
Sunny
53/34
Monday
Mostly sunny
54/35
The nation
Seattle
56/41
H
Denver
44/14
Chicago
37/24
New York
52/37
Phoenix
70/41
H
Dallas
58/32
Miami
81/67
Forecast Weather Service
Sunshine most of the day
High:44°
Low:28°
Skies will be mostly sunny in the morning,
clounding up by late afternoon with a high of
44 degrees. Tonight, a slight chance of
snow flurries with a low of 28 degrees.
Key
Rain T-Storms
Snow Ice
North Platte
4/19
Mostly sunny
Omaha
3/23
Mostly sunny
Goodland
4/21
Mostly sunny
Salina
4/24
Mostly sunny
Topeka
4/30
Mostly sunny
Kansas City
4/26
Mostly sunny
Columbia
4/128
Mostly sunny
St. Louis
4/28
Mostly sunny
Dodge City
4/23
Mostly sunny
Wichita
4/172
Mostly sunny
Chanute
4/28
Mostly sunny
Springfield
4/30
Mostly sunny
Forecast by Mike LaPoint
Temperatures are today's
high and lowest in low
Thursday
Mostly sunny
41/22
HIGH LOW
Friday
Mostly sunny
49/28
Saturday
Mostly sunny
51/31
Sunday
Sunny
53/34
Monday
Mostly sunny
54/35
Seattle 56/41
H Denver 44/14
H Phoenix 70/41
H Dallas 58/32
L New York 52/37
Miami 81/67
Fronts
cold
cold
warm
warm stationary
Professor discovers swastika scratched into his office door
A swastika was serached into the Wescoe Hall office door of a KU professor after his letter describing white supremacists as "cowardly bigots" was published in the Kansan
By a Kansan reporter
The letter by George Wedge, associate professor of English and linguistics, that was published on Nov. 22, described how he discovered stickers bearing swastikas and white power slogans in an elevator in
Someone apparently had attempted to alter the marking so that it would look like a flower, Wedge said.
Wescoe on Nov. 17.
Wedge said he discovered the 4-inch wide swastika on his office door on Nov. 23 and reported the incident to KU police.
Wedge said he had received only positive comments about his letter and did not know whether the swasnika was directly related to the letter.
A slide show on the Community Catalyst Project will be shown at 7:30 tonight at the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee St.
- "Suitable Images," the third program of the Asian American International Film Festival, will be shown at 7 tonight in Doche Auditorium.
On Campus
■ Anorexia Nervosa and Associate Disorders will meet from 6 to 7:30 tonight in room 7 at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
Dungeons and Dragons will meet at e tonight in the Pioneer Room at
- The KU Chess Club will meet at 7 tonight in Alcove A at the Kansas Union.
- The Art History Club will meet at 4:30 today in the Eastern Seminar Room at the Art and Architecture Library.
- The KU chapter of BACCHUS will meet from 7 to 8 tonight in Alcove G at the Kansas Union.
"Preparing for Finals," a Student Assistance Center workshop, will be from 7 to 9 tonight in 30 Storm Hall. An introductory meeting for the job will be at 7:30 tonight at Ecumenical Amphitheatre 1204, Oread Ave.
The Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Adams Alumni Center. Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, will be there.
The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a stress management workshop from 7 to 9 tonight in the Pine Room at the Kansas Union. Dean Kerkman, clinical psychologist, will speak.
- Louise Stanley will speak at 2 p.m. today on “There’s a Reason It Spelled P-A-N-Ting.” The department of art is sponsoring the event in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union.
"Ecphrases," an English lecture by M. A. Lichson, professor and chairman of English, will be at 7:30 p.m. on April 211 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
"A Lie of the Mind" will be presented at 8 onstage in Crafton-Preyer Theatre at Murphy Hall. Tickets are $5 for the public, $2.50 for KU students and $4 for senior citizens and other students.
- The Swahili Club will sponsor a speech at 7 tonight in Parlor C at the Kansas Union.
A Burger is not just a burger!
You'll understand why our burgers are better than an ordinary burger when you take the first bite. They are made from lean, fresh (not frozen) ground chuck. 7 varieties are served on natural whole wheat buns that we bake from scratch.
50c OFF
Blossom Crown
any 1/3 or 1/4 lb Burger
1 offer/coupon/customer not valid w/other offers
12th & Indiana 841-2310
expires 12/14/88
BURGER
From CBS - Holiday Hit Music From Kief's - Holiday Hit Prices Why pay more?
FE 44099
LIVING COLOUR
VIVID
Including
Middle Male/Dependent People
Memories Card Wall
Oyer, Lester B. & Lumbard)
Cook of Personality
1
Cassette or LP
ONLY $ 5.99
Compact Disc
ONLY $11.96
FV 41664
WAS (NOT WAS)
WHAT UB DOG?
A CD including
Soy in the House of Love
Out Come The Freaks
What We Discuss
Also available on Cassette
Cassette or LP
ONLY $6.44
Compact Disc
ONLY $12.49
DC 44302
EDDIE MONEY
NOTHING TO LOSE
Including
Walk On Waves, Yet Me In
The Love In Your Eye / Boardwalk Baby
Magic
FC 44186
TOMMY CONWELL AND THE YOUNG RUMBERS
RUMBLE
including
I'm Not Your Master's On Fire
If We Never Meet Again I've Risked
Garnish Breakout Heard It Best
Cassette or LP ONLY $6.99 Compact Disc ONLY $12.49
THE MOTORCYCLE CENTER
Cassette or LP
ONLY $6.44
Compact Disc
ONLY$12.49
TP OH
FV 41675
FV 41675
THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS
AVI LOVE JUNK
including
I'm an Adult New Home to Laugh
Cassette or LP ONLY $6.44 Compact Disc ONLY 12.49
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AUDIO/VIDEO
THE GRAMOPHONE shop
64th & IOWA
LAWRENCE, KS
(813) 832-1011
TWO BANDS
SUNFLOWER INTERNATIONAL in the CASBAH 803 Mars.
It's No Secret.
It's Good Food.
RUNZA
INN
RESTAURANT
2700
Iowa
Join the KU Chapter of BACCHUS!
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
Most Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of University Students
Wednesday, Nov. 30 7-8 p.m.
Join this University organization and help insure that students make informed, responsible decisions regarding the use or non-use of alcohol.
Resume Writing & Interviewing For Women
A workshop designed to help women improve and enhance resume writing techniques and interviewing skills.
Alcove G, Level 3 (North end)
Kansas Union
Tuesday, December 6,1988
2:00-4:00 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, Renaissance Hall. For more information, call Sherrill Robinson at 864-379-1200.
体育
FAZP CASES
ZSP CARD
MEMBER EDIC
S
CA
C
S
30
100 DOLLARS
Here's your chance to get holiday cash fast. The First
National Bank will fill one of its four Lawrence ZIP Machines with $50 bills, and then we'll give everyone an hour to register as many times as they want before
lucky winners.
The FIRST
PLACE winner
will use FNB's
ZIP Card to
withdraw as many
$50s as possible
in $2^{1/2}$ minutes.
100 DOLLAR
SECOND PLACE will try for a fistful of Susan B. Anthony dollars, and
THIRD PLACE
The First
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAWRENCE
1. BILL 50
Anyone 18 years and older is eligible to participate, however you must be present to win. Previous wounds 'suns' are not eligible to enter nor are INB registration cards or their families Registration closes 5 minutes before the
HIRD PLACE for a fistful of half dollars from our fishbowls. This week you can play FAST CASH at:
Drawing at 12:01 A.M., a minute after Midnight (Registration begins at 11 P.M. Friday, Dec. 2).
Kansas Union
Jayhawk Blvd.
KU Campus
5 minutes vetore the
drawing is scheduled
MEMBER FDIC
KEY 50
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 30, 1988
Campus/Area
3
KU cadet claims pilot training spot
TURNER
Scott Wallace/KANSAM
Lori Turner, Wellington senior, is one of 25 women selected nationally for U.S. Air Force pilot training.
By Laura Woodward Kansan staff writer
A Wellington senior was awarded an allocation for pilot training from the U.S. Air Force about two weeks ago.
“It’s something I’ve been waiting for, for quite a long time.” Turner said. “I’ve wanted to do anything else,” he added as a military family. My dad was a fighter pilot and that has influenced me a lot.”
After graduation in December,
Cador Leni Turner will go to one of
five pilot training bases in Texas,
Mississippi, Oklahoma or Arizona.
Turner is one of 25 women selected nationally for the allocation and is the only recipient from the University of Kansas. This is the second time she has applied for the award last year and received it but was medically disqualified because of a height discrepancy.
There is a minimum standing height of 5-foot-4-inches. When she was first measured, she was $1\frac{1}{2}$ inch too short. However, when she was measured for this year's competition, she met the requirement.
She will spend 52 weeks at a pilot-training base. She then has two options: She can become an training or fly for the Air Force.
"I would really like to fly a fighter, but Congress does not allow women to fly fighters," she said. "Maybe by the time I start training, women will be allowed to."
Turner said that she did not like the rule but that it challenged her more than anything else.
"When I would talk to people in high school about doing this, they would discourage me," she said. "This rule makes me work harder. There's always someone telling you that you can't do it."
Although she will not be allowed to fly a fighter, Turner is not
discouraged.
A reconnaissance flight is an inspection or exploration of an area to gather military information.
"I would like to be an instructor pilot for the basic training," she said. "And, after awhile, I would like to fly reconnaissance flights. You have to have quite a few flight hours before you can do this, and I can get those from being an instructor."
Col. John Rademacher, who works with the Air Force ROTC at KU, said the allocation was prestigious because so few were awarded.
Rademacher said the allocation also was important because not many women receive the award.
"I is important because not everyone gets to be a fighter pilot," he said. "A lot of people are physically and medically disqualified, especially if they don't have the eveesight."
"Lori is well-deserving of the award." he said. "She has been very patient in getting her slot."
Pilots are required to have 20-20 eyesight or better.
Turner applied to be a member of ROTC at the end of her sophomore year and was required to go
through six weeks of field training before she could become a full member of ROTC. She applied twice before she was accepted for field training. When she first applied, ROTC was not accepting music majors, and Turner is a music performance major.
"My mom is all for it," she said.
"She's been an Air Force wife for 20 years and thinks it's a good life."
Turner's family is pleased with her career choice, she said.
After graduation, Turner will be commissioned as a second lieutenant.
Panelists discuss Wiesel's visit and his message
By Daniel Niemi Kansan staff writer
S six weeks after Elie Wiesel's speech at KU, his visit and impact on society were still being discussed last night.
Four panelists spoke to about 30 people at the Kansas Union on the importance of the Holocaust survivor winner at the third and last of the Elie Wiesel Continuing Discussion Series sponsored by Hillel.
The panelists were James Woolfel, director of the Western Civilization program; David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs; Michael Diggs, Lawrence junior; and Morris Margolies, courtesy professor of history.
"I was so impressed that even after living through that tragedy, he could go on to not only win the Nobel Peace Prize but to have what I would consider a relatively normal life," he said. "You've got to think if he came through this far, there is some glimmer of bone."
Diggs said Wiesel's message was one of hope. Before he met Wiesel, Diggs said, he expected to see a man who would be bitter and despondent.
Margolies said Wiesel's message was one of survival.
"After you get through all of the literary criticism, the analysis of the sociological implications, the questions of social justice and questions of collective and individual guilt and responsibility in society," the author is something to smile about because we are still alive." Margolies said.
Ambler said Wiesel's most important message was that individuals can make a difference.
"Wiesel made the comment at the end of his presentation that "The opposite of love is not hate, but
Michael Diggs Lawrence junior
I was so impressed that even after living through that tragedy, he could go on to not only win the Nobel Peace Prize but to have what I would consider a relatively normal life." - Michael Díges
indifference," "Ambler said." "It is so often that you hear someone say 'Oh, how terrible. What can I do? I'm only one person. I'm here to suggest that you can make a difference as a individual."
Woelflat said Wiesel's work was important to students to understand the Holocaust, Wiesel's book "Night" and the Western Civilization Program.
"I've never run into anybody who wasn't moved by it and as a concrete, living testimony to the horrors of the Holocaust, the think is unassured," he wrote.
"It's very timely to emphasize these themes in a period of the 1980s when in the United States we have resigned a resurgence of racism, of anti-Semitism and of other forms of discrimination."
bobbinor
Debbie Pokres, St. Louis, Mo,
sophomore, said Wiesel was her
hero.
"I see him as an inspiration to all who have read him and met him," she said.
Dana Crow, Lawrence resident,
said Wiesel's criticism of indifference was his most important message.
City accepts permit concerning preserving eagles' environment
"I think he made a lot of people really think about 'How many times have I stood by and watched bad things happen and I didn't do anything?' " she said.
By Mark L. Moe
Kansan staff writer
By Mark E. McCormick
The plan to build a riverfront shopping center cleared a major hurdle last night when the city manager accepted a permit from the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks at the city commission meeting.
Concerns from citizens that construction of the center on the Kansas River would disturb bald eagles who feed at the site carried weight in the writing of the permit.
Special concerns in the permit include delaying demolition of trees at the site and restricting human traffic on a pedestrian promote at the center during January and February, the peak months for the eagles.
Joyce Wolf, a member of the Jayhawk Audubon Society, said no one knew what effect the center would have on the eagles. What is certain is that the eagles
won't appreciate human encroachment.
worry appropriate human intrusion." she said. "The rest remains to be seen after the demolition and the construction starts."
Increased auto and pedestrian traffic can disrupt the birds' feeding and mating patterns, Wolf said.
the area where construction is to begin is one of the more popular fishing spots for eagles in the county. Wolf said. According to records kept by the society, the majority of the eagles in the county frequent the site.
To accommodate this concern, the city commission plans to provide conservation easements opposite the center and near the sever plant. An easement is a strip of land set aside for conservation.
"I really commend the city for its future vision in making those easements." Wolf said.
Festival of Trees fills Eldridge
By Mark Fagan
Kansan staff writer
An unusual holiday forest has sprung up in downtown Lawrence with the hope of being removed by charitable citizens.
The second annual Festival of Trees has filled the Crystal Room of the Eldridge Hotel, 701 Massachusetts St., with 46 conceptual Christmas trees that will be auctioned off at 7:30 tonight.
"We have some unusual Christmas trees," said Deanell Tacha, co-chairman of the festival. "Most of them have homemade ornaments on them. It really matches the creativity of the people of Lawrence."
All proceeds benefit The Shelter Inc., a non-profit organization in Lawrence that provides a temporary home to youths who are unable to stay in their own homes and are in the state's custody.
The display opened yesterday in the hotel and will be open to the public from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. Photo sessions with Santa Claus cost $3 and will be available from 4 to 8:30 p.m. today.
Trees were donated by local businesses, civic groups and individuals.
"It's a wonderful community project," Tacha said.
"It's a way to celebrate the spirit of Christmas and the joy of Christmas all at the same time."
2 of local Cub Scout pack 3051 donated a "birdfeeder" tree, with hollowed-out oranges on the branches providing holders for bird seed. The tree won the Mayor's Choice award as Bob Schumm's favorite.
But that doesn't necessarily mean Schumm can have it.
"He can only buy it if he bids the highest." she said.
City amends lease, approves bonds for riverfront plaza and joins census suit
Kansan staff writer
By Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night unanimously voted to amend its lease for the planned Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, approve $1.5 million in funds for the plaza and join the county's census lawsuit against the state.
John Lungstum, a representative for the Chelsea Group, said the amended lease would definitely "benefit the city, not Chelsea. The city is going to win."
The new lease will incorporate the original lease struck in June and the addendum. Under the addendum, if Chelsea sells the 19 year lease, then the new owner, rather than
the city, city manager, said that the lease was negotiated 11 years ago. The Chelsea Group will buy the plaza buildings and lease-hold interest for the 19 years now.
"We haven't received land rent in the past." Watson said. "The revenue is not there now."
The land lease will be $150,000 a year for 10 years. After 10 years, the fixed amount will be $120,000 a year. The $30,000 difference will be paid in land rent.
"You're going to have the unknowns," Schumm said. "But we've got to try it or give it up. I'd like to clarify this is an enhancement."
Watson said that Chelsea had agreed to pass along to tenants up to 5 percent of the land lease. The city would receive this as land rent.
Mayor Bob Schumm said that although it looked as if the plaza would be pouring in money to the city, there would be some unknowns.
The bonds that will be held by the Chelsea Group will be subject to federal and state laws.
Ken Wilens, the city's bond counselor, said that it would be illegal for the developers to have tax-exempt bonds.
"They will be subject to the prevailing rates of interest," Wells said. "It will be at
the true rate of borrowing and will have no advantage to the tenant."
The city also approved plans for the plaza's 511-space parking garage, which will extend from City Hall nearly to Connecticut Street.
Price Banks, city planner director, said that the garage would have three access points. Banks said that the garage would meet the requirements of the zoning ordinance, the police and fire departments and the utility companies.
Deadline for construction of the garage,
originally scheduled for June 1, 1989, has
been extended to September 1, 1990.
been moved to Dec. 1, 2016.
The city also decided to join the Douglas
County Commission lawsuit against the state of Kansas concerning the census figures that were certified by Secretary of State Bill Graves Nov. 1.
The county commission approved an ordinance Monday that set the specifics for the case. The commission considers the census figures, which have the county at a permanent residency of 59,441 and Lawrence at 44,980, unconstitutional and not representative.
Off-street parking requirements for the Oread neighborhood were also discussed, but the commission came to no decision. The issue will be on the Dec. 17 agenda.
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Wednesday, November 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Revealing graduation rates of athletes a step forward
People often forget that college athletes are also college students. They are expected to perform on the playing field or basketball court, and they have to perform in the classroom. Too often the need to get an education is overshadowed by the dream of making the last-second winning basket.
This philosophy begins in high school, where it is estimated that 25 percent of the nation's high-school senior football and basketball players are functionally illiterate. Only one in every 10,000 high-school athletes ever becomes a professional athlete.
Those few who do make it to the professional level in their sport last an average of only four years. Most have reached the peak of their careers before they turn 30. Without a good education, most can expect only marginal successes for the rest of their lives.
The University of Kansas, admirably, makes this information available when requested by prospective athletes. But Sen Bill Bradley, D-N.J., a former professional basketball player, Rep. Tom McMillen, D-Md., a former Olympian and professional basketball player, and Rep. Ed Towns, D-N.Y., a former college athlete, plan to introduce the "Student Athlete Right-to-Know Act" when Congress convenes in January.
The bill, which was introduced earlier this year but was still in committee when Congress adjourned in October, is a good idea. But it needs to be written carefully to make sure that all schools determine their ratios in a similar manner.
Unfortunately, requiring colleges to provide this information will not miraculously make every college athlete a scholar. But it will provide impetus to colleges with poor athlete-graduation levels to improve their acts. It's good to remind colleges that student athletes are enrolled to learn and not merely to play ball.
Michael Horak for the editorial board.
The proposal would require colleges to make graduation rates and the average number of years it takes to get a degree available to recruits before they sign a letter of intent. For comparison purposes, lists would also be available to show how other schools scored.
This unfortunate fact emphasizes the importance of requiring colleges to show athletes that they are committed to seeing that person graduate from college. One way to do this is to make available graduation rates for students on athletic scholarships and the average number of years it takes these athletes to graduate.
Costs add up for retired presidents
When Ronald Reagan officially retires from the presidency in January, it will be the first time in this century that four ex-presidents will be living at the same time. That's more than a historical footnote; it's a downright expensive proposition for U.S. taxpayers.
Other Voices
In the 30 years since Congress formally inaugurated a program for the care and feeding of former presidents, the cost has increased a hundredfold. The government will spend about $40 million on former first families in 1989.
Nobody begrudges Secret Service protection or the maintenance of post-presidential office facilities for former chief executives. But the biggest expense to taxpayers has nothing to do with ex-presidential safety and comfort.
Three dollars out of every five goes to maintain presidential libraries.
Portland Press Herald Portland, Maine
We need to take another look at the nation's presidential library program with an eye to shifting more of the costs of operating them to private foundations.
Civil rights chief won't be missed
William Bradford Reynolds officially leaves the Justice Department Dec. 9, and his legacy can be summed up in a single word: bitterness.
As President Reagan's chief civil rights enforcer, Reynolds 80s alienated American blacks that they voted against Reagan in 1864 by a margin of 9-to-1. That distrust continued to be reflected when blacks fought Bush in the war on Iraq and even though Bush once represented the kind of traditional moderate Republicanism which, only 30 years ago, was drawing a respectable share of the black vote.
The Evening Sun Baltimore
News staff
Todd Cohen ... Editor
Michael Horak ... Managing editor
Julie Adam ... Associate editor
Stephen Wade ... News editor
Michael Merschel ... Editorial editor
Noel Gerdes ... Campus editor
Craig Anderson ... Sports editor
Scott Carpenter ... Photo editor
Dave Eames ... Graphics editor
Jill Jess ... Arts/Features editor
Tom Ebien ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Greg Knipp...Business manager
Debra Cole...Retail sales manager
Chris Cooper...Corporate sales manager
Josh Procton...National sales manager
Kurt Messersmith...Promotions manager
Sarah Higdon...Marketing manager
Brad Lenhart...Production manager
Michelle Garnand...Asst. production manager
Healey Lichtenau...Classified manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The wider, will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Letters, columns and cartoons are the opinion of the writer or cartoonist and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editors, which appear in the left-hand column, are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuffer-First Fall Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are $3 and are paid through the student activity fee.
survey
POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118
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NYNEVChicagoTribune
YES, WE ON WALL STREET ARE REASSURED THAT A BUSH ADMINISTRATION WILL BE EXERCISING FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY...
GENTLEMEN...
PLACE YOUR BETS.
Taking a chance on those in need Not all the poor and hungry are gang leaders or Big Mammas
Do-gooders sometimes ask me to write columns hustling money for the poor, the downtrodden and the needy. I always tell them to bug off.
Not that I lack compassion. I have a tal of it, although the average prison guard knows it.
But experience has taught me that most people don't want to read about the poor and the downtrodden.
If I depress them often enough, they'll quit reading my column, and I'll be out of work. Then I'll become poor and downtrotten. I can handle that, but my wife couldn't, and she'd quickly dump me for some guy with oily hair, a gold chain and tickets to a 'Cib Med.
However, over the years I have made a few exceptions to my rule. And I'll tell you about one of them.
M. MENNER
It happened about 20 years ago, when I worked for the Chicago Daily News
There was an unfortunate young woman who lived in the Taylor Homes housing project. She had a stroke.
One evening, she was on the sidewalk and saw a man shot to death by a street gang.
She said that if she testified, the gang surely would kill her. And she wasn't going to make a difference.
The gummen were brought to trial. The woman was the key witness. She was put on the stand and asked to identify the murderers. But she refused to testify.
The judge warned that he would hold her in contempt and jail her. She said jail was better than death.
The judge demanded that she describe what she saw. She said she couldn't. The indore asked why.
Mike Royko
I went to the jail and interviewed her. It was heart-tending. All she wanted was to live in peace.
Syndicated columnist
Her dream was to move from the Taylor Homes to a decent apartment, away from the violence. She wanted to buy some decon furniture and warm up the kids and raise them properly. That wasn't asking.
The judge, who disliked publicity, decided he couldn't keep her in jail forever and released her.
So I wrote about the ease, rapping the judge and
author mistakenly kick in a buck or to help her
achieve her goal.
Within three or four days, readers sent in about 8,000. With infiltration, that's probably 8,000 in total.
I phoned and asked how she wanted the money delivered. Wearing an old housedress and a cheap coat, she took the bus to my office. She wrapped the money securely in a coat. Thanked me and left.
The money kept coming. In a week, there was another $2,000. I again called her.
She arrived wearing a slinky red dress, spiked heels and a coat with a fur collar. She was with a tall young man who wore what was then known as a Super Fly outfit. He didn't smile or say much.
They took the money and left. I figured, what the woman after what she'd been through, she was entitled to.
--from the projects I thanked them.
But a few weeks later, I was in a bar that was a banquet for off-duty cops. There it struck up a fight.
That was the last I saw of her.
"That was a nice thing you did for that woman from the projects."
But they added: "There's one little problem. She hasn't moved out vet. You know why?"
Maybe she was having trouble finding an apartment.
They said: "No, we worked on that case. And she's still there because she's War Lord for the gang that killed the girl. She's the gang's Big Mamma. That's why she wouldn't testify. See, he was a criminal and he wasn't innocent. He had a bad time. She had him hit. We couldn't prove it, but we know it. So I think you've been had, pal."
I later checked with other cops on the case and the prosecutor's office. They said the same thing. As one of them put it: "You are the patsy of the year."
it crossed my mind to ask the lady for a refund.
It figured she and her Super Fly friend might be fine.
Anyway, that experience is one reason I avoid do-goodism.
It's for the Chicago Tribune Christmas Fund, which helps needy children, the hungry, the homeless.
However, there's an exception. Every year at this time, the editor gives my arm a twist and asks me to stick with it.
Since we're in the season when America begins its annual Christmas spending orgy, I thought that some of you might want to put aside a few bucks to help those who are truly needy.
I guarantee that none of it will go to any Big Mamma War Lord. At least I hope it won't.
Mike Royko is a syndicated columnist who writes for the Chicago Tribune.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Bill Heatherman Kingman junior
Taylor on the Spot
plethora of pooches” was my favorite. Quit wasting your wink. Tackle a real issue.
Jennifer Krehbiel Kingman sophomore
Come now, Mr. Taylor. Your Nov. 17 column got carried away. Dogs are not our "worst enemy."
Who says we have sole ownership of this hill, anyway? Man puts claims to every tool of earth and mankind.
If dodging refuse is your complaint, let's look at ourselves. Soda cans, ketchup packets and yesterday's Kansan cover more ground than most dogs walk in a day.
The dogs I meet on campus seem happy to see me. Most people don't even say "hi." Dogs offer something we don't: kindness. Too bad we all don't deserve it.
Dogs don't cut in line, spread gossip, give
dirt looks or steal library books.
Mark Bogner
Penalosa junior
In the Nov. 21 Kansan, Mark Tiflord wrote for the editorial board that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration was "covering up" facts concerning the 1866 Challenger disas-
Matt, your one-liners were catchy. "Plentiful
No cover-up at NASA
Specifically, Tilford claimed that unmanned reports "have mentioned evidence that the explosives were not in the explosion." The explosion in question involved approximately 700 tons of propellant.
yielding a force of 2.8 million pounds. Although the crew compartment was not "vaporized" as Tilford claims NASA said, simple common sense dictates that an explosion of such magnitude would be fatal instantly to any human exposed to it.
Even if the crew somehow survived the explosion, because they were at an altitude of 46,000 feet traveling at 1.92 times the speed of sound, they would have lost consciousness in a few seconds (data from the Rogers Commission report).
Titford also claimed that NASA might be allowing the shuttle to fly with known flaws. Again, common sense makes it obvious that any complex mechanical system will have flaws. Even small aircraft fly with systems malfunctioning and have structural regulations and safe procedures that extend their work, but the aircraft is allowed to fly with, say, a stuck cabin air-conditioning thermostat.
I suggest Tillard check his facts and sources before coming to absurd conclusions based on false information.
John Thywissen Houston senior
BLOOM COUNTY
COULD'VE BEEN WORSE...
I COULD'VE CROAKED.
AND IT DOES LOOK SORTA SVELTER ACTUALLY...
by Berke Breathed
ANYWAY WHAT'S DONE
IS DONE AND I'VE JUST
GOTTA BE POSITIVE
ABOUT
IT.
OPUS?
WHAT? BLEAGH
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. November 30,1988
5
Savannah River start-up delayed
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The only U.S. plant that makes a critical component of nuclear weapons won't be able to resume production until at least next spring or summer because of persistent safety concerns, Energy Secretary John S. Herrington said Monday.
Just last month, Energy Department officials said that their Savannah River Plant, near Aiken, S.C. would begin a phased restart of its K in December, and that it could result in the tritium in January. None of the things at Savannah River has produced weapons material since last April.
"We are hoping to start (the K reactor) in the spring, summer," Herrington said in an interview with Associated Press. "We are not going to start up or operate a reactor that we are not satisfied is totally safe."
Since October, engineers with the Energy Department and the operating contractor, E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., have been developing much more stringent operating and safety criteria.
"We're not slipping. We are using more caution, OK?" Herrington said in the interview.
"I am satisfied with the progress. I think our start-up criteria, our modification and our upgrade are proceeding well." predicted data on the start-up," said
Nuclear plant operators told to check for faulty breakers
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Nuclear Regulatory Commission said yesterday that it has ordered operators of all commercial nuclear facilities to use systems for counterfeit and possibly faulty circuit breakers.
Spokesman Frank Ingram said the order, issued Nov. 22 to the 110 plants, noted that recent inspections "indicate a potential safety concern." But he said there have been cases where there was a counter-or faulty break-in claimed for an accident of any kind at a nuclear plant.
The order for inspections, which must be carried out by March 1, called for nine Southern allegations that four Southern California firms had sold counterfeit breakers to nuclear plants.
Pacific Gas & Electric reported in July that it had found 30 counter-breakers its inventory at the campus nuclear plant near San Luis Obispo.
Southern California Edison Co. found in the same month that it had bought 16 potentially counterfeit breakers for its San Onofre plant, 55 miles south of Los Angeles.
The NRC said in the bulletin that the inspections were necessary "to provide reasonable assurance that nuclear power plants can be operated without undue risk to the public health and safety."
The NRC has found "numerous failures" of certain types of circuit breakers during preliminary commission-supervised tests.
Herrington.
"As we proceed toward start-up, we want to make sure that everything is right. I don't want to have an arbitrary date of December and then take a day off or not in place. I am now saying spring because I now think that is a reasona-
The three reactors at Savannah River are the only operational facilities in the United States capable of producing two critical nuclear weap
bile date. It may be that when we get to spring that it won't be till summer. I don't see it going much farther than that." he said.
ons materials, tritium and plutonium. Herrington has told Congress that the United States is "awash" in plutonium.
Tritium decays at the rate of 5.5 percent per year and administration and congressional sources say stockpiles will be depleted badly within six months to two years, although the exact numbers are classified. Tritium is the isotope of hydrogen, is used to boost the yield of nuclear weapons.
Asked when tritium would be in critical short supply, Herrington said; I think we are OK with spring oxide but declined to give an exact date.
Both DuPont and the Energy Department are beeing up their management and oversight of the Savannah River Plant, officials say. For the first time, federal officials will be stationed directly at each reactor rather than at the regional headquarters, which is located at one edge of the sprawling 300-square-mile complex.
DuPont, which agreed to run Savannah River in 1950 at the personal request of President Harry S. Truman, is turning the operating contract over to the Westinghouse Electric Corp. starting April 1.
DuPont has reissigned the senior official in charge of reactor operations to Savannah River from companies in Wilmington, Del. 500 miles away.
Air in Los Angeles creates a dilemma for EPA standards
The Associated Press
Such an action would be catastrophic, the agency said.
WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency yesterday asked the public to comment on the "crural dilemma" of whether it really is required to shut down Los Angeles auto use to meet clean air standards, as some interpretations of the law seem to require.
Though framed in terms of Los Angeles, the legal issue could some day be applied to many of the 107 counties in the country to meet federal air pollution standards.
The agency is under court order to announce an air pollution control plan for the Los Angeles area.
Los Angeles failed to meet federal pollution standards for ozone and carbon monoxide, and it is the only state establishing standards for nitrogen oxides.
In recent years, peak ozone concentrations have been almost three times the standard, which typically is exceeded on 145 occasions annually. The mean concentration has risen than 75 percent above the standard or more than 35 violations per year.
Ozone, which damages the lungs in high concentrations, is formed in sunlight by the reaction of nitrogen oxides, a combustion product, with certain hydrocarbon compounds such as gasoline vapor or solvents. The South Coast Air Quality Manager manages an 80 to 90 percent reduction in hydrocarbon emissions, half of which come from transportation fuels, would be needed to meet the ozone standard in the Los Angeles area.
After several postponements, all cities were supposed to meet the standards by Dec. 31, 1987, but Conners had to decide to decide what would happen next.
The EPA has announced, but not formally adopted, plans generally requiring 3 percent annual reductions in emissions of the relevant pollutants beyond whatever reductions result from federal programs
Though the EPA is involved in several court cases, Los Angeles is the only area where the EPA is under orders to fulfill the legal mandate to control town plans in places where it has found local plans inadequate.
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6
Wednesday, November 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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--civil service procedures.
The Kansas University Police Officers Association elected officers at a meeting Nov. 17, new vice-chairman George Salehar said.
Police association replaces positions of former leaders
Gary Weyden is the new chairman of the association,
Mike Flagi is secretary and Chris Keary is treasurer.
By a Kansan reporter
Salehar said that Tim Cochran, the former chairman, and Cecil Leonard, the former vice-chairman, had resigned their positions but still were members of the association.
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Steve Bukaty, the lawyer who represents the association, has said that Cochran and Leonard were fired earlier this fall because of their union-organizing activity. He said they were appealing their dismissal through
Jim Deneen, KU police director, said no disciplinary action had been taken against KU police employees as a result of organizing activities.
Bukaty said he had submitted the signatures of more than 30 percent of the association's members to the Public Employee Relations Board to meet the "showing of interest" requirement, the second of three steps toward the possible official recognition of the association as a union.
Bukaty said he was waiting for the board to contact him to schedule a meeting about the third step, an election to determine whether a majority of affected KU police employees want the association to represent them.
Policeman misses day in court
KU officer failed to appear on misdemeanor theft charge
By a Kansan reporter
police department
A warrant for the arrest of former KU police officer Tim Cochran was issued Nov. 22 in Douglas County District Court after Cochran failed to appear in court on a misdemeanor theft charge.
Cochran's lawyer, Steve Bukaty,
said that Cochran had not been aware of any criminal charges against him and had not received a summons.
Jim Flory, Douglas County District Attorney, said that the Shawnee County Sheriff's Office had attempted to serve a summons but that Cochran was no longer living at the Topeka address listed on the summons. Flory said that it was not necessary to serve a summons before issuing an arrest warrant.
Flory said the charge came as a result of a report filed by the KU
Jim Denney, KU police director, said the charge against Cochran stemmed from the theft of six Kansas Relay T-Shirts, one of which was recovered, from the KU track department in Memorial Stadium.
According to KU police records, the shirts, valued at $8 each, were taken Aug 14. The theft was reported to KU police Sept. 28.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 30, 1988
Nation/World
Syrian troops arrest 350 in Beirut house searches
The Associated Press
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syrian troops arrested nearly 350 pro- Iranian men in unprecedented house-to-house sweeps through Beirut's Muslim sector, officials said yesterday.
The cleanup operation was aimed at quelling bloody clashes between Muslim militants that began Thursdays and left 40 people dead and 87 wounded.
Reporters said residents in Khan-
dak Ghamik, West Beirut, looked
to the stage where staged a midmorning ballet.
Children and Shite women, covered from head to ankle in black clad shorers, stood back in fright as they stood by their apartments, reporters said.
Last week's violence marked the first time in five months that Syrian-backed Amal and pro-Iranian Hezbollah violated the Syrian-controlled districts of the city.
Soviets limit Gorbachev's powers
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — President Mkailh S. Gorbachev to criticize of his constitutional reforms yesterday, saying that he will accept tighter controls on power and try to accommodate republics clamoring for more autonomy.
Gorbachev, acknowledging the political give-and-take forming in the freer atmosphere he has fostered, told the Supreme Soviet, or parliament that, 'Our own socialist system of 'checks and balances' is taking
shape in this country, designed to protect society from any violations of socialist legality at the highest state level."
During its three-day session, the Supreme Soviet is considering a package of almost 120 articles of legislation, first published five weeks ago, that Gorbachev says are the first major step toward a political system based on law, not central dictate.
But the draft laws faced stiff criticism that they actually strengthen the
presidency, which Gorbachev assumed on Oct. 1, against the legis- and strengthen Moscow's power against that of the 15 Soviet republics.
The unprecedented criticism of the proposed legislation was highlighted by the Estonian republic's Nov. 16 declaration of sovereignty" over all fire and its demand to review all new laws. Several Supreme Soviet deputies, including two top officials from the Baltic republics, registered dissatisfaction yesterday with elements of the reform.
Arnold Rulet, the Estonian president, said that Surremise Soviet deputies only received copies of the letter on Thursday. They have not been published.
But Gorbachev, detailing some of the changes to the 1,500 Supreme Soviet members, said, "It is obvious all of the provisions of the bills of such not formulated precisely enough and caused quite a few critical remarks."
Charges against North upheld
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The judge in the iran-conflict case yesterday upheld two of the central charges against Oliver L. North. But dismissed the third as a "purely cumulative count" that would only confuse jurors.
U. S. District Judge Gerhard A. Guesse refused to dismiss the two charges of conspiracy to defraud the government and theft of government
property against the former National Security Council aide that arose from the diversion of U.S.-Iran arms-sale proceeds to the Nicaragua rebels.
"The indictment alleges a conspiracy which involved concealing the very existence of the profits of the enterprise from the start and hiding from Congress information relating to the conspirators' assistance for the Contras." Gessell said.
News Roundup
U. N. POSTPONES DEBATE: The General Assembly of the United Nations on yesterday postponed its annual debate on the Palestinian problem so it can convene a special session outside New York to hear PLO chief Yasser Arafat, who was denied a U.S. visa. A senior Arab diplomat said the session probably would open in Geneva on Dec. 13 or 14. General Assembly President Dante Caputo said he received and granted a request from Arab nations to postpone the debate, which had been scheduled for Thursday, Friday and next Monday.
20 PALESTINIANS WOUNDED: Israeli soldiers in occupied lands wounded 20 Palestinians yesterday, hospital officials said. Merchants were caught between one faction demanding a strike and another insisting they stay open. Among the wounded were a 10-year-old boy shot in the leg and a 14-year-old hit in the chest.
ORGANIZATION SUES FBI: An organization opposed to Reagan administration policy in Central America filed suit against the FBI on yesterday, seeking to seal files compiled during the bureau's anti-terrorism probe of the private
group. The class-action lawsuits allege that during the March 1983-June 1985 probe, the FBI spread false information about the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, linking it to terrorism and hurting its efforts to raise money and enroll new members.
ISRAELI ATTORNEY COMMITS SUICIDE: An Israeli attorney for convicted Nazi war criminal John Demjaniuk died yesterday after jumping from the 15th floor of an office tower in downtown Jerusalem, police said. Police ruled the death of Dov Eitan a suicide.
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Some of today's most important ideas are held in trust by the leaders of tomorrow. More than 2,500 such leaders, college students from all over the country, recently competed in an NCR-sponsored essay competition. The topic: "Creating Value For Stakeholders In Corporations And/Or Not-For-Profit Organizations." At stake: $300,000 in awards. And at even greater stake: a chance to affect the way the world does business.
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Our sincere thanks to all who entered the competition. Their ideas promise a bright future—for themselves, and for business the world over.
First Place
Murray B. Low
University of Pennsylvania
Wharton School of Business
STAKEHOLDER ESSAY COMPETITION WINNER'
Second Place
Gilbert Rubel
University of Iowa
NATIONAL WINNERS
Scotland University
Texas University/Austin
Mark Christel
University of Wisconsin
Scott Evans
Colorado State University
Kalyanaram Gurumurthy
Utsushiatsu Institute of Technology
Gregory Heworth
Columbia University
Yen-Chi Huang
Stanford University
Darnell Hunt
Georgetown University
Susan Akhun, Jr.
University of California Berkeley
Amy Montgomery
University of Michigan
STATE WINners
Kathryn Adam
University of Minnesota
Susan Ahn
Northwestern University
Aijay Ahuju
University of Idaho/Moscow
Bruce Alexander
Middlebury College
Robert Asseln
Yale University
Sue Abhain
University of Alaska
Thomas Austin
University of Wisconsin/Stout
Jack Ballentine
University of Georgia
John Banko
University of Florida
Hanneman
Rice University
Michael Blach
California Polytechnic State/Sam Luis Obispo
Susan Bodenheimer
Miami University
George Bohan
California State/serve University
Mark Caligari
University of "momysyllia"Wharton
Marinika Barka Carroer
interamerican University
Nikki Chong
University of "momysyllia"Wharton
Jozanne Chung
Northwestern University
Jobin Clair
Cent State University
William Cowe
Christopher Cunningham
Canada State University
Doward Dewes
Prinity Bible College
Peter Donati
Cornell University/Oxford
Geraldh Douglass
University of Miami
Timothy Dunning
Chris Dyke
University of Florida
Vanita D'Silva
Virginia Polytechnic Institute
George Ellis
Michigan University
Brant Endeer
Ohio State University
Judith Finestone
Drexel University
Duane Ford
East Texas State
Bruce Friedman
Harvard Business School
Eran Hunter
Cornell University
Marc Gredingier
University of Maryland
William Hammer
Northeastern University
Philip Hawkins
LDS College沾莱姆
Thomas Irwin
Hawaii Pacific College
John Jacobs
North Carolina State
Scott Johnson
Tennessee University
Philip Hawkins
LDS College沾莱姆
Thomas Irwin
Hawaii Pacific College
John Jacobs
North Carolina State
Scott Johnson
Tennessee University
Stephanie Jordan
Appalachian State University
Andrew Scott Keating
Darmouth College
Sonya Koren
University of Nebraska
Kentucky University
University of Denver
Gail Koren
Kent State University
Michael Kuhn
Washington University
Lawrence Kupers
UCLA
David Lambert
University of Florida
James LaPointe
Montana State University
Signe Larkin
Northern Arizona University
Leonard T. Lee
Mark Lofstom
Columbia University
Gary MacDonald
University of Michigan
Charles Marquette, Jr.
Louisiana State University
Kaleb Jackson
University of Virginia
Russell Meier
Rice University
Susan Ann Milne
Willamette University
Brian Minne
Michigan State University
Ernest Ndlukwe
Michigan State University
Matthew O'Nuska, III
University of New Mexico
INNERS
Etienne Weiss Ozonak
Earlham College
Elizabeth School
Northern University
Bradley Pick
Northwestern University
John D. Powell
Louisiana Tech University
Bruce Reblan
University of California/Berkley
Richard Reid
Harding University
David Roeder
Mississippi State University
Gonzalez School
University of Kansas
Peter K. Schalstock
Cornell University
Justus Schlichting
Clarmont Graduate School
Kimberly Schwartz
University of Brown
John Schwier
Christian Brothers College
Scott Shafer
University of Cincinnati
Brian Shaffer
University of California/Berkley
Angela Sizemore
University of South Carolina
Julia Snell
Auburn University
Michael Solka
University of Pennsylvania/Wharton
Lisa Stamm
Northern Kentucky University
Michael Strong'
Montey Institute of International Studies
Abu Suri
Princeton University
Brent Taliafero
Oklahoma State University
Dianne Todd
Northern Western University
Jay Temple
Monterey Institute of International Studies
Hillary Turner
University of Binghamton Seattle
Curt Walker
Purdue University
JoI Watanabe
Virginia University
Gary Wiggin
George State University
William Harvard Business School
Linda Gail Williams
Carnegie-Mellon University
Stewart Wilson
Brigham Young University
Jeffrey Windley Jr.
University of South Carolina
Gary Winger
University of Utah
Barry Wolterson
Millips College
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Wednesday, November 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Waste hazards remain at KU, official says
By Jeremy Kohn Kansan staff writer
Ten waste control violations at the University of Kansas in February 1986 have been corrected, but some potential hazards still remain, a University waste control official said Monday.
we're getting more waste material, and we're doing a better job of educating the University community about what hazardous waste is," said Steven Cater, KU environmental health and safety officer. "It's better because we don't have the waste sitting around the laboratories."
Still, some potentially dangerous conditions exist.
Sale is somewhat dangerous conditions exist. Waste is regularly collected from the chemistry departments involved in photography. The toxic chemicals are sorted into 55-gallon barrels and sent to a trailer on West Campus. The maximum number of barrels in the trailer has been 25. Cater said.
Cold temperatures cause the liquid waste to freeze, which could crack the barrels, he said.
"The traiter meets the legal requirements, but it is not the optimum," he said. "I don't think it's a threat to anything, but I would hate to think of it as a long-term solution."
Cater was hired in November 1986 to supervise waste control procedures that KU accepted in July 1986, five months after a state agency found 10 waste control violations.
John Goetz, chief of hazardous waste for the state bureau of waste management, said the violations were corrected. There have been no formal investigations since.
Goetz said the University's infractions included:
not accounting for all waste.
- disposal of some flammable material in garbage cans at Learned Hall.
not labeling some waste containers.
- not providing hazardous waste placards to mount on disposal trucks.
- lack of proper training for all University workers who handled waste.
- insufficient waste storage space.
- no contingency plans for accidents where waste was handled and stored.
- ■ mixing of solid waste with waste oil by facility operations workers.
- no proof of the city's permission to dispose of some chemicals in the city's sewage system
According to records from the chancellor's office, Cancellor Gene A. Budig on July 18, 1986, approved "Hazardous Waste Regulation and Recommendations for the Lawrence Campus," a report that systematized hazardous waste procedures for the University. The report took several years to complete and was reviewed by the University Biohazards Committee and state officials before the chancellor approved it.
John Landgrebe, professor of chemistry and then head of the committee, was the report's primary author. He said that University was not properly controlling its waste and had no formal program for its collection and disposal.
"A lot of the stuff was disposed of in willy-nily ways." Landrebe said Monday.
State regulations require that waste be stored at the University for no more than 90 days. KU's waste is transported three times annually to an incinerator in Kansas, where it is burned or fuel is sent to a kiln in southeastern Kansas.
Cater said about 5.9 tons of waste were collected last year, a 8.9 ton increase from 1986.
Bob Bearse, associate vice chancellor for research. graduate studies and public service, said $60,000 to $70,000 was spent last year for waste disposal.
Since 1985, KU has steadily produced more hazardous waste each year. Most of the waste material is stored on West Campus before being sent to East St. Louis, Ill., where it is
A growing problem
3.8 tons
.4 tons
9.5 tons
10 tons
1985 1986 1987 1988 (estimate)
Source: Steve Caler, KU environmental,
health, and safety officer
Dave Eames/KANSAN
KJHK board to decide on manager
Janet Cinelli, board member and Overland Park junior, said seven applicants were interviewed by the university only two or three students apply.
By a Kansan reporter
The board of directors for KJKHF interviewed applicants for next semester's station manager position yesterday and will probably make their decision by the end of today, a board member said yesterday.
The station manager oversees the station's operation, chooses the staff and is responsible to the board. According to board information from April 1988, the station manager must be enrolled in at least six hours of graduate or 12 hours of undergraduate classes, have at least a 3.0 grade point average and have a year of radio experience.
Members of the board are Mike Kautsch, chairman and dean of journalism; John Katch, faculty representative and assistant professor of journalism; Max Utsler, chairman of radio and television; Dawn Abrahamson, Student Senate representative; Cinelli, broadcast students' representative; and Jerry Howard, station manager.
Howard, Topeka graduate student,
is a board member but will not vote
for the next station manager because
he has reapplied for the position.
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THE KU BOOKSTORES PRESENT: The Fred Terry Macintosh Seminar
4
Fred Terry is a contributing editor to MACazine, and wrote a graphics column for the magazine. He has written for MacUser, MacWorld, MacWEEK, Computer Shopper, and Personal Computing. He is a contributor to The Macintosh Bible, 2nd ed.
"Using Microsoft Excel"
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Saturday, Dec. 3
- Linking
10 a.m. - Noon
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
Burge Union
864-5697
Free Admission!
Open to all KU students, faculty and staff
---
Reserve your place in history Back by popular demand.
The Jayhawker Yearbook photographer will be here from Nov.28 to Dec.2 Seniors this is your last chance.
Monday 11-3,4-8
Tuesday 9-12,1-5
Wednesday 9-12,1-5
Thursday 11-3,4-8
Friday 8-12,1-4
Walk-ins only
Burge Union - by the candy counter
KC explosion
✩
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 30, 1988
Understanding the impact
The explosion yesterday morning was powerful, but not as powerful as the 1947 ammonium nitrate accident in Texas City, Texas. That blast destroyed the city and killed 561 people.
Explosive power is commonly measured in kiloton force,where 1,000 tons of TNT equals one kiloton.
---
The 45,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate that exploded may have been roughly equal to 11 kilotons of TNT
force. The initial explosion of 30,000 pounds would have been a seven kiloton explosion.
In contrast, the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945 was 20 kilotons.
Source: Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology
Bill Skeet, Dave Stewart/KANSAN
City reacts to effects of explosion, deaths Firefighters somber over losing peer
Firefighters somber over losing peers
By Barbara Joseph
Kansan staff writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — About 4 a.m. yesterday. George and Lisa Tyler awoke to a crack and a flash.
and a tash.
They didn't know it was the first explosion of ammonium nitrate at a Kansas City, Mo. highway construction site about a mile away. Nor did they know that the blast had just killed six firemen.
"We didn't know if it was war, a gas leak or a thunderstorm." said George Tyler, 250E. E838 St. , Apt. 2, South. "It was a big solid crack that echoed."
method:
Tyler went across the street to Dodson Sudries, 2511 E. 85th St., where he called his landlord from an outside phone booth. Minutes into the conversation, another blast hit, shattering the plate glass window next to him.
I yelled. I didn't know what happened." Tyler said. "It kind of bleed me back, I said, 'I gotta go check my wife and kid.' When I walked in, my wife was picking our 18-month-old son off the floor. The blast had thrown him several feet."
Authorities said the ammonium nitrate was stored at the site for use in clearing rock in highway construction.
For Dale Horner, owner of Dodson Sundries, the blast meant paying for two large plate glass windows and several small ones. While Horner entertained a steady stream of customers who talked about the blast, he waited for the window repair company.
"It's gotta be in before I go home tonight," he said.
Blocks away at the John Deere Co., 3210 E. 83th St., Dan Louden, personnel manager, talked with a repairman in an office where window blinds blew back and forth in the open
"I'll work through the night so we can be in operation tomorrow," Louden said.
Louden said almost every window in front was blown out. The sales office had been remodeled only a year ago. In the lobby, workers repaired a ceiling that had just been remodeled Monday.
remodeled Monday.
"We were one of the closest and hardest hit," Louden said. "When I first walked in here, it was a mess. I just about wanted to cry."
Firemen at the two stations that dispatched the six firemen were solemn. They watched television for updates and talked among themselves.
At fire station 41, 5700 E. Bannist Road, the flag was at half-staff. Tony Dovark, fire truck
George Tyler Kansas City, Mo. resident
w,
'We didn't know if it was war, a gas leak or a thunderstorm. It was a big solid crack that echoed.'
driver, was on the C shift that would have relieved the three firemen at 7 a.m. He had known the men about 20 years.
"It could have happened on A, B or C shift," he said. "It's unfortunate it happened to them. This is a real dangerous job, but you never expect something like this to happen to you or the people you know."
At station 30, 7534 Prospect Ave., a large window was shattered, another was cracked and the Plexiglas enacending the watch office had separated. The men were reflecting on the family-like relationships that develop among firemen and feeling grateful their lives had been spared.
Fire truck driver Errol Ballance anticipated his wife would want him to retire because of the accident. Ballance, who was filling in from another station, has 25 years on the force. That's enough to retire, but he wants to work five more.
"My wife came unglued this morning when she heard the firemen got killed," he said. "It makes me think about quitting, believe it. It don't take but one run and it's all over."
At the command center, 71 Highway and Bannister Road, the Salvation Army had set up an emergency service canteen, and three Red Cross trucks stood by. No one but investigators was allowed at the explosion site, less than two miles away.
John Germann, 107th battalion chief, said the incident would put some firemen on edge when they received calls of a similar nature. The firemen had responded to a truck-on-fire call, only to be faced by explosives. They had no time to think.
"It will take awhile to get over this," Germann said. "We won't go crazy because we'll talk about it. We call it post-mortem. We learned that after the Hyatt Regency Hotel collapsed."
DETAIL OF AREA
Indiana Ave.
Dump site
Blue River
65th St.
71
Craters
Excavation area
EXPLOSION SITE
Construction vehicles 87th St.
Blue River Road
Service road
Fire vehicles
Quarries
Indiana Ave.
BLAST
Continued from p. 1
Firefighters were already at the construction site when the explosions rocked the area about a 4 m.2 security guards at the site had called them when they noticed a pickup truck on fire, Knabe said.
Investigators said they suspected the fires were arson, but had no clear motive. They said the fires did not appear to be professionally set.
Labor union officials and contractors said there had been no problems at the site, where demolition is occurring to clear a path for a highway.
Security guards reported seeing someone and went to investigate. Knabe said. When it returned, he heard their piece trucks burning and called firemen.
Three firefighters arrived with a pumper truck at 3:45 a.m. Knabe said they noticed another fire in the construction trailer and called for more help.
By the time the second pumper with three more firefighters arrived, the pickup was out and both trucks went to the other fire.
Germany was about to order the firefighters to pull back when the first blast occurred, Mills said.
Germann estimated the firefighters were about 30 to 40 feet from the burning trailer.
"He saw a strange burning pattern," said Mills. "He was just in the process of ordering his firefighters out when the explosion hit."
Investigators said they suspected the fires were arson, but had no clear motive. They said the fires did not appear to be professionally set. Labor union officials and contractors said there had been no problems at the site, where demolition is occurring to clear a path for a highway.
ine explosions occurred at a construction site on the southern edge of Kansas City, about $ _{1/2} $ miles northwest of Bannister Mall, one of the area's busiest shopping malls. Several quarries are located adjacent to the highway construction site.
Construction workers had been blasting in the area to clear rocks for a freeway project.
The dead firefighters were identified as Capt. Gerald C. Halleran, 57; Capt. James Kliverton Jr., 54; firefighters Thomas M. Fry, 41; Luther E. Hurd, 31; and Michael R. Oldham, 32; and Robert D. McKarinn, 42, a fire apparatus operator.
The accident was the worst in the fire department's history. Five firefighters were killed in a 1959 gasoline storage tank explosion.
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Wednesday, November 30. 1988 / University Daily Kansan
Changing the look of LAWRENCE
Talk of future spurs Lawrence memories
By Deb Gruver
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Glenn Kappelman remembers the Lawrence of the 1930s as a young boy riding his bike down elm-shaded streets.
Now he's looking forward to seeing the future of the city as a Lawrence Plaza.
"It was in evolution even then," said Kappelman, of Calvin, Eddy and Kappelman Real Estate Inc.
Kappelman holds fond memories of Lawrence, particularly the city's
He recalled the tree-lined streets in the '30s.
Kappelman, who is working on a collection of prints on city history called 'Lawrence, Kansas Illus.' from his New York studies, has been capable of reshaping itself.
"The streets were lined with elms whose branches touched and looked just like an arch." he said. "The picket fences were just perfect. When you were on your bike, you were always in the shade."
Kappelman doesn't want to lose those memories of shaded Lawrence streets to a city that is unrecognizable in 1992. To control growth, he said he wanted two things to happen in the next four years.
"I think Lawrence needs well- planned, steady growth, not a boom growth," Kappelman said. "And we need to continue to use, reconstruct and encourage historical preservation."
So the 1992 he envisions will be a mixture of old and new.
He's excited about the riverfront project that will appear on the banks of the Kansas River within the next year.
"If the riverfront plaza develops, that area in itself will develop north." Kappelman said.
history of downtown.
Where will be given the Grand Regatta, by Eastern Rowing Crews, September 19 and 20,
during the week of the Great Bismarck Fair
Ron Schneider, a Lawrence resident who is involved in historical preservation, said he believes the riverfront project will add to the
"The riverfront project is going to celebrate old buildings," Schneider said.
Both Kappelman and Schneider believe the downtown will grow in the next four years.
"As town grew westward, businesses had to squeeze down Sixth Street and Ninth Street, kind of like toothpaste coming out of the tube," Kappelman said. "Because it's always blocked by the North, the downtown has always squeezed the other way."
BROOKLYN BRIDGE AND DAM
WATERCOURT. ALEXANDRIA.
Although Kappelman thinks the northern end of the downtown area is open for growth now, he doesn't see it coming. He says the plan was thaned the planned riverfront project.
He said he had a pretty good feel for the city he had seen transform in the last 50 years.
There's not much to keep Lawrence from growing, Kappelman said, and he wonders just where it will end.
Lawrence might someday connect with some of its neighboring townships. Kapelman predicted.
BRIDGE AND DAM
"Johnson County is moving to the west, toward overland Park and Lenexa. It will ultimately connect with DeSoto, and DeSoto will move toward Eudora." Kappelman said. "With the industrial park, we'll squeeze into Eudora. And we'll have a heavily populated Highway 10."
That population excites, yet concerns him.
By 1992, the city's three main arteries will be Sixth Street, 15th Street and Clinton Parkway, and Wakarua Drive, Kapelman said.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS.
Price Banks, city planning director,
said Sixth Street would extend
the bank's service to the West Side.
This print shows how the Kansas River, near downtown Lawrence, looked in 1882. Glenn Kappelman, a Lawrence realist, is working on a project that records Lawrence's evolution.
"You're going to see new industry by then and more schools," Kappel
Catherine Wheeler/KANSAN
man said.
But in all the redevelopment and rezoning, Kappelman said he wanted Lawrence to be preserved.
"Historic preservation can't exist in it," he said. "It has to support itself."
Schneider agreed.
"Real preservation encourages the use of a building," Schneider said. "Adaptive use, that's the key. Preservation is an act of conservation."
A print in the private collection, "Lawrence, Kansas Illustrated," shows Lawrence's townspeople lining the river. Both Schneider and Kappelman are glad the buildings will find new life.
"It's the total environment," Kappelman said. "It's social and economic activity. It's part of the interest. It's part of the action."
SUGAR CENTER
The Bowersock Mills and Power Co. is the site where the riverfront project will be built. The project is scheduled to be completed within the next year.
Wheeler/KANSAN
Continued from p.1
OWNERS
"I think the downtown will grow stronger with the riverfront project," she said. "The brewery is going in next door to Liberty Hall. That's going to be a neat thing. Many students have never seen a brewery. That whole block is bought up and is already planned."
But the waiting is slow for some business owners. Peter Zacharias, owner of Goldmakers, 723 Massachusetts St., said he thought downtown business would be about the same after the riverfront project was completed.
Although he said he thought the riverfront would encourage customers to come downtown, he didn't know how far they would travel from the riverfront.
I think the downtown will grow stronger with the riverfront project. The brewery is going in next door to Liberty Hall. That's going to be a neat thing. Many students have never seen a brewery. That whole block is bought up and is already planned.'
- Linda Lester owner of The Etc. Shop
"There's the rule that people won't walk more than 300 feet out of their way," Zacharias said. "Maybe Lawrence people will be more adventurous in four years and will walk out of sight of their car."
A Lawrence businessman for about 15 years and in his present location for two years, Zacharias said he loves Lawrence's downtown and township is one of only a few towns in the Midwest, with a thriving downtown.
"I'm against a suburban mall in the future — 1992 or whenever," he said.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 30, 1988
11
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y'r τα α τα
Bush says he will seek speedy Cabinet decision
mo mo mo mo
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President-elect George Bush told Senate Republican leaders yesterday that he will seek speedy confirmation of his Cabinet, perhaps with hearings beginning even before he takes office on Jan. 20.
Bush also told the GOP senators he hopes any "honeymon period" with Congress can yield a federal budget compromise, according to participants in a private get-acquainted meeting at the Capitol.
Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., said the president-elect indicated he wanted to meet with "a bipartisan group to discuss his thoughts" before submitting a budget outline of his own.
However, Sen. Lloyd Benten, D-Texas, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee and the 1988 Democratic vice presidential candidate, said Bush "should not be in the position of not sending any budget up."
"This will be his first test of leadership. He has to show what he believes in — national defense, Medicare, revenues." He has to speak to the principal points of the budget. That's part of the price of leadership." Bentsen said. "They just won an election. It's their call."
Republican senators said the vice president indicated during their meeting that he would take up the matter of early confirmations with the Senate's newly chosen majority leader, George Mitchell of Main
Bush called Mitchell to congratulate him shortly after yesterday's secret-ballot election among Senate Democrats.
Bush is to meet with Mitchell tomorrow, sandwiched between meetings today and tomorrow with Rev. Jesse Jackson and Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis, two Democrats who spent much of the year criticizing Republicans in general and Bush in particular.
Dukakis and Bush will talk at the vice president's residence Friday afternoon in their first meeting since the resignation in their role for the presidency three weeks ago.
Bush aide Steve Hart said the Jackson meeting was "in keeping with what George Bush has traditionally done, which is to be open and talk to people who are interested and conquered."
In 1891, the Senate, then controlled by the Republican, voted confirmation of key appointments of President Reagan's within hour of his inauguration. Democrats now have a majority, in the Senate.
"It would be important to his administration if he could have early action on confirmation, particularly with some of the key people like (James) Baker," Bush's choice for secretary of state, said Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss.
Cochran said that, if Democrats went along, confirmation hearings could be held on Bush's nominations before they are formally submitted.
WASHINGTON — The Federal Aviation Administration told airlines yesterday that it wanted an additional warning device in the cockpits of all U.S. commercial jetliners which would tell pilots whether the critical takeoff alarm system was working.
FAA wants warning device added
The Associated Press
The proposed directive, which is expected to go into effect early next year and give airlines another year to comply, would affect about 3,700 large commercial jets, according to the FAA.
Commercial jetliners have alarm systems that are supposed to warn pilots if the plane's critical control devices such as wing flaps are not in the proper position for a takeoff.
But in at least two recent crashes it was suspected that the alarms failed to sound because of a malfunction. A spot check earlier this year of Boeing 727 aircraft showed 35 cases in which the alarms either failed or did not
The FAA said in a proposed order yesterday that it wanted the airlines to install an additional warning light in cockpits of all large commercial jets, so that, in case of an emergency, to the takeoff warning system was disrupted.
operate properly, according to the FAA.
The modification, which likely would be made during a plane's routine maintenance so as not to interrupt normal service, would apply to aircraft manufactured by Boeing Co. McDonnell Douglas Corp., Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and Airbus Industries, the European consortium, as well as foreign manufacturers of smaller jets such as Fokker and British Aerospace.
"You're talking about the entire (U.S.) passenger fleet of large jet airplanes," Fred Farrar, FAA spokesman, said. Some aircraft but probably only a few — may already have the additional warning devices, which are expected to cost $1,050 an aircraft to install, he said.
Airlines have until February to comment on the proposal, after which the FAA is expected to issue a mandatory requirement, officials said. While the air carriers will have another year to comply, many probably will begin immediately to make the modification in some aircraft.
to make the environment safer. The alarm systems have been a focus of attention in two major airline crashes within the last 15 months.
Investigators also are examining the possibility of an improper flap setting in the crash of a Delta Air Lines Boeing 727 near Dallas last August.
last 15 months.
The crash on Aug. 16, 1987, of Northwest Airlines Flight 255 during a takeoff from Detroit's Metro International Airport was blamed on the failure of the flight crew to set the plane's wing flaps properly for takeoff, inhibiting its ability to gain lift. The crash of the McDonnell Douglas MD-80 claimed 154 lives.
Pilot admits possibility of rule-bending
The Associated Press
IRVING, Texas — The pilot of a Delta Air Lines jetliner that crashed Aug. 31, killing 14 people, testified yesterday that some rules might have been bent in readying the Boeing 727 for takeoff but that preparations were adequate.
Ninetv-four people survived.
For instance, the Delta veteran of 23 years said he had used hand signals instead of calling out completion of each item on the prepaid card. He had made a takeoff briefing at the gate instead of on the runway.
Larry Davis admitted seeing deviations from the rules under questioning by aerospace engineer Jeff Gorney as the National Transportation Safety Board opened an inquiry into the crash on takeoff at Dallas International Airport.
"I like to get as much done as possible before we get into the position of getting rushed," said Davis.
off, despite an Federal Aviation Administration rule requiring a "sterile" cockpit once the plane has left the gate.
But he noted that the plane was "waiting in a line of traffic" and added: "I don't believe it was a critical phase of flight, but technically it was (in violation)."
Gorney also said a flight attendant was allowed into the cockpit when the jet was waiting to take
The FAA requires pilots to go through a checklist but does not specifically require averbal a "challenge and response" between pilots. The agency, however, has
made clear on many occasions that such an exchange is preferable.
According to NTSB documents,
Delta procedures Aug. 31 only
suggested a verbal exchange during
some phases of the checklist.
FAA recently chastised Delta for inadequate cockpit discipline and poor coordination and communications among pilots, and Delta has said that it will formalize the checklist process with increased emphasis on verbal challenges.
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Wednesday, November 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
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Wish list includes budget reform
WASHINGTON — With his final budget, President Reagan will make one last effort to overhaul the way Congress parcels out money, including recommending a switch from one-year to two-year spending plans, administration sources said yesterday.
The Associated Press
Officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the president will submit a laundry list of recommendations in a way the appropriations process works.
Reagan has repeatedly sought many of these proposals during his White House tenure, such as presidential authority to veto individual candidates on some bills and a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget.
While Reagan will leave office without getting any of his pet reforms adopted, advisers to President-elect George Bush have indicated that Bush will fight for at least some of the changes.
Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady, who will stay on in the Bush administration, has been particularly supportive of a proposed two-year budget cycle.
GNP grows despite drought
WASHINGTON — The nation's economy shrugged off the summer drought and grew at a respectable 2.6 percent annual rate in the July-September period, but inflation picked up, the government said yesterday.
The Associated Press
with the deficit, to take the lead in recommending ways to streamline the budget process.
However, the department said the picture was distorted by the summer drought that hit much of the nation. Without the drought, 32 percent of the country and 3.2 percent in the second quarter and 3.2 percent in the third quarter.
According to sources, these are the proposals the president is expected to make on Jan. 9 when he sends his final budget to Congress:
So far, a little less than the $12.8 billion in drought losses have been accounted for in the GNP. They are likely to shave as much as 1.2 percent off the fourth quarter average.
The Commerce Department said the performance of the gross national product, the broadest measure of economic health, slowed in the third quarter after growing at an annual rate of 3.0 percent in the second quarter and 1.4 percent in the first three months of the year.
a two-year budget cycle. Reagan has said a two-year budget would eliminate repetitive annual budget tasks, give Congress more time for oversight functions and eliminate unnecessary commercial spending from one year into the next to make the deficit appear smaller.
It was the slowest pace since the fourth quarter of 1986, when the economy grew at a sluggish 1.4 percent rate.
"If we hadn't had a drought where cows died and grain dried up, GNP would have been much stronger," said William Dunkelberg, dean of the school of business at Stanford University phia. "What that tells you is you have one hot economy on your hands."
process could gain momentum. Many observers expect the National Economic Commission, a high-level advisory panel concerned
Some officials suggested that with a new administration and because of the urgent need to deal with the budget deficit, reforming the budget
-- line item veto. The president has repeatedly sought the same power "that 45 governors have" to veto individual items in a spending bill without being forced to reject the entire bill.
-balanced budget amendment.
Another Reagan perennial, this constitutional amendment which would require revenues and spending to balance is similar to requirements in effect in many states. The president also supports a constitutional amendment to require a greater-than-majority vote whenever Congress raises taxes.
KU alumnus named as University Relations director
By a Kansan reporter
Randy Attwood, managing editor of the Olathe Daily News for nine years, has been named associate director of University Relations at the University of Kansas.
Robin Eversole, director of University Relations, announced his appointment yesterday. Attwood will begin the job Dec. 5.
Attwood will be responsible for the University's media relations and for internal communications on the Lawrence campus. His duties will include planning and implementing media relations policies and activities.
ENRICH YOUR SUMMER - SPEND IT ABROAD! University of Kansas Summer Institutes
Attwood received a bachelor's degree in art history from KU and has completed a year's work toward a master's degree in philosophy at KU.
Attwood replaces Marla Gleason, who resigned in August after 20 years at University Relations.
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Art & Design
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Live with Florentine families while studying at the Dante
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FOR MORE SPECIFIC PROGRAM DETAILS, COSTS AND REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS, CONTACT THE OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD, 203 LIPPINCOTT HALL, 864-3742
You don't need your parents' money to buy a Macintosh.
Just their signature.
It's never been difficult for students to convince their parents of the need for a Macintosh computer at school.
Persuading them to write the check, however, is another thing altogether.
Which is why Apple created the Student Loan-to-Own Program. An ingenious loan program that makes buying a Macintosh as easy as using one.
Simply pick up an application at the location listed below, or call 800-831-LOAN. All your parents need to do is fill it out, sign it.
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Burge Union 864-5697
University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. November 30. 1988
Sports
13
Seton Hall played three aces in Alaska victory
Pritchard, Newton get top honors
The Associated Press
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Depth, a big front line and Pookey Wigington, a 5-foot-2 reserve point guard with a bad knee, are the reasons Seton Hall is the champion of the Great Alaska Shootout.
Now the Pirates want to show the rest of the country they aren't the Big East Conference pushovers that some people are expecting them to be.
"They picked us seventh in the Big East," Wigington said. "We think we're better than that."
The Pirates are coming off of their
naughty behavior, and the chance
ever, but return only two ships.
Still, Coach P J. Carlosimo's team clearly was the class of the field in Alaska, beating Utah 86-68 in the first round, edging Kentucky 63-60 in the
semifinals and dumping Kansas 92-81 in Monday night's championship game.
"I'm as proud as I can be, I honestly am, to beat three teams the quality of those teams," Carlesimo said.
The Pirates used their depth to wear down the opposition. Ten players played in the victory over Kanada on the court eight minutes or more.
"To play three games in four days against this level of competition meant we had to play a lot of people." Carlesimo said.
He said he wasn't surprised that a Seton Hall player wasn't named the tournament's outstanding player. That honor went to freshman Chris Browning, an 89-71 winner over California in Monday night's third-play game.
"We didn't deserve the most outstanding player because we didn't have one." Carlesimo said. "We had five or six or seven. Take your pick. It was hard to key to our success, that and the fact that we played hard defensively."
'It's amazing. I really thought the smallest player on the court had the biggest impact on the game.'
I.
The biggest Seton Hall standout in
Roy Williams Kansas basketball coach
the championship game was the smallest player Carlesimo's ever coached.
"Pookey won the game. There's no question." Carlesimo said. "We were struggling, and he got us going. He made some steals. He scored. He created offense for us. There's nothing else he can do."
Wingington, playing because starter Gerald Greene was in foul trouble, had nine points, seven assists, three steals and, believe it or not, two rebounds in the victory over Kansas. He had several big plays in the decisive Seton Hall run midway through the second half.
"It's amazing," Jayhawk coach Roy Williams said. "I really thought
the smallest player on the court had the biggest impact on the game."
After undergoing knee surgery twice, the last latest year, the junior college transfer from Ventura, Calif. she's not going to be a marquee player
"I know that my role is going to be limited because of my knee problem, he said. I don't have any knee braces on my knee. I can't play a long stretch."
Australian Olympian Andrew Gaze topped the Seton Hall scorers against Kansas with 18 points, including four 3-pointers. The Pirates' other Olympian, 64, 250 pound Rummon Ramos of Kansas, added 16 points, 10 in the second half.
Kevin Pritchard topped Kansas with 17 points, while Mark Randall added 16 and Milt Newton 15. Newton was the top scorer in the game to the Shootout's all-tournament tourn.
"Wiggington's penetration was difficult for us to stop." Williams said. "At the same time, they were strong inside. Sometimes when a starter was hit with a ball, it doesn't mean for them early it does not necessarily mean it is good news. I thought Poo-
key did an outstanding job. He really bothered us."
Williams thought his team was tired and didn't play as well as it did in its earlier victories over Alaska-Anchorage and California.
"I would have liked for us to take a little better shots," he said. "
But he continued to praise the attitude of his players, who are banned from defending their national title because of recruiting violations that involved no one still connected to the program.
"I think they are the kind of youngsters who deserve to have good things to them," Williams said.
In the third place game, Kentucky reserve Derrick Miller dazzled the crowd with a 36-point performance, one short of the tournament record. He hit 14 and 15 from the field and sank a tournament record seven 3-pointers.
"I've had so many great guards in my career...but I don't believe I've ever seen a guard shoat the ball that well," Kentucky coach Eddie Sutton
Miller scored 25 in the second half as the Wildcats outscored Cal 55-33.
said "He was on fire. I don't think I've ever seen anybody shoot any better than he did from that range."
Miller hit only 21 percent from the field last season and scored a total of 21 points. He said afterward that the death of his grandparents a month apart last winter caused his poor season.
Before Monday night's game, he said, "I asked the Lord to help me do something to make them proud."
Named to the all-tournament team were Pritchard, Newton, LeRon Ellis and Mills of Kentucky, Darryl Walker and John Morton of Seton Hall, Dwayne Davis of Florida, Van Gray of Utah, Todd Fisher of Alaska-Beauseur and Leonard Taylor and Matt Beeuwert of California.
Pritchard was a consistent performer for the Jayhawks in the tournament, scoring 17 points in each game and dishing out a team-high 15 assists.
Newton was the Jayhawks' leading scorer in the tournament, averaging 17.6 per game, including a 24-point score over Ole Miss and a round-figure victory over Alaska-Anchorage.
The Associated Press
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Kansas State officials deny that they ever confirmed plans to hire Bill Snyder as their new head football coach, but a defensive coordinator was expected to be present today at a 10:30 a.m. news conference.
Snyder, 47, would be the Wildcats' 32nd head coach and would face one of the great challenges in college football
K-State, wininess in 27 games, was 230-1 in three years under Stan Parrish. Since 1945, the Wildcats had 35 wins andaches and only four winning seasons.
State athletic director Steve Miller had confirmed Snyder's hiring. That later was denied
Parrish replaced Lee Moon, the interim coach after Jim Dickey, who was fired two games into the 1985 season by then-athletic director Larry Travis. The dismissal of Dickey, who took the Wildcats 16 their only bowl game in 1983, was an unpopular move with many K-Sta-
"All he's confirmed is we have hired a coach," said Ken Mossman, K-State director of sports information. "The hiring must clear all the affirmative action channels before it can become official. We hope to have that all taken care of Tuesday and hold a press conference Wednesday morning to introduce our new coach to the public."
Media reports yesterday said K-
Snyder is a native of St. Joseph, Mo., and was a three-sport star at William Jewell College in Liberty, Mo. He joined Iowa coach Hayden McGraw from Marshall State in 1976 and just finished his 10th year with the Hawkees.
Iowa, which is headed to the Peach Bowl next month, pounded Kansas State 45-10 in September at KSU Stadium.
Snyder has been given credit for developing Iowa quarterbacks Chuck Long, Mark Vlasic and Chuck Hartleb.
Man allegedly attacks Kansas State president
The Associated Press
Marlan E. Ray, 47, of Clay Center, reported went into Wafley's office late Monday afternoon yelling about the reported selection of Bill Snyder, offensive coordinator at Iowa, as KState's new head football coach.
MANHATTAN, Kan. — The man who allegedly attacked Kansas State University President Jon Wefla in his office Monday was a football player at the school, authorities said yesterday.
No formal announcement has been made, but Snyder was expected to be introduced as the football coach at a news conference today.
"He (Ray) was very distraught and in a state of disorientation, so to speak." Charles Beckom, director of the campus police department, said yesterday. "He grabbed the presidency and asked him to get away and then (Ray) grabbed him in a bear-hug type fashion and threw him to the floor."
the attack.
David Wilson, an intern in Wefald's office, pulled Ray off of Wefald, police said. Wefald was not injured in
"Due to his (Ray's) mental state and his responses, he was taken to Memorial Hospital for observation and evaluation." Beckom said, adding that Ray then was transferred to Topeka State Hospital.
Wefaid initialized that he planned to press charges in the case, but the Riley County attorney's office did not today that no charges had been filed.
Clay County Sheriff Gary Caldwell said yesterday that his office has had two previous contacts with Ray "and we'd take him to treatment." The sheriff said Ray was the man who "a few years ago crashed the gates of the White House" that was a reference to a 1811 incident in which a man in his car into the White House gates in an attempt to see the President.
Ray is a retired Army major, Beckam said, and was a former K-State football player and 1964 graduate of the State College of Veterinary Medicine.
Sports Briefs
Alabama's slashing play-breaker Derrick Thomas nosed out Broderick Thomas of Nebraska, winning the fourth annual Bufus Award yesterday as the nation's outstanding college linebacker.
Thomas received two more points in the voting by a 12-member selection panel than the Nebraska Thomas.
On a 3-2-1 point system, Derrick Thomas received four first place battles and a total of 20 points. Broderick Thomas received three first place votes and 20 points.
THOMAS WINS BUTKUS AWARD
Alabama coach Bill Curry called the 6-foot-4, 220-pound outside linebacker "one of the greatest in Alabama history."
Mike Stonebreaker of Notre Dame placed third in the balloting, followed by Keith DeLong of Tennessee and Percy Snow of Michigan State.
Stonebreaker received three first-place votes and 17 points. DeLong, a Lawrence, Kan native, received seven point wins. *DECISION_PENDING*
Palmer, the Chiefs' leading rusher, was put on indefinite suspension before Sunday's game at Pittsburgh for what team officials termed "conduct detrimental to the team." Witnesses have said Palmer, miffed at running second team behind Herman Hewett, were taken out of the game and commented that he might intentionally fumble in order to secure a trade.
Palmer has not been available for comment. Teammates who were protesting the suspension maintain that he made the remark in jest. Palmer said he had talked about the present coaching staff's uncertain future with the team.
The Kansas City Chiefs said a decision on whether to reinstate suspended running back Paul Palmer could come today.
Chiefs' coach Frank Gansz, who has been criticized by some players or his handling of the incident, said yesterday he had "no idea" when a situation on whether to reinstate the second year running back would be made.
Students get kicks from martial art
KUNG FU KARATE
Larry France, Northbrook, Ill., junior, spars with Jay Wiedenkeller, at New Horizons Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do.
Tae Kwon Do gaining local popularity
By Ken Winford
Kansan sportswriter
For the students of the New Horizons Black Belt Academy of the Taekw Do, 2223 Louisiana St., New Orleans, it is its attitude and a way of life.
Tae Kwon Do, a martial art originated in Korea, is gaining popularity all over the country.
according to New Horizons instructor D.L. Booth.
"Tae Kwon Do is one of the most popular martial arts right now." Booth said. "Look in a phone book in any town and you're going to see a lot more Tae Kwon Do schools than other types of martial arts."
Tae Kwon Do, which means the art of fighting with the hands and
BRAZIL
Station Breidentha/KANSAN
Larry France, second-degree brown belt, performs a series of punches at the New Horizons Black Belt Academy of Tae Kwon Do. 2223 Louisiana St.
feet, is sometimes confused with other martial arts; such as Japanese or Okinawa karate.
In Tae Kwon Do, the feet are used about 70 percent of the time with the hands being utilized the most. The knees and feet and hands are used equally.
Booth, who took up Tae Kwon Do in 1974 and who opened the academy's in 1986, said he first kept up with it as a way of keeping in shape.
"I sat around at home a lot watching television and was pretty much a couch potato," he said. "After I got into Tate Kwoon D, I discovered that it had a lot more than just physical conditioning.
"I found out that people who train in martial arts are really good people. There is a lot of grievance among martial artists."
Booth said there were more than 100 students enrolled at the academy. Ages of students ranged from 5 to 65 years old.
"Lots of parents will bring their kids in for the self confidence and discipline." Booth said. "But there's people here for all different reasons. A person who trains here for a year is going to get into really good shape. But it takes a disciplined person to stick with it."
Larry France, a Northbrook,
Ill. junior, joined the academy in
the fall of 1988 after taking a Tae
Kwon Do course at the University
In Tae Kwon Do, the levels of expertise are represented by different colored belts. A beginner
starts with a white belt and advances through yellow, orange, green, high green, blue, high blue and three different degrees of brown before reaching black belt, or expert status.
"At the University, I got up to an orange belt," France said. "But the class only met twice a week and you really didn't get the individual attention. I thought I was achieving something, but I wasn't learning the basics. That's why I joined the academy."
Students can advance in promotional tests held every few months. France, a second-degree brown belt, will be going for a first-degree brown belt in the academy's promotion test Saturday.
"The great thing about Tae Kwon Do is that it's something you can use your whole life." France's Marielle Boniface self-defense, it's a way of life."
France said the mental part of Tae Kwon Do was more important than the physical. He said the five principles of the art were: courtesy, integrity, perseverance, self-control and indomitable spirit.
"The things you learn from the training are important in life," he said. "You learn respect not only as an instructor but for everybody."
As an instructor of a Tae Kwon Do academy, Booth said he often saw people entering the program for the wrong reasons.
“Sometimes we have people that come in just to learn how to fight.” he said. “We usually find these people either change their attitude or learn to use a skill until the idea that this should be for self-dense purposes only.”
Booth's wife, Susan, also is a black-belt instructor at the academy. She said she became interested in Tae Kwoon Do as a means of self-defense a little more than five years ago.
"I found that just knowing how to defend yourself if you need to make you feel more comfortable," she said. "I would encourage other women to get involved. It gives you an added confidence."
---
14
Wednesday, November 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
SenEx to decide on recommendation for required syllabi
By David Stewart Kansan staff writer
The University Senate Executive Committee will decide tomorrow what to do with a recommendation that faculty members be required to have written course syllabuses.
At the Nov. 10 SenEx meeting, Robert Sheldon, University ambusman, said several students had called him with complaints that professors gave them unfair grades. The students based their complaints on the lack of written course descriptions, or syllabuses.
Bob Jerry, chairman of SenEx, said SenEx would consider charging a committee, most likely the Academic Procedures and Policy Committee, with looking into the issue. The University already suggests that faculty tells students what work will be expected in the class.
notebooks, or other outside work, in order that his or her students may not, through ignorance, subject themselves (students) to the charge of academic misconduct."
According to the Handbook for Faculty and Other Unclassified Staff: "Every instructor shall make clear, at the beginning of each course, his or her rules for the preparation of classroom assignments, collateral reading,
Sheldon said Nov. 21 that faculty should use a written syllabus for another reason; to
"We've sort of reached a point in history where you should have it on paper." Sheldon said. "Students have a right to have information as clearly as possible as to what is expected in a course."
Sheldon said if students complained about grades, they wouldn't have a case if the grading system was laid out on paper. That would make them more nervous it takes to go through grievance procedures.
"How much time do you want to spend defending yourself against student claims?" said Jennifer.
He said he was working on a letter about syllabaries that he would send out to faculty members.
In many departments, Sheldon said, syl-
labuses are required, but only informally.
For instance, that's the way it is in the english department, said Michael Johnson, choreographer.
"Everybody from the new GTA to the senior staff are advised informally to have syllabi," Johnson said. "That's general good wisdom."
Robert Minor, chairman of the religious studies department, said that department had no formal requirement either, but that it didn't need one.
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It's your move... Are you career wise and interview smart
December 6, 1988
7-9:30 p.m.
Javhawk Room, Kansas Union
A mini-workshop for women on unethical interview questions, sexual harassment in the workplace and a Q & A with prominent career leaders.
Sponsored by:
Commission on the Status of Women and Mortar Board Partially funded by Student Senate
Classified Ads
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders meeting will be held tonight from 6:30 at Walkins Student Health Services, room 7.
Don't be a TURKEY try MASSAGE. Reduce your stress and don't forget your GPT CERP. If you need help with the toughest gobble your budget either, students 20% Call 841-6345. Remember, you know it!
For confidential information, referral and support for AIDS concerns - Call 841-2943. Headquarters counseling center.
Have an old-fashioned Christmas at beautiful PINE HILL FARM. Cut your own fresh tree, ride into our fields in her-drawn wagon, enjoy hot chocolate and ice cream. Wreaths and bird drives. Drive E on Highway 10 4 miles to Douglas Road 1057 then turn South 1½ miles. The Edwards. 424.2517
Out of State Students-Going home on vacations
Earn travel money and much more during your
vacations by being our sales rep in your home
place (including reoers). New and exciting art card
designs by Alpha Light. See them at the union
building, amplifier store, oasis, xiH.
Call 749-3377
Hey KU! Want a challenge? Try Adams Campus Challenge Course. Call Rees. Services @ 843-356-2001. Join us for a slide show on West Coast communities by the founder of Starridge community in San Francisco. Wed., Nov. 7, 8:00 pm, Sunflower Club, Tennessee. $20.00 donation appreciated.
SKI THE BEST THIS YEAR! SKI
24-hour land roundtrip transportation
$249 land plus roundtrip transportation
Deluxe condominiums with fireplace, jacuzzi,
1 book from live. Contact DAVID 842-165. Limited
availability.
SPRING BREAK 89 Trips Available Now
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SUICIDE INTERVENTION. If you feel like you want to end it all, or if you are concerned about someone who might call 841-2438 or drop by 8198 for help, please contact Us. We are confident, and confidential. We are.
Volunteers needed. Headquarters Crisis Counseling Center. Training provided, commit through summer. Information meeting Sun Dec. 4, or Wed. Jan. 11th. 8:00 a.m. 1925 Massachusetts.
WE TEACH MEN SKIN CARE. Dermatologist tested. Mary Kay has a skin care system for you. Call today! Nancy Armstrong, Mary Kay Beauty Consultant 841-4351
ENTERTAINMENT
GET INTO THE GROOVE Metropolis Mobility
Network radio CD3. Hot Spots Maximum Party
radio CD5. Get into the Groove
GOOD VIBRATIONS the most affordable mobile music for any occasion. Call: Brian B418 94464
Handel's Import Repair will tune up your car. $35
nuts, mobile service. B418-4028
JOHN G. SINGS Parties, B-days, singing messages, 841.1874
PHENOMENAL! MUSIC & KDV BUYERS
buy one record, tape. CD or KDV blank tape
at regular price and get the second for
$9.98-19.98
KDW CALL ENTERPRISES 04357 0500
KDW CALL ENTERPRISES 04357 0500
FOR RENT
2 bedroom apartment for rent second semester.
Near laundry, shopping. On bus route. Call
813.629.
2 bernoon & 2 bath apt, with microwave, ice maker and carpet plush. Call 842-3111.
2nd. semester sublease, 2 br in triples, w/p.
hookup. KU has route pk 06, available Jan. 1,
14/89; mo Call days or evenings 8437786.
hookup. KU bus route, pets OR, available Jan 1,
$400 mo Call days or evenings 847-7586
$1 Jan rent paid, 2nd min. sublease, 2 bedroom,
roommate
1. Jan rent paid 2nd semi suitese 2 bedroom,
jacuzzi bath, furnished/unfurnished 749-4292
Affordable spaces 2 b apt Furn. on bus
route 841. 830-380
Beginning January 2 - Sublease 2 bedroom; 2 bath apartment. Option for direct lease in May. 14th & Kentucky. 749-3269 or 841-1212.
Available Jan. thru May, Two bdrm apt
w/fireplace 827 Michigan Sunrise Place Free
cell rent, negotiable Call 841-9004
Beautiful 3 bedroom apartment. Wood floors fireplace $550 no includes utilities. 128 Tennessee. 841-5845, 749-7358. Mature students/families
Completely Furnished 1,3, and 4 bedroom apartments available immediately & near KU. Call 84-7412, 8412-7455, 8412-9429, or 748-3415.
Mastercraft
- `o.a.p.mpetri` * **Für Schussier生物** * **Mathematical Studies 1.3 & 2** * **Energy theory**
* Mathematics and design with you wiim matlab.
* Mathematics, ii & syllabus wiim matlab.
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED: To share nice 2 bedroom apartment Spring Semester. Call 749-1555
Female Roomate wanted to share beautiful apartment in Pepperette Park. Available immediately. Apartments include own bedroom, own bathroom,洗衣机, fireplace, and free laundry room.
For rent - 2 hdr - 1 bath, in great location, on bus route. We need someone to take over our lease Jan. May Call for details - 843-4325
Female roommate wanted to share house blocks from campus, 125 *i*; utilities, $200 deposit. W/D; must like cats, non-smoker. Contact alice at 934-8425 or days 8425 before.bam. Attend a: Formal roommate Sublease starting Jan. 1. Roommate: Private room walk to campus: Amy 842-6888
Available January 1, $335 km. Kurt-749 384-258
Grad. Student says, "I'm outta here." Will rent
new 2 br. apt. for $100 under actual cost.
Available Jan. 1, 841-2958
Large 1 br apt. for rent spring semester. 1 block north of Union. Furnishings available. $320 mo. 824-4100. best after 9pm.
Male or Female roommate wanted. Very nice townhouse for 2nd semester. $210/mo. + ½ rate. on UK hotel route. BH4-494
Male roommate wanted for Spring semester to share spacious apartment, own bedroom, washer/dryer, close to campus, on bus route rock room, matrusha + 7 months +利息. Call Hailey
Sunflower House
Sunflower Hous
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
Need Sublease. Nice 2 be. 4b lock from Union.
Water paid. Laundry Place. Available
Jan 1st. $885. Call 841-3434.
New 2-bedroom apt. , 3 min. walk to campus.
Cheap utilities, off-street parking, 1312 Ohio. Call Larry at 622-6240
Non-smoking roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom house on campus. Preferably a grad student. 842-5345
One large bedroom for sublease at Hanover Place immediately. $330 mo. water paid, and furnished.
Call 841-1222 or 843-3566.
Quint., roommate wanted to share two bedroom apartment. Walking distance to campus, $155 month plus t_2 utilities. Start Jan. 1st. 842 8476.
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient location to K.U, and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
15th St Crestline 842-4200
RENT OUR APT. - EARN $100/mo. Nice, new 2
br. New appliances, jacuzzi, built in study area.
Available Jan. 1, 841-2968.
Room in mice room very near campus. Share kitchen, bath, 180 units, utilities deposit. Bg47 8659. Second Semester Roommate wanted to work on Bus route or walk distance (aa42 784-785).
Single apartment for sublease 2 bikes from Union $350/month. 842-5546 best after 9:30pm.
spacialis a dorsiflora* age, infants of Calida. *Fall*
over lease. Available after finals. Call 841-5849.
Spring Semester Sublease. thr. WD, on bus rt.
Calls evens. 740 - 5900 Desperate.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 30, 1988
.
We Bring More Roommates Together by Splitting Them Up.
Colony Woods realizes the closer you are to your roommate the farther apart you want to be. Knowing this, we give them two bedrooms and 2 full bath apts at a kitchen and living room area.
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MON. - FRI. 9-6
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842-4444 524 Frontier Rd. (Off of 6th Street)
SUBLEASE: Studio in Berkeley Flats, five minutes to campus. Water/gas paid $285 monthly. 749-836-9368.
Sublease: Large 2HR apt. on Bus Route Can
3 Call:811-4349
SUBLEASE 2: bedroom townhouse, close to campus, available Jan 1 842-098.
Sublease. Nice 2 br duplex, syls old, dishwasher
close to campus, $800/month, 849-1220.
Sublease one room apt. Water paid. Dec rent.
$250 deposit. Rent $285.00 off rent each month. Call 842 8239 (keep trying) or 843-1118.
We offer dining room and spring for $9. We offer dinner TV, TV game, and laundry (facilities). Low rent includes all utilities, and evening meal. Give cooperative help a try. Call 789-6671 or 84-4844.
TRAILRAGE STUDIO available for sublease,
spring semester Quire clean, great location
room, laundry, pool, Dillen's Phone 749-4835
after 7pm on evenings or weekdays
Two bedroom apt. : Washer/dryer hookups,
garage, 3419 Harvard Drive, 841-8223. Small pets
allowed.
Two MOD studies for sablease. Dec. 15th? 1203
Oread. Across from Yello Sub. 749-6805. 749-2916.
749-3782.
Unfurnished 2. bedroom - apt, large bath,
dishwasher, dryer hook-up $600/month -
utilities 3 blocks from campus, 5 or 8 month
sublease beginning 14.798-3482
WANTED - Person or persons to assume a lease at Hanover Place at semester end. If interested call 842-9357
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 66044
913 - 843 - 8559
Convenience...
Luxury...
Privacy...
All rights reserved.
All these Advantages
and more!
Naismith Hall...These two words have come to mean something special to KU students. It's hassle free living that only Naismith can offer. Why worry about utility bills and cooking dinner? Let Naismith Hall take care of all your worries.
Now leasing for the SPRING Semester
Ask about our new "DINE ANYTIME"
For information and a tour come by or call today!
WANTED Person or persons to assume a lease at Colony Woods, 1 bedroom, at semester end. Call 843-3918
FOR SALE
I-way ticket on American from KCI to Dallas.
Dec 22nd, $75, 841-3574
A CHRISTMAS TREAT
What's more treasured than a handmade gift?
We have that special touch your shopping from country crafts to unique art品. Plus cookies and handmade art for all.
**THOMAS HAYWARD**
$ 7 2 9^{1 / 2} $ Mass. UPSTAIRS Shop M-F 9:6 Sat 10:5
AUDIO BUFFS, extremely brand new unassisted audio kits offered by private individual. 1) Dyna Kits Mark IV, 40 watts, tonne power; 2) Minis $99.50 set. 3) Dyna Kit Model XS (Class A), $89.00 set. 4) Dyna Kit Model XS (Class B), $49.00 set. Call 612-882388 evenings or after 7 o'clock or any day at Wednesday.
BSA TROOP 53% ANNUAL MUMSAGE SALE
Saturday, December 3rd, 6:30am to 9:0pm, FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH, 10th and Kentucky. Admission FREE
MACE MIGHT MISS A STUN GUN
As you walk across campus at night,you might feel safe carrying a can of mace,but are
you? Why chance it?
If you're carrying a Stun Gun
by Everquest your protection
is secure. Unlike Mace, there
is nothing to spray, so you
can never miss. The VIPER I
stun gun delivers 50,000 volts
of electric shock every time
you fire. It's guaranteed to
bring an attacker to their knees
giving you plenty of time for
**Discount:**
Viper II only $49.95
Call @
Terry
864-2913
For free brochure write to:
John Quint
P.O. Box 2186
Lawrence, KS
66045-0186
An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, an antique and used furniture piece, fine antique and collectible handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, cardboard boxes, vintage records, record clothing books, comebase cards, slip machines, Maxfield Parrish, art decoupage tools, Royal Dudley, and so much more. Use our tools, the MATTLEY S. FLAIR MARKET 181 New York, the MATTLEY S. FLAIR MARKET 181 New Jersey, and Sun 13. For booth rental into 842-660-7599.
Private individual offers rare audio cassette course in French developed by U.S. Dept of State Criminal Defense Bureau. Includes tapes and manuals. List price $495, special offers available upon request. Call 817-366-3889 before 7 pm or all day. Call 817-366-3889 before 7 pm or all day.
Comic books, Playbags, Penthouses, etc. **Comics** 81 New Hamphire. Open Sat. & Sun.
For Sale: 76 Bianchi R.C.5i Bike, like new, 88 Hard Rock Mountain Bike. 841-809-6988
Prior to Sale, Pioneer Tuner with timer, 60. Walker JC55 Turnable, 12B5, Meridian Meridian amp, 15P, Cassette decks aIwa, 35, Cyberen (Kyocera) 60. Excellent condition. Call Gabriel B41-184-164
**FREE information on New Ka Police Photo radar:** NOW in use. Also in use to save $80.00 on the BEL VECTOR 3 radar detector that will detect all radars including New ka BAL
Enterprises, P.O. Box 274 Laming Ks. 60494
GOTU SUPPLYS "N." G1. New I.G.套房s.
Combat boats, and safety-too-boots Wool (climbers),
Camouflage Clothing Also CARHARTT
WORKEAR Mon.-Sat. 9-3 Open sundays!<
Christmas 124 · M. St. Marty Sales .S.
Christmas 124 · M. St. Marty Sales .S.
Pewsey Mystic electric guitar, excellent condition $200 and Crate 4-git amp, almost new, $200, 841-257.
Rock-ridel Thousands of used and rare albums 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. ever Saturday and Sunday Quantrill's Fie Market, 811 New Hampshire
Quantrill's Fires Market . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Stereo w/in Intel speaker pods. Cost $49.
Stereo w/in Intel speaker pillows. Prices 749-3899.
Techniques Stereo System SCA 810-W/CDual
280 Watts/Charge. Only 2 months old. Under
$600.
AUTOSALES
1880 Toyota Tercer 2 dr. 5 speed, A/C stereo, 78 mi. Excelent condition. $1000-$1800. Call 846-7868.
1886 Honda Civic (Civic) 4-speed manual, AM/FM radio, color. Colorful. 842-9888. 1-422-3128.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords. Mercerts. Corvettes. Chevys. Surplus.
Buvers Buyers (1) 805-647-6000 Ex. S-7638
Is It True You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the U.S. government? Get the facts today! Call 1-800-742-1427, 3294
LOST-FOUND
**AIRLINES NOW HIRING.** Flight Attendants.
Travel Agents, Mechanics. Customer Service.
Listings. Salaries to $10K. Entry level positions.
1) Call ( 055-837-4600 . Ext A. 9738
Missing: Blue backpack w/ leather bottom. Contains important class notes: not all mine! If found please call 842.7241. No questions asked.
HELP WANTED
Black Lab. found 11/28/08 in front of Marvin Hall with hurt paw. Call Humane Society 843-6835 or call Archi 864-5136.
Spend a year as a NANNY. Enjoy New York, home and life with a friend. Pay room. Room & board great salaries. Screamed families. PHINCTON NANNY SCREAMED families. PHINCTON NANNY ST. HARRIER 16. NJPINSON N.J. (609) 493-7856. NJPINSON N.J. (609) 493-7856.
Do you need a job for next semester? Stepping
up to the next level includes infant care,
& pre-schoolers. We will be training in
part-time aid positions. We will be training in
the childcare and/or early childhood of
the Grichard Center Shopper. On the
middle school level, we will teach
Do you like to sing? Dance? Create a good time? Then singing Telegrams are for you! Super part time. Call J.Cindy 749-2288
Child Care Worker needed for weekend position.
Child Residential Treatment Program for boys 12-17 yrs.
Provides children with a safe, nurturing environment of age, have a valid driver's license & gsss
DO SOMETHING FUN! **Earn extra money**
GOVERNENLY NEEDED for 2 small children ages 7:35 am to 6:00 pm neededs in my home. Reliable car necessary Call after 6:00 pm, anytime weekends, 841-8444.
earn discounted loans; and meet new people by:
*SELLING VACATIONS! $200 - every week PART
1 of our weekly program to treat you!
*Be your own boss! Only self-motivated
need apply *OPTIONAL WEEKS! Tue-
nesday, 3/5 from 9 AM to 4 PM,
Parkway 100, KC MO. Don't miss! Call (816)
+44-555-4405 to receive a fun gift, fun
companions, and more.
GOVERNMENT JOB. $16,940-$59,230. Vt. Now
Hiring. Your Area (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. R-9758
for current Federal list.
Junior women. Consider a commission in the Marine Corps. See Lieutenant Milburn at 925 Iowa or Call 841-1823.
Up to 640 per week. Positions nationwide: East,
West, South, Midwest. 1 year commitment:
1-800-722-4535. National Nanny Resource and
Referral.
NEED EXTRA CIMS? Work as a cashier for NEED EXTRA CIMS? Please contact the following: 888-350-6244; 888-350-6245; Applications accepted through December 5, 1988 at the General Accounting Office. Carrash University, 777-400-2500; www.carrash.edu Previous caching experience preferred.
graduate Student needed to manage 18-unit apartment building in Olathe. Salary and apartment furnished Phone 1-482-4496
Part-time help was needed immediately Tuesday,
Thursday, and Saturday to continue Spring
semester. Starting pay $8.85 hr. Apply in person
African Adorned, 5 East 7th.
$400,000 $800,000 sum. **YUMFER**, All Countries, All Locations, All Countries, LC, PD, PC & KS01. Coral DeNA, CA 92852.
Part-time workers - Packer Plastic is examining the feasibility of having *b*2 time production shifts: 8a.m - 12noon, 12noon - 4pm, 4pm - 4pm, 4pm - 1mindnight, 12mindnight
tax Restaurants is now hiring for both full-time and part-time work. We offer flexible hours and scheduling. pay up to $67.50 per hour. Appliances at Tax Restaurants W. 21rd, St. 49-4501.
Retail Sales Microcomputers Retail Sales IBM-compatible computers and support of Apple computers for Lawrence's number one computer system. Send resume or credentials by 12/07. CONNECTING TPOINT COMPUTER CENTER, #04 New York, Lawrence K. 65440 EOE; M/S/V IH
Staying in town over break? Need $$$$ Loved Kids? Apply to Children Learning Center 331. Main for teacher aid position. Flexible hours. $3.50 per hour.
SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS. Over 5,000 Openings! National Parks, Forests, Fire Crews, Stamp For Free Details. 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT 59001
TACO JOINES - now hiring day & Evenings apply
all 3 locations 1085 Mass, 1620 Misc, 928 W 2rd, or 110 W
6th, Mature, responsible persons need only apply
between 2.5 mm
W. T.C.S. The local battered women's program is looking for a full-time community facilitator. Duties include grant writing, raising fundraising efforts, and providing support to battered women and their children. Women of color, formerly battered women, and different age groups may participate available at Headquarters. Women Studies, Job Service Center, Haskell Health Center, or other organizations must be posted by Wed, Dec. 8th, 1988.
Are you a student concerned about responsible use or nonuse of alcohol? Get involved in KU's Student Affairs Council meeting Wednesday November 30, 7:48 p.m. on Kansas University Call 814-4004 for more information.
MISCELLANEOUS
On TVs, VCRs, Jewelry, Stereo, Musical instruments, cameras, and more. We honor Visa/MC.A.M.E.X. J-Hawk Pawn & Jewelry. 184 W.604, 749-1591
Hillel
לָה
Kittens $5 each. Light brown Taby male. Black
Taby male. Grey Taby female. 924-6888.
Events of the Week
Wednesday, Nov. 30
Hanukkah table
with Kabbai Friedman
11:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Kansas Union
Little Brothers & Little Sisters
Kahl Party
Little Brothers & Little Sisters
Pre-Hanukkah Party
6:30 p.m. Hillel House
RSVP required by Wed. Nov. 30
For hours, KSves and more information Call Hillel House 749-4242
HEALY LISTEN
Call on us here.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO REALLY LISTEN
Benefit Dance for
For Tickets and Information call:
841-1449
RICK CASTANEDA Friday, Dec. 2, 1988
Alarm Lite it screams for help. Carry in pocket, lite for protection. Loud force makes it an excellent attention getting device. Excellent for camcorder. 89.45 $ .B0 Box 3716, Lawrence Ks.
Angela Rene 'I'm late again and I'm sorry.' Honey
have had a great 19th birthday. You're the best
friend and rooome I could have ever hoped for.
I love you so much! - Christine.
Pastors Peace Convoy
MAN U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT??? Peee and H-WE. The past eight months have been perfect! I love you tumples and forever Love always, N niflil and H.B.
Are you adventurous, fun-loving, imaginative?
Are you a creative person with an experience with you! Watch next Tuesday's
Ken, Rufus came home. Stop by and see him some time. Brian, I love you! Pais.
Pistol Grip Natech Socket Screwdriver set
eight socket wrenchs, AWL two side two Phillips
screwdriverized Gift box Zip. Fifteen piece
compressed Priced $9.95 P.O. Box 3716,
Lawrence KS.
Futon mattresses from $86.88, mattress and frame from $199.88. At New Wave Futons, 11th East.
needs $2,500 to truck
hurricane relief to
Nicaragua
Please call 843-6827
Lawrence
for information
2 West GSP 87. 68 Don't forget Dos Thurs, Dec 1.
5:30. See ya there!
Government Photos, Passport, immigration,
vias. Modeling, theatrical, Advanced fine art portfolios. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Tum Saw 795-1611.
NICE COLARDO $25/NITE FOIL 2 Ten couy box set
Gameroom/fireplace/ HROB, pool table, game
Gamerroom/fireplace/HROB, pool table, game
X-Acoustic Kit, N冰雪 Park, Silver Creek
Cave, Brandsbury/resort - Grand Lakes, CO
Brandsbury/resort - Grand Lakes, CO
PERSONAL
Habitie Connie, Happy tst year anniversary
Looking forward to see you tonight. Love you
forever, Yarob.
Recipe, REM. nights from hell, all our friends Jack, Reng and Kim, Jim and Tart, Arf Art, Coco Butter, ice cubes, the Jungle, greedy fries, meat studs, and double beds. I love on R W
International Student Travel
Low rates on scheduled flights worldwide.
Call 1.800.775.0133
For that personal touch Gateway Insurance
Paying too much for car insurance because of Your Age?
Had a few tickets?
Need an SR-22?
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided 841,2316.
BUS. PERSONAL
GATEWAY
INC.
ALL Line Ski & Snowboard Tuning
Complete Repair home pickup and
completed Certification
Certified Tenture
S
THE BEACH HOUSE
GIFTS & ACCESSORIES
EAST 8TH 749-0334
NE corner of 23rd & Iowa : 841-4204
THE COMIC CORNER
Role-playing & War Games 100's of miniatures & modules
The Most Extensive Collection of back-issue comics in Leavenol
SERVICES OFFERED
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation revised. 841.7746
Friend or family of a girl or a lesbian 'Need talk? For a Free, confidential referral to Gay & Lesbian Peer Counseling Call KU Info at 843-566 or M at 843-7195. Supported by UWSP.
K. U. INFORMATION CENTER 84-368-3006, campus community events, University procedures, SUICIDE CRISIS HELP, referrals, 24 hrs/day
MATH TUTOR since 1978, M.A., $/hr., 843-9032
(p.m.).
teaching experience. Call Alex at 841-7661
Parts and services for BMW, Motoguzzi and Harley Davidson motorcycles. We accept Visa and Mastercard. B.C. A/C & Auto. Cycle 315 N.2D.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park...9131 459-6878
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-8421. Confirm helpful free pregnancy
QUALITY TUTORING ECONOMICS
CHAPTER 9 THEMATICS IN LESL Call
Donna B42-1053
, oimp contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
Santa loves MASSAGE. Hello! The perfect gift this season is a massage certificate from Lawrence Massage Therapy $92.97 $massage. Suite 114 call 814-6623 and blessed via va to !!
Service your car before winter arrives with cruise system, tuneup and heater checks. All makes and models. Accept Vscia and Mastercard B C Auto & Cycle 31 N. 2nd 124-895.
Students: add color to papers, projects, graphics,
drawings and reports with the only full color
copy on campus. Call 864-3244
BEST FUN YEAR
Winterization
Special
only $29^{95}
Toyota Quality Service
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, misc. IBM correcting Selectic, spelled corrected. 843-954
ACT NOW :Papers, resumes, & cover letters
WRITING LIFELINE. 841.3469
2 Smart Typesetting. Dissertation. Thesis Paper, Resumes and more. Spelling corrected and all output laser printed in your choice of fonts. Low typing prices. 749-2740.
degrees below zero.
Accurate word processing. Meadowbrook location. Reasonable rates. Ten years experience. Call evenings before 10: 749-1961.
for protection to 20-30 degrees below zero
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your writings into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-265, days or evenings
- Drain cooling system
- Drain cooling system and replace anti-freeze for protection to 20-30
- Check all fluid levels.
- Check all fluid levels.
- Check battery and sta.
842-4988 for professional typing at reasonable rates. Before 10pm.
Absolutely fast accurate typing. Papers, theses,
dissertations, resumes. Reasonable rates
841-9633.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25/double-spaced pica page. East Lawrence
Mrs. Matilla 841-1919
ATTN MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS Word processing service available near. yay. APA formal experience, spell check. Call Pat Macak, 843 6708
- Check battery and starter
- Clean & inspect battery
All R.J.'s Typing Service 841-5942 Term Papers, Legal, Thesis, etc. No calls after 9 P.M.
**COMPANY DESIGN** 41.00 pts. #1-94-8244
Doma's Quality Typing and Word Processing,
paper, papers, dessertations, letters,
resume, brochures, and laser-printed.
Laser Printing. Spelled correct, **8243**.
- Clean & inspect battery terminals/cables
Expert Typist: Reasonable rates. Call 842-3203
IRON FENCE TYPING. 841-5838.
Typing word processing on p.c. LQ printer. Term papers, theses, dissertations, misc. Barb. 842.210
The Peace Store: A Peace Forum: 729↓
Massachusetts, Wordprocessing, Spelling check:
*841-9223 or 841-2279*.
the WOORDTOCTS. Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these resumes, commercial, IBM-PC, MAC, CDF, Daisyware, dot matrix, laser. Since 1893
WORD PROCESSING Efficient, accurate. Also tutoring writing projects. Call Anne. 842-7708.
- Toyotas only
Ellena Toyota 2300 W. 29th Terr.
exp 12/31/88
Very experienced Spanish 104-216 tutor; translator. Results oriented, systematic approach makes Espanol easier, even fun. 841-6974
WANTED
-typing at a reasonable rate -Call Barbara at 18:51:11, 9:40-Monday, Thursday and 8:30 on Friday.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable typing and wordprocessing. Judy, 842-7943 or Lasa, 841-1915.
TYPING
Female roommate winters second semester. Own
room, bedroom and bathroom. On campus.
Jack 84412-7530
Female non-smoking roommate needed second semester to assume lease of two bedroom townhouse, $1 rent and utilities. On bus route Call 841 841-3521
Roommate roommate to share a 2 bdroom
apt. starting Jan 1, 1989. Village Square Apt.
$177 per mo. + $ utilities After 5pm. Call
843-8033
Female roommate wanted second semester to
assume lease of three-bedroom house. 352 E. 12th
St. $165 a mo. + utilities. Call 842-7726.
Female roommate will for Dec. 1st to share
towhouse $135 per month + a utilities bkq. 8472-7623.
To be considered, residents must assume lease of two-bedroom towhouse *fe/utilities*, this route, fireplace, pool.
For more details call (800) 322-8012.
Female roommate wanted, very nice two bedroom apartment completely furnished. $187 +
½ utilities. 749.5206.
House Share, Private Room, W & D, furnished. 3 biks from campus all the comforts of home, biks 749-7515.
LOOK- I must sublease my half of two bedroom apt. Rent only $145/month. Many amenities. 842-8618 Hurry!
Room, cooking privileges, bath, in private home plus off-street parking, needed immediately by female grad (age 40), non-smoker. 843-8027
Responsible male non-smoker to share 2 bedrooms apt. Available immediately Gas heat, microwave, DW. furnished Bus route, close to campus $185/mo * 1' utilities 749-4388
Male roommate wanted for Spring semester. Own bedroom. Sunrise Village. $153 + '+' utilities. 842-5487
Roommate will for spring semester. January
Sublease 2 bedroom apartment. Great location:
3 schools from campus & close to downtown. $155 a month plus 1s utilities 749-381. Lorem.
Roommate wanted to share one bedroom apt.,
furnished, $135/month + utilities, water, cable
paid, on bus route, 842.120
Male of Female roomate wanted to share giant 2 BR apt. 1, bath, wash/driver, pool, huge balcony, on bus route 735/mo (negotiable), 8 utilities. Gary 814-677.
Room newer home w/d d/w f/p $200 mo utilities
pd. 749-7566.
Roommate will need to share a bedroom apartron $170/month + $u utilities, ask for Mark. 842-938-9000 Roommate need. Very convenient & modern apartment. On bus route $10 = electricity. Call
Spring roommate wanted Eddington, pool,
laundry, bus route $210 plus ½ utilities. Call Alan
841-164.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY Classified Information KANSAN Mail-In Form
Wanted: Someone to provide night support for disabled man from 10:49 m. to 8:30 a.m. Pays $2.50 per day. T拜 749-1729.
- Policy
WANTED: Male roommate, Surprise Village
your own room, your own bathroom. 841-8723
WANTED: Roommate to share 2 bedroom apt.
close to campus. Available Jan 1 for $13.50 plus
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in Bold Face count as 3 words
BOLD FACE
OVERFLOW FACE
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words.
Classified states are shown in a table.
Tearsthes are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words.
No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
Blind box ads-please add $4.00 service charge.
Deadlines
Deadline is 4 p.m. two days prior to publication
Deadline for personal use only
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.
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 2 Weeks 3 Weeks 1 Month
0-15 3.10 4.55 6.50 10.80 16.15 20.40
16-20 3.60 5.40 7.60 12.20 17.85 22.40
21-25 4.20 6.25 8.75 13.60 19.55 24.40
26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00 21.30 26.35
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 16.45 22.95 28.35
Classified Rates
Classified Mail Order Form
Classifications
01 announcements 300 for sale 800 help assisted 800 services offered
100 entertainment 310 auto sales 700 personal 900 typing
100 business 340 auto sales 110 commercial 700 sales
ne ___ Phone no
Please print your ad one word per box:
| | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND
Date ad begins
Total day in paper
Amount paid
Classification
LOW KANSAN POLICY
Make checks payable to:
Kansan J.
191 Staffer Room
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
THE FAR SIDE
By
By GARY LARSON
© 1980 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
'Yoo-hoo! Oh, yoo-hoo! . . . I think I'm getting a blister.'
16
Wednesday, November 30, 1988 / University Daily Kansan
BENEFITS OF CHEERFUL SERVICE
GOLD MEDALIST PARTY
LAW ENGINEERING CENTER
GOLD MEDALIST PARTY
BON
...0R You Could Watch Your Wash Spin.
A young man sits in front of a washing machine, resting his feet on a stool while reading a book.
Hours:
Daily 7 a.m..
Last Load at 10:30 p.m.
DUDS in SUDS
Good clean fun!
Located Right Behind Independent Laundromat 918 Mississippi 841-8833
Some Students Don't Need A BANK IV Student Loan.
Studious
"I discovered heretofore unidentified organic compounds in ordinary dorm food which I processed to propel a spaceship the size of Duluth to the Andromeda galaxy and back..." On one hand: Won every scholarship known to humanity. On the other: Needs money only to buy pocket protector and dental floss.
m
Industrious
(12 simultaneous part time jobs. Too busy to talk.)
On one hand:
Learns value of
a dollar.
On the other:
Collapses of
exhaustion 2 weeks
before graduation.
me
Prankster
"...and then we'll get up to their campus, steal the weasel mascot, and hold it for 50 kegs ransom."
On one hand: Lots of laughs.
On the other: All assets
controlled by bail bondsmen.
QA
BROOKLYN
Football Powerhouse Star
"Hi, Mom!"
On one hand: Can turn pro at any minute.
On the other: Needs to finish his education to understand the contract.
Most, However, Do Typical College Student
“$69.95 for one book?? Used!!”
On one hand: Could qualify for a BANK IV Student Loan.
On the other: Hasn't applied yet.
A BANK IV Student Loan Isn't For Everybody.
DO.
udent
BOOK DAILY
But it's probably right for you. Cause BANK IV believes in you And in the future you're building for yourself. So if you need money for school, send us this coupon. We'll send you complete details.
The Strength of Kansas. BANK IV
Send me information on BANK IV's Student Loan program.
Name
Address
City
State Zip
Expected Graduation Year
Clip out coupon and mail to: BANK IV Educational Loan Department
P.O. Box 1318
Wichita, KS 67201
BANK IV Educational Loan Department / P.O. Box 1318 / Wichita, KS 67201 / (316) 261-2103 or 1(800)283-LOAN