VOL. 99, NO.146 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
WEDNESDAY JUNE 7,1989
Upheaval in China rocks the world
奠
MOURNING
Beijing's defenders skirmish
Steve Traynor/KANSAN
Chinese students march down Javhawk Boulevard protesting the Chinese government's actions in Beijing.
The Associated Press
BEIJING — Only days after some units of the Chinese army attacked thousands of unarmed demonstrators in Beijing, citizens poured into the streets yesterday to give a hero's welcome to other units.
This astonishing contrast represents the sharp differences in loyalties and backgrounds among the factions of China's fighting force.
The 27th Army, based in Hebei province, is reviled and feared in Beijing for shooting hundreds of people during a demonstration in Taianmen Square.
But the 38th Army, which normally is responsible for defending Beijing, is now considered a force that has come to drive the 27th from the capital. Its troops were greeted Tuesday when they entered the city. People rushed forward to give them cigarettes and shake their hands.
The intentions of the 38th in entering Beijing remain unclear. But Chinese and diplomatic sources widely agree the army group has come to end the killing and possibly to drive the 27th from Beijing.
Details are sketchy on the number of soldiers involved in the three or four armies deployed in the Beijing area. The People's Liberation Army is organized into about 22 Group Armies, such as the 27th or 38th Each has about three divisions and totals about 40,000 soldiers.
The London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies estimates the Chinese military has more than 3 million men and women on active duty, with about 2.3 million in the army. The 22 Group Armies are spread among seven designated regions of the country.
KU students rally for democracy seekers
There already have been skimishes reported between soldiers of the 28th and 38th with men of the 27th. The clashes are possibly a prelude to a major battle to drive the 27th out of the capital and end one of the worst crises in communist China's 40-year history.
Less than half of each corps is thought to have been deployed in Beijing. So far they have shown mainly tanks and armored personnel carriers, the groups are also equipped with anti-aircraft and artillery regiments.
by Laura Graham
Kansan staff writer
Wearing black armbands and chanting "Long live China!" Long live the people! Long live democracy!" and other slogans in support of students from around 50,000 people marched on Jayhawk Boulevard yesterday afternoon.
The march began at about 3:15 in front of the Kansas Union, as the crowded paused for a moment of silence before pouring for those recently killed in Beijing.
"Today we are here to demonstrate for a new democratic China that we always wanted, but never had the opportunity to have," said Zhou Xiaofang, Beijing, China, senior He read from a document that addressed the march had prepared to address all the friends of China."
"We simply want to show our support," said Joseph Kuo, associate professor of East Asian Languages. "No one knows what will happen."
Ye Ying, Zhengzhou, China, graduate student who used to work for the Chinese government, said it was hard to believe all the killing and violence which was taking place in his homeland.
"I believe that sooner or later the students will win," said Ye. "I believe that if I were in China, I surely would participate."
Commist regime, "Justice will be done" or "We shall overcome" organizers said the rally was needed to a peaceful demonstration.
Although many marchers carried signs with messages such as "Penalize the butcher," "Down with the
"The violence that has happened there is tragic," said Mike Mader, Great Bend graduate research assistant for the KU Information Center. Mader said he thought the march was important because the Chinese students' quest for democracy was really a global issue.
Students wait, watch homeland
by Charles Higginson Kansan staff writer
Eight people crowded around the television set in a corner of a Stouffar Place living room Monday afternoon. As videotaped footage of a fire in Beijing filled the screen, they swooped down on the television, leaning close and peering into it. They pointed at signs and placards, reading them aloud and tapping the screen. When commercials replaced the news, they turned eagerly to a pile of newspapers on a coffee table.
In a scene repeated in hundreds of apartments across the United States, Chinese students at KU were trying to figure out what had happened in their homeland.
It was early Sunday in Beijing when Chinese military forces began shooting and beating their way through throngs of pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square, killing and injuring thousands of people. For three weeks, Chinese students and workers had occupied the square, demonstrating for democracy.
Yu Xuejian, Beijing graduate student, was one of the students gathered around the television. In a voice constricted with anger, he most recent events in China meant to Chinese students in the United States.
"People have been asking us, 'Are you afraid of the future?'" Yu said. "And sure, my future will be in danger. But I don't care."
we don't care anymore.
Yu said the Chinese government's violent response to the continuing demonstrations was a shock.
"This kind of massive killing was unexpected," he said. "This regime is insane."
Yu was one of nearly 40 KU students who traveled to Chicago early Sunday to demonstrate at the Chinese consulate.
"We knew that our voice should be heard," he said. "Even though we cannot go back, we can call for the support of all Chinese students and scholars in the United States. We can try to get the attention of the U.S. government and people and hope they can offer some support."
Yu said he doubted the Chinese government could last.
"The present regime is certainly doomed." he said. "How can a government survive without the support of the people and call itself a people's government? Their victory will be temporary."
See ANGER, p. 6, col. 1
Tom Foley elected speaker
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Democrat Tom Foley of Washington was elected the 49th speaker of the House today, replacing a scandal-scarred Jim Wright. Foley promised to end months of political tumult caused by charges of ethical misconduct.
Foley pledged in advance to "restore a mood of conciliation, reconciliation and cooperation with the people," House replied with a standing
Wright, presiding for the final time as speaker, said the tally was 251 for Foley and 164 for GOP leader Bob Michel.
ovation as his election was announced.
A few moments later, Foley made a ceremonial entrance into the chamber where he had served for 25 years. He climbed the speaker's podium. Wright, descending, handed over the gavel.
Michel stood beside Foley and conceded defeat in a humorous
speech.
"I'm all for putting an end to bitterness," he said. "I'm all for putting our house in order. But we are not sweeping things under the rug."
Michel also took one final shot at Wright, saying that the members of his committee who had investigated him "neither mindless nor cannibals."
Wright's fall from power hits hard
"The chair will receive nominations for the office of speaker," said Wright.
The Associated Press
Even as Wright nominated Rep. Tom Foley of Washington as speaker in a somber speech on the house floor, workers were truely out of touch with expectations out of the speaker's ceremonial office on canvas-covered carts.
WASHINGTON — The impact of Jim Wright's fall from power was stark and swift yesterday, as the former House speaker remained in his Capitol office while his successor of only an hour headed to a White House meeting with the president.
Asked about his plans as Foley prepared to take Wright's place at the table with President Bush at a meeting on clean air legislation, Wright replied. "I must get to on the phone and call my wife."
A day earlier, Wright was sitting next to Bush as the congressional
The Fort Worth Democrat, a member of the House leadership for the last 12 of his 34 years in Congress, spent his final moments as speaker holding his regular conference but revealed little about his plans or his state of mind. He declared simply, "I feel fine."
leadership gathered with the president to discuss foreign policy.
Forced out of his leadership job over ethics questions. Wright plans to resign his congressional seat later this month.
"I might express my appreciation to all of you for keeping a robust discussion going." he told a
As giant orange trash cans waited to be filled with cardboard boxes stuffed full of folders, frames and plaques in his staff's adjacent office, Wright was asked if he had any parting words.
room packed full of reporters: "I might want to write a column or two. Someone suggested I should become a columnist. It might be a good thing. In fact, I might disgust those who unnamed sources are."
Just 45 minutes before he was to nominate Foley before House Democrats, Wright closeted himself in his office with notes written the night before and wrote his last speech as speaker.
A spokesman said Wright had not yet decided whether he would move to his congressional district office in the Longworth House Office Building until he resigns his seat. But it was clear that he and his wife, being pushed quickly out of the mansiononial office, although Wright also has a personal office in the Capitol.
Desegregating Topeka
District considers adding 'magnet' schools
The Associated Press
TOPEKA - Lawyers said yesterday that busing probably will not be required to correct lingering school segregation in Topka, 35 years after a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision, but school district officials are studying their options after an appeals court ruling in Denver.
An attorney for a group of parents who said the district had not done enough to eliminate the segregation that led to the 1954 decision said he believes a remedy will not be possible without action by the district said he's not sure what the district will have to do.
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel in Denver said that although Topeka officials had not resisted integration, segregation still existed in its school system. Thus, the panel said in a 2-1 decision, a remedy will be required. The panel filed its decision Friday but released it publicly Monday.
"I doubt that we're talking about busing." said Rich Jones, an attorney for the parents. "I doubt if we're talking about anything really radical. This school district has a very difficult problem, and the worst we had seen or the worst we had read about."
Gary Sebelius, the district's attorney, said any speculation on what the district will have to do is premature.
“Something has to be done. They don’t say what.” Barbara Kudlacek, the district’s spokesman, said: “there’s too much that has to happen before we even start to discuss that. I don’t think there are easy answers.”
The district could ask the appellate court for a rehearing before all 10 judges, and if it gets a similar decision there, it could appeal to the U.S. Surpeme Court. Sebelius did not know whether the board would hear the hearing.
In 1964, in Brown vs. Topeka Board of Education, the
"No one has suggested that we have anything less than an excellent program," Sebelian said. "There's just a lot of it."
However, in 1979 the parents of 17 black schoolchildren said the district had not eliminated all vestiges of segregation. Among those parents was Linda Brown Buckner, who was a student at the time of the 1954 decision and whose maiden name is on the case. The reopened case is sometimes called "Brown II."
U. S. Supreme Court said segregated school systems were unconstitutional because separate facilities for blacks and whites provided inherently unequal educational opportunities. The district, which set aside four elementary schools specifically for black children, had to implement an integration plan.
The case went to trial in October 1986, and U.S. District Judge Richard Rogers of Topeka ruled in April 1987 that the school district did not bear the liability for racial imbalances in some of its schools because the parents failed to prove it intentionally attempted to keep schools segregated.
The appeals court said Rogers applied too strict a standard and the parents merely had to prove that segregation existed, given the past history of the district.
The parents had pointed to seven elementary schools and one middle school that, they said, had a disproportionately high number of minority students. At the time, most of the schools' schoolchildren were minorities and 19 percent, black.
Dan Biles, an Overland Park attorney who represents the State Board of Education, said he's not sure what the appellate court's decision will mean in practical terms. The parents originally sued the state board, but Rogers removed it as a defendant and the appeals court agreed with that ruling.
Biles said the court has narrowed the scope of the case to focus on the assignment of students to schools, school attendance boundaries and the assignment of faculty and staff.
---
2
Wednesday, June 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Wednesday -Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. High 77' Low 63'.
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Sunday - Sunny and warm. High 87', Low 67.
Monday - Increasing clouds with a chance of thunderstorms by the afternoon. High 84', Low 65'.
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Calendar
WEDNESDAY
Retiree's Club coffee
Adult Life Resource workshop.
- 10 a.m. Adams Lounge, Adams Alumni Center.
Lawrence Bicycle Club
meets at South Park Gazebo. 8:30 a.m - 3 p.m. Destination varies, frequent trips include Lakeview, Wells Overlook, the Lawrence airport or just round-town Manhattan.
■ "Herbs for Life." 7 p.m. Adult Life Resource Center conference room, 708 W.
Ninth St. $35.
Staff training and development.
THURSDAY
Retirees' Club birthday party.
Retiree Club birthday party.
2:30 p.m. Summerfield Room, Adams Alumni Center.
"Communication " 8 a.m. June 15. 102 Carruth O'Leary Hall. Sponsored by Personnel Service.
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas
meeting; 7:30 PM, Acevedo at the Kansas Union
Jack Winerock, piano recital
8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. Public, $3. KU students, $2.
Lawrence Bicycle Club
SATURDAY
meets at South Park Gazebo. 8:30 a.m.-noon. Ride to Baldwin City, about 30 miles at 12-15 mph
Claude Frank, piano recital
Glade 1 p.m., piano rectal
8 p.m., Swartwhatch Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. $5.
SUNDAY
Lawrence Bicycle Club
meets at South Park Gazebo, 8:30 a.m. to about 2 or 3 p.m. Scenic tours of Douglas County and surrounding areas. Distance is 30-60 miles.
TUESDAY
Lawrence Bicycle Club
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Midwestern Music Camp
faculty/staff recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. Free
On The Record
A man exposed himself to a woman Monday in the 800 block of Lawrence Avenue, Lawrence police reported.
A bicycle valued at $225 was taken Monday from a business in the 2300 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police reported.
A bicycle valued at $150 was taken Monday from a residence in the 1900 block of Stewart Avenue, Lawrence police reported.
A bicycle valued at $225 was taken Monday from a residence in the 1900 block of Stewart Lawn, Lawrence police reported.
Several items of jewelry valued together at $5,540 were taken Monday from a residence in the 3100 block of Creekwood Drive, Lawrence police
reported.
The headlights and one window of a bus were shot out with a BB gun Monday in the 900 block of East 30th Street, Lawrence police reported.
A window air conditioning unit valued at $150 was taken Monday from a residence in the 1500 block of Street. Lawrence police reported
A car valued at $2,900 was taken
donday from a residence in the 500
lock of Fireside Drive, Lawrence
police reported.
Several items of clothing valued together at $1,022 were taken Monday from a room in the 1800 block of Dr. Drive, Lawrence police reported.
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / wednesday, June 7, 1989
3
1st KU woman aerospace PhD
Graduate working at NASA beating employment odds
by Susan Newburger Kansan staff writer
Vicki Johnson has gone where no woman has gone before.
Johnson, a NASA aerospace engineer, became the first woman to doctorate in aerospace engineering at the University of Kansas.
She returned to campus to receive the degree during the May 21 commencement ceremony, "This is what I have been waiting for." This finally what I've been waiting for.
Johnson's dissertation investigated the optimum design of commercial airplanes through lifecycle costs, or the expense of maintaining and operating an airplane throughout its life.
Jan Roskam, Dean E. Ackers distinguished professor of aerospace engineering and Johnson's adviser, said the study was timely.
"With increasing costs, one of the things that NASA will look at is the potential payoffs and the bottom line," Roskam said.
Johnson works at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Lanygle Research Center in Hampton, Va., concentrating on aeronautic and supersonic aircraft concepts to meet design specifications.
Johnson's pioneer effort began at Liberty High School in Liberty, Mo. when she was offered a scholarship to study engineering at the University of Missouri at Rolla. A counselor suggested that she relinquish the scholarship to a male student with a lower class rank.
She chose to keep the engineering scholarship.
"We let her decide on her education," said her father, Charles Johnson.
In August 1976, while at Rolla, Johnson was chosen to participate in a cooperative program sponsored by NASA. The program allowed students to work at NASA on alternating semesters, so that students graduated in five years with substantial work experience.
"I now visit high schools on career days, encourage students to take advantage of cooperative programs," Johnson said.
NASA continued to encourage Johnson's educational advancement, supporting her as she completed a master's degree in flight services from George Washington University in Washington, D.C.
NASA also paid her salary and tuition when she began the doctoral program at KU in August 1985. She studied on campus for the first year and returned to Hampton to finish her doctoral thesis.
"KU's conceptual aircraft design program is the best in the country, if not the world," she said. "A side was that KU was close to home."
However, at the undergraduate level, women make up less than 1 percent of the aerospace engineering students, according to Roskam.
Johnson said she had become accustomed to those odds. In 12 years of studying aerospace engineering, she only the only woman in her class
The balance is not much different at Langley Research Center. Of the 1,300 scientists and engineers at the center only 147 are women.
Crossings improve at slow pace
by Donna Eades Kansan staff writer
More than two years after four University of Kansas students were killed when a train collided with their car, installation of flashlight for the railroad crossing in North Lawrence is nearing completion.
Construction for two other Union Pacific crossings in Lawrence will be completed by the end of the year. A spokesman for the Union Pacific spokesman for the Union Pacific.
One of the crossings scheduled for improvement is located at the entrance to the Riverfront Park in North Lawrence. On May 11, a Haskell Indian Junior College student was killed and two others injured when their vehicle collided with a train.
Dawna Paul, 20, of Cherokee,
N.C., one of the Haskell students
injured at the Riverfront Park
crossing has been released from
the University of Kansas Medical
Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Ricky L. Cooper, Anadarko, Okla. is still listed in serious condition at the KU Medical Center.
After the accident at the Laptap crossing in the Spring 1987, the National Transportation Safety Commission, the Lawrence crossings and four others on the same line between Lawrence and Topeka. The state allocated funds for construction of crossarms and flashing lights at the intersection.
According to original Union Pacific estimates, construction at the seven crossings should have been completed by October 1988.
"I can see how the delays are frustrated, but the wheels just don't move as quickly as we would. That's why the Tice, Union Pacific spokesman
"A fatality might move it up in priority of installation, but in this
RAIL CROSSING ROAD
2 TRACKS
case the crossing on Laptad road was the most pressing." Tice said.
Steve Traynor/KANSA
Department of transportation worker Roger Magnet begins to install a crossing arm and signal at the Lantad intersection in North Lawrence.
Milo Kratochvil, coordinating engineer for the Kansas State
Department of Transportation,
said that 90 percent of the cost for
the project will be paid by the
state. Union Pacific and Douglas
County will each pay 5 percent.
Total cost for the project will be between $700,000 and $800,000. Shu-macher said.
Rules seek lower default rate
Education department's loan regulations will not affect KU
by Sharon Chapman Kansan staff writer
Tom Lyons, a spokesman for the department, said the restrictions would not affect the University of Kansas.
The U.S. Department of Education enacted regulations on Monday to lower the high rates of debt on Guaranteed Student Loans.
"Your (default) rate is a little above the national average but there will be no immediate charges for your school." Lyons said.
According to statistics from the Department of Education, the default rate at KU is 12.3 percent.
When Education Secretary Lauro Cavazos announced the plan, he said that 37 cents of every dollar spent on the loan is used to service unpaid loans.
Cavazos' plan divides schools into four categories of default rates: those schools above 60 percent, between 40 and 60 percent, over 30
percent and over 20 percent. Schools with these rates will be required to begin specific programs to lower the rates.
All schools must provide counseling to first-time borrowers. Other measures are determined in the school's default rate category.
Schools that fail to comply with these regulations may be suspended or banned from the GSL program.
Even though the regulations will not affect KU directly, the Student Financial Aid Office plans to add programs to lower the rate of default.
"Our default rate is far below the ceiling that's required for schools to be forced into taking remedial action," Jeff Weinberg, assistant director of financial aid, sai d. . . But we will be making a concerted effort in the fall to bring down our rate."
loan counseling to keep up with the increased number of students who are borrowing, Weinberg said.
Although Weinberg said default rates should be lowered, he thinks that the focus should not be on the reasons behind the rates. But on the reasons behind the rates.
"Some of these figures can be misleading. At a small school, six people may receive loan money. If three of these six default, you have a 50 percent rate of default," he said.
The effort would include more
Weinberg said more than the financial side of the default problem needs to be considered. He said it is not always the students' fault that loan payments are not met.
"Some schools don't provide the necessary services once the student arrives. They don't receive the services they pay for and then are unable to meet their loan payments," he said.
Weinberg said that he does not want to see the door to higher education closed to disadvantaged students because of high default rates.
Chemical causes evacuation
by a Kansan reporter
Haworth hall was evacuated for about 20 minutes yesterday morning while the Overland Park Bomb Squad removed a five gallon container of hazardous chemicals found in a storage closet.
The chemical, anhydrous ethyl ether, is used as a solvent in lab work. It has a 90-day shelf life. After 90 days the chemical may unstable, and, if exposed to air, there is a risk of explosion, Robin Eversole, Director of University Relations, said.
"The chemical was stored in a closet and had just been overlooked for a period of time." Eversole said.
for a period of time, Eversole said. The chemical had been in the closet since 1966.
After removing the container from the building, KU police and the Overland Park Bomb Squad took it to a University-owned field adjacent to the Sunflower Munitions plant eight miles east of Lawrence.
"We had to use caution because of the potential for explosion," LT Jeanne Longaker, spokesperson for KU Police, said. "We called overland Park because they're the explosives experts in the area," she said.
The container was heated,breaking the chemical down into a harmless mixture of carbon dioxide and water. There was no explosion.
The chemical was found in a campuside inventory of hazardous chemicals instituted at the request of the Lawrence fire department.
"No other chemicals this old or in this quantity were found," Loralee Saxon, a spokesman for University Relations, said.
Sanders appointed StudEx chairman
by a Kansan reporter
William Sanders' appointment as Student Senate Executive Committee chairman was unanimously approved on May 24, after Christine Stanek's appointment was rejected by the committee.
Stanek, St. Charles, M.o., senior,
was suspended from her position as
off-campus senator along with three
other students. She was suspended
from the university and then as
chairman by Student Senate President
B. Jake White was confirmed on
The suspension occurred because of an alleged violation of the University Code regarding the number of pupus senators allowed in the Senate.
As a result of her suspension, Stanek could not serve as StudEx chairman.
White said legislation had been passed five years ago changing the university code to allow for five off-campus students who did research had been conducted before
the four senators were suspended.
Sanders said that although Stanek was reinstated as an off-campus senator, her appointment to the StudEx chair was not reconfirmed and his appointment was subsequently approved.
As executive committee chairman, Sanders will preside over StudEx meetings. His responsibilities also include assisting senate committees, representing members for the fall and assisting student organizations with their bylaws.
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Wednesday, June 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Violence against students in China shocks, outrages
We are filled with anger and sorrow after reading reports of the Chinese government turning violently upon its own people. Although we have always known we had freedoms that were denied citizens of a non-democratic nation, we were shocked when China turned to the methods of its past.
When we speak out against actions or ideas we don't agree with, we know that our government and university will not turn guns against us. At the very least, officials will listen to us and discuss ideas with us. That is what students in China asked for, meetings with leaders to discuss political reforms.
They demonstrated peacefully for weeks, with so much support from other citizens that their nation and the world had to take notice. But their own government opened fire on them rather than recognizing them; the few Chinese officials who seemed to support the demonstrators have not been heard from in days.
Communism, in its purest form, promises equality of all citizens. But communism doesn't deliver.
It is the nature of human beings to want more of what they consider good, whether it be material goods, leisure, freedom or power. Often, those with less, resent those with more.
Governments are composed of people. But unless all the people are heard, the exalted few control the state. Because of the greed for power, the structure of the communist state lends itself to decline into totalitarianism.
Education and free speech for all citizens is essential for a nation to come as close to true political freedom as possible. The educated youth are the hope of the future. Their ideas will not be crushed beneath military tanks.
But, as French president François Mitterrand said of the massacre, "A regime which is reduced to firing on its youth to survive, when the youth it has educated rises up in the name of freedom, has no future."
The Chinese government's use of the archaic method of force to control a populace indicates a move backward rather than forward.
We extend our full support to the demonstrators in China, who are risking their lives to move forward, and to the Chinese students at KU and throughout the world. We urge our readers to express their outrage regarding the violence by writing to the Embassy of the People's Republic of China, 2300 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D.C. 20008.
Kirsten Bosnak for the editorial board
AIDS awareness is a must
In May, the American College Health Association released results of its yearlong study of AIDS on college campuses. The University of Kansas was one of 19 schools nationwide that participated in the study. Student health centers provided blood samples from students who had sought medical attention. The found that two out of every 1,000 students tested HIV positive.
Each school was to provide 1,000 blood samples for the study. However, not all schools met the quota. So the study was conducted from 16,861 blood samples.
The study indicates that AIDS is a problem on college campuses. KU students should realize that they could be affected.
Ten of the 19 schools participating in the survey had no HIV-positive but five institutionally infected students or studen- ters. Two of these had nip-tips gettin' over them.
The 0.2 percent rate of infection is higher than was expected and indicates that more preventive measures, such as education, need to be taken on campuses. There is no question that the AIDS virus is widespread.
And now the results of a study by physician David Imagawa, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance, Calif., in the New England Journal of Medicine, have revealed that some people may carry the AIDS virus for as long as three years before it can be detected by standard tests. This should increase the need for concern.
Kathy Walsh for the editorial board
As college students we may feel as if "it could never happen to us." But as students, as our country's future, we need to take AIDS seriously, even if it requires re-evaluating our lifestyles.
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board. The editorial board consists of Jill Jess, Ric Brack, Kirsten Bosnak and Kathy Walsh.
News staff
less...Editor
Rie Bitok...Managing editor
Stan Diel...Campus editor
Kelly Lamson...Photo editor
Shagged Kline...graphics editor
Tom Ebert...General manager
Business staff
Scott Frager...Business manager
Jerre Medford...Retail sales manager
Loris Campanella...Campaign manager
Adam Pfeffer...Production manager
Mike Lemann...Classified manager
Jeanne Lohm...Sales and marketing
Jeanne Lohm...Sales and marketing
Letters should be typeed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, 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. Editorials, which appear in the left-hand column, are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board.
The University Daily Kanaan (USP5 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60404, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final periods, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are **$50.** Student subscriptions are **$3** and are paid through the student activity fee.
Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, K. 66045.
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THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE U.S. AND CHINA
Summer Kansan wants you Readers play important role in decision on news in paper
M any of you may have been surprised when you walked across campus today and saw the Kansan in its boxes.
We're hack
Were back. However, The University Daily Kansan is a misnomer during the summer session. The paper comes out once a week, on Wednesdays.
We have an abbreviated staff in the summer because many journalism students have summer internships. However, our news coverage will not be abbreviated.
Our weekly production schedule gives us time to do more in-depth stories. Our reporters and editors can ensure that stories are covered completely and accurately. We can write more features and explore new angles to stories that would otherwise be handled as breaking news.
But we are going to need our readers' help. Charles A. Dana, the editor of the new-defunct New York Sun, once said, "The newspaper must be founded upon human nature. I must correspond with the people. I must furnish that sort of information which the people demand, or else it never can be successful. The first thing which an editor must look for is news."
I am looking for news.
The Kansan gets its story ideas from a number of places — press releases, tips from sources, reporters' investigations, public events and meetings, to name a few.
But reader input is one of the most valuable sources of story ideas. It is only through this input that we can know what the students want to see in the newspaper.
Jill Jess
Many readers are unfamiliar with the workings of the Kansan. Because we want you to be an
PETER WILSON
Editor
integral part of the newspaper, it is important that you understand the process of putting out the Kansas.
The Kansan staff is made up of the news staff and the business staff.
The editor and business manager are hired by the Kansan Board, which is made up of administrators, faculty and student representatives in the School of Journalism. The editor and business manager then interview and hire candidates for their staffs.
The business staff is responsible for making money for the newspaper. It accomplishes its task by selling advertising space. But while it is an integral part of the Kansan, it is separate from the news staff. This separation ensures that advertisement will in no way be influenced by an advertiser.
The news staff is under the direction of the editor.
The campus editor assigns stories to the reporters. He also edits the stories, with the help of an assistant campus editor, for content, as a flow and libel. The campus editor is Stan Diel.
The photo editor assigns photos and assists in the editing of images to be published. The photo editor is K.K. Lamson, a photographer.
Stephen Kline, the graphics editor, is responsible for all news artwork and graphics in the Kohlberg Report.
Ric Brack, the managing editor, does what his title suggests — manages. He is in charge of personnel matters in the newsroom. He also handles supplies and facilities. Ric is also the first mate of the newsroom. He is the ranking editor when the editor is not present.
My job, as editor, is to make all final decisions on news coverage and editorial copy in the Kansan. I am also the representative of the Kansan to the campus. If you have a complaint about the Kansan, you can talk to Rioc or to me. Our telephone number at the newsroom is 684-4310.
All of the jobs I have described so far are paid positions. But the people who work the hardest and with whom you are most likely to have contact are our reporters. They receive no pay, but they report what is being reported in Advanced Reporting, a two-credit-hour class. But they in put in 15-30 hours a week for that class.
Our copy editors, who read stories for style, clarity, flow, accuracy and libel, also are unpaid. They are enrolled in Advanced Editing. They work two nights a week from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m.
But the part of our newspaper that is indispensable is our readership. We're here for you. If we had no readers, we wouldn't be able to sell advertising and would not be able to put out a newspaper. Therefore, we want to keep you satisfied.
So let us know if you have a comment on the Kansan. As Charles Dana would say, if we are not meeting our readers' needs, then we are unsuccessful.
Jill Jess is a Lawrence senior majoring in journalism.
Student actions are inspiring
three weeks ago when the Chinese student's demonstrations began we thought, "How quaint."
Our sympathy and support for their effort was strong, if only in thought.
The inevitable comparisons were made of today's Chinese students to the U.S. students who struggled in the 1950s for civil rights and for peace in the 1960s and 1970s. Punits spoke of how we, the students of today, would probably not measure up to the brave actions of our counterparts in China under similar circumstances.
We marvelled at the guts Chinese students as our televisions and front pages told of how they policed Thanaman Square, shared popsicle stores and patriotic songs. We delighted in the erection of their "statue of liberty."
Then martial law was declared, and the mood of our discussions and thoughts about the protests changed from mirth to shocked disbelief.
His prediction, unfortunately, came true in Beijing's Sunday predaunt darkness and the darkness of his father from the eyes of the outside world.
"The next thing that'll happen is they'll stop the flow of information and news," said a friend of mine, bhp by bhp. Theirests would come to a bloody end.
Visions of a party-like atmosphere akin to students camping out to gain entry to a final four basketball game were replaced with visions of bloody students fleeing tank treads and rifle bullets.
While the students in China may have taken U.S. patriots as an example, Deng might also have looked to U.S. history to learn ways of handling dissent by muzzling the voices of the dissenters.
Ric Brack
Managing editor
P
In the late 1700s, struggling under the weight of press criticism, Congress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts, partially to restrain the pens of editors critical of the Federalists. The Acts remained in force for three years, until the presidency of Thomas Jefferson was under way.
Right here at the University of Kansas, censorship and attempts to squelch dissenting voices have been seen too often in the recent past.
More than a year ago, the University's administration was able for a time to block a gathering billed as a free speech forum where members of the Ku Klux Klan were scheduled to speak. The publicity generated by the delay and the attempted censorship ultimately brought much more attention to the matter than it otherwise would have enjoyed.
Officially, senators decided that the Kansan could survive on about half the money it had previously
Eventually, partly because of the pressure of public opinion, the right to free speech won out and the forum was held. Thousands of people freely attended, protested, listened and learned. No one died.
And during its budgeting process this past semester, the KU student government tried to bridge the opinion of Kanan editors who, student senators would say privately, were critical of their decisions and politics.
received from the student activity fee through the senate. Unofficially Kansan editors and reporters were told that a windfall fund could be created if they were carried – if this page carried no further editorials critical of the senate.
The editors continued and the Kansan got its money, although on a restricted basis. Again, no one died.
The Chinese students, as a forum for their expression, had to resort to hunger strikes and demonstrations when the government intervening and life ending — situations
You however, are lucky.
You have the forum provided by this newspaper, on this page.
But we realize that there are at least two sides to every story. We will present our opinions and we invite you to do the same.
We are excited at the prospect of sharing our views and opinions with you here, and we will do that every Wednesday.
You can write a letter to the editor, or if you have an idea for a guest column or cartoon, let us hear about it.
The recent actions of our counterparts in China should inspire us to take a stand for what we believe. The Chinese students were willing to sacrifice their lives. All we must sacrifice are a little time and effort.
What is it that angers or delights you about the Kansan, the University, the city of Lawrence, the nation or the world? Write it down and bring it by the newsroom. We look forward to hearing your opinions and learning from your points of view.
Ric Brack is a Great Bend senior majoring in journalism.
It is very pathetic to see what is going on in China. The soldiers have killed hundreds, perhaps thousands of innocent people including children. We have seen in the history of humankind where the innocent people have been suppressed brutally by the dictators and king and woman, and died under basic human rights — freedom of speech, movement, choice, food, shelter, medicine and so on.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
China struggles
As we know absolute power corrupts humans, so it came as no surprise that Yang Shangkun, Li Peng and Deng Xiaoping acted like the power mongers and oppressors which we have seen in our human history all over the world.
In the history of China it is observed that the students took the leading role to demand the basic human rights, and it is not new to see that the students in 1899 have done it again. But unlike the past, the citizens of the world know about the barbarous act of Yang, Li and Deng instantly. So it is not only the duty of the Chinese students to oppose the dictators and oppressors alone, the citizens of China must work together to achieve our basic human rights. If we cannot get our fundamental human rights just by asking, then we should grab them.
China, please do not give up now.
Remember we are looking up to you.
Do not give up, victory is on the horizon.
Rashid Malik
Dhaka, Bangladesh graduate student
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 7, 1989
Haskell president resigning despite acquittal
by Christina Mann
Kansan staff writer
by Christina Mann
After eight months of investigation, negative publicity and a rift that divided faculty, staff and students at Haskell Indian Junior College, Gerald Gipp has been cleared of all alleged improprieties and reinstated as president.
But he won't be staving
Gipp has asked that he be reassigned to another post at the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
"I reluctantly came to the conclusion that it would be in Haskell's best interests for the school to have new leadership," Gipp said in a prepared statement.
Brad Keena, spokesman for the BIA in Washington, said he would be chosen before Haskell's fall.
semester began.
The investigation began when Don Bread, a Haskell teacher, filed a complaint that Gipp ordered his assistant dean of instruction to withdraw the course. The failing grade given to Gipp's daughter in 1997.
Bread said his superior changed the grade to a "D" without his approval after Denise Gipp completed a special summer session to challenge the grade.
Charles W. Murphy, chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribue, said the complaint was nothing more than a personal and political attack on Gipp.
"You need to know . . . that the efforts to discredit and run Dr. Gipp are no more than political and personalized attacks. They are also part of the disgruntled staff members and (others)."
one of the investigators.
"Throughout the past 100 days I have listened to frequent hearsey and misstatement of facts regarding Dr. Gipp and his administration," Murphy wrote in a letter to
Dan Watkins, Gipp's attorney, agreed with Murphy.
"Any appearances of misconduct or impropriety have been created by unscrupulous repetition of half-truths and untruths by those making the allegations rather than by any improper conduct on the part of Dr. Gipp." Watkins said. "The allegations have become the conclusions despite all of the evidence to the contrary.
"Dr. Gipp deserves public acknowledgment that the serious allegations, which have
been publicly repeated so often, are unfounded."
The investigation involved four charges, the most serious of which was the issue of the stewardship.
The session was offered to 11 students who were short one class required for graduation. Gipp approved a plan whereby the students could challenge their failed courses and get denié. Denié Gipp was the only student to successfully complete the summer session.
After completing the class, Denise Gipp's failing grade was changed to a "D." This led some faculty members to charge that the session was developed solely for her benefit.
Watkins said that after Gipp's initial
approval of the session, Gipp was not
members designed and developed the program.
The fact that the other 10 students were uninterested or unsuccessful in completing the session did not detract from the legitimacy of the summer session, he said.
Keena said that the only reason the summer session came under fire was the appearance of impropriety and that he was satisfied with the outcome of the investigation.
"I think the case was handled very appropriately after very careful investigation," Keena said. "I think the school will have no adverse attention now. I'm convinced the school will get on in the goal of educating its students."
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Robert Kleinberg, assistant professor of political science, agreed with Yu's prediction.
- Continued from p. 1
Anger, grief felt by students
"I can assure you that the entire population of Beijing is behind this protest against the government, and they will not rest until the government is replaced." Kleinberg said. He said he based his assessment on talks with a number of Chinese students who had been in phone contact with relatives and friends in Beijing.
removal of the current government and the trial of Chinese premier Li Peng for ordering the troops' action.
Kleinberg said that the protesters' initial demands for basic freedoms and government reforms had been augmented by demands for the
"I *would urge everyone at KU who is upset about the massacre to contact Chinese students at KU and find we can contribute*, *Kleinberg said*.
Wang Xiaoming, Beijing graduate student, was one of about 40 KU students who took part in a demonstration Sunday near the Country Club Plaza shopping area in Kansas City. It is a common description of the Chinese students' response to the killing of hundreds of protesters.
"Essentially, it's extreme anger," Wang said. "A lot of confusion, a lot of anger, a lot of sadness."
Wang said that very few Chinese people in the United States could do anything substantial to help. The protests that have taken place in U.S. cities are mainly expressions of frustration and outrage, he said.
"At this point there is no turning back until the government gets Tiananmen Square cleared away," he said. "I'm worried that this kind of killing is going to silence people for a long time.
"From the look of it now,it looks
like we're heading into a dark period."
Nonetheless, Wang intends to return to his homeland to work.
"I'd very much like to work at home," he said. "I have every intention to go back. We've all been watching it very carefully."
Lawrence residents with relatives in China are also watching carefully Marie Willis returned May 12 from Beijing, where she visited her eldest son, a commercial officer with the Department of Commerce, and his wife, a vice consul with the Department of State.
KU professor analyzes turmoil in China
by Dick Lipsey Kansan staff writer
"Many people still look for por
Like the Manchu dynasty of old, the Communist regime in China may be in danger of losing the Mandate of Heaven.
A flood, earthquake or other major natural disaster would be taken as proof by many Chinese that the mission has lost favor with the gods.
"Students and intellectuals use the Mandate of Heaven cynically, but it is still a stick to be beat by the authorities." Daniel Bays, professor of history.
tents," he said. "If a natural disaster were to strike, many citizens would take it as a disavowal of the government. The concept behind it, that students should be realizing, is very real. Many Chinese students have expressed this recently."
Bays said the Communist leadership may be losing control of the country.
"By the end of the year we may see a pattern of extreme regionalism in China. 'Bays said,' "Protracted civil war is one of the worst clashes. More likely is a weakened and decentralized central government."
"Initially, students from the People's University in Beijing led the protests," Bays said. "These are students who are scouted for future high party positions. People's University has a department that trains students in Marxism-Leninism and party management. These students are the ones who led the first marches in April.
Another problem for the Chinese leadership is the nature of the student opposition.
prestige. They feared for the credibility of the party, and their slogans brought in students from Beijing University and the rest of the country. They poured into Beijing railway station by the thousands."
Bays sees little possibility that the leadership could soon regain its authority.
"Their concern was that they are slated to be party leaders, and they saw the Communist Party losing
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Nation/World
Death of Iranian leader could signal change
Khomeini burial stirs emotions
The Associated Press
TEHERAN, Iran — Ayatollah Khakimi was buried yesterday after frenied mourners knocked his body to the ground and ripped his hair a burial shroud to pieces for memorials in a nationalary who ruled Iran for 10 years.
Thousands of Revolutionary Guards and civilians pushed and shoved around the graveside, kicking up clouds of dust as Khomeini's body was taken from a metal casket and lowered to the grave.
"They are burying a sacred body," screamed a television announcer, his voice horse with emotion, as sofi rode up the walls of blocks on top of the shrouded body.
"Oh, Father, don't leave your children! Oh, father, don't leave your beloved!" he wailed.
Khomeini, the driving force of Iran's Islamic revolution, died Saturday at age 86.
Several people were knocked unconscious in crushes at the cemetery and earlier at Marmara Mosque, where they were brought nearly 10-hour funeral procession.
A mid scenes of mass hysteria, the huge crowd surrounding the grave beat their heads with their hands in expressions of grief and threw dust themselves to show they wanted to be buried with their spiritual patriarch.
to pieces. The body fell to the ground.
In the chaos, Khomeini's son was
knocked down, but appeared uninjured.
carrying the body to the cemetery,
grabbed the corpse out of an open
wooden coffin and ripped the shroud
to pieces. The body fell to the ground.
They blocked the path of a van
State television later showed mourners grabbing the body and pulling the shroud when the feet could no longer be reached but out of abruptly for several minutes.
The body was rewrapped, placed in a closed metal casket and airlifted to the Bahseh Zahra cemetery, with mourners clinging to the helicopter until it was several feet off the ground.
Khomeini was buried next to Iranians who helped him seize power in the 1979 revolution that toppled a 2,500-year-old monarchy, and soldiers killed in the eight-year Iran-Iraq war.
Analysts anticipate transition
NICOSIA, Cyprus — After the death of Ayatollah Khomeini, Iran moves into what is arguably the Islamic revolution's most decisive phase as rival factions jockey for power.
The Associated Press
Some analysts and Iranian opposition figures in exile predict that Iran will be gripped by more bloody insurgency in Benjamin's herds battle for supremacy.
Others say the transition could take many months of bitter, but
largely peaceful, maneuvering.
The swift action Sunday by the 83 member Assembly of Experts, formed in 1979 to ensure the smooth transition of power, in naming Presi- tors, would appear to have contained an open struggle for power for the time being.
But it has not been eliminated. The country's political future is more uncertain now than at any period since Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was toppled in 1979 and Khommieni was elected in 2006 by the theoretic Islamic republic.
Even as Khomene was being buried amid scenes of mass anguish, the men he installed in power were lining up against each other.
On one side are the so-called pragmatists led by Khamenei and Parliament Speaker Hashemi Rafsanji. They favor a collective leadership, opening doors to the West and tackling the urgent task of warreon-
struction.
On the other side are the anti-Western radicals led by Interior Minister Ali Akbar Mohtasemi, who believe the revolution's survival depends on Iran's pre-eminence in the Moslem world and spread of Khomeini's fundamentalism.
Some analysts believe that Iran will move toward a less rigid religious-based system, downgrading the theocracy that has played such a dominant role since Khomeini was catapulted to power.
Khamanei, a middle-ranking cleric, clearly has not inherited Khomein's undisputed spiritual authority.
Since his appointment, Iran's official media has accorded him the courtesy title of "avatollah."
But he has not been referred to as "imam," or spiritual leader, as Khoomei was universally known throughout tran.
Solidarity turns down offer to join coalition
The Associated Press
WARSAW, Poland — Spokesmen for the Solidarity movement said yesterday that despite the group's overwhelming victory in parliamentary elections, the group is accepting the Communist Party's offer to join a governing coalition.
In a conciliatory move, however, representatives from the free trade union movement offered to stand by
the agreement made with authorities in April, allowing the party the two thirds majority in Parliament's powerful lower house.
As many as 35 seats might be vacant because some party and government officials, including Prime Minister Mieczyslaw F. Rakowski, had to have been defeated in Sunday's vote despiteunschosed.
DUKE BILLS STALL! David Duke, ex-Ku Klux Klan leader turned ambitious freshman legislator, riled many people with his election, but he was not alone. Other leaders had little effect on Louisiana government.
With the 1989 general session nearing its end, none of his bills has made it through the legislative process. Only one was passed by the House and it is pending in a Senate committee.
News Briefs
"Some of my legislation's gone through. I mean I'm on a one-month freshman legislator. That's not bad."
It's not unusual for a newcomer to have difficulty getting legislation passed. Rep James St. Raymond had a similar experience last year.
"The major difference is David is sort of a one-issue type of guy. He's interested in the business."
AIDS DRUG RESULTS! A decoy drug designed to confuse the AIDS virus by mimicking its natural target is safe and may lower levels of the virus inside the body, researchers said yesterday.
Scientists said they were encouraged by the results. But they warned that testing was at an early stage and that no one could be sure how much the medicine would be in stopping AIDS.
"Nevertheless, this represents an exciting
step forward," said Dr. Ian Weller of Middlesex School of Medicine in England.
The drug, known as soluble CD4, is one of more than a dozen being used experimentally against HIV, the AIDS virus.
So far, only one medicine, AZT, has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use against HIV. Although it can prolong the lives of people with AIDS, AZT does not cure the disease and has a variety of toxic side effects.
"It clear that we desperately need alternation of leadership," said Dr Thomas Merrell of Stanford University.
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8
Wednesday, June 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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The drought of 1988 heightened Kanans' awareness for the need to conserve water. As part of this increased awareness, Gov. Mike Hayden ordered all state agencies to submit a water conservation plan.
Although the plan was acceptable to officials, it left a few questions unanswered. said St Tomis, directing resources for the Kansas Wider Office.
"Overall, the plan was in really good shape." Stiles said, "but we suggested some revisions. We asked for more quantitative goals, such as what percentage water use would be cut (during drought conditions), and more detail on which water service plans are currently used."
Rodger Orike, director of the University of Kansas Support Services, said that quantitative goals for water conservation had not been determined but that information on curricular conservation methods was unavailable.
by Julie Rehm Kansan staff writer
One measure recommended in the plan was the upgrading of the water distribution system on campus.
Another problem with the water distribution system is the altitude of Mount Oread. The water pressure must be maintained at a high level to reach the upper floors of taller buildings. This can lead to stress on the water lines in buildings on lower areas of campus and can cause leaks.
The water conservation plan also included suggestions for the installation of more efficient, underground irrigation systems to replace some of the portable watering systems now in use. Most of these are more efficient because they more evenly distribute water and the distribution can be timed.
Another conservation measure within the plan is the installation of water evaporative cooling towers to replace less efficient, outdated coolers recently installed in the new cooling systems recently had been installed in Blake Hall.
Improvements to the University's water distribution system are part of a package of capital improvements requests. Orok said. He estimated the cost of the water system upgrade to be $1.7 million. He said the capital improvements package was expected to go before the Kansas Legislature in fiscal year 1991 or 1992.
Andy Hau, assistant director of electrical engineering, said one of the most effective ways individuals could be to eliminate air conditioning.
"We are increasing these (underground watering systems) in number as funds become available in the landscape budget," Oroke said.
Phase 1.
Discontinue street and sidewalk washing.
The KU water conservation plan includes a three-phase drought response plan.
- Limit vehicle and equipment washing to three days per week.
- Reduce landscape watering to subsistence levels.
Parts of the system were installed in the early 1900s. Improvements to the system have not kept pace with campus growth.
Distribute water conservation information on campus.
14. Eliminate landscape watering, except for major sports practice fields.
Suspend vehicle and equipment washing.
- Continue water conservation education and request public cooperation.
**Phase II**
- Air conditioning systems using chilled water to buildings where temperature control is needed for sensitive materials or equipment.
- Relocate summer session classes to buildings that must maintain adequate airflow.
- Reduce use of student laundry facilities to one day per week.
Adjust air conditioner systems in chilled water cooling systems to the temperature with endangerment materials or materials in the buildings.
- Reduce use of student laundry facilities to one day per week.
- Eliminate all outside watering.
The conservation plan states that KU uses 6.9 percent of the Lawrence water supply. The plan states that drought response activity will parallel Lawrence conservation activity. However, Oroke said it was possible that Gov Hayden could ask the University to take such conservation measures before the city of Lawrence would be required to do so.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday June 7,1989
9
Students needn't spend summer inside
by Heather L. Anderson
By Heather L. Anderson Kansan staff writer
It's time to get back to the books, but no one said that summer has to be all work. There are plenty of outdoor adventures. Lawrence to help fill up spare time.
Water sports are an integral part of many people's summer recreation and there are two lakes in the park that offer an abundance of things to do.
Lone Star Lake is a county lake south of Lawrence. The Lone Star Marina rents canoes, rowboats, sailboats, boat boats, motorboats and paddleboats.
Stuart Doores, owner and operator of the Lone Star Marina, said that there is free swimming and camping
space available.
Fishing costs $3 a year and the lake is good for crappie, bass and channel catfish.
Water-skiing is allowed on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and one weekend day which alternates at different times of the month.
Clinton Lake, located three miles southwest of Lawrence, has a variety of activities for the outdoor adventurer.
Park manager David Rhodes,
said that a $3 fee was charged for
each car that entered the state park
and entered for those who
enter on foot or bike.
People interested in sailing, water-skiing and boating should head for the marina which is located in the
Although boating is fun, it can also be dangerous. Rhoades said that the Army Corps of Engineers had decisions to ensure 10 National Safety Week.
state park. Both sailboats and fishing boats are available for rent.
Rhodes said that the most important safety precaution was to wear a life jacket. Eight of the ten people were wearing life jackets. Lakes were not wearing life jackets.
Another safety factor is to have a float plan. In other words, people always should notify someone of where they are going and what time they should be expected to return home.
Rhoades' last suggestion is simply to use common sense. Watch the
Fishing is allowed and prospective fishermen must obtain a Kansas State Fishing License. The lake is stocked with largemouth and smallmouth bass, crappie, channel catfish and walleye.
KEENWOOD
weather and do not drink and drive.
Oryille and Helen Voth with their 9-year-old granddaughter, Shelly Robinson, boat at Clinton Lake.
Hikers are welcome to try any of the trails in the park. The North Shore Hiking Trail, located in the state park on the north shore, is 5/2 miles long. Rock Haven Horse and Hiking Trail is 15 miles long.
There is also a 5½-mile mountain bike trail on the north shore of the park.
Swimmers can choose between Bloomington Beach or a beach near the marina. Both areas have restrooms.
There are three campgrounds in the Bloomington Beach area that can be reserved. Prices range from $25 to $75 each.
Besides the many trails at Clinton Lake, there are several hiking trails in the Lawrence area.
Another route is a half-mile riverfront trail between Constant and Burcham marks.
The 4%-mile Kaw River Trail has been named a National Recreation Trail by the Department of the Interior, said Margie Young, an employee of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
The trail runs along the edge of the Kansas River. Its starting point is at the intersection of U.S. Highways 2 and 24/59 west of Tee Pee Junction.
young said that the trail ended in a wildlife preserve that the Parks department created.
Bicycling enthusiasts can choose from several marked bike routes that run throughout the Douglas County area, or join a local cycling club.
ance riding, there is a group that meets at 6 p.m. each Tuesday evening in front of Strong Hall
For those interested in perform-
Ron Lathrop, former president of the Lawrence Bike Club, said that the ride was 30 to 40 miles long at a fairly brisk pace.
Recreational riders meet at 8:30 a.m. every Sunday at the South Park gazebo and travel through various locations in Douglas County, Lathrop said.
@ 8:30 a.m. Saturday mornings, a group meets in South Park to ride to Baldwin City. Both Saturday and Sunday rides include several rest stools.
The beginners' group meets at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesdays at South Park. Their routes include Lakeview, Wells Island and the Lawrence Airport, Lathrop said.
Softball and sandlot volleyball teams are organized through the Lawrence Parks and Recreation department.
For people interested in alternative sports, there is skateboarding, ultimate frisbee and windsurfing.
Todd Loveland, owner of Options,
846 Illinois, that windsuring is one of the fastest growing sports in the Midwest.
He said that local windsurfers could be found at Clinton Lake, but that Wilson Lake, located near Rurus had ideal windsurfing conditions.
For those people unfamiliar with competitive frisbee games, Lawrence is a hotbed of opportunity.
Ultimate frisbee is a physically demanding sport that combines the elements of football and basketball. It is a non-contact game play by two players on opposite sides, with points possible by passing the disk down a football-like field from one
team member to another. A goal is scored when the disk is passed to a team member in the end zone that the opposing team is attacking.
KU has men's and women's ultimate frisbee teams. They practice at Shenk Complex, 23rd and Iowa High School. We welcome newcomers. Leland said.
Golfers can test their skills at two privately owned golf courses open to the public.
Frisbee is like playing ball golf except with a frisbee. There is a frisbee golf course on the University grounds and on the Parks and the department is planning to open one in Centennial Park, Love land said.
Alvamar Golf and Country Club, 1800 Crossgate Drive, is a championship 18-hole course ranked nationally by The Journal. Louis Westfall, a club professional,
The course also allows for nine-hole play.
by Donna Eades Kansan staff writer
The Orchards, 3000 W. 15th St., is a course which features both 18-hole and nine-hole play.
Tennis players can enjoy lighted tennis courts located near Robinson Gymnassium and one block west of 21st and Louisiana streets. There is no charge to play; courts are reserved on a first-come-first-service basis.
The Lawrence Municipal Pool,
Eighth and Kentucky streets, is a public pool open every day from 1:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Admission is $1.50.
Horse lovers can head to Spencer Riding Stables located 16 miles west of Lawrence on Highway 40.
Maxine and Ralph Spencer own and operate a stable that is open to the public. Monday through Saturday calls are planned call ahead for reservations.
Nanci Griffith crosses borders of music genres
Nanci Griffith, with her ponytail and voice, is an unlikely country music queen.
But if you're looking for her albums, you will find them tucked in next to the likes of Tammy Wynette, Patsy Cline and other well-known female country vocalists.
Griffith, on a six-week tour of the United States, performed last Sunday at Liberty
Hall before a sold-out crowd.
Writing songs these days that put her on the country music charts, she prefers to call her music "folkably." But some songwriters have dubbed his music alternative country, new acoustic, or contemporary folk.
"Hirson声不是 quite country, but it's closer to country than the term 'folk' music might imply," said Kim Forehand, promoter for Griffith's Lawm appearance. "She's just not your standard bee hive country music singer."
Griffith's inspiration for her songs comes from southern writers such as
Griffith and other folk singers such as fellow Texans Lyle Lovett and Michelle Shocked, and East Coast songwriters Tracy Chapman and Suzanne Vega, force the listener to sit up and pay attention to her music. Sometimes deliver subtle political messages.
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Survey tests students for HIV presence
by Susan Newburger Kansan staff writer
Two out of every 1,000 college students tested HIV positive in a survey at 19 universities conducted by the American College Health Association and sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control.
The HIV Seroprevalence Survey was the first to attempt to determine the prevalence of Human Immunodeficiency Virus among college students. A positive test result indicates the presence of acquired immune deficiency syndrome antibodies.
University of Kansas students who had blood drawn at Watkins Memorial Health Center between August 1 and September among the participants in the survey.
Of the 18,681 student blood specimens included in the survey, 30, or 0.2 percent, tested positive. Ten schools had no positive specimens, while five of the institutions had rates of 0.4 percent or higher.
No separate figures were available for KU. Specific campus results were not linked to the identity of individual students or institutions.
"I think the survey results bring AIDS to the forefront again," said Candyce Wattley, a nurse at Watkins who had worked with the local study. UK students who see the results report "Hey, this is a serious issue."
Kuch Fallis, a spokesman for the center, estimated that nationwide 1 million to 1.5 million people were infected. This represents a 0.4 percent to 0.6 percent HIV infection rate for the general population.
Richard P. Keeling, director of Student Health Services at the University of Virginia and president of the American College Health Association, had a percent rate of infection was somewhere higher than had been hypersized.
"I irrespective of any particular level of infection, the fact that HIV infection appears on campuses should also should cause real concern," he said.
KU officials who worked on the survey agreed.
"AIDS is a problem at all college campuses, including KU," said Janine Demo, coordinator of health education for a fact that AIDS is on campus."
The University was selected to participate in the survey because it met a series of criteria. The survey included 49 private schools across the United States.
Students who had *blood sample* drawn during treatment were included in the survey. Only those samples drawn specifically for an AIDS test were excluded from the study, said Waitley.
"KU fit the requirements." Waitley said. "We are a member of ACHA, have an active AIDS education program and draw a university population from our own geographic area."
The HIV tests were not performed on campus. The anonymous samples were sent to a laboratory, and the results then were sent to the ACHA.
Kansas Girls State features mock government
by Gwendolyn Parrett
Kansan staff writer
More than 500 high school seniors from Kansas will attend the Americana Legion Auxiliary's 47th annual celebration of the University of Kansas next week.
During their week in Lawrence, the students will form a mock government, featuring elections and
speeches by Kansas politicians.
Dorothy Malone, public relations director for Girls State, said the program would give the girls practical experience in the process of
The students, who will arrive June 11 and stay in Hashinger and Lewis Halls, will form two mock political Nationalists and the Federalists.
"It's a mock government based on a third-class city," Malone said. "They have to register before they vote. Girls seeking state office have to vote by mail." The elected senator or representative, they hold sessions and present bills.
government.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 7, 1989
Sports
11
Royals Report
Wednesdav: Twins 7, Royals 1
Minnesota's Dan Gladden hit a grand slam in the sixth inning to put the Twins up 7-1. A hard rain ended the Royals hopes for a late game comeback when the game was called in the bottom of the sixth inning. White ended his fielding streak by committing his first error in 188 games.
Twins 7, Royals 1
Minnesota 000 025-7 7 0
Kansas City T 001 025-7 1
Tampa Bay H (4.1) Tampa Bay (4.1)
H (4.1) Tampa Bay (4.1)
Fridav: Rovals 4. Angels 0
Rovals 4. Angels 0
Danny Tartarub hit a two-run home run in the eighth inning, as Kansas beat California 4-0 Friday night. Mark Gubeza was the winning pitcher.
California 000 000 000-0 10 0 0
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Guicuba, C. Finley, Minton, W.Gubicza (5-4), L-C. Finley (7-3), 2Bs-Boone, B. Jackson,
Sidwell, M.D., Tulane University.
Saturday: Angels 4, Royals 3
Brian Downing homered in the sixth inning to snap a 3-3 tie and give Columba a 4-1 lead. The Royals were unable to produce a run during the game.
Angels 4. Rovals 3
Kansas City 000 012 000-3 07 22
California 012 000-4 11 11
Leibrandt, Montgomery; McCaskill, Minton, McClure, W-McCaskill (7-1), L-leibrandt (3-6)
ZB-D. White, Bettey, Downie, Tabler, HR-Buckner (1), Downing (5).
Sunday: Angels 5, Royals 1
The Angels to a 2-0 lead in the fourth on Chick Davis RBI single and a bases loaded walk to Brian Downing. A Dick Schofield's sacrifice飞 off Steve Farr in the eighth made it 3-0. Bo Jackson led off the ninth with his 13th home run of the year, tying him for the AL lead.
Angels 5, Royals 1
Kansas City 000 000 001—1 5 0
California 000 000 01x—1 5 x
Applier, T. Gordon, Barr, Fliyleen, Harvey, W-Bleyeven (6-2), L-Appler (0-1) 2Bs-Stillwell.
HRs-Howell (4), B. Jackson (13).
Mondav: Rovals 5. Mariners 3
Matt Winters singled in the 13th inning, scoring Danny Tartulli to lead the Royals to a 5-3 victory over Seattle. Bo Jackson saved the game for the Royals with a 300-foot throw to get Harold Reynolds at the plate in the 10th inning.
Royals 5, Mariners 3
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Mariners beat Royals; White's thigh injured
The Associated Press
SEATTLE - Alvin Davis is back and just in time for the Seattle Mariners.
The Mariners were 4-11 while Davis was on the 15-day disabled list with an injured left calf.
He hit a three-run home run in his first time up Tuesday to lead the Mariners to a 5-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
"I've been on the DL twice before, and I've never been more ready to come back." Davis said.
"The guy just made a mistake, and I bit it good." Davis said.
No one was happier to see him back than Mariners manager Jim Lefebvre.
He hit a hanging curve ball from loser Stan Clarke, 0-2, over the right centerfield wall.
"Alvin's presence will benefit everybody up and down this lineup," Lefebvre said.
"In those six losses, we were a hit or a run away. Having Alvin back is like putting George Brett (currently on the 21-day disabled list) back in Kansas City's lineup." Lefebvre said.
Scott Bankhead, 3-4, thrilled the Royals, allowing them three hits over seven innings. He struck out five and
walked two.
"When Scotty's on, he spots his pitches well and works inside and outside well. He has to have both sides of him together," Lefebvre said when they tonight." Lefebvre said
"He gave us a big boost with that home run after a tough, 13-inning loss," Bankhead said, referring to Monday night's loss to the Royals.
Lefebvre was pleased by Bankhead's second consecutive strong effort. He pitched 6-2 3-1ms of shutout ball and had no decision in the Mariners 3-2 victory over Texas June 1.
"I just try and go as long as I can as hard as I can." Bankhead said.
"I had good control and was spotting my pitches well. Hey, Alvin (Davis) is the story."
Mike Jackson pitched the final two innings, allowed one hit and struck out four.
Right fielder Jay Buhner hit a solo home run in the seventh inning, his second in as many nights.
He led the Pacific Coast League with 10 home runs when he was recalled from Calgary and has found his home run swing with the
"I'm just starting to settle in and get comfortable." Buhner said.
KU track places 13th at meet
by Christina Mann Kansan sportswriter
With his first season at the helm ending, track and field coach Gary Schwartz said he was pleased with his team's performance.
This past weekend the Kansas men's team scored 19 points and tied for 13th place in the 1989 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championship in Provo, Utah. The team showed marked improvement over last year's tie for 45th place, Schwartz said.
The Jayhawks took three men to the 73-school competition, which was won by Louisiana State. Pat Manson, Aurora, Col. .colon, placed second in pole vault and Cam Miller, Raytown, Mo. .senior, placed third.
Both men cleared the winning mark of 18-4/2, but not until their third and final attempts. Because placing was determined by the number of misses, Oklahoma's Tim McMichael took first place after
The third Jayhawk to score for the team was distance runner Craig Watchee, South Bend, Ind., senior, who placed fourth in the 10,000 meters with a time of 30 minutes, 32 seconds. Watchee also had qualified and not met the need for a better chance to win by concentrating on only one race.
clearing the mark on his first try, setting an NCAA outdoor record. The previous record was 18.5.
All three athletes captured All America honors.
The team has two more competitions to attend: next week's Athletic Congress Junior Nationalists and the Nationalists in Houston, Texas, July 20.
Attending next week's junior competition are Joel Wood, Watskea, III, freshman, competing in the shot-put tournament. Jake Hale, in middle-distance running,
Schwartz reflects on season
Although Schwartz was happy with the team's place, Watchek said that after finishing fourth place in the indoor meet last March, 13th place at the outdoor meet was a little disappointing.
"It's pretty hard to score when you only have three or four guys going to the meet."
However, Schwartz said the team's placings had improved in both areas since last year.
Despite the team's successes Schwartz said he had encountered a few frustrations early in the season.
"There are many ways to be successful and many ways to be frustrated," he said. "It's frustrating to
"We accomplished a lot more than I thought would be possible for our first year." Schwartz said "The fourth place finish in indoor was fantastic. Some coaches work twenty years and still aren't able to do that."
start over. It takes a while to implement your philosophies. Everyone's new and things don't start smoothly right away.
"All coaches were athletes at one time usually, so we're very competitive and impatient."
Schwartz, who previously coached highly successful women's programs at both Tennessee and Penn State, met with coach KU was to coach a coed program.
"It builds better team spirit," he said of the combined squads. "You don't digsemble and teach boys in one classroom and girls in the other, so why split them up in track? They may have different needs and desires, but they can learn from each other."
Schwartz said that although the low membership on the women's squad hurt them as a team, there were only a few performances by individual women.
KU golfers qualify for NCAA test
by Mary Steuby
Kansan sportswriter
For the first time, the KU men's golf team will go to the NCAA Championship.
The tournament begins today and continues through June 10 at the Oak Tree Country Club in Edmond, Okla.
The Jayhawks have sent an individual qualifier to the tournament each of the past two years but have never qualified as a team. Coach Ross Randal said he was delighted at the outcome of this year's season.
"I told the guys that they could do something no other Kansas team has done and they did it. I'm really proud of them," Randall said.
Senior John Sinovic is the only team member with NCAA tournament experience. He finished 19th in last year's meet. Also playing for the Jayhawks are John O'Reilly, Clay Sean, Sean Thayer and Len Johnson.
The Jayhawks qualified for this year's championship by tying for sixth place with Arkansas and Texas at the NCAA Central Regional Qualifying tournament. May 25-27, in Oklahoma City, they competed for to spots in the NCAA Championship. Oklahoma and Oklahoma State tied for first place.
The Jayhawks were led at the Regionales by John Ogden and John Sinovic who tied for 14th place with scores of 232. Sinovic highlighted his last round with a hole-in-one on the 11th hole.
Other KU scores were Clay Devers, 228; Len Johnsen, 235 and Sean Thaver, 237.
This year's championship will consist of a 30 team field, including defending champion UCLA.
"With a few exceptions, these are the top 30 teams in the country. I think we play the way they were capable of playing to our enterprise a few people," Randal said.
GOLF
Teed off
Tomas StargardtieriKANSAN
Ray Akin, 70, takes some last practice puts after winning the Orchards Senior Mens 10th Anniversary Tournament at Alvamar Golf and Country Club. Akin won with a score of 55 with a 20 handicap. The tournament was held yesterday morning at the Orchards Executive Golf Course, 3000 W. 15th St.
Sunday Silence, Easy Goer Hawster ready for Belmont
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Quick. Besides Sundance Silence and Eoer Goe, the only horse who will run in all three Triple Crown races this year.
"We're one of only three survivors." trainer Ron McAnally said.
Ten 3-year-olds are expected to be entered Thursday for Saturday's 1½-mile Belmont Stakes, in which they will become the 12th T triple Crown winner.
Although Anmally feels the longer Belmont is his best shot at getting on the board in a Triple Crown race, he now figures Sunday Sleiman will win. He did not go so far Goer to win the Preakness, and Sunday Sleyon won by a nose. So
"Easy Goer is a big, robust horse, and horses like that usually don't get 1½ miles as well as a horse like Charlie's or ours. I felt that if Easy Goer was going to beat Sunday he would have been at a shorter distance."
"I think Charlie probably has the edge in this one." McAnaily said after arriving at Belmont with Hawkster on Tuesday morning.
Both Whittingham and Easyo Gøsner's trainer, Shug McGaughey, feel their horses have the pedigree to go 1½ miles, and that's about the horse that can go 1¼ miles in the Derby is the longest any of the 3-year-olds have run so far.
KU sponsors summer fitness programs
why the switch in allegiance to Charlie Whittingham's horse?
A new program is offered for those who like to wake up with the sun. The Sun-Rise Fitness Program allows
bv Sharon Chapman
Summer is a time for catching up on all the exercise missed during the busy and cold winter months, and KU Recreation Services is willing to help.
Recreation Services is offering a variety of programs designed to make getting in shape both fun and practical. Programs range in price from $20 to $25.
Kansan staff writer
"The is this first summer the SunRise Fitness Program will be offered. Participation will be evaluated at the end of the summer to determine its utilization." said Rick Duncan, director of recreation Services.
members to use any of the Robinson Center facilities beginning at 6:15 a.m.
For those not willing to rise early,
an outdoor aerobic exercise class will
be held Monday through Thursday
from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
"We found that the gym is too hot
in the summer, so we'll have the class on the lawn behind Robinson," Cameron said.
Two water classes will be offered.
The name of last year's Aqua-aerobics has been changed to Aquacise in an effort to increase participation. It will be held from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.
Monday through Thursday.
A children's swim class will be held in two sessions of 10 classes each.
"We're a little disappointed in the number of KU faculty and staff members who enroll their children.
We get a lot of community people but not much staff," Cameron said.
People interested in any of the summer programs can call Recreation Services at 864-3546 or stop by the office at 208 Robinson Center.
People who enjoy team sports can join the slow-pitch softball league. Teams will play two games each week beginning July 10. They divided into men's and women's teams, open to all students, faculty, staff and their families.
Detroit outruns LA wins opener 109-97
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — The Los Angeles Lakers' unbeaten streak couldn't withstand the weight of the Detroit Pistons' defense.
The best-of-seven series continues tomorrow night at the Palace, then shifts to the Forum for possibly three more.
The Pistons, who relied on defense to fashion the NBA's best regular-season record, snapped the Lakers' playoff streak at 11 games with a 109-97 victory in the opening game of the final last night.
"We had to work hard for all our shots," the Lakers' Mychal Thompson.
No team has scored 100 points against Detroit in 14 playoff games this season
Detroit, a team that landed nobly on the NBA's all-league team last week, blew the game open when Joe Dumars scored eight points in a 72-54 run to start the third quarter. The Pistons outsided the Lakers 24-18 for the period, marking the 12th time in 14 playoff games they have held an opponent to fewer than 20 points in a quarter.
"We weren't very sharp, but I credit the Pistons' defense for that. They're the best and they played like the best."
"They've got excellent defenders." Lakers couch Pat Riley said. "They bump and bounce and put a lot of pressure on you.
son said. "That's the way the Pistons make you play. Nothing can easy. Then, after you do that work, we'd shot and they'd get the rebound."
Part of that, of course, was due to the absence of Lakers guard Byron Scott, who pulled a hamstring in practice on Monday and did not dress. Scott had been averaging 19.9 points in the playoffs.
Detroit outrebounded the Lakers 45-32. The Pistons shot 55.4 percent, Los Angeles 46.7.
"Obviously, it hurt us," Riley said. "It caught us at the 11th hour. There really wasn't time to adjust.
"But, if we're going to feel sorry because we lost a key player, then we might as well forget it."
The Pistons, who beat the Lakers 60th times they met in the regular season, grabbed the lead with 2:48 left. The Raptors quarter and he rested of the way.
"We executed well and got the shots we wanted." Detroit guard Joe Dumars said. "We know LA is a great third quarter team and we didn't want to let down in the third quarter."
---
The defense saw to that.
"We take pride in our defense." Detroit's burly Rick Mahorn said. "If they take shakes, we get the rebound. It puts a lot of fatigue on them. We never give up out there. That's our brand of ball."
12
Wednesday, June 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Foster honored posthumously
by Gary Patton
Kansan staff writer
With nearly six years of college education behind him, KU senior Lance Foster died May 7, just two weeks before his long-awaited graduation. He died of interna injuries received May 6 when a Pepsi truck hit him in the dining hall of St. phenson Scholarship Hall where he lived.
before," Longaker added.
Foster, 23, from Stillwater, Okla. was posthumously awarded a bachelor of science degree in systematics and ecology and a bachelor of arts degree in political science at commencement ceremonies May 21. He graduated with distinction in both majors.
Foster, who remained conscious after the accident, told KU police that he had put 50 cents in the soda machine. When it didn't give him a drink, he began rocking it back and forth, causing the machine to fall on him, police spokesman Lt. Jeanne Longaker said.
"I have never heard of this type accident happening on campus
Foster was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital and later flown to the University of Kansas Medical Center. He was a Med Center spokesman, said.
"He was such a great student with such a great personality," said Michael Gaines, professor of mathematics and ecology and one of Foster's teachers and academic advisers. "He had a passion for learning that was driven by his thirst for knowledge."
To commemorate Foster's academic excellence, the division of biological sciences has established an award in Foster's name. Each year, the division's graduating senior with the most outstanding honors research thesis will be presented with a $100 cash award.
Although journalism was not his major, Foster worked at student radio station KJHK for two years.
Serving as program director in his final semester, he routinely worked 20-40 hour workweeks, said station manager Mike Ulin.
KJHK broadcast a three-hour special program May 8 in Storner's honor that included musical dedications tales from friends and co-workers.
Some of Foster's \lost friends said they would remember him as someone they could always count on for companionship.
"If you asked him to do something, he was always there to do it," said Eleanor Gier, friend and fellow Stephen Henneman. He just loved to be out doing things."
At the request of Stephenpons residents, the vending machine that fell on Foster was removed from the hall several days after the accident, said Karla Carney of University Relations.
The machine was not bolted down at the time of the accident, Longaker said.
"University policy is to bolt vending machines to the wall when there
has been evidence of vandalism," Carney said. "There had been no evidence of vandalism with this machine."
Foster is survived by his mother and father, of Stillwater, and brothers Clay, 28, of Seattle, Wash., and Morris, 29, of Norman, Okla.
He was buried May 10 at the Hawley Cemetery in Grant County, Okla.
The family requests that memorials be sent to the youth fund of the First Christian Church in Stillwater, where they are served as a junior and college deacon.
Foster had been accepted to the graduate program of the Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Policy at the University of Texas. He might have had some day he might be interested in owning a broadcast property.
Whatever Foster's plans and goals might have been, some of his closest friends insisted that 'Lance was the man who person who would do his own thing.'
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13
Children learning self-esteem through classic fantasy tales
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. — Wilbur the pig and Bob the bobble have a lot to teach grade-schoolers if only more educators and parents would stop being afraid of fantasy literature, a professor said yesterday.
The Associated Press
Read about in the classroom has grown more popular in the last 15 or 20 years, but such books as "Charlotte's Web" and "The Hobbit" remain on the outskirts of structured curricula, Roberta Herrin said.
Herrin teaches fantasy literature at East Tennessee State University and is helping coordinate a workshop next week for teachers and librarians on the use of often-classic fantasy tales'
The importance of self-esteem is explained through the experiences of Wilbur in "Charlotte's Web," Herrin said. Charlotte, a spider, befriends the self-pitying pig and encourages him to stand on his own four feet.
Biblo Baggins in "The Hobbit" finds his true identity after he accepts a challenge from the wizard Gandalf.
Students are more apt to learn the importance of such traits in the framework of fantasy. Herrin said
"You start with a narrative, a story, that engages their interest and move from that to the very practical step of telling the story." "That's very different than coming in and saying, 'Today we're going to study geography.'"
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 7, 1989
MAX U.:HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
SHADES
We've got the styles and the quality. Sunglasses to let you see well and look good. Bausch & Lomb Rayban Sunglasses and better imports, $9 to $115. Most $24 to $70.
The Etc. Shop
Milworks have a clearance sale. Practice prints $1, Unprinted T $4, long sleeve T $5, and new hand dred hat colors on cotton cloth. 842-9754 735A New Hampshire
732 Massachusetts
Lawrence
Kansas
66044
(913) 843-6011
PENNYLANE RECORDS & TAPES. Visit our CD shop on the upper level - special orders always welcome. 844 Massachusetts. 749-4211
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided: 841,2316.
120 Announcements
Interested in skinny dipping?
more information.
HOT SPINS! Sundays at Chairs 623 Vermont
EYES D.J. RAY Valaquez, Funky Punk
House, Maximum Industrial Groaves, Save your
dollar cover
Assistant Director for Student Leadership Development Programs & Organizations and Acadmian Qualifications include Master's degree in college student personal work or a closely related experience. Salary Range: $21,000-23,000 Full job description requirements available on www.hawaii.edu/assistant-director. Include the names and addresses of three references to Amelie Director, Organizations and Acadmian Qualifications. Kansas, Lawrence 60536, 913-844-861. All materials must be postmarked by 15 June, 1989.
2 keys on a square keychain in Finder park
lost on May 13. Claim at 320 Carruth R/O Leary Hall
Found 4/1 Black female cockie mixer 7 wks
Free to good up. 841.829. Leave message.
205 Help Wanted
140 Lost-Found
200s Employment
ATTENTION - HIRING! Government jobs - your
area. $17,340 - $69,485. Call 1-602-838-9885. EXT R
495.
Child Care Director. Must have education/e-
xamination for office management and
supervision skills. 50 job duties. Send resu-
nce and 2 letters of recommendation, by
June 16, 2008 to C-C-Childcare, 929 Vermont.
NATIONAL CHILDREN'S MAGAZINE seeks sales associates in your area. Part time and full-time. Send resume to PO Box 2421, Tuscaloosa, AL 35403.
commercial
Casting Invoice: (11) 85-676-0007 E-mail: careers@mcc.com
California Recruiters can help you find your
job in Sunny California. Current
job offers include:
1. 1:40 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
1. 1:40 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
1. 1:40 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
At: California Recruiters, HO Box 200, Rox Dell, CA 95406-6220
At: California Recruiters, HO Box 200, Rox Dell, CA 95406-6220
At: California Recruiters, HO Box 200, Rox Dell, CA 95406-6220
delivery drivers. Have one car and insurance at $7.50 per hour plus plan
applied. Apply in person at checkers Pizza 214
www.checkerspizza.com
Easy Work 'Excel Pay' Assess products at call. Home for information 304-641-801 Ext. 623. Female help needed for light housekeeping Mondays & Wednesday 12:55 - 14:38. 843-3388.
CRUISE SHIPS Now hiring all positions. Both skilled and unskilled. For information Call (615) 799-5507 Ext. H 694
Help Wanted. Evenings & weekends for counter sales. Experience preferred but not necessary Apply in person Midway Auto Supply 1830 W. 6th B-12 M-F
National marketing firm seeks ambitious mature student to manage on-campus promotions for top national companies. Flexible hours with earl earning. Job location: Cali Callenne or Rebecca P (800) 592-2113
Part-time and full-time AVAILABLE.
Welfare offered @ 9 per hour excellent advancement opportunities. Employees receive a Blue Cross & Blue Shield employee receive a Blue Cross & Blue Shield holiday. Call Personnel for an appointment
ENTERTEL, INC.
841-1200
OVERSEAS JOBS. Also cruise ships. $10,000 -
$105,000/yr. Now Hiring! Listings! (1)
(1) 840-629-4000 Ft. Oyster
Need Money? We've got the solution!
100 POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Several desk jobs are now available at Naisthm Hall for the summer months. Applications and availability at the Naisthm Hall front desk, jobs in Naisthm Hall front desk, jobs in phone calls please E.O.E.A.M/F/H/-
*INSTANT IN CUSTOMER SERVICES*
Duties include pickup and delivery of equipment, receiving and ordering of orders, assisting tech-
nician Position requires: current enrollment at KU ability to work with customers, 6 months per暇 period per week. Complete job description available. Fill out an application form at the Computer Center each half-graduate grade assistant to serve as AD. Requires knowledge of Microsoft Office fraternities. Required Qualifications: enrollment as a KG graduate student for fall 1984 and spring 1985. Achievement of leadership, availability to flexible hours. Positive interview. Complete position application at Naisthm Center. 864-4601. Submit letter of application to Danny K. for letters of recommendation. Organizations and Activities Center, 400
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841.7740
225 Professional Services
KU PHOTOGRAPH SERVICE'S: Ekstachne
service within 24 hours. Complete B/W service.
PASSOFF/RESUME $6.00. Art & Design
Design, Room 804. 864-7477
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob Gyn and Abortion Services. Overland Park...(931) 491-6878
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
FAKE ID'S, DUI'S
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
HARPER
LAWYFR
LAWYER
1101 Mass
Suite 201
QUALITY TUTORING. STATISTICS, MATH and ECONOMICS All levels. Experienced teachers with MA's. Call Demis @ 824-1055.
235 Typing Services
1-1000 pages. Accurate and affordable typing, wordprocessing and cassette transcribing Judy 842-7945 or Lsa 841-1915.
d'irman W Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctated, grammatically correct pages of letters-grammar tests. 8432,宋艺 or evening.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses. misc. IBM correcting Solelectric, spelling corrected. Call Mrs. Wright 843-8544
Laura J. L's Typing Service 841-9369 Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters, DocuSign's Quality Design and Word Processing Term papers, themes, dissertations, letters, documents, Laura J. L's Laser Scribe, Spelling corrected, 872-7547
THEWORD-TORES - Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, theses, resumes, commercial IBM-PC, MAC, CPM 843.147 dot matrix, dot matrix, Since 1980 843.147
KeyWays - Professional PC Services. Data entry, verification, word processing, SFS formats, WordPerfect, Call Ocali Spencer Cooper formerly KU Computing. 842.8078 KU
Word. Processing Typing; Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.
S. Degree. 841-6254
300s
Merchandise
300
Waterbed Works
710 W. 6th
842-1411
DEGAN MARIMBA MODEL 40 4 octave, C to C
Excellent condition $42.000, 842-3030
305 For Sale
SLEEP WITH THE BEST Waterbeds from $139.95 complete
Futon & Frame
$120.00
Futons $95.00
716 Mass. 842-REST
New Save FUTONS
ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1
(U-repair). Deligent tax property. Repossessions.
Call 490-832-8855 EXT GH 4055.
3-D's Used Furniture
PENNYLANE RECORDS & TAPES. Now buying &
selling used records and compact discs. 944
Massachusetts. 749-4211
Quality used furn. & appl.
If it doesn't work, we won't sell it.
If we don't have it, we help find it.
843-5453 642 North 2nd
PENNEL AND RECORDS & TAPES Newborn baby uses used records and condoms.
340 Auto Sales
'83 Renault Alliance AC $spd. 63K Excellent shape
$2000. 842-5833.
85 Renault Encore AC automatic, good shape engine, 62$ K2400 800, 842.5833.
86 Honda Nighthawk 60K. Excellent shape with
ATTENTION - GOVERNMENT VEHICLES from 1100. Fords, Mercedes. Carvettes. Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide. 1. 402. 838. 685T EX A 405.
Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, 4 X 4's Seized in drug raid for under $1000? Call for facts today 892-837-4401. Ext. 765
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords, Mercedes. Corvettes. Chevys. Surplus.
Buyers Guide (1) (805-660-600. E-S 9738
400s Real Estate
400s
405 For Rent
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A quiet, relaxed atmosphere
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom Laundry fac. & swimming pool Waterbed allowed 10-12月 leases
9th & Avalon
842-3040
Furnished one and two bedroom apartments. One block from KU. Off street parking. No pets. 841-5900
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
合
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, disability or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the **mw**. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertising on this newspaper are available on all equal opportunity basis.
COLONY WOODS
APARTMENTS
$345 $395
1 brm 2 brm
(w/2 bath)
FREE CD PLAYERS
Managed with the student in mind.
All of this is yours plus up to 2 compact disc
lives on large
3 HOT TURS
■ HEATED POOL
OUTDOOR POOL
EXERCISE ROOM
BASKETBALL COURT
ON BUS ROUTE
WALK TO CAMPUS
MICROWAVE
FULLY CARPETED
AIR CONDITIONED
ICEMAKER
PATIO
WATER PAID
LAUNDRY-VENDING
SATELLITE
WALK TO SHOPS
10 MO. - 1 YR. LEASE
842-5111
LOCATION
Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Component location to Kleiderborn
& Draper, Water and Basic
Cable included. We invite
You to Discover Moodya
meadowbrook
NAISMITH PLACE APARTMENTS
JACUZZI IN EVERY APARTMENT
Two Bedroom
Brid Cable TV
- Fully Equipped Kitchen
- Walking Distance from
- KU Bus Route
- Park-like Setting
- Park-like Setting
- Laundry Facilitie
- Private Balcony or Patio
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- Private Balcony or Patio
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Office Hours: M-F 10-4, Sat 10-2
Ousdahl & 25th Ct.
941 1915
Mastercraft Management
842.4455
Completely Furnished!
**Complete Furnished!**
Station, 12-3-4, 1 bedroom apartment. May great design, energy efficient and appointed you with in mind. Call 400-812-8557-9404/ 942-74915
1-5 P.M.
RESERVE YOUR HOME FOR
NEXT SEMESTER!
OPEN DAILY
Offering:
• Custom furnishings
• Designed for privacy
• Private parking
• Close to shopping & KU
• Many great locations
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1,2,3,4 Bdr. Apts.
Designed with you in mind!
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Orchard Corners - 749-4226 15th & Kasold
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
- Front door bus service
- "Dine Anytime" with
Feast Your Eyes on everything Naismith Hall has to offer
Dive Anytime with unlimited seconds
- Excellent campus location
- Semi-private baths
- Fully furnished & carpeted
- Quiet study areas
- Active social calendar
- Laundry & vending facilities
- Active social calendar
- 9-month academic year lease
- Optional payment plans
- Swimming pool
* Basketball courts
* Free utilities A/C
Including an Eye-Catching Gift
We will give you a free pair of fashion sunglasses when you come by and see for yourself all the special features and amenities that we have built with a row of college living rooms.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
841-8559
South Pointe
APARTMENTS
1 & 2 Bedrooms Still Available
- low utilities
- new appliances
- dishwasher
- walk-in closet
- new plush carpet
- volleyball
- outdoor pool Stop by at:
1266 W. 26th
M-F, 9-6 Sat., 12-5
For more info call: 843-6446
Furnished rooms with shared kitchen & bath
Most utilities paid. Off street parking. One block
from KU. No pets. 941-5200.
14
Wednesday, June 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Gifts push Campaign Kansas towards a $150 million goal
by Charles Higginson Kansan staff writer
The largest fund-raising effort in the University's history continued unabated through the past few weeks on the Lawrence campus.
Campaign Kansas, a five-year drive to raise $150 million, had passed $117 million in contributions as of May 21, said John Scarfe, director of public relations for the Kansas University Endowment Association. The Endowment Association administers the campaign.
"I think we're real pleased with the progress." "Scarffe said. "We're right on target, but we realize a lot has to be done."
The campaign was publicly announced in May 1988 and is scheduled to end in July. In the period the period will be included in Campaign Kansas.
"What we're doing in Campaign Kansas is to complement that effort to provide the things that make the difference between an adequate and an excellent educational opportunity." be said.
Recent major gifts, totaling more 11.7 million include:
recent major girls, tombing-
than $1.7 million, include:
■ An estate provision valued at
Harvell from Harvell and Nelva
Urvach, Wichita, for unrestricted
support of the Williams Fund, which
provides scholarship assistance to
more than 400 KU intercollegiate
athletes
A charitable trust established with $100,000 by Philip R. Phillips, Bartlesville, Oka, for unrestricted use. A $500,000 gift from Robert W. and Katherine Hall Wagstaff, Mission Hills, to establish the Robert W. Wagstaff distinguished professorship of law.
A $100,000 commitment from Elizabeth Colck Debtor. Leawood, to establish the College of Debtor. The College of Small Business Endowment Fund in the school of business.
A $75,000 commitment from Robert S. and Charlotte Mueller, Mission Hills, of which $50,000 will apply to the KU Alumni Association's Second Century Fund and $25,000 will apply to the Arthur Young distinguished professorship in the school of business.
■ Donations to be applied to the Ernst F. Lied Performing Arts Center include a $50,000 charitable trust established by Spencer A. and Marjorie G. Gard, Lenaex; a $30,000 gift from Helen R. Hale Foundation, Wichita; and a $150,000 bequest from Helen S. Addison, Houston.
Kansans predict party growth
by Barbara Kollmeyer
Kansan staff writer
A battle of ethics has been raging on Capitol Hill.
The battle has produced two Democratic casualties, Speaker of the House Jim Wright and Democratic Majority Whip Tony Coelho. According to two Kansas Democrats, however, the victors may be the Democrats themselves, gaining a stronger leadership team on Capitol Hill.
Both U.S. Rep. Jim Slattery and Dan Glickman, Kansas Democrats, agreed that the shakup in the House proved to be positive for their party
"The party will go through a short period of struggle and confusion, but six months from now it will come out and people will leave." Slattery from his Washington office.
Majority Leader Tom Foley of Washington, who is popular among Republicans and Democrats, is expected to replace Wright. Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri is the candidate favored to take Foley's place as Democratic Majority Leader.
According to Glickman, the new House leadership will strengthen the Democratic Party as a whole because Foley and Gephardt are well known such as education trade, science programs, agriculture and trade.
"These kinds of issues will help nationally because they will be appealing to Kansas Republicans and from Wisconsin," Dickman从 his Washington office.
Both Glickman and Slattery are friends with Gonhardt and Foley and
hope that their influence can be felt more through the election of these individuals.
Slattery said both Foley and Gephardt had the experience and background that would prove beneficial to Kansas.
"Dick Gephardt is a neighbor from Missouri who is going to bring in a Midwestern perspective to lead," Slatter said.
"Tom Foley knows more about farm and rural programs than any other speaker in history," he said, referring to his former role on the wheat and grain subcommittee.
"It will be helpful for Kansas to have someone in the House that knows so much about legislative matters that affect Kansas," added
COLONY WOODS
APARTMENTS
FREE COMPACT DISC PLAYERS
Managed with the student in mind.
All of this is yours plus up to 2 Compact Disc Players per new lease.
LEASING NOW!
FEATURING:
• one bedroom apt. ($345)
• on bus route
• two bedroom apt. ($395) with TWO FULL BATHROOMS
• drapes are furnished
• fully equipped kitchen with MICROWAVE, DISHWASHER and ICEMAKER
Amenities
• 3 outside HOT TUBS
• INDOOR/outdoor POOL
• weight room
* Ask about 1/2 off of your deposit
842-5111 Location, Lifestyle 1301 W 24th The Best Value In Town!
CELEBRATE Vista's
25th Anniversary
all month long
99¢ Hamburger & Reg. Fries
(Pickle, Ketchup, Mustard) Cheese and Bacon Extra.
25¢ Vista Creme Cones
(Regular Size, Chocolate Dip Extra.)
Vista DRIVE IN
Good after 11:00 a.m. at the following stores:
Topeka — 250 E. 29th and 1050 Wanamaker
Lawrence — 1527 W. 6th
THIS IS A DIRECTIONAL VIEW OF THE NEW BUILDING AT WEST MIDDLE. THE FIRST FOUR TOWER BLOCKS ARE IN FRONT OF THE GREEN FIELD, WHICH IS UNFURNISHED. THE SECOND FOUR TOWER BLOCKS ARE ALSO UNFURNISHED. THE THIRD FOUR TOWER BLOCKS ARE IN THE MIDDLE. THE FOURTH TOWER BLOCK IS IN FRONT OF THE MOUNTAIN.
CELEBRATE
Vista's
25th Anniversary
all month long
99¢ Hamburger &
Reg. Fries
(Pickle, Ketchup, Mustard) Cheese and Bacon Extra.
25¢ Vista Creme Cones
(Regular Size. Chocolate Dip Extra.)
Vista DRIVE IN
Good after 11:00 a.m. at the following stores:
Topeka — 250 E. 29th and 1050 Wanamaker
Lawrence — 1527 W. 6th
SHOW OFF YOUR DIPLOMA IN AN ATTRACTIVE FRAME FROM ENCORE!
ENCORE
Picture Framing
This coupon worth $5.00 off on our special diploma frame (double matted) OR any other framing order.
2323 Ridge Ct.
(behind Mrs. Winners)
842-8230
SELL IT FAST IN THE KANSAN CLASSIFIED
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUK
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Diner
BUMBI
STAND BY ME
Caddiyshack
RUNNING SCARED
JIMM STUART
REAR WINDOW
1989 SUMMER FILMS
Diner
BUMBIE
Nighthours
STAND BY ME
Bambi
Caddyshack
RUNNING SCARED
JASON SCHRAMM
REAR WINDOW
1989 SUMMER FILMS
Easy
Elien Barkin plays a sexually repressed assistant D.A. who's investigating corrupt policemen... like fast-talking New Orleans detective Demis Quand. (Ned Beatty). Directed by Jim McBride. 101 min. R. With A road Runner cartoon, too!
CARLTON
June 7.9
7:00 p.m.
Diner
has the 1950s and a group of men gather in their favorite diner to discuss issues that are important to them - women and sex (Mickey Rourke, Steve Gutenberg, Kevin Bacon) Directed by Barry Levinson. 110 min. R Featureting open cartoon
June 14,16
7:00 p.m.
Neighbors
John Belushi's last film casts him as a milquotastub suburbanite whose life is turned on end by the arrival of his bizarre and destructive new neighbors (Dan Akrynd and Cathy Moriarty). Directed by John Avildsen. 94 min. R. Featuring a Road Runner Cartoon
June 21.23
7:00 p.m.
STAND BY ME
TOMORROW
Four boys looking for adventure go on a search to find the body of a boy killed by a train. The expedition takes on a new meaning as the boys fight, jokey and ponder the mysteries of life (River Phoenix, Wi). Special Gaup shortman) Directed by Kohler Rene. 87 min. Special Our Gang short
7:00 p.m
June 28.30
Bambi
See Bamba, Thumper, Flower and many more of their friends in this beautiful Disney film based on the children's classic. Voices: Bobby Stewart, John Sutherland 69 min. G. Featuring two Bugs Bunny cartoons.
July 7
7:00 p.m.
10
Caddushack
July 12,14
Bushwood Country Club becomes a free-for-all when Rodney Dangerfield blows into town. Meanwhile, Bill Murray tries to take care of the gopher problem. Directed by Harold Ramis. 107 min. R. Plus a Three Stooges short.
7:00 p.m.
RUNNING SCARED
Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal are a pair of Chicago mean street cops thirty days from retiring. Unfortunately, every crook in town (including "L.A. Law's Jimmy Smits) is out to stop them. Directed by Peter Hyams. 110 min. R Emphasis on an opening cartoon.
July 19.21
7:00 p.m
**YOUNG**
REAR WINDOW
An immobilized photojournalist uncovers a brutal murder while causally observing his neighbors from his window. The situation becomes dangerous as he tries, with the help of his fincee, to prove the murder occurred. He is pursued by a police officer, Alfred Hitchcock. PG. FEATuring a Road Runner cartoon.
7:00 p.m.
All films are shown in Woodruff Auditorium located on the fifth floor of the Kansas Union or in Alderson Auditorium, fourth floor of the Kansas Union, unless otherwise noted. Tickets for all films are $1.50. You may purchase your tickets at the box office on Friday from 8 a.m. to 9 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. On the day of the show, the box office opens 30 minutes prior to each show and closes 45 minutes after the film has begun. No one is allowed to enter the theater after the box office closes. Beginning at noon on Monday, ticket films show that week are available for advance purchase. GUA films are open
One
96972501
For the latest update on films call 864-SHOW.
---
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.99, NO.147 (USPS 650-640)
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
WEDNESDAY JUNE 14, 1989
Journalism school regulates KJHK Station manager to be unpaid
Kansan staff writer
by Charles Higginson Kansan staff writer
KJH-KFM will soon see changes, but not everyone involved with the station will welcome them.
In a crowded meeting last night, the KJHK board of directors received a statement of purpose and a set of operational and organizational requirements from the faculty of the school of journalism. The new policies emphasize KJHK's role as a laboratory radio station and stress professionalism in the station's programming.
KJHK is licensed to the University, and the journalism school administers the station. The faculty's decision is made by the terms of the station's constitution.
The statement of purpose and requirements clarify the station's mission and specify changes in its structure, operations and policies for performance, program development and student participation.
They specify a 14-point music performance policy, which includes the requirement that announcers gain approval of written playlists from management before broadcast. Staff members not enrolled in journalism courses will be required to sign a 12-point participation contract affirming support of the station's laboratory function.
In addition, the station's student manager position will become unpaid, with a limitation of one term. The student manager position, on an individual's appointment,
The faculty also recommended withdrawal of the station's pending application to the Federal Communications Commission for increased power. It will not be resubmitted until the station is organized and operated in line with FCC requirements, and then only if the increased power would enhance its academic function.
The new policies are an attempt to address concerns about the station's ability to maintain its FCC licensing and to serve as a laboratory where students can learn professional skills and be read to the board by Mike Kautsch, dean of the school of journalism and chairman of the board.
"What you have here is an expression of the faculty's will," Kautsch said during the meeting. "The constitution and this board is a faculty creation."
assistant professor of radio-tele-
vision-film, said. "The faculty took it
up on itself to voice its opinion.
The station is not a demoralized
process."
John Katich, board member and
Last April, after several months of controversy about the station's operation and function, the Student Senate recommended changes in the structure of the KJHK board. Paul Leader, former co-chairman of the finance committee, which oversees the station, Senate's recommended changes were an attempt to increase student participation in the station.
The board took no formal action last night beyond reading the faculty statements and appointing Max Utser, board member and chairman of radio-television-film, to communicate the new faculty requirements to
Janet Cabelli, Lawrence senior and board member, questioned several points of the recommendations during the meeting.
"I'm just really upset that the board didn't have a vote on what was happening," she said after the meeting. "Why am I on the board?" Why is there a board of directors if we don't have a say?"
Mike Mader, Great Bend graduate student, was one of about 20 people who attended the meeting.
"I'm outraged," Mader said. "I think the journalism school has acted unfairly. We always thought the station's spirit could be maintained and still meet the academic mission of the department.
"And apparently it can't."
Mike Uln, KJHK student manager, said, "The station will operate as it can, with or without student senate funding. The faculty has spo
"I think the station had a chance not to have the faculty speak last semester, but the attacks on KJHK continued. And now the people who wanted to free KJHK have backed us into a corner."
William Sanders, Student Executive Committee chairman, also attended the board meeting.
"We will discuss what happened at the meeting at the next StudEx meeting on Thursday," Sanders said. "We were given a guess as to what might happen."
Steve Traynor/KANSAN
Ulin said, "I hope that JKJH can continue to serve the students. I know that we working at the station want to."
10
Craig L'Ecuver and Scott Roberts work on the construction of audio speakers. The two work for Martin-Logan Ltd., based in Lawrence.
Wall of sound
KU Iranians watch events at home
by Charles Higginson
Kansan staff writer
The death of Ayatollah Rubailullah Khomeini, Iran's political and spiritual leader, evoked strong responses from Iranians studying at KU, but they do not expect its immediate consequences to affect them directly.
"The effect will come if there are a lot of changes in Iran," said Khosro
Khomeini died June 3 of a heart attack at the age of 89.
Darroudi said many Iranian students would be watching events in Iran to decide whether to return.
"It depends mostly on what is going on in Iran," he said.
In a written response to questions, Mahdi Shafa, Teheran graduate student, said, "Those who care for an institution should go back to serve their country."
Shafa's statement said Khomeini's death affected the life of every Muslim.
"Those who are looking for a Westernized Iran may not like it."
"Iam Khomeini was a Muslim leader who happened to be Iranian." Shafa wrote.
Khomeini's funeral last week brought intense outpourings of grief from many Iranians.
"We witnessed a unique funeral in the history of mankind," Shafa's statement read. "Ten millions of people have been killed, Khoumni because they loved Islam."
Darroudi said he respected Khomeini but did not consider himself politically active.
"I would have a feeling for Khomein because he was a leader and a great man." Darroubi said.
Clark Coan, director of the office of foreign student services, said 34 Iranian students were enrolled in Tahnans and 28 Iranians were enrolled during the past
spring semester.
"Most Iranians are interested in the United States because of past relationships between the two countries," said Ali. "Also, they want to learn English."
Shafa's statement said Islam encourages its followers to search for knowledge without placing limitations on time or place.
President Sayeed Ali Khamenei, 49, was named June 4 as an apparently temporary replacement for Khomeini. Khomeini's son, Ahmed, and Iran's parliamentary speaker, Ali Raisanjali, are also among those who may emerge into permanent positions of power in Iran. None of the seeds the yamelah's combined spiritual and political authority.
"Khomeini is irreplaceable," said Deborah Gernini, assistant professor of political science. "There is no one like him. He filled a multiplicity of
roles."
The selection of Khamenei was probably an interim measure that would result in little change for iranians at KU, Gerner said.
Despite the difficulty of deepening events in Iran, iranians at KU do not expect the current power struggle to be fundamental changes in the government.
Darroudi said, "The Islamic Republic will remain, no doubt about that. From what I know about what's going on, Rafsanjani is the most powerful man in Iran. I think Khoma son will be the spiritual leader."
Khomeini overthrew the government of Shah Reza Pahlavi in 1979, returning triumphantly to Iran after many years of exile. He quickly uncovered the growing Islamic republic that rejected Western political and social institutions.
Bud, the aluminum can From original ore to your trash bin and back again
by Christina Mann
Kansan staff writer
He has lived more lives than Shirley MacLaine and survived more scrapes and close calls than James Bond. He has been crushed, smashed, kicked around and has spent a few nights in the gutter.
He is Bud, the aluminum can.
He's n't helped up with Bud during his recent stay at a local rehabilitation center for aluminum cans: a reeving plant.
"I really didn't think I was going to make it this time," he wheezed through the opening at the top of his crumpled body. "I was in the clutches of some careless party animal who threw me into the trash dumpster. Lucky for me some cute kid came and by cashed in so he could go buy himself a candy bar."
Hebert's business is a curb side service which, in 13 months of operation, has gathered 50,000 pounds of recyclable materials from Lawrence residents and bars.
Bud and other aluminum cans are the most valuable recyclable, said John Hebert, a partner in Lawrence Recycling Service at 716 E. Ninth St. In terms of turnover, the company is the newsaper and glass, he said.
"I never cease to be amazed at how much beer people drink." Kirk Devine said with a laugh. Devine is co-owner of River City Recycling, which is housed in the same building as Hebert's basil-room. "We work together and support each other," Devine said.
Lawrence Recycling Service gathers recyclables at no charge
but does not pay its customers. Those who don't mind a little extra legwork can pocket some change to recyclables to River City Recycling.
"Everything is throw-away anymore and that's where we get a lot of our stuff — people picking up after other people. It's everybody old lady that had to use a walker to comin' in." Murdock said.
"It's kind of split," Murdoc said of the two types. "A lot come in and say I don't care how much money I get, I just want to clean up and recycle things." Then there's who will want every penny they can get.
Jerry Murdock, co-owner of Sunshine Recycling of Lawrence at 906 N. Second St., said two types of murders have a psychology-minded and economy-minded.
What, then, is the fate of But the aluminum can after arriving at one of Lawrence's several recycling centers? Well, here is what Robin Narameo, a co-owner of River City Recycling, said would happen to the can if he ended up at her place:
First, Naramore runs the cans over a screen-topped table. The screen allows trash and remaining crumbs to fall. The net catches non-aluminum cans.
Murdock estimated his company collected eight to nine tons of aluminum each week. At the current price of $8 cents per pound, Sunshine Recycling pays about three times week for aluminum cans alone.
After she bags the cans, they are sold to another company where they are flattened and sorted.
They are run through another sorter "just to double check," Naramore said.
The companies melt the bricks and roll them out into big sheets. New cans are "punched out just as they come in" making cookies. "Narramore said."
The cans are then run through a densifier, which presses them into 30-pound bricks. The bricks are sold through a broker to aluminum companies such as Reynolds Metals and Aluminum Company of America.
According to the information,
"recycling aluminum produces 95
percent less air pollution and 97
percent less oil pollution than
prior virgin ores."
According to literature from River City Recycling, the recycling of one can saves 95 percent of the energy required to produce the can from virgin ores. That saves through gasoline to fill the can half full.
Finally, the companies sell the recycled aluminum to beverage companies such as Coca-Cola.
"I don't have a favorite because I don't advocate drinking or not drinking these products. My mom said in what I am, not what I contain.
When asked, "Which was your favorite incarnation — the time you spent as a Peep, Coke, Sprite, oriser can?" Bud bid this to say.
"I can be here for you again and again. I can make you money; I can save you money, I can help save your environment, too. I don't want to landfill great prematurely, but my longevity depends on you."
Beijing blacklisting students
Participants in demonstrations say they were photographed
The Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO — Student leaders say that Chinese consulates in San Francisco and New York City have been taking pictures and compiling lists of participants in demonstrations against the Beijing government.
At a protest at the consulate in San Francisco immediately after the massacre in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, consulate staff were at the windows and on the roof of the building with still and video cameras, student protesters said Monday.
"Everyone saw them. We just shouted 'Stop it' " said Yu Maochen, a graduate student at the University
"We were very angry. It's my suspicion they did it every time. It's for some blacklist, that's for sure." Yu said.
In New York, Ding Chu, general secretary of the Chinese Alliance for Democracy, said consular staff also worked with some diplomats down during recent demonstrations.
of California at Berkeley
Some students in New York also said staff from the consulate came to their campuses recently and questioned staff members in the demonstrations, said Ding.
Student leaders say any Chinese nationals who speak out against the Beijing government face certain persecution in their homeland.
Despite the risks of antigovernment demonstrations, Chinese students in the United States are not interested in seeking political asylum, students at Stanford University said.
"Most Chinese students would agree that political asimilation is the last thing we would want. It's akin to treason," said Douglas Pau, a graduate member of The Association of Chinese Students and Scholars at Stanford.
Chinese witnesses and Western intelligence say the toll from the June 3-4 assault in and around Thaung Kyi's compound on Sunday, 3,000 dead, most of them civilians.
Grant to save energy at KU
bv Garv Patton
Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas has received a $105,396 federal grant to make improvements designed to save energy in three campus buildings.
The grant, combined with matching funds from the state legislature, will pay for projects at Watkins Memorial Health Center. Haworth Hall and Blake House. Myron Platt planned for engineering of facilities planning for engineering.
The money is available for use now, and the projects must be completed by Sept. 30, 1990, Reed said.
"We want to reduce our energy usage," Reed said. "We have seen a reduction in steam usage as a clear conservation program is working."
watkins' 16-year-old, air-controlled energy management system will be replaced by a $61,222 computerized system.
Similar improvements at Haworth will cost $109,413.
"The new system will avoid seat of the-pants engineering and will allow the building to run at optimum speed." The director of facilities operations.
A $40,158 project will make Blake's heating and cooling system more efficient.
KU was one of 36 state colleges, school districts and hospitals to
"Not a lot of things these days save taxpayers money." Haun said. "But these projects do. The new technology has made a lot of savings available."
Jon McKenzie of the Kansas Corporation Commission said the completed projects were expected to save KU more than $60,000 in utility expenses each year. He is the grant manager who will monitor KU projects.
receive the Department of Energy grant. McKenzie said the amounts ranged from $1,940 for the Christian Challenge School of Wichita to $344,838 for the Hutchinson Hospital Corporation.
McKenzie said every institution that applied for the grant this year received one.
"That is not the case in other years," McKenzie said. "Some years are much more competitive."
Lawrence Memorial Hospital, the only other grant recipient in Douglas County, received $293.657.
To qualify for the grants, an institution must be a public or non-profit school or hospital, and its buildings have been built before April 1977.
Since the program began in 1979, KU has received a grant every year, including one for about $100,000 in 1988.
2
Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
FUJI Sale
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Buyany bike which is not discounted and get:
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THE Palace Cards & Gifts
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Safety Hints from your gas company. If you detect an odor you think may be natural gas-
OFF
(1) Open windows and doors to dilute the air to a safe level.
(2) Call for aid or advice from the gas company or fire depart-
(3) If the odor appears to be very strong leave the house or building immediately. Go to a telephone and notify the gas company—do not turn on any electrical appliances, including light switches.
(4) When the problem is solved, have a qualified person from the gas company, plumbing or climate control firms relight appliances.
(5) In the event a leak is detected anywhere outside of a building notify the gas company immediately and describe the location and approximate level of the odor — a quick check is made to determine the problem and corrective action needed.
If you have any questions please contact our office.
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SUN
TODAY
Partly Cloudy
HI:77°
LO:63°
Weather
Denver 79/48
Los Angeles 79/62
Dallas 80/59
Chicago 61/50
Seattle 65/55 Fargo 74/45 New York 74/65
KEY
Rain Snow
Ice T-Storms
Today's Pick City
Fargo, North Dakota
High:74° Seasonal temperatures and Low:45° sunny skies are expected
Kansas Forecast
Showers mostly ending across the south by noon. Decreasing cloudiness in the afternoon. Partly cloudy north. Highs in the 70s. Tonight partly cloudy and cool. Low in the upper 40s.
Salina
82/63 KC
65/50
Dodge
City Wichita
72/60 76/64
Forecast by National Weather Service Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows.
7-day Forecast
Wednesday -Partly cloudy with sun sprinkled throughout the day. High 77" Low 63".
Saturday - Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain and warm. High 83", Low 65".
Friday - Partly cloudy with a chance of showers. High 82', Low 63'.
Sunday - Rain all day. High 84', Low 60.
**Thursday** - Clouds in the morning, then partly clearing by the afternoon. **High 80**, Low 58*
Monday - Decreasing clouds.
High 84°, Low 65°.
Tuesday - Sunny but with a distinct possibility of seasonal temperatures. High 80, Low 65.
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
SUA movie
Lawrence Bicycle Club
- **Diner.** Woodruff Auditorium. 7 p.m. $1.50
**meet at South Park gazebo, 6:30 p.m. M destination varies, frequent trips include Lakeland Wells Overlook, Lawrence airport or just around town.**
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas
THURSDAY
Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas
meeting. Alcove at the Kansas Union. 7:30 p.m.
Brown Bag Concert
The Mariachi Band will perform a free noon-time concert in front of the First National Bank, 900 Massachusetts St.
FRIDAY
SUA movie
Jazz concert. Swarthout Recital Hall, 7 p.m. Free.
Midwestern Music Camp
"Diner." Woodruff Auditorium, 7 p.m. $1.50
Academic Computing Services
■ Seminars. Introduction to SAS- Part 1 PCLab, Computer Center 1-3 p.m.
Introduction to MIDnet and NSFNET Mac Lab, Computer Center, 1-3:30 p.m.
Using the National Center for Supercomputing Applications Cray from KU, Mac Lab, 3-4:30 p.m.
Emporia's Twin River Festival
- Emporia is about 75 miles west of Lawrence
SATURDAY
Midwestern Music Camp
- Junior High concert, Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall. 11 a.m. Free
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Ride to Baldwin. Meet at South Park gazebo at 8:30 a.m. 30 miles, 12-15 mph
Twin Rivers Festival
The festival is in Emporia, about 75 miles west of Lawrence.
Midsummer's Day Swedish Festival
The festival is in Lindsborg, about 120 miles west of Lawrence.
SUNDAY.
Midwestern Music Camp
- Registration, Junior High Session 2, Oliver Hall and Murphy Hall 1 p.m.
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Scenic tours of Douglas County and surrounding areas. Meet at South Park gazebo. 8:30 a.m. - 30-60 miles, 12-15 mph.
TUESDAY
Lawrence Bicycle Club
**Training ride for those interested in learning the base of road racing techniques.** Meet in front of Strong Hall, 8-30 p.m. Destination varies 30-40
Clarification
Because of an editor's error, the quote, "What we're doing in Campaign Kansas is to complement that effort to provide the things that make the difference between an adequate and an excellent educational opportunity," was written by James Martin. The director of Campaign Kansas has been attributed to James Martin, the executive director of Campaign Kansas.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 14, 1989
Campus/Area
3
Lyme virus no cause for alarm official says
by Donna Eades Kansan staff writer
Although an unconfirmed case of Lyme disease has been reported in Johnson County, Kansans have no cause for alarm, said Greg Crawford, spokesman for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
"The key is that not all ticks carry disease," Crawford said. "If you get bitten, it doesn't mean you'll get the disease."
Lyme disease, characterized by a blotchy red rash, joint pain, fatigue, headaches and muscle weakness, is carried by the deer tick.
"At this time it's very unlikely people in this area will contract the disease," said Ann McBride, physician at Watkins Memorial Health Center. "The deer tick is not endemic to this area."
Lyme disease is more prevalent in the Northeast, where it was first reported in 1975, the Pacific Northwest, and the upper Midwest.
There have been no confirmed cases of Lyme disease in Kansas in 1989, she said.
Crawford said that physicians were not required to report the disease, but eight cases were voluntarily reported in 1988. He said most of those infections occurred in other areas of the country.
"If people are concerned, they should be more concern about rocky mountain spotted fever," Crawford said.
In 1988 there were 28 reported cases of rocky mountain spotted fever, also transported by ticks, in Kansas.
Symptoms of that disease include a sudden fever, fatigue, muscle pain, severe headaches and chills.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment recommends that individuals who will be outdoors in wooded areas use tick repellents and wear long-sleeved shirts and pants tucked into boots.
Siberians to be studied KU professor may be first Westerner allowed
by Dick Lipsey
Kansan staff writer
Mikhail Gorbachev's glasnost policy has created new research opportunities for a KU scientist.
Michael Crawford, professor of anthropology, left Sunday for his eight trip to the Soviet Union in the last 25 years. But this time he may be the first Westerner to study people in Siberian native villages.
"Previously, the Soviets never allowed us to go into native villages," he said. "This was because of the military installations in areas such as Moscow and Belarus." The Chukhota Peninsula extends into the Bering Sea near Alaska.
Crawford will spend two weeks in the Soviet scientific institute of Akademorgod, near the Siberian city of Novosibirsk.
"We will iron out the agreement for the research project. In the past our work involved analyzing blood samples or teaching the Soviets, rather than going into the villages. This time I will see the villages and work out the experimental design," he said.
Crawford will study the "new world syndrome" found among Indians of the American Southwest to determine whether it's prevalent among Soviet native peoples who are genetically related to American Indians.
"Scientific literature argues that American Indians exposed to Western diets, such as those high in refined sugars and carbohydrates, develop a number of conditions," he said.
"These include late onset diabetes, gallbladder cancer and gallstones, and Indians have a much higher incidence of these than the white population," Crawford said. "This is the 'new world syndrome'. Nobody
Scientific literature argues that American Indians exposed to Western diets, such as those high in refined sugars and carbohydrates, develop a number of conditions. This is the 'new world syndrome.' Nobody knows whether it is present in the Siberian native population'.
C
Michael Crawford professor of anthropology
knows whether it is present in the Siberian native population."
Crawford also will spend two weeks at the Soviet primate center at Sukhumi, on the Black Sea coast, doing a follow-up study on lymphatic cancer in a baboon colony. He first met Henk in 1965, when the Soviets began the study.
"They injected a group of baboons with human leukemic cells, and the baboons came down with a primate form of lymphoma. cancer of the lymphatic system was rapidly, and they experienced an epidemic. About 450 animals died.
"All of the animals in the control colony were exposed," said Crawford. "But only some died, and there was a familial pattern. About 55 percent of the variation was based on genetic predisposition.
"This summer, as a follow up, we'll use DNA analysis to determine where on the gene is the locus that controls predisposition. The National Cancer Institute is interested in this."
Crawford speaks Russian, which
he said has given him unique opportunities in the Soviet Union.
"To my knowledge, I'm the only American biological anthropologist fluent in Russian," he said.
Crawford also has observed dramatic changes in the Soviet scientific community as a result of glassost.
Crawford noted some problems in Soviet science.
"In the past most scientific institutions were run by party members, who often had marginal academic credentials. The parachiks are gradually becoming displaced. If the Gorbacheva era can get rid of some of the ideological pursists and incompetents and have real scientists run the institutes, that is not a problem."
"They still have problems with basic equipment," he said. "They don't manufacture much lab equipment in the Soviet Union, and to get it from abroad requires foreign currency, which is distributed in a hierarchy of national offices doing defense work. Genetics doesn't have the clout of physics."
Crawford expressed optimisms about future relations with the Soviets.
"I am hopeful that glasnost will open up more exchange programs with Soviet scientists," he said. "Last fall Rem Sukernik, my Soviet counterpart to Lawrence. It was his first time even to visit a nonsocial country."
Crawford said he expected to receive funding from the National Science Foundation to return to the villages next year for further study. He will study either the Nganasan people of the Taimir Peninsula on the Arctic coast, or the Eskimo and Chukchi people of the Chukhotka Peninsula. The Soviet government has not made its decision.
Local Briefs
HAYDEN TO SPEAK: Kansas Gov. Mike Hayden will speak about leadership and the importance of women in politics to more than 500 Kansas Sunflower Girls State at 3 a.m. tomorrow, in Templin Hall.
He also will talk about the increased number of female legislators and the importance women play in his administration.
Girls State will continue through Saturday.
Summer enrollment barely up
sixth grades who have trouble in reading and math.
The board also decided to allocate $7,296.91 for the purchase and installation of window blinds in three of the elementary schools. Roofs will be replaced at three schools, a total of $33,575.
Although the school of Fine Arts recorded the highest increase of 15.7 percent, enrollment in other areas remained about the same, with an overall increase of less than 1 percent.
In other business, the board decided to allow children of employees at Quail Run Elementary School to attend school there.
SCHOOL BOARD MEETING: The Lawrence School Board agreed last night to allocate $99.975 for Chapter 1 services for the 1899-90 school year. The money will supplement $375 per student from the Kansas Chapter 1 section.
Chapter 1 is a program that began in 1978 to help students in first to
School 1989 1988
Allied Health 140 136
Applied English Center 61 74
Architecture and Urban Design 109 130
Business 235 256
Education 408 357
Engineering 340 336
Fine Arts 242 204
Graduate School 2,710 2,568
Journalism 232 200
Law 189 180
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences 2,500 2,513
Medicine 832 879
Nursing 55 69
Pharmacy 64 68
Social Welfare 225 248
Special University 190 210
Unknown 15 20
(Some students are enrolled in two schools.)
SOURCE: Educational Services Susan Younger/KANSIAN
Enrollment grows less than 1 percent
by Susan Newburger Kansan staff writer
The Department of Educational Services said preliminary enrollment was 8,411, compared to 8,341 for the previous year, an increase of less than 1 percent.
Seventy more students enrolled in summer school this year at the University of Kansas than last year, first-day figures show.
Of the 17 areas reported by Educational Services, seven had increased enrollment, with increases ranging from 15.7 percent to 0.9 percent.
Enrollment on the Lawrence campus was 7,080, up 109 students from last summer's enrollment.
Don Scheid, associate deine of fine arts, said. "A few classes have closed, primarily studio classes with restricted class sizes. But no problems have been brought to our attention."
Representatives of schools reporting an increase said higher enrollment had not caused problems.
"We can never second guess the enrollment," said Scheid, "All sorts of things affect enrollment. We've learned that in most cases one thing has made a difference."
The School of Fine Arts recorded a 15.7 percent increase in enrollment.
Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism,
said that increased enrollment had
not caused any problems for the
school.
"I have not received the final report, but we seemed to meet the demand for classes," Kautsch said.
"We expect to break 1,000 students this fall. The summer school enrollment was not a surprise." Kautsch said.
The 13.7 percent increase in enrollment is consistent with the growing interest in the school's program, Kautsch said.
Official summer enrollment fig ures will be determined July 28.
ALEXANDER SMITH
Steve Traynor/KANSAN
Michael Crawford, professor of atropolyg
Court accepts plan of reapportionment for House districts
Kansan staff writer
by Sharon Chapman Kanson staff writer
The Kansas Supreme Court approved a House reapportionment plan on Friday, but referred an amendment to the new state census to a lower court.
The action was filed by Douglas, Riley and Leavenworth counties and seven legislators from those counties that were required to be used in the reapportionment plan.
The action also challenges the constitutionality of the census results.
"We allege that the methodology used by the secretary of state is unconstitutional," said Patti Hackney, assistant Douglas County counselor. "It is part of Kansas law that you are counted where you sleep. For most students, this would not be their parents' address."
in the federal census, people are counted where they are, regardless of their legal address.
"We believe that the federal method is constitutional," Hackney said. "The difference between the federal number is unbelievable."
The House is reapportioned every 10 years so that districts and representation will be as equal as possible.
Opponents of the census do not want it used for reapportionment because students are counted at their legal address, which is often not where they live most of the year, and military personnel are counted at the address they used before coming to Kansas.
The number of residents was cut in
both Douglas and Riley counties because students from the University of Kansas and Kansas State University were not counted. Leavenworth County's totals also were cut because of Ft. Leavenworth
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D- Lawrence, estimated that as many as 15,000 students live in her district, which includes most of KUI's resi
Because students and military personnel were not included, Hackney said some districts appear to be twice the size of state estimates, and an important segment of the voting population might be ignored.
The court decided not to consider the census with the reapportionment plan because the state constitution required a decision within 30 days. The court said that more time was needed to evaluate the census issue and moved the action back to the state district court.
There is no time constraint in the lower courts, but legislators hope a decision will be made before the 1980 presidential runoffensus will be used in those elections.
According to the 1986 federal estimates, Douglas County has 72,600 residents. The 1988 state census said the total was only 59,441. The 1980 federal census also showed a higher number of residents in Douglas County than residents. A federal census is conducted every ten years but the estimates are updated every year.
If the 1990 House elections are conducted with the newly reapportioned districts, the plaintiffs will ask the judge to prohibit certification of the results.
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4
Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The fact that some industry spokesmen are praising President Bush's plan for reducing emissions of industrial chemicals proves its effect will be strong.
Bush's plan is designed to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions said to cause as many as 3,000 deaths and an unknown number of birth defects and other health problems each year. The proposal calls for a 50 percent cut in those emissions by the year 2000.
For years, environmentalists' warnings that the planet is slowly dying of poisoning have fallen on deaf governmental ears.
Now, President Bush, upon learning that his resort home town of Kennewick港口, Maine, had dangerously high ozone levels last summer, has announced that the environment is "a moral issue" and promised to take action that will 'significantly improve every North American's quality of life.'
The Environmental Protection Agency has been dragging its feet since 1970 on its Congressional mandate to reduce the deadly emissions. The Reagan administration for eight years ignored environmental issues.
Bush was quick to point a finger at pollution in Boston harbor during his race for the presidency against Massachusetts. He said he would "say no" to the guard of his family's resort home.
The fact that he finally did means that the earth's environment has deteriorated to the point that even the most powerful man in the world can no longer ignore it. Let's hope that Bush's belated, feeble first step toward saving our planet will be followed by larger, more concrete steps.
Ric Brack for the editorial board
Congratulations, Shockers
Champs!
The state of Kansas has taken the national championship spotlight again, as Wichita State University has claimed the NCAA title in
The Shockers took the title Saturday, beating the Texas Longhorns 5-3, canning a season that was a constant battle for survival.
faced elimination in six of their 10 games of the College World Series. But the Shockers did not give up, even though the Texas team was well into the final round.
But the Shockers did not give up, even though the Texas team was undefeated in the series going into the title game.
The Shockers had already beaten baseball power Michigan and top-ranked Florida State twice.
Kansas has much to be proud of in the Shocker team. The entire country has taken notice of a school in our state.
You battled adversity, you showed the nation that Kansans don't give up when the chips are down.
And the Shockers are not only tremendous athletes. Many of the players have consistently made the Athletic Director's Honor Roll, a distinction that is rare among many coaches.
We remember the emotions that a national championship can arouse.
Bottle that euphoria. It is a feeling that you will seldom, if ever, be.
spouse or again.
Congratulations, WSU. You have done well for the state of Kansas.
Jill Jess for the editorial board
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board. The editorial board consists of Jill Jess, Ric Brack, Kirsten Boanak and Kathy Walsh.
Other Voices
Student bigotry rampant
The recent rise of racially motivated incidents on college and university community networks is particularly disturbing — and for now, the obvious reason.
The incidents of racial bigry have ranged from hate-filled graffiti scrawled on campus buildings to full-scale brawls between whites and blacks.
At least as troubling, however, is the overreaction on some campuses. The University of Michigan, for instance, has established a "speech code" that outlaws "insensitive statements" under threat of expulsion. The University of Wisconsin has adopted . . . penalties for students and faculty who make derogatory comments about a person's race, gender, religion or "sexual orientation." . . .
The proposed limits on freedom of expression, no matter how wellmeaning, should raise caution flags.
Since the search for truth entails free inquiry, any restraint on the exchange of ideas within the university community subverts the purpose of research.
The Arizona Republic
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The first sign of the Armageddon.
Regime support lost forever
China's hard-liners soon will be 'buried in self-dug graves'
the recent events in China have shocked people all over the world. Why? It was because the massive killing of
people all over the world. That meant a powerful killing of students and civilians was so unexpected and outrageous. The massacre was brutal, ruthless and bloody.
We saw the Chinese People's Party and government order the People's Army to slaughter the Chinese people. We had believed the Chinese Communist Party and government were for the people to serve the people. We believed the people would love the people and would never harm them.
The most surprising and unacceptable fact is that the people's army used guns and tanks that were produced by the Chinese people to shoot down and run over the victims (those same people) instead of using the weapons to defend them and safeguard the nation.
Those familiar with China's politics must have heard terms like "people's democratic dictatorship" and "autocratists and traitors to the people" used by the Communist Party and government. The bloody incidents in China last week should shed light on the real definitions of those terms
From news media all over the world, we've seen, heard and read plenty about what hap
The "people's democratic dictatorship", meaning the Chinese Communist Party and government, dictate to the Chinese people who love and demand democracy and freedom. "Autocrats and traitors to the people" refers to the current leader of these despots who totally betrayed the people.
Yu Kuejian
Guest shot
pened in China. But what could we see, hear and read from the Chinese media? Not a single word about the massive killing. Not a single picture of the killing of students and civilians by the terrorists.
According to the Chinese media, the pro-democracy demonstrators were counter-revolutionaries and the peaceful demonstrations were riots.
Without mentioning the slaughter of hundreds, probably thousands, of demonstrators on Tiananmen Square during the bloody weekend, the government-controlled media claimed that no
It did eventually give casualty figures for the
weekend. 400 soldiers and 300 others had died. Of
them, 172 were civilians.
Facing the "truth" as told by the Chinese government, we simply cannot help ask what it was all about. Where did the grisly scenes we saw on our TV screens come from? Why were there more deaths of soldiers who had tanks and guns than of students armed with sharpened sticks and rocks? And if only 23 students died, who were the "others?"
With those questions in mind, we simply have to ask where the truth is. Surely, you won't get it
from the Chinese government and the state-run media. We often hear and see the term "sheer fabrication" used by the Chinese government, but I would say that what the Chinese governors in the Chinese people and the world about what had happened in Beijing was the sheerest fabrication.
Deng Xiaooping, Li Peng, Yang Shangkun and their followers reappeared last week to praise the "excellent work" done by the army. They came out to praise the "excellent work" Are they insane? What kind of leaders are they? What kind of people's party and government are they?
Deng Xiaoping and his followers could claim a temporary "victory" in their brutal suppression of the pro-democracy movement on Tiananmen Square. But they forgot that they could not suppress the strong demands of the Chinese people for democracy in China. The Chinese people had no choice but to support and of this regime. A government without the support of its people is certainly doomed.
We should be optimistic about the future of China. The martyrs of the pro-democracy movement did not shed their blood in vain. The current hard-liners are digging graves for themselves and are being killed by the Chinese people in those self-dug graves. Final victory will belong to the Chinese people.
Yu Xuejian is a graduate student, majoring in communications.
The backroads keep their secrets
How foreign the 'country' can be, City Man, even with your fancy maps
"D
addy, can I have my bow and arrow?" asked the three-year-old in the car seat next to me. "Not now. Daddy's concern."
trating, " my wife said, circumciting the quees
from the crowd to an audience to anuse himself with a toy bow and arrow in his mouth.
In fact, both my wife and I were intently scanning the northwest Kansas horizon. We sought landmarks that seemed somehow both cryptic and prosaic.
You see, we'd just begin the last leg of that venerable family rite, the cross-country vacation. Eight miles ahead, the signs warned, the highway leading home was closed for repairs.
Faced with an extra hour of detoured travel, we adopted guerrilla tactics and plotted an off-highway route with the assistance of local intelligence. We'd stayed a couple of days at the farm of my wife's aunt and uncle, Mary Lou and Keith. Keith had grown up on the place and together they'd raised three children there, along with the cattle and wheat
"Go over the hills past the draw south of town," Keith had said the night before.
Mary Lou: 'You bet, you'll know where you're'
then there's a mobile home, and the Lloyd
Model.
Mary Lou: "Pretty soon you'll see a square yellow house over on the right."
Keith: "No, you pass some other places... you'll be able to tell it all, right."
Me: "Is the yellow house the first one we come to?"
A. C. KENNEDY
Keith: "The one with the corral..."
Me: "How far for you?"
Me: " How far have we come by then?"
This was apparently a novel question judging by our host's mute expressions. They looked at each other and shrugged, more with their eyebrows than their shoulders.
"Well, make it a couple of miles," said Keith. My wife and I tried to look reassured
Mary Lou: "After a while you pass the new
Stuart Beals
Staff columnist
on the left "
Keinsorge place on the left.
The 'new' Keinsorge
place was built in '48.'
Mary Lour "Yes. Finally, you come to the John Brown farm." This last was spoken with an air of self-evidence that elevated the description to a national White House. Both our guides grew enthusiastic.
Keith: It's a good looking place...
Mary Lou: ".. A real nice looking place
There's a big barn and lots of machinery,
and a large warehouse."
My wife enlisted me with her eyes as she said "I don't think, we're not sure. how many miles is it?"
By now Mary Lou and Keith understood that we required remedial efforts. "Well, for people that need to know the miles," said Mary Lou, "we've got a county map."
Our retief was tempered when we found that it was a land abstract map of uncertain currency. It contained no legend, no miles to-the-inch scale, just squares and rectangles denoting parcels of properties. We wrote the numbers of properties on the map represented mile-square parcels and not quarter-sections, then...
Of course, local distances don't usually interest folk like Keith and Mary Lou. We live long in Chicago, but the city is this reason.
centers.
We guessed it was seven miles to the turn. This
On here, the metric standard is people/place,
not miles or kilometers: who has this place; who
rents that place; who was born here, married
whom from where, and was buried in what
place?
distressed our hosts; we could gauge their ebbing confidence in our navigating skill. After all, if the John Brown farm did turn the turn for us, no map or odometer could rescue us. Mary Lou found a way to describe the juncture definitively. "There'll be a windmill on the right."
Mary Lou then cautioned that the "new" Kleinsmerge place was set back from the road.
Keith was frowning slightly. Something in the last set of instructions, or in the way we received it, led to a confused response. I sure yet that we'd get through all right. Then he brightened, pointed as he confided to us.
"Now, let's be a little more specific for them, said Keith. Slowly, gaseg into the distance, he pictured it for himself and then us. "From the road, I'd say, it's...about a hundred yards."
"After you turn east, you go straight until you get to the Dresden road," said Mary Lou. "You'll see some transformers at the intersection. Turn right and you'll be more or less a straight shot to the Interstate."
"Those transformers will be on the southeast corner."
Now on the road, my wife checked our improved map against the passing landscape. "There's the square yellow house," she said. My imagination had extended the boundless to all the spaces that yellow lion cube on the high plains. The actual house resembled a mustard-colored rectangle.
We found the "new" Kleinsorge place. The John Brown Farm really was a nice-looking place, well kept and prosperous. Six miles after the turn we found the transformers.
In the process of following the directions, we found a new appreciation for a place, its people and its environment.
We found our way home.
---
Stuart Beals is a Lawrence graduate student in journalism.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 14, 1989
5
Summer camps under way
by Julie Rehm Kansan staff writer
As most University of Kansas students leave campus for the summer, hundreds of junior high and high school students from across the nation come to KU to attend academic and music camps.
The camps offered by KU's Midwestern Camp program this year are for students interested in music, journalism, speech and debate, and computers. A camp offers students also is in session.
This is the 54th year for the Midwestern Music Camp, which is divided into five sessions. The first two sessions are for junior high students, and the other three sessions are for senior high students.
Workshops for different musical instruments are offered at the camp, including orchestral instrument and jazz ensemble; the camp also has a jazz ensemble.
David Bushue, professor of music at KU and director of the camp, said nearly 360 students were enrolled in the first session.
The Midwestern Journalism Camp includes workshops on newspaper and yearbook production, photojournalism and desktop publishing. Jackie Engel, journalism lecturer at KU, is director of the camp, which will run through June 16. Engel said 47 students from eight states were attending the camp.
"The camp teaches students to go back and make their school publications much better." Engel said.
Samuel Adams, associate professor of journalism at KU, is the director of a two-week summer journalism workshop for minority high school students. He founded the care camp in 1974. This summer, 11 students from Kansas and Missouri are attending the workshop.
The camp also is an important tool for recruiting minorities. Adams said.
"They get a sense of the quality of the campus and the quality of the instruction," he said.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — They've toured his house, marveled at the gold records and jewelled jumpsups and checked out his lavish airplanes. And now, for the Elis fans who they'd seen it all, there's more.
"It's Elvis and America and the automobile," says Todd Morgan, a spokesman for the Elvis Presley Automobile Museum, which opened Monday. "It's Elvis' love affair with America and love's affair with cars."
The Associated Press
The museum has more than 20 vehicles once owned by the king of rock 'n' roll and is the newest attraction at the 46,000-square-foot souvenir center at Gricklead. Presley's former MEMPHIS residence.
Elvis fans say 'Love me fender'
More than 650,000 tourists and fans visited Graceland last year. For a $15.95 see-it-all ticket, fans can tour canopy, two of the Presley's airplanes, his tour bus, a couple of small museums and the new 13,000-square-foot automobile display. It costs $3.50 for the automobile museum alone.
The $1.5 million automobile museum, which includes replicas of a drive-in movie and a 1950s filling station, features vehicles ranging from a go-cart to Presley's favorite Stutz Bearcat.
Many of the vehicles were kept until last year under a backyard carport at Graceland, and they had fallen into disrepair, said Brian Hughes of Classic Car Co. of Memphis.
Even the 1955 pink Cadillac that Presley gave his mother was in
rough shape, said Hughes, whose company restored the vehicles for the museum. Like many of the display vehicles, the Caddy had to be stripped to its frame and rebuilt, he said.
However, much of the machinery inside the vehicles is still in mint condition. "If you raise it and turn it on," Day Pressley gave it to his mother, Hughes said.
The museum includes TV screens beside several of the vehicles showing home movies of Presley or his family.
A short film of Presley movie clips showing him with various vehicles is featured at the drive-in movie set at the center of the museum. For seating, the set has 38 front seats from 1957 Chevrolets.
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Amish Quilt In-A-Day Workshop: Sunday, July 9, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Bring your sewing machine and a sack rack. You will select the size and fabric for your class. Fabric selection should be done prior to class with the help of a Stitch On Employee $18.00 plus supplies.
Morning Star Quilt In-A-Day Workshop: Sunday, July 23, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Bring your sewing machine and a sack rack. You will make a quilt you can take home and use as a pillow. Fabric selection should be done prior to class with the help of a Stitch On Employee $18.00 plus supplies.
Double Wedding Rick Quick Strip Template Quilt Workshop: Sunday, August 6, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Bring your sewing machine and a sack rack. You will select the size and fabric for your class. Fabric selection should be done prior to class with the help of a Stitch On Employee $18.00 plus supplies.
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Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Dalv Kansan
Eagles at Clinton Lake reared by single parent
by a Kansan reporter
The young eagles which hatched earlier this year at Clinton Lake are doing well despite being raised by only one parent.
Gary Reid, wildlife area manager, said no one was sure what happened to the other adult.
"It's hard to say, they usually won't leave," he said.
close.
When the eagles began nesting, Clinton Park managers had problems with fishermen driving their boats too close to the site and frightening them. They were placed within 200 yards of the eagles to keep viewers from getting too close.
Recently, however, the area has been relatively quiet. Reid said
The nesting area is located on the south side of Clinton on the Rock Creek Arm of the lake
Reid was pleased with the progress the young, despite the disappearance of one parent
"He or she is doing a good job of feeding them," he said. "They're really growing. The two young are larger and have feathered out."
Reid said that if the young reach maturity, they could return to the Clinton vicinity in two years to lay eggs.
Crime rate on the rise
Below are the total for current criminals in the year
Crime Jan-Mar Jan-Mar Percent
1988 1989 change
Murder 19 26 +35.8
Rape 153 179 +17.0
Robbery 472 597 +26.5
Aggravated Assault 1,269 1,386 +9.2
Total 1,913 2,188 +14.4
Below are totals for crimes committed in Kansas in the first quarter of
射
Source Kansas Bureau of Investigation
Along with the increase in violent crimes,1,955 drug and alcohol related offenses occurred with 50,322 total in the first quarter of the year alone.
Stephen Kiline/KANSAN
Police Record
A car valued at $1,500 was taken Sunday from a residence in the 1300 block of West 24th Street, Lawrence police reported.
- A bicycle valued at $800 was taken Sunday from a residence in the 100 block of West 14th Street, Lawrence police reported.
A bicycle valued at $400 was taken Sunday from a residence in the 900 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police reported.
Two bicycles valued together at $275 were taken Sunday from a residence in the 2200 block of Hampshire Street, Lawrence police
- Cash totaling $500 was taken Monday from a business in the 800 block of Iowa Street, Lawrence police reported.
A camera and jewelry valued together at $1,040 were taken Monday from a residence in the 2500 block of
Ousdahl Road, Lawrence police reported.
A printer and stereo receiver valued together at $688 were taken from the KANU radio station office Monday, October 10. The office was by a law firm estimated at $50.
A high-speed pursuit involving a man on a motorcycle and several Lawrence police officers ended early Friday at the intersection of Pudura, Lawrence police
According to police, the man allegedly borrowed the motorcycle but did not return it. The owner then reported the motorcycle missing.
reported.
The man ignored attempts by officers to pull him over and lead police on a chase through Lawrence The man eventually ended up on End 13th Street west of Eudora and fleed on foot through a cornfield.
Area crime drops as state rate rises
by Laura Graham
Kansan staff writer
Violent crimes in Kansas increased 14.4 percent in the first quarter of 1989 compared to the same period in 1988, a report released by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation showed. These figures reflect a 1.6 percent decrease, however, from the last quarter in 1988.
The overall number of crimes reported in Lawrence decreased 16.2 percent in the first quarter of 1989, as compared with same period in 1988, from 187 to 743.
These figures represent a 22 percent decrease from the last quarter in 1988, when 953 crimes were reported.
Douglas County also experienced a decrease in crimes during the first quarter of 1989.
While 1,125 crises were reported in the county between January and March of 1988, 1,043 were reported in 1989, a decrease of 7.3 percent.
These figures also represent a 16.8 percent decrease in Dougson County crimes from the last quarter in 1988, when 1,254 crimes were reported.
For Kansas as a whole, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation reported a
T.
he overall number of crimes reported in Lawrence decreased 16.2 percent in the first quarter of 1989, as compared to the same period
in 1988, from 887 to 743.
14. 4 percent increase in violent crimes for the first quarter of 1989 as compared to the same period in 1988.
Violent crimes, which include murder, rape, robbery and aggravated assault, increased from 1,913 between January and March of 1988, to 2,188 during the same period in 1989.
These figures reflect a 1.6 percent decrease, however, from the last quarter in 1988. During that period, 2.223 violent crimes were reported.
wrine 25,268 property crimes were reported between January and March of 1888, 25,716 are on record from the same period in 1989.
Property crimes, which include burglary, theft and motor vehicle theft, increased 1.8 percent in the first quarter of 1989.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 14, 1989
Nation/World
7
Gorbachev calls for arms cuts
The Associated Press
BONN, West Germany — Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and Chancellor Helmut Kohl signed a broad declaration today that calls for military action against insurgents in masturbator arsenals and a worldwide ban on chemical weapons.
The document on common principles of both nations was signed on the second day of the Soviet leader's first state visit to West Germany.
The past signed by Kohl and Gorbachev said their countries have a common European heritage, and that European nations should exist in 'peaceful competition with one another' and reduce their military might.
Germany and the Soviet Union was not directed against anyone and that a special place in the common Euro-
European Community was provided for the United States and Canada.
It also said cooperation by West
The two nations appealed for a 50 percent reduction in the strategic nuclear arsenal and increased in conventional armies and weapons in all of Europe.
The signing ceremony was carried live on West German television.
The document called for a "world wide ban on chemical weapons" and treasury taxing banned nuclear tests and the use of the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.
Missile Treacy
That accord, signed by both superpowers, is seen by the Soviets and West Germans as a document ban.
ring the development of "Star Wars" space defenses advocated by President Bush's predecessor, Ronald Reagan.
Region.
The document signed yesterday also stressed the importance of respect for human rights, cultural contacts and youth exchanges for promoting lasting peace.
Earlier, Gorbachev received a rapturous reception that outstripped the welcome given two weeks earlier. He then signed a treaty with the Soviet leader in West German opinion polls.
proposals to reduce conventional forces on the continent, saying they offer chances for speedy agreement.
Osborne Bonn's 18th-century Town Hall yesterday, a crowd chanted "Gorbly! Gorbly!" and waved dozens of Soviet flags.
When Gorbachev arrived in this key NATO country on Monday, he declared that Moscow and Bonn had begun "a new chapter" in relations that could bring a new era of peace to the continent. He also welcomed U.S.
"A Soviet leader surrounded by cheering West Germans, who would have thought of that a few years ago?" exclaimed a television commentator during a live national broadcast.
Other banners reflected the German pain at the postwar division of their nation and of the former capital, Berlin, telling Gorbachev "Gerber — peace in Europe" and, in English, "Gorby, make love not walls."
White firefighters demand their rights
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Civil rights advocates seeking to prevent affirmative action programs from being rolled back are shifting their sights to Congress, following a series of major setbacks in the Supreme Court.
"It is not possible for civil rights advocates to do business in federal courts any more," Russell Galloway, a professor at the Santa Clara University School of Law in California, said Monday.
Galloway and others, after the high court ruled 5-4, argued that white firefighters in Birmingham, Ala., were entitled to bring suit to attack an affirmative action plan approved eight years ago to settle a lawsuit.
The white firefighters were not a party to the lawsuit and say they should not be governed by a settlement in which they had no voice.
The controversy is the latest in a series of high court decisions chipping away at affirmative action programs, which have been used to give hiring and promotion preference to minorities and women.
The court ruled in January that state and local governments may not impose racial quotas for hiring on public works projects.
Ray Fitzpatrick, an attorney representing the white firemen in Birmingham, said Monday's rule-based quota promotions that "unfairly discriminate against whites.
Civil rights and women's groups, however, say they may ask Congress to reverse the high court rulings.
"I think a legislative remedy is something that is probably going to be pursued," said Judith Winston, a lawyer for the Women's Legal Defense Fund.
"This decision will open old wounds and create unfortunate new levels of racial animosity," said Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., chairman of the House Judiciary subcommittee on civil rights.
The last major congressional debate on civil rights was touched off by a high court decision in 1984 that
placed limits on laws barring federal aid to schools and other institutions that discriminate Legislation restoring the original broader interpretation passed over former President Reagan's vow last year after a long struggle.
Some observers said they think Bush might be more amenable than was Reagan to legislative action in the civil rights field.
"I think the Bush administration is more concerned by reaching out to the black community than the past administration was," said T. Alexander, a professor of law at University of Michigan Law School who follow civil rights cases closely.
Environmentalists recognize efforts of clean air plan
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Bush has redefined the debate in Congress about clean air and has taken a leap forward in convincing environmentalists that while he may support of them, he's not merely enmyer
To many environmentalists, the significance of Bush's three-pronged proposal Monday to clean up the nation's dirtiest air is that it came forcefully from the White House alone. However, the president that air pollution is putting millions of people in the United States at risk.
This is in sharp contrast to the eight years President Reagan occupied the White House. Reagan didn't acknowledge acid rain as being an environmental concern and violated air quality smog and toxic industrial chemicals as excessive government regulation.
Jay Hair, president of the Wildlife Federation, said that with Republicans in Congress rally around the Bush clean air package the debate would center on finding a middle ground between the White House bill and more stringent Democratic versions.
Fred Krupp, executive director of the Environmental Defense Fund, said the Bush package
would serve as "a vehicle that's going to drive this (issue) through Congress.
Public opinion polls have shown that voters are keenly interested in removing the yellowish smog from urban areas, want to be protected against the release of toxic industrial chemicals into the air, and approve new regulations on rain and forest destroying lakes, streams and forests hundreds of miles from the tall stacks of coal-burning power plants.
To be sure, there are provisions and details of Bush's clean air package that brought criticism and uncertainty from the environmental community. At the same time it was characterized as trying to move too far, too fast by the coal industry.
Despite those industry complaints, Bush's proposal to cut sulfur dioxide emissions from coal burning power plants in half year 2000 — a key to curtailing carbon — prompted widespread praise.
"I believe the environment won today," a beaming William K. Reilly, head of the Environmental Protection Agency, told reporters after briefing them on the White House proposal.
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8
Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Local firm known worldwide
bv Laura Graham
Kansan staff writer
The quest to be the best has led a small,local company into the big time.
While many people in Lawrence probably have not heard of Martin-Logan, Ltd, the company has built a worldwide reputation for designing and marketing exotic, high quality speakers.
The company designs electrostatic speakers with a unique technology which it pioneered.
"We were able to take advantage of "aerospace materials." Gale Sanders, Martin Logan president, said. Students in security keepers have an unusual appearance.
The speakers range in height from nearly five feet to just over seven feet tall. The largest system, the State
ment ESL. weighs 1900 pounds
All of the company's products incorporate electrostatic technology for reproduction of pure, almost perfect sound. The company's electromagnetic speakers
While Sanders and his company may not be very visible in the Lawrence community, the success of Sanders is still visible around the world, said Sanders.
Martin-Logan sells its speakers through 70 dealers around the nation. In addition, it ships them to 30 overseas distributors.
Martin-Logan's present line consists of four models which range in price from $2,500 to $40,000.
The company's products are sold almost entirely to individual consumers. Sanders said.
18. Sander's owner interest in It was Sander's own interest in
quality sound that led him and former Ron Sutherland to begin working on the electrostatic system in 1980.
They began to realize their success in 1982, when their first model, the Monolith, received a design engineering prize from the Consumer Electronics Show.
Since the beginning of their success in 1982, Martin-Logan speakers have won four awards from the bi-annual Consumer Electronics Show.
He said that Lawrence is an ideal place for the company because of access to technology available through the University of Kansas.
With modern communication, transportation and computer systems. Sanders said it is possible to do almost anything anywhere.
1980
Gayle Sanders, president of Martin-Logan, Ltd., sits in front of one of his company's first speakers, the CLS.
THE NIGERIAN ASSOCIATION & THE ETHNIC FASHIONS OF LAWRENCE PROUDLY PRESENT
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OPEN YOUR EYES TO A WHOLE NEW CLASS OF COLLEGE LIVING Discover a residence hall that combines the advantages of apartment living with the convenience of living in a dorm. And Naismith Hall features eye-popping amenities that you rarely find in a residence hall, including a coed fitness center, weekly maid service, cable TV lounges on every floor and a computer center with Apple Macintosh computers. With a world of features, a snazzy sense of style and a special eye to detail, Naismith Hall represents a whole new class of college living.
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Nasumi Hui
1
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 14, 1989
9
KU construction continuing
by Angela Howell Kansan staff writer
Construction projects on campus are benefiting from favorable weather, as contractors rush to meet scheduled deadlines.
Asbestos removal is the first step for renovation of Snow Hall. David Schaecher, assistant administrator in Facilities Operations, said work on Snow is scheduled to be done by December 1990.
The comparative and human anatomy labs, currently located in Snow Hall, will be moved to the first floor of Haworth Laboratory for relocation should start this week and is scheduled to finish August 15.
Construction on the Dole Human Development Center, located east of the park, is under construction through the summer. The building will house the Bureau of Child
Research, the departments of Human Development and Family Life, Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences and Disorders, Special Education and some facilities of the Radio-Television-Film department. Schaecher estimates it will be completed by the spring semester 1990 and ready for occurrence next summer.
The Stewart wing of Haworth Hall is being remodeled, sending some departments to the Burge Union temporarily. They are sequestered in a building named Marci Francisco, assistant director of Facilities Operations.
The Science Library is nearing the end of its construction. Francisco said, "I'm crossing my fingers that I'll be done when he falls," she said.
by this tilt. The parking facility, located north of Allen Fieldhouse, is also
scheduled for completion this fall.
Parking will be available to students, faculty and staff who work nearby.
The architects designing the Ernst F. Lied Center are working toward the final draft, Schaecher said. Construction is scheduled to begin in January. The center will hold a corner of 15th and Iowa streets.
The plan for the $13 million center requires the demolition of many of the surrounding buildings. The first to fail was a 1958 demolition by Schaerche said. Demolition is planned for either October or November.
Spahr Hall, the engineering library, is also expanding. Three more bayes offices have opened. Construction is scheduled to start in August.
Watkins accredited for 3 years
by a Kansan reporter
Watkins Memorial Health Center has received a clean bill of health in a report recently released by the CDC that recommends an ambulatory Health Care, Inc.
In the evaluation conducted last fall, the association granted Watkins the highest ratings possible and gave the center three years accreditation.
The association gave Waltkins high marks in the areas of patient rights, governance, medical records, professional improvement and facilities and environment. Services highly commented were their pharmacy, pathology and medical laboratories, and diagnostic and therapeutic imaging.
"It's an excellent report. The staff worked very hard to obtain the accreditation," said James E. Strobl, director of Watkins. "It shows we're among the best in college health."
Teaching, research and publication activities also were rated excellent.
According to an article in the December issue of the Journal of the Association for College Health, 31 out of the 1,500 college health centers in the nation are accredited.
City Commission OKs expansion of bookstore
oy Donna Eades Kansan staff writer
After more than two hours of public comment and debate, the Lawrence City Commission last night approved a proposal for the expansion of the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road.
Road. The plan passed 4-1 with David Penny dissenting.
Because the bookstore is located within a residential area, the commission set several conditions concerning the expansion.
The conditions include the completion of a site plan performance agreement, the removal of one parking place in front of the store and the designation of one handicapped space.
A limit on the length of delivery trucks also was included. Delivery trucks longer than 15 feet would not be allowed to park overnight, would be allowed to park overnight.
ond floor expansion would be limited to 7 weeks of peak season time. During non-peak times the second floor will be used for storage.
Public access to the proposed sec-
Because of the length of debate on the Jawhayk Bookstore site plan, the commission unanimously agreed to postpone afternoon from 3:30 to 6 p.m.
In other business, the commission:
■ received a payment of $26,109.19 from the Lawrence Housing Authority.
- conducted a public hearing to receive comments regarding vacation of a portion of 12th Street between Kentucky and Vermont
■ unanimously passed a revised site plan for the First Free Methodist Church at the northwest corner of 31st Street and Lawrence Avenue.
scheduled a lunchon study session to meet with Lawrence Arts Center for June 27, from noon to 1 p.m.
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---
825 Mass.
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Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
KU professors expect NASA check for further telerobot development
by Heather L. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Two KU professors anticipate receiving $150,000 from NASA this week that will enable them to begin developing a device designed for space usability.
Bill Barr, professor of mechanical engineering, and Terry Faddis, associate professor of mechanical engineering, received a grant in September that paired them with Kraft Company, which manufactures the telerobots.
The goal is to develop a dual-armed, master-slave teletobot that will be used on Space Station Freefall. The robot will be an experimental space lab, Barr said.
The money received this week will be the second payment on a total of $400,000 guaranteed by NASA toward the telerobot's development. Barr and Faddis will also receive a $120,000 grant from Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp., a state-owned business that provides seed capital. Kraft TeleRobotics, Inc. will supply $280,000 in equipment.
NASA chose Barr and Faddis to
There's a master and a slave. The operator provides input through the master controller, and the slave responds. The slave mimics his motions, projecting the operator's presence into whatever adverse environments there might be; space station, underseas, oil platform or nuclear environments'
Bill Barr
professor of mechanical engineering
he said.
work on the project with Kraft Tele-
Robotics, Inc. because of their expe-
pence with robots and their work
with the computer-integrated manu-
facturing lab in Nichols Hall, Barr
said.
Unlike a standard robot which is pre-programmed to work independently, a telebotet's moving parts, or arms, are controlled by an operator.
"There's a master and a slave." Barr said. "The operator provides input through the master controller, and the slave responds. The slave mimics his motions, projecting the operator's movements in these environments there might be; space station, underside, oil platform or nuclear environments."
Barr and Faddis will add sensors and a computer system to the teleroft that will allow an operator to feel the amount of pressure exerted by the teleroft's arms. Also, while in space, sensors can help make the teleroft completes a pre-programmed task. Barr said the project could take two or eight years.
In order to get funding for the project, Congress has required space technology to have some job-applicability on Earth. This includes robots working in factories or areas that might be hazardous to humans.
SIX KU mechanical engineering students are working on the project. The idea is to educate the students about the project and have them create effective ways to use the telerob, Barr said.
This procedure is not for medical professionals only.
Photo courtesy of Kraft TeleRobotics
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---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 14, 1989
11
10
Steve Traynor/KANSAN
Lights Camera KANSAS!
by Barbara Kollmeyer Kansan staff writer
VINLAND -In the midst of the lush, rolling hills surrounding Vinnland, more than 2,500 people gathered on a damp, chilly Saturday to film part of the NBC mini-series, "Cross of Fire."
"Cross of Fire," which is set in the 1920s, "presses the rise and fall of Indiana businessman and Klux Klan leader David Curtis Stevenson. The series has been shot in Lawrence, Topeka and Ottawa.
Most people were wearing clothing of the 1920s. Several others were wearing white robes and hoods. Above one of the tents hung a banner which said "The KKK Welcome You!"
J. L. Watson, a recent KU film and theatre graduate, said she participated in the event to see what filming was about and to act.
ABOVE: During a break in the filming, four-year-old Kristen Fagan. Lawrence resident, shields herself from the rain. LEFT: A crowd of extras stand in a tent after rain delayed the filming of "Cross of Fire." About 2,500 people were extras for the NBC mini-series.
The cast includes Lloyd Bridges, David Morse and John Heard. Hundreds of extras, including KU students, residents, also took part in the filming.
"In class, we weren't taught technique. With this, you see the nitty
gritty," Watson said, shivering in her sleeveless dress reflecting the styles of the 1920s.
Watson described the day as "hurry up and wait." The rain delayed filming by more than two hours.
"We're really cold, they told us to be patient," Watson said, as she watched a scene being filmed.
By noon it was pouring rain, and cold, hungry extrares filled a tent, waiting in line for lunch and listening to jazz music.
Some of the people portraying Klansman said that wearing KKK costumes was disturbing.
Larry Switzer, Prairie Village senior who wore a green Klan robe indicating a higher rank, said. "I was with the symbolism of the uniforms."
Switzer said this was his fourth day as a paid extra and that he enjoyed it, despite the Kian costume.
Later that morning Switzer, 25, was taken out of the scene because the director said he was too young to hold such an exalted position in the Klan Switzer said that he would
probably wait until they placed him in another scene.
"It's fun no matter what happens," he said.
Eunice Stallwool, 1989 KU graduate and programming assistant for the Kansas Arts Commission, came for professional reasons but said she was uncomfortably seeing so many people dressed as Klansmen.
I've been observing, but I haven't been observing comfortably." Stallworth said.
"Cross of Fire" even enticed State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence. He brought his wife Pat and their two children to be extras in the day of
"The film commission asked me to come here today and my wife and I decided to make a day of it." Soibach said.
Ron Lauenti, director of photography, said the countryside and people of Kansas were what the company had been looking for.
"We looked in Indiana and didn't see anything we couldn't get here," Lautore said. "We wouldn't cooperate so cooperative we just couldn't ask for anything more."
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Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Elks lodges to push for civil rights
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES - For more than a century, the Elks club has chosen members to stand for the American ideals of equality, charity and brotherhood. Almost all of them have been white men.
But that may be changing because of recent challenges to the membership practices of the 12) year-old prevalent and Protective Order of Eiks.
Several California lodges have threatened to go to court if they are unsuccessful in persuading the national organization at its convention next month in Atlanta to change policies to include more black members
Earlier this year, two black men were denied membership to a lodge in Lampac, Calif. 140 miles northwest of Los Angeles.
In late March, Deputy Attorney General Louis Verdugo Jr. in Los Angeles confirmed that the state was investigating the lodge for possible violations of California's civil rights law, the same law the U.S. Supreme Court upheld in ordering the Rotary club to admit women.
The two men have been told that fewer than a dozen lock members call "no" votes by placing black marbles into the voting box. Even though nearly 140 members supported them, Elks voting rules require only three black marbles to reject, or blackball, an applicant.
Under community pressure, the Lampco lodge and others in Santa Barbara County passed a resolution to urge the national Grand Lodge to change voting procedures to a two-person organization, organization balks, the California lodges plan to go to court with the NAACP
Butch Simas, Elks Western Central Coast District leader, said he was concerned about opposing the Grand Lodge, but the lodges were ready to go against it.
Slattery attends Scottish Rite picnic
Congressman lauds protests says the U.S. sets example
by Gary Patton Kansan staff writer
With a backdrop of 13 U.S. flags, a smoking charcoal grill and a tub of orange soda pop. Rep. Jim Slattery said that the United States was a beacon of hope for freedom-loving people around the world.
"Chinese students protesting in Tiananmen Square didn't build a statue of a hammer and sickle." Shattery said Sunday in Lawrence. "They built a statue of liberty. They quoted Abraham Lincoln with the words 'of the people, by the people and for the people.'
"We must ensure we are worthy of that emulation. The quality of life in America must be second to none in the world."
Slattery, 2nd District Democrat in his third term as congressman, spoke at the Lawrence Scottish Conference's second annual "picnic of patriotism."
The Scottish Rite, 1005 Massachusetts Sl., is a 108-year-old Masonic organization that supports the U.S. Constitution and stands for a belief in a supreme being.
Slattery urged his audience to pause and think about the freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution.
"Many people in China gave their lives for some basic things that we all take for granted: to speak freely, to associate freely with others and to worship the God their consciences demand." Slater said. "They wanted the freedom to protest and change their government by ballots rather than by bullets.
"These are the same freedoms gained and defended by the blood, sweat and tears of our ancestors."
Slattery's speech marked the end of the rain-shortened festivities for the 215 Masons, family members and friends gathered at Broken Arrow Park, 31st and Louisiana.
Except for horseshoes, most of the games planned for the afternoon were cancelled. However, the
Ever since I attended a House Agriculture Committee meeting in Great Bend about a month ago, it has rained during every one of my trips to Kansas. I feel like the rainmaker.'
'E
Rep. Jim Slattery D-Kansas
pickernets remained drab under a shelter for their grilled steak dinner. flag demonstration a pledge against forgiveness and Slattery's speech.
Slattery took the blame for the inclement weather.
"Ever since I attended a House Agriculture Committee meeting in Great Bend about a month ago, it has rained during every one of my trips to Kansas. I feel like the rainmaker," Slattery said.
After a drawing with prizes ranging from a 50-pound bag of fertilizer to a $10 duck, master of ceremonies Larry Wengerarthorprises the battery with the day's final prize "a package of men's bikini briefs."
"I'll have to report this on my ethics committee report." Slattery yelled over a roaring crowd. "This is a set-up."
In a more serious tone, Slatter said after his speech that he would return to Washington. D.C., on Monday, for the work in Congress on Tuesday.
"The first items on the agenda are the savings and loan mess and clean air legislation." said Statman. "The goal is energy, and Commerce Committee.
Referring to presidential proposals on both issues, Slattery said, "It's good that President Bush has put his plans on the table. Reagan never did. It's good the president is holding some leadership in these areas."
Patrick G. Brungardt/KANSAN
Rep, Jim Slattery, D-Kan., accepts a box of underwear as a gag gift
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 14, 1989
Sports
13
Royals Report
Wednesdav: Rovals 9, Seattle 6
Leading 2-0, the Royals scored four runs on six straight hits in the fourth. Kurt Stillwell, Kevin Seitzer and Brad Wellman had three hits each. The Royals had a season-high 18 hits and lead 6-0 by the fourth inning.
With one out, Matt Winters singled, Bo Bonehit his bit first tripe since 1988. Wellman and Stillwell singed, Seitz doubleed and Jim Eisenrich
Royals 9, Seattle 6
The Mariners trailed 7-0 before scoring six runs in the final four innings.
Kansas City Seattle
110 401 020-9 18 2
000 001 020 6 12 0
Gubicza, Montgomery, Swift, Harris, Nordentier, W-Gubicza (4), L-Switzer (2,2) *Montgomery* (1), E.Reynolds, Buckner, DP-Kansas City at 2, Seatile 1, L-Okasan City at 1, Seatile 7, B-Leonard 2, Seetzer, Wellman, SB-Borne, HR-Buhner (3), SB-Bucker (1), Eisenreich (10), Wellman (1), SF-Sitzter, Brieley
Fridav: Rovals 6, Angels 1
Bo Jackson hit a three-run homer in the first inning and Kurt Stillwell drove in three runs with a pair of singles Friday night as the Royals beat the Angels 6-1. Charlie Liebrandt pitched a six-hitter for his third complete game this season and the 40th of his career. Liebrandt, 4-6, struck out three and walked none as he won for only the second time since April 28.
Royals 6, Angels 1
Royals 8, Angels 1
California 100 1000 000---- 6 9
Kansas City 320 100 000---- 6 9
Liebertian; McCaskill, Monteloure, Fraser, W-Liebertian (4-7) L-McCaskell (7-2) DP-Kansas City 2; LOB-California 4, Kansas City 6; KB-2Dowling, Wellman, Washington, HR
Saturday: Royals 5, Angels 4
Danny Tartabull hit a two-out home run in the eighth of Greg Minton, 1-2, the first homer off Montana this season. The Royals took a 4-10 lead but Brian Downing hit a two-run single in the seventh of Bret Saherbagen and Devon White hit a two-run single in the eighth of Tom Gordon, 7-2. Steve Farr pitched the ninth for his 12th save as the Angels lost for the fourth time in five games.
Royals 5, Angels 4
California 000 000 220 - 4 8 2
Kansas City 000 000 210 - 5 x 7
Hamburg, T. Gordon, Farr, Blyeven, Minton, W.T. Gordon (7:2), L. Minton (11:1), E.
Harten, D. White, D.P. Kansas City (7): I. CGBAL-A, 4. Kansas City 5: S. Bbj-Brittler, JE.
(6:B, SB-8), JE (17): D. White, (22): SF, 22).
Sunday: Royals 5, Angels 3
Bob Boone, who left California last season as a free agent, hit a three-run homun Sunday that lifted the Royals over the Angels 5-3 for a three
Boone's home run — his first since August 1888 — capped a four-run rally in the sixth and made a winner of Terry Leach in his American
The Royals scored in the third when Kevin Seitzer walked and advanced on second baseman Johnny Ray's error. Jackson singled home.
Royals 5, Angels 3
California 102 000 000-3 9 1
Iowa 001 001 000-5 7 1
Bannister, T. Leach, Montgomery, Farr, Abbott, Monteleone, McClure, WT-Letch (1-0), L.Abbott (2-5), S-Farr (1-3), E-Boone, RAY, LOB-California 6, Kansas City 5, B-Joyner, Howell, BM-Jack, HR-Boone (1), SB-Washington (5), Seitzer (7), Ray (3), SK- Anderson
Monday: Royals 2, Athletics 1
Jim Eisenreich's run-scoring single with two outs in the 10th inning gave the Royals the win over Oakland. The victory went to reliever Tom Gordon, 8-2, and moved the Royals past California into second place in the American League West. $^{24}$ games behind Oakland.
Todd Burns, 4-1, walked Kurt Stillwell leading off the 11th and Stillwell was nailed at second on Seitzer's attempted sacrifice. Greg Cadret relieved and retired George Brett on a grounder and intentionally walked Bo Jackson to face Eiseleinsson. Jackson hit his 15th homer in the second.
000 001 000 00—1 4 0
010 000 000 01—2 7 1
Guilicao, T. Gordon Welch, Corsi, Burns, Cadaret, W.-T. Gordon (8-2) B-41 (4-1)
DuPasquale O.D.-Schaumz 2 Kansas City (7) LOB-Cadaret (8-1) Kansas City K. HR-7 Jackson (15)
Brown, J. S. Hornsby (9-1) Kansas City K. HR-7 Jackson (15)
Tuesday: Royals 5, Athletics 3
Bob Bone hit a three-run double and Kevin Appler won his first major league City Royals beat the Oakland Athletics for their sixth straight victory.
Appier, 1-, went five innings and gave up two runs on seven hits. Steve Farr, the fourth Kansas City pitcher, pitched the ninth for his 14th save.
002 000 100—3 10 2
040 100 00x—5 7 1
Oakland
Kansas City
Kansas City 400 100-7 5-7
Appler, T. Appler, Montgomery, S. Farr; C. Young, Cadaret, W. Appier (1-1) LC.-Living
(2-6), S.F. Farr (14); E.Hubbard, Steinbach, Palacios, DP-Dakwanl, 1, Kansas City 3, LOB-
Oakland 8, Kansas City 6, BB-Boone, Winters, SB-Silhouette (1).
ON DECK
Today Royals vs. Athletics
Royals vs. Athletics
Thursday
Royals vs. Indians
6:35 p.m. Municipal Stadium
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Royals vs. Indians 6:35 p.m. Municipal Stadium
Saturday
Thursday
Friday
Royals vs. Indians
6:35 p.m. Municipal Stadium
Friday
Royals vs. Indians 12:35 p.m.Municipal Stadium
Sunday
Tuesday
Royals vs. Brewers 7:35 p.m. County Stadium
Major League Standings
East W L Pct. GB
x Baltimore 32 26 458.
New York 29 31 483
x Cleveland 29 32 475
Milwaukee 29 32 475
x Boston 29 31 466
Toronto 27 34 443
x Detroit 27 34 393
American League
East W L Pct. GB
Chicago 34 27 587 -
x Montreal 34 28 548
x New York 34 29 508
x St Louis 30 29 508
x Detroit 23 19 397
Philadelphia 21 37 362
| West | W | L | Pct. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oakland | 40 | 22 | 645 | |
| Kansas City | 37 | 24 | 607 | |
| California | 37 | 24 | 600 | |
| Texas | 34 | 27 | 557 | |
| x Seattle | 30 | 33 | 476 | |
| x Minnesota | 28 | 32 | 467 | |
| x Chicago | 23 | 30 | 365 | |
National League
West W L 15 Pct. GB
x Houston 37 25 597 -
x San Francisco 36 26 581 -
x Los Angeles 35 26 574 -
x Los Angeles 36 21 492 -
x San Diego 30 34 469 -
x Atlanta 30 34 393 -
game not included
Shockers new NCAA champs
by Barbara Kollmeyer Kansen sportswriter
Since a game last weekend at Omaha, Neb., Kansans have been able to cheer for another team of national champions.
Nearly a year and a half ago, on a warm April night, more than 30,000 students, faculty, and townpeople gathered on KU's campus to celebrate their champions, the KU Jayhawk's basketball team.
Kansan sportswriter
Saturday afternoon, Wichita State University's baseball team won the College World Series, giving the team its first national title in any sport.
"Every national champion gets some breaks and we were no different," said Scott Schumaker, Wichita State athletic director.
But the Shockers' drive to the championship wasn't without hardship. After battling injuries and six tough NCAA tournament games, the Wichita State Shockers defeated the Texas Longhorns 5-3.
The Shockers lost their starting right field, Jeff Bonacquista, and All-American shortstop, Mike Lansing, to injuries, forcing them to sub players in positions they were not used to playing.
all year long," Schumaker said, Banners and signs sign celebrating the Shockers were plastered through out Wichita after the final game. In partnership T-shirts that went on sale after the game were said out within hours.
'We've been in the range of top ten
More than 6,000 people showed up Sunday evening at Eck Stadium to greet the Shockers when they arrived.
UK baseball coach Dave Bingham said Wichita State's victory would be beneficial to all Kansas college baseball teams.
"We fight a battle with the southern climate teams," said Bingham,
who led the Emporia State University baseball team to an NAIA championship in 1978.
The team will travel to Washington, D.C. on Friday to be congratulated by President Bush. They will be the first championship college baseball team to be invited to the White House.
"With Wichita State being able to win a national championship, it will help Kansas and Kansas State," he said. Bingham said the additional recognition that Kansas baseball would receive because of the championship would be beneficial to the programs.
Track team sees new faces, old names
bv Julie Rehm
Kansan staff writer
The names Ryun and McClain can once again be used in the present tense when referring to the University of Kansas track team.
The 1989-90 squad recently signed Heather Rynn and Ladd McClain to its team. Their fathers were KU track teamsmates in the 1960s.
Ryun, 18, is the daughter of Olympian Jim Ryun, who attended KU from 1965 to 1969
She was the 400-meter champion in the Sunflower League and placed 10th in the 500-meter at regional. Ryu graduated from Lawrence
McClain, 18, is the son of Gene McClain, who attended KU from 1964 to 1968
McClaim is the regional champion in cross-country, and a two-time Sanflower League champion in the two-mile race. His only defeat was in a state cross-country meet. He graded 10 out of 10. Shawnee Mission West High School.
Both McClain and Ryun said their fathers didn't pressure them to sign with KU.
McClam said, "We have KU stuff all around the house, and a KU license plate on the car. But I chose KU on my own free will."
Ryun said, "It 'going to KU) has always been in the back of my mind, but my goal was to get a scholarship, it was a big miracle, a big blessing.
"I grew up cheering for KU."
Ryun signed with KU Monday and McClain signed four weeks ago
Brett still a power at age 36
Injury pushes him to work harder, return stronger
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo — At 36,
George Brett may tie a little
easier than when he was winning the first
of his 12 All-Star rings.
But that left-handed swing is still smooth and pretty as ever. And he seems to have retained that uncanny ability of the blazed list with his bat blazing.
"George Brett could roll out of bed 'Christmas morning and hit a line drive,' said Kansas City general manager John Schueterhol.
Brett did it again Saturday night.
Brett did it again Saturday night. After missing 36 games with an injury right knee, he popped up on his knees and Bert Blyleven. Then he singled and doubled, driving in two runs to help the Royals sweep the Angels.
"It's a great way to come back," Brett said. "I think I would have had fun even if I went to 4-for, but going 2-for with two RBIs was even more fun."
Schuerholz and the Royals have watched Brett since 1974 and he always wants to bounce back in style. Nobody can recall Brett ever going litness in one of his frequent reappearances.
"It might have happened, but I can't remember it," Schuerholz said. "For the most part, the memory is clear that whenever he comes off an injury, he comes back sharper and in a better groove. He works himself so hard when he's injured that he comes back with a vengeance."
Brett has never been one to sit around and wait for things to happen.
"He works with," Schuerohzold said. "And mentally, he misses the game so much, he's excited about being on the court again, but he's on top of his game."
Getting two hits off Blyleven was especially satisfying since Brett began with a career average of .205 against the curveball expert.
Brett will be a designated hitter while his knee strengthens and then resume his first base dues. It was as an All-Star third baseman that he won two batting titles and led the team in runs on-base, triplets, on-base percentage and slugging percentage three separate times. He and Ty Cobb are the only American League players ever to win three championships in both hits
It's no wonder the Royals feel so much more secure when he's in the lineup.
"He's an excellent leader and a great left-handed bat," pitcher Mark Gubica said. "He gives everybody inspiration. As soon as he came back, you could tell it gave everyone a lift. He was the first to be usual, gives a couple of hits and knocks in a couple of runs right off the DL. He is amazing."
MERCURISMO
Rough rider
Tomas StargarderKANSAN
Gregory Clark, Provo, Utah junior, rides on the mountain bike trail inside the levy at the Kansas River
Kansas City wastes Oakland, sets seige upon the AL West
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Boone Bobo hit a three-run double and Kevin Appler won his first major league game Tuesday night as the Kansas City Royals beat the Oakland Athletics 5-3 for their sixth straight victory.
Appier, 1, went five innings and gave up two runs on seven hits. Steve Farr, the fourth Kansas City pitcher, pitched, pitched the ninth for his 14th save.
Curt Young dropped to 2-6 with the loss. The Royals, 38-24, moved within 1:4; games of Oakland, the leaders of the American League West.
Kansas City's Danny Tartabull burt his knee trying to make a catch in right field in the second imming and
C
Curt Young dropped to 2-6 with the loss. The Royals, 38-24, moved within $1 \frac{1}{2}$ games of Oakland, the leaders of the American League
left the game. Matt Winters replaced Tartabul and drew a leadoff walk in the bottom of the second.
Pat Tatler and Jim Eisenreich singled, loading the bases Boone cleared them with a double off the ground and Wellman's RBI single at 4-0.
Mike Galego and Luis Polonia, who had four hits, singled leading off the Oakland third. Both moved up on a deep fly ball by Lance Blankenship and each scored on Dave Parker's single.
The Athletics committed two errors that gave the Royals a run in the fourth Wellman reached on second basenium Glen Humbard's fielding error, advanced on a ball and scored when caterer Terry Steinbach threw wildly to first base on an infield chopper by Kurt Stillwell.
Oakland picked up an unearned run in the run when Stan Javier singled, went to second on an infield out and scored on a throwing error by first baseman Rey Palacios. The 5-2 in five of Koya's stadiums this season.
Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
.
Pistons take the NBA title Abdul-Jabbar exits early; cheers, hugs briefly halt game
The Associated Press
INGLEWOOD, Calif. — At 10:48 last night, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's time came to an end.
He strode from the court in defeat with 19 seconds left in the last game of his 20-year NBA career. It was far from his best game.
He scored just seven points but he was hugged and hailed as a champion.
- Karem Abdul-Jabbar
"The greatest scorer in the history of the NBA," the public address announcer at the Forum, Abdul Jabbar's home court for the last 14 years, said as the Lakers center left the court. Among the first to embrace him were teammates Orlando Woolridge, the man who replaced him in the lineup, Magic Johnson and James Worthy.
L. A. Lakers center
'B
'Because of the outcome, I can't feel too good. I would like to congratulate the Detroit Pistons and wish them the best. But, beyond that, it's been a disappointing evening.'
Even Detroit's isiah Thomas came over to shake his hand. All the Pistons stood and joined in the long, loud standing ovation.
Abdul-labbar, known for his skyhook and stoc die steamer, stood composed by his bench as he heard the 2 minute, 40 second standing ovation. He was still composed a few minutes later when he spoke with reporters.
And he smiled broadly in the shower room next to his team's lockers.
The Pistons had just beaten Los Angeles 105-97 to complete a four-game sweep and their first NBA title.
The man who had scored more points than anyone in NBA history had just seven Tuesday night in the game his team had to win. The man who had more field goals than anyone made only two shots. At 42, the oldest player ever to play the game ended his 20th season on a sour note.
because of the outcome, I can't feel too good," Abdul Jabbar said. "I would like to congratulate the Detroit Pistons and wish them the best, But.
And the Lakers' 7-foot-2 captain grabbed just three rebounds and let several others slip out of his hands to Detroit players.
"They just double-teamed me every time and made me pass the
ball." Abdul-Jabbar said.
He missed six of his first seven shots. With 1:37 left in the game, he lowered his head and drove by James Edwards for a layup that cut Detroit's lead to 100-96. It was his last shot.
Soon after, he went to the bench for food and heard the applause.
The Lakers fans "have been beautiful," he said. "They've grown with us and we have grown with them."
"I just tried to enjoy the moment and take it all in."
He said he wanted to give his teammates "One last hug. It's the last time we'll be able to do it on the hardwood."
"I'm going to miss my friends and the camaraderie."
Johnson said, "It's hard to describe what it was like" to see Abdul-Jabbar walk off the court for the final time.
KU places 22nd in golf
by Susan Newburger
Kansan sportswriter
A rain storm which soaked the Oak Tree Golf Course in Edmond, Okla., shortened the Kansas men's golf's first trip to the NCAA tournament.
Kansas finished 22 of 30 teams in the tournament.
The team was cut before the final 36 holes in the abbreviated format.
Under the usual NCAA tournament format, no teams would be cut during the 72 hole event. A storm on June 7 forced the tournament to reorganize.
Golf Coach Ross Randall said that since the event had to be finished in three days instead of four, the participants had to play 36 holes on the course. He said they were ranked in the lower third did not qualify for the final day's play.
John Sinovic. Prairie Village senior, said the cut was unfortunate for the team.
"We've always played better towards the end of a tournament," he said.
Randall agreed. "We shot one of the top five or six scores in the second round," he said. "We were cut by only two strokes."
This was the first time the KU golf team has qualified for the NCAA tournament. Sinovic, who was an individual qualifier in last year's tournament, was the only team member with NCAA experience.
"I got a lot more satisfaction with the entire team going," he said. "I think it reflects well on Coach Randall."
Also playing for the Jayhawks were John Ogden, Lawrence sophomore; Clay Devers, Lake Quivia freshman; Sean Thayer, Garden City sophomore; and Len Johnson, Abilene sophomore.
Randall thought the younger players performed the best.
Johnson led the team with a two round total of 148.
Oklahoma won the tournament, claiming its first NCAA golf title after finishing third or better for the last five years.
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Lawrence, KS 66046
(913) 842-7173
FEATURING
DAVE GRUSIN
TOM SCOTT
STAN GETZ
JOSE FELICIANO
STEVE GADD
RICHARD TEE
OUNT BASIE ORCHESTRA
DIGITAL MASTER
DIGITAL MASTER
Overland Park
(913) 381-2676
Westport
(816) 561-9960
Independence
(816) 252-4250
Bannister
(816) 763-8411
CARNIVAL!
MASK
CARNIVAL!
June 14,16
SUIGENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
7:00 p.m.
---
$1.50
Timer
Woodruff Auditorium
It's the 1950s and a group of young men gather in their favorite dinner to discuss issues that are important to women and sex. (Mickey Rourke, Steve Gutenberg, Kevin Bacon) Directed by Barry Levinson. 110 min. R Featuring opening cartoon.
For the latest update on films call 864-SHOW.
PUP'S Grill
Kansan advertising does not cost, it pays
9th & Indiana 749-1397
FREE CHAR BURGER
When you buy a Char Burger, Large Fries and Large Drink at regular price.
Offer good with this coupon till 7/31/89
ONE NIGHT
ONLY!
WC BEA
FROM
NIGERIA
Stay Streetsmart, Shop Streetside!
ONHYOKOSUN
WITH THE OZZIDI BAND
thursday
JUNE15*9PM
ADVANCE TICKETS AT CATS, OUTLETS &
The Bottleneck
Gourmet Express
749-3663 749-FOOD
FAST DELIVERY
Delivering Great Food in about 36 minutes! All orders prepared fresh from scratch!
Sat-Sun 11-Fri-Sat
745 New Hampshire
Toasted Ravioli 2.49
Fried Provolone 2.49
Cajun Shrimp 2.29
Cucumis Nachos 1.25
Vegetarian & Delight 2.19
Dish Salads 2.99
Shrimp Cocktail 3.99
(items below include garden salad)
Teryaki Char-Beard 4.95
Gripped Sirion Steak
Well Wrapped 5.49
BBO Chicken 4.95
Veggie Fry 5.49
Lemon Stir Fry & Pesto 5.49
Oriental Beef 4.95
Basted Shish Kabobs 4.95-5.49
5. 00 minimum order
642 Mass LIBERTY HALL 749 1912
NOW PLAYING
Celebrate The 50th Anniversary Of An American Classic THE WIZARD OF OZ Returns to The BIG SCREEN One Week Only JUNE 11-17
Experience Dorothy, Toto;
The Tin Man, and even the
Wicked Witch as they come
to life in 35mm. Make your
plans now to attend this
EXCLUSIVE presentation.
VIDEO BIZ
VIDEO BIZ
9th & Iowa
749-3507
2 Video Tapes
and VCR
One Night Rental
$5.99
Expires 6/30/89
• 3 video tapes
• 2 days
Only $3.99!
--from Microtech Computers This AT class computer has the features you want in a compact design.
749-3507
RIVERFRONT DELI
A farmer in a top hat and apron.
- Full Breakfast $1.89
served ttl:10:30 wkdays 11 wkends
* Daily sandwich specials & $1.00 Longnecks
* "Cookie Monday" is a free cookie with any sandwich
* Catering services & meat and cheese sold by the pound
* Fresh Baked Daily
Hours:
M-S 6am-9pm
Sun. 8am-9pm
SAVE on the Veggie-Cheese,
50c Beefalotta, River Sub, or
any of our other delicious
sandwiches.
913 N. 2nd
6 blocks north of Johnny's
843-3338
INTRODUCING "THE BABY"
dtk
dlk
Don't miss this special offer.
1525 The standard setup includes a 80286, 12MHZ 0-wait, CPUI, 512K (upgradable to 1MB), 20MB Hard drive, monographs adaptor with 12" monochrome monitor, 5 expansion slots, 1.2 MB Floppy drive, MS DOS 3.3, 101 keyboard, small footprint [16"x16"x4.5"], one year parts and labor, in-store warranty, FCC Class B Approved & UL Listed.
MICROTECH Computers
841-9513 Dickinson Plaza
M
Don't Be Left Behind Cedarwood apts a great place to live
Now Leasing Summer & Fall
Newly Redecorated Units Air Conditioning & Pool Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus Route
Studios
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts
Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom)
Cedarwood Apts call Pat today 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 14, 1989
15
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
GREAT TASTE-NATURALLY.
Lawrence's Premium Frozen Yogurt
Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Louisiana 843-5500
I Can't Believe It's YOGURT!
FREE FROM SODA, SUNCREAM
Classified
Directory
100s Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
365 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate Wanted
100s Announcements
105 Personal
MAX U.:HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
**Nek.**
I didn't know you were going to be here this summer. I feel bad for some of the things I said.
Please give me another chance. Respond here.
Vanessa (once yours)
more information.
Lawrence area group with private pond is having an open house Sat. June 17th. Please call 1-723-3569 for help.
110 Bus. Personal
A woman reading a newspaper.
Balloons·N·More
Don't leave dear' ole Dad up in the air on Father's Day! Balloons N More balloon bouquets are bursting with love just perfect for Pop!
749-0148 609 Vermont
YOU ARE HERE
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Make Plans Now!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Lowest possible rates to Europe.
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
On campus location in the KU Union and 831 Mass.
B. C. Auto is your full service auto repair specialist, 315 N.2nd St. 814-695 M P-8. We accept Visa, MasterCard, discover
- World wide travel information.
Government Photos. Passport, immigration,
Government Films, theatrical, Advanced fine art
art partitions. Sides can be a valuable asset to your
artistic future. Tum Swells 749-1611
See us TODAY!
PENNYLANE RECORDS & TAPES. Visit our CD
ship on the upper level - special orders always
欢迎 844 Massachusetts. 749-4211
Maupintour travel service 749-0700
SCOWLER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 841-2316.
SUN- GLASSES
★★★★★★★★★
The Etc.
Shop
732
Massachusetts
Lawrence
Kansas
60644
(913) 843-0611
WORD PROCESSING
professional 15 years a quarter.
Fast and accurate resumes, letters of application/interest, term papers, thesis, dissertations, proof reading.
Call Sarah day or night at 842-0690.
★★★★★★★★★
YELLO SUB DELIVERY 5 10p.m. daily. The
23rd Street store now serves beer.
120 Announcements
Pure steam distilled Drinking Water now available at Uptown Gardens, 1341. Mass. Lawrence, 749-3491. Beers/gallon in your home.
130 Entertainment
FREE IN-HOME TRIAL. Singer/Songwriter Benghazi will come into your home live via "The Falk Show" this Saturday morning on KJHK, 90.7 FM.
HOT SPRINTS! Sunday at Chairs 623 Vermont
HOT SPINES! Ray Valleau. Funky Punk
House. Maximum Industrial Grooves Songs.
so easy keep! Sound the Sahara. 2nd draw,
1st draw.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
ATTENTION - HIRING! Government jobs, your area. $17,840 - $69,485. Call 1-602-338-8885. Ext R 4055.
BE ON TV. Many needed for commercials
Catalog i (1) 805-697-6000 Ext TV 9738
Castin, *$19* (8) 656-8470 California. Help you find your location in Sunny California. Current list of job offers in your specialty. List of job offers in your specialty. List of job offers in your specialty. List of job offers in your specialty. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PO Box 230, Rio Dell, CA 8562-9220. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PO Box 230, Rio Dell, CA 8562-9220. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PO Box 230, Rio Dell, CA 8562-9220. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PO Box 230, Rio Dell, CA 8562-9220. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PO Box 230, Rio Dell, CA 8562-9220. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PO Box 230, Rio Dell, CA 8562-9220. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PO Box 230, Rio Dell, CA 8562-9220. Checkers Must have immediate openings for delivery drivers. Must be 16 years or older, have one year of experience with California Recruits, PQ
Child Care Director. Must have education/experience in C.E.D. office (office manager and supervise child care) and 2 letters of recommendation, by June 16, in C.E.D. to C.L.C. Childcare, 925 Vermont.
Cruise SHIPS Now hiring all positions. Both skilled and unskilled. For information Call (615) 797-5892 Ext. H 649
739-558-1031 EARN MONEY Reading books' $30,000-yr. in
come potential. Details (1) 805-687-6000 Ext.
Y-9758
Instructor/Consultant. Seward County Community College. Graduate degree in counseling, experience preferred; preference to those with master's degree, commitment to social work, psychology, sociology, human growth/counseling psychology, sociology.
OVERSEAS JOBS Also cruise ships. $10,000 - $105,000/yr! Now Hiring! Listings! (1) 805-647-4000 Ext. 93-9783
Need sales reps in K.C., Lawrence, and Topaka
15 hours a week. Earn up to $3000 this summer
Matt 789-3496
Instructor/Director of Aquacities, 8-month position; prior teacher, 12-month experience in aquatic environments; experience teaching, two with master's degree, supervisey and community education. Send letter of application, required transcripts and school records to Community College Box 157, Liberal Arts KS 6790-1357, 11th Floor, Community College. U.S. Postal Service, 2020 Oak St., unattended until filled out.
several deck shifts are now available at Nasimh Hall for the summer months Applications and further information will be available at the Nasimh Hall from Friday, June 28 to Saturday, July 3. E.O.A. M.E.I. / F.H.
NATIONAL CHILDREN'S MAGAZINE, seeks sales associate in your area. Part-time and full-time. Send resume to PO Box 2421, Tuscaloosa, AL 3540.
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 641-7749
KINECTION SERVICES
PROGRAMMING WITHIN 24 Hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT RESUME $6.00 Art & Design Building, Room 206. 864-4797
225 Professional Services
STUDENT ASSISTANT IN CUSTOMER SERVICES
Deadline 6/14/80. $3.60 hourly
Duties include pickup and delivery of materials, assisting technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair duties, providing technical ability to work with customers, 6 months per undergraduate hardware experience, able to work 16 hours a week. Unpaid. Fill out an application form at the Computer Center reception desk. Receive a deposit for EOA Employee
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Ser.
Overland Park...9131 491-6878
New perspective on problems, people, events.
Psychic reading by mail, $3. Clarion, Box 8601,
Topeka, KS, 66580.
HARPER
QUALITY TUTORING. STATISTICS. MATH AND ECONOMICS. All levels. Experienced teachers with MA's, Dennis at 842-1053.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
235 Typing Services
"pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 43-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy esting
LAWYER
10,000 pages. Accurate and affordable typing,
wordprocessing and cassette transcribing. Judy
842-7948 or Lisa 841-1915.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbed into elaborate letter-size letters of letter-quality type. 842-2603, day or evening. Aficioable, affordable office supplies. IBM BCM connecting Selectic
FAKE ID'S, DUI'S
spelling corrected. Call Mrs. Wright 843-9644
Call R.J.'s Typing Service 841-5942
Paper, Legal, Thesis, etc. No calls after P.M.
Daina's Quality Training and Word Process
Term papers, letters, dissertations, letter
Term papers, letters, laser printers,
Laser Printer. Spelling corrected 842-2747
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, theses, mice, IBM correcting Selectric spelling, calling Call Mrs. Wright 843-8654
Printer, spelling corrector
Dr. Funk, current editor, head spelling, grammatical, and aesthetic wounds. Publishing and processing 843.0995
KenWays. Professional PC Services. Data entry, verification, word processing, SFS formats. WordPerfect, others. Call Caithe Spencer Copier (at KU Computer) 862-8077. www.ku.edu/copies
**HWDRUCHTRC-Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing.** Legal, these resumes, commercial IBM TCP/IP MAC CD Candless, dot matrix, laser. Since 1853
other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLF
843-1479
Word接受Trying, Papers, Resumes,
Applications, Ab assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254
rast, accurate and affordable word processing with spelling check. Call Sally 841-2279.
PEACE TYPING
ATTENTION. GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1,000
(Deluxe). Reqlarent tax property Reponse-
ment Call 456-8257, Univenga, 10-9p, training, "24", $100-
814-456
16 East 13th 842-1133
3-D's Used Furniture
305 For Sale
X
Merchandise
Jayhawker Frame & Futon
100% cotton $279.95
Free pillows w/ purchase!
Sale ends June 20
save FUTONS
PENNYLANE RECORDS & TAPES. Now buying
& selling used records and compact disks. 644
Massachusetts. 749-4211.
716 Mass.
842-REST
WATERBED - Semi-waveless king complete,
heater, bookcase headboard. 6 drawers, lines;
tomorrow. Tom 841-6048
80 Spider Convertible excellent condition. New top, 57.00 miles. AC AM/FM cassette, $2990 negotiable. 842-383-833
340 Auto Sales
or rentace LeMans, power breaks, power steering,
AC/Stereo, looks and runs great.
for $12900 Call 842-7595
ENTERTAINMENT GOVERNMENT SEIZED VEHICLES from $100 for Ford, Mercedes, Carsonets, Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide 1-402-838-8855 EXT A 605
Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, A 4 X's Seized in drug raids for under $100.00? Call for facts today
802-837-3401. Ext. 765
remainance Alliance excellent condition
AM/FM stereo 63.500 miles $219.829 893-383
"88 Holda Nightwave excellent condition with
front and windshield 1300 OBO
842-383 893-383
360 Miscellaneous
400s Real Estate
Surprise your dad with a BALLOON IN A BOX
maked anywhere in the USA from Balloons
N' More. 690 Vermont. 749-618 "The little gift
n' the red front door."
Moped or scooter wanted for purchase now Please call 749-3580, price discussable.
=
405 For Rent
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination," race, color, religion, handicap, gender, familial origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
South Pointe APARTMENTS
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
- new appliances
- dishwasher
- walk-in closet
1 & 2 Bedrooms Still Available
- new plush carpet
- low utilities
- new appliances
- volleyball
- outdoor pool
outdoor pool
Stop by at:
2166 W. 26th
M-F, 9-4 Sat., 12-5
For more info call: 843-8446
Completely Furnished!
Completely Furnished
Studies, 213-245. Excellent resources. Many great locations, ample efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1121, 841-5255, 794-0445 or 749-2415.
SUNRISE
SUNRISE
- 1.2. Bedroom
APARTMENTS
1. 2. Bedroom Apartments and Townhouses
- Tennis Court & Pools
- Basements
- Free Cable TV
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
Summer Tenture
10th & Arkansas
Surprise Village
Call 841-8400 Village
OR 841-1287
Mon.-Fri. 10-5
Feast Your Eyes on everything Naismith Hall has to offer
- Excellent campus location
- Front door bus service
- "Dine Anytime" with
- unlimited seconds
Cum private baths
- Fully furnished & carpeted
- Quiet study areas
- Basketball courts
- Free utilities & A/C
Including an Eye-Catching Gift
We will give you a free pair of fashion sunglasses when you come by and see for yourself the beautiful Nassau Hall a new class of college living.
NAISMITHHALL
LOCATION
1800 Naismith Dr.
841-8559
EDDINGHAM PLACE
--contract
meadowbrook
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
MASCOORDAN BLDG
Available Now!
Spacious, Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. Convenient
location to KU, and
on the Bus Route 35.
Excellent location for Bison
Cable Included. We invite
You to Discover Moorbowl-
brook
M4 815
Reserve for
Ecall Now!
- 10 or 12 month
A quiet, relaxed atmosphere
- Exercise Weightroom
- Swimming pool
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
- Laundry room
FURNISHED two bedroom apartment on 2nd floor w/ halcony for couple of 8 people in private home. Available Aug. 1: 843-706. Keepying.
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom Laundry fac. & swimming pool Waterbed allowed 10-12 month leases
9th & Avalon
- Fireplace
EDDINGHAM PLACE
- Energy efficient
841-5444
- Energy efficient
* On-site Management
Offering:
1-5 P.M.
RESERVE YOUR HOME FOR
NEXT SEMESTER!
OPENDAILY
842-3040
Professionally managed by Your Valley Management, Inc
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1,2,3,4 Bdr. Apts.
Designed with you in mind!
Offering
* Custom furniturebilities
* Designed for privacy
* Private parking
* Private accommodation and KU
* Many great locations
* Equal opportunity housing
Kaw Valley Management
Go to...
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Hanover Place - 841-1212
14th & Mass.
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
15th & Kasold
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT 842-4455
Furnished one and two bedroom apartments. One block from KU. Off street parking. No pets. 841-5500.
841-5000
Furnished rooms with shared kitchen & bath.
Most utilities off. Off street parking. One block from KU. No pets. 841-5000
auscome. Clean a bedroom, 2 bathrooms, 3rd floor
equipment, kitchen, microwave, on bus route 409.
$negotiate Call 24 hours. Marty 749-2680, in July
(312) 675-7217
NAISMITH PLACE APARTMENTS
JACUZZI IN EVERY APARTMENT!
- Paid Cable TV
- Park Cable TV
- Fully Equiped Kitchen
- Laundry Facilities
- Private Balcony or Patio
COLONY WOODS
APARTMENTS
$345 $395
1 brm 2 brm
(w/2 bath)
- Park-like Setting
- Laundry Facilities
- Walking Distance from KU Bus Route
- Private Balcony or Fado
- Furnished or Unfurnished
FREE CD PLAYERS
Office Hours: M-F 10-4, Sat 10-2
Ousdah & 25th Ct.
841-1815
3 HOT TUBS
Managed with the student in mind.
All of this is yours plus up to 2 compact disc years new lease
EXERCISE ROOM
BASKETBALL CO
HEATED POOL OUTDOOR POOL
Policy
AIR CONDITIONED ICEMAKER
ON BUS ROUTE
MICROWAVE
FULLY CARPETED
OUTDOOR POOL
EXERCISE BOOM
BASKETBALL COURT
FULLY CARPETED
AIR CONDITIONED
PATIO WATER PAID
ON BUS ROUTE
WALK TO CAMPUS
WATER PAID LAUNDRY-VENDING
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WALK TO SHOPS
LAUNDRY-VEND.
SATELLITE
10 MO. - 1 YR. LEASE
842-5111
430 Roommate Wanted
I am a 5th year student who's roommate got kicked out of school. Need a roommate to share two bedrooms, 2 bathroom, fully furnished. Your rent is $169. Call Marty J4-1980, in库存. Roommate needed for summer.fun. Comfortable 2 bedroom apt , close to campus. $182.50.Call Julie
Female Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom api
Prefer responsible grad student. Please call
841-0020
Norman wanted for beginning 1989-1990 school
to share a bedroom, two bath towneahouse,
with patio, garage, microwave and dishwasher.
Non-smoker preferred. $265 monthly + $3 utility.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
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0-15 3.10 4.55 6.50 10.80
16-20 3.60 5.40 7.60 12.20
21-25 4.20 6.25 8.75 13.60
26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 16.45
CLASSIFIED RATES
Classifications
(C) CLASSIFICATION
105 personal 140 full fund b/f 305 for sale 730 want to buy
110 business persons 140 help w/work 304 auto sales 405 for rent
12 announcements 225 professional services 360 miscellaneous 430 roommate wanted
13 245 living services
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Make a difference to:
University Dalkan Kansan
191 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
Classification
Wednesday, June 14, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Study is quest for good taste Bush tours national park
The Associated Press
ITHACA, N.Y. — In this health-conscious age, most people want to know the ingredients in the food they're eating. John Sherbon and Harry Lawless want to know what's in the ingredients.
But Sherbon and Lawless, Cornell University food scientists, aren't driven by health; they want to deter food that makes food taste the way it does.
It's an area that is increasingly crucial in the food industry.
"I'm not sure it's possible to get anyone to try green eggs and ham, but our job involves trying to learn what it is about green eggs that puts people off, and maybe find a way to make more appealing," said Sherbon.
Away from the public eye — and mind — food scientists work on ways to improve what Americans eat. That not only means making it taste better, but improving quality, processing, storage, stability, nutrients and safety.
"When consumers buy a food product and eat it, they decide whether they like it hashed on the product as a whole," Lawless said at Cornell's new, $6 million Food Processing and Development Laboratory.
"The they do not necessarily look at the individual qualities of the food such as color, taste, aroma and texture under a microscope. However, scientists look at the individual pieces of the food puzzle, trying to understand what makes certain like one product and dislike another."
In the world of big business, that's a mighty tool, said John W. Finley of Nabisco Brands Inc., in East Hanover, N.J. "It's important because no matter how much you spend on advertising and marketing, you can't be that flavor. If it's not tasty, it's not desirable. It's that simple."
A more basic role for taste scientists is to ensure a food tastes the
W,
When consumers buy a food product and eat it, they decide whether they like it based on the product as a whole. They do not necessarily look at the individual qualities of the food such as color, taste, aroma and texture under a microscope. However, scientists look at the individual pieces of the food puzzle, trying to figure out what makes consumers like one product and dislike another.'
Harry Lawless
Cornell University food scientist
same no matter where it's made or its ingredients come from, he said. "When you're dealing with agricultural commodities grown in half a dozen states, the flavor can be extremely variable.
"You want an Oreo cookie to taste the same in Syracuse as it does in Miami. Consumers have certain expectations when they pick up a Oreo cookie, and that usually changes to change. And if they don't like it, they probably won't buy it again."
Early flavor analysis — the science goes back to Louis Pasteur, according to Sherbon — was limited to tasting and sampling by human eyes. Most would not as scientists watched and recorded their observations and comments.
“Sensory evaluation has come a long way since the days of the tongue and palate approach,” said Lawless, who has a background in psychology everything is as easy as the Pepsi challenge would have you believe.”
Sensory panels continue to play a major role. said John Vercellotti, a
research chemist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agriculture Research Service region center in New Orleans. The center, one of its headquarters, has had panilin evaluate such foods as beef, catfish and peanuts.
"No matter how advanced the science gets, these machines are only replicating what the nose and mouth do," said Vercellotti. "There will always be a place for them because people are the ultimate consumers and the ultimate decision-makers as to what tastes good."
The panels can be fairly objective because assessments are made as a group, usually from parameters established with the help of computers, he said. "It's kind of like an a capella choir that sings with absolute pitch. You don't have all the instruments and they may be very different, but collectively you come out with one parmonious sound."
What modern science has been able to do is take assessment a step further by pinpointing the chemical or chemicals that give a food a distinctive taste. One of the more recent developments in this area is "charm" analysis, which uses high-resolution gas chromatography to identify individual chemicals. It involves a person sitting in front of a chromatograph, sniffing emissions and having their responses recorded by a computer.
The name derives from the definition of charm, which is a property that attracts people, said Terry Acree, a chemist at Cornell's laboratory in Geneva. Through charm she created a glass jar that makes what a Concord grape taste different than other varieties or a Cortland apple than a Rome.
"We work in anonymity," said Sherbon, "but the consumer would be the first to know if we weren't doing our job."
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo — President Bush on Monday toured a geyser basin blackened by the devastating fire that swept through Yellowstone last year and then went fishing in the shadow of snow-streaked mountains of Grand Teton National Park.
The Associated Press
Bush walked for nearly a half hour among a section of charred lodgepole pine trees, asking park authorities about the blaze that burned nearly half of Yellowstone's 2.2 million acres.
Shown plant seedlings in abundance on the ground, Bush asked,
"Are there jillions others underneath?"
He questioned whether the burn orange needles on the trees indicated the trees might survive. John Varyle, a researcher in scientist, assured Bash they were dead.
The National Park Service has
previously released surveys aimed at showing the park was well on its way to recovery.
Bush flew to West Yellowstone, Mont., from Washington after announcing a sweeping clean-air program to reduce acid rain, urban smog and cancer-causing toxic chemicals.
An airport crowd of several hundred people serandred him with "Happy Birthday" on his 65th birthday.
Bush was accompanied on the trip by one of his 11 grandchildren, George P. Bush, and Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan, whose department oversees the National Park Service.
From West Yellowstone, Bush and his party of White House aides, security officials and others flew in five helicopters over Yellowstone Park, inspecting the fire damage from the air before landing in a
gevser basin.
Bush wore a blue western shirt, green slacks and hiking shoes, but most of his senior staff members were dressed in dark suits and ties.
After the tour, the president said he had received a "very positive assessment" of the regrowth. The rest of the tour was to be by the roar of the helicopter motor.
closing out the day, Bush returned to his helicopter and went to Jackson Hole to spend time at the armored museum in the brickhouse of Lodge on the banks of Jackson Lake.
Immediately on his arrival, Bush and his grandson, accompanied by security personnel, took off in boats for an evening of fishing.
Before his arrival at Yellowstone, Bush said, "One of my greatest pleasures in life is going fishing with my grandchildren." Bush had traveled with this particular grandson to the Grand Teton before.
More merit scholars go to KU
by Mary Steuby
Kenyon staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Because of an aggressive recruitment campaign last year, the University of Kansas led to top rankings, placing them among the top 15 public universities attracting National Council of Teachers, KU officials said yesterday.
According to the 1988 report of the National Merit Corp., Evan, Ill., 41 National Merit Scholars enrolled at KU for the 1988-89 school year, seven more than the 1987-88 school year.
"We are obviously pleased with being ranked 15th. But, at the same time, we are striving to improve."8 We are assistant dean of educational services.
Buel worked with Kris Anderson, assistant director of admissions, on a campaign to recruit area scholars by
"Each individual student has very personalized needs," Ruel said. "It is up to the University to show them what our school can meet those needs."
showing them what KU had to offer. Anderson said the campaign focused on national Merit Scholars from colleges and universities in Nebraska, and parts of Colorado.
Anderson said it was important for the University to get beyond the test scores and concentrate on the students as people because area schools were being recruited by the country's top schools.
"We try to show scholars how they can receive a quality education at a prestigious state university, for an affordable price." she said.
KU upscaled its National Merit Scholar recruitment program last fall. In addition to contacting prospective students by mail and phone, structured camps visits and alumni hosted reception were added to the campaign.
Anderson said alumni and present KU scholars played important roles in the recruitment process because of their experience and the benefits of a KU education.
Scholarships were another important tool in recruiting area scholars, she said. A National Merit Scholar finalist who ranked KU as his first place to graduate was able for a $1,300 annual scholarship from Corp. and the National Merit Corp.
In the fall of 1990, the guaranteed scholarship will increase to $2,000, with the addition of the Riss Foundation Scholarship. The Riss Foundation Scholarship is offered to the Riss family for use with the National Merit Scholarship program.
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VOL. 99, NO.148 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WEDNESDAY JUNE 21,1989
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
KU
James Skinner, Overland Park junior, is rehabilitating at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
KU student optimistic Rapelling accident hasn't hindered his spirits
by Donna Eades Kansan staff writer
he suffered a severe closed-head injury that left him without the use of his legs. Skinner was in a coma for about a week after the accident.
Early reports said Skinner was taking a break from work on a school project when he fell from a stairwell railing. After a witness discrepancy was cleared, authorities said he had fallen while rappelling from the
James Skinner, slowly wheeling his chair down the hospital corridor next to his 81-year-old grandmother, slyly asked her if she was ready for another wheelchair race.
Family and friends smiled and laughed, the tension of watching Skinner attempt to manage his new wheelchair broken.
After more than two months in bed at the University of Kansas Medical Center, having a new challenge to mater, one that gets him out of his hospital into the way of busy nurses and hospital altes, seems to give energy.
crings.
"He's just a positive, ornery guy," said one of his nurses, Colleen Lundstrom.
In a situation where many people would give up skiing, Overland Park junior, who was injured in a rappelling accident on campus in March, stays optimistic by looking to the future.
Skinner doesn't dwell on how his accident could have been prevented. He doesn't talk about what he can't do. Instead, he concentrates on the possibilities open to him and his chance he has to meet. When he will be the time when he will leave the hospital and return to his industrial design studies at KU
No one knows what went wrong the night last March when Skinner fell 25 feet down the open airwell of the Art and Design Building.
ourth floor to the landing between
the second and third floors. Skinner
has no memory of the accident or of
the 48 hours before it.
"We beed at Gammons and had a little bit to drink," said Gerard Overby, Topea junior, who was with Skimmer the night of the accident. "But by the time we came back to the building it was a hard moment for our faculty to restrapelling. We were perfectly in control of our faculties at that time."
It was not the first time Skimmer and Overbey had rappelled together. Overbey taught Skimmer the basics of rappelling, which is used in mountain climbing, at a rock quarry east of Lawrence, Skimmer, a former high school springboard diver, learned quickly, Overbey said.
"He'd been rappelling several times without me, and I figured it was time for him to take some responsibility, that I didn't need to check if anyone "overhead" did. I didn't check his rope the night he fell."
Overbey stood at the bottom of the stairwell and acted as belayer the night of the accident.
In case of a fall, the belayer pulls on the rope to ensure the slow descent of the climber. If the belay绳 is not properly attached, a belayer will not be able to control the fall, said Rick Anderson, AUC outdoor education coordinator.
"It must have been hooked up wrong." Overbey said.
Although there are no specific rules against rappelling on campus buildings, KU police spokesman Schuyler Bayley does not recommend
"We would ask if someone sees a rappeller that you call from a blue phone and we would come over and ask them to come down." Bailey said.
Victoria Thomas, KU general counsel, said the University is not liable for injuries suffered on her floor. The evidence is clear evidence of negligence.
"If someone came and rappelled on the side of your house, no one would expect you to have a sign in front saying 'napping.' Thomas said.
Skinner attributes the accident to the combination of a vertical surface, which he had never attempted to rappel before, and hard, inflexible shoes. "The process of rappelling is real clear to me. The situation I was in just wasn't the best. If a rappelling teacher had been around, I would have been admisoned — severely." Skinner said with a wry smile.
Skinner said sports had always been a part of his life. He was active in competitive diving at Shawnee Mission South High School, but had put organized sports aside since he came to KU.
"I like to do active things, different stuff that people hadn't done before," he said.
In the evenings after dinner Skinner and friends from Kappa Sigma fraternity, in which he is a member, would challenge each other to dives from the high diving board at Robinson Center. Whoever was first in line would perform a dive, sometimes just a canniball, sometimes more difficult, and the others would follow suit.
"I would try not to stump them with something too difficult," Skinner said.
Movie productions in Kansas
Lance Ruke, assistant professor of industrial design, had Skinner in his class last spring.
"He's a creative leader in class," he said. "Nothing will prevent him from doing what he wants to do."
Filmmakers see Lawrence as an ideal spot to set the stage
See SKINNER p. 6, col. 6
Kansan staff writer
bv Donna Eades
Two years ago, it was Matt Dillon playing pinball in local bars. This summer it was Lloyd Bridges buying potato chips at Dillons.
Since the 1982 filming of the made-for-TV movie "The Day After," producers and directors have shown an increasing interest in shooting films
Since then, feature films "Kansas" and "Nice Girls Don't Explode" were filmed in the Lawrence area. "Twister" was filmed in Wichita and "Crazy Era" in Topeka, and "Dark Before the Dawn" was filmed in the Hugoton area.
Several TV movies and miniseries have also been filmed, including "Murder Ordained," filmed in Emporia, about a minister convicted of murdering his wife, and "The Parade," loosely based on the William Ihn play, *The Parade*. It is still going in to Topeca for the miniseries "Cross of Fire," about a central Indiana Klan leader in the 1920s.
1920s. Jerry Jones, coordinator of the Kansas Film Commission said There
were several reasons for increased interest in Kansas, particularly the Lawrence area.
He said Lawrence was a central location for a production team that needed to be able to reach all shooting locations within one hour.
The Flint Hills on the west side of Lawrence provided film makers with a virtually treeless prairie landscape, and Kansas City gave me just as much joy. Just outside of Lawrence were many small towns for rural settings.
"The biggest advantage in Lawrence is ease of movement," said Michael Stubbs, location man and the filming of "Cross of Fire."
"Time is money for us, and if we can film in Lawrence in the morning and in Vinkin in the afternoon, it's a real advantage." Stubbs said.
A second important reason for film makers' increased interest was the
"After' Cross of Fire,' word will go back to California that Kansas is a
One positive experience encourages other film makers to give Kansas a try. Stubbs said.
good place to work," Stubbs said. "Hollywood is a small community. Everyone hears, whether good or bad."
If Kansas offers certain advantages to film makers, it receives obvious benefits in return. Makers of "Cross of Fire" are expected to spend from $3 million to $5 million in Kansas before work is completed on June 28. Much of that will go into the service community and into the pockets of Kansas residents who work as extras or as production staff.
Another benefit to Kansas is the amount of publicity generated by a film crew and the celebrities that accompany it.
"Where else can you get the name Kansas printed in daily newspapers for days running?" Jones said.
"It was between us and Iowa for 'Field of Dreams,' and Iowa got it." Jones said. "Okahama beat us out for about 20 minutes worth of 'Rain Man.' We still lose more than we win."
for day training. The process of bringing in the revenue and getting the publicity was extremely competitive, Jones said
KU minority affairs head hired
PETER H. HAYES
Marshall Jackson is the new head of the Office of Minority Affairs.
by a Kansan reporter
marshall R. Jackson has been appointed interim director of the KU office of minority affairs. The appointment was effective Monday
He replaces Rosita J. Dorsey, who resigned recently.
Caryl K. Smith, dean of the department of student life, declined to comment on Dorsey's resignation.
Jackson was assistant director of the placement center, and had previously been assistant director of admissions. He worked in the admissions office for 17 years, including one semester as a bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Kansas.
"I want the job," Jackson said of the position opened by Dorssey's resignation. "I could return to my boss, but I think I will be a candidate."
No additional information was available as of yesterday, according to Robin Ewesole, director of university relations.
State tells agencies to expect '90 budget cuts
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Spending by the 1989 Legislature has made state finances so tight that Gov. Mike Hayden's budget director has told agencies to reduce their budget requests for funds to levels deciding program cuts.
In a letter to agency heads dated June 15, Budget Director Michael O'Keefe said the level of spending approved this year, compounded by the drought situation, makes bare-bones funding for the fiscal year that begins July 1, 1990, "even more necessary than usual."
The letter became public Tuesday after members of the Legislative Budget Committee discussed the austere financial situation lawmakers will face when they convene next January.
While O'Keefe's letter is not specific, Rep. Bill Bunten, R-Topeka, chairman of the Budget Committee, said some state agencies are interpreting it as meaning they fce a 5 percent budget cut next year.
accept a level of funding that is 5 percent less than what they normally would expect to receive. But he does not know the level will force program cutbacks.
O'Keefe's letter merely points out that Hayden expects agencies to
Under the state's budgeting system, state agencies each year submit A. B and C-level proposed budgets. An A-level budget provides for no growth in spending, while the B-level provides for normal, inflation-driven growth and C-level allows for enhanced funding.
"The budget you will submit at levels A and B will require reductions in existing programs and functions." O'Keefe said in his letter.
"I encourage you to continue your efforts to review all means to achieve efficiencies, in order to continue service levels even at these reduced costs."
The austerity of the allocation results principally from the fact that the approved Fiscal Year 1990 budget expenditures are significantly greater than Fiscal Year 1990 revenues.
Level A funding is 5 percent less than B-funding, meaning O'Keefe's call for agency heads to request no more than A-level spending represents a 5 percent reduction from what would be a minimum request in a normal budgeting year. He did not save in his letter that agencies are
Michael O'Keefe budget director
budget director
being cut 5 percent from what they got for next fiscal year.
Buten said it wasn't clear to him whether Hayden is proposing to cut agenies' financing by 5 percent next year or what would be subject to the cuts. But he had not seen O'Keefe's letter.
Bunten he assumed demand transfers from the general fund for such things as income tax rebates to school districts and sales tax revenue to the highway program would be exempt.
However, another member of the Budget Committee, Senate Minority Leader Michael Johnston, D-Parsons, said it could mean "healthy cuts in local aid, because half the budget is in local aid."
budge is in town.
Hayden is on vacation this week.
O'Keefe, Chief of Staff Dennis Taylor
and Press Secretary Kathy Peterson were unavailable to comment on how the governor's requested reductions would affect various agencies.
Assistant Press Secretary Frank Ybarra issued this statement on behalf of the administration:
"The governor doesn't set the budget until November, after the Consensus Revenue Estimating Group meets.
"Not until then will we know what the financial condition of the state will be, and any speculative assessment of theARGET at this time would be 'mature'."
A 5 percent budget reduction would equate to about $125 million less spending from the state general fund
The 1989 session spent $56 million more than Hayden recommended.
The 1989 Legislature, at Hayden's request, cut taxes by $10 million to top collection of an income tax windfall the state realized because of changes made in the federal tax laws in 1986.
"The (Hayden) administration feels it is time to build the balances in the general fund," Bunten told members of the Budget Committee.
After reducing revenue by that much, the lawmakers financed Hayden's budget requests and added the $6 million.
O'Keefe wrote the agencies:
Johnston said even if the Legislature had accepted Hayden's budget recommendations and asked for his endorsement, "We still have some real problems next year."
"Estimated revenue growth is not sufficient to overcome that situation."
"The austerity of the allocation results principally from the fact that the approved Fiscal Year 1990 budget expenditures are significantly greater than Fiscal Year 1990 revenues, and significantly greater than the governor's recommendation.
Richard Ryan, director of the Legislative Research Department, told the Legislative Budget Committee that he expects the state to have ending balances of $325 million on June 30 and $151 million on June 30, 1990, based on actions of the 1989 Legislature.
O'Keefe said the general fund balance on June 30, the end of this fiscal year, could be as much as $380 million. However, he said, reduced revenue because of the tax cuts and spending authorized by the federal sure that balance "will be down rapidly in Fiscal Year 1990."
With no increase in revenue and no expansion of the budget, Ryan's figures projected a 821.7 million general fund deficit on June 30, 1991, based on current levels of expenditures.
---
The balances continue to drop sharply because the appropriations authorized by the Legislature would outstrip projected revenue by $174 million in Fiscal Year 1990 and by $172.7 million in FY 1991.
Wednesdav. June 21, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Calendar
WEDNESDAY
IBM-Compatible Workshop
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Introduction to SPSS/PC, Computer Center, 9 a.m.
SUA Movie
*Weekly ride. Meet at South Park gazebo, 6:30 p.m. Destination varies, frequent trips include Lakeview, Walters Overlook, Lawrence airport or around New York City.*
Brown Bag Concert
SUA MOVIE
"Neighbors," Woodruff Auditorium, 7 p.m. $1.50.
■ Paul Gray and the Gasile Gang will perform a free noon-time concert in front of the First National Bank, 900 Massachusetts St.
THURSDAY
IBM-Compatible Workshop
- Word Perfect 5.0 Review. Zenith Lab, Computer Center. 1 p.m.
Farmer's Market
■ The market is open from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at the city parking lot in the 1000 block of Vermont Street.
Gav and Lesbian Services of Kansas
Meeting. Above A at the Kansas Union, 7.30 p.m.
FRIDAY
Midwestern Music Camp
Jazz Concert, Swarthout Recital Hall, 7 p.m.
SUA Movie
- "Neighbors." Woodruff Auditorium, 7 p.m. $1.50
SATURDAY
Farmer's Market
- The market is open from 6:30 to 10:30 a.m. at the city parking lot in the 1000 block of North Street.
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Ride to Baldwin City, Meet at South Park gazebo at 8:30 a.m. 30 miles. 12-15 mph.
Midwestern Music Camp
Junior High Concert, Crafton-Preyer Theatre, 11 a.m.
SUNDAY
Lawrence Bicycle Club
- Scenic tours of Douglas County and surrounding areas. Meet at South Park gazebo at 8:30 a.m, 30-miles high, 12:15 mph.
Art Exhibit Opening
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Mainframe seminar
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TUESDAY
Farmer's Market
- The market is open from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at the city parking lot in the 1000 block of Vermont Street.
Lawrence Bicycle Club
**Training ride for those interested in road racing techniques. Meet in front of**
**Strong Hall, 6:30 p.m. Destination varies. 30-40 miles, 18 mph minimum.**
Clarification
Because of a reporter's error, Scott Schumaker, assistant sports information director at Wichita State University, was incorrectly identified in last week's Kansan.
---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. June 21, 1989
Campus/Area
3
Law dean mulls job
Faculty retention a worry, Jerry save
by Christina Mann Kansan staff writer
MERCY
hell would you want to go and do a thing like that?"
When Bob Jerry told one of his friends he wanted a supply for a dean's position at the University of Kansas law学院
It is a question that any faculty member faces when moving into administration, Jerry said. But his response was simply, "I decided right now would be a good time both personally and professionally to do
That is the same reason Mike Davis, outgoing dean, gave for leaving the position
Effective July 1, Jerry, 36, will replace Davis.
"The reason I decided to (leave) now is it seemed like the right time." Davis said. "I stayed a few more years than I originally intended so I could work on Campaign Kansas. But I think you instinctively know when to move on. It's part of doing a job well knowing when to stop."
Jerry said he was not surprised that he ended up in education because his parents were college professors. Jerry said that as he worked to get involved at the University of Michigan he thought about teaching someday.
"Kansas was one of the opportunities I had," Jerry said. "I decided that of all the places I could have gone, this was the place I wanted to
When he got an offer to teach law at KU in 1881, he accepted. Jerry moved from a private practice in Indiana to Lawrence for three years, to move to Lawrence in 1882.
"The fact is, I enjoy all aspects of being a professor very much," he said. "I enjoy teaching, I like the research and I enjoy the service."
"I've been involved in a number of University committees and other activities, and although sometimes I complained, the fact is I got quite a bit of satisfaction out of service activities. This opportunity in administration will give me a chance to engage in a super kind of service."
"One of the nice things about becoming dean at this time is the school is in good shape. That's a tribute to my predecessor, who would point out that progress this past decade has been the work of many people. But Mike was the energy for a lot of this progress," Jerry said.
course. My goal is to build on this foundation."
Jerry said one of the biggest challenges he would face was retaining faculty members. Of the 25 memb- resdards are in their 40s and 50s, he said.
a lot of this program. "Do you
"The school is clearly on the right
"In other words, the major core of this faculty is reaching its maturity in teaching and research," he said. "Inevitably, people with that kind of prominence are attractive to other law schools."
"If we can hang on to this faculty for another decade or longer, the quality that we'll have here will be..."
Davis also spoke of the importance and frustration of hiring and retaining faculty.
"You can't do this for nine years and not have frustrations. The biggest of these, I think, was when good people left," he said. "While we did it we were very frustrated with members, there were always one or two that went somewhere else."
Another challenge Jerry said he would face is how to use the small faculty to get the best all-around curriculum for 500 students.
"It is impossible for a faculty of 28 to do everything perfectly," Jerry said. "Having said that, there's absolutely no doubt that KU is providing a very high quality legal education at a very fair price. I don't know where they are in good shape. I just think any school faces certain challenges."
Jerry said the thing he liked most about his career up to this point was being able to influence the way students viewed their law careers.
"I appreciate the most being able to 'talk to students about ethics and what social obligations lawyers have to our system of justice,' he said.
"If I've caused a few students to think hard about their roles as practicing attorneys in our society, then I will tell them that as my favorite achievement."
"I'm sure there are some students who think about law as little more than a business, but one of the virtues of this school is that we have many faculty members who have a broader picture. I think we do a pretty good job of communicating that to the students."
"My goal is to be as good as dean as I can in the short run," he said. "I'm not going to worry about the long run, because in my business I will know eventually I will return to the role of a full-time faculty member."
CHEFENA BALDO
Steve Travnor/KANSAN
ticipalting in the Midwestern Music Camp at KU this week. The Midwestern camps, run through the end of July on campus.
Pat Duffer, Lawrence, concentrates on his music while Frankie Laguardia, Baskersfield, Calif., imitates him. The two are par-
Trumpet Tunes
StudEx to review KJHK funds
by Charles Higginson
Kenyon staff writer
Kansan staff write
The Student Executive Committee decided Thursday to devote an entire future meeting to questions about its role in the U.S. military-operated radio station JKHF-KM.
StudEx will meet Monday to formulate a written response to the KJHK staff and the faculty of the journalism school and to reconsider the station's eligibility for Student Senate financing.
That action was prompted by changes in the station's operations mandated last Tuesday by the journalism faculty. The faculty's reorganization of KJHK will affect the station's organization and specifies that its primary purpose is to serve as a laboratory for broadcast students. It also specifies that students seeking managerial positions should have completed management course work.
Off-campus senator Aaron Rittmaster, as well as several other
senators, said the changes would prevent Senate from supporting the station.
"We can't." Rittmaster said. "Bot tom line. It's a clear violation of our rules."
Rittmatter and Pat Warren, finance committee chairman, said Senate rules governing financing of student organizations precluded funding of primarily academic activities. They also said the rule does not restrict activities that involve academic prerequisites for participation.
Senators also questioned the manner in which the changes were made.
Warren said he thought the faculty might have exceeded its authority as described in the station's constitution.
"The faculty cannot simply mandate that change," he said.
Warren said the faculty's decision to rescind the station's application to the Federal Communications Commission for increased power changed the station's budget request. Senate allowed $29,000 for additional equipment related to the increase in equipment.
Warren said his committee investigated aspects of the station's operations last semester but was never rescinded. FCC application might be rescinded.
Several StudEx members questioned Mike Ulin, KJHK student station manager, after he read a letter signed by Ulin and Max Utsler, chairman of radio-television and acting general manager of KJHK.
"I've got a real question about whether someone was trying to conceal this from the committee," Warren said.
Bice Mosley, liberal arts and sciences senator, asked Ulin if the School of Journalism wanted KJHK to go off the air.
"I've been assured by the dean of the school that, if the Senate funding
Mike Kautsch, dean of the School of Journalism, said yesterday, "I believe the station probably can be the most effective basis without Senate funding."
goes, the school would immediately pick up the funding," Ulin answered.
Kautsch said cuts in staff and operating hours would be necessary to reduce the need for equipment and other resources.
B. Jake White, student body president, asked Ulin at the meeting why the student members of the KJHK board were not informed of the pending changes before Tuesday's board meeting.
Ulin said, "I cannot speak for the faculty of the School of Journalism," Studsx members discussed possible courses in immediate catechisms in KJHK's funding.
"I'm very concerned," Rittman said. "I don't think I'm ready to make a decision because, frankly, right now I'm just angry."
Weekend conference centers on East Asian business tactics
Cultural literacy noteworthy Weekend conference centers on East Asian business tactics
by Angela Howell Kansan staff writer
Culture counts in business, and the American approach to negotiation doesn't always save the day or the deal.
That was the message of speakers at a conference last weekend on doing business in East Asia, sponsored by the Center of East Asian Studies and the Kansas Center for the Humanities.
John Carlin, former Kansas governor and president of the consulting firm Economic Development Associates, said. "It's not just a matter of having a broader knowledge of other people, it's a matter of whether you want to be successful in doing business around the world."
Carlin discovered this for himself when he visited Japan for the first
time in 1987.
"When I saw those wonderful, smiling Japanese across the table, nodding at every proposal I brought up, I knew there would be contracts in the mail within days," Carlin said.
Nothing came out of those visits. Now he recognizes the difference between Asian hospitality and securing business deals, he said.
G. Cameron Hurst III, director of the Center for East Asian Studies, said misunderstandings because of cultural differences could account for the American trade deflated a billion a year to East Asian nations.
Many American businesspeople are frustrated by the amount of time it takes to seal a deal. That is the reason it is the importance East Asians place on relationships.
"Relationships are not designed to make one business transaction." Carlin said. "They're designed for a lifetime, so they're slow."
Judy Hancock, chairman of the international department at the Kansas City, Mo., law firm of Shook, Hardy and Bacon, said Americans were more impatient than their Asian counterparts.
Americans value facts, logic and reasoning and are confused with Chinese values where empathy, connections and the political situation could have more of an effect on the outcome of the negotiation, Hancock said.
Contracts with Asians are the cause of much American constrastion. Often, to an East Asian company, the contract is seen as another
stage of negotiation, as an agreement to continue business.
"Koreans will feel no qualms at all to change the contents of the contract if the economic climate changes. We see it the way we do." Hurst said.
Americans believe in universal, never-changing rules. Hancock said. The Chinese have a different cultural understanding.
"The Chinese see ethics and morality as relativistic." Hancock said. "They change depending on the situation."
Jill Kleinberg, professor of business, said Americans valued individualism and egalitarianism. In Japan, they emphasize teamwork and a hierarchical organization. The firm is seen as a family. Kleinberg said.
Dario Robertson, professor of law, said that the unity felt in the country resulted in competitiveness.
"They'll have slogans on the wall, Kill Toyota!" if you work at Honda. They're vehement against the competition," Robertson said.
Informality, common among American businesspeople, may put off Asians.
"Asians come to the negotiating table and say 'Let's get on a first-name basis. I'm Harry, he' Joe What's your name? How would you prefer Mr. Tanaka would probably prefer to be called Mr. Tanaka until he gets to know someone very well."
The custom of gift-giving often vexes American businesspeople. Hurst said it was important to give presents.
"You must give presents," Hurst said. "It's very difficult, calculating what ought to be given, exactly when and how. It has to wrapped properly. There's a whole ritual involving present-giving."
In Korea, entertaining plays an important role in business.
"It might not be a good idea to send your most devout Mormon over." Hurst said. "Because there's a strong chance he will be dragged
from bar to bar. It is part and parcel of Korean business."
Business cards, banded about caviily here, are essential in East Asia. The hierarchical structure in East Asia dictates that a proper match, according to position, must be set up for meetings.
"if you want to make a presentation to the president of the company, your president will have to make the presentation." Carlin said. "They want someone across the table that matches."
Hurst said globalization of markets was occurring on some levels, but superficial similarities often masked cultural differences.
"Just because you go to the Rotary Club meeting in Tokyo and you meet someone who has a Ph.d from John Hopkins who is wearing a Brooks Brothers suit and speaks impeccable English does not mean his mind works the same way as yours," Hurst said. "People in Nebraska and Nepal, despite globalization, do not approach problems the same way."
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Wednesday, June 21, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Laboratory or playground? KJHK ends alternatives
Poor Mike Kautsch. He keeps trying to act like a leader, but he just can't get seem to get the hang of it. Especially when it comes to that thorn-in-the-side of his journalism school, radio station JKHJ.
for students interested in tateo.
It just seems funny that the summer session, when the Kansan publishes only once a week and the majority of students are far from earshot, is the time that Kautsch, dean of the School of Journalism, chose to announce decisions about changes that will be made at the station.
It's not that recent efforts to introduce more professionalism into the radio station are off-base — they are not. The station for too long has been more of a playground than a laboratory for students interested in radio.
Last summer, for example, the station manager pulled "thresh" music recordings from the station's library and prohibited that style of music at the station. At the same time, non-students were prohibited from appearing on the station. No matter that some non-student shows were among the best the radio station had to offer.
radio station had to order The reason given for removing the recordings from the station and locking them away was that "thrash" was no longer consistent with the radio station's style.
The new station style would be more mainstream, they said, more like every other college radio station in the country. No matter that KJHK had gained recognition as a trendsetting, unique station and was credited with advancing awareness of new music in the Lawrence area.
The latest changes in station policy were also made under the protective cover of summer. Kautsch showed up at a KJHK board of directors meeting last Tuesday to announce faculty-mandated operational and organizational requirements for the station.
At a radio station staff meeting last Wednesday, many student staff members said they weren't as upset about the changes as they were about the way faculty members forced the changes upon them. They voiced frustration at how such faculty-mandated changes have become a regular occurrence and how difficult it is to run a professional station when the rules seem to be constantly changing.
rules seem.
We agree that the station has not been as professional as it could have been. But pulling a certain style of music seems to be a move aimed at discouraging certain people from working at the station more than fostering professionalism. Who said alternative music and professionalism could not go hand in hand?
radio?
How much professionalism could Kautsch have expected from a station that was set up to allow students with no training in radio to go on the air? Prior to Wednesday's decree, non-journalism students were allowed air time when they enrolled in a 100 level theater course. That could be equated to opening Kansan facilities to any freshman and saying that whatever they produced would be published in the Kansan. Poor policy? Yes. Student staff members' fault? No.
Students have made mistakes at the station. Questionable donor announcements have prompted a Federal Communications Commission investigation. Questions of taste have arisen. Disputes over the station's organizational structure have led to inmuendo, smear tactics and have landed the dispute in a cover story in a weekly Kansas City magazine.
But it has not been the fault of the KJHK student staff. It has been the fault of the way the system was set up. The blame must lie with Max Utsler, chairman of radio-television-film sequence in the School of Journalism. It must also lie with Kautsch.
The needed changes at the station should have been implemented with student knowledge, not in the heavy-handed way that it was done. Now that the decree has been handed down, we hope the journalism school will back off and allow the students the freedom they deserve.
Ric Brack for the editorial board
HIC Brack for the editorial board
The editorials in this column are the opinion of the editorial board. The editorial board consists of Jill Jess, Ric Brack, Kirsten Bosnak and Kathy Walsh.
Other Voices
One down and two to go
The Ayatollah Khomeini, grand wazoo of all Iranians living and dead, has passed into another world, where he is presumably roasting over a slow fire.
Deng Xiapeng and Ferdinand Marcos are still alive.
You can't win them all.
Philadelphia Daily News
News staff
Jill Jess . . . Editor
Heidi Kim . . . Manager editor
Sian Diel . . . Campus editor
Kelly Lamson . . . Photo editor
Stephen Kline . . . Graphics editor
Tom Elkins . . . General manager
Business staff
Scott Frager ... Business manager
Jeremiah Ford ... Retail sales manager
Lori Plant ... Campus sales manager
Adam Pfeffer ... Production manager
Mike Lehman ... Classified manager
Steve Hagen ... Sales and marketing
Letters should be typeed, 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/staff position.
Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newsroom, 111 Staffer-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.
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KLINE
SUPREME COURT
"I SEE THE CONSERVATIVES ARE WEARING THEIR NEW ROBES."
Keep your laws off my body Adoption background doesn't hamper pro-choice viewpoint
If abortions had been legal in South Dakota in 1967, I might not be writing this column. You see, in 1967 a young female law in South Dakota
student at the University of South Dakota discovered that she had become pregnant by a man she had been seeing. The man may have been a visiting professor from England, may have been married and probably did not know the woman was pregnant. She was married, and she did not want to raise a child as a single parent. So she put the baby up for adoption.
In another town in South Dakota, a couple was waiting to adopt a baby girl. They already had two boys, but they decided that a girl would round out the family. One day they got a call that a healthy baby girl was in a foster home awaiting adoption. The couple brought the baby home when she was eight weeks old and made her their own.
I thank my biological mother for the choice she made.
That's about the extent of the information I have about my life before becoming a Jess.
have about my life before that. But I do know that the decision to carry me to term and then give me up could not have been an easy one. I know that my biological mother did what she thought was right. And I know that the pregnancy could not have been easy on her. In 1967, single pregnant women were not socially accepted, especially in South Dakota.
But I also am thankful that women today have more choices. A woman should not carry a child
Jill Jess
Editor
to term if she is unable to — physically or emotionally.
The Supreme Court could rule as early as this week in a 1966 Missouri abortion case. The case could be used as an opportunity to rescind the 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision legalizing abortion.
Even the slight possibility of the denial of these choices is frightening. Just because abortions would be illegal does not mean they would not be performed.
If the Roe vs. Wade decision is overturned, a once-sanctioned rule would be brought by dangerous self-abhorrence.
Already, women are gearing up for the possibility that abortions may be outlawed. An early-1970s guide to self-abortion, "When Birth Control Falls," is back in circulation. And a 28-minute video tape, "No Going Back," demonstrates menstrual extraction, an at-home method of terminating early pregnancies. Sales of a device for menstrual extraction have tripled since January.
But menstrual extraction is risky. It can result in incomplete abortions or infections.
Granted, these are not coat-hanger approaches to terminating pregnancies. But do we want to return to the days when women had to risk their lives to control their bodies?
Pat Turner, president of the Wichita chapter of Right to Life, a national anti-abortion group, said in the Wichita Eagle-Beacon, "Their choices were before they were pregnant. If they want to control their bodies, they better think a little earlier."
But no birth control method is 100 percent reliable. And some women are not physically able to use certain types of birth control
it is unfair to call women irresponsible if they have unplanned pregnancies.
And while my biological mother chose adoption instead of abortion, the majority of women do not. Nationally, only about 6 percent of all births are still in the maternity or pregnancies to term not their child up for adoption.
Without an option of abortion, many young, poor, unstable women are going to be forced to have a family. This is an unhealthy atmosphere for the parent and the child.
My biological mother chose to put me up for adoption. I thank her for that.
but if I ever meet her, I will tell her that I support her right to make any decision she wants concerning her body.
And I demand the same right.
It's AstroTurf, Joe
■ Jill Jess is a Lawrence senior majoring in journalism.
At first, Ray Kinsella though it might have been the rustling of the cornstalks, the howling of the wind or a practical joke played on him by his wife and young daughter. Then he cloud banks made him realize that the voice he heard emanated from the heavens:
"If you build it, he will come."
"Build what? He will come?" the Iowa farmer stared in his field loomed an answer. And then the vision came.
BENNIE HARRIS
Ray Kinsley suddenly knew he had to build a ballpark, a place to play baseball. And when it was built, Shoeless Joe would come back.
So Ray visited Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh and Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati — or it was the other way around? They all looked pretty much the same. He took pictures of life's savings and started construction. Three municipal bond elections later, it was finished.
And he came. Wearing a glove barely larger than his left hand,
"Shehoeless" Joe Jackson, one of the greatest players of all time, sought redemption. He had been tossed out of the sport he dearly loved because he and his Chicago White Sox teammates were accused of conspiring with the pitchers of 1919 World Series, his ballpark will give the scandal-ridden "Black Sox" a second chance.
Ray pored over a chewed-up copy of the Sporting News' ballpark manual, looking at photographs and trying to decide what his stadium would look like. He loved the designs of Ebbets Field, the Polo Grounds, Shibe Park and Crosley Field, but apparently these old ballparks had outlived their usefulness and practicality. The pencil-pushers who balanced the books and purses penny to good use needed that green grass, brick walls and uneven timber set out of touch with modern times and economically unfeasible when maximum profit margins were considered.
Bill Kempin Staff columnist
dressed in the white flannel uniform that was immaculate until the initial head-first slide, "Sheeless." Joe Jackson walked into Ray's ballpark. After flawless flying a few of Ray's fungos, Jackson cut his shoe off his too-tight footwear so he could feel the cool air in his stocking feet.
"That's not grass, Shoeless Joe. We call that AstroTurf."
"What kind of grass is this, Ray? We mighty stiff."
`baseball sure has changed since the last time I played it. The rules are all different. Even the field looks different. What's that 20 doing out there in left field where I caught that last fly ball?"
"That indicates the 20-yard line of the football field," Ray explained. "I scheduled an exhibition game between the Packers and the Giants on Saturday night. This isn't just a all-park. It's a multi-use facility."
"Mighty strange, mighty strange" Jackson sighed. "At least it's a beautiful night for baseball. The sky's filled with stars so bright they don't even seem like they're twinkling."
"That's because they're not stars, Sheoeless Joe. Those are lights in the roof. We're indoors. I built this stadium under a domed roof out of panels that schedule doubles to headers where people can see two games for the price of one."
"This skin is a damn No." Ray said as he examined the foot of Shoeless Joe. "It's turf toe."
"I'm beginning to wonder if the Lord meant this to be redemption or punishment . . . Ow!" the ballplayer moaned as he removed his sock and saw the red irritation on his foot. "This sure ain't heaven."
K·A·N·S·A·N MAILBOX Rush is misled
We are in a time of hope. We are in a time of despair. In one moment we envisioned promise and a joyful future as we saw Chinese students rallying at Tiananmen Square, fighting for the democracy of China. We were granted. The next moment, however, we were in despair as we saw the Chinese government fire upon the unarmed students, and more importantly, as we seek support we are turnover to today's world leaders who actuated by a damper to the fire of freedom.
Are we, the youth, a lost generation? Negative? We witnessed hundreds of thousands of Chinese students leaving campus, chanting, protesting and hunger strike. Right. Lost? Absolutely not!
Then, who is lost? Come on,
there must be someone or some
group of lost people mixing up the
world, isn't there? It is certainly
the Chinese regime, who is more
than lost — they are lunatics!
While being lost is pardonable,
being crazy is damnable!
Obviously, the Bush administration is lost at this point in time. While over the past century the U.S. government has been, for good or for bad, assuming the role of international policeman, attempting in vain to keep the troubled world in peace, the Bush administration struck us dum-bounded by pulling its squad out of the spot, allowing the culprit to get away with murder.
The Bush administration is lost because as the Chinese troops fired upon unarmed students in Tiananmen Square, President Bush, upon request, merely said that he would freeze arm sales to
The administration is lost when
President Bush refuses to fix blame for the massacre in Beijing. As China's Red Cross estimated, 100 people killed and another 600 injured.
The administration is lost when President Bush rejects suggestions to impose more sanctions on those fires upon its youth to survive.
Jengjyh Duh
Jengjyl Duh
Hualien, Taiwan, graduate student
Facultv unfair
On Tuesday, June 13, 1989, the KJHK Board of Directors met to respond to Student Senate recommendations to increase student representation on the board. The faculty board members' response included requirements for all KJHK staff heads to take seemingly impossible-to-get into journalism classes. It also included a list of disc jockey qualifications (i.e. pre-written, pre-approved play lists and no automatic allowance for ad-libbing on the air).
Can you believe that? The faculty board justifies these changes by standing on their shoulders and right to run or destroy the station at will.
For the record, as a student board member, this was not my dirty work, and apparently not the work of Student Senate-appointed board member Dawn Abrahamson. We had no say at all. Instead, the journalism school faculty wrote the qualifications and they became law. Our board meeting on them took place. I was told we would discuss the Student Senate recommendations. Instead, the faculty's response was thrust upon me. I had no vote. I had no say.
Am I part of KJHK's governing body or is that, too, just a farce? I was led to believe that I was one of KJHK. In reality I was an observer.
Janet M. Ciniell Lawrence senior and broadcast representative on the KJKH board
---
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. June 21, 1989
5
Teaching tongues on TV
by Christina Mann
Kansan staff writer
Imagine a time when parents will no longer yell at children for watching television instead of doing homework, teachers will let students watch television in class, and the University of Kansas will produce live broadcasts for these students.
Next fall, KU will broadcast live Japanese language classes for
students at the sixth grade level,
say Gregory Gutenko, producer/
director for the Star Schools Project
at KU.
The satellite broadcasts will be KU's part in the Midlands Consortium Star Schools Project. The six universities participating in the project are KU, Kansas State University, Oklahoma State University, the University of Alabama-Birmingham, the University of Mississippi and the Missouri School Boards Association.
Mary Jane Dunlap, hometown news editor for University Relations, said, "Anyone with the proper equipment may receive these broadcasts, but there are districts that have trouble attracting and keeping math, science and foreign language teachers."
The proper equipment to receive the broadcast costs about $7,000 and consists of a satellite dish and tuner, VCR, television monitor, radio or cordless telephone and an electronic printer, said Brenda Wiedemann, assistant in the Education Communications Center at K-State.
K-State will offer live broadcasts of Spanish classes this live, Wienck said. The fee that schools must pay for receiving the broadcasts depends on the number of students enrolled in the class, but Wienck said 2 Kansas school would pay $2,000 for an enrollment of 10
students. Out-of-state schools would pay $2,400. Eacn additional student would add $100 to the bill.
Fifty schools across Kansas, Missouri and Mississippi have been equipped to receive the broadcasts. So far, 20 schools have signed up for the Spanish class, she said. K-State will eventually serve schools in Oklahoma, Alabama and Tennessee, Wienck said.
Gutenko did it was too early to tell how much KU would charge for the Japanese program, but he explained how the transmission would work. The classes are received on monitors in classrooms. A phone number, usually toll-free, is given to students with questions can call. Phone lines remain active for 12 hours or the transmission.
In addition, the class is monitored by a teacher, called a teaching partner, who will most likely be a tutor along with his or her students.
Homework, tests and answer keys can be sent through the mail from the university so that the teacher can grade assignments. Teachers can review and printers can receive homework and tests on that equipment.
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Wednesday, June 21, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Kansas guardsmen join the drug war
by Gary Patton Kansan staff writer
For the first time in history, the Kansas National Guard has joined the state's war on drugs.
Earlier this month, the National Guard transported its first team of drug enforcement officers by helicopter in a search for marijuana fields, said National Guard spokesman MaJ. Joy Moylan revealed the specific details of the mission because of its sensitive nature.
The National Guard will play only a supporting role in the drug war, transporting drug enforcement officers by air and ground to find remote drug farms. Also, ground radar equipment will be used to detect drug smuggling by air.
Galen Davis, Kansas Gov. Mike Hayden's special assistant on drug abuse, said the state goal was to show an increase in identifying cultivated plots. Last year officers destroyed nearly 4 million marijuana plants worth an estimated $1 billion
"The National Guard assists you a better means of surveillance at a time when drug traffickers are using more sophisticated means to protect
their goods," Davis said.
The National Guard's new role was made possible by a $363,000 federal grant received June 1 from the Department of Defense as part of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988.
The act appropriated at least $40 million to pay states for local National Guard support. Only Vermont and West Virginia have not requested military assistance, according to an Army Times report.
Moser said the state had received $25,000 more than it had requested. She said the additional funds would be used to pay for maintaining the program's aircraft.
Frank Ybarra, Hayden's deputy press secretary, emphasized the Guard's limited role.
"The Guard will never be involved in drug burs." Ybarra said. "They will never be directly involved in arresting drug offenders."
Moser said only National Guard aviation units, which fly the state's fleet of 42 helicopters, had participated in the program so far. Future military operations would solve any necessary Guard unit that had the necessary support equipment.
WASHINGTON — Hispanics flooded into California, Florida and Texas and accounted for about one-fourth of the nation's total population growth in the first half decade, the Census Bureau reports.
The Associated Press
Population of minorities growing
Those states and New York each now have more than 1 million Hispanics. This detailed analysis of minority populations since the 1980 census.
Sixteen states, led by New York, had more than 1 million blacks as of 1985, while California had the largest number of other minorities, the study found.
But the black population of California was growing faster, adding 243,000 between 1800 and 1855, with more than 600,000 increase for the Empire State.
Blacks comprise the nation's largest minority at 28.9 million, the study reported. New York had the largest black population at 2.7 million, followed by California with 2.1 million blacks.
The nation's Hispanic population jumped from 14.3 million in 1980 to 17.5 million in 1985 through a combination of high birth rate and immigration. Although they were only 6.3 percent of the U.S. population in 1980, Hispanics
California has the largest Hispanic population, the report showed, at 5.9 million — one-third of all Hispanics in the nation.
made up about one-fourth of the 12 million national population increase during the next half-decade, the report stated.
Texas was second at 3.7 million followed by New York at 1.9 million and Florida with 1.1 million.
California added 1.3 million Hispanics between 1980 and 1985, while Texas gained 700,000. Florida, New York and Illinois also added more than 100,000 Hispanics each.
Among states with a million or more blacks the fastest growth rate for that group, 16 percent, was posted by Florida.
Mississippi had the largest proportion of blacks in its population, 36 percent, the report found, followed by South Carolina's 31 percent, and Louisiana's 30 percent.
During the first half of this decade only West Virginia and the District of Columbia had a decline in black population.
more than four out of five blacks reside in metropolitan areas, the bureau found. And the shift continued to be in favor of cities with
blacks migrating out of rural southern regions and into urban areas.
The report added that four metropolitan areas have more than 1 million black residents New York (3.2 million), Chicago (1.6 million), Los Angeles (1.2 million) and Philadelphia (1.1 million).
Almost 90 percent of all Hispanics live in metropolitan areas, with more than half in seven metro areas, the study found: Los Angeles (3.6 million), New York (2.3 million), Miami (815,000), San Francisco (775,000), Chicago (757,000), Houston (595,000) and San Antonio (568,000).
Texas, Virginia and New Jersey had the fastest growing populations in this group, however. Texas' other races increased 67 percent to 314,600 while the group was up 52 percent to 126,800 in Virginia and 51 percent to 184,000 in New Jersey.
nation also included 7.3 million other minorities, a category that includes Asians, Pacific Islanders, American Indians, Eskimos and Aleuts. This group jumped 1.9 million over five years, largely as a result of international migration.
Skinner is anxious to come back
- Continued from p. 1
Nobody's surprised that he's as aggressive and as optimistic as he is because that's the way he always was."
The main goal for Skinner has been getting through school, said his mother. Judy Skinner.
"My mental processes are the same. I can still tell the same dumb jokes." Skinner said. "I can'tuggle but it's not a big problem."
"He's always been enthusiastic about his major," she said. "He wont go back to school tomorrow, but know he will get back eventually."
everyday. Skinner believes his accident will make him a more sensitive industrial designer.
"I think it will make me more aware of how things could be made more accessible for elderly or handicapped," he said.
Skinner said some things will be different when he returns to KU.
"If anything, it'll just change my point of view," he said. "It takes some people years to do that. I lucked out."
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 21, 1989
Nation/World
7
N.Y. Post publishes stolen exam
The Associated Press
ALBANY, N.Y. — A statewide high school achievement test was canceled Tuesday after the New York Post published the answers on its front page to demonstrate what it is worth the market in intuitably obtained exams.
About 80,000 students statewide were to have taken the chemistry exam.
State Education Commissioner Thomas Sobol called the Post "beneath contempt" and threatened
to sue the newspaper.
Sobol said officials were investigating the theft of the chemistry test and others after learning the exams were widely used in New York City, Biology, math, French and global studies tests were also reported to be available, he said.
The distribution ring of illegally distributed tests "would appear to be larger than we had ever suspected," said Timothy Gilles, a spokesman for Attorney General Robert Abrams. He said reports indicate the problem
involves both public and private schools.
The regents tests, given in 17 subjects in late June, are taken by college-bound high school students in New York state and generally account for about a quarter of a student's final grade.
Gilles said Abrams was investigating reports the tests and results were being sold for $2,000, although some tests were available for as little as $5 or $10 the night before the exam.
The Post, available on the streets for 40 cents, published the 56-question answer key to the chemistry test under the headline "Easy as Pi."
Post Editor Jerry Nachman said it took a reporter 15 minutes to find a copy of a test after he was assigned the photo and look into reports they were stolen.
Sobol said the department thought it could "contain the damage" to cities that the tests could have on them give elsewhere in the state on Tuesday.
World Briefs
The research, to be done in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Washington, Florida and other states, comes as public concern increases. The nation disposable diapers dumped annually in the nation's overflowing landfills.
While not the biggest component in the U.S. garbage pile - waste paper, bottles and cans are bigger
Procter & Gamble Co. announced it was backing research to see if dirty disposable diapers can be cleaned and their components recycled. The cost of equipment was not immediately available.
Environmentalists have warned that the plastic-coated disposable diapers do not decompose, making their contents potentially toxic. They are used in juveniles and bacteria that cause polio, hepatitis, meningitis and other disease
DIAPER RESEARCH: The nation's largest maker of disposable diapers said yesterday that it would begin searching for ways to transform billions of dirty diders from an ecological problem recycled flower pots, building roads and lush highway medians.
contributors; diapers cannot be recvcled like other trash.
As a result, lawmakers in Nebraska have banned the sale of non-biodegradable diapers by 1983 and legislators in Iowa, Washington and Oregon have considered similar action.
NORTH SAGA CONTINUES:
Oliver L. North should go to prison because he broke the law during the Iran-Con scandal, lied about it during his trial and still doesn't show remorse, prosecutors say.
slow I remove it.
In a sentencing memo likening the fired White House aide to the corrent politicians of Tammany
Hall, prosecutors say North "viewed and continues to view himself as being above the law and beyond reproach."
The former National Security Council aide faces a possible 10-year term when sentenced Friday by U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gessell for destroying evidence, aiding and abetting the obstruction of Congress and accepting an illegal gratuity.
Letting North go without a prison term "would be a statement that 15 years after Watergate, government officials can participate in a brazen attack on a substantial gratuity and still receive only a slap on the wrist," prosecutors told Gesell in their memo Monday.
MORE DRUG TESTS: The nation's private employers now have expanded authority to
New oil spill plan
require drug tests of job applicants, while railroads and airlines have greater power to test those already on the job.
The board's decision came Monday, the same day the Supreme Court ruled in a more narrowly defined case that railroads may require tests for workers without first bargaining with unions.
The National Labor Relations Board says private employers may decide unilaterally to require drug testing of job applicants, and the union negotiate with unions if they want to test their employees.
WASHINGTON — The major oil companies today announced a comprehensive plan for improved prevention and cleanup of catastrophic oil spills such as this spring's Exxon accident in Alaska.
The decisions regarding existing workers appeared at odds, but they involved two separate labor laws, the Railway Labor Act that applies only to rail and airline workers, and the National Labor Relations Act which governs other labor contracts.
The American Petroleum Institute said its members had approved a program that would create a nationwide spill-resp.response organization capable of dealing quickly with a spill anywhere in U.S. waters.
The Associated Press
increased-response capability through the Petroleum Industry Response Organization, which would cost the industry $30 million to $55 million a year and an initial investment between $70 million and $100 million.
The program would cost more than $250 million in the first five years, said Allen E. Murray, chairman of Mobil Corp.
The industry would have
The response organization would have regional centers in Seattle, Long Beach, Calif., New Orleans, New York and Norfolk, Va., plus at least 15 "staging areas" where cleanup equipment such as skimmers and chemical dispersants would be stored.
Murray said each response center would be capable of handling an oil spill equal in size to the Exxon accident.
More arrests in China
The Associated Press
BEJIING — Authorities have arrested more students involved in the pro-democracy movement, the government said yesterday.
Liu Gang, 28, was apprehended Monday in Hebei province south of Beijing and returned to the capital, the official media reported.
the online index to Liu, one leader of the democracy movement, was one of 21 students on the government-issued wanted list.
Six of those students have been arrested or have turned themselves in. Authorities said more than 1,360 students were for-participation in the movement.
The United states urged China to spare the lives of the 11 demonstrators sentenced to death and to pardon all those arrested. Execution is by
firing a bullet into the head . Marlin Fitzwater, White House press secretary, said the United States appealed to the Justice Department and pardons for those arrested.
The Chinese government invalidated all exit permits issued before yesterday. Chinese must obtain the permits when seeking visas to travel abroad.
The Chinese government also stiffened visa requirements in what appears to be a move to keep others from fleeing.
Chinese police guarding foreign consular offices turned away visa applicants who didn't have the permits. Only three applicants who approached the U.S. Consulate had obtained the permit, officials said.
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Wednesday, June 21, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
City, firefighters to end battle
by Susan Newburger
Kansan staff writer
Stalled negotiations between Lawrence firefighters and the city should be resolved by the City Commission during a public meeting scheduled for 7 p.m., June 27, in City Hall.
At the hearing, the commission is scheduled to approve a Memorandum of Understanding with the International Association of Firefighters Local 1596. The commission set the meeting night during its regular meeting.
meeting. The two sides will present their proposals at the hearing. The commission is then required to accept one of the proposals. The commission's decision will be binding.
"We'll just have to wait and see." said Ray Hummert, city clerk and chief negotiator for the city. "The commission will have to decide."
coord
The main issue blocking agreement is the existence of the "extra board," a pool of part-time firefighters created 17 months ago.
"We want to keep the issue as simple as possible," said Russell Brickell, president of local 1596 and chief negotiator for the department's 66 firefighters.
Members of the extra board substitute firefighters who are ill or injured. Members are also available for hiring whenever the department's manpower falls below established staffing levels.
The extra board was a concept generated by the fire chief in order to reduce overtime, Hummert said.
either of the board members are paid straight time instead of overtime," he said.
he said.
Jim McSwain, chief of the Fire Department. said that the extra board concept was nothing new. It had been used in different jobs, he said, but it was fairly new to the fire department.
The line firefighters, full-time employees, are concerned about the quality of firefighters on the extra board.
conditions," Brickell said.
He said that the job, which featured irregular hours and an hourly wage based on a beginning firefighter's salary with no benefits, was an extra board members much of a reason to stay with the department.
No one wants to work under these
Six men participated in the first 21-day training class. Of that group, one man was hired as a full-time firefighter, and three quit the program. Three replacements were hired in January, Brickell said.
Jim King, who has worked as an extra board firefighter since its beginning, said it was difficult to remain with the program.
"The lack of incentives and fringe benefits hurt," he said. "Had I known when I was first hired, I don't know how to respond." Liked the city and the department."
Extra board members must have a flexible work schedule to remain active. Brickell said that extra board members who missed three times, they were
dropped from the program.
King had changed jobs so he could stay in the program. Last year he worked regular hours at Ready Mix, creating problems when he was called in to work for the fire department.
"This year I work as a maintenance man for an apartment complex, and I've worked it out with my boss so there's not a conflict," he said.
The extra board issue has dominated the negotiations. However, the two sides still disagree on salary and the length of the agreement.
The city has proposed a 4 percent pay increase the first year of a two-year contract, with a 4 percent decrease the second year. Hammert said.
sard. The firefighters are asking for a one-year contract, with a 4 percent increase.
The city commission hearing is the final step in the tal's between the city and the union that began April 15.
Focus on traffic Kasold speed limit may be lowered
by Susan Newburger Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night considered plans to solve traffic problems.
The commission considered proposals to lower the speed limit on Kasold Drive, to waive up-front costs on an extension of 15th Street and to study the proposed East Lawrence Access路.
The Clinton Park Homes Association asked the commission to lower the speed limit to 30 mph on Kasold Drive from 23rd street to 8th Street.
"We're almost trapped," said Jeff Price, 3200 W. 24th Terrace. "We're asking for a little help to get in and out of our neighborhood."
The commission decided to post additional speed limit signs to hold drivers to the 40 mph speed limit. It also required sign distance "distance" signs in the area.
distance signal in the distance The issue has been part of the commission agenda for three meet-
insights because of new guidelines that set a 10:30 p.m. deadline for Tuesday meetings. Any items still on the agenda will be presented in a special Wednesday afternoon meeting.
The commission approved Phil Struble's request to waive up-front costs for Billing Enterprises to extend West 15th Street.
were looking at a wider than normal city street," said Struble of Land Plan Engineering.
Normally, builders must deposit 25 percent of the cost of a new road with the city call. The city's plans for 15th Street call for a four-lane road.
"When we're expanding streets we have to make exceptions, because we want an arterial street where they can drive. And Dave Penny, city commissioner.
The commission also passed the joint city, county resolution to study the proposed East Lawrence Access road.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 21, 1989
9
Portable stereo turns 10 July 1
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The technology behind the Walkman portable cassette player might never have developed without these words from Sony Chairman Akio Morita; “TURN DOWN THAT MUSIC!”
Morita, seeking to soften his children's blasting stereos, asked his development team for something that would let the kids rock out without deafening dad. Working from a model developed by Sony founder Masurai ibuka, model TPS-L2 rolled off the assembly line a year later—the first Sony Walkman, unveiled July 1, 1979.
In the decade since, the Walkman and its imitators have become ubiquitous, with tiny headphones appearing on millions of heads worldwide — traffic-bound commuters, long-distance runners and house-cleaning parents as well as their rock 'n' rilled kids.
"The Sony Walkman has in fact changed the way the world listens to music." said Tom Harvey, president of the Sony Consumer Audio Product Company. "It's changed our lifesites."
Go argue. As the Walkman marks its 10th birthday, it has become a cultural phonemonom, as American folk songs are being played by the Walkman's first decade include:
■ Walkman: A Space Odyssey.
■ specially adapted Walkman was sent into orbit attached to astronaut Jake Garn, recording the sounds of his bowels for posterity. This was a scientific experiment.
■ Illegal Walkman. Teachers at the University of Illinois were warned of students using Walkmans to play "real crab sheets" during tests.
■ Walkman: The Movie. Michael J. Fox, faxing an Eddie Van Halen guitar solo through a Walkman, convinced his 568-bound father there was life on other planets in "Back to the Future."
The Royal Walkman. Princess Diana owns a gold-plated number that she plays while relaxing in Buckingham Palace.
The Walkman wasn't an immediate sensation. Initially it was called Soundabout in the United States, Slowaway in the United Kingdom.
'T.
The Sony Walkman has in fact changed the way the world listens to music. It's changed our lifetimes.'
- Tom Harvey president, Sony Consumer Audio Product Company
Freestyle in Sweden and Walkman in Japan and other world markets.
But Morita argued for uniformity, and sales in the United States, 37,000 units in 1979, took off after the Walkman name was adopted in May from then on, the personal stereo deck set up and running.
"Retailers told us, 'You guys are absolutely out of your minds. It doesn't even record, and it costs $200. It's never going to go anywhere.' Harvey said. "The next thing I know, we've got back orders for 1/2 years."
By 1982, Time magazine was hailing the Walkman as the gadget of the year. By 1984, Sony had cranked out 10 million which climbed to 30 million more than it had grown and more than 50 million — about half of them worn in the United States.
While the first model had a retail price of $199.95, today's Walkman prices run as low as $14.95 for an FM, radio-only model. There are 44 Sony models: water-resistant, with AM-FM radios, with recording capabilities, that freaks now have the Watchman, a tiny portable TV set; die-hard audiophiles have the Discman, a portable CD player.
Meanwhile, the trademarked Walkman name entered everyday language as a synonym for a personal stereo, just as Klenex came to stand for a facial tissue. Walkman is even an entry in the dictionary.
Birthday celebrations for the Walkman include one of the originals going on permanent display at the Hard Rock Cafe in New York City, and Tiffany's will produce 36 special Walkmans to be presented to as-yet-unchosen innovafors in music and technology.
by Julie Rehm Kansan staff writer
Students see art come to life Four playwrights' works chosen for weekend production
Every amateur playwright dreams of seeing his or her work brought to life in a stage production.
That dream will become a reality for four University of Kansas student playwrights this weekend.
At 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, the Lawrence Community Theatre, 15th and New Hampshire streets will present staged readings of four one-act plays written by students enrolled in a script writing class. The class was taught Spring 1989 by Paul Lim, lecturer in the department of English. Admission is $3 and $2.
"Out of my 17 students, four handed in scripts that I felt deserved to be done." Lim said.
Lim said he was surprised by the attitudes expressed in Heiny's play.
"When I first read the script," Lim said, "I was surprised at how shocked people were that the
Lim and Doyle Haferfield, Overland Park senior, are directing the plays James Erdahl, resident resident, designed the sets.
Lim said the four plays covered the spectrum from comedy to tragedy.
"All the different characters tell why they think she married him, but no one really knows," Heiny said.
The first play, "People Will Tell You," written by Katherine Heiney, Midland, Mich., 1898 graduate, is a comedy. Six characters share their reactions of shock when an attractive, young college woman pursues and marries her older, married math professor.
character would go for an older, married man."
The second play in the production, "Brick by Brick," was written by Shauna Pedego, Kansas City, Mo. senior. The play examines high school counselor's attempts to trouble a high school girl
"It (the play) deals with the psychological walls people build up in their minds," Pedego said. "A lot of the character's problems are caused by her alcoholic stepfather."
AIRFIELD
The third play, "Sylvia," was written by Robert Popper, Kansas City. Mo. senior. In the play, an elderly man is commissioned to be her husband, the only love of her life. Not all of her memories are happy, however.
Lim said Popper's play was the most traditionally structured of the four.
"You get a full story, a beginning, a middle and an end, which isn't always the case in real life." Lim said. "This is the case with a question mark. They end with a question mark. Robert's play is complete."
The final play in the production, "Cartwheels for My Father," was written by J.D. CmaCauley, Lombard, III. senior. This play plays a young man's reaction to learning that his father is dying of cancer. McCauley is also performing the role of the young man in the play.
McCauley described the play as "very autobiographical." He said his father died of cancer two years ago and that he was inspired to write the play by a "particularly nasty" nightmare he had.
J. D. McCauley, Lombard, III., senior, portrays a young man dealing with his father's death from cancer in "Cartwheels for My Father."
and cries," McCauley said. "I never did that."
The production is dedicated to the memory of McCauley's father, Edward Downes McCauley, whose
"The guy (in the play) screams
photograph will appear on the set.
"I asked Joe if it would bother him to have a picture of his father on the set, and he said, 'No.' " Lim said.
Justin's father, Daniel, said Justin drove off in his toy car while he was cleaning the family's garage. The father said he found Justin just after the accident and took the boy and his toy car home.
Child's fun causes real crash when toy car enters highway
The Associated Press
CLACKAMAS, Ore. — A driver who caused a three-car collision did not have a license to show a sheriff's
The 2½-year-old boy drove his battery-powered toy car onto a suburban road Sunday and triggered a collision by drivers in adult-sized vehicles, he said, him, said Clackamara County sheriff's deputy Michael F. Helmstedt.
deputy and now he won't be eligible for one until the year 2003.
That's when Justin Aronson turns
16.
Two cars and a small pickup truck were damaged but no one was hurt. Helmstedt said.
Helmstedt wrote in his report that he interviewed everybody involved in the accident except for Justin. "He couldn't talk vet." Helmstedt noted.
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Wednesday, June 21, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Clarence Buller, professor of microbiology, credits his discovery of a polymer, which might be used to restore the body's recovery to diet control, by chance.
Sometimes a scientist's discovery is only as good as his luck.
"I'll tell you how science works," Buller said, "it's all accidents."
Professor discovers polymer
by Sharon Chapman Kansan staff writer
He discovered the polymer while researching a bacteria that could be helpful in producing energy, Buller said.
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Kansan staff writer
"That's what you call serendipity kind of an accident," he said. "Then we always say 'Well this is the way it is' named it, but that's not always true."
"I isolated the bacteria that makes it in 1981 and identified the polymer sometime between 1984 and 1986," he said.
After analyzing his discovery,
Buller found it was 95 percent sugar.
Most cells are only 50 percent sugar.
The polymer may eventually be used for diet control. It's the pure form of the active ingredient found in
It can be dissolved and releged if it's not placed correctly, he said. Gels use now cannot be controlled underground or dissolved as easily.
A polymer is any of a number of natural and synthetic compounds of usually high molecular weight consisting of repeated linked units, each a relatively light and simple molecule.
Buller also is working on a project with Shapour Vossoughi, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering. They think the polymer could be used as a gel for oil recovery.
is polymer properties. Bauer's Buller's polymer is distinct because it's not soluble in water like most polysaccharides.
Buller said his polymer would have many practical applications because it wasn't soluble in water
"A large potential comes from the fact that it a hydrogel," he said. The polymer is a hydrogel because, in a gel state, it traps water in the spaces between the entwined molecules.
Patents are pending on both the production of the polymer and the use of the gel in oil recovery. Buller takes 3 to 4 years to receive a patent.
Buller's polymer is a polysaccharide. A group of nine or more monsaccharides joined by bonds such as
oat fiber.
"The sugars have a lot of different ways they can be hooked together. How it is hooked together determines its physical properties." Buller said.
"With our gel, if you screw up, then you don't get killed by the owner because you ruined his well," Buller said. "You can just dissolve it."
"By virtue of it being a hydrogel, anything that dissolves in water can be put into this gel and will slowly leak out." Buller said.
starch or cellulose form polysaccharides.
A polysaccharide may seem like something only a microbiology or organic chemistry student could understand, but it's a piece of paper or a cotton shirt.
It's safe to eat, although it's not digestible and calories aren't consumed, he said.
Paper, cotton and starch are three polysaccharides people use daily.
Buller said he wouldn't commercialize the polymer because of the high costs of introducing a new product.
"But, if you have something with a lot of potential, you also try to make sure the right people hear," he said.
Buller said he had already heard from people who were interested in developing other projects with the polymer
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 21, 1989
11
Steve Traynor/KANSAN
ERIS
I got it, I got it!
Scott Dupuis, St. Louis, Mo. junior, steals a shot from Shawn Nelson. Overland Park junior. They were playing at Robinson Center
Foes join forces down under
by Sharon Chapman Kansan sportswriter
Big Eight Conference basketball players left rivalries behind on a recent trip to Australia.
"At first it was kind of difficult," said. "We had always been competing against each other. Eventually we learned to play together."
Maddox was a member of the 1989 Big Eight men's select basketball team.
Kansas Coach Roy Williams coached the team, which was composed of players from each of the Big
Eight teams. The team's record was 3-6 against professional teams in Australia.
Maddox said that playing against professionals was a new experience.
The players were then taken off the field and said, "They were three weeks into their season by the time we played them. We had only been together one day before we took it to a game."
The team was far from home, but their biggest competition came from other U.S. citizens.
The players that really hurt us
were the Americans," Maddox said. "There's a lot of good American players over there. They really raised the quality of the play."
Australian teams are allowed two players from the U.S., but others can join if they are naturalized Australian citizens.
Maddox said the trip gave him valuable experience.
"I had more of an opportunity to play outside than I have ever had at Kansas," he said. "This was good practice." He also "I'll have to play more outside."
Not all the players' time was spent on the court. They spent six days in Melbourne and four in Brisbane. They were able to do a lot of sightseeing.
"It was my first time there. We had a lot of unusual experiences," he said. "Driving was always an interruption, you never knew what to expect."
Maddox said he was glad for the chance to get to know Big Eight players under different circumstances.
Season is over, practice is not
Semi-professional team keeps some Kansas players batting
by Gwendolyn Parrett Kansan sportswriter
"The older guys have played professional baseball and they know what it takes to get the job done," he said. "They show you how to take the approach. They show you how to play, and you just follow their lead."
Most people are thinking of ways to stay out of the almost triple-digit temperatures. But several Kansas baseball players are spending much time on a hot, dusty baseball field building experience for the next season.
"It's a really good atmosphere for some of our younger kids to play for," ice said. "The younger players
Kansas players on the Maupintur Travellers include Mark Hummel, Bismark, N.D., third base and outfield; Jeff Spencer, Enid, Okla., first base; John Green, Oklahoma Shaw, Bartlesville, Okla.; pitcher; Mark Moore, Overland Park, catcher; Mike Byrn, Lawrence, outfield and designated hitter; and Steve McGinnie, Plymouth, Neb., pitcher. The team, which also won four former Maupinters, plays at Hougain-Maupin Stadium.
Kansas assistant baseball coach Lee Ice agreed with Spencer.
The team was formed in 1983, and its overall record is 182-60. This year's record is 9-2. Last year, the Travellers were league champions and Kansas state champions in the American Amateur Baseball Congress and the National Baseball Congress.
Jeff Spencer said the summer team was more relaxed than the Kansas team, but there was a lot to be learned as well.
will learn from the older guys."
Walt Houk, team manager, said all semi-professional players recruited the top college players in the country, and when weren't 'limited to college players.
"There's no age limit, so we have ex-pro playing." he said. "Our team would probably be a little better than most college teams."
"I play for fun now," he said. "It's your job when you're playing minor league ball. You're always trying to make it to major league. There's always someone right behind you waiting to take your place. Here, we come out, we know we're going to play and have fun."
Mark Gile, 1983 KU graduate, was drafted by the Texas Rangers. After playing shortstop on its minor league team for three years, he returned to Lawrence and began playing second base. After moving to Louisville playing semi-professional baseball was much different than playing professional.
Houk said that semi-professional baseball games had no shortage of talent scouts out to recruit new players. During a recent game in Clarendon, Iowa, three scouts from league teams were looking for talent.
"We've either got guys coming out of the pros or young guys playing to get into the pros," he said. "They get to play in front of pro scouts during the summer. When we get into tournament play, a lot of scouts will be there. Last year in the N.B.C. World 17 players were signed to pro teams.
"It's as close to minor league baseball as you can get. It's the best baseball around here next to the Royals."
Baseball recruits boost KU's roster
by Gwendolyn Parrett Kansan sportswriter
The KU baseball team signed two more recruits last week, bringing the number of new players to nine.
Gerry Camara is the second player this year to be recruited from Howe and Junior College in Big Springs Texas. Camara, originally from Bronx, N.Y., will play third base for the Jayhawks.
Mike Bard, a switch-hitting first baseman, who also played for Howard Junior College, was signed earl Howard. Bard is from Cherry Creek, Colo.
Lance Niles, a pitcher from Arkansas City High School, also signed last week.
The baseball team is still looking at three other recruits. However, their names cannot be released until they sign letters of intent, said Lee Ice, assistant baseball coach. The deadline for signing is Aug. 1.
"We've worked really long and hard on recruiting these kids," ice said. "Coach Kilmur and I saw 200 games last summer, and out of that we got 5,000 names, and out of that we get 26 players."
"There are some kids that we lost in the recruiting battle," Iee said. KU had signed the number two pick in the country, Tyler Houston, in January. Houston is now negotiating with the Atlanta Braves.
Today
Other recruits signed during the spring include: Jeff Berblering, Goddard High School; Jim Walker, Nickerson High School; Kent Mahon, St. Xavier High School, Cincinnati; David Soult, Oak Hill High School, Cincinnati; Joe Niemeyer, Oak Park High School, Gladstone, Mo., and Chris Moore, Cochise College, Winslow, Ariz.
Today Royals vs. Brewers
I ice said the staff was optimistic about next year's team. "I'm excited about it, position-wise, which is what I'm in charge of."
7:35 p.m. County Stadium
Saberhagen (6-4), August (6-6)
Thursday
Thursday Royals vs. Brewers 1:35 p.m. County Stadium
Saturdav
Friday
Friday
Royals vs. Yankees
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
American League
East W L Pct. GB
Baltimore 39 28 458 -
Boston 32 33 492 65
Cleveland 33 35 465 11
New York 33 35 485 61
Toronto 33 36 478 7
Milwaukee 32 37 464 8
Detroit 26 42 382 13
West W L Pct. GB
Oakland 43 27 576
Kansas City 40 28 588 2
California 39 28 582 2½
Texas 37 31 544 5
Minnesota 33 31 485 9
Seattle 32 39 451 14
Chicago 26 44 371 17
Royals vs. Yankees 7:05 p.m. Royals Stadium
Sunday
Royals vs. Yankees
1:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Monday
Royals vs. Mariners
7:35 p.m. Kingdome
Tuesday
Royals vs. Mariners 7:35 p.m. Kingdome
National League
East W L M Pct. GB — x Chicago 38 30 559 — 2
Montreal 37 33 529 2 1
New York 35 34 32 598 2½
x St Louis 34 32 351
x Philadelphia 27 39 409 10
x Philadelphia 23 41 359 13
West W 1 L 2 Pct. GB —
San Francisco 41 48 594 —
Houston 39 30 552 —
*Cincinnati 37 30 552 —
*Los Angeles 37 30 549 —
*Atlanta 35 47 486 71%
--- 37 40 483 13%
x - late game not included
Royals snap streak Bo Jackson drills another long one as K.C. keeps pressure on Oakland
The Associated Press
MILWAUKEE — Bo Jackson hit his 17th homer of the season in a six-run 10th inning Tuesday night at Milwaukee. The Milwaukee Brewers 8-2.
Bob Boone opened the 11th with a double off Mark Knudson, 2-3, and pinch-runner Rey Palacios on headrun on Frank White's single.
Kevin Seitler walked and George Brett hit a two-run double before Jackson drove his home run to center field for a 7-2 lead. It tied him for the American League lead in the Baltimore's Mickey Tettleton.
Jim Eisenreich singled, went to second when Pat Tat Walker and scored on Palacios' single to make it 8-2.
ing run in the eighth and then pitched three scoreless innings. Steve Farr pitched a perfect 11th.
Paul Molitor walked with one out in the seventh, stole second and scored on Sheffield's single for a 1-0 lead.
Tom Gordon, 9-2, gave up the ty-
Singles by Bill Buckner, Boone and White tied the game in the bottom of the innning off Brewers' rookie Jake Navarro, who was making his major league debut. After Kurt Stillwell flied out, Seitzer hurt an RBI double for a 2-1 lead.
Milwaukee tied the score at 2 on a walk to Jim Gantner and singles by Robin Yount and Gary Sheffield.
Royals starter Charlie Leibrandt allowed four hits in seven innings, walked two and struck out a season-high six.
Darnell Valentine visits summer camp Former KU basketball star advises youths on defense, discipline, drive
by Gary Patton Kansan sportswriter
Just 9
Rumors of Michael Jordan's arrival had Allen Field House buzzing Monday as Coach Roy Brown led his team off of his summer basketball camp.
"I do not know if Michael Jordan will show up in this week or not." Williams told his 27 attentive fans that he would bring 8 to 10. "My guess, he will not."
Nobody likes to play defense.
But playing in the NBA, it's a must," said Valentine, a 6-foot-1 guard for the Cleveland Cavaliers. "You've got to be mean. You've got to have an attitude that says 'I'm not going to let my man score.'"
With that quieting announcement, all attention turned to Darnell Valentine, 1978-81 KU most valuable player.
— Darnell Valentine guard. Cleveland Cavaliers
Valentine, among KU's all-time
valentines in scoring, steals, assists
and minutes played, emphasized
their success with shots in
about 30 minutes of drills.
Nobody likes to play defense. But playing in the NBA, it's a must. You've got to be mean. You've got to have an attitude that says 'I'm not going to let my man score.'
"N
Insisting that defense was a team effort, Valentine revealed his
"What we do for him is put the whole team on him and don't let him catch the ball," Valentine says, "make the rest of the team score."
team's technique for defending Jordan, the National Basketball Association's perennial scoring leader.
He admitted that his team's efforts failed in this season's playoffs, when Jordan's team, the Philadelphia 76ers, won a trivial division champion Cavaliers
Valentine, a 1981 academic all-
american, said that good defense
and basketball discipline carried
to life off of the basketball
course.
"Not all of you guys are going to make it to NBA or college basketball teams," Valentine said. "Use basketball as a tool. Use it for discipline to help you accomplish other great things in life."
Valentine, voted by fans in 1986 to the all-time Kansas team, said he got to the professional ranks with a lot of hard work.
"When I was your age, I didn't have the opportunity to go to camp." Valentine said, wearing his 8-year-old, cut-off, 14 KU sweatshirt. "You guys have the jumpsuit on, I made up for it and worked."
For a tuition of $260, each camper is guaranteed six days of hard work under the direction of Williams and his staff. The camp, which opened Sunday, is designed to teach basketball fundamentals
n through lecture sessions, daily drills, team practices, league games and special clinics.
This week's camp, the first of four back-to-back camps scheduled this summer, will feature a trainer with father Rick Barry, Williams said.
barry, father of 1989 KU graduate and basketball player Scooter Barry, is expected in camp before Friday.
Williams, former University of North Carolina assistant coach, said he planned to have several other professional and college players at the school. Exact arrival dates have not been finalized.
Joe Bollig, assistant sports information director, said the list included: Jordan, Brad Daughtery, of the Cleveland Cavaliers, Worley, of the Los Angeles Lakers, Wolf, of the Los Angeles Clippers.
Danny Manning, all-time KU scoring leader, is also expected to hold a clinic at the camp.
Coppers.
All are former North Carolina players under Williams and Coach Dean Smith.
KANSAS
UNIVERSITY
Patrick G. Brungardt/KANSAN
Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darnell Valentine talks to participants of the Roy Williams Summer Basketball Camp.
---
12
Wednesday, June 21, 1989 / University Daily Kansen
SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS
CLIP A COUPON!
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843-2121
First Month Free
with this ad
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"It's not just the Catholic community — the whole city is welcome," said Buddy Langford, co-organizer of the free event.
It's time again to put on your dancing shoes and join in the fun at the annual St. John's Mexican Fiesta and parking lot dance from 5 p.m. to midnight Saturday, on the school at St. John's church, 1208 Kentucky.
From 6 to 7 p.m., a dance group of children from the church will per-
Patio Specials
by a Kansan reporter
It's fiesta time for St. John's
S
by Barbara Kollmeyer
Kansan sportswriter
- Special good Thursday thru Sunday
** Specials good Thursdays only
OU's Switzer resigns after 16 years
$1.00 Ice cold beers*
$1.95 Margaritas**
60¢ Draws**
* Special good Thursday thru Sunday
* Not valid Thursday only
form a variety of Mexican folk dances.
Few crumbs are expected to fall from the table of the University of Oklahoma football program this year, following the resignation of
DOS HOMBRES
The Soundseekers, a band from Kansas City, will play Mexican dance music from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Church members will sell homemade burritos, enchiladas, tacos, tamales and tostadas at prices ranging from $1 to $1.25.
A moon walk, a balloon walk, a fish pond and other games will be available free of charge.
Someone shot the window of a residence in the 500 block of Oklahoma Street with a BB gun Monster. Damage was estimated at $150
"After it got started, it became such a fun experience to bring people together and to put on something for them, that it just kept on." Langford said.
- A ring valued at $450 was taken Monday from a residence in the 3000 block of Oxford Road, Lawrence police reported.
The fiesta concept was started right years ago to raise money for
the new Corpus Christi parish, Langford said.
- A car valued at $4,000 was taken Monday from a residence in the 1600 block of West 29th Street, Lawrence police reported.
815 New Hampshire
"It's something the community looks forward to every year and it keeps on growing," said Loretta Chavez, co-organizer of the event. "It's really fun for the whole family."
■ Someone entered a business Monday in the 2700 block of West 27th Street and caused $400 worth of damage. Lawrence police reported
841-728
841-82
- Someone entered the office of a business Monday in the 1100 block of Vernom Street and went through the files to retrieve data. Lawrence police reported. Nothing was reported missing.
Coach Barry Switzer on Monday
Police Record
Coach Barry Switzer on Monday. Switzer resigned after 16 years at Oklahoma.
Kansas athletic director Bob Froedrick said yesterday that because of the college football system and the strong tradition of the Sooner football
Kansas football coach Glen Mason agreed that Kansas would still be battling against a tough Sooner team this fall.
team. Kansas would not gain any edge on the field, in playing or recruiting.
--for only
Guys & Dolls Hairstyling
Summer Session Special $2 OFF
Haircut Only
Expires 7/29/89
2420 Iowa
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If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help. testing Safe, affordable abortion
Confidential pregnancy testing • Safe, affordable abortion services • Birth control • Tubal ligation • Gyn exams • Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases. Providing quality health care to women since 1974 insurance, VISA & MasterCard accredited For information and appointments (913) 345-1400
PARTY
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PYRAMID PIZZA COUPON BLOWOUT!
842-3232
NOW OPEN! 14th & Ohio (Under the Wheel)
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MANIA
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& GET THE SECOND ONE
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PYRAMID PIZZA MEDIUM TWO TOPPING PIZZA
$6.95
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PYRAMID
PIZZA
PYRAMID PIZZA THRIFTY THURSDAY
16' LARGE PIZZA ONLY with
TWO TOPPINGS $795
plus
LITER OF COKE Plus Tax Expires
--university
audio
KENWOOD STEREO FOR YOUR CAR
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SELECT
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ON/OFF
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- Compact flat chassis • Quartz PLL synthesized tuner • Seek • 18 channel preset memory — 12 FF 6 AM • FM Automatic Noise Reduction Circuit (ANRC IV) with high-performance tuner • Auto-reverse with Program tape direction switch • Metal (high bias) selector • LCD multi-display • Digital clock • Separate bass & treble controls • Loudness switch • Front rear speaker fader • Illuminated cassette door and controls • Power antenna lead • Total max. power 12W, RMS power 4W/ch at less than 1% THD.
KENWOOD KRC 1003 CASSETTE RECEIVER AND A PAIR OF MATCHING COAXIAL SPEAKERS ONLY $29995 INSTALLED
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University Audio/video
2319 Louisiana Lawrence
841-3775
---
13
Classified Directory
100s
105 Personal
110 Business Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
200s
Employment
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 21, 1989
205 Help Wanted
205 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
Merchandise
300s
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
Real Estate
100s
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Anne, I’d love to continue our conversation, meet me at Louise W this West day.
MAX U:HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT????
I will willing to talk, but I make no promises. Some of the stuff you said will not be耐苦 for begrenath. Is finner OK? Usual place? P.S. I’ve given her up. Nigh
110 Bus. Personal
B. C. Auto is your full service auto repair specialist 315 N. 2nd St. 841-6855 M-F 8-6. We accept Visa, MasterCard, Discover
Government Photos, Passport, immigration
vs. Modeling, theatrical Advanced fine art
portfolio Slides can be a valuable asset to your
artistic future Tom Swells 749 1611
If you are going to drive-em to drink, drive-em to Louise's 1000 Mass & 1307 W 7th
PENNYLANE RECORDS & TAPES. Visit our CD shop on the upper level | special orders always welcome. 344 Massachusetts. 794-4211.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your driver's license without patrol testing upon successful completion. Transportation provided. 941-236
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Trip Advisor
Make Plans Now!
- World wide travel information.
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Eurail, Britrail passes.
- Lowest possible rates to Europe.
On campus location in the KU Union and 831 Mass.
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
120 Announcements
ice cold tea at Louse's Bar & Louse's West
75cm敢画, $1.50 Schooners
Pure steam distilled Drinking Water now available at Uptown Gardens, 1341 Mass. Lawrence, 749-3491. 48cups/gallon in your container.
130 Entertainment
Best Prices on Tap, Lounge's Bar & Lounge's West
Check out our special summer prices.
HOT STPN! Sundays at Sunday's 623 Vermont
Eyes D.J. RAY Valaqueste, Funky, Funky Hip
House Maximum Industrial Grows. Save your
Dollar stock. The Sabathia' 28 cent draws.
dollar coin.
140 Lost-Found
Genie garage door opener found in parking lot by stadium. June 16. Call 864-9274.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
BE ON TV. Many needed for commercials
Casting info (1) 805-697-6600 Ext. TV - 9758
California Recruiters can help you find, teaching position in Sunny Curran. Current list of po jobs offered in your specialty, at California Recruiters, PO Box 201, Rio Dell, CA. 65520-9282. Checkers Pizza has immediate openings for a job that may be 16 years old or older. Have own car and work on mission and tips. Full and part-time positions in person at Checkers Pizza 2124 Yale Road
Child-Helped needed July 16-22 Volunteer to assist handicapped child attending special residential camp. Call Trinity Respile Care. 842-3159
CRUISE SHIPS Now hiring all positions. Both skilled and unskilled. For information Call (615) 797-5097 Ext. H. 644
DOCUMENTATION SPECIALIST! Salary:
$18,000 per month. Requires:
user-oriented documentation, on-line help lines &
supervisor support, system administrator,
pier system operators & supervisors
& seminars & workshops for micro, manifold &
manufacturing.
BA/BS degree in a communications related field with coursework in computing for field, or BA/BS degree in communications related field with experience & demonstrated skill in using computer software. CLEAR oral & written communication skills. FFT*
job description is兼职 Deadline: July 11
1985. Send cover letter and resume to Ruth Hurst
Personal Coordinator Computer Center
Lawrence, Lawrence, KS 60455
EOA Employer
Douglas County Rape Victim Service will provide sexual assault education from June 15. Applications are available at Headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts Street. Information meeting June 22. Headquarters, 1419 Massachusetts Street. EARN MONEY Reading books! $30.00/year; potential details. [1] 865-687-6000 Ext.
Instructor/Counselor, Seward County Community College, 16 month position. Bachelor's degree in psychology or related field; preference to those with master's degree, community college or graduate school education, psychology, sociology, human growth counseling
Instructor/Director of Aquaculture, 9-month position, bachelor's degree, prior teaching experience with master's degree, supervisory and community education. Send letter of application, resume, education. Send letter of application, resume, instruction. Instruction. County Community College. Search for positions at CCAC. 125. Inquiries for fall; position open until filled.
Looking for an English tutor, for speaking 2hrs. week, salary negotiable. Call 842-6071, Wan Hir
NANNIES NEEDED!
Exciting opportunity for responsibility, mature person who enjoys working with children to be a nanny in the Washington D.C. area. Excellent job. Send resume to Information on information call (431) 722-6198.
NATIONAL CHILDREN'S MAGAZINE seeks sales associates in your area. Part-time and full-time. Send resume to PO Box 2421, Tucalosa, AL 35063.
Need sales reps in K.C., Lawrence, and Topeka.
15 hours a week. Earn up to $3000 this summer.
Matt 794-3499
OVERSE IN JOBS. Also cruisehips. $10,000
$105,000/yr! Now Hiring! Listings! (1)
805-687-4000 Ext. 317-9788
225 Professional Services
DRIVER EDUCATION offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving KU students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-7749
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: Ektachrome
services within 24 hours. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT/RESUME $6.00. Art & Design Build,
Room 206. 894-6767
FAKE ID'S, DUI'S
16 East 13th 842-1133
New perspective on problems, people, events.
Psychic reading by mail. $5. Clarion, Box 86031,
Topeka, KS. 66589.
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park...(931) 491-8678.
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 943-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
HARPER LAWYER
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
QUALITY TURING. STATISTICS. MATH and ECONOMICS. All levels. Experienced teachers with MA's. Call Dennis at 842-1655.
235 Typing Services
1-1,000 pages. Accurate and affordable typing,
wordprocessing and cassette transcribing. Judy
842-7945 or Lasa 842-1915.
KeyWorks - Professional PC Services. Data entry / verification, word processing, SFS formats, WorldPerfect others. Call Calebte Spencer Cooper Compared. Computing Services. 842.607.000 Free estimates.
Dr. Funk, current editor, heals spelling, grammatical, and aesthetic wounds. Publishing and word processing. 843-695.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term papers, these, thesis, ibm. ICM selective Correcting, spelling corrected. Call Mrs. Wright 84-9544. Team L. T. Trainer. Signature 81-9544.
Rail C.J.'s Typing Service 841-5924 Term
Papers, Legal, Legal, etc. Thesis, no calls after P.M.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term nainers, thesis dissertations, letters
THEWORLDOCORS- Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, these resumes, commercial, IBM PC, MAC, CDP Daisywell, dot matrix, learn. Since 1983
R.J.'s TYPING SERVICE
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor
transforms your scripts into accurately spelled
and punctuated, grammatically correct pages,
of letter-worthy type. 8432. 2635 days or revenues.
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing with spelling check. Call Sally 841-2279
841-5942 No calls after 9 p.m.
newspapers, databases, archives,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Laser
Printer. Spelling corrected. 842-2747
Term Papers, Legal Thesis, Etc.
KANSAS FURNITURE
FACTORY OUTLET
1987 Honda Elite 50 (Scooter), Purple Black
Books Basket, excellent condition, $500 or best offer.
843-608-608 after 6 p.m.
305 For Sale
Chair...$637.50
300s Merchandise
3-D's Used Furniture
Box...$237.92
Commodore 64 computer $250, Raleigh 1-speed bike $100, Magnavox 16" color TV $101, 840-765-3911
PENNYLANE RECORDS & TAPES. Now buying computers and compact discs. 840-Massachusetts. 749-421-81
Albums $3-$4. TJ 842-4921.
340 Auto Sales
King size Matt O
Box...$237.92
professional 15 years experience
Fast and accurate resumes, letters
of applicationinterest, term papers,
thesis dissertations, proofreading.
If we don't have it, we'll help find it.
843-5453 624 North 2nd
Bicycle: Univega, 10-sp., touring, $24", $100,
841-456
738 New Hampshire
749.SAVF
1884 Remault Alliance, 75,000 miles, dr. acc.
AM FM cassette, $250 (OBO) 943-049 or 968-
900. Danium 210, good condition. AM FM cassette,
nontheatl. 210, store. 981-045 or 929-337.
Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, 4 X 4's Seized in drug raids for under $100.07 Call for facts today.
892 837-340, Ext. 765
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100.
Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevy's, Surplus.
Bruves Guides (1) 805-687-6000 Ext. S-9738
Please leave a message
405 For Rent
Quality used furn. & appl.
it doesn't work, we won't sell it
Can Sarah Day to night
at 842-0690.
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisement in this newspaper is on an equal opportunity basis.
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or limitation based on such personal status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
AFFORDABLE RATES
Call Sarah day or night
AFFORDABLE RATES
WORD PROCESSING
400s Real Estate
Practically on campus. Regency Place Apartments 2 bedroom, balcony, water paid. Available August 1st. 749-0805.
★★★★★★★★★
Moped or scooter wanted for purchase now.
Please call 748-3580, price discusable.
1 bedroom & studio in older home in quiet neighborhood near downtown, gas & water paid.
Available August 15. 749-0605.
Southwest location - 2 bedroom in quiet neighborhood, 11 floors, air conditioner and watery dock-ups, swimming pool, fireplace. Available now and August 1st. 749-6805.
★★★★★★★
2 bedroom in fourplex in quiet residential neighborhood. Washer-dryer hook-up. Central Air, Available August 1st. 749-6005
=
Aug. 1st large 2 bedroom, Bath. Rent $220 + ½
utilities Call 813-4964
Studio, 3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-3255, 794-0455 w/ 794-2415
beautiful Downtown apt, modern kitchen, central air, available August 1st.749-885.
Downtown: Quiet 2 bedroom apt., large bedrooms, carpeted, central air, Available August 1st: 744.9005
FURNISHED two bedroom apartment on 2nd floor w/ baths for couple or two girls in private home. Available Aug. 1. 843-6706 Keep tryng
Furnished one and two bedroom apartments. One block from KU. Off street parking. No pets. 841-5500
Excellent location. 2-bedroom apartment in
4-pixel. Carriage. CA. Low utilities. No pets.
Available August 1. $340. 1194 Tennessee & 1341
Ohio Call 824-4242
Furnished rooms with shared kitchen & bath.
Most utilities paid. Off street parking. One block
from KU. No pets. 841-5600
Summer Sublease available now. Great location
2 minute walk to campus. 2 bedroom, 1ysa, study
lounge. Rent is noteworthy. Call 749-5484
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A quiet, relaxed atmosphere
POLICE DEPARTMENT
9th & Avalon 842-3040
close to campus
spacious 2 bedroom
Laundry fac. & swimming pool
Waterbed allowed
10-12 month leases
NAISMITH PLACE APARTMENTS
JACUZZI IN EVERY APARTMENT
- Two Bedroom
- Paid Cable TV
- Walking Distance from KU Bus Route
- Park-like Setting
- Laundry Facilities
- Park-like Setting Laundry Facilities
- Laundry Facilities
- Private Balcony or Patio
- Private Bathroom or Faucet
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Office Hours: M-F 10-4, Sat 10-2
Ousdahl & 25th Ct.
841 1915
South Doyle APTMENTS
1 & 2 Bedrooms Still Available
- low utilities
- new appliances
- dishwasher
- walk-in closet
- new plush carpet
- outdoor pool
2166 W. 26th
M-F, 9-6 Sat., 12-5 For more info call: 843-6446
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
- Free cable TV
Spacious 2 bedroom apt. near campus. Large kitchen, balcony, central air. Available August 1st 740-805.
- Exercise Weightroom
- Laundry room
* Fireplace
841-5444
- Energy efficient
- On-site Management
Open 3:00-5:00 daily
Professionally managed by
SUNRISE
SUNRISE
Studio Apt's Across from Yello Sub, 120 Ired
Available August 1st. Gas & Water paid: 749 6050
Sunrise Terrace
APARTMENTS
FREE CD PLAYERS
BASKETBALL COURT
ON BUS ROUTE
COLONY WOODS
APARTMENTS
$345 $395
1 brm 2 brm
(w/2 bath)
Apartments an Townhouses
OUTDOOR POOL EXERCISE ROOM
players per new lease.
Managed with the student in mind.
yourss plus up to 2 compact disc
- Tennis Court & Pools
WALK TO CAMPUS
- 1. 2. Bedroom
HEATED POOL
MICROWAVE
FULLY CARRIER
SATELLITE
WALK TO SHOPS
- Free Cable TV
Call 841-8400 Village
OR 841-1287
Mon.- Fri. 10-5
MICROWAVE
FULLY CARPETED
WATER PAID
LAUNDRY-VENDING
PATIO
- Close to Campus
- On Bus Route
Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan
AIR CONDITIONED ICEMAKER
LAUNDRY-VENDIN
SATELLITE
10 MO. - 1 YR. LEASE
1301 W. 24th
849 F-11-1
1301 W.24th 842-5111
OPEN DAILY
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1,2,3,4 Bdr. Apts.
Designed with you in mind!
- Custom furnishings
* Designed for privacy
* Private parking
* Private use & KU
* Many great locations
Hanover Place - 841-1212
Lith & Mass
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Orchard Corners - 749-4226
15th & Kasold
Tanglewood - 749-2415 10th & Arkansas
Sundance · 841-5255
7th & Florida
MASTERCRAFT 842-4455
LOCATION
Available Now!
Spacies 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 Meadow-
brook.
Reserve for
M.F. B.5
Sat. B.5 Fall Now!
***
meadowbrook
Sublease- clean 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom, road 3rd
equip kitchen, microwave, on bus line $400
negotiable. Call 24 hours. Marty 749-2680. in July
(312) 675-7212
Feast Your Eyes on everything Naismith Hall has to offer
- Semi-private baths
- Front door bus service
- "Dine Anytime" with
- Laundry & vending facilities.
- unlimited seconds
- Fully furnished & carpeted
- Excellent campus location
- Basketball courts
- Free utilities & A/C
- 9-month academic year lease
- Swimming pool
- Laundry & vending facilities
- Active social calendar
Including an Eve-Catching Gift
NAISMITH HALL
We will give you a free pair of fashion sunglasses when you come by and see for yourself the special features and amenities included with Hall A which a new class of college living.
Wanted, friendly person with transportation to rent free room in large house. Call 842-7414
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
I am a 8th year student who's roommate got kicked out of school. Need a辅导 to share to2 bedroom. 2 bathroom, fully furnished. Your rent $159. Call Matt K449, 740-889, in (312) 872-6712.
Policy
430 Roommate Wanted
Female Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apt.
Prefer responsible grad student. Please call
841-0620
Roommate needed for summer! fail. Comfortable
2 bedroom apt. close to campus. $162.50. Call Jill
841-5741
Desperately seeking female roommate for all (all semester or soerer to share new furnished 4 br apt at Sundance $167.00 . t_4 utilities 841-9212
Two roommates wanted to share master bedroom in three bedroom duplex. August 1, $130 each. non-smokers preferred. 749-604-784
Romantic moated for beginning 1980-1990 school year to share bedroom, two bath towhouse with patio, garage, microwave and dishwasher. Non-smoker preferred 5% monthly $8.
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Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days
0-15 3.10 4.55 6.50 10.80
16-20 3.60 5.40 7.60 12.20
21-25 4.20 6.25 8.75 13.60
26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 16.45
105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale 370 want to buy
personal possessions 340 professional 195 for sale
120 announcements 252 professional possessions 66 miscellaneous 430 roommate wanted
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14
Wednesday, June 21, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
SPECTATOR'S LONGEST DAY
of the YEAR SALE!
Today, 8 a.m.-7 p.m.
Specsator's Summer Mark
Down will begin with Spring and
Summer merchandise reduced
30 to 40%
Our longest day BONUS: All regular
store merchandise reduced 25%
Wednesday Only
SPECTATOR'S 737 Massachusetts
843-1771
(1)
comfortable apartment living
Come by and view the newly remodeled 2BDR units at Southridge Plaza Apts. — From $310
• Water/Cable Paid • Swimming Pool
• 10 Month Lease • On KD Bus Route
• Laundry Facilities • Furnished or Unfurnished
1704 W. 24th 842-1160
(behind J.C. Penney)
(behind J.C. Penney)
BULLWINKLES
1344 Tennessee
Open All Summer!
Open Monday-Saturday 6p.m.-midnight
YOU'RE GONNA LOVE THIS SALE
L'Express
shirts
pants
shorts
$990
L'Express
shirts
pants
shorts
$990
swim-
suits
$1490
swim-
suits
$1490
YOU'LL LOVE THE SAVINGS!
HARPER'S
FASHIONS
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Local Briefs
Police officers found the man outside and placed him under arrest. During the arrest the controlled subterranean covered, a police spokesman said.
he began to strike her. She then called police.
WORKER INJURED: A man working on the new parking garage near Allen Field House was injured Monday, Lawrence police reported.
Clarence M. VanEaton, Belton Mo., was standing in front of a pipe
connected to a concrete pump that was blocked. When the line suddenly broke free, he was struck by a blast of gas and woke him up before he backwards onto the pavement.
He received scalp lacerations and was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital where he was treated and released.
BODY FOUND: The body of a man was found in the front seat of his car Monday evening in the 2900 block of East Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported.
According to police reports, the man was discovered by his ex-wife who had been in a nearby establishment. She told police that she had seen the man's car in a nearby parking lot and had gone over to talk to him when she discovered that he was dead.
The man had apparently been living out of his car for a short period of time, police said.
Police believe the man had been dead for several hours before he was discovered.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL. 99, NO. 149 (USPS 650-640)
PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
SUMMER WEEKLY EDITION
WEDNESDAY JUNE 28,1989
KU not alone in radio woes Other college stations seek out alternatives
by Charles Higginson Kansan staff writer
KJHK-FM is not the only college radio station to face financing problems and controversy about programming.
Stations on other campuses fulfill variety of missions and derive support in a variety of ways. They have access to a variety of solutions to their problems
KUNM-FM, a station in Albuquerque operated by the University of New Mexico, has suffered particularly hard times. Lymn Brown, station manager at the 13,000-watt station, said the station had been the subject of a lawsuit by listeners and protests by staff members.
KUNM, a public radio station,
serves a large regional area. Brown
listeners sited the station about
two years ago, claiming that a drastic
format change should not have
been made after a fund drive.
She said the station's management tried to prevent announcers from mentioning the pending change on the air. One announcer who did so was assaulted, during a broadcast, by the station manager, Brown said. She said the station's 80-member colleague staff quit in support of the lawsuit.
Brown said the format change replaced some of the station's freeform programming with jazz. In free-form programming announcers structure an entire program using music from a single artist, or use many kinds of music to pursue a theme such as a season or color.
"It can be very creative and very exciting, but it can be difficult to do if you're not well versed in many kinds of music," she said.
The station also broadcasts material from National Public Radio. Brown said most of the programming was college-oriented alternative rock.
In response to the lawsuit, KUUM's board of directors was expanded and restructured. Brown said. It now has 15 members, including faculty, students, staff and five members of the station's listener community.
The University of New Mexico, which holds the station's license from the Federal Communications Commission, has no academic broadcasting program. Brown said. The station has no direct academic function.
KUNM's total budget is $300,000 of which about $107,000 comes from the university's student government, Brown said.
John White, station manager of KUCB-FM in Boulder, Colo., said that the station broadcasts at 30 a.m. and 7 p.m. at Colorado College if its FTC license.
White said KUCB had an internship program through the university's communications studies department and was starting one for news through the journalism school. He said, however, that the station operated well, but not input and that no academic requirements existed for participation.
"We don't let non-students on," he said.
He characterized the station's programming as free-form alternative music. Most of its $5,000 annual budget was devoted by student government, and about $5,000 is generated by the station. White said the studentgov-
See UNIVERSITY, p. 6, col. 5
Edwin
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GREEN BEANS
Baked beans
Edwin C. Sample, Lawrence, endures the heat at the Lawrence Farmer's Market at 10th and Vermont streets. Sample was selling
yesterday. The market is open Tuesday and Thursday from 4 to
6:30 p.m. and Saturdays from 6:30 to 10:30 a.m.
Academics mission promoted by Big 8
Athletics not only bond, official says
The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Establishment of an organization to promote academic cooperation among schools in the Big Eight Conference was announced yesterday by University of Missouri President C. Peter Magrath and Haskell Monroe, chancellor of its Columbia campus
"For too long the Big Eight universities have been identified in the public mind with athletics, "Margrah's academic academies is our primary mission."
"Putting together an association of Big Eight Universities has long been an objective of mine, and I am enthusiastic that all of our eight universities, covering six states, will be even more closely aligned," he said. "We will mission regionally and nationally. And it will strengthen and intensify our collaborative efforts and programs."
The Association of Big Eight Universities, formed recently when Big Eight presidents and chancellors meet in Kansas City, elected Kansas State University President Jon Wefald as its chairman.
It takes the place of the Mid- America State Universities Association, which since 1960 has coordinated a limited number of joint
It's basically to help the Big Eight institutions collaborate with each other," said KU executive vice chancellor. "It simply continues the work of MASUA."
Judith Ramaley
KU executive vice chancellor
activities. A full-time executive director will be hired to develop cooperative programs and seek financial support.
"We are all public universities, and we are the predominant institutions of higher education in our respective states." Monroe said. "Our unification strengthens each university and increases the viability of the entire Midwest."
Members of the association are Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa State, Colorado, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
"It's basically to help the Big Eight institutions collaborate with each other," said Judith Ramaley, KU professor of history. "We continue the work of MASUA."
Kansan reporter Gwendolyn Parrett contributed information to this story.
Chinese in U.S. afraid to return home Arrests scare KU pro-democracy student and staff activists
by Dick Lipsey Kansan staff writer
In the aftermath of the Tiananmen Square massacre and the subsequent executions of pro-democracy activists in China, some Chinese students and staff at the University of Kansas won't be returning home for a while.
"Right now it's almost impossible for students to go back," said Deng Yanpei, Shenyang, China, graduate student, Monday. "Students who joined the protests feel that it's dangerous to go back now."
"If activists go back, there is no way others can help if they get in trouble," said Miao Desu, a scientist at the KU Museum of Natural History. "Personally. I would not want to take the chance. We didn't anticipate this. We were naive."
Wang, Mingjing, Nanjing, China graduate student, said he was less concerned about danger to students still in the United States.
"It still too early for the government to take action against the students here," Ming said. "They can't do anything to affect activities and students in China, it will be very hard. They are followed and watched."
Miao said the Chinese government was probably trying to gain information about the activities of Chinese students here.
"They were always prepared to keep track of who did what," he said. "I would not be surprised if someone here in Lawrence is doing that. With over 160 students and visiting scholars here, you never know if even one guy reports or collects newspaper clippings.
"We are not sure if we have such people around here, but there is solid evidence that demonstrations in the big cities were closely watched," Miao said. "Some people took two or three hours of film of individual demonstrators."
"The government may have tapes, and pictures and articles that have been published," Wang said. "These
may be used to talk to our relatives at home, to warn us to be quiet."
Wang said the turmoil in China was part of a larger pattern.
"There is a proverb in China since the Communists took power," he said. "The proverb says 'one turmoil one revolution.' The expression followed by repression Now there will be a general purge of Communist Party members sympathetic to the students. How far can the power it will be carried out is not certain.
"Unless there are political guarantees that opposition can be tolerated I couldn't go back," he said.
Police seeking man for questioning
by Heather Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Detective Sgt. Jeffery Dysart, Overland Park police department, said yesterday that Richard Grissom, 28, was the man who fled from Lawrence police through the back window of an apartment in the 2500 block of West Sixth Street Sunday night.
Overland Park police have identified and want to question a man in connection with the disappearance of a KU graduate whose car was discovered in the parking lot of a Lawrence apartment complex.
The graduate, Joan Marie Butler,
24, was last seen June 18 after she left
a friend's house near the Country
Club Plaza.
Police discovered Grissom when a local resident reported that Butler's car was in the apartment complex parking lot.
When officers arrived to check the car, Grisom came out of an apartment and got into the car. Police approached Grisom as he returned to the apartment, but he slammed the apartment door in their face and
escaped through a back window
Butler, a KU graduate, is employed by a Kansas City advertising agency. The agency has been recruited to serve as the release about her disappearance.
Tim Benttison, associate professor of journalism, and one of Butler's former instructors described her as reasonable and serious-minded student.
"If there were anyone intent on getting a job in the advertising business, it was Joan Butler," he said. "She was convinced that advertising
was going to be her cup of tea
"I'm horrified to think what might have happened to her."
Gt. Dytt described Grissom as a black male, 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing about 185 pounds. He is thought to be driving a brown two-door Toyota or Mazda. He has used diatoms of Richard Lee and Riaki Cho.
Anyone with information about Grissom's whereabouts should call (913) 381-352. Ext. 530.
Student receives full biomedical scholarship
When Tu Bui reached his senior year at Shawnee Mission Northwest High School, he was told he couldn't take any more biology courses.
by Gary Patton Kansan staff writer
That is because he had completed them all by the end of his junior year.
then all by the end of his junior year. When Bui enters the University of Kansas next fall, he will have plenty of biology classes to keep him busy. He is one of two incoming freshmen who has received full, four-year scholarships for studies in biomedical sciences.
The scholarships are part of an undergraduate science program for minorities and women that will be paid for by a $500,000 grant KU received Friday. The money is the first installment of a $1 million grant Howard Hughes Medical Institute to be used over the next five years.
"This grant will increase the pool of people working in the sciences and will have a major impact on KU for years to come," said Michael S. Gaines, professor of systematics and ecology and the grant's project director. "Getting this grant is the most significant contribution I have made in my 19 years at KU."
The KU grant is part of $61 million the Maryland-based institute will distribute to 51 U.S. universities. The purpose is to increase the number of students in research and teaching careers in the medical and biological sciences.
Bul, 18, whose family immigrated to Shawnee from Vietnam in 1975 and gained U.S. citizenship in 1981, said she would not join two brothers and a sister at
KU.
"Tu is the smartest of the bunch," "Quen Buj, 23, a senior majoring in computer science." "But I like to see some strange theme influence on his science studies."
Tu followed in his oldest brother's footsteps as a student researcher. Both won awards in high school for Greater Kansas City Science Fair projects that they had worked on at University of Kansas Medical Center.
Gaines said the Hughes grant would pav for similar apprenticeship
programs that would allow high school students to conduct laboratory research with KU professors.
The grant also will pay for two outreach programs designed to attract Kansas and Missouri high school students.
The enrichment program will bring high school students entering their senior year to KU for four weeks of summer mini-courses. Gaines said the summer program, which begins in 1990, would help bridge the gap between high school and university life and would
improve student study skills in English, math and biology.
The discovery program will pay for overnight campus visits by students and their parents to explore KU and the biomedical science buildings.
Gaines said $70,000 of the grant would be used to attract prominent women and minority biomedical professionals as guest speakers.
"We want highly visible professionals who will interact with students and serve as role models." Gaines said.
Wednesday, June 28, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Saturday Sunny and warm, slight chance of precipitation. High 95, Low 75.
Sunday - Sunny and warm with chance of thunderstorms developing in the late afternoon or evening. High 94, Low 75.
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
SUA movie
Lawrence Bicycle Club
SGA movie
"Stand by me." Woodruff Auditorium, 7 p.m. $1.50
- Meet at South Park gazebo, 6:30 p.m. Destination varies, frequent trips include Lakeview, Wells Overlook, Lawrence airport or just around town.
Distance is 8-15 miles.
THURSDAY
Brown bag concert
Computer seminar
Brown bag with SMART software. Noon. Computer Center auditorium
Tommy Johnson. Noon. Ninth and Massachusetts streets.
Farmers' Market
- The market is open from 4 to 6:30 p.m. at the city parking lot in the 1000 block of Vermont Street.
FRIDAY
SUA movie
"Stand by Me." Woodruff Auditorium, 7 p.m. $1.50
Midwestern Music Camp jazz concert
Midwestern Music Camp jazz concert
Sawhorth outflow Hall, Murpury, Hally. 7 p.m.
SATURDAY
Independence Days
Mophepsis Day
10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Burcham Park, Second and Indiana streets.
Exhibit
- "Quilt Kaw Valley." Through July 9. Watkins Community Museum.
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Ride to Baldwin. Meet at South Park gazebo at 8:30 a.m. 30 miles, 12-15 mph
Midwestern Music Camp senior high concerts
Choir and orchestra 11 a.m., bands 2 p.m. Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall.
SUNDAY
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Scenic tours of Douglas County and surrounding areas. Meet at South Park gazeebo. 8:30 a.m.-30:60 miles, 12-15 mph.
Independence Days
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Burcham Park, Second and Indiana streets.
TUESDAY
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Lawrence Bicycle Club
Training ride for those interested in learning the basics of road racing techniques. Meet in front of Strong Hall, 6:30 p.m. Destination varies. 30-40 miles. 18 mph minimum.
Independence Days
Independence Days
6-10 p.m. Burcham Park. Fireworks.
Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 28, 1989
3
Missouri St
10TH Street
STOP
The sidewalk at 10th and Missouri streets has been condemned by the Lawrence City Commission.
Hazardous sidewalks to be fixed
dy Susan Newburger
Kansan staff writer
Their backs have felt the footsteps of thousands of KU students trudging up Mount Oread to class. Their faces are cracked from exposure to the sourcing sun and snowy drifts.
But now these sidewalks wear the fluorescent pink paint mark of the condemned.
Segmentes of 92 sidewalks lining the Mount Oread Neighborhood were condemned by the Lawrence City Commission last night during its regular meeting at City Hall.
"Age and time have taken their toll," said Terese A. Gardner, city engineer. Neglect and last summer's drought have also caused the sewage system to overflow weepes under sliding mud or overgrowing weeds.
The worst problem is when bricks are missing. I can remember when the sidewalks were all brick.
'T
Lauralyn Bodle
The sidewalks are in an area bordered by Ninth and 16th streets to the north and south. East and west boundaries are Massachusetts and Missouri streets.
Property owners will be officially informed by letter if their sidewalks are inadequate or poor.
Owners will then have 60 days to repair the marked segments. After Sept. 1, the city may contract for the repairs and charge the owner a special assessment.
Sue Comfort, treasurer of the association, said that members walked the area and made up a fence.
The Oread Neighborhood Association filed the complaints, which were then investigated by the Police Department.
"We have so much foot traffic," she said. "It can get rather dangerous at night."
The Lawrence city code defines hazards as a "plank, brick, stone or segment of sidewalk to be raised above the established level of such sidewalk more than 1/2 inch, in any manner which might catch the foot of a pedestrian, or to permit any holes or depressions to occur in the sidewalk in which a pedestrian might step or catch his foot in a manner to cause injury."
"I walk four miles every day." Comfort said. "I have fallen on the walks."
The Oread neighborhood, which is north and east of the KU campus, is a popular home for students, who live in greek houses, apartments and rental homes.
Laurainyl Bodie, Lawrence senior, lives at 1336 Tennessee. She walks to campus over sidewalks which are cracked, sloping and mud-covered.
"The worst problem is when bricks are missing," she said. "I grew up in this neighborhood, and I can remember when the sidewalks were brick, I think it would be criminal to take the brick."
Cost of repairs will vary according to the type of materials used and the area of sidewalk to be repaired. The owner may repair the sidewalk himself or hire a contractor.
The commission has directed landowners to reconstruct the brick sidewalks in order to "preserve the integrity and character of the neighborhood."
Property owners may apply for financial help through the Community Development Department. A block grant will pay some or all of the special assessment.
Commission plays peacemaking role
Ordinance goes, contract conflict grows
by Susan Newburger
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence City Commission played the role of peacemaker at last night's meeting, resolving two longstanding conflicts, one with the Business Council and another with the Lawrence firefighters. Its decisions did not place all sides.
The commissioners voted to abolish the troubled BID. But City Manager Bufford Watson said the city had made the tough decision to collect ball of the 1994 assessment.
BID was a group of downtown business owners formed by a February 1987 ordinance. The ordinance levied annual fees to pay for coordinated non-retail promotions, programs and physical improvements.
The 11 business owners who have not paid their 1988 dues are currently litigants in a case with the city.
Watson said he thought the abolition of BID would end the conflict.
"Some have indicated they will pay if BJD is abolished." he said.
The commission's acceptance of the city's proposed Memorandum of Understanding with the International Association of Firefighters Local 1598 was the commission's controversial decision.
Proposals had been submitted by both the firefighters and the city. The commission was forced to accept one of the proposals. The stalled after three months of talks.
The city proposal offered a two year contract, with a 4 percent salary increase the first year and a 3 percent the second.
The firefighters wanted the department to abolish the extra board, a pool of substitute firefighters. They also asked for a one-year agreement.
Watson disagreed.
Lawrence firefighter Bob Kent said that a multi-year agreement was illegal under the Kansas Cash Basis Law. The law states that it is unlawful to budget for more than one year.
"Our feeling is that when the president of the firefighter's union and the mayor sign, we have an attorney says we have a contract.
"The accepted proposal) will continue the existing memorandum on a sound professional level." said RAY NICHOLS and chief negotiator for the city.
Russell Brickell, president of the firefighter's union, said he might not sign the agreement.
"I need to talk to our lawer and the attorney general before signing to see if the resolution is binding," Brickell said.
In additional action, the commission denied a request to attach an elevated deck to Pizazz, a nightclub at 901 Missouli St.
Mayor Bob Schumm said he thought the deck would be damaging to the neighborhood.
Regents to discuss intra-state program
Kansan staff writer
by Laura Graham Kenyan staff writer
The program allows dental students from Kansas to pay in-state tuition at the University of Missouri in Kansas City. In return, architecture and architectural engineering students from Missouri pay in-state tuition at the University of Kansas and Kansas State University.
Among items on the agenda for the Board of Regents meeting at 9 a.m. tomorrow in Topeka is the discussion of the new dental structure and dental reciprocity program.
An agreement to continue the program for three more years was approved by the Regents at its March 16 meeting.
Koplik said Kansas was losing about $1 million each year, and the Regents hoped to "find ways to reduce the imbalance."
"It shouldn't cost Kansans to educate Missourians," Martine Hammond, director of academic affairs at the University of Monad said the Regents had looked
1.
At that time, Stanley Koplik, executive officer of the Regents, said more Missouri architecture students were taking advantage of the program than were Kansas dental students.
shouldn't cost Kansans to educate Missourians.' — Martine Hammond director of academic affairs, Board of Records
Regents
into the issue and would report its findings tomorrow.
Other matters on tomorrow's agenda include:
■ Consideration of operating budget requests of the Regents institutions for fiscal year 1991.
A proposal to merge engineering technology programs at Kansas State University and the Kansas College of Technology
■ Review of a new degree proposal by Wichita State University. The degree to be discussed is a Ph.D in Psychology, Human Factors.
**Approval of recipients for the 1989-90 Paul Douglas Teacher Scholarship Program. The program, which began in 1986, encourages outstanding high school students to pursue teaching careers through the provision of renewable annual scholarships of $5,000.
Police catch man after chase
by Heather L. Anderson Kansan staff writer
When Mike Long picked up his application to become a member of the Lawrence Police Department Monday morning, he didn't expect to be helping officers apprehend a suspect later that afternoon.
"I've been trying to get on with the Overland Park park police and the Lawrence police." Long said of the town, "I was always around as a witness, but when the
Long helped police catch a man who ran from them after they surrounded his car.
guy started to run, I chased him."
According to police reports, the chase began when a police officer saw a car speeding out of the First Avenue parking bank of 1807. 183rd St.
The officer, suspecting a possible bank robbery, followed the car,
The driver of the car ignored attempts by the officer to pull him over. At the corner of 23rd and Alabama streets, he turned left into a parking lot and continued west on 23rd Street until he reached waistway By. That time, police had surrounded his car, forcing him to ston
In a get-away attempt, the driver
While an officer was placing the driver under arrest, a struggle ensued and the driver of the car fled on foot.
Police and other witnesses began to chase the driver until he was caught.
which was headed east on 23rd Street.
"This guy got out of his car and started to fight with the police officer
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Wednesday, June 28, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Bias demon haunts Court; new laws needed in fight
Sometimes your past comes back to haunt you.
One of this country's meanest old ghosts is racism, and one of its effects is that minorities often suffer memeaning treatment, racial slurs and even harassment on the job.
factual said a slave must endure the job. And so far, the strongest legal defense against such treatment in cases involving private parties and institutions has been another old ghost: the Civil Rights Act of 1866.
In a 1976 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the 1866 law could be used to file lawsuits in private discrimination cases. The court renamed the law; it is now referred to as Section 1981 of the U.S. Code.
In 1982, a black woman who worked as a teller in a North Carolina credit union sued her employer for racial harassment under Section 1981. The suit alleged that, in addition to being subjected to racial slurs and treated differently from white workers by being given janitorial tasks, she was denied routine wage increases and training for advancement.
And that leads us to last week's ruling.
In 5-4 decision, the Court ruled that although the law still applied to discrimination suffered during the hiring process, it could no longer be used as a vehicle for filing discrimination lawsuits after hiring.
But even this week in Kansas City, Mo., community leaders are concerned that institutional racism may be taking hold. A school official who allegedly made a racial slur regarding another administrator may be promoted, and this would create the ideal situation for both subtle and blatant discrimination.
How soon we will see the effects of this ruling is anybody's guess.
The real tragedy, however, is that the legal system and even civil rights activists have made no real push for modern legislation that addresses the issue of on-the-job racial harassment. It is pitiful that victims of discrimination are forced to rely on a law that dates back nearly to the time when blacks were held as slaves.
The easiest thing to do now is blame the Court for imposing limits on the application of this old law that not only are unfair to minorities but are a step backward in the movement toward truly equal rights and treatment.
As United States citizens we value our freedom, or at least we say we do. But ever since the Supreme Court decided last week that flag desecration is protected under the First Amendment, a lot of people seem willing to give up part of their freedom for mandatory flag worship.
If new legislation is passed, we may never see the adverse effects that many expect. And we can begin to put our past behind us.
Kirsten Bosnak for the editorial board
Flag burning protects rights
Granted, the flag is a revered symbol in our country. Most U.S. citizens would never even consider burning it in an attempt to make a political statement. However, there are some people who see the burning of the flag as an outlet for expression. Gregory Lee Johnson is one such person.
Johnson, who said he does not consider himself an American, was arrested for burning a flag at a demonstration during the 1984 Republican National Convention. In Texas vs. Gregory Lee Johnson, the Supreme Court voted 5-4 to throw out his conviction.
Offensive as it may be, flag burners share the same protection under the First Amendment as any U.S. citizen.
By protecting these people, the amendment protects us. For we are the people who strive to make this country a better place by exercising our constitutional freedoms.
It's a shame that there are people who value the liberties given them under our U.S. Constitution so little that they would even consider defacing a symbol of that Constitution. But we must recognize the right to speak freely and openly as long as that speech does not pose a "clear and present danger" to public safety.
Respect for the flag cannot be mandated. And that is exactly what the Senate is trying to do through legislation it passed Friday. Don't the senators know respect is something that must be earned? Respect for the flag was earned more than 200 years ago by our forefathers and has since been an inborn characteristic for most of us, because we see it as a symbol of our freedom. If we are forced to treat the flag in a sacred manner, the flag would no longer be a symbol of our liberty, but a symbol of our hypocrisy.
The patriotism of the five justices voting in favor of our First Amendment rights should not be questioned. Their decision was a defense against suppression. Their decision is a continuation of the rights symbolized by the U.S. flag.
Kathy Walsh for the editorial board
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George Bush on South Africa
Mr. Harvey
KliiND.
A
THE WORLD IS GOING TO FAIL IN THE WORLD.
Shooting down gun control
Sell armaments to the NRA, let hobbyists handle defense
Here's a new idea for resolving the gun-control impasse. It mates two already powerful influ ences upon Congress.
it mates two already powerful influences upon Congress, the National Rifle Association and the taxpayers' rebellion, in a monolithic super-jobby, a jobby for the 1990s.
Plus, it advances the Reagan-era trends toward deregulation of industry and the transfer of responsibility for the nation's welfare to the private sector, namely the sporting goods indust-
If nothing else, it may help resolve the debate over whether the U.S. Constitution guarantees the right of individuals to possess firearms. Let's start there.
Gun-control opponents like to invoke the Second Amendment to the Constitution, which states, "A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed. However, the Army must also be regulated. The business about a 'well-regulated Militia' is dismissed as a peculiarity of colonial American speech."
On the other hand, gun-control proponents argue that the present-day branches of the armed forces satisfy the intent of the amendment. They hold that the first part about the "well regulated militia" conditions the putative rights of individuals to amass personal arsenals.
Really, this semantic morass is easy to clear up. Try inserting some other content into the first part of the amendment. How about: "A diet high in Fiber and low in Saturated Fatts, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed."
See? It's a non-sequitur, even to a Guns and Ammo subscriber. But it's nonsensical only because the form of the sentence logically entails one assertion in the other.
P. B. KISHEKOVA
Here's a better example, inserting the contrary: "A well regulated militia, being inimical to the security of a Free State, the right of the people to govern themselves," or so much for the question of whether the authors of the
Stuart Beals
Staff columnist
Constitution intended to make the personal possession of guns a free-standing right.
So, how do we attach the right to have your own gun directly to the necessity of maintaining a national defense, and keep everybody happy? We regenerate national defense, that's how.
We start by selling the materiel of the armed forces to NRA members and hunting clubs and whoever else wants to get into the hobby of defending the country. The capital and maintenance costs will be borne by the enthusiasts and those who want to help them fund the tax burden on everyone. The hobbyists, in turn, can sell their services to others of us as well. .armed services.
Arms procurement scandals, influence peddling and conflicts of interest will become meaningless terms in a wide-open, laissez-faire market. Weapons smuggled will be aimed at getting guns and bombs, like cigarettes and hooth, to under-aged kids.
Competition among manufacturers and vendors is certain to extend overseas, and our relative economic status may improve as other nations develop their machines in order to arm us. rather than the converse.
we a mantain the jobs of career militaries by getting them to administer the refresher courses required for renewal of one's license to "own and operate Engines of War." Existing ordinances prohibiting launches and explosions within city limits and during certain hours at night (unless, of course, there's a forecast of incoming warheads) should suffice to preserve the general tranquility.
What's in it for you would-be gun and missile owners? The hotter toys that money can buy are now available.
coupons and read the reviews in consumer magazines. You've got to keep up with the neighbors on this, you can let those turkeys with the bratty kids control the land, sea and air.
Just a few million of you could unload your bass boats and pick up a fully-equipped used nuclear-powered aircraft carrier complete with escort vessels. Be sure to check out the "fish-finder" that locates spy submarines along with those sneaky lake trout. Or, you could get together and order one of those low-rider B-2 Stealth Bombers and cruise Eastern Europe on a Saturday night.
Some significant economies of scale can still be obtained. For example, plutonium production can still be subsidized by the large direct-marketing pool of electric power plant customers. This could cost-efficient thermonuclear devices within the budget of a medium-sized city. With blast overpressures exceeding ten pounds to the square inch at a radius of two miles from the hypocenter, the municipal July 4 fireworks display will really make an impression.
Others of you are getting restless, I'm sure. You may ask how this will solve the domestic violence crisis. Hang in there with me, and let's give it a try. It will not usually to restrict ownership of internal machinery.
Boys will be boys, after all. My hunch is that weekend hi-jinx with Trident submarines in a world that's on Launch-Alert status will become such a nuisance that even the most gung-ho defense club members will have second thoughts about that Second Amendment mandate.
Then we'll have a rational base for a change Section One of the 21st Amendment states: "The 18th article of amendment to the Constitution of the United States is hereby repeated." Prohibition didn't work after getting a fair test, so we got rid of it — just like that.
Come to think of it, hasn't the Second Amendment gotten a fair test? Perhaps its time to renovate it. If a majority of us can't agree on how to do that, let's scrap it and start over.
Stuart Beals is a Lawrence graduate student.
K·A·N·S·A·N
MAILBOX
Editorial 'slander'
I am writing to protest your choice to publish the quotation from the Philadelphia Daily News on June 21. To try to derive humor from the recent death of the leader of one country and to imply impatience for the death of two others seems of questionable taste even for macabre humor. For the newspaper of a university with many foreign students, I would expect better. To call Khomeini a "wazoo" and to suggest that he should be sent to the many not only in Iran but throughout the Middle East, who saw him as a religious leader . . . some of whom may pay tuition to KU. The editorial page might be used to discuss political issues than to slander the dead and dying.
Linda Donan Graham, Mo., graduate student Say no to China
Linda Donan
During the past month the American public has seen on television a tyrannical regime in China handling a protest of college students by opening fire on them in a great square in Beijing, China. According to Red Cross reports, 3,600 students were killed in a matter of minutes and about 60,000 were wounded in probably one of the worst massacres in the history of mankind.
This is the same communist China that the United States government and State Department have declared a "most favored nation" from the point of view of trade, and to whom we are now sending sophisticated military equipment to make air force flight aircraft more efficient in their mission as a communist military power.
Not only should the U.S. government not have anything to do with a diabolic government like this, but the American people should express their disgust and revulsion by boycott products from the Communist People's Republic of China. They could start by not buying any new goods for sale from many local stores, including the U.S. Military Post Exchanges, and many of the large chain stores.
Another thing we can do is boycott Chinese fireworks this coming Fourth of July. This is the only message that these people will understand. If we continue to support the economy of a communist nation like China or any other communist nation, it will likely lead to Communism succeed. We should not forget that the communists have sworn to bury us, and they have not deviated for a moment from that oath.
E.A. Munyan
Overland Park resident
Natural revolution
About eight years ago, when I was a college student in China, someone raised a question during a weekly discussion session with my teacher. Party to keep our brains washed, but they often out to be
brainstorming sessions or tea parties on many campuses) during which we talked about which radio station was more popular. The choices were the Voice of America or China Central Radio, a propaganda machine noted for its loudspeaker broadcasts along the time of the war. Someone immediately chose VOA, "because no one believes in our own radio anymore." Trying to make the debate more interesting, I pointed out that the majority of the population (70 to 80 percent are farmers) simply could not afford the luxury of the short wave radio necessary to receive VOA broadcasts. Looking back, I realize that it was indeed then, at the time of World War II, the policy adopted by Deng Xiaoping, that people started to turn their backs toward the government. They did not need a radio to make up their minds.
Deng is shooting his own foot! Many people here regard him as a hero in liberating the economic energy of the Chinese people by his reforms. One often misses a critical point on why Deng opened the forbidden gate of China: our country was on the verge of bankruptcy and it did not take even the slightest wisdom to abandon old Maoism — a failed centrally controlled economy.
Most people in China, including Deng, were able to realize that the cause of cancer was cultural revolution, a ten-year turmoil that left the country bankrupt. Only a few courageous young men put out large-character posters on a street wall in Beijing demanding the fifth modernization; a democratic system. It was easily put down by Deng because the rest of the country did not understand what
democracy meant
10day, seeing that thousands of our country's best and brightest fell in front of Deng's machine guns and that hundreds of factory workers stood hard-in-hand with the students, citizens in tens of cities, millions of people in together have made the land in together have made the land in longer, with a single and most powerful word in democracy: "No!" There is no longer any doubt: this is not the cultural revolution that was provoked by Mao some 20 years ago to keep himself in power. That was a mass movement迪拜let its people see the outside world and that was fueled by almost religious frenzy poisoned by our dictators.
This time, it is a spontaneous, grass-rooted and conscientious desire from the educated, the urban labor force and the people to taste the forbidden fruit — freedom to control their own lives.
I agree that what happened on June 4 in the heart and artery of the city of Beijing, its square and avenue, was only a moment of nightmare before a dream comes true; a sudden contraction because there is no blood may be more tears and blood, or a period of uncertainty and hesitation. As the world watches that young man shouting in front of some 30 tanks, my heart goes out to him. The course of the people in Tiananmen square for freedom and democracy in China has been the common goal of the whole world. As an old proverb of my culture goes: nothing can resist a common will.
---
Wang Mingjing Nanjing, China, graduate student
5
Researcher: Judge incentives on effects
by Angela Howell Kansan staff writer
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday June 28, 1989
When cities want to bolster their economies they often use tax breaks to attract new business. But, according to a KU economics researcher, the use of tax breaks can be counterproductive.
Tax breaks should be judged on their direct effects rather than speculation on potential indirect effects, said David Burress, assistant professor of tax law and research associate at the Institute of Public Policy and Business Research.
A local cost-benefit study should be completed before a city grants tax abatements, he said. Tax abatements are cuts in property and other taxes.
"How is it going to affect government? How will it affect the average citizen? How will it affect the citizens that are better off and how will it
affect the worst-off citizen? These all should be taken into consideration." Burress said.
"They have an ad hoc approach now," Burress said. "But they're moving toward a more systemized environment of abatements and I encourage that."
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said the city granted two types of concessions: tax abatements and industrial revenue bonds.
Industrial revenue bonds are often less expensive for businesses, Wildgen said. But because of new restrictions on industrial revenue bonds, the city might abandon them within a year, he said.
Bill Martin, economic development director of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, said Lawrence gives 50
The most recent abatement was granted to Standard Liquor Corp. in March.
percent property tax abatements to businesses.
"A good quality company will be willing to pay its fair share," Martin said.
Instead, cities often make their decisions on whether to aid a business based on economic multipliers.
Burress said cities should consider such direct effects as the number of jobs a new business would create or the effects it would have on existing businesses. Cities also should consider possible costs of street, sidewalk and sewer construction and police protection, he said.
Multipliers are figures that translate a known direct effect of a new business, such as the number of jobs required, into an estimated total impact.
Burress gave the example of a new manufacturing plant providing 100 jobs, indirectly leading to 60 more jobs in the local service sector. The total impact would be 160 jobs and the multiplier would be 1.6.
Economic multipliers could be used to justify public concessions such as land acquisitions, new roads and sewers, job training programs, subsidized loans and tax incentives, Burress said.
Martin said Lawrence does not give away land, water, sewers, streets or subsidize loans for business. Those owners are not the final word, he said.
"These economic impact things are kind of nebulous." Martin said. "There's such a wide range of studies, it's hard to pin anything down. I look for a quality company that's going to provide new jobs."
Minority chief outlines plans
He may be new to his job, but Marshall Jackson knows what he wants to accomplish.
by Dick Lipsey Kansan staff writer
'My role is to support and help in recruiting, retaining and
C
JACKSON
graduating minority students," he said in an interview last week. "Whatever is necessary to help students graduate by providing a supportive atmosphere — that's our purpose."
Jackson has been interim director of the office of minority affairs since
"I hope to hire a secretary soon, and an associate director and assistant director this summer," Jackson said. "I don't want to rush it. I want people with a commitment to minority students and education."
June 19. He said his first challenge was to fill out his staff.
Jackson is reviewing the current minority support programs on campus.
"I'm taking a hard look at existing programs," he said. "There is no point in duplicating programs other offices are doing. I want to assist students in identifying existing programs we can help, I like to provide support to them."
Jackson said his office could help to coordinate the various programs for minorities.
"I'd like to see this office be a clearinghouse for information on minority programs." he said. "Then someone could come here for information about campus programs and get it. There are a lot of programs, but no one has looked at the overall picture and tried to coordinate it."
Jackson said the office of minority affairs also had a more subtle role.
"This office can help bring the institution to the point where it really accepts diversity," he said. "I am really happy that we are able to contribute on cultural diversity. New students and transfers probably need to be more aware of
it."
Jackson said support and orientation programs should be conducted throughout the school year, rather than during the summer.
"His years of experience make him able to step in and become immediately effective," she said yesterday. "He will be a valuable colleague."
Caryl K. Smith, dean of student life, said Jackson's knowledge of the University and Lawrence would be helpful.
Jackson has bachelor's and master's degrees from KU and in the past 17 years has served as assistant director of admissions, acting director of admissions and acting director of the KU placement center.
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6
Wednesday, June 28, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
KJHK board, StudEx compromise
by Charles Higginson Kansan staff writer
The final link apparently has been forged in an agreement that will allow continued Student Senate financing of radio station JKH-FM.
The KJHK board of directors last night voiced approval of changes in its own structure and in policies regarding student participation at the station. The chairman was part of the commission hammered out last week by Senate leaders and representatives of the radio-television faculty.
"It was to the credit of the Student Senate leadership that the door was opened and a case made that the station could comply with our request," said Mike Kautsch, dean of the School of Journalism and JKHK board chairman.
Under the new terms, the student station manager will become an ex-officio, non-voting member of the board. A representative appointed by the Senate will replace the manager as a voting member. This change requires an amendment to the KJHK constitution.
constitution The board cannot propose and adopt constitutional amendments in
une same meeting, so it will meet again at 2:15 p.m. today to actform a board members' committee favorably abovethe amendment at last night's meeting.
"It appears this will be a unanimous vote in favor of the change," Kautsch said.
Mike Ulin, "KIJH station manager, said, "I personally relish the opportunity to steer out of the spotlight. I want a pure ombudman for the station."
The agreement was announced in a press conference Monday. The Student Senate Executive Committee accepted it Monday night.
"I'm completely happy and I hope the faculty is too," said William Sanders, a conference chairman, at a conference, endorsers helped develop the agreement.
It modifies policies proposed June 13 by the journalism faculty, which administers the station. Senate financing totaling $36,000 had been appurposed apparent conflict between Senate rules and the proposed policies.
prior experience.
Senate rules prohibit organizations with a primarily academic purpose or with academic requirements for
participation from receiving Senate money.
"At this point, I think we've achieved a strong compromise," said Aaron Ritmaster, off-campus senator, during Monday's StudEx meeting.
Currently, the board is composed of Ulin. Kautsch; Senate representative Dawn Abrahamson; Janet Ciniella, radio-telence senior; elected by students in that sequence; John Katich, assistant professor of radio-telence; and Max Utlser, associate professor and chairman of radio-telence and interim KJHK faculty adviser.
The board last night unanimously accepted an element of the agreement that would limit station staff to three semesters in a single job.
The guidelines established June 13 required students who sought KJHK management positions to have taken, or to be enrolled in, journalism management courses. A provision of the guidelines stipulated that all students who have completed at least one semester of "high-quality work" at the station to be considered for
management positions
In accepting the agreement, StudEx affirmed that a part of the faculty guidelines, a participation contract for non-journalism students, satisfied its concerns about broader student involvement in the station.
Radio-TV faculty welcomed that affirmation.
"What makes the difference to me is recognizing that the participation contract should be drafted to professional standards, job codes, or radio-television, said Monday. "That's a key to the whole operation."
The agreement also reiterated the importance of maintaining the station of Federal Communications Commission license and its function as an academic laboratory for broadcasting students.
Nonetheless, some StudEx members Monday questioned the propriety of Senate's financing academic activities.
"To the Student Senate, this is not an academic lab," said Bill Muir, graduate senator. "It's a student radio station."
University stations face similar crises
- Continued from p. 1
ernment allocation had been cut recently.
"Student government had a personal problem with our past station manager." he said.
KRN-MF in Lincoln, Neb., has avoided that possibility by avoiding that source of money. Larry Walkin, chairman of the University of Nebraska's a broadcasting department, said, the station was an academic laboratory and relied entirely on funds from academic departments.
"Our mission, basically, is that we operate very much in an experimental teaching mode," Walkin said. "We deliver news and information function."
Walklin said KRNU had broadcast live coverage of courtroom proceedings and meetings of the state legislature and board of regents. The station also carries entertainment programming.
programme. He said KRNU had academic requirements for participation, and that students in news reporting and
other broadcasting classes were required to work there.
"When you are dealing with students you are in an instructional mode," he said. "It's like a giant classroom."
Walkin said the university held KRNU's FCC license. The station has a full-time faculty advisor with no other responsibilities, and only students are allowed on the air, he said. KCOU-FM in Columbia, Mo., operates with money from the university's music director, said the University of Missouri's residence hall association held the station's license.
The 430-watt station's budget comes mainly from residence hall fees, he said, but student government, sponsor underwriting and law firms, also contribute. He said student government was a reliable source.
"Technically, we're owned by the students," he said.
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Nation/World
7
Spill cleanups, inquiries begin
The Associated Press
CLAYMONT, Del. — A prematurely dropped anchor may have contributed to an 800,000-gallon oil spill in the Delaware River that had hundreds of workers today gathering mechanical skimmers could suck up.
The spill was one of three that occurred in U.S. waters during the weekend.
More civil and military workers were pressed into service to clean up the Delaware oil, and the state sued in federal court to recover damages from the owners of the Uruguayan tanker that caused the spill.
In Texas, tropical storm Allison
slowed the cleanup of a 240,000-gallon spill in the Houston Ship Channel. Off Rhode Island, most of the estimated 420,000 gallons of oil from a grounded Greek tanker no longer threatened the shore
About 450 Delaware National Guardmen and 255 workers hired by a private contractor worked from Monday to Friday. Delaware shoreline early Monday.
"Our staff was here until 9 o'clock Monday night calling in people," said Nana Cunane, president of a private cleanup company. The crew of boat owners to join our boats out there. Every day, more and more people are coming."
Coast Guard hearings were to begin yesterday on the spills off Rhode Island and Texas, which resulted from a collision of the tanker Rachel-B and an oil barge owned by Coastal Towing C. of Houston.
Among those scheduled to testify in Providence, R.I., was Capt. David G. Leonard, a harbor pilot who The New York Times said tried to warn the tanker it was heading into dangerous waters.
Coast Guard officials said there was no evidence of mechanical failure and that the ship's captain, Iakovos Georgeudis, said he had erred in plotting the ship's course and by not having a pilot guide the ship at
the mouth of Narragansett Bay
Along 20 miles of the Delaware River, workers in boats scooped up blobs of congealed oil larger than the goo into large trash bags.
Federal officials said shoreline damage in Pennsylvania and Delaware was light because the oil congealed instead of spreading across the surface of the water. Winds and tides spared New Jersey.
Delaware Fish and Wildlife officials found about 25 Canada geese soaked with oil on milk near the mouth of the Christiana River, which feeds the Davenport River, Coast Guard spokesman David Oney said.
BEJING — Nine more people were put on trial for rioting during the suppression of China's democracy movement, including one accused of disemboweling a dead official media reported yesterday.
Nine put to trial in China reform
China's legislature is scheduled to convene tomorrow to endorse the hard line against dissent that began with the army assault June 3-4 on pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square. More than a dozen of those who have and 27 have been executed since the riot The 13 Americans ordered out of the
The Associated Press
Among the nine defenders in the trial, which began Monday in Beijing, was Zhang Jianzhong, 28. The Beijing Daily said he took part in the demonstrations since April 17, and when the army moved in, silk a dead soldier's stomach opened and the officers' claims paid charges against the other defendants included arson, robbery, theft and inciting others to riot.
country have prepared to leave.
U. S. officials said China asked the United States to delay the start of a Peace Corps program, which was the latest cultural exchange to be threatened or suspended because of the crackdown.
Civil rights promoters call for greater efforts
News Briefs
CHICAGO — Civil rights leaders urged the Bush administration yesterday to devote as much attention to overturning Supreme Court decisions on job discrimination as repealing the high court sanction of flag burning.
"We are asking this administration to express the same reverence for equal employment opportunity." Nancy Creater, a Chicago employment discrimination activist told Attorney General Dick Thornburgh after his speech to the annual convention of Operation PUSH.
The Supreme Court has invalidated minority set-aside quotas for local
public works contracts, made it harder for plaintiffs to prove employment discrimination and gave white males the right to challenge affirmative action plans previously approved by courts.
"This administration is fully committed to eliminating every form of discrimination in our society and will zealously enforce every law of the land, not as an adversary, but as an ally," Thornburgh said.
CONVICTION OVERTURNED: A federal appeals court day overturned the conviction of former Reagan administration aide Lyn Nofziger for illegally lobbying his White House colleagues months after he left the government.
In a 2-1 ruling, the appeals court said Nofitzger's 1884 conviction must "be set aside because it is not based on a finding that he had one of each element of the offenses" he was accused of committing.
"You are free to question the integrity and commitment of the president and the attorney general." Thornburgh said.
"The government was required to prove that he had knowledge of all of the facts making his conduct criminal," U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Jude Buckley said in his ruling Buckley argued Judge Stephen Williams. Both are Reagan opponents to the court.
Judge Harry Edwards, a Carter administration appointee, dissented, saying there was "no basis for闹urning Notziger's conviction."
The case against Noziger, Reagan's White House political director in 1981, was the first major test of the revolving-door provisions of the Ethics in Government Act. The law imposes a one-year ban on lobbying former government colleagues once an upper-echelon employee leaves service in the executive branch.
**SPY GAMES:** A U.S. Navy intelligence analyst who defected to the Soviet Union in 1986 complaining of FBI harassment actually was a long-time Soviet spy, a newspaper said yesterday in disclosing his
death at the age of 32
ine disclosure that Glenn Michael Souther had been "a staff member of the KGB" was a rare admission of Spy voting.
The military newspaper Red Star published an obituary signed by the KGB collegium and his "work comrades" the man it called Mikhail Yevgenievich Orlov. It said he died suddenly June 22, but did not give a cause of death.
SOVIET BOWS TO PRESSURE:
Premier Nikolai I. Ryzhkov bowed to pressure yesterday from the new legislature and withdrew seven of his Cabinet nominations, the first time elected Soviet representatives have forced such officials from taking office.
Six nineteen were rejected in first-ever confirmation hearings last week before committees of the new 542-member Supreme Soviet, and then at least one other person was rejected during committee work.
The premier could have taken the fight for his first choices to the full Supreme Soviet this week, but he said in a speech to the lawmakers that he would submit new candidates.
This Supreme Soviet is the country's first full-time representative legislature. It is a branch of the larger Congress of People's Deputies, which was chosen this spring in the first national multi-candidate Soviet elections in seven decades.
The Tass news agency said the Supreme Soviet later confirmed 60 nominees for work in government ministries and committees.
SLOW PITCH SOFTBALL
Play begins July 10 at Robinson Fields
Monday Thursday through November 30
leagues C or D Coaches
Teams will play two games per week for three weeks,weather permitting. Leagues open to all students,faculty and staff.
OPEN TO EVERYONE, PLAY FOR FUN!
24 -team- limit
Registration Fee: $20.00/team
Registration Fee: $20.00/team
Registration Deadline: Thursday, July 6, 5:00 p.m. Register in 208 Robinson anytime prior to the deadline.
League schedules will be posted on bulletin board outside 208 Robinson on Friday, July 7
SPONSORED BY KU RECREATION SERVICES, 208 ROBINSON, 864-3546
Audio Video Services Fast, Expert Electronic Repair
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PHONE: 913-841-3379
---
8
Wednesday, June 28, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIED GET RESULTS
The Congo Bar
Wednesdays Jerry Beaver
Thursdays Draws 75c
Thursdays Bottles & Cans $1.00
2 FREE
GAMES
OF POOL
limit one per customer
520 N. 3rd St. 9:00a.m.-Closingtime
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
WELCOME TO ORIENTATION
Take a Short Tour of Colony Woods and Receive a FREE T-SHIRT
Buses run from campus to the property every hour
• Ad must be presented
FREE COMPACT DISC PLAYERS
Managed with the student in mind
All of this is yours plus up to 2 Compact Disc Players per new lease
Players per new lease.
LEASING NOW! FEATURING:
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with TWO FULL BATHROOMS
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MICROWAVE, DISHWASHER and ICEMAKER
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- INDOOR/outdoor POOL
- weight room
- Ask about 1/2 off of your deposit
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842-5111 Location, Lifestyle 1301 W 24th
The Best Value In Town!
--by Angela Howell Kansan staff writer
PIZZA DOUBLES
Godfather's Pizza
Original or New Golden Crust
2 Cheese Pizzas $10.99 $13.99
Medium Large
2 Specialty Pizzas $13.99 $18.49
843-6282 711 W. 23rd
2 Super Combos $14.99 $19.99
Everyday Low Prices
2 Medium One Topping Pizzas
$9.99
Or 2 Large $12.99
Additional topping ratio. Not valid with Sunday FREE drinks or any other discount offer.
Limited delivery area and store limit. Add 11 to delivery. Fahrenheit: 12.50
Large Combo Pizza
$9.55
Or Super Combo $10.75
Not valid with Sunday FREE drinks or any other discount offer.
Limited delivery area and store limit. Add 11 to delivery. Fahrenheit: 12.50
3 OFF LARGE OR
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Limited delivery area and store limit. Add 11 to delivery. Fahrenheit: 12.50
Medium One Topping Pizza
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Or Large $7.95
Additional topping ratio. Not valid with Sunday FREE drinks or any other discount offer.
Limited delivery area and store limit. Add 11 to delivery. Fahrenheit: 12.50
Large Combo Pizza
$9.55
Or Super Combo $10.75
Not valid with Sunday FREE drinks or any other discount offer.
Limited delivery area and store limit. Add 11 to delivery. Fahrenheit: 12.50
2 Medium One Topping Pizzas
$9.99
Or 2 Large $12.99
Additional topping ratio. Not valid with Sunday FREE drinks or any other discount offer.
Limited delivery area and store limit. Add 11 to delivery. Fahrenheit: 12.50
NEW WEISLER
Large Combo Pizza $9.55
Or Super Combo $10.75
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NEW WEISLER
Rulings' effects not instant Local impact of civil rights decision unclear
While recent court decisions have erected new barriers to discrimination cases filed by minorities and women, the impact on the University of Kansas and Lawrence will not be immediately apparent, said Tom Berger, assistant director of the office of affirmative action.
"We'll just have to wait and see what the impact is on higher education," Berger said. "Speculation may cloud the issue now."
Recent Supreme Court decisions concerning discrimination could make business decisions more difficult, said John Gergac, professor of law.
"things are in flux, they're changing, so business managers are uncertain how to act. how to make decisions that will equal opportunity." Gergazc had
more difficult for workers to use statistics to prove discrimination. A separate decision made it easier to challenge affirmative action plans
In January, the Supreme Court ruled that quotas for minorities were an unlawful form of reverse discrimination. Since the decision, it has been
Last week, the Supreme Court barred the use of an 1866 civil rights law which has been used to fight racial harassment.
Richard Levy, associate professor of law, said that while lower courts were still receptive to plaintiffs in discrimination cases, minorities might have tough huck getting decisions from the Supreme Court.
"The hopes of the Supreme Court being the 'Great Friend of the Minorities' have been dashed." Levy said.
Burger said that each of the cases reaffirmed minorities' fears about President Reagan's appointees to the Supreme Court.
Minorities might seek recourse by lobbying for legislative change, Levy said.
"If legislative action is enacted quickly, I don't think there will be much of a long-term effect," Levy
said. "I don't see any immediate effect for KU. The broader impact is in the general climate of racial relations."
Without legislation, he said, minorities might be at a long-term disadvantage in regards to civil rights.
"They are going to be left without a remedy, because they can't establish their claims in court," Levy said.
Since many businesses are comfortable with the practice of affirmative action they might be more likely to maintain it, but businesses practicing racial discrimination would be under less scrutiny, he said.
Berger said there have been discrimination cases on campus, but he could not reveal the number, or because of a confidentiality policy.
Death penalty foes decry ruling
The Associated Press
Gergace said he hoped the recent decisions would not be seen as encouragement to discriminate
WASHINGTON — Death penalty opponents are calling for new state laws to protect juveniles and the mentally retarded in the wake of Supreme Court rulings they say are "medieval and barbaric."
"I trust that it would be sanctioned," Gergacz said. "It virtually an ethical issue. Maybe I'm just an optimist."
LIBERTY CALL
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Mass.
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4912
JUNE 25 - 29 & JULY 2 - 7
JUNE 25 THROUGH SEPTEMBER
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Wed & Thurs 7:30,9:30
Sunday 5:30,7:30,9:30
"To give up, with ultimate finality,
upon a person even before they emerge
from childhood is squerely in opposition to the funeral premise which heightened
the emotional system," said American Bar Association System President Rob
ert Raven.
BITE THE BIG ONE.
We really pile it on!
If your sub was any bigger you'd need a mouth the size of Mick Jaggar's!
12th & Ind. 841-3268
(N. of 15th St.)
Open 10-10 Mon-Sat
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Not valid w/o other offers
Yellow Sub
1814 W 23rd St 841-ASUE
(S. of 15th St.)
Open 10-10 every day
Clip and $ave with Daily Kansan Coupons !!!
People make the difference at Fifi's Nabil's Restaurant.
Thank you for your support during our recent remodeling. We invite you to come in and see our new look.
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Hillcrest Shopping
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841-7226
M-F 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Tue-Sat 5 p.m.-10 p.m. Sun-Mon 5 p.m.-9 p.m.
Lawrence.
LADIES
Seduction 89 will be appearing at the Flamingo Club at 8:00 p.m. on Saturday, July 1st.
Seduction 89, featuring former Chippendales is coming to
- A Mel Gibson look alike.
- Dancers featured on Phil Donahue.
- The grand prize winner of the Stalone Rambo contest.
- A Mr. Texas bodybuilding champion.
- A model featured in GQ magazine.
- "One of the hottest male reviews to come out of California in years," states the Times. "More than just a male review," says USA Today.
- Tickets are $8.00
Seduction 89 is in no way connected to Chippendales owned by Easebe Ent.
DIPLOMA FRAMING
15%
Framing Discount
Diploma Framing
Any Graduation
Expires 8/1/89
THE PUBLIC HOSPITAL OF LISBON
IN AWAKENING
FOR THE SERVICE OF MEDICINE
AND MEDICAL SERVICES
THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS
You have worked hard for that diploma. We know you are proud of it. Good professional framing will help preserve it for a lifetime. We personalize your diploma with your own school colors. Your diploma represents the end of one race and perhaps the beginning of another. Permit us the privilege of helping you preserve the records with appropriate framing. We also frame class photos, senior prom programs, tassels and graduation programs.
FRAME WOODS
NEW LOCATION: 819 MASSACHUSSETS • DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE • 842-4900
---
. University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 28, 1989
9'
Officials confident KU budget won't be devastated by cuts Rumored proposals won't affect 1990 money
by Barbara Kollmeyer Kansan staff writer
Talks of budget cuts have surrounded Gov. Mike Hayden's proposals for fiscal year 1991. However, spokesmen from the effort to clear up any confusion over what possible budget cuts would mean to KU.
Marlin Rein, associate university director for business and fiscal affairs, said Monday that recent newspaper coverage of Hayden's proposals was not accurate and had caused unnecessary panic.
"There are no budget cuts at this point. The governor has received and the legislature has approved the budget for 1990, with the full funding of the Margin of Excellence in place." Rein said.
place. Remember
Regents schools submit three budgets, which go through several channels before being approved,
H,
— Gene Budig chancellor
the Gov. Mike Hayden clearly believes in the importance of the University of Kansas and the Margin of Excellence. Obviously, much depends on the state of the economy, but we have no control over that fact.'
Rein said.
R60
The budget levels are A, B and C.
The state budget director assigns level B spending proposals to the different state agencies. The budget is based on data collected of how band is handed out will be collected and on hand by the end of 1991.
decrease from the level B budget estimate.
Agencies submit level C budgets. These budget estimates are based on the agencies need and are presented without limitations.
Level A budgets reflect a 5 percent
without limitations.
Allocations are more restrictive for KU's 1991 A and B budgets than last year. Rein said.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said Monday that he was confident in Hayden's support of the Regents universities.
"He clearly believes in the importance of the University of Kansas and the Margin of Excellence," Budig said.
said
"Obviously, much depends on the state of the economy, but we have no control over that fact," he said
Variety of musicians to perform at festival July 4 celebration to be on river
by Donna Eades Kansan staff writer
Songs of the West and rock from the bayou will headline the annual 4th of July Independence Days celebration this weekend.
A cowboy band, Riders in the Sky, will start the four-day celebration at 7 p.m. on Saturday on the main stage in Burich Park, near third and Indiana street, near America's "White Cowboy" town in the Sky have a weekly public radio show called Riders' Radio Theatre.
Cajun musicians, Zachary Richard and the Bon Ton Playboys, will follow the Riders at 10 p.m. with a live music rhythm and blues.
Orleans system and blues performers, The Kelley Hunt Band, will perform at 7 p.m., Tuesday.
They will be followed at 8:15
p. m. by the Lawrence Symphony Orchestra, directed by Charles Hoag, accompanying the annual Javenee Fireworks display.
The festival, now in its seventh year, will feature entertainment, crafts, food, historical presentations, contests and canoe races, and activities for children of all ages.
ages.
Tickets, good for all four days of the event, can be purchased from various town merchants. Tickets are $5.50 for adults and $2.50 for children between 5 and 12. Children under 5 are admitted free. Tickets for Tuesday only are $2.
Monday is Downtown Lawrence Day, featuring a quilt show at Watkins Community Museum, a turn-of-the-century street musician and an ice cream social on Massachusetts Street.
SATURDAY JULY 1
Burcham Park open 10 a.m. to 10
a.m.
- Free State Run. 7:15 a.m.
- Independence Days Parade. 9:30 a.m. From South Park to Seventh Street. Entrants should arrive at South Park by 8:45 a.m.
- FMC's Shelter Theatre, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Continuous entertainment by the Popoorn Company.
Fritz Davis, Lawrence School of Ballet.
Shady Grove Stage, 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. Continuous entertainment by Lawn Mowing with Bryan Wendling, Kaw Valley Champion Songwriter.
SUNDAY JULY 2
Burcham Park open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Continuous entertainment.
MONDAY JULY 3
Events take place from noon to 6 p.m. in downtown Lawrence. Burcham Park will be closed.
Continous entertainment.
TUESDAY JULY 4
Burcham Park open 6 to 10 p.m.
for concerts and fireworks
■ Fireworks display, accompanied by the Lawrence Symphony Orchestra, nightfall.
Patrick G. Brungardt/KANSAN
WAVAIL
New Age
Incoming freshman Kent Eagleman, Lawrence resident, reads the undergraduate catalog before going to advising at orientation. Summer orientation took place yesterday afternoon in the Kansas Union.
KU's new orientation Excellence in Ellsworth' helps ease transition
by Laura Graham
Kennon staff writer
Kansan staff writer
Although they don't know one another, about 80 new KU students will soon be living together; attend meetings; speak in groups; interacting in many of the same activities.
The students are part of a pilot group organized by the office of residence life. They will participate in a program called "Excellence in Ellsworth" when they come to the University of Kansas next fall.
university of oxford.
The university is a result of efforts
that the school of new student orientation
and university administrators
are making to help new students
succeed, said Sally Bryant, director
of new student orientation.
"If you don't make it in school, no one sits around and holds your hand forever." Bryant said.
"Excellence in Ellsworth" encour
ages participants to become involved in campus activities and builds cohesiveness among group members.
The students who volunteered to take part in the program will live together on the tenth floor of ELLworth Hall. We have a class together and are assigned as teaching ministers and be assigned to an instructor or faculty mentor.
As a result, the orientation office hopes to break down the fear factor that many new students have and to ease their transition into college.
lee stuart, assistant director of residence life, said many activities had been planned for the students, but it was too early to do shortly after they arrive in August.
"Most of it will be an emphasis on building community," Stafford said.
dents, but its importance in retaining students after they had arrived had been recognized only in recent years.
She said commitment from upper administration to make orientation a more comprehensive and ongoing program resulted in the development of a full-time, year-round office of a new student orientation last June.
Bryant said orientation had always been a valuable step for new stu
Before then, the orientation program was only a segment of the admissions office, coordinated by a part-time staff.
In addition to "Excellence in Ells worth," Bryant said numerous other programs might be developed to facilitate the ongoing orientation process. One of her goals, she said, was to create separate orientations for freshmen, transfer students and readmitted students, so that the unique needs of each group could be addressed.
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642 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas • 913-749-1912
LIBERTY HALL
10
Wednesday. June 28, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
CLUB
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limit per sandwich per coupon
Bottleneck
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Elvis Hilmer
Godfathers
Blasters
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"Many people think the stories are terrific, and many think they are horrible and not serious journalism," Warner said.
He expanded it last month into a weekly feature called "Pause to Remember." which now contains up to a half-dozen dead pet stories, mostly about dogs. Some have suggested "Paws to Remember."
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"But the key point is that I like it, and my boss (editor James Sneddon) likes it, and that's why it's continuing, and I think going OK."
They aren't obituaries, exactly, said staffers at the West Chester Daily Local News, daily circulation 40,000. They're more like stories of the pets' lives and the people they lived with.
"It seems to have hit some nerve," said city editor David Warner, who tried the idea out first with a story about a rooster that flew the coop and
Pet obits draw fire in suburbs
WEST CHESTER, Pa. — The newspaper in this middle-of-the-road Philadelphia suburb has drawn sharply divided opinions about its new type of human interest feature — stories about dead pets.
Though it sounds like a "dog days" sort of thing to fill space in the paper, of little real notice except to the owners of the pets being remembered, the project has proved controversial.
The Associated Press
--ine wall Street Journal even wrote about the new feature and got a reaction from other journalists.
"I have trouble finding space for the people," Richard Pearson, obituary editor for the Washington Post. told the Journal.
Eugene Roberts, president and executive editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer, told the Journal there's nothing like it in his newspaper and no plans to do in the foreseeable future, but I mean in my lifetime.
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a broad, farcical style. The actresses aren't trying to be men," she said.
Both Meier and Ringer said they did not expect all-male or all-female casts to become standard at KU.
"It's an intriguing summer idea, but it should not be seen as a historical precedent." Meier said.
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Delores Ringer, assistant professor of theater and film, is directing "Two Gentlemen of Verona." She will present more opportunities to actresses.
Ringer said the female ensemble was not having difficulty with the male roles, though a different acting style was required.
"in most of Shakespeare's plays there are many male roles and few female roles," Ringer said. "We to give more roles to women."
In July, "Two Gentlemen of Verona" will be performed with an all-female cast, while "The Taming of the Shrew" will be performed with an all-male cast. Both plays will be in Anton-Preyer Theatre, Marhal Hall.
"These plays will be like nothing anyone could possibly imagine." Meier said. "I don't think anyone would anticipate the way we've
Available in other configurations
Paul Meier, assistant professor of theatre and film, is the director of "The Taming of the Shrew."
Old comedies given new twist
The University Theatre program will present two of Shakespeare's comedies this summer with a new twist.
The actresses are playing men in
NEW YORK — Actress Mary Beth Hurt testified yesterday that she urged her then-husband, actor William Hurt, to marry his pregnant
Hurt said that her former husband rejected the idea, saying he would never wed again.
by Sharon Chapman
Kansan staff writer
Meier said one of the most intriguing things about the all-male cast was that Shakespeare's plays were written to be performed this way.
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"I'm finished with marriage," Hurt said the actor told her when they discussed his relationship with former balerina Sandra Jennings in a September 1982 meeting. Hurt said her former husband asked for the meeting because he wanted to talk about finalizing their divorce.
Hurt said that besides a brief reconciliation in 1978, she and the actor had been separated since 1975. Hurt said that she asked him why he wanted to finalize the divorce at that time and that he replied, "Because I was there."
staged them."
"I said, 'Marry her, Bill.'" Hurt said. "He said, 'No. I'm finished with marriage.'"
The Associated Press
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Ex-lover sues William Hurt
Hart said she asked him if he intended to marry Jennings and that he said he did not.
If state Supreme Court Justice Jacqueline Silbermann finds there was a marriage, she could give Jennings a piece of Hurt's income for the part 60½ years. Jennings' lawyer, John Hurt, said Hurt was worth about $10 million.
because he publicly wished Jennings said the common law marriage began under South Carolina law Dec. 9, 1892, when Hurt learned he was divorced. They left South Carolina Jan. 10, 1893.
Hurt testified on the final day of a
hurt's former housekeeper/personal assistant, Diana Schiebel, returned to court yesterday with a lawyer. The judge had advised him not to be attached to taking Hurt's personal files and giving them to Jennings' lawyer.
Hurt's testimony appeared to support he ex-husband's contention that he never considered Jennings his boss, that he never intended to marry her.
Movie producer Tim Zinneman also testified. Zinneman said Hurt told actress Mary Kay Place at a baby shower for Jenners in Beaufort business," when she asked whether Hurt planned to marry his lover.
Zinnemann, who married actress Meg Tilly in Beautiful during the filming of The Big Chief, said the movie was a tribute to Wesley Hurt and Jennings was discussed.
New York Supreme Court trial to determine whether her former husband, 39, had a common law marriage with Jennings, 32. Jennings was Hurt's former life-in-liver and is known for their six-year son Alexander.
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The producer said he invited Jennings and Hurt to be witnesses at his wedding, but Hurt did not show
Zinnemann said that after their wedding Tilly threw her bouquet over her shoulder toward Jennings, who almost caught it but dropped it.
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Judge Silberman said she would accept briefs with closing arguments from the lawyers in the near future and render a decision soon after that.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 28, 1989
Sports
11
Seattle shuts out KC at home,8-0
by Gary Patton Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
KANSAS CITY, MO — With help both on and off the playing field, Seattle Mariners pitcher Brian Holman shut out the Kansas City Royals 8-0 last night in Royals Stadium.
Holman, 2-2, was assisted by three infield double plays and a wall-crashing catch by rightfielder Jay Buhner in the third inning. Holman, acquired from the Monsanto team, pitched out seven Rangers hits for his first American League shutout and complete game.
Even Holman's 16-year-old sister helped out by snagging a pop foul in the stands.
Mariners hitters jumped on Royals pitcher Luis Aquino, 3-2, for two runs in the third inning, snapping Aquino's scoreless inning and earning a save for another five runs in the fifth inning and won in the sixth.
Rookie leftfielder, Greg Briley,
and designated hitter, Jeffrey
Leonard, provided most of the
firepower.
Briley, one of four Mariner rookies in the starting lineup, scored two runs and batted in three, with two singles and a sacrifice fly.
Leonard, who began the game as the American league's most productive designated hitter with 51 RBIs, knocked in four runs with a three-run home run and a sacrifice fly. The home run was Leonard's
15th and the first Aquino had allowed this season.
"As good as Louie has been, he just didn't have it tonight," Manager John Wathan said after the game. "We couldn't get anyone warmed up and in there. It happened so fast. The three-run horse broke it open and put it out of reach in a hurry."
Aquino's last pitch came in the fifth inning and landed in the left field stands. It was a solo shot by Aquino his third home run of the season.
The Royals only scoring threat came in the ninth inning. Singles by Kevin Seitzer and Pat Tabler and a walk to Jim Eisenreich loaded the bases. But Holman fielded a comebacker to the mound and threw to home for a force out the imminent attack. Matt Winfield played the game with a ground out to second baseman, Harold Reynolds.
The Royals loss was their third straight at home, their longest home losing streak of the season. With one game remaining, last night less assures the Royals of losing homestand of the season.
"As bad as it has been lately, we are holding our own because Oakland hasn't been too hot," Wathan said.
With Oakland's 11-5 loss to Minnesota last night, the Royals did not lose ground to the division-leading Athletics.
Today
Thursday
Royals vs. Mariners
7:35 p.m. Royals Stadium
Royals vs. White Sox 7:30 p.m. Comiskey Park
Fridav
Royals vs. White Sox
7:30 p.m. Comiskey Park
Saturday
Royals vs. White Sox 6:00 p.m. Comiskey Park
Sundav
Monday
Royals vs. White Sox
1:30 p.m. Comiskey Park
Royals vs. Athletics 9:05 p.m.Oakland Coliseum
American League
Tuesday
Last W L Pct GB
Baltimore 42 31 578
New York 36 36 498
Milwaukee 36 36 480
Boston 34 38 427
Detroit 35 38 457
Philadelphia 35 40 484
Royals vs. Athletics 8:15 p.m. Oakland Coliseum
West W 4 W L 4Pct. GB -
Oakland 46 31 39 .57 -
California 43 32 39 .58 -
City of San Diego 42 32 39 .568 2½ -
Texas 42 33 39 .560 1½ -
Minnesota 39 39 51.54 -
Seattle 35 37 451 37 -
Philadelphia 35 41 413 10½ -
Tampa Bay 35 48 347 10½
National League
East W L Pct. GB -
Montreal 42 34 34 .553 -
New York 39 34 34 .534 -
Chicago 40 34 34 .534 11½%
Pittsburgh 38 37 49 .533 11¼%
Pittsburg 31 41 43 .431 9/
Philadelphia 26 41 46 .361 14
West W 4 L 3 Pct. GB -
San Francisco 64 10 605 -
Houston 43 13 667 -
Cincinnati 41 34 567 +
Indiana 37 37 504 4½
San Diego 36 40 474 10
Atlanta 29 45 392 16
Big league big dream for pitcher
by Gary Patton Kansan sportswriter
Minor league baseball players are labeled fillers or prospects. Most of the Durham Bulls were fillers, or career minor-leaguers.
career minor to college.
Scott Taylor, who was a KU pitcher from 1986-1988, calls himself a major league prospect.
"I've got my sights set on the big leagues," said Taylor, a 6-foot-4 righthander for the Seattle Mariners' class A farm team, the Wausau, Wis., Timbers. "I'm going to give it my best shot. There are plenty of chances to fail, but the chances for success are there too."
With a 9-5 record and 2.95 ERA,
Taylor said he was pleased with his performance in his first professional season.
"I载 out of the Mariners' spring training camp in Tempel, Ariz., as the Timbers' number one starting pitcher," said Taylor, the team's 18th-round 1988 draft choice. "Now I'm third in the league in wins and have completed seven of my 14 starts."
Taylor, 22, from Arkansas City, Kan., said that one of the biggest differences between college and professional players is the emotional level of the players.
"At KU, we got more excited and the games seemed more intense," Taylor said in a telephone interview Monday. "Here, the games are more laidback, but we are expected to do the job. We get paid to play."
Another difference is the longer season.
"With a 150-game season, you can't dwell on your mistakes," said Taylor, who averaged 50-game seasons at KU. "You just have to keep learning from your mistakes. There's always the next game."
Taylor, among KU's top seven all-time leader in games started and innings pitched, said the season had already taken its toll on his team's
YJ
Taylor aims for spot among KU's major league players
1986-88 KU pitcher Scott Taylor has his sights set on making it to the big leagues. This season he is the top starting pitcher for the Wausau Timbers, the class A farm team of the Seattle Mariners.
Major League Jayhawks
Bob Allison ('54)
Larry Miller ('58)
Washington Senators 1958-60; Minnesota Twins 1961-70.
Larry Milner ('58)
Los Angeles Dodgers 1964; New York Mets 1965-66
Chicago Cubs 1970
Chuck Dobson ('64)
Kansas City A's 1966-67, Oakland A's 1968-71; California
Arizona 1975-75
Skip James ('71)
San Francisco Giants 1977-78. Chris Gayle (165)
San Francisco Giants
Steve Renko ("65)
Montreal Expos 1969 76; Chicago Cubs 1976; Chicago
White Sox 1977; Oakland Bears 1980; Boston Red Sox
1982
Clay Christiansen ('79)
New York Yankees 1979-86; Minnesota Twins 1987.
Steve Larsen (770)
Philadelphia Phillies 1984-present.
pitching staff. He is one of only two starters to remain injury-free.
Susan Younger/KANSAN
SOURCE: KU Athletic Department
Taylor repeated two complaints heard regularly among minor-leaguers: poor pay and long road trips.
Class A ballplayers average between $800 and $900 a month for their five-month season.
"The pay is pretty terrible," Taylor said. "Nobody gets rich in the minor leagues, but we say. We'll get there. We get there (to the major leagues)."
"On the road trips, you never know what to expect." Taylor said. "You just hope the sheets are clean at the
next rest stop:” Other than some rowdy back-of-the-bus team sing-alongs, he said his travels had been uneventful.
Taylor said his team, the northernmost team of the Midwest League's Northern Division, usually took 10-12 day road trips to such towns as Kenosha, Wis., Rockford, Ill. and Slow Bend, Ind.
"We've spent as many as seven hours at a time on the bus," Taylor said. "But it helps having a pretty face, and a smile." We are going we're going as fast as he can."
Taylor's future plans include
enrolling at Wichita State University at the end of the season. He said that he wanted to finish the 10 hours of credit that he needed for his bachelor's degree in chemistry. It will also give him a chance to be closer to his girlfriend, who lives in Wichita.
Right now, though, his sights are set on the remainder of the season.
"If I move up at the end of the season (to class AA ball), that'd be great," Taylor said. "If I don't, that's a bad day." He had a lucky idea; I didn't have to play rookie ball (the lowest level of professional ball) in my first year."
Tennis Classic will begin Friday at KU
by Gwendolyn Parrett Kansan sportswriter
The University of Kansas will be represented by four tennis players in the United States Tennis Association's third annual Mainline Tennis Classic, beginning on Friday at the Allen Field House tennis complex.
The tournament, sponsored by Mainline Printing, Inc., of Topeka, is the first stop in the fourth USTA Pro-Satellite segment. There are five segments throughout North States, and they will be in Lawrence, where this segment will go to tournaments in Springfield, Mo., Tulsa, Oka., and Wichita.
The tournament will consist of a
qualifier to fill 16 spots that are still open in the 64-man main draw.
"There are 48 people who are already in the main draw," said Scott Perleman, tournament director and director of games at Kansas City, Saturday and Sunday, there will be 200 players playing for the last 18 spots.
Kansas tennis players scheduled to compete are Jeff Gross, Rafael Rangel, Paul Garvin and 1989 American John Fallbo. Former Jayahew Mike Wolf is also in the main draw. Wolf and Fallbo will also compete in the doubles competition
Michael Chang, who earlier this month was the first American in 36 years to win the French open, finishes with a record seven-under-five Classic in Lawrence two years ago.
"The thing that impressed you most was his foot speed," Perelman said about Chang.
Perelman said that $12,500 in prize money would be divided among the finishers. The players enter the tournament as either amateur or professional competitors. Amateurs will get prize money, but it is divided
equally among all amateur finishers. Perlman said that it was possible for college players to win money as well as earn a salary and still retain their NCAA eligibility.
The players in the tournament will earn rankings by the Association of Tennis Professionals. "It's based on what they call your ATP points," she said. "The more ATP points you have, the higher you're ranked."
Perelman said he was optimistic about Kansas competitors this year. "We've never had any of our players do significantly well," he said. "Although I'm pretty excited about how well we'll do this year."
NBA drafting order baffles experts
The Associated Press
NEW YORK - The names were familiar - Pervis Ellison, Danny Ferry, Sean Elliott, Glen Race, J.R. Reid, Stacy King - but their new uniforms were a surprise until the NBA draft yesterday evening.
The 1989 Big Six were all taken after six selections in the first night draft in NBA history, but the order of the drafts baffled the experts.
Ellison, who found out he was taken by the Kings when the commissioner announced it, said he knew Russell was interested in him.
Ellison, who led Louisville to the NCAA title in 1986, was taken by Sacramento, whose general manager, Bill Russell, was apparently tred of soft inside defense. Ellison is one of 3 shot blocker in college history.
After Ellison, the top-rated half-done went in quick succession, with Duke's Ferry going to the Los Angeles Clippers, Arizona's Eliott to San Antonio, Michigan's Rice to Miami, North Carolina's Reid to Charlotte and Oklahoma's King to Chicago.
1. was stum surprised," Ellison said. "Most of the players I was talking with didn't have any idea who was going to be No. 1."
"You never know with trades." Ferry said. "I'll sleep better tomorrow night. If it's L.A. I'll make the best of the situation."
Chicago. The 6-foot-10 Ferry seemed certain that the backcourt-poor Clippers would trade him.
Elliott, who was plagued by reports of problems with his liver and knees, said he didn't expect to go 1. So he was pleased to be chosen by San
"This obviously could be a great team with (Terry) Cummings and Willie Anderson and with David Robinson coming in," Elliott said. "There's really nothing wrong with the teams. The teams just wanted to
— Sean Elliott San Antonio draft pick
This obviously could be a great team with (Terry) Cummins and Willie Anderson and with David Robinson coming in. There's really nothing wrong with my knees. The teams just wanted to dig deeper.'
Sean Elliott
T
Rice, who averaged 30.7 points and set a record for points in the NCAA Tournament, was taken by the worst team in the NBA last season. Miami's leading scorer, Kevin Edwards, averaged 13.8 points.
dig deeper."
"I lived in Michigan more than half of my life and it feels good to get out of the winter snow to the sunshine." Rice said.
Reid was the only predictable selection among the first six. The Hornets were the only team to announce a preference before the
The 6-11 King, the only highly regarded center in the draft, was thrilled to be going to Chicago, this year's Eastern Conference finalist, and becoming a teammate of Michael Jordan.
After the top six, the first round continued with guard George McCloud of Florida State going to Indiana, forward Randy White of Louisiana Tech to Dallas, forward from Hornsby, forward from Texas, point guard Pooh Richardson to Minnesota, forward Nick Anderson of Illinois to Orlando.
"I couldn't ask for a better, " King said. "Jordan is one of the greatest players who has ever played." Dreamed about playing with him.
point guard Mookie Blaylock of Oklahoma to New Jersey, forward Michael Smith of Brigham Young to Boston, point guard Tim Hardaway of Texas-Ela Pas to Golden State, guard Todd Lichti of Stanford to Denver and point guard Dana Barros of Boston College to Seattle.
Seattle then pulled the surprise of the first round, taking 6-foot-10-inch freshman Kemp, who attended Trinity Valley Community College in Texas for one year but did not play. Kemp signed a contract to play Kentucky in 1988 after being rated as one of the top high school prospects.
Cicago, with its second round pick, then made B J. Armstrong the fifth point guard selected in the first 18 picks.
the rest of the first round included forward Kenny Payne of Louisville to Philadelphia, forward Jeff Sanders of Georgia Southern to Chicago, guard Blue Edwards of Oklahoma and Bryon Irvin of Missouri to Portland, guard Roy Marble of Atlanta, forward Anthony Cook of Arizona to Phoenix, guard John Morton of Seton Hall to Cleveland, forward Vladie Divace of Ugosylvia to the Los Angeles Lakers for Kevin Battle of Illinois to Detroit.
The NBA champion Pistons later traded guard Michael Williams and the rights to Battle to Phoenix for the rights to Cook.
Elliott, Ferry. King and Douglas were 1989 All-Americans along with freshman guard Chris Jackson of LSU.
Douglas was the first pick of the second round, by Miami, and was the sixth point guard taken overall.
Another well-known college player slipping to the second round was Indiana's Jay Edwards, the Big Ten Player of the Year. Edwards was taken by the Clippers with the 33rd pick.
SHOOTING
Steve Traynor/KANSAN
Throwing pains
Danny Lalich, Lawrence High School student, practices the javelin throw behind Memorial Stadium. Lalich attended the Kansas Big Dudes Throwing Camp, which teaches high school students field events such as javelin, discus, hammer and shot put. He was practicing Monday.
---
NATURALWAY
Wednesday, June 28, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Wills give Kansans right to die
In this age of AIDS and cancer, medical advances postponing death turned an individual's right to die into a legal battle.
Because of this, Stan Sterling,
associate professor of social welfare,
said he and his wife had living wives
and their children would be natural
and inevitable.
Kansan staff writer
A living will is a legal, signed document stating that in the event of an incurable injury, disease or illness, a person would be permitted to die naturally instead of being kept alive by artificial means.
aid of life support before the support system could be removed. The will could be revoked at any time by the patient.
The will stipulates that two physicians must determine when a person no longer survive without the
"We decided that neither of us wanted to be kept alive if we were terminally ill." Sterling said, "if we were terminally ill nature just lick its course."
Kansas is one of the few states where a living will is considered a legal document. Family members, the clergy and clergy must honor a living will.
According to Kansas law, any person age 18 or older has the fundamental right to decide whether or not to have life-sustaining devices with
Sterling, who teaches courses in
He said there were three main reasons why people obtained living wills: to avoid the prolonged indigence of being kept alive in certain circumstances, to protect family from anticipatory grief and to protect family finances.
death and dying, said he had learned a lot from working with terminally ill patients.
The hardest thing for most people was not choosing whether a person should live or die, but dealing with losing the person, he said.
"I feel very comfortable knowing I won't have to be kept on life support systems because of my wife's confession," he said. "My children's conflict." Sterling said.
A recently passed Kansas bill
enacted a durable power of attorney for health care decisions, allowing a person to designate someone else make decisions and post-mortem decisions for him.
Michele Kessler, an attorney for Legal Services for Students, said friends or partners of patients with AIDS were ostracized from certain legal decisions. By giving the partner power of attorney, homosexual couples would be allowed to share in health care decisions.
Because the law was new, Kessler said its impact would not be determined until a case was tried in court. She said it was still unclear whether she would create problems for those people who wanted a natural death.
Post-trauma stress soothed for police
by Heather L. Anderson Kansan staff writer
The everyday routine of police officers and emergency service workers is full of traumatic events that can create tremendous stress.
The solution for many people is to build emotional walls to keep the stress that surrounds them at bay.
what if NPR, the coordinator of Adult Services at Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, said that police and ambulance service people tended to think of themselves as saviors and protectors. Because of this, many of them develop unrealistic beliefs concerning their reactions to events.
"They think that it's part of their job and it isn't supposed to bother them," he said. "They think there's another matter with them if they do."
"We tell them that it's normal to respond with horror to dead bodies."
The impact of prolonged exposure to trauma manifests itself in depression, marital conflict, sleeping disorders and drinking. These are normal reactions to stress that is not properly processed, Bates said.
Lawrence police officers contacted said they did not suffer from stress related problems. They said that they view themselves as normal people doing their jobs and that persons' incidents were a part of the job.
Bates and co-worker B.C. LeCount hold counseling sessions to teach people how to process the tremendous stresses dealing with extraordinary events.
The two-hour meetings, held within 48 hours of a traumatic incident, involve those present at the event and the person suffering from the stress.
Local group finds homes for refugees
by Barbara Kollmeyer Kansan staff writer
As a result of various humanitarian groups protests, child immigrants from Central America are no longer deported to their home-
Instead, the children, most of whom are 10 to 17 years old, are placed in shelters. The shelters, however, are not the final destination for these children who have fled their homeland for fear of their safety. Placement in private homes is the ultimate goal.
Jill Jenkins, committee coordinator for the Lawrence Latin American Refugee Committee, said the committee worked with a group of refugees From Central America in Texas, helping child refugees.
cia Garay, 15, will be placed in Lawrence by the LLARC. He will begin his American child placement in Kansas through Border Association.
"A lot of these kids come up and think they can make it on their own and finally turn themselves in house they're hungry." Jenkins said.
The LLARC is a non-profit organization and is affiliated with the campus organization, Latin American Solidarity. Jenkins said the LLARC became a campus organization in May.
Brian J. Sziittal, community outreach coordinator from the Border Association office in Chennai, India, with the efforts of the Lawrence group.
Next month, Will Antonio Gali-
LOOKING FOR A PART-TIME JOB? Find It At TED PARCEL SERVICE
Wanted Loader/Unloaders to work 3-5 hour shifts Mon.-Fri. at Lenexa, Ks. facility (30 min. east of Lawrence.)
Interviewing for all shifts
w/emphasis on late night shift
Please sign up prior to interviews.
ups
Interviews will be held Friday, June 30th Contact the Placement Center at Burge Union
eoe/m/f
ANNOUNCEMENT
GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL
$8.00/hr.
is accepting applications for positions on the
GRADUATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
send letters of nomination or self nomination to: Graduate Student Council 426 Kansas Union,864-4914 Include Name,Address,Phone Number,and Department Deadline: July 7th
Convenient
Food Alert
CHUG-A
JUG
---
Now Thru Labor Day
Convenient
Food Mart
CHUG-A-JUG
32 oz Squeeze Bottle
$1.19 Filled with Fountain Drink
CHUG-A
JUG
29¢
Refills
AUTO • BOAT • HOME • COMMERCIAL
AUTO • BOAT • HOME
AUTOPOLISHING &
WINDOW TINTING
SUN TINT
lifetime warranty
by insulfilm inc.
Reduce The Heat & Interior Sun Fade 2201-C West 25th Street. • Lawrence, KS.
913-841-4779; 766-9086
0751
AUTOPOLISHING & WINDOW TINTING
SUN
TINT
lifetime warranty
by insulfilm inc.
10% OFF with this ad.
200s
Classified Directory
Announcements
105 Personal
110 Business Personal
120 Announcements
130 Entertainment
140 Lost & Found
100s
Employment
205 Help Wanted
225 Professional Services
235 Typing Services
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
340 Auto Sales
360 Miscellaneous
370 Want to Buy
400s
Real Estate
405 For Rent
430 Roommate Wanted
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Anne, I'd love to continue our conversation, meet me at Louise's West this Saturday.
MAX. HOW DO YOU SLEEP AY NIGHT?*
SWM, 34. graden, tail and trim, joins
swimming, baseball, current affairs, Dresers to
play in the 2015 NCAA Division I Repo. P.O.
814, Lawrence KS 65069
B. C. Auto is your full service auto repair provider for the BMW F8 & We. Equip your Visa Mastercard, Discovery Government Photos Passport, immigration, voxing Modeling, the advanced fine art design and printing capabilities to your artistic future. Tom Swells F8-161 If you're going to drive a car, drink an amber beer, go shopping or do anything else.
110 Bus. Personal
Travel Insurance
SUMMER TRAVEL?
Make Plans Now!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
* Lowest possible rates to Europe.
* Eurail, Britrail passes.
* World wide travel information.
On campus location in the KU Union and 831 Mass.
See us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
PENNYLANE RECORD & TAPES. Visit our班
shop on the upper level. special orders always
welcome. 844 Massachusetts 748-4211.
SUNFLOWER DRIVING SCHOOL. Get your
driver's license without parent testing upon
completion. Transportation provided.
841-2316
13
120 Announcements
Ice cold tap beer at Louise's Bar & Louise's West,
75cent Draws, $1.50 Schooners.
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, June 28, 1989
is a society based on voluntary cooperation pundits, faculty members and staff. P.O. Box 182, Lawrence KS, 60404. Pure steam distilled Water now available at Lawrence. 749-3591 sedents-galen in your Lawrence.
130 Entertainment
Best Price on Tap, Louise's Bar & Louise's West.
Check out our special summer prices.
140 Lost-Found
measure yourself in an evening of eclectic acoustic music featuring fifteen arena artists. Sunday, 16th, 8 p.m. iKettlebeck. Proceed to legal appeal for allowed ERAIGHTS & RIGHTS.
HOT SPIN! Sundays at Jaynes 823 Vermont. Eyes D.J. Ray Valasquez, Funky Hunk House Maximum Industrial Grooves. Save your phone. Maximum Industrials is 62nd street, dollar cover.
FOUND BUNNGLASSES Call 864 7514 to identify
Found. Very nice. Siamee looked like cat with
brown eyes, declaved. Call 841-6325 or come by
90 Tennessee.
Genie garage door opener found in parking lot by stadium June 16. Call 864-4274
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
BE ON T.V. Many needed for commercials
Casting info (1) BIS-857-6000 Ext 9758
Bides Safe Sale & Service. Shop experience prefer-
Bicycles Sale & Service. Shop experience preferred. Cycle works. 1601 W. 23rd. 842-6363
Human recruiters can help you find your teaching position in Sumy Caucasia. Current positions in your school are 1,000-1000 B.S., or at California Recruiters, PO Box 220, Roe Dell, CA. (85862 8520) CRUSE SHIPS NOW hiring all positions. Both skilled and unskilled. For information call (413) 8586-2200.
**DOCUMENTATION SPECIALIST** Salary:
$23,000/$26,000/focal year. Local design. write help files and document user interfaces. write help files for mainframe & supercomputer systems; prepare & present user-education materials; and train.
semester of computer users. Required Qualifications 1) BA/BS degree in communications related field 2) BS degree in computer science, computer engineering with experience in documentation 3) Exp in computer technology 4) Ex
cellent aid & written work. Deadline: July 11. Send cover letter and resume. Ruth Hurt, Personnel Coordinator, Computer Center University of Kansas, Lawrence KS 60045
EARN MONEY Reading books! $30,000/yr. income potential. Details (1) 815-897-6000 Ext. Y-9758
NATIONAL CHILDREN'S MAGAZINE, seek sales associates in your area. Part-time and full time. Send resume to PO Box 2421, Tuscaloosa AL 93040
Instructor/Consultant. Seward County Community School position. Bachelor's degree pre-requisite teaching or education, preference to those with master's degree, commitment to school as well as psychology/sociology, human growth/coaching psychology, sociology, human growth/coaching psychology.
experience: director/Director of Aquatics, 6-month position; bachelor's degree, prior to teaching/experience experience preferred; those with a community college college teaching experience in physical education. Send letter of application, resume and portfolio to Instruction, Seward County Community College, Box 137, Liberal, KS 6795-117, 318-6481-011, ext.128. Open for fall, on appointment.
molly meees
Now Hiring
Need sales reps in K.C., Lawrence, and Topeka 15 hours a week. Earn up to $3000 this summer
749-749-3499
OVERSEAS JOBS. Also cruisehips $10,000
$105,000 yr! Now Hiring! Listings!
(1) 489-264-9300 Ext. J-9738
Part-time Janitor wanted (Eve). If you enjoy cleaning are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your call. 842-6254.
Part time Woman's University Law班. Call 842-6284. Palace House is interested in your talent. Call 842-6284. Scholarship Hall Director. 97% time live in Kansas. Attend a program at one of all an-mall's host at the University of Kansas. The Director is responsible for all student personnel aspects of Grace Poorison Scholarship Hall-a
STUDENT ASSISTANT IN CUSTOMER SERVICES Deadline 17/78 $7.99 $6.49 Dates include training in providing sales of orders, assisting technicians in light mechanical and electronic repair skills, ability to work with customers, 6 months previous hardware experience, apply for a position on the job or
EARN $300
OR MORE
IN ONE WEEK!
Individuals, fraternities,
sororites or campus groups
needed for one week mark-
eting program. Flexible
hours. Zero investment.
Call immediately:
1-800-932-0528 Ext.350
Looking for an English tutor, for speaking
2hrs/week, salary negotiable. Call 842-6071, Wan-
Bai
Exciting opportunity for responsible, mature person who enjoys working with children to be a man in the Washington D.C. area. Excellent benefits, great work environment (in land) C.I. 722-6410.
NANNIES NEEDED!
interlibrary loan
County State Victim Support Service will begin accepting applications for volunteer assistance at the County Libraries and Guardians, 141 Massachusetts Street. Information meeting June 22, 5:30pm.
Information Center 726985.
225 Professional Services
DRIVER EDUCATION education thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided, 841-7749
FAKE ID'S, DUI'S alcohol & traffic offences other criminal/civil matters. DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
KU PHOTOGRAPH SERVICE'S: Ekachrome
serviced within 24 hours. Complete B/W service.
PASSPORT/RESUME $6.00. Art & Design
Build, Room 206. 864-4767
New perspective on problems, people, events.
Psychic read by mail, $5 Clarion, Box 86031,
Topeka, KS. 66036.
TOPPAL, KS 80531
PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Ser-
Overland Park...(913) 491-6878.
Vices Overhead Fans
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at
843-4821 Confidential help/free pregnancy
testing
HARPER
LAWYER
749-0123
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
QUALITY TUTORING, STATISTICS, MATH AND ECONOMICS All levels. Experienced teachers with MA's Call Denn at 892-1055.
235 Typing Services
1-1,000 pages. Accurate and affordable typing,
wordprocessing and cassette transcribing. Judy
842-7946 or Lisa 841-1915.
R.J.'s TYPING SERVICE Term Papers, Legal, Thesis, Etc.
841-5942 No calls after 9 p.m.
Accurate, affordable typing experienced in term paper writing. Mail resume, spelling correct. Call Mrs. Wright 843-854-9344.
Rc L's Typing Service 841-3942 Term papers, Legal terms, Paper layout. Mail resume, word processing and Word Processing. Term papers, theses, disertation letters, resumes, applications, mailing Laser. Mail resume, theses, disertation letters.
★★★★★★★★★
WORD PROCESSING
professional 15 years experience
Fast and accurate researches, letters of application/interest, term papers, thesis dissertations, proof reading.
AFFORDABLE RATES
Call Sarah day or night at 842-0690.
★★★★★★★★★
Dr. Funk, current editor, heals spelling, grammatical, and aesthetic wounds. Publishing and word processing: 843-6995
PEACE TYPING
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing with spelling check. Call Sally 841-2279.
SPEEDTERM Word Processing Service. Accelerated wordpreduce. 943,726.
curmBRM IBM TURNS-Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing (Legal), these resumes, commercial IBM PC; MAC CP Daisyheel, dot matrix, laser. Since 1883
305 For Sale
300s
KANSAS FURNITURE
FACTORY OUTLET
Merchandise
3-D's Used Furniture Sofa & Matching Chair, Refr., A/C Elec. Stove, Table & Chairs, Rockers Buffets, Dressers
843-5453 624 North 2nd
3-D's Used Furniture
Albums $3-$4. TJ 842-4921
Mattress...§168.22
Full size
Matt & Box...$117.77
Chair...$637.50
Ring size Matt O
Box... $237.92
Bedroom set...$219.22
Ceramic Lamps...$17.21
Bookcase...$58.23
5 pc Dinette...$153.34
Bunkbed...$88.76
HURRY SUPPLIES LIMITED!!
Bicycle: Univega, 10-sp., touring, 24" , $160
841-4450
738 New Hampshire 740 SAVE
1900 Mazda GLC Dr. 5 speed, AM/FM Cassette high-miters, commute car, 1 owner, very reliable Repair records, just replaced rear end, new head oaklet, $900 best offer. 842-919-83
340 Auto Sales
Massachusetts.
PENNYLANE RECORDS & TAPES. Now buying
& selling used records and compact discs. 844
Massachusetts. 749-4211.
Magnuson 64 computer $20, Baleigh 1-speed bike $110, Magnavox 16" color TV $100 for sale; Golf Clubs $30 for sale. Must be the beginning golfer or he occasional golfer. Call after m. p. 79-243. Great selection of Bauch & Lemb Bay, T-shirts, The Eic. Store, 752 Massachusetts, 843-6411.
Just Toyota SRS Torcel. 75,600 miles. 5 speed, excellent condition, must sell $1800. Call 841-9460 and ask for Takenki.
Receivers: Sony, Mitsubishi and Akai (computerized). $110, $130, $140 respectively. Call 843-6008 keeping evenings?
189 Remault Alliance, 75,000 miles, dr. AC/AMF-cassette, $200.00 BD-8439 or 699.00
890.00 Datum 210, good condition. AM/FM cassette.
890.00 Datum 210, good condition. AM/FM cassette.
890.00 Datum 210, good condition. AM/FM cassette.
Can you buy Jeeps, Cars, 4 X 4's Seized in drug
injury for under $10.00? Call for facts today.
608.827.2911 Ext. 265
802 687-3601. Ex. 768.
GOVENMENT SEIZED Vehicles from $100
Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevrots, Surplus
Bug Guide (1) U.S. 857-687-6000. Ex. S-9788
370 Want to Buy
Moped or scooter wanted for purchase now.
Please call 749-3580, price discusable.
405 For Rent
400s Real Estate
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise 'any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or other feature that make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.'
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis.
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
Available Inc. 15, 1 br. basement app. 225/No. Appliances, waver door, dryroom & paint, off street parking. 10th & Tennessee 240/6018.
**Complete Furnished!**
Studios, 1-2-3 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations. energy efficient and beautiful. Call 8411121,8412557,9749-045
749-2415
Mastercraft Management
Excellent location 2-bedroom apartment in
4-plex. Cara, CA. Low utilities. No pets.
Available August 1: $340. 1104 Tennessee & 1341
Ohio. Call 842-4242.
FURNISHED two bedroom apartment on 2nd floor. Enclosed with a screen. Available August 1, 18, 4/30. Keep起诉. Furnished one and two bedroom apartments. One block from KU. Off street parking. No pets.
Furnished rooms with shared kitchen & bath.
Most utilities paid. Off street parking. One block from KU. No pets. 841-5500.
Grad. Student/ Professional. Newly furnished one bedroom duplex 200 sq ft. willing to housebase few hours per week (dayyay) to housebase. References. 153-169 Leave message
APPLE LANE APARTMENTS
close to campus spacious 2 bedroom Laundry fac. & swimming pool Waterbed allowed 10-12 month leases
Studio Apartments Please Call 843-4300
A quiet, relaxed atmosphere
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
9th & Avalon
JACUZZI IN EVERY APARTMENT!
Fully Equiped Kitchen
842-3040
Two Bedroom
Raid Cable TV
- Walking Distance from KU Bus Route
South Quinte APARTMENTS
NAISMITH PLACE APARTMENTS
- Laundry Facilities
- Private Balcony or Patio
- Park-like Setting
- new appliances
- Laundry Facilities
- Petite Bathroom or Potty
- low utilities
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Office Hours: M-F 10-4, Sat 10-2
1 & 2 Bedrooms Still Available
- walk-in closet
- dishwasher
- new plush carpet
- dishwasher
Office Hours: M-F 10-4, Sat 10-2
Ousdah & 25th Ct.
841-1815
- outdoor pool
Stop by at:
M-F, 9-6 Sat., 12-5 For more info call: 843-6446
EDDINGHAM PLACE
2166 W. 26th
Retired professor has furnished room for quiet female graduate student, or piano major. Available Aug 1, 1 $1,890 plus deposit. 843-2174.
4th & Eddingham (next to Gamm
OFFERING LUXURY
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- 10 or 12 month
2 BR APARTMENTS AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE
contract
- Swimming pool
* Free cable TV
- Laundry room
* Fireplace
- Exercise Weightroom
841-5444
Open 3:00-5:00 dail
- Energy efficient
* On-site Management
- Energy efficient
Professionally managed by
Raw Valley Management, Inc.
SUNRISE
APARTMENTS
- 1,2. Bedroom
- Apartments and Townhouses
- Garages
- tennis Court & Pools
- Basements
- Fireplaces
- Fireplaces
- Microwaves
- Free Cable TV
9th & Mich
Sunrise Terrace
10th & Arkansas
Sunrise Village
6th & Gateway
Call 841-8400 Village
OR 841-1287
Mon - Fri. 10-5
On Bus Route Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan
COLONY WOODS
APARTMENTS
$345 $395
1 brm 2 brm
(w/2 bath)
FREE CD PLAYERS
Subbase- clean 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 3rd floor
equip kitchen, microwave, on bus route $400
negotiate Call 24 hours. Marty 749-2080, in July (312) 875-7212
Managed with the student in mind. All of this is yours plus up to 2 compact disc
RESERVE YOUR HOME FOR
NEXT SEMESTER!
ON BUS ROUTE
WALK TO CAMPUS
EXERCISE ROOM
BASKETBALL COURT
2 HOT TURNS
COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1,2,3,4 Bdr. Apts.
Designed with you in mind!
OUTDOOR POOL
- WALK TO CAMPUS
- MICROWAVE
Hanover Place - 841-1212
14th & Mass.
Go to...
Wanted, friendly person with transportation to rent free room in large house. Call 842 7414.
OPEN DAILY
Offerings:
* Custom furnitures
* Designed for privacy
* Private parking
* Class room accommodations
* Local location locations
* Equal opportunity housing
Campus Place - 841-1429
1145 Louisiana
WALK TO SHOPS
LAUNDRY-VENDING SATELLITE
1-5 P.M.
MICROWAVE FULLY CARPETED
WATER PAID LAUNDRY VENDING
WALK TO SHOPS
10 MO. - 1 YR. LEASF
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
10 MO. - 1 YR LEAS
1301 W. 24th
Q48 F444
PATIO
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
AIR CONDITIONED
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
Orchard Corners - 749-4226 15th & Kasold
842-5111
MASTERCRAFT
- Excellent campus location
842-4455
Feast Your Eyes on everything Naismith Hall has to offer
- Fullv furnished & carpeted
- Swimming pool
* Basketball courts
* Free utilities & A/C
Including an eye-catching fashion saloon when you come by and see for yourself all the special features and amenities that make Hamm hall a whole new place.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr.
841-8559
LOCATION Available Now!
Spacious Furnished Studios,
1 & 2 Bedroom Apcs, Convenient location to K.U., and on the Bus Route. Carpeted & Draped, Water and Basic Cable. Included. We Invite You to Discover Meadowbrook.
Reserve for
brook.
M-F 8-5 Reserve for
Fall Now!
M-F 8-5
Sat. 8-5
Sun. 1-4
meadowbrook
842-4200
"Your Home Away From Home"
Boardwalk
O
HAT
1 & 2 BDR available
Top Hat
Top Hat
Indoor/outdoor pools & heated spa
3,6,9,10,12 month leases available
Water & trash
remove PAID
24 hour professional on-site management & maintenance
New appliances carpet & ceiling fans
2 on-site KU bus stops
Laundry facilities with 25¢ wash & dry
顶帽
Small pets allowed
842-4444
Mon-Fri 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
524 Frontier Rd.
Female Roommate wanted for 2 bedroom apt.
Prefer responsible grad. student. Please call
841-0620
Aug. 1st large 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Rent $220 +
utilities. Call Julie 843-4964.
Female roommate for great 2 bedroom apartment beginning Aug. 1st. $185 mo. & low utilities. Prefer studious upperclassman. 749-3774.
I am a 5th year student who's roommate got kicked out of school when she roommate to share a cell phone. I am asked $189, $161 Call Marty F49-2000, in July (312) 675-7212, looking for a roommate for a bedroom house. I am asked $25, $124 Looking for a roommate for a bedroom house.
Determine whether seeking female roommate for full
semester or sooner to share new furnished 4 b.
apr. at Sundance II $167.00 + `v_uiities
419.921`
- Policy
A. U. W. C. to School or Summer fall.
Rommate needed for summer/fall. Comfortable
2 bedroom apt, close to campus. $162.50. Call Jill
841-5741.
Romainemate used for beginning 1898-1900 school year to share a bedroom, two bathhouse with patio, garden, microcar and dishwasher. Nomister prefers 20% water. *y* is utilitarian.
two roommates wanted to share master bedroom in three bedroom duplex August 1, $130 each, nosnorkers preferred, 749-0794.
Classified Information Mail-In Form
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words set in ALL CAPS & BOLD FACE count as 5 words
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Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan.
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CLASSON
Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10Days
0-15 3.10 4.55 6.50 10.80
16-20 3.60 5.40 7.60 12.20
21-25 4.20 6.25 8.75 13.60
26-30 4.75 7.10 9.90 15.00
31-35 5.35 7.95 11.00 16.45
Classifications
152 personal
announcements
140 foot to fund
138 for sale
146 care packages
140 romantic wanted
120 announcements
142 professional services
160 miscellaneous
143 romantic wanted
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University Daily Kansan
191 Stauffer Flint Hall
Lawrence, KS 66045
---
14
Wednesday, June 28, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Dickinson
250 PRIME TOWN SHOW (#) SR CIT ANTIM
RICK MORANIS
PC
HONEY I SHRUNK
THE KIDS
('1:00-1:45*3:05) 5:10-7:15-9:20
ROBIN WILLIAMS
DEAD POETS SOCIETY **
("2.00-1.40") 7:59-9.55
CLINT EASTWOOD
PINK CADILLAC
2.05*1.45-3.07; 7.05-9.30
HARRISON FORD
INDIANA JONES
(1'1-45, 2'12-45) 7-09: 9-35
PATRICK SWAYZE
ROAD HOUSE
(1.59 2.20-1.45; 7.10-9.25)
KANSAN CLASSIFIED WORK
FUJI Sale
June is FUJI month at RICKS Save $25.00 to $200.00 during our annual month-long FUJI sale!
Fat tire bikes from
$229.95
Road bikes from
$199.95
Free Accessories
Buyanybike which is not
discounted and get:
1. FREE lock & cable
2. FREE water bottle &
cage
3. FREE Cycle Pro gloves
RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Mass., Lawrence, Ks., (913)841-6642
Let HARBOUR LITES Brighten Your Nights
Featuring .25$ Pool Every night
And Our Specials
Mon. $1.00 Bottles of Beer
Tues. $2.25 Pitchers of Beer
Wed. 15oz. Draws for .50¢
Thurs. Free Pool After 7:00 p.m.
Fri. .90¢ Bottles of Beer
Sat. $2.00 Pitchers of Beer
Located 1031 Mass
When a detective novel starts like that, as did Tom Torner's recent novel, "Coda," there's going to be a problem, said Sara Paretsky, a Chicago-based writer and 1987 KU graduate in political science who is making new inroads in the field of detective fiction.
"You know when you read the opening sentence that the villain is going to be the woman in bed with the hero," Paretsky said.
The trouble started in bed
Writer changing stereotypes
by Donna Eades
Kansan staff writer
Paretsky's sixth novel, featuring the first woman private investigator, will appear on the bookstands in February. In her novels, Paretsky is working to change the image of women in detective fiction.
Paretsky created Warsawshawi 10 years ago in response to the male-dominated detective novels she had been reading since childhood.
Traditionally, women have either been the villain, or they've been wringing their hands, needing to be rescued, Paretsky said.
These stereotypes do not fit Paretski's V.I. Warshawski, private investigator and super-sleuth extraordinaire. Fiercely independent, brave, intelligent, and solves other people's problems without the help of a male partner.
1. wanted to create a woman detective who would stand in contrast to other women characters, who would be caring and believable.
2. Parettski said.
Albough a fan of the genre, she was not a fan of the women-as-victim and femme-fatale stereotypes she saw in the novels of Dashiell Hammett and other well-known detective writers.
The popularity of her hard-boiled female detective who performs daring deeds in silk stockings and Italian attire, she adds a mini-trend in detective fiction.
Following Paretsky's example, writers such as Sue Grafton and Antonia Fraser are experiencing their own female detectives.
But success has been hard won. Although the popularity of Paretkys's attests to the public's growing acceptance of her work, changing attitudes within the public's circle has been more difficult.
Three years ago, Paretky and a handful of other women writers formed the group Sisters in Crime to combat the problem of the under-educated of women in crime fiction awards and reviews in major publications.
The group, now expanded to 500 members, also has been concerned with the level of violence and sadism directed toward women and children in action.
"This kind of violence is a reflection of the discomfort our women children feel," Pareksky said. "It plays out in graphical representation for them."
rape and snuff films. It's a common theme that women have to be terribly degraded in crime fiction."
Paretsky, who grew up in what she called a traditional family during the 1950s, first became involved in the women's movement when she was a student at the University of Kansas. She cited Emily Taylor, former dean of women, as the most important feminist influence in her life.
"I was a Watkins Scholar, and she would meet with us once a month to hash out feminist issues." Paretsky said.
"I knew then that it would be a battle to break into a new field, but it was then that I began to realize that I didn't have to program myself to just get married and have children," she said.
Parestky's leadership in the field of detective fiction and her determination to meet her personal goals were recognized last year when MS. Magazine named her woman of the year.
"She does a lot of things that I wish I had the nerve to do when I was young, like going out and marring her children in believe in," Paretsky's mother said.
"What V.I. is doing is what many middle class women throughout the U.S. are doing now. She's doing a job she didn't know existed for her when she started high school." Paretsky said, "She's a pioneer."
Biff! Bang! Wham! Ticket sales zoom
by a Kansan reporter
Holy Batmania!
Tbby BSA
The movie "Batman" opened last Thursday in Lawrence and has sparked quite an interest in the Caped Crusader.
Elden Harwood, manager of Hillcrest Theaters, Ninth and 'iowa streets, where the movie is showing, adjusts the lighting and adjustments for the popular show
sales to help with the burden
"We had five shows a day through the weekend, and four a day since," Harwool said. "The crowds are over we expected, but what can you do?"
Larry Cornelius, Lawrence resident who went to "Batman" opening night, attested to the lines.
Hillcrest also has increased its staff and relies on advance ticket
The enthusiasm continued inside the theater. Crowds cheered and jeered as Batman battled his evil counterpart, the Joker, Cornelius said.
"It had as much audience participation in a movie as I've seen," he said.
Cornelius, who operates a novelty store in Lawrence, said Batman items were selling as well in his store and other movie line he has carried.
Police Record
INJURY ACCIDENT A 7-year-old Lawrence boy who was struck by a car Monday was listed in critical condition yesterday at the University of Kansas Medical Center, a hospital spokesman said.
The boy, Dustin Luther, 327 Florida St., suffered head and other injuries when he was struck by a car in the 500 block of Florida Street. He was by helicopter from Lawrence Memorial Hospital to the Med Center.
ROBBERY INVESTIGATION KU police continued to investigate an attempted robbery that occurred Monday morning in a stairwell at the Kansas Union, said Sgt. Schuyler Bailey, KU police spokesman.
According to police reports, a white man attacked and tried to take a bag of money from a Kansas Union officer, causing her to fall down the stairs.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PRINTING SERVICE 864-4341 4 DUPLICATING CENTERS FOR ALL YOUR COPY NEEDS! OFFERING COMPLETE COPY SERVICES TO THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY...STUDENTS, STAFF & FACULTY
Learned
Come see us
3018 Learned Hall Across from Elevator 864-4479
Xerox 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)
* sort & collate up to 50 sets
Xerox 9210:
Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
(closed during lunch)
Wescoe
- bold print
- variable reductions (65%-74%-98%)
- copies 1 sided original
- sort & collate up to 50 sets
1520 Wescoe Hall Next to Cafeteria 864-3354
Xerox 9500:
Monday-Friday 7 a.m.-5 p.m.
(open during lunch)
- 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)
- sort & collate up to 50 sets
Fax # is 864-5340
Xerox 1090:
- 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
Both machines print only $ \frac{1}{2} \times 11 $ and $ \frac{1}{2} \times 14 $ paper, or cardstock
Burge
Resume Kits
309 Burge Union
3rd floor next to Candy Counter
864-5098
Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m. (closed during lunch)
Let us do your duplicating for you Reasonable Prices and Convenient Parking Services available:
Xerox 1075:
• Bold print
• $8\frac{1}{2}$x11 and $8\frac{1}{2}$x14
• 2 sided copies
• Variable reductions
• Transparencies
• Labels
• Large selection of paper (colors and weights)
Xerox 1075:
Questions? Stop by or call we're here to help you.
VELO BINDING (only at Burge Center)
KUnion
Room 431
Main Floor K Union
864-4908
Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
(open during lunch)
Canon Color Copier
full color copies
up to 11X17
from slides & 35mm neg.
For a limited time $1.00 copies
Get your favorite photos enlarged
Just a few of our available services:
Kodak 300:
- Fast, efficient and affordable copies
• Crisp sharp image reproduction
• Variable reduction
• Staples in a choice of 2 positions
• Glue bind
• Covers available
• Large paper selection
Never a job too large or too small.
Have a rush job?
We Welcome Them!
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