VOL. 100, NO. 67 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY DEC.1,1989
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Tax committee rejects calling special session
By Derek Schmidt Kensan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Taxpayers staggering under rising property taxes got no immediate help yesterday from the Legislature.
A special tax committee voted 21-11 last night not to recommend that Gov. Mike Hayden call the Legislature into special session this month to address tax-relief measures.
"Dissatisfied taxpayers' is not a strong enough expression," State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said after the vote. "It's possible we could have a genuine revolt, such as people refusing to pay their taxes."
A member of Hayden's staff said that the governor would decide by Monday whether to call a special meeting.
"At this point, there appears to be no consensus among the legislators on a special session," said Frank Ybarra, the governor's deputy press secretary.
The governor already has extended the deadline for payment of first-half property taxes from Dec. 20 to Jan. 16 to allow the 1980 Legislature, which convenes Jan. 8, a week to debate tax relief before the deadline. Several counties reportedly plan to contest the governor's authority to extend the date.
Karen France, a lobbyist for the Kansas Association of Realtors and an organizer of a tax-protest rally at the Capitol on Wednesday, said she was disappointed with the committee vote.
"It really would have been a big help to the taxpayers if they would have called for a special session," France said. "They made a beginning, but they have a long way to go."
State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, led the fight for a special session.
The committee did agree on several tax-reflux measures that the Legislature could enact, but without a special law.
"We need to come in here and clear up the confusion about what appeals are possible and what taxpayers' options are." Vancrum said.
But several committee members feared that a special session would degenerate into a legislative free-for-all and that other issues, such as abortion, would invade the process.
"It's just an expensive waste of time," said State Rep. Keith Roe, R-Mankato.
Charlton and State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, voted for the special session.
Branson said that she was disappointed that the special session vote failed but that she was pleased with the committee's policy recommendations.
► Re-opening the local tax-appleals process for all taxpayers.
▶ Codifying the governor's extension of the tax due date to Jan. 16.
▶ Requiring taxpayers to pay only 25 percent of their tax bills to qualify to protest. Half payment now is required.
▶ Adding $20 million to the current $10 million appropriated for the residential "circuit breaker," which provides direct tax relief to low-income homeowners facing sharp tax increases.
trading an $82 million commercial circuit breaker to offset tax increases for small businesses.
X
Keith Thorpe/KANSAN
Solitude
A student walk a well-worn path near Potter Lake. Warming trends should bring temperatures into the 50s through Tuesday.
City files charges against 8 houses
Seven fraternities, one sorority slapped with fire code violations
By Lisa Moss
Kansan staff writer
The city prosecutor filed charges Wednesday against seven KU fraternities and one sorority for violation of the uniform fire code.
Representatives of the houses' corporation boards will appear in court Dec. 15 to answer charges.
The houses could face a maximum fine of $200 for each violation, city prosecutor Tom Porter said.
Phi Kappa Psi, 1602 W. 15th St., was charged with six counts of fire code violations and faces a maximum fine of $1,200.
Alpha Epsilon Pi, 1116 Indiana St., was charged on five counts.
The five other fraternities cited by Porter were:
Alpha Kappa Lambda, 2021 Stewart Ave.
Phi Kappa Theta, 1941 Stewart Ave.:
Tau Kappa Epsilon, 1911 Stewart Ave.
and Theta Chi, 101 Missouri St.
Sigma, Kappa, 1325 W. Campus
The charges were filed as a result
of Nov. 10 inspections made by Rich Brarr, Lawrence fire marshal.
Harvey Bodker, president of Alpha Epsilon Pi's corporation board, said he was not yet aware of the charges and was not concerned about them because he was doing all he could to comply.
"I guess he is just doing his job," he said of the fire marshal. "We've been working on it. We want the safety of people who live in the house as much as the city does, if not more."
Pat O'Connell, president of Phi Kappa Theta's corporation board, also said that he had not received notice of the charges. He said that the corporation board was working to comply with the codes.
Porter said that he thought the corporation presidents would plead not guilty and that a second court date would be set.
If the work that needs to be done is finished between now and then it would help their cases, he said.
"They were given a lot of time to correct these things, and the reason is that these are major items requiring large amounts of money." Porter said.
At a farewell ceremony in the
Leaders confident of summit success
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Consumer spending fell to its lowest level in nearly three years in October, the government said yesterday, and analysts said continued sluggishness in personal consumption was likely to be a "major drag" on the economy in the fourth quarter.
Urging an end to East-West divisions, Gorbachev the changes sweeping Eastern Europe and toppling hard-line communist regimes were invocable. He said they did not signal the collapse of socialism, but instead further development of a concept with noble goals and "enormous humanistic and democratic potential."
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Bush headed yesterday for his first summit with Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev, saying the two have a powerful and historic opportunity to work for peace. Gorbachev, in a speech in Rome, called for a 35-nation meeting next year to speed the integration of Europe.
"It's not going to be a great Christmas in terms of shopping and retail earnings," said Sandra Shaber, an economist with the Futures Group, a Washington consulting firm. "People will just wait until things go on sale."
On the other hand, personal income rose 0.9 percent, which analysts said indicated that consumers still had a bargain but were just waiting for bargains.
The Commerce Department said that spending, reflecting plummeting auto sales in October, dropped 0.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $3.53 trillion after
October spending drops; personal income increases
White House Rose Garden a few hours before his scheduled departure aboard Air Force One, Bush said, "I'm ready and confident." He labeled himself and Gorbache as "envoys for positive, productive change."
Half a world away, authorities on the Mediterranean island of Malta were busy mobilizing the military — the first to join the war — for ration for the superpower leaders.
Not even a shortage of tiny, wavable Soviet flags was enough to hamper the preparations, said Eddie Stafrace, who reported selling 160 toy cars from his toy store behind the Palace of the Grand Masters in Valletta.
Bush and Gorbachev will meet tomorrow, beginning $11\frac{1}{2}$ hours of talks during two days.
Income, on the other hand, totaled $4.51 trillion, reflecting the largest advance since a 1 percent gain last March. It had risen 0.3 percent in September.
edging up only 0.3 percent in September.
It it was the first decline in personal spending since a 0.1 percent drop in September 1988 and the steepest decrease a 1.4 percent fall in January 1987.
The San Francisco Bay area earthquake knocked $21 billion out of the income figure at an annual rate, but that was partially offset by other one-time "special factors," including a $7.2 billion increase in farm subi-
Consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of the nation's economic activity.
"Consumer spending is starting the fourth quarter on an extremely good note," said David Jones, an economist with Wheybridge G. Lanson and Co. in New York.
Personal spending
dies and $6.8 billion in bonuses to auto industry employees.
Jones and Shaber expect a weak fourth-quarter economy but said the report by itself did not indicate an imminent recession.
Percent change October
All spending -0.2%
Durable goods -28.8%
Nondurable goods +2.5%
Services +20.2%
Includes payments by individuals on goods and services without interest.
1.5% Percent change at annual rate
1.0%
0.5%
0 Down 0.2%
SOURCE: Bureau of Economic Analysis
-0.5% ND J F M A M J J A S O
Legislature to consider bar checks Kansas courts still question constitutionality of asking for ID
By Stacy Smith Kansan staff writer
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said the issue would be discussed in the Senate Judiciary Committee when the legislative session begins Jan. 8. In addition, Winter said he was considering introducing a bill that would legally allow officers to ask bar patrons for identification.
When the 1900 Legislature convenes in January, the legality of bar checks will be raised.
Shepherd wrote in her decision that Lawrence police officers did not have reasonable suspicion that Bernstein, Winnetka, ill., junior, was underage and therefore involved in criminal activity at the time they approached her in a Lawrence bottle. Shepherd asked the young woman looked young was subjective and dependent upon that officer's perspective.
"One idea was to treat the ability to drink in a bar like we treat the ability to drive a car. It's a privilege, not a right," he said. "By driving, you can give your consent to give your driver's license when an officer asks."
The constitutionality of bar checks was brought into question when Judge Jean Shepherd of Douglas County District Court rued on Sept. 20 to suppress evidence in the Kansas
vs. Abbey Bernstein case. The case involved a KU student who was charged with underage drinking last spring.
The Douglas County district attorney's office filed an appeal on Sept. 25 with the Kansas Court of Appeals in Topeka. Rick Trapp, assistant district attorney, said he was using the same legal arguments he used in the original case. He said he could not comment further.
Bernstein's attorney, Donald Strole, said he had developed an additional defense to counter the district attorney's point that if the
ruled was upheld, the police could not enforce the law. Strole has until Dec. 22 to file his brief with the Court of Appeals.
"The court has held that looking young alone is not reasonable suspicion." Strole said. "The case could be if police saw someone look really nervous and who had someone else always buy drinks for them and then who started to leave when a uniformed officer entered.
"I'm just trying to say that if officers have these factors, they might have reasonable suspicion: Having one factor alone is not enough."
Strole said he based his point on a recent Supreme Court case, United States vs. Sokolow, that held that the police had cause to arrest an individual because the defendant looked and acted suspiciously.
Strole said he did not expect the case to be put on the court docket until February or March.
U.S. joins battle to thwart Philippine coup attempt
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — U.S. warplanes this morning joined the battle to save President Corazon Aquino's elected government after military rebels bombed the presidential palace in the strongest bid yet to toil her.
President Bush authorized military assistance to back Aquino's government after rebels also seized two air bases, including the air force headquarters, and were moving artillery and armor into the capital.
The mutinous soldiers also seized two television stations.
The extent of U.S. involvement was fighter jets flying over the rebel-held Sanglegy and Villamor air bases, a U.S. official in Washington said.
more, two Pacific democracies stand shoulder-to-shoulder in the defense of freedom.
"Even now, U.S. fighters are joining the fight to give air cover to our ground troops." Aquino said. "Once
"The fight is joined in earnest. The outcome is assured."
At least 10 people were killed and 64 wounded in the most serious of the six coup attempts since Aquino came to power. She was reported safe after the attack on the palace.
She was swept into office in February 1888 by a civilian-military uprising that drove President Ferdinand Marcos into exile in Hawaii. But public discontent with the economic use of economic problems and allegations of corruption.
Jets roared across the skies over Manila Friday afternoon but U.S. Embassy and Clark Air Base spokesmen refused to confirm whether they were U.S. planes. U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Blatt said he was unaware.
in battle to death in winter they were U.S. pilots.
U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Platt said he was unsure
how many U.S. warplanes had been committed to help the Aquino government. He said there was no specific time limit for use of the U.S. lets.
In Washington, a U.S. official confirmed that U.S. planes began flying over two rebel-held Phillipine air bases shortly after the presidential authorization.
"The goal in this authorization has been to discourage any hostile attempt on the part of the rebels in the Philippines. President Aquino's request was very specific and that was to conduct an aggressive cap over two Philippine air bases, Villamor and Sangley Point," the official said.
It appeared the government had trouble mustering loyal troops. Mutinous units were less than a mile
The official said the U.S. aid at this point involved solely those flights over the rebel-held bases, and added that ground troops were not involved
Rebels also held parts of Manila's main airport and bombed government installations.
from the palace, and thousands of civilians fled the fighting.
It was unclear who was leading the mutiny. Rebel soldiers would not say. They were believed to be loyal to renegade Lt. Col. Gregorio "Gringo" Honasan, who led an August 1987 coup attempt in which at least $3 people were killed.
The U.S. military has 40,000 troops, military departments and Defense Department civilians站 at six bureaus.
U. S. Embassy spokesman Jerry Huchel warned U.S. citizens living in Manila to stay in their homes. Up to 100,000 other U.S. civilians live in the Philippines.
Australia, Japan, New Zealand and Thailand condemned the coun attempt.
2
Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Dally Kansan
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 1. 1989
Campus/Area
3
Council rejects 2 parking recommendations
By Kate Lee
Kansan staff writer
The University. Council yesterday voted against two of the six changes in parking regulations recommended by the Parking Board.
A discussion of the Parking Department budget was delayed until next week because a quorum was not present. The votes on the parking regulations were valid
because because a count for the quorum was not called until the budget discussion at the end of the meeting.
One of the defeated changes would have extended the hours of faculty blue spaces to 8:30 p.m. in the lot west of Learned Hall. The other would have opened the lot north of Summerfield Hall at night and changed Lot 35, west of the Military Science building, to faculty and staff
until 8:30 p.m.
The Council approved changes that would add spaces to the lot behind the Spencer Museum of Art, make the lots of Alumni Place tow-away zones for no permit and wrong zone violators, make the lot to the east of Learned a loading zone, and eliminate the requirement for full-time staff enrolled in classes to buy a yellow permit.
The resolution changes were
approved in their entirety by SenEx on Monday.
Morris Faisman, chairman of the Parking Board, said the changes were proposed primarily to alleviate the problems faculty and staff members had in finding parking spaces in those lots at night.
"There are faculty and staff who work until 5:30 or 6, and then by the time they get home and come back, can't find a place to park," he said.
William Sanders, a Student Senate representative to the Council, said there were students, particularly graduate students, who used campus buildings to study at night.
"With this, they would not be able to park anywhere near until 8:30, which is fairly late," he said.
The Parking Board is composed of faculty, students and staff.
"The board tries to make recommendations based on what is good for
the university as a whole," Falman said.
Ray Moore, presiding officer of the Council, said the final decision on the regulations would not be made until after the board made its final recommendations to Chancellor Gene A. Budig next semester.
Anyone who wanted to could send comments to the chancellor, he said, and there would be time for the Council to review final changes.
Class publishes poetry magazine
By Anita Meyer
Kansan staff writer
In most classes, collaboration on a paper is considered cheating. In Alan Lichter's poetry-writing classes, collaboration produced Kado, a publication Lichter thinks is KU's first student poetry magazine.
Lichter, associate professor of English, said he had not suggested the idea of a poetry magazine to any other class.
"I suggested it to this class, and "I took it upon themselves to get it together," he said. "With other classes, I just never felt the energy. I've never been encouraged as I have with this class."
The editors of Kado are Ellen Bannister, Leavenworth junior and last year's Caruth Poetry Award winner; Christine Biller, Lawrence Perrin; Mary O'Neill, Manchester senior; and Giles Scott, Manchester, England, graduate student.
The magazine will be sold Monday through Wednesday for $1 a copy in front of Wescoe Hall and the Kansas Union.
Biller said she thought it was important to publish a student poetry magazine.
"I think it's important to have an outlet for student poets," she said. "I also think it's important for people to be exposed to poetry."
12
I suggested it to this class, and they took it upon themselves to get it together. With other classes, I just never felt the energy. I've never been as encouraged as I have with this class.'
- Alan Lichter associate professor of English
The 28-page magazine will contain
21 poems by 14 poets.
"the potential for Kado was always there," Scott said. "The poetry was good, and we wanted to do it."
Rendezvous was a fiction magazine produced by Lichter's fiction-writing classes in Fall 1988.
Lichter said Rendezvous sold about 700 copies at 50 cents each.
Molman said copies not sold Mon-
throught Wednesday would be
sold.
If 500 of the 600 books printed are not sold, the editors will have to pay for publishing costs themselves.
"All along we've been working on a budget of zero," Molmain said. "We got the printers to let us pay 10 days after publishing. Considering the publication and the quality of poetry, we should be able to do it."
or Yoome
Julia James/KANSAI
Sandy Praeger congratulates division leaders on a great job
Donations exceed United Way goals
By Holly Lawton Kansan staff writer
The United Way of Douglas County celebrated victory yesterday at the Adams Alumni Center when about 200 participants in the 1989-90 campaign were told that the goal of $768,000 in donations had been exceeded.
The United Way raised $74,839 for financing of 26 local agencies in 1990, said Sandra Praeger, chairman of the campaign. The University of Kansas was the third-highest contributor with a total of $120,427, exceeding its goal by nearly 10 percent.
"KU has done such a tremendous job that all the Jayhawk signs on campus were colored in early and then stolen." Prazeer said.
Another $10,000 to $15,000 could be donated in the next few weeks, as pledges continue to come in, she said.
Praeger praised the efforts of the United Way volunteers in surpassing the goal of the campaign.
"This says so much about our community," Praeger said. "We're able to work together and show teamwork. It makes me very proud of Lawrence and the community.
"This couldn't have been done by just a few people. All the volunteer effort is what made it work," she said. "It shows that if everyone gives a little, no one has to give a lot."
Andy Contreras, United Way volunteer, told a story at the celebration about the role that the Boys and Girls Club, a service financed by the United Way, played in his life.
The division with the largest contribution was the business and industry division, which provided 46% of the overall goal with $465.146.
Mike Kautsch, division leader for KU, made a surprise presentation to Paeera as he named her an assistant for her work with the United Way.
"When those kids walk in the door, always smiling, they make all my troubles seem to disappear," he said. "The United Way is always there behind these agencies' success stories."
"The way we do this is to give a Kansas sweatshirt. Our goal was to get you a sweatshirt that fits, but as we all know, we exceeded our goal," Kautsch said as he gave Praeger an extra-large sweatshirt.
Willner adviser specializes in helping college faculty
Bv Doug Fishback
Kansan staff writer
Donald Koster uses his to help college and university faculty face charges brought against them by adminis-
Some people use their retirement years to move to a lake-side home, fish from pontoon boats and barbecue steaks.
Koster, who retired in 1978 from an English professorship at Adelphi University in Garden City, N.Y., is acting as academic adviser to Dorothy Willner, professor of anthropology, during dismissal hearings. The hearings, which are open to the public, began in October and are scheduled to continue through Dec. 22.
Willner said that Koster had shown dedication to the principles of academic freedom and tenure by taking the past two months to help her with her case.
Koster, 79, came to Lawrence from his home near
"I believe that I'm very fortunate in having Dr. Koster," she said.
Whitney Point, N.Y., after Willner chose him from a list of potential representatives that was provided by the American Association of University Professors. He said he had attended the University of Kansas in an official AAUP capacity.
Jonathan Knight, associate secretary of the national office of the AAUP, said that the lists were composed on a case-by-case basis from faculty members whose abilities and experience seemed well-suited to the conditions.
in the course of our business, we get to know lots of faculty members. We try to use our best judgment in these cases.
His first case came at Adelphi in 1965, he said, when university officials suspended a non-tenured faculty member without a hearing.
Koster, who was a charter member of the Adelphi AAUP chapter in the late 1940s, said that most of the cases he had been involved in had been in the East.
Koster was one of two representatives recommended to the faculty member
"He chose me. and that's how I got started in this
sometimes grisly business." he said.
Koster won that case and went on to serve as a representative or witness in 15 or 20 others, he said, including a tenure revocation hearing for Kansas State University professor Bem Mahaffey five years ago. Koster served as an expert witness in the K-State case, which Mahaffey won.
Koster said that he had expected the Willner case, which is in its seventh week, to be a long and challenging event.
"'t took the precaution of bringing my wife with me,' he said.
Koster and his wife are living in a Lawrence apartment during the hearing. He said Willner was paying his expenses.
Although his expenses are paid, he said, money was not the issue when he decided to take on a case.
[Image of a man with white hair and glasses]
"There's not enough money in the world to make me do anything," he said. "I don't think there's a principle involved." Kester said.
Donald Koster
Compliance with AAUP policies is what Koster said he
looked for in a case, but the issue of academic freedom is behind the policies. He described it as freedom, both in and out of the classroom, for faculty members to express themselves without fear of reprisal.
Attention! December Graduates
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Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Margin can't be sacrificed for property-tax problem
Disquieting news from Topeka reports that the Margin of Excellence could be the check that pays for reducing the property-tax burden. If true, it is too high a price.
However, the Margin need not be the budget line that gets crossed out in favor of much-needed tax relief.
In fact, lawmakers seem to be holding the Margin hostage to stall solutions to the tax problem. For example, State Sen. Dan Thiessen, R-Independence, has said, "If we were to pump a lot of money into property-tax relief, it would take it out of the general fund, and programs that have been funded before then would be hurt." Thiessen then added that the Margin would be a likely victim.
House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg, said Gov. Mike Hayden's budget would not include full financing for the final year of the Margin. Hayden has not yet specifically targeted the Margin but has said he would look at using the state's general fund to finance tax relief. The Margin is financed through the state's general fund.
Suddenly, the Margin, which has received strong support from the governor and legislators, would seem to be on the table. Lawmakers must recognize that ensuing public outcry would prevent a substantial cut in the Margin's final year. A more logical explanation is that the Margin is being used as a tool to delay substantive discussion on tax relief.
Both issues are too important for rhetorical games. The Margin has received full financing for two years and the support of the public. The final year must be financed in full to accomplish its goal.
The tax problem also must be remedied as soon as possible. The logical solution is to shift some gambling revenues from economic development to tax relief or to incorporate a "circuit breaker" into tax assessment that would prevent catastrophic increases in levies.
The Margin should not be a bargaining chip in the tax relief negotiations. Both issues suffer if they are placed at odds.
Daniel Niemi for the editorial board
Regents application price will benefit the University
The Board of Regents has finally put a price on applying to the University of Kansas.
A $15 application fee is now in effect at Regents schools, which brings KU in line with most other Big Eight schools. Admissions directors at the various Regents schools said recently that the application fees would help reduce the number of applicants that they would have to sift through each spring when they decide who will and who won't attend in the fall.
In fact, Bruce Lindvall, director of the office of admissions at KU, has predicted a 10 percent decrease in the number of applications his office will receive. He said yesterday, however, that it was too early to foresee exactly how this would affect in-state vs. out-of-state applications.
But the fee is a boon for all Regents schools in more ways than just reducing the number of applications that admissions employees will have to read.
The fee will generate about $300,000 for KU, according to local estimates. That money will stay at KU and will help finance additional staff. Obviously, that's a plus. And it's not a one-shot deal, either. This is money that will be coming in year after year.
With the third year of the Margin of Excellence in jeopardy, it would be nice to have another constant source of income for the University, one that we have never had before.
But there's a psychological factor here as well. People applying to KU in the past have had nothing to lose by doing so. Now, an applicant has to put his money on the line, and some people are not willing to do that. Although a fee of only $15 won't stop many people, it will stop those who weren't really serious about coming to KU in the first place. And that may save time in the lower-level classes because staff won't have to worry about teaching people who would rather have been semenlace else.
So it's about time that the Regents gamble on an application fee. The fees at other schools range from $10 to $50. Perhaps the next step should be to up the ante.
David Stewart for the editorial board
News staff
David Stewart...Editor
Ric Brack...Managing editor
Daniel Niemi...News editor
Candy Nieman...Planning editor
Stan Dietl...Editorial editor
Jennifer Corser...Campus editor
Elaine Sung...Sports editor
Leura Husar...Proof editor
Christine Winner...Arts/Features editor
Tom Eblen...General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Linda Prokop ... Business manager
Debra Martin ... Local advertising sales director
Jerre Medford ... National/regional sales director
Jill Lowe ... Marketing director
Tami Rank ... Production manager
Carrie Blaninka ... Assistant production manager
Margaret Townsend ... Creator
Eric Hughes ... Creative director
Chrissi Doolol ... Classified manager
Jeff Meeesy ... Tearsheet manager
Jeenne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
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HEY, COME ON, FELLS!
I WAS JUST KIDDING ABOUT
THAT COLD WAR STUFF!!
COME ON BACK, PLEASE...
HEY , FELLAS???
Gorbachev's stake in Malta crucial
The truly remarkable changes that have been sweeping through Eastern Europe can be at least partly attributed to the reforms of Mikhail Gorbachev. The Soviet president initiated changes in communist doctrine and ideology that reached far beyond his country's borders. Ironically, the revolution that Gorbachev instigated may end up causing his ouster.
As George Bush depends for his first summit with his Soviet counterpart, U.S. policy toward the now volatile Eastern bloc remains unclear. President Bush's failure to articulate such a policy would, in any other situation, be unfortunate. But the sorry state of affairs in the Soviet Union and the growing discontent among its citizens make Bush's aloof inepteпtion not only acceptable, but desirable.
The Soviet Union and the United States have both undergone some dramatic changes since the days of the "evil empire." The Soviet government has shifted its focus from invasions of Third World countries to its allaying, centralized economy. This shift has allowed U.S. presidents to move from condemning the "communist threat" to contending with the growing influence of national television audience. Times have changed.
But now Gorbachev is in trouble. The notorious Russian winter is quickly approaching and the fruits of perestroika have yet to ripen. Strikes, domestic unrest and the inefficiency of the Soviet economy threaten to bring massive shortages of such essentials as soap, boots and even coal. The Soviet people have grown weary of Gorbachev's promises of better days and his support in the Politburo and the Communist Party is waning.
B. S. H.
However, Gorbachev's popularity abroad rivals that of the Pope. His new thinking has inspired the people of Eastern Europe to demand reform. And
Daniel Grossman
Staff columnist
reform was what they got. Instead of a wall in Berlin, East Germans now have pluralism in its infancy. In Warsaw, instead of military rule, they have Solidarity. And in Prague, CzechoSLavakia, instead of Soviet tanks they have promises of democracy. The era of Stalinist inflexibility and the Breznev Doctrine in Eastern Europe has been replaced by the icon of Mikhail Gorbachev and the future of freedom that he represents.
But this popularity that the Soviet leader enjoys abroad does not come without its costs. With the liberation of Eastern Europe, the future of the Warsaw Pact is drawn into question. Its disintegration could prove to be the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back in the Kremlin. Gorbachev would find it difficult to preach perestroika from the cold of Siberia.
Between his mutters of the merits of prudence, caution and staying the course, George Bush did manage to say that it was in the interest of the United States that Gorbachev's reforms succeed. In fact, this was the closest our president has come to taking a stand since his inauguration. His exact words were, "There is no greater advocate of perestroika than the president of the United States." If this is the case, then Bush's lack of policy in regards to the Soviet Union is fortunate.
The Malta summit offers both Bush and Gorbachev great opportunities. For Gorbachev, a successful summit could mean a boistering of his domestic support, perhaps enough to get him through the long winter that lies ahead. Success, for Gorbachev, includes an agreement with Bush that NATO and the Warsaw Pact must remain intact despite the changes in Europe. This might take some of the heat off of Gorbachev from Communist Party hard-liners. But such an agreement could help Bush as well.
Just the fax about new technology
It was one of those news items designed to elicit public outrage — a news item similar to those reports about the Pentagon spending hundreds of dollars for a single toilet seat.
President Bush continues to downplay the significance of the Malta summit, methodically reiterating the importance of moving slowly. But by issuing a joint statement with Gorbachev endorsing the continued presence and importance of NATO and the Warsaw Pact, Bush would, quite accidentally, both formulate a policy toward Europe and assert the eagerness of the United States to become involved in the ever-changing political atmosphere across the Atlantic.
This time, the items in question were not toilet seats. They were fax machines. It seems that the Air Force had purchased 173 custom-made facsimile machines under contracts amounting to almost $73 million. That amounts to $421,000 for each fax machine.
Gorbache's revolution under the banner of perestroika has sparked a political upheaval throughout Eastern Europe. Stalinist communism has been laid to rest and the Cold War may be next in the funeral procession. But Gorbache's survival is crucial to obtaining this objective. Bush must awaken from his policy hibernation and recognize the changes that are occurring in a world that is answering less and less to either Moscow or Washington. By asserting the importance of continued loyalty to the European alliances, Bush and Gorbache can make the Malta statute a significant step in stabilizing the volatile situation in Eastern Europe. If they fail, it will be a long, and for Mikhail Gorbache, a very cold winter.
PETER BROADWAY
As might be expected, the Air Force provided official explanations, which the press made fun of. An Air Force spokesman said that the fax machines really cost the government only $76,000 each and that the machines were "not your normal fax" — they were fax machines designed to withstand the dirt, havoc and extremes of battlefield duty.
Maybe so, maybe not. The thought occurs,
though, that if we go beyond the economics of this,
something even more interesting than money
emerges.
Let's start with the military fax machines themselves. The Air Force says that the machines
Nevertheless, it was duly reported that fax machines for homes or businesses generally cost between $600 and $1,500. The implication was that once again the Pentagon was being stupid.
Bob Greene
Syndicated columnist
are capable "of allowing a commander in a battlefield situation, who is managing fighter aircraft, to get transmissions from satellites to tell him what targets are out there that need to be taken out." The fax machines are able to receive documents instantaneously, can be operated anywhere in the world, are able to withstand dust, rain, sand and salt, and will work in temperatures ranging from minus 25 degrees to 125 degrees Fahrenheit.
Imagine if you had told a World War II commander about such a machine — a machine that, in an instant, was able to receive documents being sent from offices in Washington or anywhere in the world. The commander would have thought the idea miraculous, if not impossible.
The problem is that today everyone from a storeroom clerk to a Hollywood agent has the capability to receive documents in just that
manner. People grumble, perhaps chuckle, and shake their heads at the price the Pentagon is paying for the military faxes — and don't consider the dizzying truth of how amazing it is that such technology is available at all.
The point of all this is that what used to be special is now common. No wonder people don't get excited that documents can be transmitted to a battlefield, regardless of the cost. After all, we know what it means when the White House says it is "closely monitoring" a world crisis. The president is watching CNN. just like the rest of us.
It goes beyond this specific case. It's everywhere. Average people have access to products and services that n few years ago were the province of kings and millionaires. Remember all the publicity that Hugh Hefner used to get because he had hundreds of movies stored in a room at the Playboy Mansion and projectionists on call round the clock?
Now, or course, most of the country has the same option. With VCRs in tens of millions of homes, and video rental stores within a few blocks of most neighborhoods, the United States takes for granted the thing that seemed so special about Hefner's house.
Bob Greene is a columnist for the Chicago
Tribune.
AT THE CARTOONIST DISMISSAL HEARING.
IF YOU COULD PLEASE TELL US YOUR FEELINGS TOWARD THE DEFENDANT.
I THought THE DEFENDANT WAS INTELLECTUALLY STIMulating.
DOUGEE
TESTIFY HERE
AT THE CARTOONIST Dismissal HEARING.
IF YOU COULD PLEASE TELL US YOUR FEELINGS TOWARD THE DEFENDANT.
I THOUGHT THE DEFENDANT WAS INTELLECTUALLY STIMULATING.
THE APPROACH TO MATERIAL WAS HILARIOUS. AND CONTINUE. THE FACIAL EXPRESSIONS AND VISUALS WERE VERY APPEALING.
I ESPECIALLY LIKED WHEN THE DEFENDANT HAD SOMEBODY DANCING IN CLASS!!
HEE. HEE.
HEE.
TESTIFY HERE
TESTIFY HERE
VERY APPRECIATION. JUAREE TREMIDA HERIE
I ESPECIALLY LIKED WHEN THE DEFENDANT HAD SOMEBODY DANCING IN CLASS!!
HEE. HEE.
HEE.
JAPOE
ENVIRY HOUSE
CAMP UNNEELY NEVER DID THAT.
ISN'T THIS THE DOROTHY WILLNER HEARING?
DOWN THE HALL.
FESTHYP HERE
University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 1. 1989
On campus
KJHK RAISB MONEY: Radio Station KJHK's holiday auction and food fair generated about $5,500 last night for the station and a local charity organization.
"We generated about $500 for Lawrence Warm Hearts," said Tim Mensendiek, KJHK general manager. "When all was said and done, we earned about $5,000 for the station."
Mensendiek said that the amount earned for the station was about the same as last year but that he considered it an accomplishment because there were fewer donating clients this year.
Denise Kettler, KJHK promotions director, said that next semester the station would try to incorporate a fund-raising event similar to the
holiday auction but with a spring theme.
MONEY BYOLEN: About $3,000 in cash was taken from an unlock, unattended vending truck Wednesday and KU police investigator Vig Strand.
"It's not easy." Strand said, "But
everything is possible with the right
equipment."
Opening a safe in this manner is not unusual. he said.
Using bolt cutters, someone opened a safe and took 14 money bags sometime between 2 p.m. and 3:25 p.m., Strnad said. The break-in may have taken place in a parking lot near Summerfield Hall.
"We're not sure how much was
saved at this time. are no suspects
at this time."
- Three exhibitions, "Chinese Bronzes from the Sackler Collection," "Prints of the 1980s" and "Ceramics of the Weimar Republic," are on display today through Dec. 30 at the Soencer Museum of Art.
Local Briefs
► A meeting of Intervariyst Christian Fellowship will be 7 p.m.
A gallery tour by Stephen Goddard, curator of prints for the "Prints of the 1980s" exhibit, will be at noon today at the south balcony gallery in the Spencer Museum of Art.
today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
Three exhibitions, "Chinese Bron-
Burge.
> The KU Folk Dance Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today at St. John's Catholic Church, 1229 Vermont St.
> A worship service, sponsored by KU Bible Study, will be at 10:30 a.m. Sunday at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
> An ECKANKAR worship service will be at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. The service consists of short reading from ECKANKAR books.
Happy Birthday To You!!
Happy Birthday To You!!
If you have a birthday in the month of December, the treat's on us.
Just stop by on your birthday,
and we'll treat you to
a FREE medium cup
of our delicious,
premium frozen yogurt!
Louisiana Purchase
Shopping Center
23rd and Louisiana
Lawrence
Phone 843-5500
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
GREAT TASTE - NATURALLY.
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! GREAT TASTE - NATURALLY.
THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
T
he holidays begin with the perfect tree from Pence. They have a large selection of healthy live trees to select from. Eight foot trees are just $19, while seven foot trees are priced at $17 and trees six feet and smaller are a modest $15.
The finest quality trees at the lowest prices in town. So come make your place a "home for the holidays."
"home for the holiday."
PENCE
ALBERT CARDINAL COFFEE HOUSE
KANSAS
TAKENING
College Memory
ear. Macintosh will remember more about KU than you will.
This year, Macintosh will remember more about KU than you will. That's because the 1990 Jayhawker Yearbook is being produced entirely on Macintosh computers.And the results are something the staff won't soon forget.
OLIVER
Before, editing and reworking pages was timeconsuming and expensive. So the decision was made to teach the entire staff to use Macintosh computers.
Here's what they learned to do within a month: cut production time by 75%, use that time to explore more creative ideas, and improve the quality of the Jayhawker with the graphic capabilities of Macintosh.
So when you see this year's Jayhawker, remember that a Macintosh could do the same for you.
Macintosh®
The power to do your best at KU $ \textcircled{2} $ 1989 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
The Mac deals are here! Burge Union 864-5697
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News from the hill THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Campus Page
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for Driving
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PRIME TUNER SHOW • SP CIT ANTIL
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No 9:00 Show Fr. and Sat.
Prancer (G)
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No 9:00 Show Fri. and Sat.
Steel Magnolias (PG)
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No two for one passes
All Dogs Go To Heaven (G)
'11:00 '2:55 '4:55 7:00 9:00
The two lines for the pass
Back To The Future 2 (PG)
*1:12,5; 2:35; *4:55, 7:05, 9:35
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12:00, 2:15, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 no two for one passes
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41
Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Why Pay More For Less?
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Order Buffet and Your Ice Tea is ONLY 20°
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Not good with other specials
Limit one coupon per person
Valentines
Rideaways
You "win" when the Hawks do!
Each time the Men's team is victorious at home, we'll help you celebrate!
KU
Here's how it works:
Here's how it works:
On Home Game Days, you'll receive the percent off your total
receive the percent off your total purchase that matches the point spread. For instance, if the Jayhawks win by 15 points, you receive 15% off.
Cheer the Jayhawks on to victory against Maryland-Baltimore
County and then come celebrate with us!
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
GREAT TASTE - NATURALLY
Louisiana Purchase 23rd & Lousiana
843-5500
open 11-11
noon-11 Sun.
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 ta a safe level.
(2) Call for aid or advice from the gas company or fire depart- ment or police department
men or ladder 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.
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 of the area will be made to determine the problem and corrective action needed.
If you have any questions please contact our office.
CALL 843-7842
+
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We cater any size party anytime- anywhere. If you're planning a holiday party and want anything from hors'doeuvres, cakes or salads to seven course dinners, Laciece will tend to your every need.
ROCK CHALK REVUE
IBA TRYOUTS
In Between Acts Tryouts
DECEMBER 5th & 6th
D
We need singers, actors dancers and all types of creative talent
CALL 864-4033
FOR DETAILS
Recycling project will debut at start of spring semester
Now that the contract has been signed and the collection barrels have been ordered, KU's pilot recycling program, should begin Jan. 18, 1990, said Jeff Morris, student body vice president.
By Chris Evans Kansan staff writer
Liz Smith, Lawrence sophomore and member of the University of Kansas recycling task force, said 32 aluminum can containers had been ordered for the owners of River City Recycling. Co., the company scheduled to recycle at the University.
"Everything should be ready by the beginning of second semester," she said. "We're working on this over the holidays to make sure it gets done."
The recycling task force was organized by members of Student Senate and Environs, a student environmental-awareness group. Representatives from those groups and from city government, KU faculty and Student Union Activities make
up the task force.
Containers will be placed in eight buildings on campus. The buildings are the Kansas Union, Wescoe Hall, Marvin Hall, Fraser Hall, Haworth Hall, Murphy Hall, Summerfield Hall and Blake Hall.
River City Recycling workers will collect cans each afternoon before campus opens to traffic.
"We're going to try to move paper pick-up into our recycling program," Morris said.
Morris, who is also a member of the recycling task force, told senators Wednesday that he saw possibilities for expansion in the recycling program.
Smith said that any program expansion would occur after the semester-long pilot project ended.
SPRING SEMESTER LEASES NOW AVAILABLE
"We'd have to really get into the project to know if paper would be feasible," she said. "That can wait. We're doing this to make students aware. Half of it is for the aluminum, half of it is for the students."
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They're here!
The Macintosh deals you've been waiting for...
Mac Deal #1
Macintosh Plus
Imagewriter II Printer
Rodime/Everex 20 Plus Hard Drive
MacWrite 5.0
Free Macintosh carrying case with purchase!
Educational package price $ 1,899.00
Mac Deal #3
Macintosh SE 20 MB/HD
Standard Keyboard
Imagewriter II Printer
Free Macintosh carrying case with purchaser
Educational package price $ 2,499.00
Macintosh
The power to do your best at KU
© 1989 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
Macintosh SE CPU
Standard Keyboard
Imagewriter II Printer
MacWrite 5.0
Free Macintosh carrying case with purchase!
A $79.95 value!
Educational package price $ 1,999.00
Mac Deal #2
(Prices do not include 4.75% tax)
*Prices good while quantities last.
*Offer open only to full-time students,
faculty and staff of the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Campus.
*Please consult requirements for purchasing Apple Computer Equipment. You may pick up a copy of the requirements in the KU Bookstore in the Burge Union. Promotion ends Dec. 22, 1989.
Apple.
Macintosh
SE
Mac Deal a La Carte
Macintosh Plus $ 924.00
Macintosh SE CPU 1,419.00
Macintosh SE 20MB/HD 1,919.00
Imagewriter II Printer 449.00
MacWrite 5.0 49.00
Standard Keyboard 82.00
Rodime/Everex 20 MB/HD 489.00
Macintosh Plus
*Payment must be made in cash or by cashier's check.
*No personal checks or credit cards.
*Have cashier's check made payable to "KU Bookstores."
*Student dividend already applied on computer purchases.
The Mac deals are here!
Burge Union
864-5697
KU
KU
BOOKSTONES
7
V
University Daliv Kansan / Fridav December 1, 1989
1
Nation/World
7
Armenians rally for republic
Violence breaks out in disputed region
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Tens of thousands of Armenians rallied yesterday in Yerevan and demanded that their lawmakers defy Moscow by declaring the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region part of a "unified Armenian republic," local journalists said.
Unconfirmed reports from the Caucasus region in the southern part of the Soviet Union said as many as three people were killed in violence stemming from the sovereignty quarrel about the predominantly Armenian district inside the neighborly republic of Azerbaijan, adding to a 22-month total of about 100 deaths.
overwhelming Armenian majority.
In Moscow, the Soviet legislature overwhelmingly approved a resolution Tuesday disbanding a special commission that had imposed direct control over 160,000 people, which was made part of Azerbaijan in 1923 despite its
The resolution passed by the Soviet legislature said the area was part of Azerbaijan, as provided in the 1977 Soviet Constitution, and would now be the main security body under the supervision of an all-union commission.
In Yerevan, Armenia's capital, the republic's Supreme Soviet Legislature and lawmakers from Nagorno-Karabakh in a special session to debate the Moscow Legislature's resolution, said Armen Dulyan, a spokesman for the republic's official Armenpress news agency.
U.S. citizens flee San Salvador
The Associated Press
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — Hundreds of U.S. citizens flee the country yesterday to escape a guerrilla war that, after 10 years and 1,000 deaths, has captured the troubled neighborhoods they withdrew from wealthy Salvadors.
"The FMLN is maintaining a constant siege of the capital, which is the neurological center of the nation. The
fuse of a social time-bomb has been lit," said the clandestine rebel radio Venceremos.
Rebels of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, or FMLN, observed a six-hour truce yesterday to permit evacuation of those who wished to leave.
About 150 U.S. citizens left on the first of two charter flights arranged by the U.S. Embassy. They included 234 from Washington and U.S. citizens living in El Salvador.
The Communist Party conducted its first talks with the opposition, and members of Parliament proposed the repeal of tough laws used to imprison and fine dissenters.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Margaret Tuwiler said that the departure was voluntary, but that they were encouraging embassy dependents and personnel to leave the country.
The party also said it would announce a new program to include "an objective revision of its attitude toward the 'Pragueorm movement' of 1888 and the Soviet-led invasion that crushed it.
Leftist guerrillas fired their first anti-aircraft missile Wednesday, at an Air Force A-37 jet fighter-bomber near Zacateculca, 25 miles south of San Salvador, but missed the target, a Western military source reported.
CZECHOS CAN GO WEST: The Czechoslovakian government said yesterday that it would tear down the fences on its border with Austria and lift virtually all restrictions on travel to the West.
World Briefs
Spokesman Joef Hora said the new policies might allow the readmission to the party of half a people expelled after the invasion.
The Interior Ministry said that starting Monday citizens will be allowed to use their passports for unrestricted travel to the West and East of China. The Soviet Union and Poland, the state news agency CTK reported, the
The only remaining formality will be completion of a simple
PANAMANIAN SHIPS BANNED:
President Bush, trying to tighten the economic screws on Panama's Gen, Manuel Antonio Noriage "and his puppet regime," yesterday banned Panamanian-fled vessels from entering U.S. ports after Jan. 31.
"statistical card" to be filled out as people leave the country, CTK said.
The ban, announced as Bush prepared to leave for a weekend summit at Malta with Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, is part of several U.S. economic measures already in place against Panama.
In a statement, the administration renewed its determination "to assist the Panamanian people in their endeavor to bring about Noriega's departure and the establishment of democratic institutions responsive to the will of the people."
GERMAN BANKER MURDERED:
The terrorist Red Army Faction,
dormant for three years, claimed
responsibility for killing West
Germany's most powerful banker
yesterday. His armored Mercedes
was blown apart by a light-sensitive bomb on a bicycle.
Police said the bicycle-bomb apparently was placed on a street of a spa town outside Frankfurt, the 59-year-old banker lived.
Alfred Herrhausen was chairman of Deutsche Bank, West Germany's largest bank, and one of the world's most powerful Kohl's chief economic advisers.
PICASCO PORTRATT: "Pierrefe's Wedding," a poignant group portrait from Picasso's famed blue period, fetched $4.9 million at auction yesterday, the most at auction for a work by the Spanish master.
The Japanese firm Nippon Autopolis Co. bought the work and will make it the centerpiece of a museum in an auto racing theme resort in the mountains of southern Japan.
"We felt we absolutely must have the real thing, a real masterpiece like this for our museum," he said. "It's an important director of Nippon Autopolis."
Officials said the museum is to open next fall as part of a resort on the island of Kyushu that also will include an F-1 auto racing circuit.
--with SpinArt. The perfect way to create a special gift for yourself or someone else. Also, come take a look at our silkscreened and tie-dyed shirts, hats, buttons, and jewelry.
FREE DRINKS!
( with this coupon)
1 free soda or tea with any entree
Gourmet Express
749-3663 749-FOOD
REAL FOOD, REAL FAST! FREE DELIVERY IN ONLY 30 MINUTES!
$50 $50 MONO
--with SpinArt. The perfect way to create a special gift for yourself or someone else. Also, come take a look at our silkscreened and tie-dyed shirts, hats, buttons, and jewelry.
Have you had mononeucleiosis within the last month?
If so your plasma could make a valuable contribution to research and earn you $50 at the same time.
For additional details call Mark Stanard at
Lawrence Donor Center
749-5750
814 W. 24th-Corner of 24th & Alabama
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK DINNER $1.00 OFF
Mushroom or Cream Gravy Includes choice of Potato, plus Toast, Salad, Hot Food and Dessert Bar Show Your Student ID
SIRLOIN STOCKADE.
GOLDEN STEREO
SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIALS
95 & Gall
(around back)
Take I-435
To Roe Exit 1-648-3750
YOU COULD WIN
PHILIP'S AUDIO/VIDEO EQUIPMENT
WORTH $20,000.
COME IN AND ENTER!'
FOUR RIVERS
Classic Chinese Food
Banquet
Party
Reception
Welcome
四川
Szechwan
913 843-3666 2987 N. 6th Street (Across from Dillons) Closed on Monday*
40
Holiday Blowout
15% OFF Any Regular Purchase
20% OFF T-Shirts and Posters
25% OFF Special Orders
30% OFF Selected Games
35% OFF Bin Comics
Prices Good Through 1-31-90
Holiday Blowout
VERI!
COMIC CORNER
841 4234
1000 Music
Suite B
10th and Main
Downtown
in the
Beckley Square
Lawrence's Best Selection
of Comics, Games and Sup-
Club Discounts, Live Gaming
Soft Drinks and Players Boo-
Free Parking Across Street
at 10th and New Hampshire
NOW THRU FINALS
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
It's time once again to unwrap the treasures hidden in your textbooks... We're paying CA$H for books.
"At the top of Naismith Hill"
Hours: 8-5-Monday-Friday, 9-5-Saturday • 843-3826
The Berlin Wall is Coming Down and so are our prices!!!
Longnecks $1.25
Draws 75¢
All the time!!
12th & Oread
CROSSING
--with SpinArt. The perfect way to create a special gift for yourself or someone else. Also, come take a look at our silkscreened and tie-dyed shirts, hats, buttons, and jewelry.
Design and create it yourself
It's wild fun!
730 Mass next to Paradise Cafe
Creation Station 841-1999
---
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Applications
Applications for WORKSTATION SPACE in the Kansas Union for Spring 1990 are now available.
Registered Student Organizations may pick up an application in the Kansas Union at the SUA Office or the Organizations & Activities Center.
Only Workstations are Available
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS is 5:00 pm on December 7,1989
0
Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Christmas Bonus Package XT System*
768KRAM
705K RAM
Monochrome Monitor
101 Key Keyboard
Color Emulation Card
20 MB Hard Drive
Parallel / Serial / Game Ports
DOS
1 year warranty
Starting at $899
*System includes Fight-Eight-N-1 Software Package!
CP
Computer
COMPUTER PLUS
Westridge Shopping Center 6th and Kasold 841-1958
Children at Hilltop Child Development Center won't celebrate Christmas at school this month.
Instead, teachers at the University of Kansas' Hillop, 1314 Jayhawk Blvd. will work to promote culture and the world during the holiday season.
She said that more than half the students from her class last year were from other countries. This year, she said that of her class is from foreign countries.
Bonne Lindvall, preschool teacher at Hilltop, said her class would spend two weeks this month celebrating the birth of the twins and Sisterhood Around the World."
By Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writer
- Chris Carroll Hilltop teacher
The large number of children from other countries reflects a University setting, she said.
Hilltop, a day-care center where 80 percent of the children enrolled are those of KU faculty, staff and students, states in its parent handbook that, "At Hilltop, we celebrate such
Center stresses other cultures' holidays
Lindvall said that for two weeks the class would take an imaginary trip to a different country every day. Activities might include learning the language from a country, cooking its food or making its crafts.
month. She said that learning about other cultures was important, especially during the holiday season.
"Not everybody celebrates the same thing, and not everybody celebrates Christmas," she said.
holidays as Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Valentine's Day. We do not celebrate religious holidays. We do this because this is a secular center; that is, we believe that religion should not be introduced into our curriculum."
One day a parent might come to her class to talk about Hanukah, another day the class would learn about Mexico and U.S. customs would be discussed another day, she said.
Not everybody celebrates the same thing, and not everybody celebrates Christmas.
Often parents will speak about their country to the class and wear native clothing, she said.
Aruna Subramaniam, a Hilltop parent, said her daughter participated in the program last year.
"Often this helps children to realize how important peace is in the world," Lindvall said.
"It is a widening experience," she said.
other cultures from around the world.
"It is a good eye opener," she said.
"You don't have to go into the democracy or the religious culture but you can learn and grow. You are able to associate at this level."
Rosaline Siu, a Hilltop mother from Hong Kong, said she liked the idea because it gave children a chance to learn and to respect other cultures.
Subramanian, who is from India, said the program promoted a good learning experience for her daughter because she was able to learn about U.S. culture, her own culture and
Chris Carroll, Hilltop teacher, said she would use a "Children Around the World" theme for her class this
"We like as many different children in the class as possible," she said. "If the situation comes up that she has to be a minority, that's all right. But if you can get her in a class with children around the world, we like it better."
Lynn Puila, director of La Petite Academy, 3211 W. Sixth St., said her staff had a policy to not celebrate Christmas in a spiritual sense.
HARMONIC CIRCLE
GALLERY
Tues.-Sat. 10-5 Sunday 1-5
10 E. 9th St. 841-3941
"I don't think we have to stop it all together though," Puia said. "We do have a Christmas program each year, although there are other day care centers that would never fly for this."
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
GREAT TASTE - NATURALLY.
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
GREAT TASTE - NATURALLY.
GIFT CERTIFICATES
Complete your gift list with Kid Crafts, to make delicious ICBIY Yogurt!
Louisiana Purchaser
Shopping Center
843-5500
I Can't Believe It's Yogurt!
TONIGHT
Cajun Rock from Louisiana
Mamou
and
Restless Recording Artists:
Fortune Tellers
SAT, DEC. 2
Mahoots
and
75¢ DRAWS Every Saturday 11 a.m.-1 a.m.
200 McDonald Dr.
841-7077
HOLIDOME INDOOR RECREATION CENTER
TUES. DEC. 5
3 Big Bands
From England on A&M Records:
The McKons
also Atlantic Recording Artists:
11th Dream Day
and Chrysalis Recording Artists:
Bottleneck
D
Too Much Joy
18 & Over, Overt, Miss It!
DON'T FORGET
* Mondays Open Mtg. No cover
* Free Pool daily 3-5 p.m.
* 50 Days: Thursdays
* $2.50 Pitchers: Tuesdays
* We have the largest Import
selection in town
COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
INSTANT $200.00 REBATE CONFIRM YOUR NEW LEASE FOR SPRING SEMESTER AND RECEIVE AN INSTANT $200.00 REBATE.
Short Term Leases Available
- 3 Hot Tubs
- Swim. Indoor Heated Pool
* 2 Hot Tubs
- Microwaves
- On Bus Routes
- Exercise Room
- Suntan Bed
- Sand Volleyball
- Microwaves
- On Bus Route
- Walk to Campus
Hurry in Today — Take a Look
- Great Maintenance. We Care.
Make the Choice to Live at COLONY WOODS. $345 one bedroom $410 2 bedroom, 2 bath
*Offer Limited/One rebate per lease
*expires 1-15-90
A pool with two people on their backs.
Managed with the KU Student in Mind
842-5111
1301 W.24th
KU
KU
TEXTBOOK PRE-ORDER FORM
KU Bookstore University of Kansas Lawrence, Ks 66045 Kansas and Burge Unions Textbook Dept.- 913-864-5285
Beat The Rush!
Pre-Order Your Textbooks At the KU Bookstores
Complete the form below, or attach a copy of your class schedule, and return it to the KU Bookstore in the Kansas or Burge Unions, either in person or by mail by Friday Jan. 12, 1990. WE WILL HAVE YOUR BOOKS BAGGED AND READY TO PICK UP BETWEEN JAN. 18 & JAN. 25. After that date books not claimed will be returned to our shelves. NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED! Save 25% by purchasing Used Books instead of new. Save your receipt on cash or check purchases and receive a rebate (approx. 6-7%) the following semester.
Course No. Instructor Line No. Preference:
example:
ENGL 102 Smith 70650 USED
Please Print!
| | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
| | | | |
PLEASE PRINT Student Name
KU Address
KU Phone No.
Books will be picked up at :
Kansas Union Burge Union
No Deposit Required!
BOOKSTORE USE ONLY Code Dept. Price
TEXTBOOK REFUND POLICY: All textbooks purchased during the first 3 weeks of classes can be returned for a full refund anytime through Feb. 1, 1990. All returned books must be accompanied by a cash register receipt and be in new condition (except books purchased used).
CODE EXPLANATION:
1 = Used Book Not Available
2 = Go to Class First
3 = Book Out of Stock
4 = Book Not Yet Received
1
University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 1, 1989
9
KIEFS'S SALE SEASON IS ON!
DAVID BYRNE
REL MOMO
Toronto Music Festival, MAKE BELIEVE
MAJOR LEFT BEHIN
DAVID BYRNE
REL MOMO
COMPOSER & PRODUCER
CompossDisc
PASSPORT TELE
THE OCEAN BLUE
Featuring Between Something And Nothing
CompactDisc
Cass./Lp: 6.88
SALE PRICE ONLY:
CD:10.97
CAMPER VAN BEETHOVEN
CAMPER VAN BEETHOVEN
KEY LIME PIE
CAMPER VAN BEETHOVEN
CAMPER VAN BEETHOVEN
KEY LIME PIE
Virgin
KIEF'S- SELECTION AND SALE PRICES!
KIEF'S TAPES CDS RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO
24th and IOWA LAWRENCE KANSAS (913) 0842-1544
Need Extra Cash For The Holidays? Earn cash on the spot
Earn cash on the spot when you DONATE PLASMA!
Donating plasma is easy, quick and safe. You can study for finals or watch movies while you donate.And our fully automated donor center is medically supervised by a friendly and professional staff.
Spread the Christmas
Spirit and Help
Save a Life!
You'll be Rewarded!
New donors earn $15 for first
2 donations. Return donors earn
up to $22 a week. Refer a friend
and receive an additional $3.
LAWRENCE DONOR CENTER 816 W.24th
OPEN M-F
8:43—for new donors
8-6—for return donors
S
earn
lend
3.
ALL YOU CAN EAT SEAFOOD & STEAK BUFFET
Kids
The Cook
Steak, Shrimp, Clams, Crab & Catfish, served with Vegetables Soup & Salad Bar,and a lot more!
FRI. & SAT. 4-9 p.m.
SHONEYS $ 649
PER PERSON
10% OFF WITH KU I.D.
America's Dinner Table. 2412 Iowa
49
Charges may be filed today in Topeka freshman's death
By a Kansan reporter
Charges may be filed today against a man suspected of accidentally shooting and killing a KU freshman Nov. 13, said Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney.
Brian Robinson, Topeka freshman, died in a friend's apartment after one of three other men there shot him in the head with a large-caliber handgun, according to police reports. Robinson was 21.
Two days after the shooting, Lawrence police investigators completed their investigation and turned the case over to the district attorney's office.
Rick Trapp, assistant district attorney, said Nov. 15 that Flory would complete a review of the case and would decide if charges should be filed.
Yesterday, Flory said he had not filed charges yet because he had needed more time to complete work on other cases.
Overland Park
"I'm considering all of the different options," he said. "It's a significant decision."
Restaurants and Entertainment
Flory can file charges, close the case, continue the review or ask the police for more evidence, he said. He also advises that he asks the case before making his decision.
Flory would not discuss details of the case.
La Cocina Puero
Laboratorio Perro
Finally, Overland Park can enjoy what Seattle and Mexico City have enjoyed for years!!! The area's first real Mexican Kitchen has opened in Loehmann's Plaza.
The food is authentic, quick, good and cheap... But the management would like to caution you about drinking the water. We suggest you play it safe and drink the beer or Kansas City's finest Margaritas. $1.00 off food with KUID.
91st and Metcalf Loehmann's Plaza 913-341-2800
Comedy House
9045 Metcalf
Loehmann's Plaza
Overland Park, KS
Shows Wed., Thurs., Sun. at 8 pm
Friday and Saturday at 8 pm and 10:30 pm
Plaza 913-341-2800
Show Times
Tickets $4.00 Wed, Thurs. and Sun.
Friday and Saturday tickets $7.00
Friday and Saturday tickets $7.00
Free Sunday admission to bar, restaurant and
bathroom.
Buffet: Monday-Friday 11:00-2:00 Saturday and Sunday 11:00-3:00
Free admission and Sunday tickets $1.95
Free Sunday admission to bar, restaurant and hotel reception
**pre Sunday admission to bat, restaurant and hotel**
employees when you present your paycheck stub.
Dublin is the only light package with participating restaurants.
employees when you present your paycheck stub.
Dinner and show Sunday night package with
2 for 1 admission with this coupon (no valid or Surrender)
Hours: Sunday-Thursday 11am-10pm Friday and Saturday 11am-12Mknight
10586 Metcalf Ln.
CHI-CHI'S
913-383-1832
South Dointe
- Pool & volleyball
- Bedrooms
- Small pets ok
- Quiet location
- On bus route
- Small pets
* Inexpensive
- gas & heat
- gas & heat
- Central air
C central in
2166 w. 26th
Open 9-6, M-F
842 6446
843-6446
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS, 60444
913 - 843 - 8559
Convenience
- Privacy
- Luxury
provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free utilities, weekly maid
Naismith Hall...
today.
these words have come to mean something special to KU students. Only one with
service, "Dine Anytime,' and much more!
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
Only Naismith can
Interested in NAISMITH?
For more information &
a tour call or come by
Guide
MESSAGE IN MARCH
Need to break lease.
Will pay $200 of your fees.
Call 841-3842 A.S.A.P.
Two-bedroom clean apt.
in owner occupied house close
to camps. All utilities paid.
Availability in room for
smokers or pets. $800-
month plus deposit.
841-9777 or leave message.
BIG!!
BIG!!
Sublease: Large 2-bedroom.
New: w/d, fridge, carpet, mini-blinds, ceiling fan. $340/mth.
Call 740-1416
Call 749-1416!
MUST SLUBEASEL 728 Ohio. Quiet,
Spacious, Charming Studio Apt.
Hard wood flooring, claw-foot bath/shabu,
and carpet. Heat & gas pld. $275 mes. + elem. Move in gas & heat pld. $275 mes. + elem. Move in TUIL NTLAN. Let's call 977-5555, ask Rhonda or James, or 841-1074 for Locks.
Sublease:
• 1 bdm. apartment
• fully furnished
• very close to campus
843-5018
There's no place like home.
Call & ask Pat about the advantages of Cedarwood:
RARE
Your home
*1 and 2 bedroom
1 bedroom furnished apartment in nice private home. Walking distance--one
away from home.
graduate student. Available Jan. 1.
Under $300. Utilities paid. Call 843-6313.
BRAND NEW
Cedarwood
apts. & duplexes *Air conditioning
BRAND NEW
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
*B-joe at 341 Michigan
or Doug Compton 841-8468
rated units
*Air conditioning
*Newly redecorated units
*Close to mall
*Studios
*1 block from KU
Pue Route
*8-plex at 541 Michigan
*3-plex at 925 Indiana
private home. Walking distance-one block east of Naismith. Prefer one quiet
appliances, microwave and some
6-3 bedroom apartments:
washer/driver 2 full baths, all
2411 Cedar-
wood ave. 843-1116
Apartments
Available Jan. 1990
*Studios
*3-plex at 925 Indiana
Available Jan. 1000
--with fireplaces.
Call 740-5075
HARVARD SQUARE 2 Bedrooms Available
Bus Route
*Close to mal
- All applicances
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE
Roommate needed:
only 176/mo + 1/4
utilities, totally furnished, on bus route, 3 great roommates,
please call: 841-3234
KVM
KAW VALLEY MANAGEMENT, INC.
- Water Pd
- Excellent location
- Gas heat Pd
- 10 or 12 month leases
- 3 Bedrooms • Unfurnished
2105 HARVARD
- Studio 2 Bedrooms
- On Bus Route
901 Kentucky Suite 205
841-6080
KVM
901 Kentucky Suite 205 841-6080
Garage
is where the
is
We offer numerous advantages to make your Heatherwood Apartment a nice place to come home to. Call now for one of our remaining two bedroom apartments.
Heatherwood Valley Apartments
2040 Heatherwood Dr.
office #203
843-4754
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED
• For Spring Semester
• Good location
- Lease until May Deposit Pa*
* Free Cable CALL 841-3590
- Good location
- $200 + 1/2 utilities
SUBLEASE!
Jan. 15- July 31. Very cozy one
room, with carpet and hardwood floo-
n, carpeted hardwood floors,
private deck. $270/mo. Call
800-749-3753 or 8-749-3753
after 5:00
New 1-bedroom apt. Very
easy to move in.
people. Fully furnished, dish-
ing room. Laundry room.
Bathroom. Guest hookup. WD
fac. On KU bus route. It's a
JEM, must respond quickly. Will
be on strike.
lease fast. 749-4148
House for rent
spring semester.
Fully furnished. 3-4 bedrooms. Computer washer/dryer
Computer, washer/dryer,
microwave, cable TV/VCR
microwave, cable TV/VCR,
NO DEPOSITS. $595/mo.
NO DEPOSIT. $25000
ALL UTILITIES PAID.
864-3504 (days)
841-5804 (evenings & weekends).
2245 New Hampshire.
- 10 or 12 month
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th E. Eddingham (first to Commence)
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- Free cable TV
- Exercise weightroom
- Swimming pool
- Fireplace
* Energy efficient
- On-site Management
841-5444
Open 10am 5:00 daily
Open 1:00-5:00 daily
EDDINGHAM
PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management. Inc
---
The MASTERCRAFT
Difference
Custom Furnishings - No added furniture rentals
Energy efficient - Cut utility costs.
Close to campus - Sleep those few extra minutes
Close to Shopping - Cut Transportation Costs
Many Locations • Many Floor Plans • Intimate townhomes to full service complexes• Move up to ...
841-1212
Open Daily 841-5255
1-5 p.m.
841-3255
841-1429
842-4455
749-2415
10
Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Dally Kansan
TENSION
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care
820-822 Mats, St. Lawrence, Kansas 60484
(913) 841-0100
2nd Location Westridge Mall, Topeka
we're just
When the party is over, we're just getting started...
LATE NIGHT BREAKFAST BAR Try it, you'll love it!
FRI. & SAT. 10 p.m.-3 a.m. §4.79
10% OFF WITH KU I.D. SHONEY'S America's Dinner Table
2412 Iowa 843-3519
TAKE A FRIEND HOME TO STUDY.
BOOKSTORE
Study with Cliff's Notes, because they can help you do better in English class.
Cliff's Notes offers more than 200 titles covering all the frequently assigned novels, plays and
you're reading...and again as an efficient review for exams. They're great for helping you understand literature...and they're ready to help you now.
Cliffs NOTES
Available at:
KU
KU
BOOKSTORE3
Kansas Union
FAITH NO MORE FAITH NO MOR FAITH NO MO
special events presents
PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS
$8.00 ku students
$9.00 general public
8:30 p.m.
monday
december eleventh
for more information call the
office at 913-864-3477
university of kansas ballroom all ages
50¢ Draws Tonight
GAMMONS GAMMONS
23rd & Ousdahl
842-3977
The Associated Press
Wyandotte taxpayers get break from court
TOPEKA, Kan. — Secretary Ed Rolfs said yesterday that the state Department of Revenue would not challenge a district court judge's order under which Wyandotte County property owners won't have to pay increased taxes when first-half payments are due.
Wyandotte County Judge Cordell Meeks Jr. issued an order Wednesday requiring the state to permit people in that county to pay the same taxes as residents of 1988, allowing them to appeal the increases without paying them.
Rolfs said the department would adhere to Meeks' order, but that he had instructed department attorney John Maundy to make an indication of just what the order means.
The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit brought by Charles R. Wullwold of Kansas City, Kan., a taxpayer in Wyandotte County. It was filed Monday by attorney David W. Carson of Kansas City, Kan., for Wullwold.
Burghart said he would seek a hearing before Meeks early next month. The judge applies only to taxpayers who experience increases in their property
taxes this year, or to all taxpayers in Wyandotte County.
The order does not apply to taxpayers in any of the state's 104 other districts.
State law requires taxpayers to pay the first half of their property taxes on Dec. 20 and the second half on June 20 of next year.
However, publicity about Meeks' order may prompt taxpayers in other counties to bring similar lawsuits against the Revenue Department.
However, because of the uproar about tax increases resulting from reappraisal and classification, Gov. Mike Hayden last week instructed the state to delay from Dec. 20 to Jan. 16 to make on which first-baidt taxes are paid.
Some attorneys do not think the department and governor have the authority to implement such a delay in tax payments and two counties. Ellis and Leavenworth, are consider-able Hayden's order in court.
Delays in tax payments will mean school districts, cities and counties will have to wait to get their property tax revenue. Some may have to issue what are called no-fund warrants to borrow the money for operations until the tax money comes in.
Tax delay could hurt services
Dave Wakefield
Kansan staff writer
But if enough people delay their payments this way, the county might have to borrow money to cover its March 1 debt payments, said Chris McKenzie, county administrator. That expense could lead to reductions in services this year or increased taxes next year, he said.
County services might be cut if property owners are allowed to delay payment of their taxes, a county official said last night.
Even if county revenues are sufficient to cover the March 1 debt payments, the county would lose from delays in tax payments.
Under a plan endorsed yesterday by a joint Legislative committee, people who appeal their reassessments could pay one-fourth of their tax Jan. 16, one-fourth March 20 and the rest June 20.
Normally, people pay their taxes in December and some of this is invested and earns hundreds of thousands of dollars, McKenzie said. Because interest income is included in the budget, any loss of revenue early in the year could lead to budget cuts.
MkCenzie said that another proposal to raise the sales tax to offset high property taxes had already been signed by county commissioners.
On Monday, county commissioners approved a proposal by commissioner Nancy Hiebert to study how much revenue and consequent relief to property owners such a tax might provide.
County Chairman Mike Amyx said that the county was proceeding with that study but that there were differing opinions on the suitability of raising one tax to pay for decreases in another tax.
ENTERTAINMENT SECTION
Dining At Fifi's
What You'll Enjoy
Food. The best in Lawrence. A delicious assortment of continental cuisine. Foods like fresh seafood, pasta, steaks, chicken, veal and lamb. Come see us for lunch and dinner.
Lunch... Mon. thru Fri. 11-2
Dinner... Sun. and Mon. 5-9 925 Iowa
Ties, thru Sat. 5-10 841:7226
bibi's
LADY JAYHAWK DIAL CLASSIC
Friday-Saturday December 1 & 2 Allen Fieldhouse
Friday, December 1
Texas Pan American vs.
University of Missouri-Kansas City
6:00 p.m.
Kansas vs. Radford
8:00 p.m.
dial
SOAP
BASKETBALL
CLASSIC
'89
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 864-3141
FREE Admittance
for KU Students With valid KU I.D.
Saturday, December 2
Consolation Game 6:00 p.m.
Championship Game 8:00 p.m.
THEATRE #1
UNIVERSITY DANCE
COMPANY FALL CONCERTS
FRIIDAY DEC 1 8 PM
SATURDAY DEC 2 2 PM & 8 PM
the little thief
SUN 5:00, 7:15, 9:45
THIS WEEKEND
IN
WESTPORT
Kansas City's Original
Sports Bar
561-9191
chili's GRILL & BAR
Best Fajitas & ribs in K.C.I.
Try our burgers tool
Happy Hour 3 - 6:30pm
554 Westport Rd 561-1220
FUZZY'S
SHOOTS, BOW & CROWS
Come show your KU SPIRIT!
• Nightly dancing
• Sitting continuously from 11 a.m.
Lynn Dickey's
sports cafe
835 WESTPORT EDT. | Kansas City, MO 64111
786-9010
chili's GRILL & BAR
Westport BAR-B-QUE GBC
FRI-SAT 5:30,7:30,9:30
SUN 7:30,9:30
10% off with KULD.
Located above Blayney's
931-3235
CAPITAL SOULS
Blayney's
THEATRE #2
NOW OPEN
Great Live Music 6 Nights a Week!
Get a Friend in FREE with your KU I.D.
must be 21
expires 12-15-89
LIBERTY HALL
842 SAYER & LAWRENCE 60044 912/745-1912
Pool Room
8
Pool Room
8
1 FREE HOUR of POOL
WHEN YOU PAY FOR ONE HOUR AT REGULAR PRICE
$4.50 value
One Per Person, Per Table,
Per Day. Expires 12-31-89.
925 IOWA
749-5039
SUA Midnite Movies Presents
SGA MARITHE MOVIES PRESENTS
Starring: Mickey Rourke
Robert De Niro
Lisa Bonet
Rated R
ANGEL HEART
• friday & saturday at midnight • woodruff auditorium • $2.50
SUA
FEATURE FILM PRESENTATION
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 1, 1989
Arts/Entertainment
11
Duet company will tip toes with KU dancers
By Melanie Matthes
Kansan staff writer
X
Cohan and Suzeau will perform this weekend in the University Dance Company's fall concert.
A world-traveled and nationally recognized dance company that recently made the University of Kannas its home will perform this weekend in a concert with the University Dance Company.
This concert will feature the choreography and performances of Cohan and Suzeau and will feature works by two other KU dance teachers.
Muriel Cohan and Patrick Suzeau are the members of the Cohan/Suzueau Duet Company. The married couple interrupted their career as a touring dance company to teach dance at KU. The University Dance Company's fall concert will be the second time that the duet has performed with KU. They performed as guest artists in the Company's Spring 1988 concert.
v Suzeau will make his premier presentation of a new work, called "Bagatelle," at the concert. This work features two versions of the same dance. One section of the piece will be performed in the confines of classical ballet, and the other section will use contemporary dance.
This concert will be the first that does not feature a large section of ballet pieces because KU's ballet instructor resigned last semester, said Janet Hamburg, director of dance.
Suzaue is the only instructor with an interest in choreographing ballet, she said.
"The concert will feature Renaissance dance, a little ballet, modern, humor. It has everything," she said. "I think the audience is going to enjoy it tremendously. It's our strongest concert."
Margaret Mills, Winchester, England, graduate stu
dent, said that the emphasis on modern and contemporary dance was a change from her traditional classical ballet training.
"It allows much more expression, much more creativi
ty," she said. Mills will perform as a soloist in "Bagatelle" and also will dance in two other works.
19. "she said. Suns will perform as a soloist in 'Bagatelle' and also will dance in two other works. The concert pieces include four works choreographed by Brenda Hotard, graduate teaching assistant of dance:
eight Renaissance-style works rechoreographed by Joan Stone, instructor in dance; three works by Suzeau and two works by Cahan.
The concerts normally are performed at Crafton- Preyer Theatre, she said, but that theater was booked for the semester. The department of dance received supplemental funding from Student Senate to use Liberty Hall.
A duet piece by Suzeau, called "Aquarelle," will be performed by Suzeau and Cohan.
The concert is the first time that the company has performed at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., Hamburg said.
"It has a nice intimate feeling." she said. "It's a 600-seat house, which is excellent for dance."
Set to the music of Dimitri Shostakovich, this work compares a love relationship to a watercolor technique called aquarelle, Suzeau said.
The Liberty Hall theater also will be more comfortable for the audience and will accommodate more people than Robinson, Hamburg said.
"When one color is added to another each color is deepened while remaining a separate color," he said. "So, it's a perfect metaphor for me."
"We thought it"would be better for our students to be performing on a real stage rather than in Robinson," she said.
Evening performances begin at 9 p.m. on Dec. 1 and 2 and a matinee begins at 2 p.m. on Dec. 2. General admission tickets are $6 for the public and $5 for KU students and are available at the Murphy Hall Box Office and at Liberty Hall.
Sequel backslides from entertaining original
By Marc Parillo
Kansan movie reviewer
The DeLorean is revved up to 88 mph. The flux-capacitor is "fluxing." And, once again, Marty and Doc are ready for another ride through time.
With the tremendous popularity of the original, you'd think "Back To The Future Part II" would be the blockbuster hit of 1989, right?
b nashy, multi-million dollar special effects, a slew of futuristic thrills and spills and what is supposed to be considered a compelling story
b doesn't even come close to stacking up to the snappy comedy and nail-biting situations of the original movie.
Robert Zemecik, returning as director, whisks us away from cozy 1985 into the unpredictable 21st century and the same ironic situations as the first film. This time, however, a friendly television at the local soda stand serves Pepsi, people wear synthetics like they're jumped out of 'Blade
Runner," and little kids spend their time riding hoverboards, a futuristic version of the skateboard.
If what's described so far sounds pretty entertaining, don't jump to any conclusions. Instead, it turns into something pretty confusing.
\ Because the story begs for your undivided attention, watching it becomes more of a chore than a memorable experience.
Michael J. Fox makes an appearance as four different characters, three of which appear in the same scene.
Biff's back again as the antagonist, but he has his work cut out for him, too. This time, not only is he the high school bully from 1956, but he's also an old man, a sci-fi bully from 2015 and a rich, corrupt playboy.
The movie gives the viewer just too much to comprehend in one sitting. As Marty and Doc move from decade to decade chasing after Biff and an onslaught of other characters in a maze-like plot, all you can do is sit quietly and try to make
some sense out of it all.
It was also uncomfortable watching plants blatantly advertised on the silver screen. Every other scene, I felt as if I was being sold something from the movie's sponsors, Pepis ads, an AT&T ad big enough to fill the entire movie screen, a Nike ad, an ad for Pizza Hut. It was like watching an unbeatable two hours of prime-time television.
By now, you're compelled to ask, "When is it all going to end?" Well, here's another big surprise: It doesn't. A flashy "To Be Continued" sign ends the story but promises to pick it back up in about six months.
"Back To The Future Part II" proves once again that sequels are never as good as the original.
So now, it's not a movie anymore. It's a mini-
series.
▶ Merce Pertia is a Lanexe apophrone majoring in English and film studies.
Auditions scheduled for review, play
Open auditions for the third annual River City Review, a communitywide benefit talent show, will be from noon to 3 p.m. tomorrow in the rehearsal room at Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St.
Interested persons should contact Ric Averill at 843-622- or Jennifer Glenn at 843-5067 to set up an audition time.
The auditions are open to dancers, jugglers, magicians, ventriloquists and any other type of variety act.
Prizes for the show include a trip for two and a VCR.
There will be a category for group entrants and individual acts.
Auditions for "Death of a Salesman" will be at 7 p.m. Sunday and Monday at the Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire. Roles are available for eight
men and five women.
The show will be directed by Mary Doveton. Scripts may be checked out from the office with a $5 deposit. Performances are scheduled for Jan. 26 through Feb. 4.
.
This winter the Lawrence Arts Center will again sponsor its performance Night Series. Opportunities to perform 10-40 minute pieces are available for three Saturday evenings: Jan. 13, Feb. 3 and Feb. 24. Past performances have included new music, dance, poetry and performance art.
Applications are available at the Lawrence Arts Center, 200 W. Ninth St., and should be returned to the center by Dec. 6. For more information stop by the center or call 843 ARTS.
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12
Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Shuttle will try to land seeds
By Travis Butler Kansan staff writer
Students would study reaction of 5 years of exposure in sda.
Next month, the Space Shuttle Columbia will make a trip into Earth's orbit. When it returns, it may carry a cargo of 12.5 million tomato seeds for student researchers.
The seeds are part of the Long Duration Exposure Facility, an 11-inch package of experiments put into orbit by the shuttle in 1894, said Terri Sindelar, a NASA public affairs officer for education.
The project was originally scheduled to be returned in 1986, but the Challenger disaster grounded the shuttle program. Columbia will try and retrieve the project.
The objective of the project was to see how the seeds would react to long-term space exposure and to provide students from grade five through the university level a chance to explore science through a significant space experiment, she said.
Craig Martin, associate professor
of botany, said he had been interested in the project but had missed the latest updates on it because the original return date was postponed.
"I've lost track of what's been going on, but I've been sending the paperwork in for an experimental package," he said.
tion to light and the resulting tomatoes. Upper-level students might look at how the genetic material of the seeds might have been modified by their stay in space.
Sindeler said that when the seeds came back to Earth they would be returned to their supplier for some preliminary tests. George W. Park Seed Co. kept the same number of seeds from the group from which the space seeds were taken for use as a control.
After the preliminary growth tests, NASA will ship experimental kits that contain 50 space and 50 control seeds, instructional materials and a supporting board to the scholastic groups, she said. The kits will be free.
Martin said he was unsure what the results would be, but he didn't expect any difference to show.
"One thing seems to be true. If there is a negative effect, it's on the cell division as the plant grows. The seeds won't be undergoing that up there."
"right now, the evidence points to there being no effect," he said. "There really has been very little work done. Most of it has been done by the Russians, and many of their experiments have failed. They'll get back some preliminary results, but then the equipment will stop and any results after that will be lost.
NASA expects to start distributing the seeds in late February if the shuttle can successfully retrieve the LDEF, Sindelar said.
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Our Nation's Child-care Crisis:
How is Lawrence caring for its children?
to discuss the concerns of local child-care providers and working parents Presented by The University of Kansas Classified Senate and Unclassified Professional Staff Association Joint Child Care Committee
Thursday, December 7,1989 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
Jessie Branson, Representative, 44th District
SPEAKERS
Peggy Scally, Child-care Licensing Charge Nurse, Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department Gall Shreders, Vice President, Douglas County Child Development Association Joan Reliber, Director, Hilltop Child Development Center Joyce Shaw, Supervisor of Human Resources, Sallie Mae MODERATOR
Kathleen Brady-Mowrey, Institute of Public Policy and Business Research Chair of Joint Child Care Committee
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1
Sports
University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 1, 1989
13
'Hawks beat flu, slow start, Idaho
By Dan Perkins
Kansan sportswriter
The fourth-ranked Kansas Jayhawks overcame a shugglest first half and a touch of the fau lait last, eight in Vandals 87-58 at Allen Field House.
With three players and Coach Roy Williams under the weather this week, Williams was a little concerned with how his team would play.
Williams said Mark Randall, Jeff Gueldner and Pekka Markkanen were all bothered by the flu. Randall missed Tuesday's practice.
Despite that, the three scored 39 points on a combined 12-for-15 shooting from the field and 9-for-15 from the free throw line.
"Coach (Jerry) Green and I talked late last night and he said, 'Don't worry, these kids will play their tails off for you and you know that.' He told him, "Yeah, but I still have a reason to be concerned."
The Jayhawks, after jumping to a 6-10 lead in the first minute of the game on two three-pointers by Gueldron to ease Williams' concern early.
Kansas, 5-0, led just 25-22 with 6:47 left in the first half but outscored the Vandals 13-4 the rest of the half for a 12-point halftime advantage.
"I think they had a lot to do with us not getting off to a good start." Williams said. "I've said all week that they were a good basketball team. I still believe that now."
e Jayhawks ran off a 14-6 run
starting the second half to open a 20 point lead, 52-32, with 15:46 remaining in the rame.
Kansas hit 61.1 percent of its shots, but Randall said the defense was the key to the Jawhaws' easy victory.
"We've said all season that our defense is going to be our offense," Randall said. "When you can play well, you will help you to get easier basketks."
Kansas held Idaho to just 47.3 percent shooting.
Kansas was led in scoring by Terry Brown with 19 points on 7-for-14 shooting, including 4-for-9 from three-point range; Randall added 17 points and Guelden, who hit all four of his three-point attempts, scored 13.
Brown's 19 points and six rebounds were career highs, and he also tallied his first two-point basket of the season. He entered the game having shots from three-point range, but he had been 0-for-3 on two-point shots.
Kevin Pritchard led Kansas with seven assists and now is fourth on the all-time Kansas career assists list with 348, six more than Danny Manning. Assistant coach mark Turgeon on the list with 457 career assists.
ST. JAMES
Idaho's Riley Smith was the game's high scorer with 22 points, and Ricardo Boyd had 14. Smith scored 33 points in the Vandals' season-opening victory against Simon Fraser.
Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard goes for the steal against Javhawk-turned-Vandal Otie Ivinington
Andrew Morrison/KANSAS
Former Kansas guard Otis Livingston scored only four points before leaving late in the game with an injury.
Gueldner shoots perfect game
By Gene King
Kansan sportswriter
Senior guard Jeff Guelden was perfect last night in the Kansas Jayhawks 87-58 victory against Utah, nugging cough through the week.
Guelder hit four of four from three-point range and hit one free throw on an Idaho technical for his 13 points.
Before the game last night, Gueldner had hit seven of ten from beyond the three-point strike.
Gueldner and transfer guard Terry Brown were a combined eight of 13 from three-point range.
"I know that I'm not going to shoot 90 percent at the end of the year," Gueldner said.
"When Jeff gets his feet set to shoot, I start feeling pretty comfortable," Coach Roy Williams said.
"He's got the green light whenever there is one defensive player back, if he is open," Williams said.
Williams wanted to implement Gueldner in his three-point offensive game plan so much that he told Gueldner to practice shooting three-pointers during the summer.
Guelder credits his three-point success to the team's offense and his manu-
"I'm getting a lot of open shots."
he said. "On only one of those shots did I have a hand in my face."
"I'm not going to be the guy that shoots a three-pointer off one foot, but I've got a lot of confidence in me if I can get my feet set."
Gueldner said that his newly found confidence came from his summer workouts in pick-up games and scrimages.
"I looked to shoot more and to take the open shot," he said. "As I looked, for my shot, I just got that much more confident."
Guelderen said that he wouldn't be disappointed if he only got one or two pairs.
"If that happens, that means the guys inside, Mark (Randall) and Peka (Markkanen), are getting the shots," Guildner said.
Two freshmen to redshirt 1989-90 basketball season
By a Kansan reporter
Freshman Shannon Kite and Stacy Truitt will be redshirted this year and will not play in tonight's game. Washington announced yesterday.
"We feel like it might be to their best interests and ours, and it will give them a chance to adjust and physically," Washington said.
Washington said that the decision was not a disciplinary one and that it would eventually allow the players to develop and receive more time on the court next year.
I think are going to help us. But they are both very young, and I think they could both use a year," she said.
"I've got two young players that
Washington said both players understood and were comfortable with the decision.
Truitt led port Gibson High in Port Gibson, Miss., to a 43-2 record and its fourth straight class 3A state title last year. She was also named USA Today's player of the year in Mississippi.
Kite led in Elk-Hern Kimballon High in Iowa to a third-place finish in the Iowa state tournament and the MVP. Today player of the year in Iowa.
Maryland-Baltimore County is next for Kansas
Kansas Basketball GAME 6
KANSAS JAYHAWKS
Coach: Roy Williams
Record: 5-0
MARYLAND-BALTIMORE
COUNTY RETRIEVERS
Coach: Earl Hawkins
Record: 1-1
PROBABLE STARTERS
Player Ht. PPG RPG
G-Kevin Pritchard 6-3 12.6 3.2
G-Jeff Gueldern 6-5 12.4 3.6
C-Pekka Markkanen 6-10 5.8 3.0
F-Rick Calloway 6-6 8.8 5.0
F-Mark Randall 6-9 19.0 5.8
Player Ht. *IP* *RPG*
G-Larry Simmons 6-1 *25.0* 6.0
G-Bobby Mills 6-2 1.0 4.0
C-Cedric zileln 6-10 0.0
F-Levi Franklin 6-3 17.0 4.0
F-Jim Frantz 6-10 10.0 6.0
Genie notes: This is the first meeting between the two schools. The Retrievers leading scoreer, Larry Simmons, and Kevin Pritchard were grade school friends and teammates. Tip-off is at 1:35 p.m. Radio broadcasts include KJHK (90.7 FM) and KMZB (90 AM). Sunflower Cablevision will delay the broadcast.
Gene Notes: This is the first
No.4 'Hawks face Retrievers tomorrow
KANSAN Graphic
The Kansas Jayhawks won't have much time to celebrate last night's 87-58 victory against Idaho.
The fourth-ranked Jayhawks, 5-0,
have today off before facing the
Maryland-Baltimore County Retrievers
at 1:35 p.m. tomorrow in Allen
Field House.
*figures shown are after Monday's game
Maryland-Baltimore County is an NCAA Division I independent that was 17-11 in Coach Earl Hawkins' first season last year.
By Dan Perkins
Kansan sportswriter
This season, the Retrievers are 1-1 after losing Monday to Miami (Fla.). After a game against Florida, Intermediate Kansas will play at Miami on Jan. 10.
The game will feature a couple of interesting match-ups for the Jayhawks.
Lionel Simmons, who led the Retrievers with 25 points in their first game, and Kevin Pritchard were junior-high teams.
Pritchard said that in junior high, Simmons was the point guard. Pritchard also said that the two
The game also will feature a match-up of two foreign centers.
Cedric Izilein, 6-foot-10, is originally from Benin City, Nigeria, and Kansas center Peka Markkanen, also 6-10, is from Jyvyaskylä, Finland.
played a lot alike although Simmons liked to shoot more.
Izilein was scoreless in the Retrievers' first game while Markkanen is averaging 8.5 points per game for the Jayhawks.
The Retrievers had two other starters score in double figures in their opening game.
The Maryland-Baltimore County game is the second in a hectic stretch in which the Jayhaws will play five games in 10 days.
Forwards Levi Franklin and Jim Frantz scored 17 and 14 points respectively and combined for 10 rebounds.
In addition to the games last night and tomorrow, Kansas will play at home against Tennessee-Martin on Monday, at Southern Methodist on Wednesday and at home against Kentucky on Dec. 9.
By Paula Parrish Kansan sportswriter
Jayhawks to sponsor tourney
The Jayhawks will face the Radford Lady Highlanders at 8 p.m., after a 6 p.m. match between the Missouri-Kansas City Kangaroos and the Texas-Pan American Lady Broncs.
First round action will begin tonight as Kansas hosts the seventh annual Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic at Allen Field House.
The winners of the matches will play for the championship at 8 p.m. Saturday. A consolation game will be at 6 p.m.
Comaneci's whereabouts remain a mystery
Washington said the key to keeping ahead of the Highlanders would be just that — keeping ahead of the Highlanders.
"Their strength is their inside game. They're very physical, very aggressive," Washington said. They seem to have a really good skill set. They also crash the boards very well, especially offensively."
Kansas heads into the competition with a 1-2 record after placing fourth at the Hawaii Rainbow Wahine Classic last weekend. Kansas defeated Toledo 49-45 in the first round of the Classic but lost to the ultimate champion, Hawaii, 72-62 in the semifinals. Kansas played Vanderbilt in a consolation for third but lost 70-64.
"I feel like we're most comfortable when we're running, so we're going to put a lot of emphasis on just running the floor." Washington said. "We have a fast break offense that we're going to focus a lot on also."
A key player for the Radford team and someone Kansas will have to keep an eye on you will be guard Patrinda Toney. The 5-foot-5 guard averages 86 points per game and shot almost 65 percent from the free-throw line.
Although Washington considers defense to Kansas' strength, constitutes a challenge.
"If I was to sight our weaknesses right now, we're just not consistent blocking out," she said. "We're really going to have to buckle down and block people out and keep them from those second and third shots."
Radford posted a 25-7 record last year and received a postseason tournament berth in the National Women's Invitational Tournament, where the Highlanders took fifth overall.
"She's probably going to be a key player for them." Washington said.
Page is the team's leading rebound this season, averaging 8.3 boards per game.
Probable starters for tonight's game are forwards Terrilyn Johnson and Danielle Shareef, center Lynn Lisa Bradady and Shannon Bloxom.
Braddy is right behind Bloxom, averaging 11.7 per game, and leading the team in assists, averaging 9.3 a game.
"If our offense plays as well as our defense, I think we can have one of the best teams in the country," Bloxom said. "It's different running the offenses in practices and then in games. We run the same offences, but they run different defenses and you have to adjust to that."
The Associated Press
BUDAPEST, Hungary — Nadia Comaneci, the Olympic gymnastics champion who disappeared from her native Romania in an apparent defection, may be at the U.S. Embassy in Switzerland, her coach said yesterday.
"We played three teams that were ranked higher than us. I think this tournament won't be the same kind of competition," said women's basketball coach Marian Washington. But it's the kind of game that you must win to have some things. When you come off a trip like that, it's important that you get right back into the swing of things."
Embassy officials, however,
denied she was there, adding another twist to the mystery surrounding the 1976 Olympic champion, who crossed the border into Hungary in the predawn hours Tuesday.
Washington said she was looking forward to the competition this weekend and to continued improvement from her team.
After last weekend's tournament action, Bloxom leads the team in scoring, averaging 12.7 point per game against Vanderbilt and high of 19 points against Vanderbilt.
"As far as I know, she is probably in the U.S. Embassy in Bern," Bela Karolyi said in a telephone interview. "Her parents are working here, where he is coaching a U.S. women's
"She is waiting to get some travel papers," said Karolyi, who defected to the United States in 1981 and became a citizen in May.
gymnastics team.
Michael Korff, a U.S. Embassy spokesman in Bern, said she was not at the U.S. embassy."
Asked about the possibility of a reunion with his former pupil in Stuttgart, where his team is competing, Karolyi said. "There is a possibility, but she obviously needs some travel documents."
Swiss Justice Ministry spokesman Joerg Kistler said there was no indication that she had entered Switzerland."
On Wednesday from Clarens, Switzerland, Karolyi said he was "ready to help her in any manner if she
needs it."
Karolyi said he not spoken with Comaneci since her flight, although she told the U.S. Gymnastics Federation, "Millsapolis, 'My kid is looking for me.'"
Federation spokesperson Patti Auer said she was not sure where Comaneci was.
"All indications clearly point to her coming to the United States," she said. "Bela said she will come to the United States. She wants to come. When is still unclear. It could be two weeks or six days. It's her move."
She said Karolyi was concerned about Comaneci's safety.
"Bela feels she would be safest in Switzerland, in a neutral country, and then come to the United States via Switzerland, not through any other country. We seem to think he knows what she will do." Auer said.
"He said, 'They will try to recapture their national pride' — their national pride being Nadia," Auer said.
carrying her party had Austrian license plates.
At the age of 14, the diminutive Comaneci electrified the world with unprecedented perfect gymnastics and gold medals at the Montreal Games.
The Hungarian daily Magyar Hirlap said Comanet was wearing blue jeans, a sweater and short boots. "I always wore a little shirt that her hair was short and streaked.
Officials in Budapest said she fleed to Hungary before dawn Tuesday with six other people and spent the night at a hotel in the southern town of Szeged, some 15 miles from the Romanian border.
"Obviously she had some help from the Hungarian Olympic Committee people," Karolyi said. "I am sure they helped her."
However, a Hungarian Olympic Committee spokesman said that the gymnasm had not contacted them and knew nothing of her whereabouts.
A receptionist at the Royal Hotel in Szeged said Comanect left by car Wednesday morning. The Hungarian daily Nespert said the two cars
One of her former teammates, Theodora Ungureau, said in an interview that French television yesterday that Commander had called her after fleeing Romania.
Tennis match hits Lawrence
By a Kansan reporter
An exhibition Kansas tennis match at Alvamar Racquet Club tomorrow will feature the player's fourth-ranked colleague player.
Trevor Kronemann, a senior at the University of California - Irvine who is ranked fourth in the nation, and former Kansas player Mike Wolf will play a doubles match at Memphis on Tuesday as junior John Falbo and sophomore Rafael Rangel. The match will be free to the public.
-
Kronemann is also ranked No. 1 in doubles in the presense polls, and Falbo and Rangel are listed at No. 18.
14
Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Tyson-Ruddock bout canceled Local sponsors breached contract, promoter says
The Associated Press
EDMONTON, Alberta — Promoters of the scheduled fight between heavyweight champion Mike Tyson and Razor Ruddock were in breach of contract three times before the bout was called off, promoter Don King said yesterday.
The Edmonton Sun also reported that when Tyson came to Edmonton for a Sept. 14 news conference to announce the fight, the bout technically had fallen through. The fight, originally scheduled for Nov. 18, was first postponed until 1990 because Tyson became ill. In November, it was put off indefinitely because of other complications.
Tyson's next scheduled fight is in
February against James "Buster"
Douglas in Tokyo.
Douglas
The Edmonton cancellation has prompted Rudock's camp to sue King, but promoter Garry Stevenson said he wouldn't be suing anyone. Both he and Edmonton businessman Ed Bean, the major financial backer of the fight, suggested they intended to work with King and Rudock's promoter, Murad Muhammad, again, possibly for another Tyson-Rudlock matchup in Edmonton.
On Sept. 14, Stevenson had only local accountant Wayne Barry backing the fight. Barry had put up $200,000 on Aug. 30 in New York, but he couldn't provide the additional cash upon which the two sides had agreed.
Barry did come through with $300,000 that King had asked for to carry him through. Still, Stevenson admitted, the local organizers were in breach of contract three times.
"Breach of contract is the correct term, but it's also a little harsh," he said. "As we went along, Don King made concessions he didn't have to take."
When Barry couldn't come up with enough cash, Bean, who wanted to be a minority backer, became the main backer and agreed to abide by the original terms of the contract.
Stevenson said no one would ever know the full story, but Muhammad said he planned to sue King for fraud and breach of contract for canceling the fight.
Kansas ready to take a plunge into this season's crucial meet
By Andres Caveller
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas swim team will compete against seven other regional teams this weekend at the Arkansas Invitational.
"This is what we aimed at all semester," said swim coach Gary Kempf, "This is an outstanding invitational."
The Jayhawks will compete today through Sunday in Fayetteville, Ark., against Georgia, Louisiana State, New Mexico, Arizona, Arkansas, Drury and Southern Methodist.
Kansas has increased in speed this semester in preparation for
the invitational, which is the first one conducted at the University of Arkansas. Kempf said that he hoped the swimmers would post their fastest times of the fall this weekend.
He said that the Thanksgiving break had helped the swimmers rest physically and mentally because the swimmers had focused on little aspects of the sport, such as the startls, turns and finishes, during the break.
The women's team, 5-0 in dual meets, defeated Colorado State, Missouri, Illinois, Southern Illinois and Southern Methodist earlier this fall. The team started the season with a strong victory
against Missouri and Iowa State in the Big Eight Invitational.
two weeks ago, the women defeated 17th-ranked Southern Illinois 73-39.
Although Kansas has not competed this fall gainst any of the other participants in the invitations, Arkansas beat Arkansas twice last year.
There will be preliminaries and finals every day. Kempt said that Kansas would face strong competition in the nation's 15th Arizona and 18th Arkansas.
The Kansas men's team, ranked 20th in the nation, lost to Southern Illinois earlier in the season and to Southern Methodist 62-51.
HOLIDAY SALE
NIKE AIR
From tip-off to final buzzer, players can depend on NIKE's Air Solo Flight to deliver support, comfort and exceptional cushioning.
AVIA
The Avia 743 offers the support, cushioning and comfort found in higher-priced performance court shoes.
V
Reg. $44.99
SALE $34.99
The Athlete's Foot.
942 Mass. 841-6966
Nobody knows the athlete's foot hints the Athlete's Foot.
NATURAL WAY
As the Holiday Season Approaches, Remember Ray-Ban Sunglasses.
This time, choose Ray-Ban DRIFTER sunglasses by Bausch & Lomb. Once you've worn them, you'll never come back to ordinary sunglasses.* Ray-Ban sun-glasses block the harshest glare, provide 100% ultraviolet protection, and work with your eyes to keep your vision natural and strain-free. See our complete selection today. We're still selling at the old prices while existing stock lasts.
Ray-Ban DRIFTER
Sunglasses by Bausch & Lomb
Gift certificates available
The Etc.
Shop
---
AMC CITY
VISA
DUCLOVER
732
Massachusetts
Lawrence
Kansas
66044
(913) 843-0611
Presents the
University Dance Company
The University of Kansas Department of Music and Dance
and
Cohan/Suzeau
8:00 p.m. Friday, December 1, 1989
2:00 & 8:00 p.m. Saturday, December 2, 1989
Liberty Hall 642 Massachusetts, Lawrence
e
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office and the Liberty Hall Box Office; all seats general admission; public $6; KU students and senior citizens $5; for reservations, call 913/864-3982 or 913/749-1912.
Partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee.
Amoco
Gill's Amoco Food Shop
23rd & Louisiana
GRAND OPENING
Nov. 30, Dec 1 & 2
M
Store Specials
Lay's
Sandwich Wedges 99c Frito Lay Big Grabs 2 for 99c Busch & Busch Light 12 pk. $4.99 Assorted Candy M&M/Mars small bars 4 for 99c Nestle Crunch Bars 2 for 99c Free 8oz. coffee with any purchase
2 liter Pepsi/Coke free with 8 gal purchase of Ultimate or Silver gasoline
CRUNCH
BUSCH
BALLOONS & BUBBLE FOR THE KIDS
FREE POPCORN
register for these prizes.
19" Sharo color T.V.
5 - 10 gal. Ultimate gasoline certificates
Sharp compact disc player
Drawing on Dec. 5
Winners will be contacted
10
A Douglas Fir Christmas tree
Winners will be contacted
"We appreciate your business" please come again
REMODELING SALE USED FURNITURE Sat., Dec. 2 (9 am-5pm)
At the Holiday Inn (Look for trailer in parking lot)
- carpet •chairs •desks
- dressers•lamps
- *bedspreads* *sofas*
- mirrors · tables
Classified Directory
- BARGAIN PRICES *
105 Personal
*an 1 more
May Singer(s). Congratulations Dana, you are 31. Now you can pick us up for study breaks. (Can you drive?) - Your Jazzhaus Friends.
100s Announcements
Businessman needs a college male student for traveling companion to California at midmiseret break. Major expenses paid. For information write Ron, P.O. Box 3556, Lawrentw
Lonely white male seeking companion with mature woman. Must have expinex eyes, dry wilt and unique personality. Please call William anytime at 842-7591.
MAX U.: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
JAAN A. JAAN E.
Toy Store
Happy 1st birthday! It's about time. Love ya
and miss ya! lots -
110 Bus. Personal
Shop creatively this year. Creative Christmas gifts come from creative X-mas shopping. At a local store, you can buy glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and continue jewelry, fine art prints, Playbabs, collector and cheep rook-n-collar, carnival glam, Moldfield Harp, art deco, decorating items, clocks, watches, desks, antique tools, royal boutonniere, QUANTRILLE'S FILE MARKET; 811 New Hamshire. Open every Saturday and info call 926-850-6360. Via/MasterCard welcome!
*mention: Kink, the new undergraduate literary magazine, is accepting applications for art editor, poetry editor, fiction editor, advertising mgr. Send qualifications to: I, Koch, 414 Louisiana St., New Orleans, LA 70126. No phone number. Great opportunity to get published and looks great on resume.
CANCUN, BAHAMAS! Spring Break 1990!
GRANTED THE LOWEST Prices for Information
Comic books, Playbills, Penshouses, etc. *Max*
*Comic's*. New Hampshire. Open Sat, & Su
Donna Karan Sunglasses now at the Etc. Shop.
732 Mass.
Government Photographs, Passport, immigration, viasa, Modeling, theatrical, Advanced fine art portfolios. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Tom Swells 749-1611.
Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses
26% Below Sag. Retail
The Etc. Shop
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-0611
Guaranteed five years. Russell Athletic awards
14 colors. France Sporting Goods, 731 Mass.
843.
Hail your goose in sport bags or fancy packs.
Francis Gooding, 731 Mans. 843-4191.
Sports Gooding, 731 Mans. 843-4191.
B. C. AUTOMOTIVE
your full service auto
repair shop. Classic to
computerized.
M-F 8-6 Vn. Mastercard, Discover.
315 N. 2nd St., 691-695
WEST BROOK BIG Horn
MUSEUM SHOP
Museum of Natural History
HOLIDAYSALE
10% off purchases over $10
December 2, 3
Mon-Sat 10:59, Sun-1:5 864-4450
MASSAGE for the Holidays! Do what elves do—beat stress and injury with the help of Lawrence Massage Therapy. 841-0662. Gift certificates too! Rock & Roll records, Buy-Sell Trade., Quarrilta, 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat.-Sun. 10-6. Time!! With Times sport watches. They run
Time it! With Times sports watches. They run
every week at the gym. Francis Sporris
Goods, 313, Mass 849-410.
**Davis:** 849-410.
Optical dispensary
Wiggie into Wigwam a warm wool socks, mittens,
gloves. Frances Sports Goods, 721 Mass.
"the best value in sight"
600 Lawrence ave. 841-6100
KU-Trailridge Bus To 6th & Lawrence Ave.
fashion eyeland Optical dispensary
AFRICAN ADORNED
Unusual jewelry & int'l
---
5 E. 7th 842-1376
---
Hoalth club & Tanning
$20 per month
8 Tanning visits - $20
Haircuts - $3.00 off
LOOK YOUR BEST!
EUROPEAN
TAN HEALTH TH A HAIR BALON
Holiday Plaza 25th and Iowa 841-6232
120 Announcements
FAIR No More. workers needed for stage crew &
Security positions Monday, Dec. 11.
Refreshments & entrance fee paid. Please sign
up in SUA office. 4th floor浸润 from 8-5.
For confidential information, refer & support for AIDS concern call 841-254. Headquarters
*student progressive club now forming with the objective of creating reading room /office space. If interested, please write: *Progressive Club, P.O. Box 1422, Lawrence, KS 60044*.
SPRING BREAK 90
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW!
DAYTONA BEACH from $129*
7 NIGHTS
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND from $129*
5 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT from $101*
2, 5 OR 7 NIGHTS
PORT LAUDERDALE from $132*
7 NIGHTS
HILTON NEAD ISLAND from $127*
7 NIGHTS
CORPUS CHRISTI / ANISTING ISLAND from $99*
CORPUS CHRISTI/
MUSTANG ISLAND
from $99
1.00 OR 2.00 NICKELS
CALL TOLL FREE TODAY
1-800-321-5911
Snapchat
Depending on phone status and length of stay
- Depending on break dates and length of stay
University Daliv Kansan / Fridav. December 1. 1989
15
Want to see the tree in L.A. for free? We have a wheel and truck, just need two weeks. December 18th
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who calls 814-2943 or visit 1419 Mass, Headquarters Counseling Center.
130 Entertainment
DJ - Good Vibrations: The way to pump up your party. Very affordable. Brian 841-8173
way to pump up your party. Very affordable. Buy **GET INTO THE GROOVE** Mobile Metropolis Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional DJing. Party theme. Join Party Thunder. DJ Jury Valve Saxophone. 81/7063
140 Lost-Found
All black cat. Yellow eyes. Claws. Found 16th & 7th. 881478
LOST: Black cat, short hair, de-clawed, no ing,
around 1400 block Ohio. ID: 92-7988.
205 Help Wanted
200s Employment
Babysitter needed to care for 6-month-old infant in our home starting in January. M-F afternoons, 709-3230.
Car Forter- part-time/full-time. Must be 21 years old, excellent driving record, flexible hours, clean-cut in appearance. Academy Car Rental, 841-0102. EOE/F.
Jade Garden now hiring experienced delivery drivers. Must have own car & insurance. $4 per hour + 10 per delivery + tips + 1/2 price meals. Apply in person, 1419 Kaohe
Light delivery - have reliable transportation. Knowledge of city email. Good pay and benefits.
Live-in Company needed for 77-year-old woman in Lawrence. Light housekeeping and some cooking required. Large, private house provided. Must be non-smoker. 1-883-4178 or 1-883-2238.
Logan Business Machines accepting applications for part-time delivery person. Flexible hours.
841.9014
Live-in child care positions near New York,
Philadelphia, the beach. Airlift, good salaries,
PRINCETON MANYPLACE PLAENCEMENT 909 N. IRIS
rish 416, Princeton, NI 98540 (909) 467-1195.
NANNY OPPORTUNITIES
*San Francisco - girl $175/wed*
*Connecticut - twins $226/wed*
*Connecticut - twins $226/wed*
*Boston - infant $160/wed*
*Boston - infant $160/wed*
Many positions available.
One year commitment necessary.
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
Student assistants to guard the galleries at the Spencer Museum of Art. Available to work anytime between 8:50-10:00 Train-Shm. Please contact us at 864-8740 or in step or in fill an application.
NEED EXTRA CASH? Work as a cashier for NEED EXTRA CASH! Begin training at January 16, 17 and 18. Applications accepted through December 6, 1998 at the General Accounting Office, Carrissa Street, Chicago, IL 60623.
now bring! *Smith-n-Wesson* is now hire
moment. *Apply.* in person, *823 Vernor*, from 7p.m. to 10p.m.
Apply. Prevail cashingist需求 preferred.
Needed immediately - Part-time receptionist Sat.
& Sun, hours only. Apply at 1301 W. 24th, Colony Woods Apts. 842-8111.
Overnight board operator/producer for KLZR.
Convenient broadcast experience.
Contact: 84-120-1890.
den at the university for at least two years and be in good academic standing; must be eligible for work study. Preferred qualifications include familiarity with campus procedures and activities; also excellent communication skills. Available immediately. Salary $43.00 per month.
Part-time Student Employment Position.
Responsibilities include assisting/advising
students with their academic and career
university procedures; providing individual and,
group tutoring; coordinating workshop and
workshops; and attending weekly meetings.
Part-time housecleaners and office cleaners waked. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Callady at 824-8344.
Austin Roadco, NSW (9043) 854-6600
867, Lawrence, NSW (9014) 854-6600
AAO/Employer
Responsible for audio production including interviewing and tape editing. Broadcast on air-on-circus. Send resume to K504800. Start date 2/19/18. Complete position description available. Send 7/19, 3 reference and same page by 2/19/18 to Heddy Sanders at K504800. Send resume to K504800, 847, Lawrence, KS, 60544, (913) 844-6000.
Full job description/requirements available upon request. Contact Thomas M. Herrera, Assistant Director of Office of Minority Affairs, Strong Dual Use University, Lansing, MI 48935 (813) 645-4511. All materials must be received by 5:00 p.m. December 6, 1988. EOE MOYLEKY. Part-time housecleaner and office cleaners
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Flexible hours, go going every day. Lawrence County Court for Frank
Want to work in a room and exciting atmosphere? The Yacht Club is now accepting applications for cooks. Apply in person, 3 p.m.-5 p.m., 530 Wisconsin. 842-845-
Wanted: Companion for boy, age 4. Mondays
9:30am-11:30am. Req. Bach or equiv in
b. Reference required. Nonmacker. Need
own computer.
225 Professional Services
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: 24-hour
tachrome processing. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT/RESUME $6.00. 206 Art & Design.
840-679.
WORKERS' COMP
Auto Accidents & Personal Injury
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
TRAFFIC - DIV'S
Fake IDs D alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6078
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-621-7. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
Lawrence, 841-5716
Suffering from Abortion?
Hearts Hastored
Colby, KS 07701
Confidential response/material
235 Typing Services
1-1,000 passes, no job too small or too large. Attach and affordable wordprocessing. Diana.
Accurate and affordable typing/word processing.
Spelling checked. Doed with time to spare! Spell
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing. Call anytime 749-3881.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scrubbles into accurately spelled, unstructured, grammatically correct pages of
transcribe your sermons into accuracy opened and punctured, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 848-383, days or evenings
*basic reading skills* - term nouns
Call R.J.F.'s Typing Services 481-3943.
pennana, legal, theses. ec, no calls after # p.m.
paper, legal Typeing and Word Processing.
Call Barb for your typing needs - term papers,
theses, dissertations, resumes, mise. Comp.
Interface/Q/O manual. 840-3210 after 9:30.
term paper, thesis, lectures, notes,
resumes, applications, mailing lists.
Laser printing & spelling corrected. 2010/1 W, 2010 St. M-Tb
Mh- m:o:m. M - p:m. M - 54:m. M - 40:m. M - 24:m.
Excellent professional typist does papers accurately, reasonably and fast. Call Julia 943-823-826.
KEYWORKS. Word Processing and Data Entry 10 + years KU experience. Colletta 943-823-807.
KSS Professional Word Processing. Accurate and
affordable. 814-6945. Call between 1 and 10.
**headmess** - typeset
Kingston Printing, Inc.
"Making you look good on paper!"
W 04. W 218. 614-6239
This inhol is hot! At least their fingers are. Professional typist. You write, I type, Fast & accurate, reasonable rates, available day or evening. Lori 841-6058.
TYPING EXPRESS Accurate, affordable and
overnight. With spelling check. Liss 748-735-736
THEWORDDOCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Law, thesis, resumes, commercial, IBM-PC MAC, CDP, Dandywalk, dot matrix, inser. Since 1863.
Word Perfect Word Processing, IBM Compatible.
ear Orchards Corners. No calls after 9 p.m.
438-8568.
Ward Processing/Typing: Paper, Renumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
Word Processing, Macintosh, Spell-Check, Cash only. 749-3119 evenings.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
181 Nissan 310D XP, brand-NEW battery, AC good condition, only 8500 ! Call Yoshi 864-8156.
28 Ecure, loaded. Very good condition. $185.00
863-2542.
Brand new 10-speed black Huffy, low price. Call
841-1466.
carvel, model 2 guitar. White, tremelo,
forewood reefboard, single ceramic humbucker
pickup. $69. Call Steve. 842-8348, less message.
phone: 842-8348. Free good condition.
$0.00 OBO. 842-2730 evenings.
DP Dual Trac 20 free-standing weight machine, 120 lb resistance, adjustable bench, butterfly and leg cur attachment, 440 BOO Chris at 841-0041. For Sale: 197 Honda Elite Moped Rumg great!
GOVT, SURPLUS! New combat boot and safety toe boots. Wool (thintanks, gloves, socks and mittens). Field jackets, overcoats, camouflage clothing. Also CARHARTT HORKWEAR MOTORCYCLE. St. Mary's Surplus Christmas, 12-4. St. Mary's Surplus Sales, St. Marys, KS. 1-437-2734.
a croaker hide-bed with matching coffee, chair table and bed, tables. $275. Twin head board and frame. $15. Full mattress set with frame, $20. 845-280 after 5.
Lap puppies, 3 white female, 1 black male, 1
puppies. Lab puppies will retrain small
cats. £75.00. 769-789
Minix Macintosh 7000 Aurorae Camera Quit!
MINIX CONDITION PERFECT CONDITIONS Negotiable Call
PERFECT CONDITION
MOFED 1852 Honda, asking $825. Call 559-4988
after 5 p.m.
Mountain bike. Specialized Hardrock Comp. 5,
month old, great condition. $209.00. Fulton
MUST SELL: T100 T-1000 laptop computer,
1.2 MB RAM memory, 1 RGB, serial,
parallel & external floppy disk drive ports,
free software. You name the
call: Call 864-6157.
must Sell Tandy 1000 with color monitor. Will take best offer. Call 423-374-7
Feawey Guitar Ampl, 100 watt, reverb & phrase,
built in $85.00; Yamaha Bass Ampl, 50 watt,
built in $95.00.
Pomerian, female, 2 months, orange-sable.
AKC. Lakesi, 841-7898 after n. n.m
TAMA 590, drum set w/2 cymbals, ROUND GR-700 guitar synthesizer and controller, $50 each. Gibson don'tleek guitar copy, $250. Laser headless guitar, $258. ORG, 84-12345
What a deal! !Myrtia read bike - Shimano Sport condition + good condition +140 - after 5:00 hour - complaint -314
Zapo M60 + powerboard Mono tow amp, amb
up and crosswater, hi-level RCA ratiop
841-9752
370 Want to Buy
2nd-hand queen or fullsize futon and frame.
842-7075. John.
On TVs, VCRs, Jewelry, Jewelry. Musical Instruments, cameras and more. We honor Wira/MC/A.M.E.X./Disc. Jayhawk Pawn & Virah/W. 10th W. b. 749-1919.
Want to buy one season ticket for men's basketball.
Call 811-645-6456.
Call Today!
360 Miscellaneous
AIRLINES
1928 Oldsmobile Car, AC, AM/FM, tape, good condition, 81.100 oz. 844-6702.
1790 Honda Accord. A/C. 5-speed hatchback.
Motorbike license: U1200. B41006M
Maupintour
183 Tourist Overcrowding, 71,400 miles, excellent condition,
very economic, $2,700 denge. Denise 643-7401.
71. VW Bing, runs good, asking $380 OBO. Call 841-8598.
749-0700
1966 Toyota Corona Wagen 4-speed, A/C new
电池 and all-season radials. Huns good, £75.00.
340 Auto Sales
For Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules
and best schedules. On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
*83 Renault Alliance, 4 doors, good shape in/out,
AC, automatic. $1600 negotiable.
842-583-7669, 1094.
1977 Ford Grandura, $400.00; 1977 Datamaster 2805, red with black windows印制, Call 641-7495. 1978 Buck Wagon, Auto, AC, CAs/CB, Radio, Cruise, ONE OWNER, GWERD. 481-8328.
79 Cadila Coupe de Ville, excellent condition
70,000 km. Must sell. $1100.00
price paid
on air
82 Renault Alliance, 4-door, runs good, AM/FM,
A/C G/K, $100.00 negligible. 82-833-576-1094.
82 Renault Encore, excellent shape, runs good,
$100.00 negligible. 82-833-576-1094.
This week's special: V7 WBVung, Very clean
rebound motor. $1195. See Check, Tucky Nissan,
Mitsubishi.
91606 begiastan. 942-8527-960-109
C Bazletiro, with white top, loops and rims
91606 begiastan. 942-8527-960-109
78 Chevette, very good condition, one owner,
$2000 OBO. 483-1397
Must sell 1977 Toyota Celica. Lob of new parts,
needs some work. $450, BDG 820. 814-0473.
Nissan Sentra 1854, good condition, $1700. Stick
ship. Call Ching, 864-6433 night.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
big bedrooms for suburban in great houses at 11th and Ohio. Kristin or Emily @ 92-368-3800
2-HR (ap. in house, Fast walk to WC), Newly
wired 16'x9' in window, Window AC,
810, no pets, 941-5784, 841-1074
1-bedroom apt. close to campus. $230.00 a month.
749-5872.
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in the 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 national origin, or an occupation'. In any other jurisdiction, 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 advertising in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
2-br. in Harvard D-4 plex. Quiet, great location available med-Dec./Jan. Unfinished, complete kitchen, carpeting, drapes. DW, CA, W/D hookup. $75.50 or 823-383.
2-level/2 room apartment. Spring sublease. Ten mile walk to寝室. 841-706-8378. $37/month. A change for the better. M. Riess. The luxurious of washroom, dysaite, kitchen, nook. Sneeze guard.
Apartment for sublease at Natalmith Hall. A single bedroom on first floor with own bathroom and 10% of privacy. Have maid service. Leave room to use kitchen. Monthly deposit with paid deposit and half of January rent.
Available at West Hills Akla for next semester; Spacious one-bedroom fitted up, $265 a month. Water paid. Great local near campus. Lease and deposit refund: 814-300-9428 or 814-300-9428.
Available now at west Halls Apts, 102 Emery Hall: Ridic: Spacious 3-bedroom unfurnished apt, $433 a month. Water paid. 1½ baths. DW. Apt. pool, laundry. Bathroom furnished. Lease and deposit required. 8410 or 924-388. License
- 3 bedroom apartments,
washer/dryer, 2 full baths, all appliances,
microwave and some with fireplaces.
Studios. 1-3-8 & bedrooms apartments. Many
apartments with you in mind. 641-151, 642-159, 643-749
and so on.
Call 749-5275
or Doug Compton 841-8
Furnished room for female graduate student
Kitchen cleaning. Clean, quiet, clean. No smoke.
Dishwashing. Clean, quiet, clean. No smoke.
For sublease. Two bedroom apartment,
available January 1st May. On bus route. Rent
$750 per month.
For Rent: Very clean & quiet superburpara for 2 people. Available Dec. 1st, call Aspen Apart-
city hall 1 block away
california and water paid 1 block from campus at 1425 Ohio. Private parking, laundry facility
Furnished room w/shared kitchen/bath facilities for females. Off-street parking. No pet allowed.
Grad student would like to sublease apartment or house for spring semester. (314) 655-0888.
Reserve efficiency and apartments and older well-kept homes. $165 and 811-414-144.
Help | Submenuars backed down! Nice 3-bird.
apt for right click on wiltite, close to carm,
help for right click on carm.
pass, to subscribe January 14th. 740-891.
post: Submisses backed in! 3.9.2hm.
post: Submisses backed in! 3.9.2hm.
Seeking warm friendly Christian roommate? Applications will be immediately for the remainder of the academic year. Applications may be picked up at ECM Center, 1204 Gred. For more information call
Great 3-person house, 10th & Kentucky; near carpark at starling station 14th, 720-691-81
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A quiet atmosphere
•spacious 2 bedrooms
•close to campus
WINTER SPECIALS!
9TH & AVALON 842-3040
SANDWICH TREE
Nice large attic niches for rent. Avail. Jan. 1st.
925-347-0862, 925-347-2262, CJC. Rent/Mon., 925-347-2262.
Check this out! 911-644-0862.
Spacesize 3-bdm.培课, W/D hookup, AC, yard,
garage, clean, quiet. Available late December.
$245/mo. Leave message. No dogs please.
749-7527
So close to campest! One bedroom apartment for sublease, 11th and Oread. Call 841-1897.
Available Jan. 1; 'Great studio apartment -
$300/month; Low utilities. Call 842-8310.
Sublime Subleave: 3-bim, 3-bath townhouse,
an uncreative on bus route, Villaillac Village,
uncreative on bus route
9.28am. apt. 5 minutes from campus.
9.30am. $300 am. Available in January
at 10am.
1 month rent free! Sunrise Village - 4-bedroom
call & email message 866-521-9300 or 866-521-9310
Subname: 1-dorm, apartment, fully furnished
new lease on lease: 843-207-6191
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Reserve Your Home Now We Still Have A Few Completely Furnished Apartments
very to campus
Sublease Jan-July, 2 bedroom, $225.00 plums
interest and deposit. Close to campus. Call after 5
p.m. p.m. 7:30. Spencer.John.
Offering:
• Custom furnishings
• Designed for privacy
• Private parking
• Professional parking & KU
• Many great locations
• Equal opportunity housing
Designed with you in mind!
475-210-6340
Older 2-bedroom homes, downtown, wood floors, fence yards, 892-814-8444
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
INSTANT $200 REBATE
Hurry in Today some short term leases available COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- TANNING BED
- VOLLEYBALL COURT
- BASKETBALL COURT
- INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL
- EXERCISE ROOM
- 3 HOT TUBS
- ONLINE ROUTE
- ON BUS ROUTE
MASTER OF LIBRARY ARCHITECTURE
$345-$410
MODELS OPEN DAILY
Mon.- Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m.
Sun. 12-4 p.m.
842-511-7
1301 W. 24th
*Offer limitone rebate
per lease
annuals 1,155.90
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAIMSHT DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS 60444
913. 843. 8559
Convenience
- Privacy
- Luxury
Naismith Hall...
these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
Must Sublease! 738 Obo. Quite spacious, charming studio apt. 182 Hardwood floors, claw-front door. $250 per room. Move in NOW! Point of interest: $275 mo. +; else. Move in NOW! Point of interest: $495 mo. +; else. Move in NOW! For Rhonda or for Honda, or 841-1674, ask for Lots. Must sublease studio apt. $230/mo. All paid. 6 minute walk from campus. Call 848-1658, leave
Only Naismith can provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free utilities, weekly maid
430 Roommate Wanted
New i-bdm. lpt., Very ROOMIE, could be for 2 people. Fully furnished, dishwasher, microwave. Large bathtromber. Cable hookup. W/D faç. Gm RU will take you. Must make coupon deposit. #971-4186.
rooms to accommodate a new
applicant vp. Good location. Bus
route. Pool. Free cable. Please call 749-3810.
Female needed to subluese 2-hath 3-bed apart-
ment in a building. Beginning Jan. 1.
Call Hope 942-4778
Female needed to share 3-bedroom townhouse.
$25, all utilities & cable included. Call 843-835-83.
Female non-smoker. Close to campus. Gax,
water paid. Large bedroom. Responsive
to changes in needs.
service, "Dine Anytime,
and much more!
Female Roommate needs for spring semester.
Good location. $200.00 + 15 utilities. Lease until May. Deposit paid, free cable. 841-3590.
Female roommate wanted for spring semester.
3-br. b2 duplex hotel. 390 University Dr. $187 per month -
utilities. Call Vicki or Sue at 842-3763.
Female roommate wanted for summer
month + utilities. Call Vicki or Sue at 842-3793.
Female roommate will need for spring semester.
Walking distance from campus - $200/month +
%utilities. Own bedroom/bath. 842-5168.
Female roommates needed for spring semester.
Brand new apartment. Two blocks from campus.
Own bedrooms, washer/dryer, dishwasher,
microphone, 841-6163.
Female roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom
furniture with a male roommate. The same
bedroom furniture. Nice comp. $290, 845-001-
GAY MALE or non-mi. from campus. $175; %1 us.
Roommate must be available.
Female roommate needed ASAP Furnished apartment in Sundance $790 plus u. utilities
Pentale roommate needed immediately. 2 bdrm.
apt, close to RU. energy-efficient: was W/ID. Call
842-4105. Leave message.
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
Female roommate needed mid-December. Own
room, sundae, appliances. Close to campau.
810/mo. +. Uses. 495-504.
For more information & a tour call or come by today.
Female roommate required for spring 170-roommates from campus. $175 is utilite. Call soon 842-1349
Very cool 10c, air, available in January. 1800 cfm,
Vermont Blower, gas water pump. Remodeled in winter
winter $22/mo., no pets. 843-9773. Leave message.
Male non-smoking roommate needed, spring semester, central location, close to cmapsau, $150
+ ½ utilities. Call Mark or Pat, 842-8000.
Female roommate needed immediately for spring semester. Surprise Village. Call 911-828.
Female roommate (s) needed ASPA*: Great local stay from campun. $411.825 month. Call 842-9925.
room female roommate needed. Very nice, completely furnished. own room. $180 per month. 749-5068
male or female to share nice 2-bed, prm. lv.
male graduate student. Owner room. Great location
on bus route. $140/mo. + % utilities.
Available on Jan. 1, 749-1219.
Need 2 female roommates for 3-bedroom townhouse at Trailridge. Call Cindy 749-0534 or 845-7333.
male roommate need January. Fully furnished apartment. $150/month block from campus, $185/month, NW 941-8636. male roommate need to share fully furnished apartment. Sweet setup. $150/month plan
Male roommate wanted: Spring semester to share 2-bedroom apt. $100 per month plus ½ utilities. 841-909-
BEDWEDDING for $167.50/mon) 4 blks from
female roommates in Jan-May.
Call NASH at (800) 232-9545.
Call NASH at (800) 232-9545.
Roammate needed immediately 2 bdrm. for
water pd 8110/mo. November pdp 8100/mo.
Rooomate needed for large 3-bedroom apartment in house. Hardwood floors, gas water. paid water. Rooms need a heater. Rooms in very nice house for non-smoking, quiet female. Two blocks south kuwait. Free utilities. cable, W/D, A/C, microwave, TV, housecleaner. Wi-Fi, L/15/80, & 4250-$120. balcony. 841-3680.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Non-smoking responsible roommate wanted to
share furnished 2-bedroom, house on campus.
Grad student preferred. Must have references.
842-5385.
Seeking mature male roommate spring semester.
2 BR, 2 FL, old style. $300. Utilities paid.
843-0829 Newin.
Roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom house with two others. Washer/dryer. On bus route. $150 +
taxes. 749-3098.
Policy
Roommate needed for second semester. Basement room, own bathroom, utilizes split $ _{4} $ Call 790-994.
**SPRING SULENLE** Fun female needed to share candle cone to campus, "Dawnd. Cable." Call
Wanted: Roommate for spring semester.
2-bedroom apartment at Villa 26, $300.00 + ½
utilities. Call 749-1892, if no answer leave
message.
Sublease 2-bedroom, 2-bathroom apartment. Includes wet hat, fireplace and pool, very quiet. On bus route, our own washer and dryer included. Call 841-0797 or office, 843-0660.
*Pointy Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words*
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No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising.
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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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105 personal 140 lost G found 305 for sale 31
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ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY
Date ad begins...
Total days in paper... University paid
Amount paid... 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
Classification... Lawrence, K6045
THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
I will not act primitive in class.
I will not act primitive in class.
I will not act primitive in class.
I will not act primitive.
---
1
16
Friday, December 1, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Christmas Trees: We've got your size!
Whether you live in a house or a room, we've got the tree for you.
- sizes from 2 to 14 feet
* choose from Scotch Pine,
Norway Pine, White Pine,
Fraser Fir, & Douglas Fir
* FREE coffee & hot chocolate
- FREE delivery through December 17th.
- garland roping
* tree stands
* tree bags only 99¢
* 2 games for $19.90
with purchase
- FREE delivery through December 17th.
* *10% discount to dorms, scholarship halls, fraternities, & sororities.
...
31st & Iowa across from K-mart
Putt-Putt Tree Shop
---
843-1511 golf & gameroom open til Dec. 20
Tune In The World
Current events from an international perspective
90.7
Mhz
88
108
The international scene is as close as your radio
O
KJHX FM
the Sound Alternative 90.7
O
This week: El Salvador in the crossfire Sunday from 11:30 a.m.-noon
TRY DILLON'S AUTHENTIC
Pillars
FOOD STONES
CHINESE KITCHEN!
3
HOT CHINESE FOOD TO GO
Located in our Dillons Store at 1015 W. 23rd in Lawrence.
Dillon's Authentic Chinese Kitchen Foods are cooked fresh on the premises every day. Our expert cooks are trained in traditional Hong Kong, Szechwan, and Cantonese style cooking.
Dillons use only the finest, freshest quality meats, vegetables, spices and seasonings. We use only pure vegetable oil for cooking (no cholesterol). (No MSG added.)
Combination Plate Chicken Chow Mein, 1 Egg Roll & Fried Rice $349 Beef Chow Mein $429 Quart Serving
Egg Drop Soup
Pint Serving
$149
Available only in our Dilton Store at 1015 W. 23rd in Lawrence.
CHINESE KITCHEN OPEN DAILY 11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
PHONE: 913-841-3379
FDA recalls food supplement Health product becomes dangerous when taken in large doses
Health product becomes dangerous when taken in large doses
By Melanie Matthes Kansan staff writer
An over-the-counter product that is used for treatment of insomnia and premenstrual syndrome has been recalled by the Food and Drug Administration because it is suspected to be the cause of a life-threatening blood disorder.
The product is a food supplement called L-tryptophan and is sold at many health food and drug stores, said Chris Haley, director of drug information and poison control at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The FDA recalled the supplement on Nov. 18.
"There is a virtually unequivocal link between the use of L-tryptophan and development of the disorder, and until we know exactly what's going on, we've got to protect the public." Haley said.
He said the FDA had determined that the use of L-tryptophan was strongly linked to the development of a blood disorder, oesinophilia-malayia syndrome, that can be severe or life-threatening.
The symptoms of the blood disorder are pain in the muscles and joints, swelling of the arms and legs, fever and rash, he said. It is characterized by an unusually large amount of white blood cells.
There have been two reported cases of the blood disorder at the Med Center. Haley said.
Although the FDA has pulled the product from the market, many people still have it in their homes, he said, and should discontinue its use.
The product is sold by many drug manufacturers under the name L-tryptophan, Haley said.
L-trypotophan is a naturally occurring amino acid that induces sleep and
alleviates the symptoms of premenstrual syndrome, Haley said. It is found naturally in the body but becomes dangerous when taken in large doses.
He said the FDA would study the 287 case reports on the disorder that it had received since Nov. 11.
watkins Memorial Heath Center has no reported cases of the blood disorder, and the Watkins pharmacy does not carry the product, Watkins officials said.
Linda Gwalney, manager of The Community Mercantile Coop, a health food store at 700 Maine St., said that the use of L-tryptophan was fairly widespread.
"A lot of people were using it for sleep difficulties," she said. "And the National Enquirer ran horrible stories about it being a cure for depression. When those stories came out, our sales would go up."
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Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd., Lawrence, KS. 66044 (913) 843-3826
Hrs: 8-5 M-F 9-5 Sat. 12-4 Sun
Throw a party — any party! Then get on the Domino's Party Line and start ordering!
When you hang up, we swing into action with delicious cheese, tempting meats and the choiceest veggies that ever met a great pizza. And we deliver to your door in less than 30 minutes!
PARTY LINE
DOMINOS
PIZZA
Ask about our multiple pizza discounts!
Call Us!
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd St.
841-8002
832 Iowa St.
DOMINO'S PIZZA Nobody Delivers Better.
$5.99 DOMINATOR
Get one small pepperoni pizza and a Coke for only $5.99!
Additional toppings only 80*each
$5.00!
DOMINO S
PIZZA
Tax not included. Not good with any other coupon or offer.
Good on Original plaza only
Expires 12/22/89.
$5.00 DOMINATOR
Get one small cheese Pan Pizza for only $5.00! Additional toppings only 80¢ each.
Pan
Pizza
Tax not included. Not good with any other coupon or offer.
Good on Pan Pizza only.
Expires 12/22/98.
Fast, Free Delivery". Our drivers carry less than $20.00. Delivery area limited to ensure safe driving. "1*899 DPI."
1
VOL.100,NO.68 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY
DEC. 4, 1989
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Topeka gangs possibly linked to local crime
By Jim Petterson Kansan staff writer
Lawrence police are investigating several recent violent incidents that may be linked to gang activity in Lawrence.
Police suspect Topека gang members started two fights at Gammon's, 1601 W. 23rd St., in mid-November and may have been responsible for an aggravated robbery in the 1000 block of Massachusetts Street on Nov. 18.
"We're not taking this very lightly," said Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman. "This is a potentially explosive situation. Gang violence traditionally can turn extremely violent very quickly."
Mulvenon said officers believed gangs were involved in the incidents because the individuals traveled together and dressed in similar clothing styles and colors. He declined to reveal specifically how the suspects were dressed.
The first of the two alleged gang-related incidents at Gammon's occurred in the second week of November, Mulvenon said.
"A half-dozen people came to Gammon's, caused some trouble and were ejected and told they would not be let back in." he said.
back in. About a week later, on Nov. 17, 20 to 25 Black and Hispanic males and females returned to Gammon's and tried to force their way into the club, he said.
According to a police report, Gammon's employees recognized some of the individuals from the first altercation and the group was denied entry.
The group then became violent,
Mulvenon said
By the time police were contacted and arrived at the scene, a Lawrence man had suffered a broken jaw and at least five other people were injured. The club sustained an estimated $1,000 in damages. Four Topope men were arrested in connection with the incident.
Police said the aggravated robbery could be related to the altercations at Gammon's because some of the same individuals were involved in both incidents.
A Topeka man was arrested and two Topeka juvenile males were detained after the robbery. Mulvonon said the suspects were part of the same group that had been at Gammon's the previous night.
"We're not 100 percent sure they are related," he said. "But they're being investigated as related."
Mulvenon said patrol and criminal analysis officers from the Lawrence police department had been in contact with the Topeka police department reporting the incident. He declined to comment further on the investigation.
An officer at the Topeka police department's criminal intelligence department said he would not comment about the cases.
Mulvenon said police were working very closely with the the management and owner of Gammon's to prevent further violent incidents at the club.
He pointed out that police were not singling out Gammon's as a trouble spot. He said reports of violence, vandalism and thefts were often received from area taverns and private clubs.
Leaders optimistic at close of summit
The Associated Press
MARSAXLOKK BAY, Malta — President Bush and Soviet Leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev wrapped up two days of superpower summery yesterday, claiming stride towards a new era of East-West peace but underscoring differences that linger at the end of a 45-year Cold War.
Both men said they would meet again next year in the United States, and expressed the hope — but not the certainty — they would be able to sign agreements in 1990 to cut long-range nuclear weapons and conventional forces in Europe and make progress toward a chemical weapons ban.
"We stated, both of us, that the world leaves one epoch of Cold War and enters another epoch," Gorbachev said at an unprecedented joint news conference that marked the end of two days of storm-tossed talks held aboard a Soviet luxury liner. "We are just at the very beginning of our long road to a long-lasting peaceful period."
Bush said that he was optimistic after the summit.
"As the West works patiently together and increasingly cooperates with the Soviet Union, we can realize a lasting peace and transform the East-West relationship into one of enduring cooperation," Bush said.
"You get the feeling he really wants to work with us and he knows that I'm cautious," Bush said. "I'd like to think he thought I knew what I was talking about."
Even so, neither man sought to gloss over differences on two topics, the Soviets' call for cuts in naval forces and American anger at the continued flow of Soviet weapons to leftist rebels in El Salvador.
The joint news conference in Malta was conducted aboard the Soviet luxury liner Maxim Gorky. The liner was pressed into service as the site for the two days of talks after bad weather forced cancellation of plans to use U.S. and Soviet warships anchored offshore.
Gorbache departed Malta for Moscow, where he was convening a meeting of virtually an entirely new lineup of Warsaw Pact leaders to discuss the summit.
DIEHL
Taking part in the celebration, Kansas forward Michelle Arnold raises the victory cup. The Jayhawks won their third consecutive Dial Classic tournament title on Saturday when they defeated UMKC 44-41 at Allen Field House. See related stories on page 13.
three's a charm
Communist party chiefs resign posts
The Associated Press
EAST BERLIN — Communist leader Egon Krenz and his entire government resigned yesterday, and a 25-member panel of reformers took over temporary leadership in a desperate effort to rescue East Germany's Communist Party.
The resignation, announced by megaphone to a wildly cheering crowd, stripped power from Krenz less than six weeks after he replaced hard-liner Erich Honecker. Krenz was left off of the new panel, which will control East Germany's ruling party until a party congress later this month.
priory at the
It was the shortest reign of any leader in the
country's history. Krenz retains the largely ceremonial position of president.
The Communists also expelled Honecker from the party he had led for 18 years and announced that three usted Politburo members had been arrested on corruption charges.
arrested on corruption charges:
Hundreds of thousands of East Germans linked hands across the country to form a human chain intended to increase pressure for quicker democratic reforms and to protest corruption in Communist Party ranks.
Under pressure from mass demonstrations and the exodus of thousands, Krenz took over on Oct. 18 and opened the Berlin Wall on Nov. 9. He promised democratic reforms including free elections, but there were increased calls for his expulsion even within the party because of his past links to Honecker's rule. He was jeered Saturday by party members who demanded his resignation.
"The Politburo accepts the criticism raised by a large number of party members that the current leadership is not capable of uncovering the entire scope of serious mistakes of the members of the former Politburo and to draw the necessary consequences," he said.
the country was not included in Guenter Schabowski announced the resignations of the 10-man Politburo and the 183-member, policy-making Central Committee by megaphone to 10,000 cheering people who stood outside the Central Committee building.
The new committee is expected to run party affairs until a special party congress Dec. 15-17, and prepare for that congress. Its role in governing the country was not immediately clear.
Schabowski, one of those who resigned from the Politburo, was considered a reformer, but like all of the ousted officials, he was not named to the new committee.
Schabowski said that Honecker and 11 other disgraced officials were expelled from the party following disclosures of corruption among top party ranks.
Thomas Gler has made some sacrifices to improve his Russian.
Most recently, Gler, Leawood senior, had to give up his cats when he moved into the Russian House, 1536 Tennessee St.
The Russian house is a place for people to live who want to practice speaking Russian.
Neumur, who speaks fluent Russian, started the house two years ago on the suggestion of professors who thought it was a good idea.
Louise Redford, owner of the house, said that six people live in the house. Redford, who was born in the Ukraine and immigrated to the United States during World War II, is working toward a master's degree in Slavic language and literature.
Russian House provides practice, culture
"T
Students get opportunity to sharpen their language skills
he inhibition a person has toward using the language has pretty much melted away with everyone. I can try to use my Russian and not feel inhibited.'
By Lisa Moss
Kansan staff writer
By Lisa Moss Kansan staff writer
Redford said she knew of similar houses at the University of Washington, Seattle; Indiana University, Bloomington, and the University of Virginia. Charlottesville.
At the University of Washington, Redford said, the woman who runs the Russian house said the students who lived there stood out because their Russian was fluent.
Redford said that at the house, she helped her residents with their home-
- Thomas Gier
"We try to talk (Russian)
whenever possible," she said.
Redford said she cooked dinner for all the residents every night and dinner table conversation includes both Russian and English.
boul Rouxin
Sometimes Russian flavor is added to dinner when Redford prepares foods like borscht, made of cabbage and tomatoes, and piroshky, meat-filled pastries.
Gler said that Redford's cooking was good and that living in the house was a good way to improve Russian conversational skills.
Redford has created a strong, cultural Slavic feeling in the house, he said.
ane inhibition a person has toward using the language has pretty much melted away with everyone," he said. "I can try to use my Russian and not feel inhibited."
Gler said he planned to live in the house until he graduated.
"Louise is the heart of the whole program," he said. "I gave up my two cats to live here and I still miss my cats, but I like living here."
Gwyn Blackburn, graduate student in East European studies, said living in the Russian house gave her more practical experience speaking Russian than learning it from a text book.
Blackburn has been studying Russian for two years, she said.
Property tax crisis to be considered by Legislature
By Derek Schmidt
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The Legislature will grapple with hard choices in tax policy at the end of this week.
But taxpayers should not expect too much. "There is no ideal solution." State Rep. Rex Crowell, R-Longton, said last week. "Anything we do is going to affect other taxpayers, and probably, anything we do as time goes on is going to upset other groups of taxpayers."
Gov. Mike Hayden announced Friday that he would call the Legislature into special session this Friday to act on proposals to alleviate the state's property tax crisis.
most observers agree that long-term solutions, such as changing the constitutional amendment that implemented classification, are premature and will not be addressed in special session.
"In the final analysis, we may have to concede that there are inequities this one year that we cannot correct," said State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Oklahoma. He was a member of the national census session.
to go no further than to provide immediate tax relief.
leading propensity of a special case
The Legislature in special session is likely
A special tax committee last week recommended expanding commercial and residential tax relief programs by $102 million but bogged down in its search for money in the tight state budget.
right side budget.
Senate Majority Leader Fred Kerr, R-Pratt, denounced the unfinanced recommendation as falsely raising expectations.
1. mnt every taxpayer in the state would see through a program that promises relief on one hand and doesn't provide the money," he said.
The full Legialature now will wrestle with financing. At least four options have been discussed:
- Highway funds, Committee members defeated by one vote a move by State Rep. Bill Reardon, D-Kansas City, to delay for one year the state's new $2.65 billion highway program and to use funds from the highway sales tax for property tax relief.
"It makes no sense to have highways to ghost towns," said House Minority Leader Marvin Barkle, D-Louisburg.
But Crowell, a chief architect of the highway plan, blasted the attempt to raid high
way funds.
"It doesn't take a great deal of courage to switch tax dollars that other people had the courage to vote for, and you won't vote taxes for your own program," Crowell said.
Hayden has threatened to veto any attempt to undermine the highway plan, the largest legislative victory of his administration. ► General funds. Cuts from various state programs, including financing for higher education, could be on the table for financing tax relief. Several lawmakers last week suggested that was a possibility, though the committee did not directly discuss it. Hayden declined to say whether education financing was negotiable.
▶ Speeded taxes. By accelerating the collection of various business taxes owed to the state, said State Rep. Jayne Aylward, R-Salina, the state could raise $38 million. The committee endorsed the Aylward proposal, but one Democratic Senator watching the debate called the idea "amoke and mirror." ▶ New Taxes. State Rep. Vincent Snowbarger, R-Overland Park, said the full legislature should consider raising new money to finance tax relief. Among his suggestions are excise taxes on business inventories, alcohol
and tobacco products. That irks opponents.
"I do not see how we can raise taxes to support tax relief," said State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence.
The Legislature also is likely to consider several administrative changes to soften the impact of tax shifts. Among the proposals endorsed by the tax committee are:
▶ Reopening local appeals. Taxpayers who think their taxes unjustifiably could have appealed when their property valuations were issued last spring. However, many people did not take advantage of the local appeals process.
Many local governments fear that a new round of appeals will throw their budgets into chaos.
"Every time an appraiser rules for an appeal, he takes money away from a budget that already been set." Reardon said. □ Tax extension. Harden's order extending the deadline for payment of first-half taxes from Dec. 20 to Jan. 18 was ruled unenforceable on Dec. 1, by Attorney General Robert Stephan. The Legislature could reduce public confusion by codifying the extension, but county governments, which collect and disburse property tax money, worry that an
extension would cause them to miss deadlines, such as bond payments.
such as bond payments.
▶ Quarter payments. Taxpayers would be required to pay only one-fourth of their tax bills before protesting their taxes. Half payment now is required. Supporters concede that the change would result in administrative confusion, but say taxpayers deserve the relief.
the teller.
"If they can get the benefit of paying only one-fourth of their taxes instead of one half, I would think that the Boeinggs and the Hallmarks and whoever would appeal," Kerr said.
Utility inventories. Unwittingly exempted from property taxes, utility inventories would be returned to the tax roles, thereby spreading the tax burden in some counties. However, the committee proposed making the tax retroactive for 1989, which means that counties with significant amounts of utility inventory would have to recalculate and reissue tax bills.
Expand appeals board. Hayden said he would ask the Legislature to double the staff of the state Board of Tax Appeals from 20 to 39 people to expedite the processing of appeals.
2
Monday, December 4, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
HAPPY DAYS
TODAY
Sunny
HI: 57°
LO: 38°
Seattle 55/47
New York 30/21
Chicago 34/24
Denver 63/32
Los Angeles 73/50
Miami 64/55
Dallas 59/40
KEY
Rain Snow
Ice T-Storms
Forecast by Mark L. Bogner
Temperatures are today's highs and
temperature lows.
Kansas Forecast
Kansas will enjoy warmer temperatures with plenty of sun and no rain likely. Winds will become northerly in the western part of the state while they stay southwesterly in the east.
Sailna KC
57/32
58/36
Dodge
City Wichita
59/32
55/35
KU Weather Service Forecast: 084-5300
5-day Forecast
Monday - Mostly sunny with winds out of the west 12-18 mph. High 57'. Low 38'.
Tuesday - Mostly sunny again with northerly winds 15-21 mph.
High 55'. Low 32'.
Wednesday - Mostly sunny.
Northwest winds 10-16 mph.
High 44'. Low 27'."
Thursday - Sunny and cold.
Northerly winds 25-33 mph.
11:47 AM, FEB 14
Friday - Sunny skies. High 35'. Low 19'.
The theme of the year-long anniversary celebration is "Building on a Great Tradition — 125 years at KU." The selection committee sponsored a contest open to all faculty, staff and students to find a design logo.
Local Briefs
LOGO FINALISTS CHOSEN: The field of entries in the logo contest for KU's 125th anniversary was narrowed to two on Friday.
Del Shankel, chairman of the committee, said there were about 10 entries in the contest.
"I thought there were some good entries," he said. "The two finalists worked with the theme well. Either of the two finalists would be fine."
The committee asked the finalists to make some changes in their designs. Shankel said.
Shankel said the entrants would have about two weeks to make changes in their designs.
"We hope to have the logo decided early in the spring," he said.
Robin Eversole, director of University Relations, said that after the committee made its decision, the winning logo would be sent to Chancellor Gene A. Budig for his approval.
CONSTRUCTION NEARS COMPLETION: These students who have crawled over railings and risked running behind bulldozers to get to
classes in Wescoe Hall will be relieved that construction work on its third floor east side concrete is almost finished.
He said the repair should take a few days to complete.
Mike Richardson, associate director of construction for facilities operations, said that a small patch of concrete needed to be replaced because a cavity had formed underneath it, causing a depression in the sidewalk.
He said the cavity could have been caused when the building was built if the soil wasn't packed firmly enough under the sidewalk.
The work is part of a larger $18,000 renovation and improvement project at Wescoe, he said. The larger project involves cutting small grooves in the concrete around Wescoe to decrease the concrete's slippery nature.
HIT AND RUN: A 72-year-old Horton man was killed about 3 a.m. yesterday when a car hit him at 13th and Massachusetts streets, Lawrence police reported.
Harry J. Oliver was pronounced dead at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, according to police records.
M
The driver of the vehicle that hit Oliver had left the scene when police found Oliver lying in the street at 3:16 a.m., according to police records.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 4, 1989
3
AIDS activists draw attention to KU problem
By Stacy Smith Kansan staff writer
Chancellor Gene A. Budig was given an early Christmas gift of condoms Friday, but he wasn't in his office to receive it.
Students in a new campus organization, Act Up KU/Lawrence, took the condoms and a list with
> See related story p.16
names of KU students and faculty who have died of complications of AIDS to the chancellor's office. They made a similar presentation to James Strobl, director of student health services at Watkins Memorial Health Center.
"We can't afford to be silent about the issue of AIDS. Silence just spreads the disease," said Scott Manning, organizer of the group. "We draw attention to what we perceive to be inactive administration."
"We want the administration to have a comprehensive AIDS plan for the entire campus."
Strobl said he didn't mind being presented with the condoms and the list of names. He said he posted them in the lobby at Watkins.
"Any way you can draw attention to an issue, people learn from it," he said. "But I'm not sure where the administration could do."
Manning said the group was formed about a month ago to make AIDS more of an issue on campus. He said his group was pushing the administration to develop a campus-wide program, which would include installing condom vending machines on campus and adding a mandatory AIDS class to the curriculum.
After visiting the administrators, about 12 members staged a mock death protest rally outside the Kansas Union. Several protesters played dead on the sidewalk while others drew body outlines around them with chalk.
Others pretended to be dead in the grass while holding paper tombatshes with the mames of KU students who had been infected. The tapes said died from the AIDS virus.
W
VVe can't afford to be silent about the issue of AIDS. Silence just spreads the disease.'
- Scott Manning
Act Up KU/Lawrence
Carl Hipplesteen, a member of the Act Up organization in Kansas City. Mo., said he came to KU to help the local group get started.
"Although there are not a lot of people with AIDS here, there are a lot of people who are becoming infected here and then 'moving on,' he said. "It's a serious problem."
GORDON
WOODS
my life in peace
After about 20 minutes, the group marched to Strong Hall shouting "Fight AIDS now," and carrying signs that read "Judith Ostrich" Ramaley get your head out of the sand — help fight AIDS" and "Silence = Death."
The group encircled the Christmas tree inside the Strong Hall rotunda and propped up the tombstones for another mock death scene; this time to reach the administration. After about 20 minutes, the protesters concluded their peaceful rally.
"I like what the administration has been doing, but I'd like them to take a more aggressive role," Manning said. "AIDS is becoming an enormous problem at KU."
JUDITH
"OSTRICH"
RAMALY
GET YOUR
HEAD OUT
OF THE SAND!
HELP FIGHT AIDS
Patrick G. Brunsgadt/Special to the Kanese Above, Lauren Crain, Olympia, Wash., senior, lies in the rotunda of Strong Hall in front of a mock tombstone for a former KU student who she says died of complications from AIDS. Left, this message to the executive vice chancellor, along with "Silence = Death" signs, protests what the activists say is KU administration's apathy toward AIDS. Students carried the signs Friday in an effort to promote a comprehensive AIDS plan for the KU campus.
Lights, decorations bring fire hazards
By Rich Cornell Kansan staff writer
Extension cords pose biggest danger
Sometimes, decorative lights add warmth to students' homes during the holiday season. Sometimes, inadequate wiring and overburdened circuits, especially in older homes, add too much warmth.
Home fires are most common during the holiday season, said Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief. Most fires in students' homes result when electrical circuits are overloaded or when an unattended candle flame spreads to nearby clothing or furniture.
"One of the biggest problems in student housing of all types is electrical cords." he said.
An extension cord with a built-in circuit breaker, available for $4 to $10 in local department and hardware stores such overheating. McSwain said.
McSwain said students used more electrical extension cords during the holiday season. Cords could overheat and short circuit resulting in a fire, he said.
Extension cords, he said, should be placed where they will not be damaged to further decrease the change of fire.
Students also must take precautions when using a fireplace, McSwain said.
"Ensure that all of the electrical cords are not running under chair legs or rugs." McSwin said.
Portable heaters also pose a problem during the winter, he said. Students should place them at least three feet from clothes, furniture or anything that could catch fire.
McSwain said students should water their Christmas trees so they do not become too dry. He also suggested that they spray their trees with a fire retardant.
"Always have a screen or a glass door in front of the fireplace," he said. "Do not use wood scraps or lumber because they burn so much hotter than firewood."
Otherwise, a Christmas tree may
1 HCl 1 HOF
quickly burn, filling a room with smoke and flames.
"It's almost like they explode," he said.
'Always have a screen or a glass door in front of the fireplace. Do not use wood scraps or lumber because they burn so much hotter than firewood.'
- Jim McSwain Lawrence fire chief
Scott Thomas, owner of Scott Thomas Construction, said that of the types of student housing, older houses were the most likely to burn.
Electrical wiring in many houses built during or before the 1970s cannot provide as much power as demanded from the students it serves. So students, students' solutions to the inconvenience cause overheating and fires.
"People will put in a six-way adapter." he said.
The construction of older houses also causes problems, he said. The cavity between the inner and outer walls forms a tunnel from the ground to the rafters.
"If fire gets into that wall cavity, it acts like a chimnev," he said.
Therefore, the fire quickly spreads from the first to second floor, Thomas's brother.
In newer buildings, he said, flooring extends into the wall cavity, separating the first and second floors with a 5/8 of an inch layer of sheetrock. Such sheetrock, thicker than most, stops fire for one hour.
Thomas suggested that students, especially those living in old houses, install smoke alarms. Also, they should have their furnace and fireplace inspected once a year.
"Just don't run miles of cord," he said.
Inquest into shooting planned
Finally, he said, students shoud not overload electrical circuits.
Bv Rich Cornell
Kansan staff writers
A coroner's inquest will be convened to review evidence and hear testimony concerning the shooting death of a 21-year-old KU freshman, district attorney Jim Flory said Friday.
Brian Keith Robinson, Topeka, was shot once in the head about 4:20 a.m. Nov. 13 at a friend's apartment in the Tanglewood apartment complex, 951 Arkansas St., a police record stated. One of three other men there shot him.
"I think it's important that all the facts be developed by way of examination under oath." Flory said.
"Their only determination will be whether it's felonious or accidental." Flory said.
Carol Moddrell, Douglas County coroner, will preside over a jury of six county residents, Flory said. The inquest will begin within the next seven to 10 days.
He said jury members would decide whether they thought a charge should be filed and then make a recommendation to him.
stere calling for a coroner's inquest, Flory and his staff had studied evidence and testimony from the case. He did not decide whether a charge should be filed, he said.
Moddrell said Robinson's blood-alcohol level was .10, the legal level of intoxication.
"If they determine that charges need to be filed, it will be my responsibility to order an arrest," she said.
be my responsibility to order an arrest. Flory said Moddrell would instruct the jury what laws applied to the case. They may determine the shooting was a crime, a justifiable homicide or an accident.
Robinson's family is aware of the decision to hold an inquest, Flory said.
Arts fair benefits youth, local artists
Bv a Kansan reporter
Local artists decked the halls of the Lawrence Arts Center with Christmas creativity yesterday.
CENTER WITH SCHOLARS
More than 30 exhibitors were at the annual Holiday Art Fair, sponsored by the Lawrence Art Guild, offering original arts and crafts to the public.
on sale to the public. All proceeds from the "Giving Tree" will be donated to the Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence, a United Way agency.
In the foyer of the Arts Center stood the "Giving Tree," to which the artists had donated original ornaments, also
"We expect to give about $75-$100 to the Boys and Girls Club this year," Clark said.
Andy Contreras, director of the Boys and Girls Club, said the agency appreciated the donation. This was the second year that the Lawrence Art Guild donated money to the agency. The money will be used to provide art supplies for the children, he said.
Firing 'difficult but necessary'
By Doug Fishback
the chairman of anthropology told a University committee Friday that calling for the dismissal of Dorothy.Willner was a difficult but necessary step for her colleagues.
By Doug Fischbuck
Kansan staff writer
David Frayer, chairman of anthropology, told the Faculty Senate Committee on Tenure and Related Problems that Wilner's colleagues had based their decision to call for revocation of her tenure on a 12-year history of incidents that they thought threatened the department.
"It's not an easy thing for this department to do." Frayer said. "But we got to a point where we didn't think we could survive in any other way."
When Donald Koster, Willner's representative, asked Frayer whether the department was following a 1959 guideline that condemned the formation of factions, Frayer answered that factions were to be expected in anthropology and in other disciplines. He said, however, that factions should result in communication.
"The factions that developed in our department with regard to professor Willner never ended up in a healthy exchange of ideas," he said.
Frayer said that when department members met informally in March 1977, Willner objected and left the meeting. She returned briefly, opened the door and shouted. "This is nothing but a kangaroo court," he said.
When Koster asked Frayer whether Michael Crawford, professor of anthropology, had called for censure of Willner at the meeting. Frayer said that it may have been mentioned in the heat of the moment. Censure was not, however, considered as a formal motion, he said.
Neither did Frayer seek a hearing before the University judiciary regarding what he said were accusations of drug use Willner had made against him. In 1977 letter, Frayer said, he had stated he would "settle for no less than a letter of apology or a hearing before the University judiciary."
Frayer, who denied using drugs, said that Willner originally had written about an unnamed faculty member who had smoked marijuana on the sixth floor of Fraser Hall but that she later named him specifically.
Koster asked Frayer why he had not sought a hearing when Willner did not anologize.
"It wasn't worth it to me. I just wanted her to leave me alone," Frayer said. "I wanted to be out of it. There's nothing illeral with a bluff."
Frayer also said that legal briefs Willner had submitted for merit salary evaluation had not been legitimate scholarly research. He said that accepting such materials as research would set a precedent that would result in "total chaos of the merit salary system."
In other testimony, Myles Garland, a former student of Willner, told the committee he thought that Willner had been unethical by not answering students' questions and by not taking phone calls from students requesting clarification about a take-home final exam.
Gartland, who took a class from Willner in 1987, said that the professor had made four students stand in the hall on the first day of class, leaving about three desks empty in the room.
He said he never had met a student who was "even remotely happy" with Willner's courses. Garland also said he advised other students not to enroll in courses taught by Willner,
"I tell every single one of them, 'No,' " he said.
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4
Monday, December 4; 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Personal feelings shouldn't influence Senate decisions
The specter of censorship by way of Student Senate budget cuts is rattling its chains once again.
Three weeks ago, the University Affairs Committee recommended that the alternative magazine Disorientation should not receive financing. Christine Stanek, chairman of the University Affairs Committee, said the decision was made because Disorientation's editors had not submitted a budget request last spring.
Last week, another senator intimated that the recommendation was the result of Stanek's personal feelings about the publication. Regardless of the reasons, the episode points out the problems of Senate financing of student publications. If even a single senator has a beef with a publication, that publication could die.
part. Further, the episode shows that some Senate committees do not understand their own rules.
According to Senate rules and regulations, the University Affairs Committee deals with issues involving student life at the University. The committee may review questions of academic freedoms and policy. It may also review questions regarding the policy, organization and functions of student services at the University. It may also advise and make recommendations to the appropriate decision-making bodies.
If the University Affairs Committee found that Disorientation was in violation of academic freedoms or policy, it should have recommended to the finance committee that the magazine not be financed. Instead, the University Affairs Committee apparently made its decision based on criteria outside its realm of responsibility.
responsibility. Wednesday, the finance committee approved financing for the magazine. After debate, senators suspended the rules to allow discussion about bringing the bill before the whole Senate. Stanek called the decision "a direct slap against the committee system."
Stanek is wrong. Senate has every right to review committee decisions, especially those made in apparent violation of rules. Senate must review committee decisions that may be tainted by unfair personal feelings.
Student Senate should vote Wednesday to finance Disorientation.
Ric Brack for the editorial board
Officials betting on casino to fill KC Union Station
Jackson County legislators are betting on Union Station development.
development. Last week, legislators thought up a creative use for the abandoned Kansas City, Mo., Union Station. They want it to become a casino. That's right — right here in the Bible belt — gambling.
The historic structure sits strategically near the Liberty Memorial, downtown and some major shopping districts, such as Crown Center.
It seems the city has been having a hard time getting anyone to move into the building. One of the original ideas was to make the structure over and convert it into a museum. That would have required public monies and the voters of Jackson County answered with a resounding, "No."
Renovation of the building on the model of the St. Louis Union Station would be sharp. But like the museum, that would require the use of public money and would compete with already struggling local business.
So the idea of renovating the old building into a casino is being kicked around. Officials are probably willing to make a small wager that the casino would take some of the sting out of The Woodlands horse and dog racing tracks just over the border in Kansas.
border in Kansas. But before Kansas City, Mo., takes the plunge, there are a few things to remember. The city should take a lesson from the scandal that has followed the advent of pari-mutuel gambling in Kansas. Plan with care the extent of governmental control and be ready to police the system. Also, be prepared for the subsidiary industries that often follow gambling — organized crime and vice.
While the idea of a casino may not be attractive to many and may not work out in the long run, the legislators proposing the idea are to be congratulated - at least they are trying to solve the problem.
Brett Brenner for the editorial board
News staff
David Stewart ... Editor
Ric Breck ... Managing editor
Daniel Niemi ... News editor
Candy Niemann ... Planning editor
Stan Dayt ... Editorial editor
Jennifer Corner ... Campus editor
Elaine Sung ... Sports editor
Laura Huser ... Rules editor
Claire Winner ... Arts/Features editor
On Elisa ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Linda Prokop...Business manager
Debra Martin...Local advertising sales director
Jerre Medford...National/regional sales director
Jill Lowe...Marketing director
Tami Rank...Production manager
Carrie Slaninka...Assistant production manager
Margaret Townsend...Co-op manager
Erin Highest...Creative director
Christal Dooll...Classified manager
Jeff Meesey...Teamsheets manager
Jeanne Hines...Sales and marketing adviser
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MR. PRESIDENT, YOUR POLLOS CONCERNING THE DRUG EPIDEMIC, THE GREEN-HOUSE EFFECT, AND THE HOMELESS, HAVE BEEN LARGELY INSPIRATUAL WHAT'S NEXT?
I AM ENLISTING THE AID OF A SPECIAL AGENT TO HELP DEAL WITH THESE ISSUES!
ONLY ONE?
NO COMMENT!!
HAVE YOU BEEN A GOOD BOY THIS YEAR, GEORGIE?
UH-HUM. THIS YEAR I WANT THE GLJAKE DRUG CZAR DOLL, 2000 BOTTLES OF KRAZY OZONE FORM, AND 300 LEGGOLAND LOWINSONE HOUSING SETS.
ANYTHING ELSE?
WELL, Y'KNOW THAT KINDER, GENTLER NATION I ASKED FOR LAST YEAR?
Tom Avery 11/30/89 UDK
MR. PRESIDENT, YOUR POLICIES CONCERNING THE DRUG EPIDEMIC, THE GREEN-HOUSE EFFECT, AND THE HOMELESS HAVE BEEN LARGELY INSPECTED WHAT'S NEXT?
I AM ENLISTING THE AID OF A SPECIAL AGENT TO HELP DEAL WITH THESE ISSUES!
ONLY ONE?
NO COMMENT!!
Gays shouldn't use minority status
There I was, sitting on the Beach (Wesco), feeling at one with nature. The air was gently blowing, the autumn leaves were falling, and all else seemed to function as nature would dictate. Then, suddenly, continuity was shaken. A male dog was attempting sexual intercourse with another male dog. I thought, "What an atrocious act! Does this animal not understand his intended sexuality?" "Intended sexuality" meaning that form of sex in which he would be at one with nature. As I stood there in total disgust, I slowly came to a realization: he cannot do it. Because this dog was not given the tools of reason to comprehend his pervension, nature has incorporated into its design of "dog" this provision, making it an impossibility for this act to be completed. Finally, out of frustration, he ceased the attempt; thus nature was the victor.
James Madison
nature was the vitor.
About two months ago, as I walked through the west entrance of the Kansas Union, I came across what I thought to be a wonderful campaign. I immediately was compelled to support the campaign to Celebrate Diversity, because all races of people are truly wonderful and special. There was a table set up for people who believe in the ideas of the campaign to sign up and become a soldier for the cause. I approached the table, picked up my pen of burden and signed the petition. I received my commission, represented by a button, and marched away proudly. Unknowingly, at that point, I had become a supporter of homosexuality
Guest columnist
and thus a transgressor of nature. Upon being informed of the inclusion of homosexuality and therefore sexual preference into the Covenant, I respectively relinquished ties with the campaign. I obviously, upon doing so, offended the frail and frustrated looking guy behind the petition table. Enough, at least, for him to write a column that appeared in the Nov. 10, 1989, issue of the University Daily Kansan. He states in his column, "Apparently, to him, there are acceptable and unacceptable forms of diversity in human beings. That is a dangerous way to think." First, I would like to state clearly that I do not believe in or condone hatred towards any group of people, but, as a responsible person, I will point out the dangers that homosexuality pose for society.
The argument that homosexuals often use is that they are just people who share a loving relationship. I say this is false because it would be a contradiction within the homosexual community to argue against such a relationship. We also share loving relationships with the same gender. I
believe the whole confrontation between the heterosexual and homosexual community is one of sexual preference. "Sexual preference" means to maintain sexual gratification, regardless of the form. As a heterosexual, I assert that this is truly a dangerous way to think. We, as a society, create some of our greatest problems when we operate outside of respect for nature. Some examples are air pollution, water pollution and deforestation, just to name a few. As a defender of society, I assert that homosexuality, as a widespread practice, will eventually cause a social breakdown; not in the same manner that Hitler wrongly accused the Jewish people for Germany's problems.
10 affirm homosexuality would also make it necessary to affirm other types of sexual vices, such as sex with animals. Why not? They, too, are only sexual practices.
only seek it. I, as an African American, am weary of the separatist language that allows homosexuals to include us in their struggle. The word "minority" itself, meaning smaller in number, allows the gay and lesbian community to falsely equate our positions. We may both share the quality of being smaller in number but by no means in nature. I will not be identified with or forced to lay down my moral beliefs by this false equivocation.
▶ James Madison is a Kansas City, Kan., junior majoring in philology.
widr '90s. Why?
Answer? According to these brainsiac, even though we will be writing "1990" on all our checks and letters during the next year, the year will not be part of the '90s.
Start of '90s a question for experts
So it seemed like a good idea — well, an idea; I don't know about "good" — to check this out. You will be thrilled to know that no one seems to have
of the bushes.
They ramble on, these arguers did, but if I may be permitted to boil down their theory to one rather awkward sentence, here it is: There was never a year called "zero," thus the first year was "one," and a decade is 10 years, so each decade begins with a year ending with the digit "1" and concludes with a year ending with the digit "0."
Not so long ago, there appeared in this space a column dealing with the '90s — the point that for the last two or three years, a lot of people have been talking about the '90s almost constantly; what the fads will be in the '90s, who the celebrities will be in the '90s, etc. I pointed out that the '90s won't be here until the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve and that therefore we should all wait patiently.
Look, I like you people, at least most of the men. But several of you—may I be frank with you here? — have become quite annoying about a subject that would seem to be totally uncontroversial. So we're going to deal with it today, then never mention it again.
Immediately I was beset with letters telling me that the '90s will not arrive at midnight on New Year's Eve. The letter writers — and they seemed to have devoted a great deal of thought to this — argued that the '90s will begin on Jan. 1, 1991. The year 1990, they said, will actually be the last year of the '80s.
Bob Greene
Syndicated columnist
the definitive basis.
P. Kenneth Seidelmann, director of the Nautical Almanac Office in Washington, says that the letter writers are correct; 1990 will not be part of the '90s.
were so afraid.
"The first year was not a year with a zero," Seidelman said. "It was Year One. One B.C. went directly to One A.D. There was no Year Zero in between." Thus, although it will be confusing to anyone who has enough spare time to waste thinking about it, 1990 will not be a part of the '90s, at least according to Seidelman.
the definitive answer.
at least according to me.
"I use this example to explain it to someone," he said. "I will give $$$ to anyone who will give me a 10-dollar bill. Nobody takes me up on that deal."
Bridging the line:
"The beginning of the decade will be Jan. 1, 1900," he said. "Why wouldn't it be? You look for a decade to have 10 years. So, the last day of 1900 is the completion of the first year of the decade. I'm using logic rather than an analysis of an ancient calendar. We consider. What would be logical for people today?"
Michael Reed, managing editor of Encyclopedia Britannica Inc., goes the other way.
And what about those people who argue that 1990 will be the last year of the '80s?
will be the last year of the job:
"Not after Jan. 1, 1990 comes around." Read
However.
said. "The '80s will be over."
Gernot Winkler, director of the time service department at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington says that the '90s will not begin until Jan. 1, 1991.
"I will admit that from the point of view of the language, it is difficult to comprehend," Winkler said. "But the decades and the centuries — they all begin on the first day of the year one. If you have to be correct, the decade of the '90s begins on the first day of January, 1991."
However.
However . . .
Pat Higgins-Crane, an executive at World Book Inc., believes the '90s will begin at the end of New Year's Eve a few weeks from now: on Jan. 1, 1990.
"There is nothing official to tell me otherwise," she said.
she said.
Perhaps the wisest comment came from a woman who works at Information Please Almanac in New York, and who declined to give her name. Asked when the '90s will officially begin, she sounded dismayed and said:
"Oh, dear! That's just one of those silly things you read about in the newspaper."
you read about it, you see.
She got that one right. We could go on with this forever, getting expert opinions on each side of the question, but we aren't going to go on with it for even one more paragraph. Those of you who wanted to know can mull over the thoughts of the learned authorities cited above. Now leave me 'lone.'
▶ Bob Greene is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.
STEP 1: FIND AN UNGUSPECTING VICTIM.
HOW FREEDOM OVER HERE?
BEE!
CAMP UHNEELY'S FUN 'NGAGS
STEP 1: FIND AN UNGUSPECTING VICTIM.
Hey, Freeman! Give Here!
STEP 2: DIRECT HIS ATTENTION TO THIS PAGE OF THE KANSAN.
DO YOU SEE YOUR NAME'S IN THE EDITORIAL?
PONLY
KANSAN'S SPECIALTY DESIGNED TRANSFERABLE INK™
STEP 3: RUB NEWSPAPER ON THE VICTIM'S NOSE - USING KANSAN'S SPECIALTY DESIGNED TRANSFERABLE INK™
DON'T YOU SEE IT? NAKAH!
STEP 4: LAUGH HYSTERICALLY AND BEWARE RETALIATION.
SEE VOL. LATER, RUDOLPH.
STEP 1: FIND AN UNUSPECTING VICTIM.
HOW FREEDOM CAN HAVE WEAKNESS?
NEVER!
STEP 2: CRECT HE ATTENTION TO THIS PAGE OF THE KANSAS.
DO YOU SEE YOUR NAME'S IN THE EDITORIAL?
POLICE
BY SCOTT PATTY
STEP 3: RUB NOWPAPER ON
THE VICTIM'S HOME - USING
KANSEN'S SPECIALLY
DESIGNED TRANSFERABLE INK
DON'T YOU SEE IT?
HAWTHORNE
STEP 3: RUB NEWSPAPER ON THE VICTIM'S Nose - UBING KANSAN'S SPECIALLY DESIGNED TRANSFERRABLE INK™
(DON'T YOU SEE IT?)
MARK ME UP!
STEP 4: LAUGH HYSTERICALLY AND BEWARE RETALIATION.
SEE VA LARR,
RODOLPH.
STEP 4: LAUGH HYSTERICALLY AND BEWARE RETALIATION.
SEE VA LATER,
RUDOLPH.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 4, 1989
5
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS
CALENDAR
Monday
Dec.4
8 : 30 p. m. — The Transcendental Meditation Club will meet at Alceve in the Kansas Union. All students, faculty and staff are invited to attend a meditation
6: 30 p.m. - A meeting and workout
at 7: 45 p.m. Do Club will be at
207 Robinson Center
> 6:30 p.m. - The KU Hispanic
Tuesday
American Leadership Organization will meet at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
7:30 p.m. — A general assembly of the Graduate Student Council will be at the Apollo Auditorium in Nichols Hall on West Campus, Vice Chancellor Frances Horowitz will speak.
Dec.5
▶ 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. — The KU Pro-Choice Coalition will conduct a letter-writing campaign to state legislators in support of legislation at the main meeting of the Oregon Legislature.
▶ 6 p.m. — Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will meet at room 20 in Watkins Health Center.
▶ 6 p.m. — Environics will meet at Parlor B in the Kansas Union. Dennis Lowden will speak about eco-feminism.
> 7 p.m. "The Society for East Asian Studies will meet at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union to discuss issues concerning East Asian studies at the
University of Kansas.
University of Kansas.
▷ 7 p.m. - Amnesty International will meet at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union.
7:30 p.m. — Orthodox Christians on Campus will meet at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. John Platko from Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in Kansas City will speak.
▶ 7:30 p.m. — The KU Linguistics Colloquio will present Anita Herzfeld speaking about "Limon Creole and Panamanian Creole: Similarities and Contrasts" at 206 Blake Hall.
Wednesday
Dec.6
▶ 11:30 a.m. — The Commuters Club luncheon will be at Alcove G in the Kansas Union,
- Noon — David Katzman will speak at the University Forum about "An American Jew Looks at Israel." A lunch line opens at 11:40 a.m. for $3.50.
12:30 p.m. – International Club will present a Word at a Table at Alcove in
the Kansas Union. Sabine Meyer, an exchange student from France, will speak about "Europe and the New Germany."
▶ 7 p.m. — The KU Chess Club will meet at Alcove A in the Kansas Union.
▶ 7 p.m. — The Student Alumni Association will hold a Christmas party and general meeting at Adams Alumni Center. Yearbook pictures will be taken.
Panel won't study faculty's workloads
By Kate Lee
Kansan staff writer
The Legislative Educational Planning Committee on Friday decided not to ask for a study of faculty workloads at the Board of Regents institutions.
State Rep. Robert Vancrum, ROryland Park, asked for the study but withdrew the suggestion when committee members did not support
"These studies don't present any startling statistics, yet they also don't tell me enough to draw any conclusions." The statistics are causing some questions."
He said two studies were done in 1985 that showed that some faculty members spent only six hours in the classroom.
The two reports did not offer any comparative information about Kansas faculty and faculty in other states, Vancrum said.
Ray Hauke, director of planning and budget for the Regents, said there was no national data bank of information about faculty workloads.
"Many individual studies are done at particular campuses," he said. "There is not a unified faculty workload data base as there is with salaries or number of students and tuition rates."
State Sen. Jim Allen, R'ottawa,
said he did not see the point in asking
for another study if the previous two
had not shown conclusive data.
He said he was concerned about the issue because he thought people in
the community were concerned.
"The average person says that a professor works 10 hours a week and is making big bucks," he said. "That the people think on 'Main Street.'"
Vancrum said he had heard the same from his constituents.
"You hear it," he said. "It galls people. I think it galls the university community."
Leo Hufen, senior auditor at the legislative division of post audit, said a study could be done, but it would be a large undertaking.
"It would probably depend on the scope," he said. "First, we would have to assess if there is information available in our own schools. If there isn't, then the information has to be gathered, which would be a mass undertaking requiring cooperation from other states, et cetera.
"We would have a better chance, I think, if we limited it to a handful of departments, a limited number of institutes, a more narrow scope."
Vancrum said that if there was not a national data bank, he wondered how accrediting agencies were able to make their determinations.
"I think we should look at accrediting institutions and see what they have," he said. "Do they have data? Maybe they have more than the institutions. We need to see if they are just blowing smoke, or do they have a point when they come in and say faculty shouldn't have more than 12 hours of contact because it's taking away from other stuff."
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We pre-bag your Spring textbooks. Order by Dec. 31, 1989, pick up January 13-19. Stop in or mail your class schedule. We do the rest!
Please enclose a deposit of $15.00 plus tax. ($15.68)
Dept. Course Number Instructor or Staff (Note if lab or discussion group) Line # Time / Days Preference: New Used ENG 203 Swalm (example) 82345 8:30 M-W-F ✓
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Some books may not be available until classes begin. All books are returnable with receipt through February 1, 19907
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DEPOSIT IS FORFEITED IF ORDER IS NOT PICKED UP BY JANUARY 19, 1890.
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6
Monday, December 4, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Senate drug task force plots awareness plans
By Lara Weber
Kansan staff writer
The Student Senate Drug Awareness Task Force is still in the organizational stage, but members already are busy planning ways to increase drug awareness on campus.
In mid-November about 15 task force members attended a six-hour training session with the Douglas County Citizens Council on Alcoholism. The session was designed to teach the students how to approach the University community about drugs.
John Birkhead, chairman of the task force, said the DCCCA trainers did not concentrate on facts about drug abuse but tried to present a different perspective on chemical dependency.
He said the group activities taught the students how to discuss problems that faced those close to someone chemically dependent.
Greg Hughes, task force treasurer.
said the training session was beneficial.
"There was not a lot of factual stuff because anyone can get that out of a book," he said. "We learned more about the attitudes you need to present."
The task force is planning to take its information to as many campus living groups as possible.
Last week, the task force received $475 from Senate. Part of that money will be used to produce a pamphlet that the task force will distribute to all the residence halls, scholarship halls, sororities and fraternities.
Thursday, several task force members are scheduled to speak to a group of students at McCollum residence hall. Birkhead said the focus of the discussion would be drugs in the workplace.
Birkhead said the pamphlets would include information about signs of drug abuse and a list of Lawrence contact for counseling or information.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 4, 1989
Nation/World
7
New Czech leaders denounced as unfit
The Associated Press
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia — Communist leaders named a new government yesterday that includes non-Communists for the first time in 21 years, but it was immediately denounced because of the large number of holdovers from the last Cabinet.
Premier Ladislav Adamec said the government was open to "radical changes," but opposition leaders called for a renewal of mass street cleaning and issued a general strike if the ministers were not replaced in a week.
The new government includes five non-Communists, but the other 16 members are Communists, and 13 served on the previous Cabinet. It failed to meet opposition demands for a non-Communist interior minister, who is in charge of police, and a civil defense minister.
As he swore in the Cabinet, President Gustav Husak indicated that he may be ready to step down, as the opposition has demanded. Husak was elected in 1982, and he reforms in 1988, and he is the last of those leaders still in power.
One of the government's first acts was to propose talks with Moscow on the future of the 80,000 Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia since the Warsaw Pact invasion 21 years ago.
Strike committees have been on alert since last week's protest, and workers said yesterday that they were ready to leave their jobs again.
World Briefs
The opposition also seeks new laws that would anchor the democratic rights of assembly and free press and pave the way for free elections.
ELECTIONS IN TAIWAN: The opposition in Taiwan made strong gains in the island's first multiparty elections and handed the Nationalist Party an embarrassing defeat in the hometown of Taiwan's president, according to election results released yesterday.
Ballot-rigging and noisy protests marred Saturday's election, the first national vote since the Nationalist Party lifted military law in 1975. Nationalists have打倒台湾后向 Taiwan for support. 1949 defeat by the Communists in China's civil war.
Thousands of angry opposition supporters surrounded government office buildings in several cities Saturday, calling for recounts or demanding results. Protesters broke windows in one city.
The opposition Democratic Progressive Party claimed "a great victory." With nearly all districts reporting, the Nationalists were garnering 55 percent of the popular vote, while the opposition won about 35 percent. The rest went to independents.
PLAY-DOH CREATOR DIES: Tien Lui, who helped develop the Play-Doh synthetic molding clay that children have enjoyed for decades, has died.
Lui died Thursday in Cincinnati. He was believed to be in his 80s, but there were no records of his birth in
Lui came to the United States in 1924 to attend Cornell University. He earned a doctorate in agricultural biology, then taught pharmaceutical science and conducted research.
In 1967, Lui was hired by Rainbow Crafts Inc., to develop a soft sculpting substance that would be easy for small children to use. Working with Joseph Hill, he either owned the company, Lui formulated Play-Doh.
Representatives of the Indian guru met with developers Saturday in Oklahoma City to discuss plans for a low-density housing community proposed by the Maharishi Heaven on Earth Development Corp. It is one of several such communities planned across the nation, backers said.
QURU PROPOSES HEAVENLY CITY: Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, founder of Transcendental Meditation and one-time guru to the Beatles, is proposing a City of Immortals somewhere in Oklahoma to start building his vision of Heaven on Earth.
Backers said the communities would be "noise-free, pollution-free and free from crime and anxiety."
Scott Demaree, a Sillwater builder who acts as Oklahoma liaison for the Mailbu, Calif.-based corporation, said it was hoped that ground could be broken as early as April near Tulsa, Oklahoma City or Sillwater. Homes, which would be set on a minimum one-creat plot, would range from $60,000 to several hundred thousand dollars, Demaree said.
Aquino promises to finish what rebels started
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — Government forces battled rebel holdouts yesterday after driving off an assault on military headquarters by forces from Ammo. More than 600 rebels surrendered.
Defense Secretary Fidel Ramos said the government had crushed the attempted coup. Aquino ruled out a cease-fire and vowed: "What they started, we will finish."
Junior- and middle-grade officers in several provincial commands declared their support for the rebellion, which began Friday. About 100 students were arrested at Base in Cebu, 360 miles southeast of Manila.
Aquino, facing her sixth coup attempt since coming to power four years ago, rejected suggestions by Cabinet members that she declare a "state of siege," according to assistant Press Secretary Lourdes Sytanage. That would be taintment to martial law.
At least 56 people have been killed and more of the 500 wounded since Friday, according to hospital officials.
More than 10,000 people fled their homes to escape the fighting and were housed in schools, churches and other refugee centers. Many streets are closed, and garbage piled high in the streets.
Schools were closed indefinitely, but officials planned to reopen the international airport (JFK).
Pro-government forces contained hundreds of rebels in an 11-building area in the financial district of Makati, where numerous foreign embassies are located and where many foreign diplomats and businessmen live, said military Chief of Staff Gen. Renato de Vila.
Government troops blocked off avenues lead-
to make Makati. Rebels fired volleys of machine-gun fire from skySCRAPERS, and snipers shot at vehicles. Among the buildings rebels occupied was the Intercontinental Hotel.
Radio station DZRH broadcast an appeal for ambulances, saying many civilians lay wounded along Makati's Pasay Road.
A spokesman for the U.S.-run Clark Air Base said there were no U.S. warplanes in the skies over Manila yesterday. U.S. jets began flying cover for government troops Friday, at Aqui's request. But U.S. officials said the planes ended those flights at 6 a.m. Saturday.
President Bush said yesterday in Malta that he was prepared to take additional military action to defend the Philippine government if American lives were threatened or if Aquino
requested help.
The United States has six military bases in the Philippines, which are the focus of extensive opposition in the Philippines Senate and in the military, where critics say they infringe on national sovereignty.
In Cebu, government helicopters dropped leaflets urging rebels to surrender. Brig. Gen. Jose de Leon, commander of the Philippine air force, said pilots assigned to the important air base had refused to join the rebellion.
Military Chief of Staff Gen. Renato de Villa said he expected the Mactan rebels to surrender today.
Although most provincial garrisons did not mutiny, there were indications that the rebels enjoyed support among many junior- and middle-grade officers in the provinces.
Recipient of liver improves
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — A 21-month-old girl was drinking liquids, growing more alert and doing well Saturday, five days after becoming the nation's first living-donor liver-transplant recipient.
While Alyssa Githre recovered with her mother, who gave the child part of her liver a week ago, surgeons at the university of Chicago meditated before declaring that 15-month-old Tennessee girl could undergo a similar operation.
"Doctors will continue to evaluate and assess the options and decide whether she still fits the protocol for implant, said spokesman John Eastham.
Sarina Jones of Millington, Tenn., remained in serious condition in the hospital's intensive care unit, a day after she was flown in by air ambulance and taken by helicopter to the hospital, Easton said.
Sarina suffered from an infection recently, and was not considered an immediate candidate for surgery.
"It doesn't look like it's going to be this weekend," said medical center spokeswoman Mary Fetsch. "It's tentatively set for Wednesday."
Sarina's parents, Robert, 20, and Michelle, 21, who live near Memphis, arrived Friday night, a few hours after their daughter.
"They said our chances were small,but they're still claims,"said the father,a dry-wall installer and contractor.
Both little girls suffered from biliary atresia, a usually fatal genetic disorder involved in more liver transplants than other aliments.
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8
Monday, December 4, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Environmental group protects natural areas
By Jim Petterson
Kansan staff writer
Alan Pollum doesn't have any cute, fuzzy animals to put on the cover of his organization's literature.
But Pollum, state director of the Nature Conservancy, said cute and fuzzy don't always go hand in hand with a commitment to preserve a lot of natural diversity in Kansas and the world.
The world loses one plant or animal species each day and they all aren't as photogenic as a baby harp seal. Pollled are.
He said that if all the earth's remaining ecosystems are to be preserved, lesser-known and less emotionally appealing plants and animals must be protected.
we are working to preserve natural diversity by maintaining the current mix of plant and animal life," Pollum said. "We lose one plant or animal species each day. By the turn of the century, we'll be losing one species every hour."
Preserving biological diversity is the calling card of the Nature Conservancy. The Conservancy operates more than 1,000 preserve sites in Latin America, Canada and the Caribbean.
The Kansas field office of the Nature Conservancy, in Topeka, opened in early October with Pollum as the state director.
Pollum is a Kansas native and has had 19
"I've gotten an opportunity to do something I've long since believed in and at the same time use previous experience to apply directly to theI've." he said.
years of experience in financial and real estate management and a lifelong interest in the environment.
While groups like the Audubon Society or the Sierra Club are better known, the Conservancy is much larger and maintains the largest private system of nature sanctuaries in the world.
The organization is often criticized by other more politically active environmental groups for maintaining close ties to corporations who make substantial contributions to the Conservancy.
The Conservancy has more than 500,000 members, 22,000 of them in Kansas. With an $85 million fundearmarked for land purchase, the Conservancy provides about 1,000 additional acres of land every day.
The Conservancy has compiled a list of 400 priority sites in Kansas and already has acquired more than 13,000 acres in the state.
One of the Conservancy's largest projects in Kansas was the purchase of the Konza prairie in the eastern part of the Flint Hills, these 8,616 acres of native tallgrass prairies are used by Kansas State University for long-term research and educational purposes.
Pollum said he would talk in generalities
about the types of areas he would like to see the Conservancy purchase in Kansas but refused to discuss specific plans for land acquisitions.
He fears that the publicity might interfere with negotiations with Landowners or cause unwanted controversy.
Man Pollum
Gary Hulett, Gov. Mike Hayden's special assistant for health and the environment, said he was pleased to see the Conservancy operating in Kansas.
"We are looking at four or five prairie types, two or three different types of wetlands, different river sites, springs and possible cave sites," Pollum said.
"They are the premiere conservation group in the world," he said. "They work in a very scientific, yet businesslike, manner. They negotiate in good faith, not in a high-pressure manner. They've made a huge contribution to Kansas."
Pollum said he was pleased with the public support for the Conservancy as well as the growing concern for the maintenance and protection of vital natural areas.
"It's something that's time has come," he said. "I just hope it stays that way."
Better diets can help students during finals
Bv Melanie Matthes
Kansan staff writer
Students taking final exams in the next weeks can influence their test performance by altering their eating and drinking habits, local dietitians said.
Studies show that too much caffeine can decrease alertness and aggravate studying, said Ann Davis, nutritionist at Walkins Memorial Health Center.
Although small amounts of caffeine can increase alertness, Davis said, large doses can make a person jittery and irritable and can decrease productivity.
But the limits of caffeine intake are different for each person, she said, and each person should find their threshold of intake.
Because there is about four times the caffeine in coffee than in soda, it takes a great deal more soda to get the same effects as one cup of coffee. Davis said.
"If their reason for drinking pop is for the caffeine lift, I recommend that they go to sugar-free," she said.
Davis said that as an alternative to loading up on foods and drinks that are high in salt, sugar and caffeine, students should take short study breaks and do something physi-
Activities such as jumping rope or running stairs will increase blood flow to the brain and, therefore, will increase students' ability
to learn, Davis said.
Late-night studying also can be aggravated by foods such as candy bar and fast foods, said Gwyn Kites, dietitian at the Douglas County Health Department.
Besides being bad for students' teeth, she said, candy bars lack nutrients and give students only shots of quick energy.
But Davis said weight-conscious studiers should eat pizza with no meat, half the normal amount of cheese and twice the normal amount of vegetables.
Kitos said that another quick and easy meal for students is a pocket sandwich made in pita bread.
"This would be handy to eat while you'restudying," she said.
Davis said that students should drink milk and eat fruit with their sandwich for added fiber and protein.
A handy snack alternative to junk food is fresh fruit, Kitos said, because it is packaged and portable.
and portable. Davis said that fruit can be frozen to add variety and that grapes and bananas are good frozen.
Dickinson
PRIME TIMER SHOW *1* 58 CR ANTIM
Kitos said that other snack alternatives included popcorn, nuts, yogurt, cheese and vegetables.
Cereal and oatmeal are healthy snacks and can even serve as a light meal, she said.
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KANSAS
College Memory
This year, Macintosh will remember more about KU than you will.
This year, Macintosh will remember more about KU than you will. That's because the 1990 Jayhawker Yearbook is being produced entirely on Macintosh computers. And the results are something the staff won't soon forget.
OPERASION
Before, editing and reworking pages was time-consuming and expensive. So the decision was made to teach the entire staff to use Macintosh computers.
So when you see this year's Jayhawker, remember that a Macintosh could do the same for you.
Here's what they learned to do within a month: cut production time by 75%, use that time to explore more creative ideas, and improve the quality of the Jayhawker with the graphic capabilities of Macintosh.
So when you see this year's Jayhawker.
Macintosh®
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 4, 1989
9
Farmers Market opens locally Vendors brave cold to offer original goods, ethnic delights
By Chris Evans Kanean staff writer
Sitting bundled up in a remodeled yellow bus on a chilly Saturday morning, the Jefferson County engineer appeared to have ignored the advice printed on the Farmers Market fliers.
"Come in where it is warm and shop with some of your favorite people," the orange handbill stated. Richard Teaford, the engineer, had other things on his mind.
"I've got a lot of farming to do," he said, looking out the window at the clear skies. "I should get at it."
"I got drafted." he said.
Teaford's wife, Maryetta, was in the South Park Recreation Center, 1141 Massachusetts St., trying to sell her plants at Lawrence's first winter Farmers Market. For this week, Teaford had just come along to drive the bus.
Inside, Maryetta Teaford shared space with about 15 other vendors. About the same number of customers filled the room. browsing from table to table.
"This is kind of a different event," said Norma Bishop, Watson Library circulation librarian. "It's kind of a celebration of the Farmers Market."
The market, which until now took place weekly from May to November, has a special, loyal following, she said.
"I did come here because of my nostalgia for the Farmers Market," Bishop said. "These are great people."
Willis and Velma Vann, Carbondale, said they and other vendors offered non-seasonal goods at the winter market, which is to be held again twice this winter. The Vanns' table was crowded with products ranging from dolls to honey straws.
"Now, I ground my flour from the whole kernel o wheat, so it’s all natural." Velma Vann said to a potential customer. She held up a small plastic container of whea kernels to demonstrate her point.
The Vann's independent food creations don't stop with wheat flour. Willis Vann has stories to tell about their honey straws, and how his interest in wine got him into the business of beekeeping.
The 71-year-old farmer leaned forward. A trace of a smile crossed his lips. "I'm a charter member of the Amateur Winemakers of the state of Kansas," he said. "When I started this, a family could make 200 gallons a year for personal use. I used the bêes' honey for a sweetener,
"I got so much honey from my bees that I couldn't use it all for the wine, so I started making honey."
Willis Vann said he still made wine from time to time but spent more time with his work on his farm and with
"From the combine to what you see here, I'd say we spend about eight hours a week," he said.
You'll spend more time than he does, Willa Vann said. "With the India lady here, she made all that in about 12
Fatma Mohammed, the woman, smiled and shook her head when she heard that estimate.
"It took me two days," she said. "I have to stuff everything and cook it just before I come over here. I cook it all night."
"There is no meat in my food. They can get the meat anywhere else."
Not everyone at the market offered ready-to-eat foods, such as Mohammed's Greek and Middle Eastern specialties, John and Kathy King, Edgerton residents, offer a line of mostly organic, flavored vinegars.
"Salad dressing is what it was made for," John King said. "Up north, in Canada, they put vinegar on French fries. Down south, they put it in chili."
The Kings had vinegar flavors with ingredients from blueberries to cayenne pepper. John King said he would gladly share his organic secrets.
"Anybody could do any of this stuff." he said. "If people eat better, that's the main thing."
A
Velma Van, Carbondale, shows her homemade dolls, bread, honey and pancake mix.
Andrew Morrison/KANSAN
©DG 1989
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10
Monday, December 4, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Entrepreneur learned from losing
By Steve Buckner
Kansan staff writer
By learning about losing, local entrepreneur David Fonseca said he could better compete in a business climate that decrees winning to be the only thing.
Fonseca worked for the Xerox Corporation for eight years, rising from saleman to national sales manager. He said one of the most important lessons he learned was told to him by one of his supervisors.
"He told me, 'When things start to get rough, pick your place to lose.' " Fonseca said. "We know we're not going to win them all, and a lot of people try to win them all."
Although Fonseca may not succeed at all of his endeavors, he has built a successful track record with Solutions Group Inc., 111 Riverfront Road, a holding company he started and now operates with partner Paul Gray. The first company in the Solutions Group, Remote Solutions Inc., was started by Fonseca in 1981. Remote Solutions uses har-code technology to identify inventory items for companies such as McDonnell-Douglas and Procter & Gamble.
Fonseca said he had drawn his motivation from his work at Xerox. He said he had constantly heard his co-workers mention ideas, but none of them did
anything with their ideas, Fonseca resolved to take action on his ideals.
"The key for entrepreneurs is that while everybody says somebody ought to do something, entrepreneurse do it," he said. "We create something out of nothing."
Gray joined Fonseca in 1987 after he developed an idea to take advantage of telephone dregulation. Gray's idea was to use computers to handle the billings of credit card calls made by hotel guests and hospital patients. This idea led to the creation of Telephone Solutions Inc. The company, now in its second year, has 600 clients and grossed $6 million last year.
Gray, also a jazz musician, came from an entrepreneurial background. He ran a chain of music stores and opened Paul Gray's Jazz Place, now known as The Jazzhouses, 926 1/2 Massa-ria, where he needed the new ideas to succeed because his music schedule was hectic to the point of burnout.
"I had made music to be my God," Gray said. "Fortunately, my wife had faith in me."
With two successful companies to their credit, they said their efforts were now spent maintaining their existing businesses and looking for new opportunities.
"We're fortunate now that we have more than one company doing well," Gray said. "Our goal is
To meet that goal, the two men launched Room Service last month, an errand-running company that relies on their computerized data base for efficient operations.
to start one successful new company every year."
In handling their mature companies, Fonseca said the greatest challenge was that there wasn't enough money. He quickly explained that he did not mean his statement to be misunderstood as a problem or an attitude of greed.
Gray was quick to elaborate on his partner's observation.
"The more successful we are, the more we have to pay in commissions, for hardware, on phone bill"
Another challenge for them is how their success may affect their families. Fonseca said he had put a ceiling on the amount of money he takes home as not to alter his family's lifestyle. Both men said they are devoted to their families and tried to spend as much time with them as possible.
Ray Poteet, a financial partner with Alpha & Omega Financial Services, 3110 Mesa Way, has helped Fomeca and Gray as an adviser and he in his capacity has been very impressed by their integrity and acumen.
"They always did what was right, even when it was not financially advantageous to them," he said.
KU drama enthusiasts could be acting abroad
By Anita Meyer
Kansan staff writer
University of Kansas drama and classics students literally could have the chance to walk in the footsteps of Euripides this summer when they perform "Hippopotus" in a theater used in 4 B.C.
Faculty and 20 students from colleges throughout the world will stay June 8-July 24 in Katochi, on the southwest coast of Greece.
Glenn Pierce, professor of theater and film, said he had been considering the idea for at least a year.
"Greece is the cradle of Western Civilization as we know it," he said. "It's where theater came into existence."
Pierce is accepting applications from drama and classics students throughout the world.
"They have to have a certain
grade point average and interest," he said. "If they're in drama, I will also have to know their work."
He said he had received applications from as far away as London.
"We circulated filters throughout the United States and in other countries as well," he said.
Story idea? 864-4810
Pierced said the cost of the trip would be $3,712 per student. The price includes round-trip air fare, meals, room and food and six hour credit.
Pamela Gordon, professor of classes, will be one of the faculty to go to Greece. She will teach a class in Greek drama next semester." "Hippolytus" will be one of the plays taught.
"It's always important to remember 'Hippolytes' was a play that was meant to be performed," she said. "I would hope students would get a taste of what it was like when it was originally performed."
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Pre-Order Your Textbooks At the KU Bookstore Complete the form below, or attach a copy of your class schedule, and return it to the KU Bookstore in the Kansas or Burge Unions, either in person or by mail by Friday Jan. 12, 1990. WE WILL HAVE YOUR BOOKS BAGGED AND READY TO PICK UP BETWEEN JAN. 18 & JAN. 25. After that date books not claimed will be returned to our shelves. NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED! Save 25% by purchasing Used Books instead of new Save your receipt on cash or check purchases and receive a rebate (approx. 6-7%) the following semester.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 4, 1989
11
KU dancers perform in late legend's honor
By Tracy Wilkinson Kensan staff writer
Saturday night's University Dance Company's performance was dedicated to the memory of dancer and choreographer Alvin Ailey, who died Friday at 58.
Alley's unique, dynamic style introduced Black American music and traditions into modern dance and used transform it into a popular art form.
Aley, who had dedicated his companies to the preservation and enrichment of the American modern dance heritage and the uniqueness of Black cultural expression, died after
suffering for a year from dyscrasia, a rare blood disorder that affects the bone marrow and red blood cells.
Janet Hamburg, associate professor of dance, said Ailey was a gifted artist whose contribution to dance and to mankind was profound.
"He was more than his dances," she said. "He was an ambassador for dance and for the human spirit."
Hamburg said Alley was a dedicated humanist and had made a significant contribution to all dance, and particularly Black dance.
"Ailey's company was sent by the U.S. State Department throughout the world," she said. "They represented the best of the United States."
Both the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and his second Repertoire Company performed at KU in the early 1980s, said Jackie Davis, director of the fine arts concert series.
Davis said she had the opportunity to meet Alley.
"He was a very articulate spokesman for the arts, for dances, and for dancers in particular," she said.
Davis said Alley had fought to attain federal support for dance companies, to assist them in touring other countries.
The loss of Alley was not just the loss of a major choreographer, Davis said.
Our Nation's Child-care Crisis:
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A facility provides information on local child care and
to discuss the concerns of local child-care providers and working parents Presented by The University of Kansas Classified Senate and Undatified Professional Staff Association Joint Child Care Committee
Thursday, December 7,1989 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Lawrence Public Library,707 Vermont
Jessie Branson, Representative, 44th District SPEAKERS
Peggy Scaly, Child-care Licensing Charge Nurse, Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department Gall Shreders, Vice President, Douglas County Child Development Association Joan Reiber, Director, Hilltop Child Development Center Joyce Shaw, Supervisor of Human Resources, Sallie Mae MODERATOR
Kathleen Brady-Mowrey, Institute of Public Policy and Business Research Chair of Joint Child Care Committee
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12
Monday, December 4, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Booklet reminds scientists of ethics
By Travis Butler
Kansan staff writer
This spring, two Utah researchers made big headlines by proclaiming their achievement of cold fusion, promising cheap, virtually unlimited energy. Eight months later, most authorities say that the cold fusion claims were greatly overstated, if not completely valueless.
The cold fusion story is an example of problems that have prompted a renewed interest in scientific ethics, especially in the educational arena. In concert with this interest, the author has published a new booklet for students and faculty, titled "On Being a Scientist."
"I think it's a good idea," said Lester Mitscher, chairman of the department of medicinal chemistry. "It helps from time to time to have a public reminder. We tend to take for granted that everyone has absorbed this material."
from the nature of science itself. The work of a typical scientist is built upon that of his predecessors, just as others will probably build on his work. Thus, there is a great concern for the accuracy and reliability of scientific results, and those who soilly these results are usually ostracized.
The booklet lists many concerns for ethical scientists. Many arise
"You're held to a very high standard. Once you've lost the confidence of your peers, you've lost almost all influence and makes it worthwhile to be aignant."
"The key is, you have to have an implicit trust in each other," Mitscher said. "Anyone who doesn't meet that standard is expelled.
The book divides faculty results into two classes: those caused by human error and those caused by deliberate fraud. One of the causes of both is the pressure - real or perceived - for results and published articles.
"Some scientists may feel that the pressures on them are an inducement to speed rather than care," the booklet stated. "They may believe, for instance, that they have to cut
corners to compile a long list of publications. But sacrificing quality to such pressures is likely to have a detrimental effect on a person's career."
Michael Gaines, director of the undergraduate biology program, was more blunt.
"I tikh you could make a real fool of yourself if you go out without appeasement. You come home with the fraud is motivated by the pressure to publish or perish."
Gaines said, "That's more common than intentional fraud."
Another cause of unintentional error, the booklet stated, is a conscious or unconscious bias on the part of the researcher. The researcher may expect a certain result from an experiment and will unconsciously dismiss data that doesn't support that result.
tries to repeat or build on an experiment.
Mitscher said, "It's stupid to falsify. There is no way to perpetrate that kind of crime and get away with it."
Gaines said, "Generally, if the research is important, it will be repeated and any fraud will be discovered. Basically, science is self-policing."
It's important to talk about these issues with students, he said.
"It's like providing a booklet on academic behavior," Gaines said. "It's important for students to get this kind of reinforcement, the earlier, the better."
Mitscher suggested that interested people might want to read a recent novel on the subject. "Castor's Dilemma," by Carl D Jeriaser, is a story about a Nobel Prize-winning scientific team that discovers some problems with their experimental data.
Historic stone-arch bridge to be preserved for future
Citizens fighting for the preservation of a 1913 stone bridge in southern Douglas County were pleased when the bridge was made a state historic structure Saturday.
Kansan staff writer
By Dave Wakefield
"It goes into these issues in some depth, in a readable way," he said.
The Chicken Creek Bridge, about seven miles southwest of Lawrence, had been slated for demolition earlier this fall, but county commissioners postponed action pending Saturday's hearing by the historic sites board of review.
By winning the historic designation for the bridge, proponents of preservation gained additional protection for the bridge. By state law, the bridge cannot be torn down or modified without approval from the state historic sites review board.
Martha Parker, Director of the Clinton Lake Museum, said, "I am pleased. I had really hoped it would be saved. It is just such a beautiful structure."
structure has been named a bridge for historic classification purposes, said Margaret Hagedorn-Krass, architectural historian of the Kansas State Historical Society. The bridge's span of 19 feet is one of the longest and a bridge under Kansas Department of Transportation guidelines.
County commissioners must now decide whether to repair the bridge or build a bypass structure. According to estimates by the county engineer, repairing the bridge would cost less than a bypass structure.
Although technically a culvert by today's standards, the stone-arch
The bridge is the best remaining example of stone-arch construction in Douglas County, Dennis Domer, associate dean of architecture, said last month.
Frank Hempen, Douglas County director of public works recommended demolition of the bridge because it was too narrow for modern farm equipment and because deterioration of the stone work had made the structure unsafe, he said.
The Commission will discuss the bridge this week at its Wednesday meeting.
Proponents of historic preservation in Douglas County say preservation of the bridge will help bolster their efforts to save other structures.
"If we can find some way to make people aware of historic things, there won't always have to be a last-ditch attempt to save things," Parker said. "People do have an interest in preserving things if they are made aware of them."
Domer said, "Without a preservation plan for Douglas County, we are going to lose hundreds of structures. We have already lost hundreds of irreplaceable structures of historic significance.
The biggest problems are the lack of any preservation plan for the county and the lack of an inventory of historic sites in the county, she said.
"Most people, when informed about what exists in the county, are steadfastly opposed to tearing historic structures down."
Tiananmen may have caused reforms
"Their deaths perhaps prevented the deaths of their brothers in East
The Associated Press
Germany," he said.
Shen, 21, founded a student group called the Olympic Institute. He fled China in June, just days after the massacre in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.
Shen said the resistance movement is still active in China, but horrors continue.
Shen Tong, speaking to about 200 people at William Jewell College, said the deaths that occurred during attacks on Chinese protesters and the subsequent outrage from around the world may have prevented other nations from using those tactics.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A leader in China's student pro-democracy movement said Saturday that last spring's uprising may have been partially responsible for the reforms now sweeping across eastern Europe.
The Associated Press
Child,4 killed in KC home
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A 4-year-old boy was shot to death early Saturday after three intruders ransacked his home in eastern Kansas City.
Regis B. Branch was the third child to a rural urban violence in the city where he grew up.
Police said Regis was in the house with his mother, grandmother and two men when the shooting occurred. Police said the intruders entered the house about 4 a.m., produced shotguns and pistols and ordered the occupants to lie on the floor. Regis was shot in the upper back as the group was being led to the basement.
He was taken to Children's Mercy Hospital where he was pronounced dead shortly before 6 a.m., police said.
Sgt. Merle Mosby of the police homicide unit, said a second-degree murder charge was filed Saturday against a 42-year-old man, but Mosby would not identify the suspect because he was still at large.
At least two other youngsters have died in shootings in the area since September.
Four-year-old Antonio Phillips died Sept. 11 after being shot the previous evening during a drug deal that went awry in Kansas City, Kan.
Freddie Jones, 11, was killed Nov. 11 when he tried to retrieve his belongings from a midtown Kansas City house.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 4, 1989
13
Lady Jayhawks win championship 44-41 Team beats UMKC for 3rd straight title
By Paula Parrish Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's basketball team won the Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic for its third title in as many years Saturday in a game that was soft on the scoreboard and hard on the nerves.
"I'm absolutely pleased about the championship," Coach Marian Washington said. "I think a low-scoring game keeps people on edge."
Kansas beat the University of Missouri-Kansas City Kangaroo 44-11 in the championship round Saturday at Vail House in front of a crowd of 625.
In a game that went down to the wire, Kansas only managed 29.1 percent from the field. UMKC, which didn't do much better, put in 30 percent. Both teams managed to pull down a total of 78 rebounds, 20 defensively for Kansas as UMKC had 28.
"It was obviously a defensive game," Washington said.
Kansas led 17-15 at the half.
Kansas led 14-15 at the half.
UMKC, who beat Kansas last year,
45-44 in regular season play, didn't let up,
keeping even or ahead of the
Jayhawks throughout much of the second half.
With 3:41 left in the contest and Kansas trailing 39-35, guard Kay Kay Hart kept the Jayhawks in the game with two free throws, pushing the
Jayhawks to within two. Forward Shannon Bloxom followed up with a three-pointer, giving Kansas the upper hand, 40-39, with three minutes left.
Forward Misti Chennault took the Jayhawks' lead to three, 42-39, with a shot from the lane, but UMKC battled back to within one on a basket by forward Wendy Newman. But her team was not on for her team, as Kansas went on to win the Classic for the fourth time in seven years.
"I think that our shooting as a whole has been inconsistent," Washington said. "We're going to have to work on it a lot more."
Kansas met UMKC in the final round after defeating the Radford Highlanders 63-56 in first-round play Friday night. UMKC, in its first year of NCAA Division I play, defeated the Texas Pan-American Broncs Friday 50-35 to qualify for Saturday's championship round.
Chennault was voted the tournament's most valuable player. She had a total of 18 points, 11 rebounds, three assists and one steal for the tournament.
Radford beat Texas-Pan American 71-40 for third place in a consolation match before the championship game.
Center Lynn Page and forward
75
See DIAL. p. 14
Michelle Arnold retains control of a loose ball over Kay Kay Hart and UMKC center Bernice Dorsey.
Jayhawk freshman gets MVP
By Kate Lee
Kansan sportswriter
Shock was Kansas freshman center Misti Cennault's immediate reaction Saturday night to being tipped over by a hitter at the Lady Jayhawk Dial Class.
The Kansas women's basketball team defeated the University of Missouri-Kansas City Kangaroos 44-11, taking first place in the tournament. "There were three or four other girls I would have chosen before me."
Chenault was the first Kansas freshman to win the award. Her victory puts Kansas' streak of MVP winners in the Classic at three, Senior guard Lisa Braddy won the award in 1987 and 1988.
"Most coaches try to reinforce that you don't have to be a starter to make a contribution to a team," Coach Marian Washington said. "She's certainly an example of that, so we're proud of that."
Chenault came out flat in the first half of Friday night's first-round contest against the Radford Highlanders, scoring only one free throw. In the second half, she scored 10 points from the field and added another free throw.
Swim teams place in weekend tourney
See CHENNAULT, p. 14
'Hawks play tonight, try to end slugishness
By a Kansan reporter
The Kansas men's and women's swim teams took second and third respectively at the Arkansas Invitational last week in what Coach Gary Kempf called an outstanding and important invitational.
In the men's races, Arizona won with 798 points, Kansas placed second, Kentucky tied for third, State, Arkansas, New Mexico and Drury.
Freshmen Troy Reynolds won the 200-yard butterfly in 1:49.62 and Zhaun Stevens took the 200-yard dash in 1:51.48, breaking a personal record.
In the 200-yard freestyle relay, the team that is comprised of sophomores Ed Riddle and Jeff Branton, junior John Easton and freshman Robert Townsend, fell to second place with 1.22.89 to Arizona, the winner of the invitational.
In the women's races, Arkansas won with 736.5 points. Georgia came in second with 681, and Kansas grabbed third with 644.5.
By Dan Perkins Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas Jayhawks will attempt to overcome their string of sluggish performances tonight against the Tennessee Martin Faces at Allen Krug's
Kevin Pritchard, Jeff Gueldner,
and Mark Randall came off the bench to score 14, 0 and 10 points respectively in that game.
The Jayhawks, though, haven't struggled as much with their opponents as with themselves.
The fourth-ranked Jayhawks are 6-0, but Coach Roy Williams hasn't been pleased since the Jayhawks Vegas in the Dodge NIT on Nov. 22.
Kansas has won its last three games by a total of 57 points, but have shot under 50 percent in two of the games. Kansas as a team is still shooting $2.9 percent for the season.
The Pacers, 3-2, enter the game at Missouri on Saturday in Columbia.
The Pacers are led in scoring by 6-foot-6 forward Shannon Redmon with 14.8 points per game, and 6-1 guard
Kansas won its only game against Tennessee-Martin in the first official game of the 1966 season, 88-69. Three starters were on the team that year.
Marcus Nelson with 14.6 points per game.
Last season, the Pacers, a Division II team, were 1-25, but were forced to forfeit five games because they used an ineligible player.
In all, the Pacers feature eight pewcorns, seven of them from the junior college ranks. One of the newcomers is Kansas City-product Stan Bradley, 11 points per game, who attended Ruskin High School and Kansas City Kansas Community College.
The Pacers lost five lettermen from last season's team, including three who averaged double figures in scoring.
Kansas Basketball GAME 7
KANSAS JAYHAWKS
Coach: Roy Williams
Record: 6-0
Tennessee-Martin Pacers
Coach: Tom Hancock
Record: 3-2
Player Ht. PPG RPG
G-Kevin Pritchard 6-3 13.0 3.3
G-Jeff Guelder 6-5 11.7 4.0
C-Pekka Markkanen 6-10 6.3 3.0
F-Rick Calloway 6-6 9.3 5.7
F-Mark Randall 6-9 17.5 6.0
PROBABLE STARTERS
Mike Maddox, Rick Calloway and Melvin Swann try to rebound.
Game Notes: In the only other meeting between the two schools, Kansas won 88-69 in the 1986 season-owner at Allen Field House. Tip-off is 7:35 p.m. at the field house. The game will be broadcast on JKHK (9.07 FM) and KLZR (106 FM). It will be telecast time-delivered on cable channel 43.
Player Ht. PPG RPG
G-Stan Bradley 5-11 9.8 2.4
G-Marcus Nelson 6-1 14.6 2.6
C-Craig Malone 6-7 7.4 6.4
F-Mike Werts 6-6 9.8 6.2
F-Shannon Redmon 6-6 14.8 5.8
KANSAN Graphic
---
CONVERSE
KANSAS
22
AVIS
MAYH
MB7
Jayhawks fetch ugly victory KU struggles from the floor, at the line against Retrievers
By Dan Perkins Kansan sportswriter
If basketball games were paintings, it's a safe bet no one would call the Kansas Jayhawks' performance Saturday afternoon a Picaso.
"It doesn't take a nuclear physicist to realize that wasn't very pretty," Coach Roy Williams said after watching Kansas, 6-0, struggle to the 86-67 victory against the Maryland-Baltimore County Retrievers.
"We played pretty ugly, and you have to give UMBC some credit for that." Williams said. "I'm tired of saying you've got to win some ugly games. I'm ready for us to play a little better."
It wasn't pretty, but the fourth-ranked Jayhawks remained unbeaten, despite hitting a season-low 41.2 percent from the field and committing 19 turnovers against the Retrievers, 2-2.
Guard Kevin Pritchard, who led five Jayhawk players in double figures with 15 points, wasn't too thrilled with Kansas' shot selection.
"I classify this game as a win," Pritchard paused, "but an ugly one. Against their zone we were settling too much on the jump shot. We needed to look to get the ball inside a little more."
Also scoring in double figures for the Jayhawks were Terry Brown with 14 points; Rick Calloway, 12; Mike Maddox, 11, and Mark Randall, 10.
Kansas shot just a little better (41.7 percent) from 15 feet and beyond than it did from within 15 feet (40.9 percent).
The Jayhawks weren't much better from the free throw line, where they continue to struggle.
Kansas, which entered the game hitting 63.4 percent from the line, didn't do anything to help that average, but the difference in the game was the number of free throws the Javahws hit.
Kansas hit 23-of-37 from the line for 62.2 percent. The
See RETRIEVERS, p. 14
Calloway outshines KU victory
There was only one consistency in Kansas' 86-67 sludge trudge over Maryland-Baltimore County Saturday afternoon.
Bv Paula Parrish
Kansan sportswriter.
"The ball was flying around the rim on the offensive boards, and he was coming, flying in and grabbing it," guard Kevin Pritchard said. "I've never seen him go to the offensive boards like that."
His name was Rick Calloway.
Calloway, expected by some to step into the lineup and be a key contributor on the scoreboard this year, has been quietly consistent all season, averaging 8.8 points, five rebounds, and more than three assists per game. But on an afternoon when Kansas could only
manage 41 percent from the floor, far from its 55.5 percent shooting average. Calloway's above-average play was bound to make him stand out.
"I wanted to come out and play a total game," Callaway said. "I just wanted to come out and do some other things, play defense, rebound, and I think I did pretty well."
Calloway dropped in 12 points on nine attempts, for 44 percent shooting, right around his season average of 47.1 percent. Calloway hit both ends of the court hard, keeping the Retrievers down and nabbing nine rebounds to lead the Hawks on the boards. He broke his previous season record of seven rebounds against Alabama-Birmingham.
Calloway was modest about his play Saturday afternoon.
"It it was more evident some of the things he did today because he got more rebounds and did score." Coach Roy Williams said. "I really like the help he gave us on the boards. Ricky is important to this team and is going to continue to be important."
Calloway also contributed a team-high five assists and two steals with an acrobatics show that left many wondering why they hadn't noticed him earlier in the season.
"We don't have really big, big people, so I have to concentrate on rebounding and defense," Calloway said. "We spread it out so nobody plays more than 30 minutes on this team.
Chiefs win over Miami
The Associated Press
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Marty Schottenheimer offers a simple explanation for why his long-suffering Kansas City Chiefs have jumped into contention in the AFC.
"That which was once a group of men is now a team of men," Schottenheimer said yesterday after the Chiefs withstood a fourth-quarter challenge, defeating the Miami Dolphins 26-21. "And that's very important."
Wide receiver Stephone Paige caught seven passes from a revitalized Steve DeBerg for 133 yards, and Christian Okie rushed for 148, cracking the team's single-season yardage record as the Chiefs went to 6-6-1 and plunged the Dolphins to 7-6.
Marino, held to four completions for 42 yards in a miserable first half, exploded for three touchdown passes in the fourth period.
"That Dan Marino is just unbelievable," Schottenheimer said. "What a great, great quarterback he is."
"We stopped ourselves all day, and I wasn't throwing the ball well in the first half," said Marino, who finished 18-for-37 for 218 yards. "We felt we could move the ball against them in the second half. We got some things done."
After Marino's 15-yard touchdown pass to Mark Clayton made it 19-14 midway through the fourth period, DeBerg engineered a 75-yard drive capped by his 8-yard touchdown pass to Herman Heard that turned out to be the winning margin. Marino, on fourth down, hit Jim Jensen with a 9-yard scoring strike with 53 seconds remaining.
"The first half was a real disappointment," said Miami Coach Don Shula. "They did it to us both ways, rushing and throwing the football."
14
Monday, December 4, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Retrievers
Continued from p. 13
Retrievers had just 11 opportunities but made good on eight of them.
Guard Jeff Gueldner, who scored eight points, said the Jayhawks difficulties from the line were tough to figure out.
"We're a good shooting team, and I think we'll hit them when we need
Kansas 86
Maryland-Baltimore
County 67
Kansas
KANSAS
| M | PG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Randall | 27 | 3-7 | 4-8 | 7 | 2 | 10 |
| Crawford | 27 | 3-7 | 4-9 | 7 | 2 | 10 |
| Markanekar | 20 | 2-5 | 5-7 | 1 | 0 | 9 |
| Guelnerd | 21 | 2-5 | 2-2 | 6 | 2 | 5 |
| Prichard | 21 | 2-5 | 2-2 | 6 | 2 | 5 |
| Prichard | 27 | 6-13 | 2-3 | 4 | 0 | 15 |
| Maddux | 24 | 5-9 | 1-2 | 3 | 3 | 11 |
| West | 18 | 5-9 | 1-2 | 3 | 4 | 11 |
| Brown | 15 | 5-12 | 1-2 | 3 | 1 | 14 |
| Jordan | 18 | 0-4 | 4-4 | 3 | 2 | 4 |
| Nash | 5 | 1-2 | 4-4 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
| Nash | 2 | 1-2 | 4-4 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
| Wegner | 1 | 0-0 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 20,88 | 28,37 | 23,37 | 50,22 | 11 | 86 |
Percentages: FG. 412, FT. 622, Threepoint goals: 7-20 (Brown 4-9, Guelder 2-4,
1-3) Rush goals: 5-11 (Brown 4-9, Guelder 2-4)
1. Inaddox 1) Turnovers: 19 (West 4, Randall
2. Steals: 7 (Pfirchard 3), Technicals: None.
Both teams hit 28 field goals, but Kansas was 7-for-20 from three-point range, compared to 3-for-22 for the Retrievers.
to,' Guelden said. "We've been lucky to have big leads when we've been missing them. Against LSU, we hit them down the stretch."
Larry Simmons, a junior high teammate of Pritchard's, entered the game as the Retrievers leading scorer, but was held to just eight points.
Jim Frantz led the Retrievers with 21 points. Levi Franklin added 10.
The only excitement for the game was provided by the referees, on two occasions.
UMBC
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | T | P |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Frantz | 24 | 9-13 | 3T | R | A | 3 | 21 |
| Franklin | 31 | 4-13 | 0.0 | 1 | 5 | 4 | 10 |
| Miller | 4 | 4-0 | 0.0 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 6 |
| Millis | 29 | 3-7 | 0.0 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 10 |
| Simmons | 33 | 4-12 | 0.0 | 4 | 2 | 4 | 9 |
| Simmons | 38 | 4-12 | 0.0 | 4 | 2 | 4 | 9 |
| Fairley | 26 | 3-6 | 3-6 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 9 |
| Thompson | 21 | 3-9 | 0.0 | 5 | 1 | 2 | 7 |
| Simpson | 29 | 3-9 | 0.0 | 5 | 1 | 2 | 7 |
| Simpson | 209 | 28-7 | 8-11 | 41 | 12 | 87 | 77 |
Percentages: FG. 394, FT. 727. Three-Thirds of the Shots were Blank (4), Blocked Shoots: 4 (Fasaya 3), Turnovers: 24 (Thompson 5, Franklin 5, Steals: 5, Teachings: 5, Simmons, Red, Faaye), Teachings: 5, Simmons, Red, Faaye).
Half: Kansas 40-24. Officials: Kaster, Mil-
lentrees, Turington.
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After halftime, the officials showed up a couple of minutes late, prompting Williams to bounce the ball hard off the court into official Terry Turington's hands as he came over to the Kansas bench to get the ball.
"If it hadn't been such a big press thing, I would have gone out and thrown the ball up myself and played without the suckers." Williams said.
With 17:56 remaining in the game, Simmons fouled Rick Calloway and then was called for a technical foul.
He didn't, and everything went smoothly — for two minutes — that
Pritchard stepped to the line and knocked down the two technical shots, apparently giving Kansas a 44-26 lead, but the two points were erased when it was ruled that enemy was foiled in the act of shooting.
Calloway, with the score back to 42-26, hit two free throws, and then Pritchard attempted the technical shots again, hitting just one this time.
Terrilyn Johnson were named to the all-tournament team as was Staci Oliver, UMKC; Patrina Toney, Radford, and Rhonda Carrington, Texas-Pan American.
Page, nominated to the team for the first time in four years, nabbed 20 rebounds, scored 12 points, had three blocks, one assist and one
Dial
"It's been one of my goals to make an all-tournament team." Page said. "But I was surprised."
Continued from p. 13
Johnson had 18 points, 15 rebounds, one assist and three steals in the tournament.
Davis 1-5-2.4 Hill 2-5-3.4 Bivens 1-5-2.4
Bioslim 2-10:50 4-15:50 2-14:50 6-14:90
Bradly 1-17:40 4-21:40 6-27:40 8-31:40
Brady 1-17:40 4-21:40 6-27:40 8-31:40
Avoid 3-0:30 0-3:00, detsitin 0-0:00, Sparrnet
3-0:30 0-3:00, detsitin 0-0:00, Wishipronet 1-0:20
Total 18.55 10.00 4.44
Hattamman: Kamasan 17-15. Total koule:UKM 19. Nom-
taiwa: Kamasan 21-16. Total koule:UKM 30. Nom-
taiwa: Kamasan 2-4. Koule: UKM 2, Koule: 1-4).
Peluancek: UKM 18 (Koule: 6, Oliver 4). Koule: UKM
15 (Koule: 6, Oliver 4). Peluancek: UKM 18 (Koule: 6,
Olivier 4). Peluancek: UKM 18 (Koule: 6, Olivier 4).
Technologie: Bradytek 2. Chennaitse 4. Amond 2). Technologie
Kansas 44. UMKC 41
Washington announced after Saturday's game that it would not be possible to redshirt freshmen Stacy Truitt and Shannon Kite because of NCAA regulations.
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The Macintosh deals you've been waiting for...
Macintosh Plus
Mac Deal #1
Imagewriter II Printer
Rodime/Evergreen 20 Plus Hard Drive
MacWrite 5.0
Free Macintosh carrying case with purchase!
A $79.95 value!
Educational package price $ 1,899.00
Macintosh SE 20 MB/HD
Mac Deal # 3.
hibition game against the Auckland National team, she did not score. She had 10 points in the second half.
Chennault said she was beginning to feel more comfortable in her game, especially with timing and communicating with the guards on the court.
Macintosh SE 20 MB/HD
Standard Keyboard
Imagewriter II Printer
MacWrite 5.0
Free Macintosh carrying case with purchase!
A $79.95 value!
In the first half of Kansas' ex-
Educational package price $ 2,499.00
Mac Deal #2
Macintosh SE
The power to do your best at KU
© 1908 The Apple Inc. and Microsoft are trademarks of Apple Inc., Company, Inc.
(Prices do not include 4.75% tax)
*Prices good while quantities last.
*Offer open only to full-time students.
*Support of the staff of Kansas, Lawrence, Campus.
*Please consult requirements for purchasing Apple Computer Equipment. You may pick up a copy of the requirements in the KU Bookstore in the Burge Union. Promotion ends Dec. 22, 1989.
"I didn't get juice until after the start of the game last night," she said. "Tonight I got it before the game, so I was ready to go for the whole game. I and the same problem earlier in the year in the New Zealand game where I couldn't do that." The game was very well in the second half."
Apple.
Macintosh SE CPU
Standard Keyboard
Imagewriter II Printer
MacWrite 5.0
Free MacIntosh carrying case with purchase!
A $79.95 value!
Educational package price $ 1,999.00
Macintosh Plus $ 924.00
Macintosh SE CPU 1,419.00
Macintosh SE 20MB/HD 1,919.00
Imagewriter II Printer 449.00
MacWrite 5.0 49.00
Standard Keyboard 82.00
Rodime/Everex 20 MB/HD 489.00
Mac Deal a La Carte
Macintosh Plus
Macintosh
"Payment must be made in cash or by cashier's check.
"No personal checks or credit cards."
"Have cashier's check made payable to "KU Booksbooks."
"Student dividend already applied on computer purchases."
The Mac deals are here!
Burge Union
864-5697
KU
KU
DOUBTED
COLLEGE DAYS IN
Steamboat
A Package For Students Who Like Skiling or Just Love a Great Party
$249 Without transportation
$309 With transportation
$309 With transportation
Golf
COME ON, SKI THE BOAT!
1.
LAST CHANCE! To sign up
meet us at the Wheel
Tues. & Wed. 11:30 a.m.- 1:30 p.m.
Arrangements by
Echo Tours Inc
Call Bill or Petey 841-8155
- 8 nights accommodation at Timber Run Condominiums. Each unit in this student complex includes Fireplace, Full Kitchen, CATV, Outdoor Heated Pool, and Hot Tubs.
- A great schedule of parties such as Hot Tub Happy Hours, Mountainside wine & Cheese Party. Lots of Free Refreshments, great music, and good time!
Classified Directory
Package Includes:
- 4 out of 5 day Photo Lift Ticket
100s Announcements
105 Personal
Businessman needs a college male student for traveling companion to California at midmismember start. Major expenses paid. For information write Ron, P.O. Box 356, Lawrence,
Lynn, Alphabet soup, playing pool one month and growing forward to more great times. Love, Thank you.
E.M.G. 3. Long years of liness! I hate U!!!! I hope it falls off!
Diquised - A.
MAX: HI YOU OLE SEEP AT NIGHT??!
SWM, smonmep, self-employed, KU graduate,
are, are,
110 Bus. Personal
Donna Karan Sunglasses now at the Etc. Shop. 732 Mass.
Shop creatively this year. Creative Christmas shoppers will be able to satisfy sovereasy array of X-mas gifts - antiques, glassware, fine art and used furniture, picnic tables, handmade coasters, handmade hooks, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playbags, collector and cheope rock-n-roll cards, gift card holders, carnival gown, Maxfield Harrier, art deco, advertising items, clocks, watches, designs, art tools, Royal Doulton, and satin accessories. MONTHILL'S FLEA MARKET, 811 New Hampshire, Open every Sat and Sun. 10-5. For booth rental info call 842-6911.
CANCU BAHAMAS! Spring Break 1997!
CANCU New York 748-2505 Prices For information
Geoff Kaif 747-8903
Comic books, Playbies, Penthouses, etc. & Su-
cille's. 611 New Hamphire. Open Sat. Up. Mat.
JOIN HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS!
DRIVE TO MOST major cities in U.S.
CALL NOW FOR INFORMATION:
PHONE # 813/831-2125.
Government Photos. Passport, immigration,
viasa. Modeling, theatrical. Advanced fine art
participation. Signed copies to your artistic
art品. Torn Swells 794-6118.
Bausch & Lomb. Ray-Ban Sun glasses
25% Below Sug. Retail
The Ec. Shop
723 McKinney. 842-3811
Haul your gaze in sport bags or fancy packs. Nike, East-Akron, Hinds, 1130-827-9656. Francis. Kurtz, East-Akron, Hinds, 1130-827-9656.
Guaranteed five years. Russell Athletic scores.
France Sports Goods, 721 Mass.
964-1101.
Have an old-fashioned Christmas by cutting your own beautifully shaped tree at high school. Then celebrate when the kids have free pony rides. Drive on Highway 10, 4 miles; then turn south, 19 miles.
MASSAGE for the Holidays! Do what else do best stress and injury with the help of Lawrence Massage Therapy 841-695. Gift certificates to Rock & Roll records, The Dramatic Theater, Open Sat-Sun. 10 a.m.
AFRICAN ADORNED
Unusual jewelry & int'l.
folk art.
842-1376
5 E. 7th
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE
your full service auto,
repair shop. Classic to
computerized.
M.F. 495-7008, Howard-
315 N. 2nd St., B41-6958
The Yachat Limo
Bar & Grill
MONDAY
Specials:
500 Draws
$2 Grilled Cheese
& Soup
530 Wisconsin
--for next semester.
Time it! With Timex sports watches. They run
fast. They wear backpacks. Francis Sporting Goods, 713 Mass. 849-419. Wiggle into Wigwam a warm wool socks, mittens.
Frances Sporting Goods, 713 Mass. 849-419.
KU PRO-CHOICE COALITION MEETING
120 Announcements
- Wednesday, Dec. 6
- Regionalist Room Kansas Union
- 7:30 p.m.
The battle has begun!
Plenary meeting for next semester.
for next semester.
---
Faith No More - workers needed for stage crew & security positions Monday, Dec. 11
Refreshments & entrance fee paid. Please sign in uuSA office, 4th floor University from 8-5.
SPRING
BREAK
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW
DAYTONA BEACH
$129
DAYTONA BEACH
7 NIGHTS from $129*
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND from $129*
5 OR 7 NIGHTS from $101*
STEAMBOAT from $101*
2 OR 7 NIGHTS from $132*
PORT LAUDERDALE from $132*
HILTON HEAD ISLAND from $127*
7 NIGHTS from $29*
CORPUS CHRISTI /
MUSTANG ISLAND from $29*
CALL TOLL FREE TODAY
1-800-321-5911
NEW & BEACH
Sunchase
*Depending on break dates and length of stay
Lyssa L卉淋 Services of Kansas and Buddies, 716 SW Jackson, present entertainer Sharon Thompson. Dec. 15, 18:00 at 16:00 pm. Admission $49. For more information, call GLISK@ 803-254-8000.
1
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 4, 1989
15
For confidential information, referral & support for ADE conseree, call M-14513, Headquarters
Moderate progressive club now forming with the objective of creating reading room/office space. If interested, please write: *Progressive Club, P.O. Box 1402, Lawrence, KS 66044*
suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is叫 841-2545 or visit 1419 Mans , Headquarters Counseling Center.
Want to see the Dear L.A. for free? We have
Just Need seed. Dear L.A., december 16th,
Billy or Julie.
130 Entertainment
DJ· Good Vibrations. The way to pump up your
dj· Very affordable. Brian 804-8172.
140 Lost-Found
All black cat. Yellow eyes. Claws. Found 18th &
Tenn. 841-1676.
GET INTO THE GROOVE. Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional studio, radio DJ's. Hot Spots Maximum Party Thrust. DJ Ray Valesquebo. 841-7083.
LOST! Black cat, short hair, de-clawed, no tag,
around 1600 block Ohio. ID #829-7848.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
BabySister needed to care for 6-month-old infant in our home starting in January M - F-maternity
Carporter - part-time/full-time. Must be 21 years old, excellent driving record, flexible hours, clean-cut in appearance. Academy Car Rental, 841-0102. EOE/FC.
DRIVEWANTED TO drive one way to Albany, NY. Departure date negotiable. Care needs to leave Lawrence on or before December 22. Room for 2 people. Will pay for gas, tolls and two nights hotel accommodations required. You must be your own return travel. If you are interested, please call 843-719-7071.
Jade Garden now hiring experienced delivery drivers. Must have own car & insurance. 84 per hour + .50 per delivery + tips + 1/2 price meals. Apply in person, 1419 Kadow.
Light delivery - must have reliable transporta-
tion. Hours required: Good pay and
flexible hours. Dennis 64-67hrs
Logan Business Machines accepts applications for part-time delivery person. Flexible hours.
Looking for long-term employee to work 4 hours a
night, 11 m. (including Friday or Saturday evenings)
and one weekend day shift. Mechanical ability a plus.
Live-in child care positions near New York,
Philadelphia, the beach, Airfare, fare, good salary,
business travel, job search, PRINCETON INDY PLACEMENT, 301 N. HARRISON ST. 418, Princeton, NJ 08540) (954) 697-1195.
NANNY OF PORTLAND
*San Francisco - 1 girl - $175/week*
*Chicago - newborn - $175/week*
*Chicago* - newborn $75/sheep
*Connecticut* - twins $80/sheep
*Denton* - newborn $20/sheep
*Irginia* - children - $00/sheep
available
Spring '90 semester
Student passed Monday through Friday
*Virginia - 2 children - $300/week*
Many positions available.
One year commitment necessary.
$4.00 per hour
part time
7 a.m.-11 a.m.
Student needed Monday through Friday
The University Daily Kansan has a
position available for a student to
proofread advertising during the spring
The Kanan is an equal opportunity employer.
Requires a firm command of spelling and punctuation, as well as an understanding of the aesthetics of layout. Since our advertisers will be depending on you, we have staff members who are knowledgeable and responsible. We prefer a self-starter.
Contact Jeanne Hines, Sales & Marketing Adviser, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.:
You'll work during those times when we publish a newspaper and be off when we don't (like exam week, when you need the time to study).
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
New living! Smith-n-Wesson is now bring-
ing a new collection in person in 1923,
Vermont, from 7am - 10pm.
NEED EXTRA CARRIER? Work as a cashier for the Operations Department. Applications accepted through 6/9/16, at the General Accounting Office, Carruthers Hall. Apply online or phone (800) 275-4360 to apply. Previous cabining experience preferred. Needed immediately - Part-time receptionist. S/ 6 sun. hours only. Apply at 1301 W. 24th Colony St.
Part-time Student Employment Position:
student in the freshman, freshman, and transfer students on university procedures; providing individual and group sessions for study time; student interaction with faculty members;
dent at the university for at least one year and be enrolled in a study program. Preferred qualifications include an MSc or equivalent work study. Preferred qualifications include a Master's degree, two years of dedicated fitness; also excellent communication skills. Position available immediately. Salary $45.00 per week.
Full job description/requirements available upon request: Contact Thomas M. Herrera, Assistant Vice President of Law Office of Kimberly Lawnsc, KS 69063 (814) 854-2431. All materials must be received by 5:00 p.m. December 6, 1989. EEO EMPLOYER. Part-time home office and office cleaner wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in hiring you.
Wanted: Compensation for boy age 6. Monday's
willing to work 10 hours per day. Req. M.
Referees required. Non-Member. Need own
work.
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Flexible hours,
good working conditions. Apply Lawrence
Country Club, 845-286. Ask for Frank.
225 Professional Services
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: 48-hour course
processing. Complete B/W IW services.
PASSPORT/RESUME $60.00. 399 Art & Design.
MA797-76
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(813) 491-5678
*Pregnant and need help? Call Blackbird at*
*Confidential help/free pregnancy*
*testing.*
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 641-9716.
Suffering from Abortion?
Hearts Restored
Hospitals Closed
Colly, KS 8790
Confidential response/material
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake IDs & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1,100 pages, no job too small or too large.
Affordable and affordable wordprocessing. Udana.
New York.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-203, days or evening.
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing.
Call, envline. 749-3803
Accurate and affordable typing /word processing,
sparked checked. Done with time to spare! Stuff
done!
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary.
$1.25 double-spaced page. East Lawrence. Call Mrs. Mattia. 841-129.
Call Barb for your typing needs - term papers, themes, discussions, resumes, misc. Computer/LQ printer. 842-3101 after 5:30 p.m.
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841-5942. Tterm papers, legal, thesis, ect. No calls after 9 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing. Tterm papers, letters, dissertations, letters from the past, reports. Scheduling and spelling correction. 2201G W, 25th M.-Th. 8a.m. m.-p.; F-S. 8a.m. m.-p. 824-274.
document professionally typist does papers
accurately, reasonably and fast. Calif. Jail 843-749-8.
KEYWORKS, Wording Processing and Data Entry
KU experience. 10+ years
KU experience. Cloetta 843-749-8.
Services: Disaster Inc. 10 years
KUI experience. Coleta 842-8307
K.S Professional Word Processing. Accurate and
efficient. Adid.d940. Call between 10. and
18.
affordable. 611-8345. Call between 1 and 10.
RESUME-Writes & Lists Printed 36-hour service. Satisfaction guaranteed! $10-$45. JAS
Resumes' Typeset Kingston Printing, Inc.
Resumes Typeset Kingston Printing, Inc. "Making you look on good paper" 804 W. 149* *814-6329
This lady is hot! At least her fingers are. Professional typet. You write, I type. Fast & accurate, reasonable rates, available day or evening. Lori 841-8508.
Word Perfect Word Processing, IBM Compatible.
Near Orchards Corners. No calls after 9 p.m.
845-858-6037
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M.S. Dearce. 841-6254
Word Processing. Macintosh. Spell-Check. Cash only. 749-8119 evenings.
300s
X
305 For Sale
181 Nissan 310DX BP, brand-NEW battery, AC.
181 Nissan 310DX BP, brand-NEW battery, AC.
181 Nissan 310DX BP, brand-NEW battery, AC.
Phoenix loaded. Very good condition. #1596
Brand new 10-speed black Huffy, low price. Call
841-1468.
$50.00 OBO 843-270 evening.
www.bossprings. Very good condition.
843.00 BOO 843-270 evening.
DP Dual Tric 30 free-standing weight machine,
b2, per person; b3, per adult. **899** 600-416-8000.
600 OBO. Chris at 841-001-801.
Furniture for sale! A grey 5-person group chair w/cooling ends, black and white checked dresser table, dining room table w/leaf and 6 chairs, 2 end tables and a coffee table. Everything is in perfect condition.
tion. Really sharp stuff. Price negotiable.
749-759? or Stuart or Jon.
GOVT. SURPLUS!! New combat boots and safe-
ware! Banks, knapsacks, glove, shoes and
masks field equipment. Field clothing.
Also CARHARTT WORKWEAR.
Monday-Saturday; 9-5. Open Sundaies till
11am.
Christmas, 12-4. St. Mary Surplus Sales, St.
Mary, KS, 1-437-0734.
MOPED 1963 Honda, asking $225. Call 528-4968 after 5 p.m.
Mobile home in Lawrence, perfect for student
and family. Price includes $2500
best offer. Must Sell. 1-235-0846.
Mountain bike. Specialized Hardrock Comp. 5,
mountain bike. $300.00. $200.00.
frame. $60.00. 811-860.
must sell Tandy 1000 with color monitor. Will take best offer. Call 425-374-7.
Nintendo with six game cartridges. Great enter-
ture or Christmas gift. $10.00. M4-654 3000
- 845-215.
TAMA SE, drum set w/ 7-cymbal, ROALD
GR-700 guitar synthesizer, and controller, $550
e.g. Gibson doubleskine guitar copy, $250. Laser
beadless guitar, $255. OBS, BIO, 81-69482.
Peacey Guitar Amp 130 watt, reverb & reverb
Gibson Bass Ammas Bass Amp 50 watt,
$175 ORG #84-7989
RALEIGHT technician mountain bike, less than 1m
285.39H. Tech included, $275 call. Gail
285.39H. Tech included, $275 call. Gail
Pomeranian, female, 2 months, orange-sable,
AKC. Lodge: 841-7898 after 6 p.m.
What a deal! Mytait road bike - Shimano Skipton
+ good condition + £130 - after 5:00
Mytait road bike - Shimano Skipton + good condition + £130 - after 5:00
360 Miscellaneous
Call Today!
For Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS Don't Wait We'll find the
and best schedules. On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
On TVa, VCRs, Jewelry, Stereo, Musical Instruments, cameras and more. We honor Vira/MCA/M.A.E.X./Dise. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry W. 4th W. d. Wath. 16:19:10
749-0700
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
340 Auto Sales
Story idea?
864-4810
Odifomile Custae, AC, AM/FM, tape, good condition, 011 ng. neg. 864-6702
1976 Toyota Corona Wagon. 4-speed, A/C, new battery and all-season radials. Runs good. $775.
811-414-14
71 VW Bug, runs good, asking $580 OBO. Call
614-859-5290
1977 Grand Ford, $400.00, 1977 Datam 280Z, red with black inted windows, $129.00, Call 641-7459. 1978 Buck Wagon, Auto, AC, CanCB/ Radio, Cruise, ONE OWNER, Gadget, 843-3125.
411-8056, website, very good condition, one owner,
david d.koo, 411-8056
this week's special: "VW Bug, Very clean,
bush motor, $165. See Chuck, Taye, Nisian,
Mike."
2nd-hand queen or fullsize futon and frame.
BA3-FTZM, John.
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy one season ticket for men's basketball.
Call 825-6456.
400s
05 For Rent
Real Estate
1-bedroom apt. close to campus. $230.00 a month.
749-5672.
Sublease 1. bdmr apartment, fully furnished,
very close to campus. 843-5018.
2-BR apt. in house, Fast walk to WAU. Newly renovated, wood floor, dishwasher, WAC. AC. FURNISHING.
Sublease Jan. July, 2 bedrooms, $32.00 plus
utilities and deposit: Close to campus. Call after
5pm for details.
合
Very copy .Lvrt. av., available in January, 1990.
Bvrd. Vermont St., gas water paid. Removled in winter '92 $229/mo., no pets. 843-9473. Leave message.
EQUAL
HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
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, disability, or 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 law. Our readers are hereby informed that the newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
2-bedroom clean apartment in owner-occupied
house. All uuilt paid, available Jan. 1. Prefer no smokers or pets. $400 a month. 841-9774 or leave message.
big bedrooms for spring sublime in great house at 11th and Ohio. Kirsty or Emily 943-8680.
2-level/2-person apartment. Spring sublease. Ten minute walk to Wakefield. B41-705. $875/month. A change for the better. Mt. Rise. The luxuries of a campus include Dearborn, Near campus. Available now. 841-600.
Apartment for sublease at Naiamith Hall. A single bedroom on first floor with own bathroom and LOTS of privacy. Have maid service. Leave with deposit and half of annual rent.
Available at West Hills Apk. for next semester:
Spacious one bedroom furnished up to $295 a month.
Water paid. Great location near campus
and parking. Lease and deposit required.
$41,000/mo or $38,500/mo.
BROAD NEW
Under Construction
* 8-plex 541 Michigan
* 3-plex 890 Indiana
3 *bedroom apartments,
washer/dryer, 2 full baths, all appliances,
microwave and some with fireplaces.
Call 749-5275
or Dave Compton 841.8468
great locations, energy efficient and designed
with you in mind.能效 1411-8212, 758-7449
600-8301, 758-7449
Cquiet room quiet, 10th & Ttnn. Available Dec. 22,
$140/mo, 84-579-797
Nice large size room for rent. Avail. Jan. lst.
Very close to campus, W/D, A/C/B, mo./+ lts.
Room for Rent - 250 sqft.
New i-bdrm. i-bdm, Very ROOMIE, could be for 2 people. Fully furnished, dishwasher, microwave. Large bathroom. Cable hook. W/D face. On KU KING. Must respond quickly. Will wait! lase fast! 794-615.
Older 2-3 bedroom home, near downtown, wood
garden, xine yard, BFSH, Mt. Madison
warm welcome friendly Christian roommate
Katie, who is an exceptional
immediate for the remainder of the academic
year. Applications may be picked up at ECM
184-8833 1824 Oread. For more information call
845-8833.
sept homes, $105 and up. 814-1414.
Speciosa 3-bd. lerpnm, W/D bookup, AC, yard;
garage, clean, quiet. Available late December.
8450/mm. Leave message. No dogs plesne.
769-7537.
Mastercraft Management
820 4485
One month rent free! Sunrise Villa 4-bdrm.
DW, micro W/D, on bus. roof. Call & leave
me.
So close to campaise 1 one bedroom apartment for sublease, 12th and Oned. Call 841-387.
Spring Sublease - 3-bedr. 2-8 bath townhouse,
subway service, on bus route, Village Vita
Call 611-400-3500
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
WINTER SPECIALS!
9TH & AVALON 842-3040
A quiet atmosphere
* spacious 2 bedrooms
* close to campus
Available Jan. 1: *Great studio apartment -* 800/month. Low utilities. Call 842-8310.
Sublease 3-bdrm. apt. 8 minutes from campus.
Available Jan. 24: *390 a.moub. Available in*
January. 842-4168.
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Reserve Your Home Now We Still Have A Few Completely Furnished Apartments
Offering:
- Custom furnishings
* Designed for privacy
* Close to shopping & FU
* Many great locations
* Equal opportunity housing
Hanover Place - 841-1212
14th & Mass
Go to...
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10h & Arkansas
842-4455
MASTERCRAFT
INSTANT $200 REBATE
Hurry in Today some short term leases available COLONY WOODS
APARTMENTS
- TANNING BED
- BASKETBALL COURT
* INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL
* EXERCISE ROOM
* LISTENING
+
$345-$410
MODELLS ON DAILY
Mon., Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4:45, 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W, 24th
*Offer limited/one rebate
per lease
per lease
expires 1-15-90
For Rent: Very clean & quiet superstudio for 1 or 2
Bedroom. Date is, Let, Call Aapm Aspartan.
841-757-6970
LETTERS PLAY
Avail. Jan, Jan. 1, Br. $255. Both include gas heat & water paid. 1 block from campus at 482 Ohio. Private parking, laundry facilities.
867-854.
EMERY PLACE APTS.
Furnished room w/shared kitchen/bath facilities for home sale. Off-street parking. No pets.
For sublease. Two bedroom apartment,
available January 7-9. On route rent. Rent
$1,450 per month.
*road student is looking for apartment/house to
escape winter austerity.* (114). 450-8890.
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS, 60044
913-843-8559
NAISMITHHALL
Great 3-person house, 1628 & Kittencal near campus, to subbasement January 1st. 748-0911
Hail! Subbasements backed down. New 3-berm wall. Hail! Subbasements closed, close to campus. Call 748-3094 after 5 p.m.
Convenience
- Privacy
- Luxury
Naismith Hall...
these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
Only Numerous provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free utilities, weekly maid
430 Roommate Wanted
Can play live with us to share 2 bedroom townhouse
$800 all utilities and include $1199.
Call 643-557-1382.
Female needed to substitute 2-bath 2-hard apart-
ment with electric. Beginning Jan. 1.
Call Hope BM-877-479.
1 or 3 roommates needed. End of Dec./Jan. 1
Sublease in impatient apt. good location. Ha-
sle in other location with no history.
Christian male needed spring semester to share
his room. $172 + $4 units. On bus route.
843-7890.
Female need to share 2-bedroom townhouse. $250, all utilities & cable included. Call 434-833-833.
Female non-smoker. Close to campus. Gas, laundry. Bedroom. Responsive landlord. Call 434-833-836.
Female Roommate needed for spring semester.
Good location. $200.00 + 1$ utilities. Lease until
May. Deposit paid, free cable. 841-3900.
roommates needed for spring semester.
Brand new apartment. Two blocks from campus.
own bedrooms, washer/dryer, dishwasher.
microwave. 841-745183
Female roommate needed ASAP. Furnished
apartment at Sundance $179 plus 4 units.
service, 'Dine Anytime,
and much more!
Walking distance from campus - $200/month +
satellites. Own bedroom/bath. 843-5186.
* female roommate requires immediately * 2 bdrm.
Female roommate requires for spring. Non-
roommate required from campus. $150, to
utilize. 882-3149
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
**legimeter:** Survival Village. Call 841-4238.
Female roommate(s) need ASAP. Great location one block from campus. $161.25/month. Call 842-9025.
3-bdm. apt. across street from campus.
Spacious, new paint & carpet. quiet. 3-unit
building. $800/mo./month. 841-6763. Leave
message.
Female roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom
furniture. Roommate wants 3-bedroom
bathroom furniture. Nigel complex $200, 945-0811.
Female roommate for very nice 3-BR townhouse
nonmooker, $165/month, garage, PF, DW
For more information &
a tour call or come by
Female roommate needed. Very nicely, completely furnished. Must have a Bachelor's degree or male or female to share nice 3-bdrm. a/p w/ graduate student. Own room. Great location on bus route. $160/mo. + utilities. Call for details.
GAY MALE non-smoker for roommate only in duples 10 min. from campus. $175 *½* units.
Male non-smoking roommate needed, spring semester, central location, close to cmapus, 4 +½ hourly. Call Mark or Pat, 683-6090
Male roommate wanted: Spring semester to share 3-bedroom apt. $100 per month plus % utilities. $41-8000.
male roommate need January. Fully furnish
room. Roommate needs $1,500 block from campus. $1129/month. 841-1160 male roommate need to share fully furnished apartment. Sweet setup. $1389/month plan
Need 2 female roommates for 3-bedroom townhome at Trailridge. Call Cindy 749-6354 or 843-7333.
Non-smoking responsible roommate wanted to
share furnished 3-bedroom home on campus.
Grade student preferred. Must have references.
M4: 5245.
Roomsmate wanted to share 3-bedroom house with two others, wather/flush. On river,包车 $150
Roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom house with two others, wather/flush. On river,包车 $150
Roommate needed for second semester. Base-
room room, own bathroom, utilities split t₁,叫
t₂
Roommate needed immediately - 2 bdrm - fur-
nished - water pd. $210/mo. - Novemberpd. -
drawn.
Roommate needed for large 2-l bedroom apartment in house. Hardwood floors, gas, water paid $180/month. Starting January, 749-908 evenings. Roommate wanted to sublease a 34-bd. townhouse with two others. Fireplace, tramp coach, material on bus route. $180/month + utility Call 852-363-8211
OWN BEDROOM for $147.50/mo 4 blks from campus. Please female roommate from Jan. May. Call Niki 841-9977.
Roommate needed: Only $176.00/mo * utilities, totally furnished, on bus route, 3 great rooms!
louis in some nice house for non-smoking, quiet
emale. Two blocks south KU. Free utilities,
able.WD, AC microwave, TV, housekeeper.
ability.1/16/08, 1/16/08, $250-$400
aid.911-849-3818
Policy
**SPRING SUBLEASE:** Fun female needs to call
now 858-743-6200, 858-600-900.
phone: 858-743-6200, 858-600-900.
Seeking mature male roommate spring semester.
2 BR, 2 FL, old style. $200. Utilities paid.
843-6292. Nevin.
Wanted: Roommate for spring semester
2-bedroom apartment at Villa 26, 200.00 + %
utilities.
Call 749-1882, if no answer leave
message.
Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
Sublease 2-bedroom, 2-bathroom apartment. Includes wet bar, fireplace and pool, very quiet. On bus route, our own washer and dryer included. Call 841-0729 or office, 843-6600.
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
12-4
"Hang him, you idiots! Hang him! 'String him up' is a figure of speech!"
16
Monday, December 4, 1989 / University. Daily Kansan
STREETSIDE RECORDS
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LEE RITENOUR
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MIGRATION
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HAPPY ANNIVERSARY,
CHARLIE BROWN!
SEGA
DIGITAL MASTER
gh 12/16/89
SNOPPY © 1958, 1971 United States
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY,
CHARLIE BROWN!
FROM:
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Good through 12/16/89 LP/Cassette Compact Disc $5.98 $9.99
DIGITAL MASTER
Watta Mill Center
1201 W. 103rd
941-3970
Lawrence
844 Massachusetts
913/749-4211
Lawrence
1403 W. 23rd St.
913/842-7173
Westport
1028 Broadway
561-1580
Westport
556 Westport Rd.
561-9980
Bannister
5912 E. Bannister
763-8411
---
Independence
4482 S. Noland Rd.
478-3748
Overland Park
9524 Antioch
381-2676
PENNYLane
ORSETTES • COMPACT DISCS • RECORDS
PENNYLINE
CRISSETTES • COMPACT DISCS • RECONDS
ARTS & CRAFTS FAIR '89
& TS
Exhibitors include:
Yaelonna Moore - Masks & Jewelry
Julie Koebbe - Jewelry
Mara Sprengelmeyer - Jewelry
Julie Williams - Hand T-shirts & Sweatshirts
Monica Demetriou - Silver Jewelry
Debra & Gary Jennings - Ceramic ornaments & Wall Hangings
Rebecca Basuara - Jewelry
Paul Wagle - Christmas cards & Silkscreen sweatshirts
Brian Cohen - Jewelry & Painted sweatshirts
KU Glass Club - Hand-blown glass items
MONDAY, DECEMBER 4 THRU THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7 9:00 AM TO 5:00 PM
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
AIDS quilt shows love, grief
By Jennifer Reynolds Kansan staff writer
Looking at the 16 panels you see more than statistics; you see the people they represent and the families and friends who cared for them.
Tim Barbo is one of the people represented on the AIDS Memorial Quilt, part of which has been on display at the Spencer Museum of Art. He died of complications of AIDS three years ago in California.
Beverley Barbo, of Lindsburg, Tim's mother and author of the book "The Walking Wounded," said that a friend of hers made Tim's panel after seeing her read the book is about Barbo's experience with her son's illness and death.
a convertible that was he and Tommy's pride and joy. There are drops of rain or tears coming down making new life where they hit."
"They used Tim's favorite colors and some outer space objects because he was really into that," she said. "She used a representation of
Barb soared the last six months of Tim's life with him and his friend Tommy in California. Tommy died of complications of acquired immune deficiency syndrome three months ago.
Barbo is now planning to write another book about her son and Tommy.
"I am so glad Tim found someone to love even if it was a little late," she said. "People need to realize that homosexual love is a legitimate, real love and caring outside of the sexual activity."
The entire AIDS quilt has been on display three times in Washington. The quilt is composed of 10,500 panels and covers 14 acres.
"Walking through the quilt is one of
the most heart-rending experiences one can experience," she said. "If people would just take the time to look at it they would be overwhelmed.
"There was a panel made by a mom who had lost both of her sons. At the bottom it read, 'Pray for me; I have another son.' "
Andrea Norris, director of the museum, said it was one of hundreds of museums and theaters across the city that were participating in the event.
"There has been an enormous response to the call," she said. "It is an indication of our concern about the crisis."
The two sections of the AIDS Memorial Quilt on display at the museum were made possible by an anonymous donor, Norris said.
The quilt's impact on the public is evident, she said.
class countdown 654321 Celebrate the Jayhawk's Victory 25¢ draws tonite PIZZZ! 901 Miss. 749-7511 All ages 18 & above
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THE LAST CHANCE TO IMMORTALIZE YOURSELF IN THE
1990 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
Yearbook picture make-ups will be taken on a first-come, first-serve basis between Nov. 27 and Dec.8 at these times:
Monday & Thursday: 11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m.
Tuesday & Wednesday: 9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. and 1:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.
Friday: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
All pictures will be taken in the Rotunda of Strong Hall $3 sitting fee will be waived with purchase of yearbook
VOL. 100, NO. 69 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
TUESDAY DEC. 5, 1989
ADVERTISING:864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Renovation scheduled for Hoch Construction to include new lecture halls
By Liz Hueben Kansan staff writer
In 62 years, Hoch Auditorium has gone from a basketball arena to a concert hall and will undergo another metamorphosis in the 1990s.
Hoch was dedicated Oct. 14, 1927,
and was first used for Christmas
vespers on Dec. 12 of that year.
Jim Modig, campus director of facilities planning, said that during the next chapter in the building's history, it would house science library stacks and new lecture halls. The building is now the temporary home to facilities operations' house-keeping.
The building's interior would be basically rebuilt within its shell, Modig said. There would be five levels of classrooms inside the auditorium, according to preliminary plans.
Later, though, basketball coach Forrest C. "Phog" Allen pushed for a bigger field house; Hoch seated only about 4,000.
In its glory days, in the late 1920s and early 1930s, then-unnamed Hoch Auditorium, with its 3,600-pound stage curtain, was compared to New York's Radio City Music Hall, and it was the home of the Jayhawk basketball team.
The departments of music and dramatic arts pushed for a new fine arts building for better acoustics.
Because Allen Field House was dedicated in 1955 and Murphy Hall was dedicated in 1957, Hoch Auditorium is not frequently used anymore.
Although financing and construction are several years away, some plans for the building have been made.
Modig said the classrooms in Hoch would be similar to the lecture halls in Wescoe Hall. ___
See HOCH, p. 10
...
Clouds of smoke from about 1,000 burning tires barrel into the sky in Leavenworth County.
Tire fire east of Lawrence raises smoke and questions
Property owner denies knowing cause of burning rubber
By a Kansan reporter
An estimated 1,000 tires burned yesterday on private property 10 miles east of Lawrence.
The fire, which developed a cloud of black smoke that was visible from Mount Oread, started about 10:30 a.m. behind some bushes on the R.H. Brauer property one mile south of Linwood, a Leavenworth County official said.
Chuck Magaha, Leavenworth County chief of emergency operations, said Brauer did not know how the fire started. Magaha said the fire, which burned in an open field, was seen from more than 30 miles away and was reported by a resident of Kansas City, Mo.
Last night, the tires were still burning.
Magaha said that about a third
H
1 the fire, which developed a cloud of black smoke that was visible from Mount Oread, started about 10:30 a.m. behind some bushes on the R.H. Brauer property one mile south of Linwood.
of the estimated 3,000 tires dumped in the bushes had burned by the time firefighters left. He expected the fire to continue for at least two more days despite efforts of two Leavenworth volunteer fire departments who fought the flares for six hours yesterday.
names for six hours yesterday.
Four trucks from the Sherman
and Fairmount township departments and one builder, owned by the Leavenworth County fire chief, were at the scene:
"They dumped 17,000 gallons of water and if the wind does not change, they'll be OK." Magaha said.
Magaha said the firefighters, who left the scene at 6 p.m. yesterday, were going to check the fire again this morning.
Brauer, a truck farmer, denied having started the fire, Magaha said.
"The tires belonged to the owner," he said.
Magaha said that Environmental Protection Agency representatives arrived at the scene at 3 p.m., but that no charges had been filed.
1926
E. Joseph Zuroa/KANSAN
A volunteer firefighter retreats after running out of water.
Minority retention remains problem at KU
By Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writer
Minorities question business school requirements
For many, attending a predominately white university brings home for the first time an additional burden of being a minority, said Marshall Jackson, interim director of the Office of Minority Affairs.
Minorities face twice the challenge that most college students face when they go to a school such as the University of Kansas, some concerned officials say.
This is the first in a series about the problems of recruitment and retention of minority students.
"Minority students are unsure about how they are received and perceived, whether it be by the faculty or in their residence halls," Jackson said.
The studies at both universities were conducted between the fall semesters of 1978 and 1987. They were started after the students' first year of college.
Studies of Black, Hispanic, Asian and American Indian students at the University of Kansas and the University of Oklahoma have shown that retention rates for minority groups fluctuate more than do those for white students.
"We have not done the type of research to find out what has and hasn't worked and what students need to help them be successful," he said.
Observing a problem is one thing, but finding the root of the problem is tougher, he said.
David Shulenburger, associate vice chancellor of academic affairs
"Attrition studies show us what is wrong, that there is a problem," Jackson said. "But we need to find out why. If we don't do that, we're shooting in the dark."
See RETENTION, p. 10
By Cory S. Anderson and Beth Behrens Kansan staff writers
Business Overseas Lowery said the official number of Black students in the school was unknown.
High standards for admission into the School of Business have kept our students from attaining an undergraduate degree in the school, but minority students probably have been the hardest hit, said Sharnique Lowery, president of the Minority Business Student Council.
"I requested those figures two months ago, and nobody has been
able to tell me where to find them," she said. "If I had to hazard a guess, the number of Blacks alone actually in the School of Business is between three and five. There are people I know, and I've seen faces. Out of 700 students in the school, that's very few."
ornements at the school, the Office of Minority Affairs and the office of institutional research and planning said they did not keep figures on Black enrollment in the school.
Lowyc said the scarcity of Blacks was due partially to a lack of communication between pre-business students and the school concerning the
expectations for admission to the program.
ro apply to the school, a student must have completed 60 hours of college courses with at least a 2.2 grade point average. Three of those courses must be preparatory business courses that the student must pass with a 2.0 GPA.
Stricter admission standards were implemented in Fall 1986 to control the number of students in the school. The standards take both cumulative GPA and ACT scores into consideration for admission. About 60 percent
See BUSINESS, p. 10
Kansas climbs AP poll to 2nd spot in country
By Gene King and Paula Parrish Kansas sportswriters
Not since 1868, when the Jayhawk basketball squad traveled to the Final Four in Dallas, has Kansas had a number two ranking.
"The people that rated us No. 2 didn't watch us shoot free throws." Coach Roy Williams said after the Jayhawks routed the Tennessee Martin Pacers 103-48 last night in Allen Field House.
Junior forward Mark Randall said that it was not this week's poll that concerned the team.
At least not until yesterday, when the new Associated Press' Top 25 poll was released, and Kansas found itself just one natch away from being the top-ranked team in college basketball.
Kansas, 7-0, placed second behind Syracuse with 1,443 points and 17 first-place votes. The Orangemen, 4-0, garnered 1,535 points and 38 of 63 first place votes, placing them first for the second week in a row.
Syracuse will face No. 6 Duke Wednesday night in a contest that Boeheim said would be one of the toughest his team has faced so far this year, even though his Orangemen beat 18k-ranked Temple 735-756 last weekend to win the Carrier Classic Championship.
their training.
Kansas just last week went from
unranked obscurity to number
four in the nation.
"It doesn't mean anything right now," he said. "It will mean something if we're up there toward the end of the year."
In a telephone interview yesterday morning, Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said jokingly that Williams was devoting too much time to his golf game. He was referring to an analogy Williams made between golf and his style of coaching that was printed in the Dec. 4 issue of Sports Illustrated.
Regulator of savings and loan bails out
Boeheim, after watching the Jayhawk win the Dodge NTT tournament more than a week ago, said Kansas and the Big Eight Conference looked very strong this year.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - M. Danny Wall, under fire for his handling of what might become the costliest savings and loan failure in history, resigned yesterday as the government's chief savings and loan regulator.
In his letter of resignation to President Bush, Wall complained that he was being made "a scapegoat" for the problems of the industry and denounced a "steamy stream of one-sided information" from congressional hearings concerning the
collapse of Lincoln Savings and Loan Association of Irvine, Calif.
Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez, D-Texas, chairman of the House Banking Committee,篮壁灯 for allowing Lincoln to remain open until April, even though government examiners had recommended in May 1987 that it be closed. The ballout of the institution is expected to cost taxpayers up to $2.5 billion.
In turn, Wall criticized Gonzalez yesterday, saying he "resorted to corruption of the truth" in
Wall set no firm date for his departure, saying he would stay on for a transition period. He said he was looking forward to a job outside of government but had no specific position in mind.
Wall has been the chief target of hearings by Gonzalez's panel for nearly two months. At first, only Gonzalez called for Wall's resignation; but in recent weeks, the committee chairman was joined by Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine, private groups and several newspapers.
trying to force the regulator out.
Bush not yet ready to delare end to Cold War
The Associated Press
BRUSSELS, Belgium — President Bush said yesterday that it was too early to proclaim an end to the Cold War, but added that Mikhail Gorbachev's acceptance of sweeping reform in Eastern Europe "absolutely mandates new thinking" by the West.
See related story p.10
wrapping up his weekend summit journey with a stop at NATO Headquarters, Bush also told reporters that the United States would maintain "significant military forces in Europe as long as our allies desire our presence."
The president said that he wanted a treaty making initial cuts in superpowers' conventional forces in Europe definite before seeking deeper reductions. He told NATO leaders that he hoped a multinational summit could be convened in Europe next summer to sign such an accord.
Conventional forces aside, the United States and Soviet Union are negotiating a proposed 50 percent cut in long-range nuclear weapons, as well as a proposed ban of chemical weapons.
weapons.
The president spoke as Gorbachev
was convening a meeting of a radically reordered Warsaw Pact in Moscow to review the weekend.
Bush and Gorbachev leaders agreed at an unprecedented joint news conference before leaving Malta that their meeting heralded a
The dramatic change in Europe continued uninterrupted during the day, as the Soviet Union and the four other Warsaw Pact countries condemned their own invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1988. In Leipzig, East Germany, about 200,000 demonstrators broke into wild rounds of applause as speakers called for German reunification.
new era of cooperation in East-West relations, including arms control and trade. They intend to meet again in the United States in late June.
The Old Army said
At his news conference, Bush said,
"We stand at the threshold of a new
era ..." but declined to assert that
the Cold War had ended as Gorbachev suggested.
He said his goal was to see "individual freedom everywhere replace coercion and tyranny."
1
Bush said of Gorbachev, "I think he my measure, and I took his. And I think we both feel more comfortable about our common objectives."
2
Tuesday, December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
SUNSHINE
Sunny
HI: 68*
LO: 34*
TODAY
Seattle
51/39
New York
35/29
Denver
69/33
Chicago
41/35
Los Angeles
73/51
Miami
74/58
Dallas
69/49
KEY
Rain Snow
Ice T-Storms
Forecasted by Brent Shaw
Temperatures vary highs and lows
On campus
Kansas
Kansas Forecast
Kansas will experience warmth today before being sent back to the deep freeze beginning tomorrow. Temperatures will peak in the 60-70s today. Tonight, expect continued fair skies with low to mid 30s.
Salina 68/36
Dodge City 70/36
KC
65/34
Wichita 69/35
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
5-dav Forecast
Tuesday - Mostly sunny and very warm. Winds will be out of the west-southwest at 6-12 mph.
High: 66°, Low: 34°.
Wednesday - Mostly cloudy and windy. Turning colder by evening. High: 59°, Low: 28°.
Thursday - Clearing and very cold. High: 28°, Low: 8°.
Friday - Sunny and slightly warmer. High: 36°, Low 10°.
Saturday - Fair and cool. High: 41°, Low: 18°.
▶ Three exhibitions, "Ceramics of the Weimar Republic," "Prints of the 1800s" and "Chinese Bronzes from the Sackler Collection" will be on display at the Spencer Museum of Art today through Dec. 30.
The poetry magazine KADO will be on sale from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the east door of Wescoe Hall and the south door of the Kansas Union. The $1 magazine is the combined effort of Alan Lichter's poetry workshops.
A letter-writing campaign to state legislators, sponsored by the KU Pro-Choice Coalition, will be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the fourth floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
Spanish Table, a Spanish language conversation group sponsored by the KU Spanish Club, will be from 1:30 to 4:30 at Ackleove in the Kansas University.
> An East Asian Studies Bag Brown Series discussion will be at 12:30 p.m. today at Alceve F in the Kansas Union. G. Cameron Hurst, director of the Center for East Asian studies, will present a speech titled: "A Japan That Can Say No! The Morita-Ishahara Critique of America."
A meeting of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders will be at 6 p.m. today in Room 20 Watkins Memorial Health Center.
about eco-feminism
► A meeting of Enviros will be at 6 p.m. today at Alcove B in the Kansas Union, Dennis Lowden will speak
A meeting of the Latter Day Saints
Student Organization will be at 6:30
p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in
the Burge Union.
A meeting of the Student Union Activities Board will be at 6 p.m. today at the Regionalist Room in the Kansas Union.
The Society for East Asian Studies will meet at 7 p.m. today at the Oread Room in the Kansas Union to discuss issues concerning East Asian studies at KU.
A meeting of the KU chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union will be at 7 p.m. today at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. The meeting has been moved from an originally announced location at the Burge Union.
"An Aesthetic for Every Day: the Making and Marketing of Weimar Ceramics," a lecture by Laurie Stein of the St. Louis Art Museum, will be at 7:30 p.m. today at the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
A meeting of Orthodox Christians on Campus will be at 7:30 p.m. today at the Governors Room in the Kansas Union, John Platko from Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in Kansas City, Kan., will speak.
" ⟶ "The Spencer Presepio. "Nativity figures from the Collection, will be on display at the Spencer Museum of Art Thursday through Jan. 7.
Ex-KU football player arrested in fight at bar
By Rich Cornell Kansan staff writer
A former varsity football player and KU senior was arrested outside a bar Sunday because he would not cooperate with police officers breaking up fights, said Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman.
After officers had stopped a number of fights and the people involved had left the area, another fight broke out. Mulvenon said. This one involved the student in stealing a firefighter's fight, but the student would not leave when told to do so.
A Lawrence police officer arrested the 6-foot-4, 250-pound student at 2:37 a.m., Mulvenon said. An employee of Gammon's, 1601 M. 23rd St, called about 2 a.m. to ask them to stop fights in a parking lot in front of the bar.
The student was arrested, Mulvenon said. When a Dexter man tried to stop the officer from making the arrest, he also was arrested.
The student posted bond of $150 and the Dexter man was given a notice to appear in municipal court. Both are scheduled to appear in court Dec. 13
to face misdemeanor charges of criminal trespassing and disorderly conduct, a court record stated.
In an interview yesterday, the student said he was not involved in the fights Sunday. He said he started to leave but headed back toward the bar when he remembered that he left his jacket there.
Clarification
An officer who had been following him then arrested him, the student said.
A story about property tax on page 1 of yesterday's Kansan may have been misleading. Senate Majority
"He tackled me, put me in a choke hold, handcuffed me and took me to jail," the student said. "He said. 'You should have been walking instead of talking.'"
Mulvenon said that everyone outside the bar was told that they could report files but only after officers stopped all of the fighting. Both men arrested were involved in the fighting and would not leave after police asked them to do so several times, he said.
None of the fights Sunday morning appeared to involve gangs, which police suspect were involved in fights at Gammon's last month, Mulvenon said.
Leader Fred Kerr, R-Pratt, is an opponent of quarter payments.
THE BUM STEER
Police report
THE BUM STEER
Good For Delivery and Dine in.
We Deliver Great B-B-Q All Day! Remember us during finals. 841-SMOK 2451 JOWA
$1.00 OFF
Any Sandwich or Dinner
exp. 12/31/89
FLAVORS
FLAVORS Buy A Large Yogurt for the price of a regular yogurt
701 W. 9th
841-6043
Buy A Regular Yogurt for the price of a small yogurt
with this coupon
Black Student Uni
BSU
Blaise by nature
Broadway show
BLACK STUDENT UNION WEEK EVENTS:
TUE., December 5th
BOWLING PARTY, $3
9 p.m.- Midnight, Kansas Union Jaybowl
THUR, December 7th
MALE/FEMALE RELATIONSHIP WORKSHOP
with Dr. Barbara Ballard, 7 - 9 p.m.
Kansas Union Pine Room
**SAT. December 9th**
Mr. Ebony/Ms. Essence Pageant, 7 p.m.
Party at 11:00, botb in Kansas Union Ballroom
$5 for bowl / $3 for just the party
SAT. December 9th
LAST CHANCE
to pick up last year's 1989 Jayhawker Yearbook
If you did purchase one, please bring your receipt to the Jayhawker Yearbook office at 428 Kansas Union before Dec. 22,1989.
These books will be sold
on a first come, first
serve basis
Jan. 15, 1990.
beginning
The rear window of a student's car valued at $151 was broken Sunday in the 2200 block of Ousdahl Road, Lawrence police reported.
▶ The rear window of a student's car valued at $250 was broken Sunday in the 2500 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported.
DAKIN
FUN AND GAMES
816 MASSACHUSETTS
A purse and its contents valued together at $221 were taken Friday from Union Square cafeteria in the Kansas University, KU police reported.
▶ A radar detector valued at $70 was taken Sunday from a student's car in the 1500 block of West Ninth Street, Lawrence police reported.
Gifts with character
12 pk. Coke or Diet Coke only $2.99!
Convenience Store
Williams
814 Massachusetts
M, 17H 7:40
F. & S 7 Midnight
Sun, 10:6
Accepting Applications for Semester Break Work
Wed. Dec. 6 Thurs., Dec. 7
10 am - 2 pm 10 am - 2 pm
Burge Union* Burge Union & Kansas Union*
$9^{25}$ starting
*Main floor lobbies
*Entry level positions
VECTOR
MARKETING marketing
CORPORATION division of
*Entry level positions*
*All majors may apply*
*Academic credit possible*
*Corporate scholarships*
*interview now before exams*
*Start work now or im*
mediately after finals
*Can remain part time when classes resume
ALCAS
*openings in Lawrence, Topeka Kansas City, Wichita and Omaha (if unable to assist, call 1-844-9879)
Open 'Til Midnight During Finals For Late Night Scoobie Snacks!
PUP'S Grill
Large cheddar fries & large Coke only $2.00 after 9pm Only during finals! No coupon required.
On the corner of 9th and Indiana * 749-1397
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, December 5, 1989
3
Departmental grade appeals OK'd
By Doug Fishback Kansan staff writer
Students are one step closer to being able to appeal course grades through formal departmental procedures.
The University Senate Executive Committee yesterday approved proposed amendments to the University Senate Rules and Regulations specifying that students can protest "improper application of the grading procedure."
Such grade challenges would go through unit, or departmental, procedures, with the possibility for appeal to the University Judicial Board.
The proposed amendments will go to the University Council on Jan. 25. If passed there, they will pass to the University Senate.
SenEx member Michael Schreiner said that no grade appeals policy existed and that the proposed amendments would give students and teachers tangible guidelines.
"It just gives us a better informed University,community," he said.
SenEx member William Sanders, Lawrence senior, said he thought the proposed amendments had a good chance of being passed by the Council, especially because they were more conservative than past attempts that called for the formation of a special grade appeals board.
Barbara Watkins, SenEx member, said that current grade appeal practices discouraged students because grade issues were "thrown into the school system,"主编李进稳. She said that students were intimidated by the prospect of charging an instructor with academic misconduct.
"We're looking for a smaller chunk of the lie." he said.
SenEx also discussed a draft of a response to a Board of Regents' report that said University officials should increase the number of class days in KU's academic calendar.
She said that a reduction in class days since 1900 was because of the University's lengthy final examination period. Ramaley said that additional instructional days could come from the restructuring of the final period and that administrators were considering a five- or six-day exam period, which could include a combination of two- and three-hour finals.
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said that the University could accommodate Regents options to add six class days.
The University now operates with an eight- or nine-day final exam
In other business, SenEx approved interim procedures for monitoring and reporting scientific misconduct. The procedures were approved so that KU would be in compliance with federal guidelines by Jan. 1, 1990.
Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, said that the interim measures satisfied Federal Department of Health and Human Services guidelines and that they agreed with University policy.
period, she said.
"These are pretty standard kinds of things," she said.
The guidelines deal with issues such as confidentiality and time limits for reporting suspected scientific misconduct.
The inferin policies will stand until the University grievance procedure review task force recommends changes in the grievance procedure based on a study it completed earlier this semester.
Tomas Stargardter/KANSAN
кодпису
Glow art
Brian Higer. Lawrence resident and glass blower, does lampwork with pyrex rods. Higer was displaying his work yesterday.
Age studies increase along with older population
By Stacy Smith Kansan staff writer
As the number of U.S. citizens older than 65 has increased, the need for research in the area of gerontology has grown, observers say.
Professors at the University of Kansas are preparing to meet that need.
More than 60 professors in various academic departments are interested in gerontology research, according to a recent survey conducted by the Gerontology Center.
"It's becoming more of an issue because of the demographics of society — people are aging," said Lynn Osterkamp, research associate at the center.
Between 1989 and 1988, the population of people over 65 increased by 17 percent. During the same period, the population of people under 65 increased by 6 percent, Osterkamp said.
"The older population is increasing faster than the younger population."
The Gerontology Center, located in Strong Hall, is a non-academic department serving graduate students and faculty members interested in the study of aging.
"The problems are there, and they haven't been researched as much," she said.
"We coordinate a concentration at the graduate level for individuals who want to obtain a concentration in aging." Osterkamp said. "We also
Jeremy Matchett, associate dean of pharmacy, recently completed a study on aging. He studied the medication use of uninstitutionalized geriatric people in Douglas County.
encourage faculty members to do research in aing and to include it in their courses."
The center also can help individuals identify potential financing sources for research on aging and preparing grant proposals for aging projects. "The health problems of older people are being seen as an increasing social problem," Osterkamp said.
"we found out generally that there are a lot of people who need more information about their medications," he said.
University counsel calls defense witness biased Alumna refutes charges against Willner
By Angela Baughman Kansan staff writer
With an aggressive, courtroom-like cross-examination, Rose Marino, associate general counsel for the chancellor, sought to discredit a witness yesterday during dismissal hearings for Dorothy Willner, professor of anthropology.
Before the Faculty Senate Committee on Tenure and Related Problems, Marino repeatedly asked Nancy Pemulski, one of Willner's former students, if she had ever personally heard any comments about the "desirability of avoiding Dorothy Willner as an instructor."
When Sempolki conceded that she had never heard a direct statement relating to that but had heard such an indirect statement, Marino noted that Sempolki had said "NO" to the same question about the direct and indirect statements in a 1986 trial and was thus changing a sworn answer.
Marino also questioned Sempolski about an $8 million lawsuit Sempolski had filed against several anthropology department members in an attempt to show that Sempolski was biased against at least half of the department.
Mempolski, who received a master's degree and a doctorate from the University of Kansas and works as an employment specialist at Boston University medical campus, was on the KU campus between 1975 and 1983, during which time she worked as a teaching assistant and took classes in the anthropology department.
Sempolski said that her lawsuit against 12 individuals was based on a conspiracy against her.
In other testimony, Sempolski said that Willner was respected by some students but that respect eventually deteriorated.
She said the students' respect for Willner had declined because the number of remarks and the amount of gossip she heard from the students about Willner had increased between 1977 and 1979.
She said the students had "in general characterized her in a detrimental way."
She said that Willner had not, in her work with Sempolski and others Sempolski knew well, failed to carry out academic duties or violated professional ethics, which are the two charges that the University has brought against Willner.
By Mark McHugh
Local talent gains confidence experience at open mic nights
Although Athens, Ga., is known for being on the cutting edge of new and alternative music, local music lovers don't have to travel that far to see bands get started.
By Mark McHugl Kansan staff writer
The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St., has open mic each Monday night for amateur performing artists and musicians. Admission is free.
Brett Mosiman, owner of the Bottleneck, said it gave the performers a chance to promote their acts or just boast their talents.
"It's fabulous," he said. "It gives the bands and performers a chance to play in front of an audience, and it also gives people a chance to see someone play for free."
Mosiman said the Bottleneck had sponsored open mic nights for two years. Other local open mic nights are offered by the Crossing, 618 W. 12th St., on Tuesday nights, and the Jazhaus, 926 1/2 Massachusetts St., which presents The Blues Jam every other Wednesday night.
"we get the widest range of music here," Mosiman said. "We seem to be fairly eclectic. We've had everything from a steel drum player to trashy garage bands. And there is some fun and weirdness that goes on."
"They'll make a beautiful painting, and they'll hide it in their closet," he said. "My goal is to see a lot more awareness in the arts in Lawrence."
Danny Dajero, whose stage name is Danny Dajer, editor of the alternative magazine Limelight and writer from Lawrence, plays host to open mic. He has been the master of ceremonies since May. He said he derived satisfaction from playing host at open mic because it gave people a chance to express themselves on stage. He said that without open stages people would not be able to display their talents for others.
"Every night's an experience because it's a perpetual present. Every night is going to be a little different, even if you have the same artist."
Although crowd participation is not always a part of the atmosphere at open mic nights, Danjer said, strange events occur.
"One night I got up on stage with a parrot on my shoulder, and I talked to it, and a girl came up and ripped it off my shoulder," he said.
It's fabulous. It gives the bands and performers a chance to play in front of an audience, and it also gives people a chance to see someone play for free.'
— Brett Mosiman Bottleneck owner
"It's blues drive," said Mary Walker, vocalist. "It's a mixture of blues and soul and rock 'n' roll."
Last night the first band to perform was the Witch Doctors, a Lawrence quartet that played blues-based rock.
Walker said the most difficult part of performing was getting started.
"I'm really nervous before I play," she said. "But when I get on stage with the guys, and we start, I'm comfortable.
"It's a really big high when I'm singing through the P.A. system. We don't have all the equipment that they have here."
Dave Roberts, 23, of Lawrence, has been coming to open mic since it began because of the different types of music it offers.
Andrew Nelson, guitarist for the Witch Doctors, keeps his composure through self-confidence.
"I just keep reminding myself that we sounded good at Phil's place (the drummer's house), so we'll sound good here," he said.
"The music here ranges from acoustic axe to hard-core heavy metal bands. It's kind of a starting point," he said.
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Tuesday, December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Tonganoxie students find rights aren't guaranteed
Freedom of expression suffered a major setback last week when the Tonganoxie Education Association condemned 97 Tonganoxie High School students and threatened to file disciplinary actions against them when the students walked out of classes in support of district teachers working under 1988-1989 contracts.
Approximately one-third of the high school's student body left the classroom to exercise their constitutionally granted freedom to "petition" and "to assemble... peaceably."
Unfortunately, based on the response of Superintendent Stephen McClure, these constitutional rights and privileges did not justify the actions of the 97 students. McClure, along with Tonganoxie High School principal Lee Smith, announced that the students, who walked out and did not attend classes on Wednesday, must serve a six-hour, in-school suspension and another six hours of community service.
This seems like a harsh penalty to impose upon citizens who were exercising their right to express their grievances. And while their constitutional rights have been violated, so has something else equally sacred, their right to think freely.
An institution of learning should be a place that fosters free thought and independent opinion, not a place that squelches it. Obsequious behavior should not be expected or preferred in a society that must constantly re-evaluate its values and goals.
Tonganoxie High School students should be praised for their actions, not punished. While legitimately adhering to guidelines prescribed in our Constitution, these citizens were answered by school administrators' hypocrisy. Their response ignored inherent rights and even ionoardized free thought.
Today, students across the country are criticized for being unaware and apathetic. But based on the response of the Tonganoxie School District, conformity and ignorance certainly is preferable to action.
Thom Clark for the editorial board
Veto of Chinese Relief Act jeopardizes students' lives
If President Bush vetoes the Emergency Chinese Immigration Relief Act of 1989, he will endanger the lives of 60,000 innocent human beings. The victims of Bush's neglect will be the Chinese national students who are attending colleges and universities across the United States.
The legislation, introduced by Sen. William Armstrong, R.-Colo., would allow students to remain in the U.S. upon the expiration of their visas if there is sufficient reason to believe they would be persecuted upon their return to China.
Bush is expected to veto this legislation because the Chinese government wants him to. The Chinese government is so opposed to the U.S. protecting these students that it has threatened to quit sending students to the United States if Bush does not veto the legislation.
Since when does our country succumb to the idle threats of a regressive, anti-humanitarian, communist country? The Chinese government will only hurt its own economic and technological advancement if it denies visas to promising students. It's China's own fault that these students seek refuge. As a nation, we don't need to have the lives of 60,000 people on our conscience.
Bush should not give any credence to the demand. The issue at hand is not one of party politics. After all, the legislation was overwhelmingly approved in both the House and the Senate. Therefore, the only explanation for the President's veto is that he is honoring the Chinese government's request.
It is obvious from the occurrences last spring and summer that the Chinese government is not planning any political reforms. Its intolerance and disregard for democracy and humanity was exemplified through its actions against reformists. There is absolutely no reason for us to respect the Chinese government's request. It is China that will suffer the repercussions of its threats, not the U.S. And there is no justification for making 60,000 Chinese students return to a country where they will be persecuted and brainwashed.
If President Bush denies these students refuge, he will be denying the will of Congress and the will of the people of the United States.
Kathv Walash for the editorial board
News staff
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THAT'S IT! NOW SET THE HOOK!!
BUSH GORB
EVENTS
Salvadorans deserve respect
The United States is not defending democracy in El Salvador; it is only supporting death and destruction. The $4.5 billion in U.S. military and economic aid to El Salvador for the past 10 years has not fostered peace and democracy but has only encouraged increased repression by a series of right-wing governments. The recent offensive by the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) indicates the level of popular discontent with the Salvadoran government and the need for a political change in El Salvador.
The U.S. government has sought to cast the leftist insurgency in El Salvador as part of a Moscow-backed communist conspiracy for world domination. This perception, however, ignores the internal economic and political conditions in Central America that led to a search for alternative solutions to their problems. Capitalism is not the solution; it has only brought skyrocketing debt, hyperinflation, poverty and starvation to the people. Socialism can grow must grow out of a study of their history and development and not as a paranoid reaction to an ill-perceived "communist" threat to our hemisphere.
El Salvador has a long and bloody history of right-wing military repression designed to subjugate landless peasants to the whims of a wealthy oligarchy. For years Salvadoran peasants have been organizing for a democratic society in which there would be an equal distribution of wealth and power. In 1832 the Salvadoran army responded to the organizational efforts of Farabund Marti, the ideological forebear of the FMLN, with a massacre of 30,000 peasants in an oppressive government. Repression has always been the response of the Salvadoran government to greater democracy and popular participation in the government.
The present right-wing ARENA government of Alfredo Cristiani continues this tradition of responding to popular democratic impulses with bullets. On Oct. 31 of this year the Security Forces of Cristiani's government bombed the offices of FENASTRAS (a trade union federation) and COMADRES (a mother's committee for those who "disappeared" in the military's dirty war). These attacks, which killed 10 people and injured 43, demonstrate how the Cristiani government responds to its popular non-violent opposition. This is the action of the death squad government that the United States supports in El Salvador. These attacks, and countless ones before them, led many Salvadorans to understand that neither Cristiani nor the U.S. government was interested in a war against them. Rather, Salvadorans saw these bombings as a declaration of war by the ARENA government against the people.
Today, a small, wealthy elite continues to benefit from the exploitation of the masses in El Salvador. Two percent of the population controls 60 percent of the land. The average income for a Salvadoran worker is $820 a year, but many workers and peasants earn much less. Many Salvadorans cannot afford the basic necessities of life, and inadequate medical care has led to a high infant mortality rate. When Salvadorans organize to improve their desperate situation, the military responds with increased repression. Since 1980, more than 50,000 people, out of a population of 5.5 million, have been killed by death squads. Thousands more have been killed by the military's indiscriminate bombing and 1.5 million have been displaced from their homes.
Marc Becker
Guest columnist
In the present guerrilla offensive, more than a thousand civilians have been killed by the extensive use of white phosphorus bombs, rockets and Gatling machine guns in densely populated neighborhoods in San Salvador. This is not the action of a government with popular democratic support, but that of a desperate regime willing to hold on to power at any cost. The FMLN offensive continues strongly despite repeated statements by the Salvadoran and U.S. governments that it was a failure. Far from failing, the ranks of the FMLN have increased dramatically since the beginning of the offensive. The FMLN enjoys the popular support that the right-wing government does not have. The FMLN's military control of the outlying provinces has allowed the people to set up their own popular governments. For the first time in Salvadoran history, the people are able to gain control over their own social, political and economic life.
The ideology behind the FMLN does not come from Moscow but grows out of the historic economic and political conditions in El Salvador. FMLN demands such as land reform, purging the military of death squad members, freedom for civilian groups to organize and protest and negotiations with the Cristiani government are in response to their own demands. If it were happening in Eastern Europe, the United States would see it as democracy. In El Salvador we must be equally willing to defend and support democratic uprisings.
To cut off aid to the Salvadoran government would mean an end to right-wing repression and exploitation, and through negotiations, the flowering of a popular democracy in El Salvador. This move may cost an elite few their wealth and power, but the majority of the Salvadoran people would benefit tremendously. It is time for the U.S. government to respect self-determination in El Salvador.
▶ Marc Becker is a Lawrence graduate student in Latin American History.
Women smell like magazines
A freelance writer, working on an article, called to ask me what perfume I preferred on women. The writer was supposed to ask a bunch of people that question "If a woman passes you on the street, is there one perfume that you recognize immediately?" the writer asked.
"Actually," I said, "all women smell like magazines to me these days."
And it's true. Now that the slick magazines are filled with those snap-open advertising inserts that are coated with perfume, there is no real way to tell the difference between one perfume and another. The magazine-reading experience, once designed for the eyes and the brain, is now designed for the nose. By the time you're finished with a stack of magazines, you have smelled about a dozen perfumes.
My guess is that this is working against the perfume manufacturers. Yes, you can snap open the advertising inserts and find out what the perfume or cologne smells like. But you aren't left with any real memory of the different names of the different perfumes. What was the old slogan? "I can't seem to forget you; your Wind Song stays on my mind." The smell of perfume is supposed to remind you of a person, not of a publication.
I have a real feeling that the freelance writer is not going to be able to use my quote — a story about the romance of perfume will not be helped out by the observation that women are beginning to smell like perfume. The same could happen with obsolete by now. For the snap-open perfume inserts are being replaced by something even more nefarious.
I was reading a men's magazine the other day, and a few minutes after I had put it down I looked at my hands and let out a yell. My hands had turned three different colors, none of them very pleasant-looking. The colors were dark and splobyte, like nothing I had ever seen. I didn't know what was wrong, but my first instinct was to call a good dermatologist, and fast.
PETER
Before I did that, though, I tried to wash the colors off, and succeeded. I was totally puzzled by what could have happened, but then I went back through the magazine. There had been an ad from the Geurlian company, which makes perfume. It had looked like one of those snap-open
Bob Greene
Syndicated columnist
perfume ads. But it had not been for perfume.
The ad had been for "bronzers" and "blushers." Bronzers and blushes are makeup — you rub the stuff on your face and it turns your face a different color than normal. The blushers and blushers are being marketed both to men and to women.
Magazine advertising technology — which seemingly had been stalled with snap-open perfume inserts — has now reached the point where inserts featuring actual bronzers and blushers are possible. That is what had happened; I had inadvertently rubbed my hands against the bronzer/blusher ad, thinking that the pictures of the bronzers and blushers were merely that: pictures. They weren't; they were actual bronzers and blushers, which is why I screamed when I saw my hands several minutes later.
Vandy Lipman, an executive with Guerlain, said that what I had encountered was a "powder strip." She explained that a "powder strip" is different from a "fragrance strip." With a "fragrance strip" in a magazine, you smell perfume. With a "powder strip," you get blushers and bronzeers on your skin.
"It allows the customer to test the product without having to go to the counter in a store." Lipman said.
She said that readers are expected to rub the stuff onto their faces. Guerlain is running the ads in national men's and women's magazines, she said, and other manufacturers of blushers and bronzeers are doing the same than
Had any other startled readers complained about unexpectedly having their hands turn colors?
"We haven't had any problems with it," Lipman said. "You really have to rub it to get it. There has to be some friction."
Bob Greene is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Cartoon strip not funny
Michael W. Gier Parsons Junior
"Camp Unheely" is an interesting comic strip. It is refreshing to see the University Daily Kansan give space to allow Mr. Patty to ply his trade and address some of the issues unique to KU students. The strip, however, is quite simply not funny. As a replacement to the humorous but untimely deceased "Bloom County," I'm afraid it falls very short. The Kansan should keep the strip and should in the future continue to provide a medium for student cartoonists. I feel, however, that a more humorous, syndicated strip is both necessary and prudent. I suggest "Calvin and Hobbes."
Rightist view not realistic
Stan Dial, your editor on the civil war in El Salvador disturb me greatly. You see, I was beginning to believe, with great relief that your brand of conservative myopia was nearly extinct. Alas, itlings like a bad case of scurvy. You seem to believe a rather ancient (in light of recent events in Eastern Europe) conservative fantasy/nightmare that there is a worldwide "Communist agenda" to overtake the United States by first topping smaller countries and using them as stepping stones to our back door. Now, I know old habits are hard to break, but the commies and their cronies are being put to pasture in droves. And what about the "agenda"? Is that distributed like a newsletter? I would like to get on that mailing list. It would make for some interesting reading.
The problem in El Salvador doesn't stem from some imaginary agenda; it lies with the government that the United States has been keeping in power for years and is evidenced by the fact that $3.5 billion in U.S. aid (mainly military) hasn't been able to shut the rebels down. The rebels are Salvadoran not American, and they are fighting to bring an end to a regime that has proven its ability to do three things: ignore the general population, keep the land and money in the hands of a few, and eliminate anyone who disagrees with this.
The "leftist threat" to El Salvador is the population of El Salvador tired of living the "rightist" reality, and there is evidently widespread popular support for the regime, which crushed years ago by the much more heavily equipped Salvadoran army.
Are the rebels anti-United States? Well, yes, probably because we supplied the bullets to fill the heads of the civilian political opposition, which led to what is now a civil war. As for the rebels being Marxist, why would the Catholic church of El Salvador support a godless cause? It doesn't make sense and neither does your dogmatic conservative support for the continuation of aid to a government that does little more than pay lip service to democracy.
Silence the liberals? You've got to be kidding
Christopher Hill Houston, Texas, senior
Irish history distorted
In the article, "Library receives grant to catalog Irish works," in the Oread, Vol. 14, No. 13, there is a gross distortion of history. The Irish Free State was not "founded" by Britain (in 1922). Ireland fought her final war with England and freed herself from 800 years of occupation, signing a truce in 1920, having convinced England it could no longer militarily defend Ireland. What the Anglo-Irish treaty did not achieve was the full 32 counties of Ireland. Michella Collin, director of intelligence for the IRA and the prime guerrilla leader of the movement, and Authur Griffith, a member of the provisional government, were deputized by President de Valera to lead the truce talks in London. They were forced, in December 1921, to
"settle" for 28 counties. Ireland and England both still are paying the price for this piece of paper. The O'Hegarty collection in the Spencer Research Library should provide an excellent opportunity to educate us on this and other matters in Anglo-Irish relations.
Maura Piekalkiewicz
Lawrences Resident
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, December 5, 1989
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8. B&O
9. Pioneer
10. Sansui
ALL 10 TOP BRANDS
OF RECEIVERS
ARE FEATURED AT
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Total Brands
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Total Models
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THE 1989
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AT
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2. Klipsch
3. KEF
4. B & W
5. Polk
6. SneB Acoustics
7. Phase Tech
8. B & O
9. Martin-Logan
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5. Boston Acoustics
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7. Sony
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6
Tuesday, December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansas
News from the hill. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Campus Page
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MOVIE LINE 841-5191
Bottleneck
TONIGHT
3 Big Bands
From England,The Mekons
also Atlantic Recording Artists:
11th Dream Day
Chrysalis Recording Artists:
Too Much Joy
18 & Over. Don't Miss It!
/Ricky Dean Simatra
SAT DEC 9
Trip Shakespeare
WED, DEC. 6
Getten Recording Artists
Shadowland
with
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THURS. DEC. 7
From Athens, Georgia
Uncle Green
and Special Guests from St. Louis.
Uncle Tupelo
FRI. DEC. 8 Neptunes
KU and K-State join forces for geology program
By Anita Meyer Kansan staff writer
The University of Kansas has offered a doctoral program in geology for more than 60 years and now will share the program with Kansas State University.
K-State and KU announced their decision
Friday to join forces.
Students would attend classes at KU for at least one year, said Tony Walton, KU chairman of the department of geology. After that, students could choose to stay at KU or go to K-State, but the degree would be from KU.
State, but the degree would be K-State. Walton said K-State could not offer a doctoral program because its faculty and library were too small.
Walton said he thought K-State could offer students information in areas that KU could not offer.
"this way, we're able to benefit from all the state's resources," he said.
"At a doctoral level, you want a department that is most conducive to your specialty," he said. K-State faculty complement the department. For example, if a student is interested in economic geology or trace elements, K-State faculty have that expertise.
Joe Graf, chairman of the K-State geology department, said the university never had a doctoral geology program.
"In the early 70s, we offered a doctorate in geo-chemistry," he said. "After it had been in existence a couple years, the Regents evaluated programs, and the ones that hadn't graduated a certain amount were discontinued. Since our program was new, it hadn't graduated anyone and was discontinued."
"The first advantage is that we're increasing the size of the doctoral faculty," he said. "We are adding expertise to our doctoral program and different approaches. It enhances our program and introduces specialties."
Graf said K-State's program would be enhanced by KU faculty.
'treat said the doctoral program also offered students the chance to complete extensive research because they would be able to stay at K-State longer.
"It will help the faculty because the student will be doing the research for three years instead of just two if they were only master's students." he said.
He said the students' research would translate into more grant money.
It granting agencies see doctoral work being done, they'll be more willing to give us
funding," he said. "It looks better if students are going to be here three years doing research."
Matt Beebe, Grosseie, Mich., doctoral student, said he thought that a K-State/KU doctoral program would attract more students.
"I think it'a a very good option," he said. "I think K-State can bring expertise to KU and vice versa. It'rs mutually beneficial to both universities."
Graf said about one-third of K-State's yearly six to 20 master's degree students in geology went on to other universities to earn doctorates.
He said he thought more students would earn doctorates if they did not have to go to other universities.
Harvard Society of Nerds and Geeks finds love in studies
The Associated Press
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — It's the laugh. That obnoxious giggle that ends in a full-fledged snort. That's the mark of true nerd.
the mark of due honor.
Jeremy Kahn, founder, president and ideological spokesman for the newly formed Society of Nerds and Geeks, or SONG, at Harvard University has the nerd snort.
If "Vertas," or truth, is the motio of Harvard and "Vanitas" is the motio of the Harvard Lampoon, then
the slogan of SONG is "Veritas is more important than Vanitas," explained Kahn, 20, a junior majoring in math.
"The kind of people we're looking for are very interested in what they're studying. Not as worried about, like, what other people think about them," said Kahn who punctuates his sentences with "like" a lot.
"Truth is more important than to look good," he added.
Everyone knows or has known a nerd or a geek. A nerd was that
Nerds, however, go on to invent amazing new machines and make millions on the patents. Geeks go on to found new companies and become the CEO featured on Fortune's cover for maverick style.
brainy math major in college, the one with the thick glasses, the perpetual pocket calculator and plaid shirt.
Will nerds inherit the earth? No,
but they might just save it, Kahn
saves.
The first step, he says, is to help take the stigma off students who live
to study, not party. SONG, organized in mid-October by Kahn, aims to do with meetings, speakers and other activities. "Basically it's putting academics ahead of social life."
With about 35 members, SONG meets weekly and fosters discussions on how to study better and improve academic standings.
"We talk about, like, why grades are important to us or how we see relationships, which may seem strange for nerds and geeks to talk
Future plans for SONG include lectures, off-bat dances for those slightly out of step and a procrastination hot line.
about," said Kahn. And he laughed that nerdy laugh.
"I think students procrastinate more than anyone else. It's amazing how much time I spend procrastinating," Kahn said. A hot line could get students "on the road to recovery. In 10 minutes they'd be sitting down and getting to work."
Glacier Movement
Eskimo pie
Gary Minden is going to the Antarctic. So is his Macintosh. With his portable Macintosh, this KU associate professor of electrical engineering will travel over 10,000 miles. From KU to Hawaii to the Antarctic. And back again.
The portable Macintosh will allow him to study glaciers analyze his data, create graphs and charts,and bring them home to print. And he won't need a plug.
Glacier Movement
You'll probably never get to the Antarctic. But you will leave KU. With a portable Macintosh, you'll have the power to be your best wherever your job takes you. On the plane, in the taxi, in the lobby, and in the board room. And you won't need a plug.
Macintosh® .
The power to do your best at KU
© 1989 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
The Mac deals are here!
Burge Union
864-5697
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
---
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, December 5, 1989
Nation/World
7
Warsaw Pact leaders' meeting shows Europe's changing faces
The Associated Press
MOSCOW — Warsaw Pact leaders met yesterday amid rapid, bewildering political change in Eastern Europe and uncertainty about the 34-year-old military alliance's role and unity.
For leaders of four of the seven nations, it was their first meeting, underscoring how quickly old guard Communists have been swept from power. Going on another report on his Malta summit with President Bush
The seven-member pact, which used to be diplomatic cover for the Kremlin's ideological policing of its allies, faces unprecedented pluralism, from its first non-Communist head of government, Polish Premier Tadeusz Mazowiecki, to Romania's
hard-line Communist leader Nicolae Ceausescu.
Somehow, those men must agree on Eastern Europe's future and defense policy if the Warsaw Pact is to be an alliance in anything but name. Chastened by past interventions in their countries' lives, some reformers now in power also want guarantees that the pact's armed forces will not be turned against them.
In fact, under Gorbachev, the Soviets appear ready to accept virtu-
Having already ceased to make ideological demands on its allies, the Warsaw Pact should "stay out" of member nations' politics altogether, said Foreign Minister Gyula Horn of Hungary, where legal groundwork was laid this fall for democratic, multinarity elections.
anyly any sort of political change in Eastern Europe, provided that allegiance remain unmaken to the defense treaty written in 1965 at a time of tight, sometimes violent, Kremlin domination.
Recent Soviet pronouncements indicate that the Kremlin envisions the pact's future in a blurring of functions with the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance, or COMECON, the socialist trade bloc that includes all Warsaw Pact members.
In October, Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze said the Kremlin would be interested in negotiating the abolition of both NATO and the Warsaw Pact by the year 2000 as part of the Kremlin campaign to create a "common European home."
Czechs rally to support opposition Demonstrators reject new Communist-dominated government
The Associated Press
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia - More than 150,000 demonstrators chanting "They must go!" rejected the new Communist-dominated government yesterday and demanded free elections in a show of support for the opposition.
Also yesterday, thousands of tourists from Czechoslovakia freely visited the West for the first time in decades after the government lifted most travel restrictions.
The demonstrators gathered in central Wenceslas Square for the first time since Nov. 27, when a nationwide general strike forced the government to grant historic concessions to the opposition. That demonstration capped 11 straight days of rallies in Czechoslovakia.
Yesterday's demonstrators waved red, white and blue national flags and applauded opposition demands for elections by July and a second general strike on Dec. 11 if there is no new government by Sunday.
The turnout at the rally and smaller ones elsewhere was a clear signal to the government that the opposition has massive popular support for its demands for democracy.
They were protesting the new coalition government named Sunday, which brought only five non-Communist candidates to the contest, and left Communists in control of all key ministries. Thirteen were holdovers from the previous Communist
In an indication that the government may respond to demands for new ministers, First Deputy Premier Bohumi Urban met with two opposition representatives to negotiate a new meeting with Communist Premier Ladislav Adamec later this week.
Cabinet.
And in another sign of the pressure on the Communists, Fristisk Pitra, the premier of the Czech republican government, asked for more time to consider changes at the republic level, postponing an announcement originally scheduled for last night.
Eleven of the 17 ministers under Pitra in the Czech republic have submitted their resignations.
EAST GERMAN CORRUPTION:
Some East Germans are so outraged by the corruption of disgraced former leaders that they try to storm secret police offices to make sure that evidence was protected, Communist Party reformers said yesterday.
Prosecutors blocked access to evidence that might be used against the ousted officials. Citizens joined police in guarding important assets and the opportunity an ever-widening corruption investigation.
Premier Hans Modrow emerged as the leading political figure one day after the Communist Party leadership resigned. He led a three-member delegation to the Warsaw Pact summit in Moscow.
Wolfgang Schwanitz, now chief of national security, ordered flights to Romania halted because of reports that sensitive material was being smuggled to the Warsaw Saw Pact ally, whose leader, Nicole Ceausescu, has rejected reform.
Officials said no proof that documents were being sent there had
World Briefs
surfaced. Opposition sources said earlier that important documents were taken from party headquarters to Schoenfeld airport for a flight to Romania.
LEGAL MOTIONS DENIED: A federal judge has denied a series of legal motions by Wichita businessman Jim Hersberger, who is charged with 37 counts of fraud.
Hersberger and a former business associate, Steve Levandowski, were indicted by a federal grand jury Oct. 5 in Topeka. Hersberger, a prominent philanthropist and oilman, is accused of setting up a scheme to defraud investors and working interest owners in a company he operated, Petroleum Energy Inc. Levandowski is a former employee of Petroleum Energy.
Dykh Dahl, a former business associate of Hersberger, already has pleaded guilty to mail fraud and expected to testify for the prosecutor.
U. D. District Judge Dale Saffels Friday denied a defense motion to have Dahl undergo a psychiatric examination and produce certain
He also denied a defense motion to dismiss the indictment on the grounds of prosecutorial misconduct.
Hershberger and Levandowski sought separate trials, but Saffels also denied that motion.
income tax returns.
sought seap___
also denied that motion.
DOG OWNER ON TRIAL: In the
first case of its kind, the owner of a
pitt bull dog went on trial yesterday
in the murder of a toddler maudled
after wandering into the dog's path
while, prosecutors say, it was
guarding 243 marrijuana plants.
Jury selection began in California. Jurys Clara Cita County Superior Court for Michael Berry, 39, of Morgan Hill. Berry is charged with second-degree murder for the death of his older neighbor, James Soto, who died of severe blood loss after being attacked by Berry's pit bull.
According to the prosecutor and the Humane Society of the United States, the trial marks the first time in this country that a pet owner has been charged with murder because of an animal's actions.
Filipino rebels refuse to surrender
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines – Rebel soldiers yesterday offered to allow hundreds of foreigners to leave hotels in the financial district, seized last weekend by mutineers seeking to topple President Corazon Aquino.
Hundreds of U.S. citizens and other foreigners were pinned down in homes and hotels in the posh Makati district, where forces loyal to Aquino contained the mutineers to 22 buildings.
About 400 rebels continued to occupy Mactan Air Base in Cebu, 350 miles south of Manila. Their leader
The United States provided fresh military supplies to the Aquino government and promised assistance for civilian hospitals, said Richard Boucher, a State Department spokesman in Washington.
In Manila, a statement from a rebel spokesman, Capt. Albert Yen said that the insurgents would release the foreigners to dispel suspicions that they were being held hostage.
refused to surrender and threatened to blow up the base's planes.
"That's the farthest thing that we could do," he said. "We pledged our lives to this cause. We will hold the
line to the last drop of our blood."
U. S. Embassy spokesman Jerry Huchel estimated that 215 U.S. citizens were trapped in three hotels in Makati and more than 300 Japanese.
"Literally, we're in the middle," said Barbara Julich, a New York businesswoman trapped in the Intercontinental Hotel. "There are babies in the building, and there is no baby and the mothers are hysterical."
At least three people were killed in Makati yesterday and 15 wounded, including one U.S. citizen, by rebel snipers and in fighting between rebel and loyalist forces.
STUDIO ART
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204 W. 13th
RING IN THE NEW YEAR WITH BALLOONS.
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Package Includes:
- 6 nights accommodation at Timber Run Condominiums. Each unit in this student complex includes Fireplace, Full Kitchen, CATV, Outdoor Heated Pool, and Hot Tubs.
- 4 out of 5 day Photo Lift Ticket
- A great schedule of parties such as Hot Tub Happy Hours, Mountainside Wine & Cheese Party. Lots of Free Refreshments, great music, and good times!
LAST CHANCE! To sign up
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Arrangements by. Echo Tours Inc.
Call Bill or Petey 841-8155
$20 Rebate On HP's Top-of-the-line Calculators
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BRAIN FOOD
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1. 下列对“二战”相关知识的叙述,正确的是 ( ) A. 二战爆发后,日本人利用大兵侵略中国、日本领土 B. 二战期间,美国占领了菲律宾 C. 二战结束后,美国正式退出世界军事联盟 D. 二战后,美国开始推行霸权政策
$
8
Tuesday, December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Mrs. Browne, our beloved teacher and friend, has been an integral part of our lives for many years. She is a kind and caring woman who always provides us with the love and support we need. She is also a dedicated educator who helps us develop our skills and learn important life lessons. She is truly a treasured companion in our life. We wish her continued wisdom and guidance as we navigate through this beautiful world together.
E. Joseph Zurga/KANSAN
O Christmas tree
A student passes by the Christmas tree that stands in the rotunda of Strong Hall. The tree is on display each year In celebration of the holiday season.
Scarce parking in Lawrence
By Dave Wakefield
Kansan staff writer
Always in short supply, parking downtown becomes a scarcity during the peak-shopping days of Christmas, downtown merchants said.
Downtown merchants, employees cope in Christmas season
W. Jeth
Lawrence KS
66044 (013) 841-1194
And for employees downtown, finding parking spaces becomes more difficult than ever.
Marilyn Laws-Porter, an employee at Piper, Jaffray and Hopwood Inc., 647 Massachusetts St., said parking had been a problem for employees during the 18 years she had worked downtown.
"In some ways, it is better today," she said. "We have gotten a few four-hour meters behind the store and across the street (behind the store)."
But the long-term meters fill up early in the morning, leaving employees who start work late or who must run errands during the day in a fix, she said.
"It is truly a struggle each day," she said.
It is truly a struggle because usually require their employees to avoid certain lots, but enforcement is difficult, said Lawrence Mayor Bob Schumm, who owns Buffalo Bob's Smokehouse, 719 Massachusetts St.
"I have employees sign a statement that says they will not park in designated areas," he said.
Areas off-limits to employees are along Massachusetts Street and in the two-hour lots behind the stores, he said.
Kim Dycus, an employee at the Fields Store, 712 Massachusetts St. said there were two spaces behind the
store reserved for employees, but that they were usually full. Most employees park in the two-hour lot behind the store and move their cars every two hours or erase the chalk marks from their tires, she said.
Parking patrol officers use chalk marks to locate cars that have been parked more than two hours in restricted lots.
As has been done for the past few Christmas seasons,
merchants have paid the city $2,000 to hood meters
downtown. Parking will be free for shoppers from Dec. 6
to Dec. 28.
One reason offered by the association for the change was abuse of the hooded meters by employees and residents.
This year, the Downtown Lawrence Association had proposed not hooding the meters. Instead, the merchants would give shoppers dimes to pay the meters.
But downtown merchants said they did not think employee parking at the hooded meters was a problem.
Kathy McClung, manager at Maurice's, 708 Massachusetts St., said the hooded meters did not tempt employees because of the two-hour time limit.
Schumm said the city was trying to increase the available parking downtown.
"The city continues to use meter revenues to purchase land for new parking," he said.
He cited a new lot recently opened in the 800 block of New Hampshire as an example.
Soviet speaks of ending Cold War
By Bryan Swan Kansan staff writer
Soviet professor Robert Ivanov said that only the people of the superpowers, not their leaders, could bring an end to the Cold War and that the reunification of Germany would be the first important test of those governments' abilities to work together.
Ivanov, Soviet professor of history at the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences in Moscow, said yesterday during a lecture in the Kansas Union that there was no viable alternative to Mikhail Gorbachev and his policies, only the possibility of a renewed dictatorship. Ivanov, a visiting professor, will return in January to the Soviet Union.
After 70 years of state economy, to just turn to a free economy is not so easy. Perestroika, even the best plan, will not give you billions and billions of rubles tomorrow.'
"After 70 years of state economy, to just turn to a free economy is not so easy," he said, referring to his countrymen's impatience with the pace of reform. "Perestroika, even the best plan, will not give you billions and billions of rubles tomorrow."
— Robert Ivanov Soviet professor
THE PHILZONE
Ivanoan said Gorbachev's plan to reduce state ownership of the economy from 85 percent to 30 percent would give people a great incentive to work and would not cause the kind of political instability being experienced by people in East Germany.
Norman Saul, professor of history, said Ivanov had been to Kansas several times before he came to KU to teach. He said Ivanov's latest book, about organized crime, would be out soon. The book will compare the rise of organized crime activity tied to illegal distribution of alcohol
in the Soviet Union with the history of organized crime activities in the United States during Prohibition.
"Not everything depends on your country or my country," he said. "It also depends on the German people. In a week there will probably be an election, and they might put forward the question of reunification of the country."
after East German Communist leader Egon Krenz and his entire government resigned Sunday. They were replaced with a 25-member panel of reformers.
Ivanov said that a reunified, economically powerful Germany would not be allowed to belong to either the Warsaw Pact or NATO but that great powers had historically never been neutral.
Ivanov said one of the reasons Mikhail Gorbachev had proposed a second Helsinki Security Conference during the recent Malta Summit was because of Soviet concerns about a reunified Germany.
The subject of German reunification received renewed emphasis
"East Germany is not as important to the Warsaw Pact as West Germany is to NATO," he said. "West Germany has three times as much territory, has 60 million people to East Germany's 16 million and is more powerful from an industrial point of view."
Ivanov, who fought in World War II, said he had mixed feelings about German reunification. He said his brother and almost all of his friends from school were killed in the war, although he realized that the people in today's Germans were not responsible for the deaths.
Have a brush with fame. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Arts/Entertainment Page
UK
SPECTRUM
films
7.00pm
TONIGHT!
Woodruff
Auditorium
$1.50
your source for
alternative film
programming
@ KU
it's World at War week!
Dark Journey
A drama of World War One espionage and romance as a British agent (Vivien Leigh) and the German agent sent to eliminate her (Conrad Veidt) fall for each other.
Hardee'son23rd& Iowa Now Open 24 Hours
Tues.-Sat. 10-5
Sunday 1-5
If you missed him the first time, come see Glen Spence of the Cherokee-Creek
This week's HAWK CARD special
Bacon & Egg Biscuit $ 79 ^{c}$
Req. Roast Beef $ 99 ^{c} $
HARMONIC CIRCLE
GALLERY
Get your today at either Hardege's location 2030 West 23rd or 1313 West 6th - FREE for the asking. The Hawk Card is exclusively for KU students and is good for weekly cardholder specials.
Get Yours Today
THE HAWK KARD.
The bearer of this card is entitled to all privileges and benefits as specified by Hardee's Restaurants in Lawrence.
Hardee's.
Hardeez's
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The last of the Indian arrowhead makers will show his arrowheads and fine silver and gemstone jewelry on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, Dec. 9th & 10th at the Harmonic Circle Gallery. 10 East 9th Street 841-394
We're out to win you over.
Come See Our Rims!
Free Singlevision lens with purchase of scratch coating and ultra violet protection. Progressive No Line Lens $99.00.
Brady Optical
Also
- We have 600 frames lining our walls. The largest in Lawrence.
- Most glasses repaired while you wait
- The biggest and best selection of sunglasses, including Vuarnet, Bolle, Ray Ban, Serengetti, Carrera and Christian Dior.
- The biggest and best selection of
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842-
Our Italian Special!
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TAKE A FRIEND HOME TO STUDY.
Study with Cliffs Notes, because
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, December 5, 1989
/
Student cooks up successful restaurant business
Pup's owner self-taught
By Steve Buckner Kansan staff writer
One of the many things that separates John Hetler from a typical businessman is that Hetler has managed three careers before graduating from college.
John Hetler owns Pup's Grill, 847 Indiana St.
Hetter's first company, Pinnacle Productions, a disc jockey service, was successful enough to pay for his education at the University of Kansas. His second venture, a T-shirt screening company called S&B Promotions, covered expenses for spring break trips.
His most recent business, Pup's Grill, 847 Indiana St.,
opened last year and may provide a career for the Lake
Forest, ill., senior, after he graduates in May.
Hether didn't attend school last year in order to get Pup's started. This semester he is taking 21 hours to make up the lost class time. He said his psychology major was good preparation for a business career, and he offered straightforward advice to students who want to become entrepreneurs.
"If you can imagine it, you can do it," Hetler said. "If you have a good idea, act on it. But wait 'til you're out of school."
"I went to employees and owners" to learn more about the restaurant business, he said. "The employees said 'Great,' the owners said 'No way.'"
Although he had never worked for a restaurant before opening Pup's, Hetler wasn't deterred in his career choice.
The words of discouragement Heller received from the owners were a good thing, he said, because it made him dig for solutions. Heller said he heard more positive things than negative, so he opened a restaurant that served Chicago-style hot dogs, which are called "pups" in his home area.
"People in business want to help. It's a big thrill for them," he said.
Hetler's on-the-job training was an eye-opener, he said. When the restaurant opened, he concentrated on running the business instead of managing it.
Running the business, he said, meant doing anything to keep the doors open. Keeping organized was crucial, Hether said, and he devoted himself to things-to-do lists to stay on top of his business. Despite his penchant for organization, he said he made plenty of mistakes in the first months of business.
In four months of bullying,
"If you're doing things and failing, that's all right,"
Hether said. "That is, it's all right if you learn from the
mistakes and don't do it again."
Hetter said he had progressed from running Pup's to managing it. Managing, he said, entailed communicating with his two managers, establishing employee relations and setting and reviewing goals.
Jim Watson, a friend of Heter during college and one of two Pup's managers, said he was impressed with his
If you can imagine it, you can do it. If you have a good idea, act on it. But wait 'til you're out of school.'
- John Hetler
Entrepreneur and KU student
PUPS
"He doesn't have a business background, but he has a head for business," Watson said. "He's learning quickly and doing a really good job. The employees love working here for him."
boss's results.
Hetter said he got his ambition from his parents, whom he characterized as hard workers who put the family first. He said he grew up in an affluent suburb of Chicago and worked as a teacher, teaching the family and neighborhood, instead of only feeding it.
John Hetler assists employee Byron Myrick, Chicago junior, at the restaurant.
Heller said he was happy that he had been able to mix Chicago with Lawrence.
"I'm grateful that Lawrence is so understanding in letting us learn," he said. "We could not have done this in another town. The people are great; they stuck with us."
Bill Lytle, a Kansas City media broker and entrepreneur expert, said people such as Hetler should succeed in places such as Lawrence.
"University towns that size would be good for small and medium-sized entrepreneurs in fast-food restaurants," he said. "There is a stable economy because of
the University dollars pumped in by KU and the students. Lawrence is still a place where an entrepreneur can get started because there are so many diverse interests.[14]
Attention! December Graduates
We will be taking orders on December 4th-6th from 10 a.m.-4 p.m.for graduation announcements. Announcements should arrive in April 1990.Home delivery is available.
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Tuesday, December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Drop-out rate for minority students after the first year
1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
KU
Am. Indian 70.0%
Indian 60.0%
Black 50.0%
Hispanic 40.0%
Asian 30.0%
White 20.0%
White 10.0%
OU
(Figures show drop-out rates in percentages).
Hispanic 70.0%
Indian 60.0%
White 40.0%
Black 30.0%
Asian 20.0%
Asian 10.0%
Drop-out rate for minority students after the first year
1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987
KU
70.0%
Am.
Indian
60.0%
Black
50.0%
Hispanic
40.0%
Asian
30.0%
White
20.0%
10.0%
(Figures show drop-out rates in percentages).
Hispanic 70.0%
Am. Indian 60.0%
White 50.0%
Black 30.0%
Asian 20.0%
Retention
Continued from p. 1
at KU, said he was not sure anyone knew the answers to problems about the retention of minority students.
"Part of it may have to do with the quality of education from where
some students came from before they came to KU," Shulenburger said.
The quality of a student's previous education is reflected in ACT scores. The ACT is not a measure of ability, but rather of competence. The student has previously learned, he said.
less able, they often start with an educational disadvantage," Shulen-burger said.
Another possible reason for poor retention rates could be that many Hispanic and Black students come from families with lower educational levels, Shulenburger said. For many, a higher education is expected. But
"It's not that minority students are
Shulenburger said a third possible reason for poor retention rates could be KU's open admissions policy for Kansas residents. At Oklahoma, students must meet one of the following requirements: a cumulative grade point average of 3.1; score of 17 on their ACT; a composite of 760 on their SAT; or a ranking in the top 50 percent of their high school graduating class.
some minority students may be the first from their families to go to college and may not have role models to follow.
Not all students who are admitted to KU would meet Oklahoma's requirements.
"We have to take every high school graduate who applies from the state of Kansas." Stubenburger said.
A fourth possible reason for poor retention rates may be the environment at the University, he said.
Students in difficult courses tend to form study groups of people with whom they are comfortable. When a particular minority group is small, the student may not easily find other minority students who are taking the same course.
Jackson said some of the retention problems may have to do with campus climate at a school where there are mostly non-minority students.
"It's a reality," Jackson said. "It's a culture shock to a lot of kids."
James Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo. senior, said, "Minority students probably have a harder time adjusting - without a doubt."
Jenkins said it could be tough for a student who was not accustomed to interacting with white students to do so. Some of his friends had a difficult
time trying to cope at KU because they weren't comfortable and didn't think they fit in.
Those students have since trans ferred to other schools, he said.
Norris Williams, director of minority student services at Oklahoma, said the key to retention was a combination of meeting a student's academic and environmental needs.
Academic preparation plays a big part in retention of minority students, he said. Often, once students get to a university, they need to learn time-management skills.
"Some new Black students have a tendency not to ask for help, especially if they don't see someone who looks like them," Williams said.
He said American Indian students had the highest drop-out rate because many went to college after being educated on reservations.
"A lot of times Indian students going to a university may not have the same type of support from home as most other students," Williams said.
Asian students have a lower dropout rate because many come from families who put a high priority on education.
"Within their families, academic success is part of the measure stick." Williams said. "That network is stronger."
Part of retention is having an atmosphere with positive support services, he said. New students also need a place to belong.
Jackson said, "If students would get involved and take advantage of their resources, the student should feel like he belongs."
Business
Continued from p. 1
of the applicants to the school are
"The average GPA in the School of Business is a 3.0," Lowery said. "Minorities aren't even in the running with a GPA like that. They just don't make it through the prerequisites.
"By the time they realize how important their GPA is in relation to their ACT score, it's too late. There are people who strive to raise their GPA and make it in after the first or second year studying, but most just aren't admitted."
Even though national statistics show that minorities have lower average ACT scores than whites, David Shulenburger, associate vice
chancellor for academic affairs, said he did not think that minority students were disproportionately affected when admissions standards for the school were raised.
Shulenburger said the relationship between GPA and ACT scores for minority students was different than for whites. Although minority students usually have lower average ACT scores, their GPAs are usually higher than other students at that same ACT level. Also, the school considers several factors when deciding whether to admit students, he said.
Program recruits minorities
Barb Walters, admissions coordinator, said the school had one minority recruiting program. Inroads is a national summer program for 20 students from the greater Kansas City area who have completed their junior year in high school.
"This year, three Inroads students who have declared themselves pre-business have made it a point to see what we are here and want to do business."
"I'd have to say that is our main recruiting tool," Walters said. "I think it's improving. We're starting to attract more of those students back to KU. The problem is that the majority of them are from Missouri and have to pay out-of-state tuition.
Marshall Jackson, interim director
of the Office of Minority Affairs, agreed with Walters.
"We've had good success with getting Inroads students to the campus, and some of them have gone on to work at the business school." Jacket said.
But, he said, an even more successful program is the SCoRMEBE program in the school of engineering. ScoRMEBE, which stands for Student Council for Recruiting, Motivating and Educating Minority Engineers, is a student organization involved in recruitment and retention of minority engineering students.
model programs similiar to SCoRMEBE, where someone really has responsibility for recruiting students' Jackson said. "That seems to be the most workable solution."
"I really think the professional schools, to be successful, have to
Troy Frank, Topela graduate student, taught the Inroads students during Summer 1989. Although the program was beneficial, he said, he wasn't aware of any program to help the students once they decided to attend the University.
Frank said he had talked to several minority students who wanted to be business majors but had dropped out.
He said the school was missing a support group.
Congress asks for military spending cuts
hear about the renovation plans for Hoch because his department really would be there only temporarily.
Hoch
When the Parking Department moved from Hoch, housekeeping moved in temporarily.
restroom to get a file and vice versa," he said.
said Hoch had served the needs of his department but that there just was not enough room.
Phil Endacott, associate director of housekeeping, said he was glad to
Although the building is still used for music department performances, the Lied Center for the Performing Arts, scheduled to open in two or
"We had stuff stored in closets, in the restrooms and under stairwalls. It would be pretty embarrassing for a male to have to go into the women's
three years, will replace Hoch in that cannity, he said.
Earlier this semester, the Parking Department moved from its offices in Hoch to the new Parking Facility, where there is more room.
WASHINGTON — Despite a declaration yesterday by President Bush that he doesn't expect a "peace dividend" to result from reduced East-West tensions, many members of Congress are urging heftier spending on domestic programs as the military budget is reduced.
Don Kearns, director of parking,
The Associated Press
Continued from p. 1
"We'd try to have one large lecture hall space and maybe several small lecture halls," Modig said.
"We have a lot of demands at home, and there's no question about that." Bush said at a news conference in Brussels after ending the summit with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. "But I think it is premature to speak as some are at home about a peace dividend—take a lot of money out of defense and put it into other worthy causes."
The president said the reason there could be no such windfall was that the Gramm-Rudman deficit-reduction law required that he produce a budget for fiscal 1991 containing a shortfall of no more than $64 billion.
The deficit for this budget year, which ends Sept. 30, is projected to be about $110 billion. Bush will present the closed budget to Congress on Jan. 22.
Although members of Congress are split on the question, many believe it is time to impose deep cuts on the nearly $290 billion defense budget, which is about one-fourth of the government's $1.2 trillion annual spending.
"The more you cut from the military, the less damage you do to domestic programs to meet Gramm-Rudman targets," said Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass.
Frank has been a leader of a group of liberals pressing congressional leaders to slash about $20 billion from the Pentagon's budget and redistribute most of it among health, housing, education and other domestic programs.
But it is not just liberals who want to reduce the Defense Department's coffers.
Conservative Rep. Sonny Montgomery, D-Miss., chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, told reporters yesterday that he would like to see next year's defense spending frozen and savings set by eventually bringing some U.S. troops home from Europe.
*Student Dividends* 7% Fall '89
"If we do have these extra monies, I would like for them to go into the national debt and take about half the money and use it for domestic programs in the United States," Montgomery said.
Since Frank's group made its proposals, Defense Secretary Dick Cheney has begun considering plans to reduce military spending rates.
The KU Bookstores are pleased to announce that all register receipts from cash or check purchases during period #85 (Jan. 1, through June 30, 1989) may now be redeemed for a 7% cash rebate through the end of December at customer service counters at either the
Kansas Union or the Burge Union stores. KU student ID is required
Some purchases such as computer hardware may not be eligible for the student dividend program. Please ask the customer service representative should you have any questions.
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University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, December 5, 1989
11
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Textbooks for the spring semester
Elementary education draws few men back to classrooms Only 9 men at KU plan to teach school in the lower grades
KU
KU
BOOKSTORES
By Tracy Wilkinson Kansan staff writer
"They would be boring, routine," he said. "There wouldn't be a variety from day to day. I enjoy working with kids. I'd rather work with children than adults. I want to try to shape their minds. I try to make them better adults."
Albury said he was not satisfied with the idea of having one of the traditionally male-oriented majors such as business.
Steve Alburty is returning to elementary school to help mold the lives of children, but he will be one of few male role models in primary grades if current trends hold up.
"I stand out," he said. "Especially on the first day when they call out names. It's kind of like a joke from day one, but I'm not trying to be funny. They get kind of a different viewpoint from me."
Albury said he was the only male in any of his education classes.
Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction, said she was only aware of a few men in the elementary education classes.
"Right now Steve is the only one in my classes," she said. "We have had more, but traditionally it has been a recent time when we have seen more men."
Nine men are elementary education majors. A total of 144 men are in the School of Education. In 1979, 27 men _were elementary_ education majors and 250 men were in the school
Swartz, said that she had seen a change in both attitudes and numbers of men going into the occupation in the past 20-25 years.
Mark Kincannon, St. Louis, Mo., senior, said he began his studies at the University in architecture but changed his mind halfway through his junior year.
"Nationally, it has become an acceptable career for men," she said.
"I had just decided, 'This isn't for me.'" he said.
Kincannon said that he had had his first taste of teaching by giving swimming lessons for eight years and that he liked it.
An 'acceptable career'
all* "The only guy teacher we had in elementary was the gym teacher."
he said
Kincannon said that was part of the reason he decided to teach elementary instead of secondary students.
"I think more and more guys will come to elementary," he said. "Maybe for that same reason."
Albury said another reason he decided to enter elementary education stemmed from the male teachers he had in grade school.
"I didn't really like either one of them," he said. "They were not exactly models, but they did influence me."
I stand out, especially on the first day when they call out names. It's kind of like a joke from day one, but I'm not trying to be funny. They get kind of a different viewpoint from me.'
Steve Alburty Elementary Education Major
Albury said he wanted to improve on the way he was taught in fifth and sixth grade.
"I want to help them be ready for junior high," he said. "I remember that being a really scary transition. I want them to be totally comfortable with themselves and who they are — not just academically and who they are, but also for the scary times they're going to face in junior high, high school and beyond."
Kincannon said it gave him a
kissing to son call him respond to
his phone.
"It's fascinating to teach a kid something and to know they have something to show for it," he said. "It's great to see the kid doing something that you've just taught him."
Albury said he thought there needed to be more men in elementary education.
Male role models needed
"Now that the divorce rates are up, many kids don't have a male role model until they reach junior high or high school," he said. "That's not to say every family is broken, and all kids are raised by their mothers. But the fact is that a majority of elementary school teachers are female."
Swartz agreed with Albury about the necessity of a male role model.
Tom Christie, Lawrence resident, is one of three male teachers at Deerfield Elementary School, 101 N. Lawrence Ave. He said there was a need for more men in the field of elementary education.
"Each year there are fewer and fewer men in the group," he said. "And I can't think of a profession, besides maybe being a doctor, that is more important."
"That is true," she said. "You do want the male role model, and not just in the role of principal. But you don't want to overgeneralize that."
Christie estimated that of the 70-85 KU students who had observed or student taught at Deerfield this year, only two or three were males.
Christie said one potential method for making education more attractive would be to expand public awareness for the need to raise the level of teacher salaries.
"There's something wrong when you pay garbage workers more to pick up garbage than you pay a teacher of America," he said. "We need those people, and that service, but this is the future."
Raising the salary of a teacher, Christie said, would in turn raise the quality o the profession as a whole.
"We need to work to get salary up to where we can attract some quality people," he said. "If it's not a profession you are going to make some money in, you are going to lose a lot of the people who would make the money." We need to get better until we work out to get better."
Salaries too low
Nationally, Christie said, teachers' associations are growing rapidly.
"Men and women make the same amount of money," he said. "For most people, it is a second income. For some, it is a fewer and fewer in the group."
Christie said he thought teaching, especially in the elementary school range, was one of the few, if not the only, non-discriminatory occupation.
"Maybe that is what it takes," he said. "Getting together as a group is the only way we're ever going to make any changes."
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12
Tuesday, December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
1000
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Let the sunshine in
Ambam Bichinanu, Cameroon, Africa, senior, studies in the science library for his computer science class. Bichinanu was in the library yesterday afternoon.
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KU names 1989-90 scholars
Commitment to education and 3.8 GPA are part of selection
By Holly Lawton
Kansan staff writer
Intense preparation, weekend studying and at least a year of burning the midnight oil may not sound like much fun for many KU students, but it has paid off for 20 students, who were named University Scholars for the 1989-90 academic year.
The University Scholars program offers promising students an opportunity for further intellectual challenge, said Carol Prentice, assistant to the vice chancellor for academic affairs. Candidates were required to be at least first-stemester sophomores with a 3.8 grade point average. They were selected on the basis of academic achievement, ment to education, a written essay and recommendations by three instructors, she said.
The students named were: Hershini Bhana, Lawrence sophomore; Marcell Clark, Lawrence sophomore; James Eastman, Augusta sophomore; Cheryl Faber, Wichita sophomore; Michael Gentzler, Over
land Park sophomore; Karl Gundersen, Wichita sophomore; Aimee Hall, Manhattan sophomore; Geri Hart, Lawrence sophomore; Eapen Jacob, Wichita sophomore; and Michael Moore, Wichita sophomore.
Also selected were John Morgan,
Ballwin, Mo., sophomore; Pamela
McElwee, Lawrence sophomore;
Shawn Nasseri, Lawrence junior;
Ricardo Olea, Lawrence junior;
Mark Reedy, Topeka sophomore;
Rick Slade, Lawrence sophomore;
Scott Stucky, Raleigh, N.C., sophomore;
Manuel Wo Mendez Ma Tay,
Falls Church, Va., sophomore;
Jennifer Urban, Perry sophomore;
and Steven Young, Lenexa sophomore.
Each student must maintain at least a 3.5 GPA while in the program, Prentice said. The students will participate in the University Scholars, Seminar next spring, a course in which students are encouraged to integrate knowledge from fields of study besides their own.
"The students also were assigned a mentor who works with the students depending on the needs and interests of each," Prentice said. "The mentors will act as advisers, partners in research or just someone to maintain a close relationship with throughout the students' undergraduate years."
Although the students were notified of the committee's decision in October, it was not released publicly until September for all the students. Prentices said.
A luncheon next Tuesday will honor the students and their mentors. It will be the first meeting for many of them. Prentice said.
Young, who is enrolled in the School of Engineering, said the students already had gotten to know each other.
Hall, who is enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the honor was especially rewarding for her.
"We met as a group once after we were selected, and it was really neat," he said. "I got to know some people who really excited about the whole thing."
"When I came to KU, this was one of the goals I set for myself," she said, "so I was really happy when I found out I got it."
Twelve groups split $265,000 fund Chancellor, Regents must approve Student Senate allocation
By Lara Weber
Kennon staff writer
The fund committee, which has B. Jake White, student body president as chairman, includes seven other faculty and student members. Members spent five hours before the presentations from 15 groups that applied for money.
Twelve KU departments and organizations have been approved by Student Senate to receive a combined total of $265,000 from the Educational Opportunity Fund.
Kansan staff writer
The fund was developed in 1988 in response to Margin of Excellence tuition increases, which will total about $20 million during three years. The Board of Regents agreed to make tuition increases to help finance the Margin program.
More than $800,000 had been requested by KU organizations.
The Margin of Excellence is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring the total financing of its seven institutions to 95 percent of their peer schools and to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
After the applicants' presentations, the committee delivered for 90 minutes before deciding how much money to grant to each group. The following organizations received approval for
dowing organizations received approval for
money from the fund;
▶ Office of student financial aid (grants for needy freshman students). $39.390;
Financial aid office (high school academic- and need-based scholarships), $20,000;
Office of Minority Affairs, $6,000;
Office of foreign student services, $12,000;
- Office or logistic school services, $17,000;
* Financial aid office and Minority Affairs, $15,000;
Youth Educational Services, $45,000;
Supportive Educational Services, $7,156;
Community Services, $19,110;
Financial aid office (student parents), $45,000;
School of Social Welfare, $29,554;
White said that he was happy so many groups had applied and that he wished the committee could have financed all of them.
"It's amazing how much that money can make or break a student's decision to go to college," he said. "It was really enlightening to hear about the programs. It's good to know it's really working."
Jan Jess, a faculty member from the department of social welfare, said that all the groups that applied had merit and that she was sorry there hadn't been enough money for everyone.
"I think the committee did a very good job of assessing them according to the standards," she said.
The Senate-approved proposals will have to be approved by Chancellor Gene A. Budig and the Regents before the groups receive money, White said.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, December 5, 1989
13
Jayhawks rout Tennessee-Martin 103-48 victory is ninth to hit century mark under Williams
By Dan Perkins
Kansan sportswriter
One of Coach Roy Williams' favorite sayings is, "If you want to have depth, you have to play it."
The second-ranked Jayhawks proved they have depth in last night's 103-48 rout of Division II Tennessee-Martin at Allen Field House. The victory margin of 55 points was the seventh largest in the 70 points, set as last season in Kansas' victory against Brown. 115-45.
With the victory, Kansas, 7-0, is off to its best start since the 1957-58 season, when the Jayhawks started 10-0.
The No. 2 ranking is the highest the Jayhawks have been ranked since the 1985-86 season when Kansas held the ranking in the final poll of the season.
Every Jayhawk who suited up last night played at least 10 minutes, except forward Maddox who sat out the game with a sore thigh he suffered in Saturday's victory against Maryland-Baltimore County.
The only Jayhawk who failed to score in the game was Macolm Nash, but he added four rebounds to the Jayhawk 64-47 edge on the boards.
Guard Adonis Jordan said the hard work in practice paid off last night.
"Everybody's working hard in this
chance to contribute," Jordan said.
Another freshman guard, Todd Alexander, added five points and two
assists in 10 minutes of playing time.
"I'm just glad for the opportunity to play," Alexander said. "I wasn't surprised because shot holes in the first half, because I was trying to push too hard.
Guard Terry Brown scored 21 points, including 5-for-10 from three-point line, and forward Mark Ranahan scored five from bounds, leading the Jayhawks offense.
But the key to the Jayhawks vict-
tory was defense.
"Defense is our constant," Williams said, "as long as we have effort and I know with these kids we'll give the effort."
The offense was a different story, though, as Kansas again struggled.
"Once again, we still weren't clicking offensively like I think we can, but our defense is consistent every night," Williams said. "We did an amazing job in the first 12 minutes of the second half on defense. At times it looked like it was swarming out there."
The Jayhawks "swarming" defense created 20 turnovers and allowed the Pacers two just assists.
Kansas had 25 assists and only eight turnovers.
Kansas began the second half with a 34-4 scoring spree turning an 84-33 runway at 10:30 halftime lead into a 84-33 runaway with 8:35 remaining.
During that stretch, Kansas hit 15-24 shots, including eight of their last nine. Randall led the Jayhawks in the stretch with 10 points.
Kansas hit the 100-point mark with 2:20 left in the game with a three-point shot by Jordan.
Jordan, who scored a season-high nine points, said he didn't even realize what the score was until he heard the crowd.
Kansas has now tapped the 100-point mark 29 times in its history.
"I knew we were getting close, but I thought we only had 96," Jordan said. "When Todd passed me the ball, I just shot it and when the crowd got really loud, I looked up and said, 'Wow, that's 100.'"
Despite the lopsided final, the Pacers kept the game close for most of the season.
Kansas led just 33-25 with 6:15 remaining in the half, when Darren Lawer scored two of his team-high 13 points.
The Jayhawks responded by outscoring the Pacers 17-4 the rest of the way for a comfortable 50-29 halftime edge. The advantage could have been greater if the Jayhawks had not issued 9-16 from the free-throw line.
Williams has changed his tune regarding the Jayhawks free-throw shooting woes.
"I've said all along that I wasn't concerned about our free-throw shooting," Williams said, "but I am concerned about the duggym free throws now. We've got to start making them. You've got to make free throws to be a great basketball team."
Kansas
23
Kansas 103 Tennessee-Martin 48
| | M | FG | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Randall | 28 | 8-16 | 3-8 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 19 |
| Calloway | 21 | 6-13 | 0-1 | 5 | 1 | 4 | 12 |
| Pitcherhill | 24 | 5-11 | -1-3 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 10 |
| Pitcherhill | 24 | 5-11 | 0-1 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 10 |
| Guelphner | 26 | 2-8 | 1-2 | 8 | 5 | 2 | 5 |
| Jordan | 16 | 7-7 | -2-4 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 9 |
| Jordan | 16 | 7-7 | -2-4 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 9 |
| Wagner | 10 | 2-2 | 0-4 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| West | 17 | 3-4 | 3-5 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 9 |
| Alexander | 12 | 2-6 | 1-2 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 5 |
| Alexander | 12 | 2-6 | 1-2 | 4 | 2 | 2 | 5 |
| Totals | 200 | 43/8-11 | 17-2/8-24 | 65/8-12 | 17 | 103 |
Percentages: FG: 489, FT. 407, Three-three point goals: 6-15 (Brown 5-10, Jordan 1-1). Bloch: 2-11, Dushaw: 5 (Nash 2), Turnovers: 0.2. Staeheli: 2, Stefan: 8 (Randall 2, Prichard 2). Techniques: None.
Tennessee-Martin
| | M | FQ | FT | R | A | F | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Redmon | 28 | 1-9 | 1-3 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 3 |
| Wyatt | 29 | 0-6 | 1-0 | 0 | 1 | 3 | 2 |
| Benton | 20 | 1-3 | 1-0 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Nelson | 13 | 1-4 | 1-1 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 5 |
| Bradley | 34 | 0-4 | 0-0 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Hardy | 24 | 2-5 | 0-0 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Lawer | 14 | 1-7 | 0-0 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Lawer | 18 | 4-17 | 2-3 | 3 | 0 | 5 | 13 |
| Jonasson | 10 | 0-0 | 1-4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Washington | 1 | 0-2 | 1-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Washington | 1 | 0-2 | 1-0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Totals | 20 | 18-55 | 7-15 | 4/17 | 2 | 4/8 | 28 |
Percentages: FG; 277, FF; 467. Three-point goals: 5-22 (Lawrie 3-10, Nelson 2-3), Turnovers: 20 (Bradley 9, Gillies) (Melanie 1, Jonsson 1). Technicalities: None.
Hawk, Kansas 50-29. Officials: Cornwell,
Wulkow, McMullen.
TENNESSEE
30
MARTIN
KU
JAYHAWK
Kansas' Kirk Wagner battles with Tennessee-Martin's Mike Werts.
Kansas guard Kevin Pritchard and Tennessee-Martin's Stan Bradley scramble for a loose ball
Williams, players credit victory to consistent and tough defense
Bv Gene King
Kansan sportswriter
The No. 2 ranked Kansas basketball team scored 103 points in its sixth consecutive victory last night against Tennessee-Martin, and it was the Kansas defense that enabled the Jayhawks to reach the century mark for the second time this season.
"We're not clicking quite like we would like to on offense," Coach Roy Williams said. "The defense is concerned night as long as you have the effort.
"Our defense was just swarming out there." Williams said.
Tennessee-Martin shot seven of 36, or 19.4 percent, in the second half. For the game, the Pacers lored airball after airball, making only 18 shots from the field of 47 shots. Tennessee-Martin's 27.7 shooting
The Tennessee-Martin Pacers scored just four points from the opening of the second half until forward Shannon Redmond tipped in a missed shot with 7:45 remaining in the game.
percentage was the lowest percentage of any Kansas opponent this season. The Pacers' 48 points was also the lowest score for a Jayhawk opponent this year.
"Our defense was just amazing during the first 12 minutes of the second half," Williams said.
Kansas forward Mark Randall stressed the importance of the Kansas defense.
'We're not clicking quite like we would like to on offense. The defense is constant every night as long as you have the effort. Our defense was just swarming out there.'
"It is something this team is going to pride itself on," Randall said.
"The defense is going to be our offense. If we can force the other team to turn it over, that gives us that many more opportunities at the basket on the offensive end."
The Kansas defense forced Tennessee-Martin to commit 20 turnovers resulting in basket after basket for
Coach Roy Williams
the Javhawks.
Kansas also converted several of its eight steals into points.
"Defense is the main thing," guard Adonis Jordan said. "If you play defense, you'll play he (Williams) and you'll play hard and play with a lot of intensity.
"The offense will come, but we really stress defense a lot," he said. Leading 73-33 with 11-22 remaining, three consecutive Pacers' shots
were blocked by 6-foot-1 guard Terry Brown, 6-6 forward Rick Calloway and 6-9 forward Mark Randall, respectively. Then Randall was fouled by Pacer forward Mike Wertz.
Calloway said that the intensity level was so high that when he came out of the game with 14:53 remaining, he did not realize the Jayhawks were up by 32 points, 59-27.
"You can jump on a team from the start, and that puts them in a hole," Calloway said. "If we put pressure on them, then they are tentative for the rest of the game."
Even when they were ahead by 40 points, the Jayhawks could not help but play tough on the defensive end of the court, Calloway said.
Swimmer sets record at meet in Arkansas
By Andres Cavelier Kansan sportswriter
All-American junior Jeff Stout was the first Jayhawk to qualify for the NCAA championships next March, and he will play in Arkansas Invitational last week.
Swim coach Gary Kempf said he was pleased with Stout's perform- ment and that he was two freshmen who won races at the invitation in Fayetteville, Ark.
"We had a good meet," Kempf said. "It was good preparation for future meets. We faced some really good competition. We are starting to get a lot of contribution from a lot of people."
Freshmen Zhawn Stevens and Troy Reynolds, who are roommates in Oliver Hall, were the only Jayhawks to win races during the weekend's invitational, which was the Jayhawks' most important meet because of the competition.
The Kansas men's side, ranked 29th in nation, took second place in the NCAA college football season.
Individual medley racer Stevens, who also swims the breaststroke, is a high school individual medley He is a high school All-American from Enid, Okla.
Kempf, who called Stevens and Reynolds outstanding, said, "They are as talented as I have ever seen."
He swam for Enid High School and for the Aquatic Club of Enid. He was Oklahoma's state champion in the 200 medley and the 100-yard breaststroke. He was a Senior Nationals qualifier in the individual medley and the breaststroke.
Stevens said that no one, not even himself, expected him to win the 200. He broke a personal record in 1:51.48 in the 200.
"I was really happy to go two seconds faster at this time of the season." Stevens said.
Stevens defeated swimmers from seven nationally top-ranked schools in the finals. He had previously beat 30 others in a four-heat qualifier.
Stout, who swam four events before qualifying, said he wished he would have qualified earlier in the meet.
Kempf said the team's team, which finished third behind 18th-ranked Arkansas and 9th-ranked Georgia, also increased their speed.
Freestyle Reynolds, who won the 200-yard butterfly in 1:47.62, is from Wichita and swam for the Wichita Swim Club.
He was a Junior National finalist in the 200 freestyle and champion in the 200 butterfly.
Freestyle and butterfly swimmer Pranger finished second in the 200-yard butterfly behind Paige Wilson of Georgia.
Rounding out the women's side,
Redden took third in the 400-yard
individual medley while Brown took
fourth in the 100-yard butterfly.
He said that freshman Marnee Dietrich, sophomore Barb Pranger, junior Hill and Gina Brown and senior K. Redden all had a good invitational.
Hill finished fifth in the 200-yard backtrack behind sophomore Keri Doyle.
Dietrich finished third in the 200- yard breaststroke.
Tigers beat Creighton 86-79
The Associated Press
Freshman Travis Ford made three three-pointers as Missouri closed the first half with a 32-9 run last night, and the fourth-ranked Tigers beat Creighton 86-79.
Creighton's leading scorer, Chad Gallagher, committed his third foul at 5:16 in the first half. Ford's three-pointer gave the Tigers their first lead at 33-32 and Missouri capitalized on the absence of the 6-foot-10 Gallagher, outscoring the Jays 22-5.
Missouri, 5-0, trailed 28-20 with 8:16 remaining in the half after Matt Roggenbuck made three straight 3-pointers. Nathan Buntin then made a 7-foot hook shot, starting the run.
The Tigers led 52-37 at halftime and Creighton, 1-2, pulled no closer than seven points after that.
Anthony Peeler led Missouri with 21 points while Doug Smith had 18. Ford, who finished with 15 points, had three assists and two
steals during the decisive streak.
Creighton was led by Gallagher with 22 points. Creighton's Darin Plauz made three three-pointers and scored 18. Jays to 55-48. But the Tigers sank 15 of 16 free throws in the half, maintaining command.
Oklahoma
NORMAN, Oklahoma. — Oklahoma scored 31 consecutive points in the first half Monday night and the second in Sunday. State, San Angelo, Texas. 130-62.
Oklahoma, 3-0; is averaging 149 points per game and has won by an average margin of 78.3 points. The Sooners' 68-point victory over the Division II Rams was their smallest this season.
William Davis scored 10 of his game-high 22 points during the run. Davis, a senior forward who has been Oklahoma's leading scorer in each of its games, also had a game-high 13 rebounds. He
Kansas State
is averaging 25.7 points and 13.7 rebounds.
WACO, Texas — Tony Masson scored 15 points and pulled down 12 rebounds and teammate Jeff Wires added 13 points as the Kansas State Wildcats defeated Baylor 60-83 last night.
The Wildcats, 3-2, held Baylor, 4-2, to only four points in the first eight minutes of the second half with the biggest lead of the game at 51-40.
Smokey McCovery scored 21 points for the Sooners. Terry Evans added 17, Jackie Jones 15, Tony Martin 14 and Skeeter Henry 12.
The Bears were led by Kelvin Chalmers' 16 points and eight rebounds.
The Wildcats led 13-6 in the opening minutes of the game, but Baylor's Julius Denton hit a 12-four with six minutes left in the first half.
The Associated Press
Seattle's long bombs batter Bills
SEATTLE — Dave Krieg and John Williams combined on Seattle's longest play of the season, a 51-yard touchdown pass with 5:38 remaining last night, lifting the Seahawks past the sputtering Buffalo Bills 17-16.
Krieg, making his first start after being benched for two games, avoided a heavy rush and lobbed the ball over linebacker Ray Bentley.
Williams grabbed it at the 35, ran down the right sideline, got a block from Brian Blades and ran over Nate Odomes into the end zone.
Earlier, Krieg hit rookie tight end Travis McNeal on a similar play for 40 yards, the team's biggest play of 1989 until the game-winner.
8-5, still lead the AFC East by one game over Miami.
Earlier, defensive end Art Still made the first interception of his career to set up a field goal.
Buffalo had taken a 6-10 lead on field goals of 32, 40 and 43 yards by Scott Norwood. He missed from 48 yards just before Krieg hit Williams.
Seattle, S-8, clinched the victory when M.L. Johnson recovered a fumble by Larry Kinnebrew.
The victory snapped Seattle's four game losing streak and damaged Buffalo's chances of catching Denver for the best record in the AFC. The Bills.
AP TOP 25
BASKETBALL POLL
'Hawks No.2 in AP Top 25
Rec. Previous
1. Syracuse (38) 4-0 1
2. Kansas (17) 6-0 4
3. Georgetown (5) 3-0 3
4. Miausce (1) 4-0 5
5. UNLV 3-1 6
6. Duke 3-0 7
7. Illinois 2-0 8
8. Michigan 3-1 10
9. LSU 2-1 9
10. Arkansas (2) 3-1 11
11. Louisville 3-1 13
12. Oklahoma 2-0 17
13. UCLA 3-0 15
14. Indiana 3-1 14
15. St. John's 4-0 20
16. Memphis State 3-0 22
17. North Carolina 4-2 12
18. Georgia Tech 2-0 21
19. N. Carolina St. 4-1 25
20. Arizona 1-2 2
21. Alabama 4-0 -
22. Pittsburgh 2-1 18
23. Temple 2-1 16
24. Oregon St. 3-0 -
25. Florida 1-0 - 24
Others receiving votes: Notre Dame 156, La Salle 153, Oklahoma State 138, Michigan State 117, Ark-Little Rock 46, Texas 41, Texas-El Paso 41, Clemson 38, Loyola-Marymount 33.
*First place votes in parentheses
14
Tuesday, December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
YOU
Caryn Silver, Memphis freshman, gives Sara Salkind, 13, Lawrence, a sisterly shove at the Jaybowl in the Kansas Union.
Hillel students adopt siblings
By Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writer
Bowling was last weekend's activity for Caryn Silver, Memphis freshman, and her new little sister.
Through the combined efforts of Hillel and the Lawrence Jewish Community Center, a group of Hillel members are matched with Lawrence children as part of the Brother and Big Sister Program.
Amy Epstein, co-chairman of the program, said it helped to tie together the Lawrence and University Jewish communities. Between 10 and 20 children are matched each year.
Silver said the program was a good opportunity for the children to have role models. She said she grew up in Memphis where there was a larger Jewish population than in Lawrence.
Sara Salkind, Silver's 13-year-old little sister in the program, said she had participated in the program for three years.
"They give good advice," Sara said.
Sara's father, Neil Salkind, said the program had a variety of benefits.
"The Jewish community here, although comfortable, is a minority. Neil Salkind said, "It's nice to be home," and the children at another point in life."
It is always nice for his children to have an older sibling and an older friend to look up to. he said.
Susan Elkins, director of the community center, said she had two daughters who have participated in the program for the past
three years.
Children from the community center do not know many other Jewish people outside the Lawrence area, she said. Children also do not understand that there are so many tall over the country. Elkins said.
Recently, one of her daughters went to dinner at the residence hall where her big sister lives and met all of her college friends, Elkin
When the children are initially matched up, they try hard to match them with students who have similar interests, she said.
Greeks set to pool money for charity
By Lisa Moss Kansan staff writer
One Lawrence group to profit each year
A new philanthropic program started by the Greek system will benefit the Lawrence community.
The program, the Fraternity and Sorority Foundation of the University of Kansas, is set up so that fraternities and sororites donate 5 percent of their philanthropy money to one combined fund. The money from the fund will be donated to one organization in the Lawrence community every year, said Carol Kreeler. Panhellenic president.
Money raised by each chapter is donated annually to a national philanthropy such as the Ronald McDonald House. The 5 percent donated to the foundation would be taken out of the money that is donated to the national philanthropy annually, Kre克尔 said.
She said that two sororites, Delta Gamma, 1015 Emery Road, and Alpha Gamma Delta, 2005 Stewart Ave., would not be able to donate 5 percent of the money designated for their national philanthropies because their national councils would not allow it. Other chapters were happy
to donate five percent of their national philanthropy money, she said.
This does not mean the two sororities would not donate money to the fund, Krekeler said these sororites could find alternate ways to contribute.
"We want to help the Lawrence community," she said.
Krekeler said there was no way to predict how much the pool would
Kyle Turner, chairman of the foundation committee, said he presented the idea to the Interfraternity Council because he thought that the greek system and its resources could be shared more equally with the university by donating a portion of the money that was being given to national philanthropies.
A foundation selection committee is being formed. This committee will have the responsibility of choosing the organization that will receive the money. A group should be selected to pay the money by Fall 1900, Turner said.
"We want to set up something and establish it," Turner said. "We want it to be in place for years to come."
Greenpeace, Navy clash before Trident 2 launch
The Associated Press
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The Navy out-muscelled Greenpeace antinuclear protesters yesterday, crippling their vessels and towing them out of an area where they tried unsuccessfully to halt the test launch of a Trident 2 missile.
The high seas drama took place in the Atlantic, 50 miles off the Florida coast, just before the nuclear-powered submarine Tennessee successfully unleashed the $26.5 million missile on a test that put the Trident 2 program back on track after two explosive failures in the first three
undersea launches
The Navy said its ships had to "shoulder" aside a large ship carrying protesters and capture and tow them, the Army called Zodiacs from the launch area.
Greenepeace activists said that the Navy rammed their ship, aimed fire hoses down its smoke stacks to stop its engines and that Navy divers had sliced the fuel lines and punctured the pontoons on the Zodiacs.
Shannon Fagan, a spokesman for the protesters, said a Navy ship, the 254-foot, submarine-support ship USS Grasp, left two gashes in the hull of the USS Greenepe.
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E.M.G. - 5 'long years of list! I hate U!!! I hope it falls off!
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MAX I: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT? ****
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Proworks.
Have an old fashioned Christmas by crystallizing your toys and getting the kids to play with you. PAIRK! Hot box hat warm and easy to dress while the kids have free pony ride. Drive onmt in 4, 10 miles, then turn south, 19 miles.
Shop creatively this year. Creative Christmas gifts come from creative X-mas shoppers. An abstraction of the sun's rays, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, fine decorative items, Playboy, collector, and cheeso reek-n-roll wine cellar, designer carnival glass, Married Field art, dec art, display items, clocks, watches, dents, antique jewelry, fine art, will blow you away! QUANTRILLE'S PLEA MARKET; 611 New Hamburg. Open every Sat. 9am-5pm. Call 423-805-1155 or visit www.Viacastard welcome!
1
University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, December 5, 1989
Hay new! Super Strip Day party with LA.
Saturday, Jan 26 from 11am to 4pm at the Bot
Tower, 737 New Hampshire. Be there!
MASSAGE for the Holidays! Do what elves do beat stress and injury with the help of Lawrence Massage Therapy. 843-654-1025. Gift certificates too. New Hampshire, Open Sat-Sun. 10-15. 111 New Hampton, Open Sat-Sun. 10-15.
Wiggle into Wigwam a warm wool socks, mitten,
gloves. Francia Sporting Goods, 731 Mass.
645-419-8
Time !! W! With Times sports watches. They run under water, II Christmas socks. Francis Sperling. 721. Mass. 843-4191.
The Yacht Club
Bar & Grill
Tuesday Specials:
$1.25 Imports
$3.25 Turkey Club
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE
M-F 8-6 Visa, Mastercard, Discover.
315 N.2nd St., 841-6955
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE
your full service auto
repair shop, Classic to
computerized.
AFRICAN ADORNED Unusual jewelry & int'l. folk art.
842-1376
NOW is the Time To Make Your Christmas Reservations
Fares Are Increasing and Seating Is Limited. Call Today.
LOWEST FARES
911 7417
Southern Hills Center
1601 West 23rd
M-F 9:5-30 * Sat. 9:30-2
120 Announcements
Don't forget! IBA tryouts Dec. 5 & 6! Call
840-4433 for audition time
Faith No More - workers need for stage crew and security positions Monday, Dec. 11.
Refreshments & entrance fee paid. Please sign up in USA office, 4th floor from 8-3.
For confidential information, referral & support
Contact Center 814-843-2549. Headquarters
Computer Center
Stop by the Arts & Crafts Fair, Dec. 47 at the Ranas Union Gallery to buy those holiday gifts before you go home.
Gay & Lesbian students of Kansas and Buddies,
716 SW Jackson, present entertainer Sharon
Thompson. Dec. 15, 1989 at 10:00 p.m. Admission
more information; call GLOSK at
843-3081.
Want to see the Dead in L.A. for free? We have hotel and tickets. Just need wheels. Dec. 16th 12h.
4800 billy or Konee.
Basket Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is hall 841-2548 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center.
SPRING BREAK 90
BREAK
2 OR 3 MONTHS
FORT LAUDERDALE
from $132
2 MONTHS
STEAMBOAT from $1017
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND from $129
HILTON HEAD ISLAND from $127
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW!
DAYTONA BEACH
$129
MUSTANG ISLAND from $99
5 OBS 7 NIGHTS
CALL TOTAL FREE TODAY
1-800-321-5911
*depending on brochure size and length of stay*
130 Entertainment
FAITH NO MORE, THE UNCONSCIOUS,
BULLET, LA VOLTA LISTA. At the KU Ballroom.
Monday, December 11 day of classes. All
ages. Tickets at SUA office, Kansas Union, 8th
Avenue.
FLYING -- Like Santa. See the PLAZA
CRISTMAS LIGHTS. Airborn. Leave
Lawrence airport on an evening flight, circle
Kansas City, KS. 82nd sent. Date call. Call
GET INTO THE GROOVE. Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superive sound and lighting. Professional radio, chad DJ, Hot Spits Maximum Party Trust. DJ Ray Deyauques. 841-7631.
140 Lost-Found
LOST: Black cat, short hair, de-clawed, no tag around 1400 block Ohio. Call 842-794.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babysitter needed to care for 6-month-old infant in our home starting in January. M-F afternoons, 749-3330.
Car Door Furniture - part-time/full-time. Must be 31 years old. Inquire at the Car Service center in Chichester, Academy Car Rental, or West Sussex Academy.
Creek Textbook, KU Bookstore, Part-time.
$3.50 per hour. Monday-Friday (2 shift
available). 4:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. or 10 a.m.-7:00
p.m. Weekends & overtime if necessary. Begg.
in 6:00 p.m. from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
1999. Must be available to work entire time. Re-
quire previous inventory, minus or stocking ex-
MURDER WANTED to drive car one way to thommy, NY. Deputy driver to deliver package to thommy, NY. Dependent driver to deliver package to thommy, NY. Dependent driver to December 2. Room for 8 people. Will pay for gas, tolls and meals for your travel. Fees are responsible for your own return travel. Fees are responsible for your own return travel.
periods. Verifiable job reference. Apply Kansas
Union personnel office. Level 6. Rm 200. EOE.
Fruit Bank of Kamas seeks full and part-time fuel saleperson for store located at 1000 E. Parkway, Suite A, Camden, NJ 07630. Opportunity for advancement. Positions open are a m-12 o.n.m. 2 three days a week and all weekend hours. Include selling Fruit Bank cash collection boxes and handling cash from customers. Must be neat and clean and enjoy working with the public. Must have good work performance records. If interested, apply in person.
Jade Garden now hiring experience delivery drivers. Must have own car & insurance, $4 per hour + 30 per delivery + tips + 1/2 price meals. Apply in person, 1410 Kassid.
I HELP VETERANS WALK INTO
WALKING IN THE WAR
Two years later, they pay
depends on how much money
they have. Apply at DuHennessy M-7,
M-4, NM-8.
FOR US ATTENTION
Light delivery - must have flexible transporta-
tion. Good gas and flexible hours. Dennis 435-0720.
*
Legal Business Machines accepting applications for part-time delivery periods. Flexible hours.
Looking for long-term employees to work 4 h/alfa in a
business, job offered by the company, and one
week and no weekend day shift. Mechanical
engineering.
LIXUIR RESORTS bursify for winter, summer seasons. Work and play in Acapulco, Hawaii, Florida, Jamaica. FREE employment information. Write-
RAA
6018 Henderson St.
Chicago, IL 60634
Live-in child care positions, near New York,
Philadelphia, the beach, Airfare, good salaries.
Philadelphia, the beach. Airfare, good sailers,
Philadelphia, the beach. Airfare, good sailers,
PINCINON NAYONYE FLAGEMENT, 309 N Harbor Blvd,
Pine Meadows, NJ 07654.
Needed immediately - Part-time receptionist Sat.
& Sun. hour only. Apply at 1801 W. 24th, Colony Woods Apts. 842-5111.
15
Part-time Student Employment Position:
Responsibilities include providing training/advising students in academic courses, participating in university procedures; providing individual and group mentoring; providing supervision and workshops; and attending weekly meetings.
Requirements: Must have been a full-time student in good academic standing; must be eligible for work study. Preferred qualifications include familiarity with campus procedures and activities; also excellent communication skills. Position available immediately. Salary $3.50 per week.
Full job description/requirements available upon request: Contact Thomas M. Herrera, Assistant Vice President of Human Resources, Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60055 (913) 843-4531. All materials must be received by 5:00 p.m. December 6, 1998. EEO EMPLOYER. Part-time housekeeping and office cleaners are needed. The position is masticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Call Judy at 843-6254.
$4.00 per hour
part time
7 a.m. - 11 a.m.
Spring '90 semester
Student needed Monday through Friday
The University Daily Kansan has a position available for a student to advertise during the spring semester.
Requires a firm command of spelling and grammar and a fundamental understanding of the aesthetics of layout. Since our advertisers will be depending on von
you'll need to be reliable and responsible. We prefer a self-starter.
You'll work during those times when we publish a newspaper and be off when we don't (like exam week, when you need the time to study).
The Kansan is an equal opportunity employer
Contact Jeanne Hines, Sales & Marketing Adviser, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.:
864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Local moratory desires to hire a KU student to serve as the guardian for one of their class; answering phone and door, light lijorathtion lights on the windows, providing individual needs to be neat, have good communication skills and desire to serve others. This is not the job of a guardian.
Telemarketing + salary + commission Monday
Thursday, 8-9 p.m. No experience necessary
Want to work in a fun and exciting atmosphere? The Yacht Club is now accepting applications for cooks. Apply in person, 3 p.m.-5 p.m., $30 Wisconsin. 842-8445.
Wanted: Companion for boy, age 6. Monday,
through Thursdays, 4:00-5:30 beginning January
8. Reference required. Nonamaker. Need own
transportation. 842-900-9901
Secretary needed immediately for office on campus. Must have work processing. Hours: 12-8. Secretary needed contact Manpower Temporary Services. Must be contacted. This position will last approximately 5-8 weeks.
For additional information and an interview, call
845-121 and ask for Larry or Phil.
**larco, Inc.,**seeing full-time secretary/bookkeeping as well as general office skills. Larry excels in helpful but not necessary. Resume with experience
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Flatten hours.
give working conditions. Apply Lawn Care
Contractor.
225 Professional Services
RU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES - 48-hour capture processing. Complete W/ IW services.
PASSPORT/RESUME $9.00. 203 Art & Design.
47097.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-9716.
Fake ID's G alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
WORKERS' COMP
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(813) 401-6078.
16 East 13th 842-1133
DONALD G. STROLE
Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at
Confidential, help/free pregnancy
instruct
16 East 13th 842-1133
Suffering from Abortion?
Hearts Restored
Heart Disease
Colby, KS 6791
Confidential feedback/material
1-1,000 pages, no job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable wordprocessing: Diana, 834-387 or Ruth, 834-638.
235 Typing Services
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct letters of letter-qualify type. B42-3065, days or evenings.
Accurately timing by former Harvard secretary,
Mattia Mattei 481-321-6700. Entrance, Call
Mattiia Mattei 481-321-6700.
accurate and affordable typing/word processing,
spelling checked. Done with time to spare! Sun
a14-0213.
fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing,
all anytime 749-3801
Call Barb for your typing needs - term paper.
Computer LQ printer. 842-310 after 5:30.
Computer QL printer. 842-310 after 5:30.
Call H.L.'s Typing Services 841-593-4924. Term
Call H.L.'s Typing Services 841-593-4924.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Term paper, letter writing, journalism,
messaging, mailings, multilingual writing
and spelling corrected. 2010 W. I. St. M-7th,
M-1st.
**excellence:** professionalism *practicality*
currently, reasonably and best. Call 843-898-3488
Directions: 10th Street & Waterway,
Data Entry Services.
Directions, papers, etc. + 10 years
KU experience. Colette 843-898-379
K-S Professional Word Processing. Accurate and
advantage. d.m.d.ws. Call Detection 1 and 10.
a.m. m.p. m.p. m.p. 842-3224
Excellent professional typist does papers accurately, reasonably and fast. Call Julia 842-3224.
This lady has it! At her last beers have professional typet, You write, I type. Fast & accurate, reasonable rates, available day or evening. Lori 841-8508.
THEWORDCTORS- Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, thesis, commercial, IBM-PC, Mac, Delphi, Dot matrix, laser. Since 183. 863- 834- 817.
Resumes? Typeset Kingston Printing, Inc. Making you look good on paper! * 904 W. 21st * 814-4320
RESUMES - Written & Tatter Printed, 24-hour service.
Satisfaction guaranteed. $10-$25 a day.
Word Processing/Typing: Paper, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.S. Degree, 841-6254.
Word Perfect Word Processing, IBM Compatible.
Near Orchards Corners. No calls after 9 p.m.
843-8686.
Word Processing. MacIntosh. Spell-Check. Cash only. 749-3119 evenings.
---
Merchandise
300s
305 For Sale
*M Excore, loaded, Very good condition, $150
ng; qty=869842
Double bed w/boxsprings. Very good condition.
$80.00 OBO. 843-2730 evening.
For Sale: 1600 Sumiki 460cc motorcycle, black
Fiat 500 460cc motorcycle, black Honda Spide
moced. oozed. Cell. Call 664-454-2837
Furniture for sale! A gray 6-person pit group dining room table w/leaf and 4 chairs, 2 and 3 tables, b_watching stools, entertainment center, dining room table w/leaf and 4 chairs, 2 and 3 tables, rearrangeable seating. Really sharp stair. Frics negotiable.
GOVT SURPLUS!】 New combat boots and safety gear. $149.00. **Military uniform:** Field jackets, overcoat, cannonflage clothing. Also CARHARTT WORKWEAR. **Wedding attire:** Wedding dress. Christmas 13. - Marys Surplus Sales, St. Mary's Surplus.
MOPED 1982 Honda, making $225. Call 538-4968
after 5 p.m.
after 5 p.m.
Mobile home in Lawrence, perfect for student.
Must sell Tandy 1000 with color monitor. Will take best offer. Call 432-3374.
Mobile home in Lawrence, perfect for student.
Central air, remodeled. Partially furnished, $2000
or best offer. Must Sell. 1-235-0646.
Pewsey Guitar Alar, 150 watt, reverb & phrase
strings, nylon bass Amah Bass Gap, 50 watt,
875 ORG 4729, 875 ORG 4730
Ford Maverick, new battery, runs great
recently went to Texas. Asking for $30. 844-$C64M.
Hoods C5B500. Clean, low miles, must sell
00/08/14 DAE-710, npr. 9:00am.
RALEIGH technician mountain bike, less than 1 year old. Dive included. £75 snr.
T5-5 pc, drum set w/ c/w shells, ROALD
GR-700 guitar synthesizer and controller, $550
each. Gibson doublekick guitar copy, $250. Laner
headless guitar, $250. ORB, 84-014-8948.
Nintendo with six game cartridges. Great entertainment or Christmas gift. $100. Call 864-2800 or 864-2815.
1977 Ford Grand 4000, $400.00. 1977 Datun 3802, icee
with black intended windows, # 611. Call 841-7549.
1978 Buck Wagon, Auto, AC, CAS/B, Radio,
Cruise, ONE Owner, GWERG, 843-3135.
340 Auto Sales
Pomarianian, female, 2 months, orange-sable,
AKC. Lovely. 841-7889. aft. 6 p.m.
"55 Chevette, very good condition, one owner
$250 OBO. 943-1278."
1976 Toyota Corolla Wagon 4-speed, A/C new,
and all-season radials. Great, hwts. 807, 755.
1942 Ponton 1000 * 3-door hatchback, 80.00 m³,
w/snowflites. Perfectly, runs perfectly. 843-334-394
Hillel
360 Miscellaneous
This week's special: "V9 WBug Very clean,
this motor. $166. See Chuck, Tyson, Miaasn,
and others."
Call Today!
Wed., Dec. 6th
6:30 p.m.
Little Brother / Little Sister Party
Hillen House
Events of the Week
-
Don't Wait We'll find the lowest fares
Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS
For
Thur, Dec 5
7:30 p.m.
Open Forum Meeting
Hillel House
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
For information and rides contact Hillel at 864-3948
Maupintour
and best schedules.
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
Want to buy one season ticket for men's basket-ball. Call 842-6406.
405 For Rent
400s
Real Estate
2-BR apt in house. Fast walk to WK. Newly
wired w/ Wi-Fi. Windows 10, Window AC,
816, no付, no. 817-784, 817-104
- double tap (for sublease, AC, dianwashw-
board), small bills accepted, $750 per
month. 841-393-2700.
2-bdrm. apt. across street from campus.
Spacious, new paint & carpet. Quilt; 2-unit building.
$290.00/month. $41-6782. Leave message.
3-bedroom clean apartment in owner-occupied
house. All use, paid, available午1. Prefer no
smoker or pets. $400 a month. 841-9774 or leave
message.
big bedroom for spring sublease in great house at 12th and Ohio. Kratin or Emily. 842-569-3000
3-level/1-person apartment. Sublease spring. Ten minute walk to Walkee: 941-7085, $77/month.
A change for the better. Mt. Riss. The luxuries of a home include a kitchen, duplexed Nearups. Upwards. Available now. 941-8085.
Apartment for sublease at Natalitham Hall. A single bedroom on first floor with own bathroom and LOTS of privacy. Have maid service. Leave room for rent. 1 bedroom. I will with deposit paid and half of January rent.
Available at West Hills Apt. for next semester:
Spacious one-bedroom furnished apt. $395 a month.
Water paid. Great local near campus
Location. Lease and deposit required.
841-3000 or 845-3844.
Clean, quiet, bright 2 BR apt. in -pless. Bus stop in front, private parking in back. $60.00 a month + deposit. Unfurnished. Utilities extra Available now. 749-1238 all-time, leave message.
合
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertisin 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 national origin, or an exemption from any 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 advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Situations, 1-3-8 & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1232, 841-3255, 794-0455
726-841-761
Mastercraft Management
842-4655
Coyy quiet room, 10th & Tenn. Available Dec. 22,
$146/room. 841-7897.
Avail. Jan. 1, studio $600; 1 BR $800. Both in-
come water & heat water paid! 1 block from campus
at 1235 Ohio. Private parking, laundry facilities.
827-2444.
For Rent: Very clean & quiet superstudio for 1 or 2 people. Available Dec. 1st, call Aspen Apartments: 841-757-990.
For sublease: Two bedroom apartment,
available January thru May. On bus route. Rent
negotiable. Call 749-3532.
Furnished room w/shared kitchen/bath facilities for animals. Off-street parking. No pet allowed.
Grad student is looking for apartment/house to sublease winter water (sixty). (154) 458-608.
INSTANT $200 REBATE
Group 3, campus starting January 1st. 740-901-011
HiBu! Bailerens backdown! Nice 2.bcm.
for rent. $830/mth, low utilities, close to campus.
Call 740-904-094 after 5 p.m.
Hurry in Today some short term leases available COLONY WOODS
New l-bab, apt. Very ROOMIE, could be for 2 people. Full furnished, dishwasher, microwave. Large bathroom. Cebec housewife. W/D face. On KU beds. Must resort quickly. Wkly. Fax number 794-416-81.
Moving to RC7 One-bedroom apartment available for rest. Wash, dryer, dishwasher, carport and more. Great clubhouse facility. Reasonable. For more information call 681-8616.
Needed: Female roommate for spring. 2-BR, non-tower, close to campus CCREAP!
VOLLEYBALL COURT
- BASKETBALL COURT
one month rent free! Village Village - 4-dbcn,
w/mi; mini-apartment; Call & leave
address: 84769 or 854-810-310
APARTMENTS
- TANNING BED
Older 3-8 bedroom home, near downtown, wood floors, nice yard, $759. 611-414-100.
- VOLLEYBALL COURT
- INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL
- EXERCISE ROOM
Nice large all-air room for rent. Avail.丹. dan. ist.
Room 1256. No. 390. NO. no. - -
Check us. check this.
- 3 HOT TUBS
Benefits efficiency and apartments and older well
kent homes. $185 and no. 941-4144.
- 3 HOT TUBS
H
Mon. 1-11 p.m.
Tue. 10-4 p.m.
Sat. 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
MODELS OPEN DAILY
Mon. - Frl. 10-6 p.m.
- ON BUS ROUTE
$345-$410
NAISMITHHALL
Seeking warm friendly roommates? You can call immediately for the remainder of the academic year. Applications may be picked up an ECM in 1401 Grdress. For more information call 877-392-6526.
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE: KS 60044
913 - 835 - 8559
Convenience
- Privacy
- Luxury
Naismith Hall...
hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free liftid
come to mean something special to KU students.
until you make service, "Dine Anytime and much more!
For more information & a tour call or come by
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
So close to campul! One bedroom apartment for sublease, 12th and Oread. Call 841-3887.
Spacious 2-dbm. dress. W/D hookup, AC yard,
garage, clean. quiet. Available late December.
$345/mo. Leave message. No dogs please.
*748-7597
Spring SubLEASE: 3-bdm, 2.5-bath townhouse,
DW, microwave, on bus route, Sunrise Village
**SUBLEASE**, 2nd semester, 2-bdroom apt. W/D.
dishwasher, microwave. On bus route. 749-6862.
**Sublease** 2-bdrm. apt. 5 minutes from campus.
$39 per month. Available in
August 2014. 842-1464.
Available Jan. 1: Great studio apartment $300/month Low utilities. Call 842-8310
Sublime Jan. July, 2 bedrooms, $235 plus
utilities at college campus. Call after 5
9am. *Snowberry* 1168-7476.
1 or 2 roommates needed. 2nd of Birth / Jian. 1 or 2 roommates needed. Roommate required. Pool. Free cell. Please call: 789-3519. 3 roommates needed for 3-birth. house with W/D/ garage, gas, fireplace, 341W 814 H
Very copy l.b.c. apt., available in January, 1200 b.
Bellermont, W. virginia, gas water paid. Remodeled
in winter $229/mo., no pets. 843-9473. Leave
message.
430 Roommate Wanted
THE FAR SIDE
Christian male needed spring semester to share
4-br. lowhouse. $172 + ¼ units. On bus route.
Call 843-8790.
Female needed to sublease 2-bath 3-bed apartment.
$199.50 + ½ electric. Beginning Jan. 1.
Call Hope 842-427-878.
Female needed to share 2 bedrooms townhouse.
800, all utilities & 4 bedrooms included. Call 843-833-833.
Female non-smoker. Close to campus. Gas.
Responsive. Responds to calls. Responsive.
Anderson. Call 843-638-833.
Female Roommate needed for spring semester.
Good location. $200.00 * 4* utilities. Lease until
May. Deposit paid, free cable. 841-3590.
Female roommates need a spring canister
two bladders two blenders
own bedrooms, washer/dryer, dishwasher
microwave. 841-6183
Female roommate needed ASAP. Furnished apartment at Sundance. $179 plus ½u. utilities. Kirsten 842-5339.
uillities. Own bedroom/hath. 845-5186.
female roommate needed immediately. 2 bdmr apt, close to KU. energy-efficient. w HW/D. Cal. 845-4109. Leave message.
Female roommate wanted for spring semester:
3 female bath duples. 900 University Dual per person.
Roommate needed for spring semester:
Female roommate wanted for spring semester:
Walking distance from campus - 300/month + \
10% of cost.
Female roommate needed for spring. Non-smoker, own room, one block from campus. $170.
% utilities. Phone: 849-1349.
Female roommate needed immediately for spring semester. Survise Village. Call 411-8428. Female roommate(s) needed ASAP. Great location one block from campus. $161/month. Mail
Female roommate needed. Large apartment, bus route, own room, washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, furnished. $200 + $t. 855-5068 between 10:40 a.m. or after 6:00 p.m.
Female roommate needed starting ASAP. *Very*
roommate on board, on bus route, $175 per
month.
Female roommate needed. Very nice, completely furnished, own room, $100 per month. 749-5063. Female roommate wanted to share 2-bedroom apartment. Wanted to be in the bedroom/bedroom furniture. Nice complex. Price $0.82-$41. Female roommate for very nice 3-RH housemaker. 145/month, garage, FP, DW.
Lock: Male/female room needed Jan. 1.
Male: non-ambling room needed Jan. 2.
extra 1970 = 9% + utilities: Call 841-1073 (173)
Male/non-ambling room needed, spring semester; call 841-1073, $450, 8150
Call Mark Pat, Pat. 841-1073
GAY MALE, non-smoker for roommate only
from campus. from Campus. $175 *u* utili
441 - 209 - 683
Male or female to share nice 2-bd. apt. m.
male graduate student. Own room. Great location
on bus route. $140. mo. + 3 utilities.
Available on Jan. 1. 749-1219.
Male roommate wanted: Ap spring semester to share 3 rooms: ap $100 per month plus $\frac{1}{2}$
841-800-7900 841-800-7900
male roommate needed January. Fully furnished, own bedroom, 18' microwave and hardwood flooring. NU 841-1963. male roommate need to share fully furnished apartment. Sweet setup. $135/month plus
Need 2 female roommates for 3-bedroom townhouses at Trailridge. Call Cindy 740-8544 or www.trailridge.com
Non-smoking responsible roommate wanted to
share furnished 3-bedroom house on campus.
Grad student preferred. Must have references.
842-3245.
BEDROOM FOR $167.50/mo) 4 bliks from
ownman. Need female roommate from Jan-May.
Need male roommate from Jan-May.
Roo-mate needed immediately - 2 bfrm - lubed water pd $214/mo. November pdr
ROOMMATE WANTED * female or male to share a group apartment* * 4s block from campus*
Roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom house with two other roommates. on dry. on bus. $250
on a second roommate.
Roommate needed: Only $176/60/mo. *usually, totally furnished, to land base, 3 route utilities, totally furnished.*
Roommate for: large 3-bedroom apartment in house. Hardwood floors, gas, water paid $180/month. Starting January. 749-568 evenings. Roommate wanted to lease a house. townhouse
osmosem needed for second semester. Banne-
room, room, both bathroom,卫生器勺 $u_1$, split $u_2$.
Rooma in very nice house for non-smoking, quiet
rooma. Two blocks south KU. Free utilities,
cable, WID, A/C, microwave, TV, housecleaning,
sweepers and 1/15/19. $420-$520. $180-
$340. [84] - 889-7620.
and two others. Fireplaces, trash compactor,
dishwashers, on bus route, $180/month - utilities.
$25/month - utilities.
Seeking fun roommate who's serious about school. Own bedroom, bathroom. W/D, pool, spacious, quiet, very nice. Electric, cable, water paid. $23.50/month. 642-738-96.
Seeking mature male roommate spring semester.
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By
By GARY LARSON
U.S. MAIL
© 1983 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
16
Tuesdav. December 5, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
TOM MCKINNEY
Bird buff
Mike Wellman, director of building operations for the Adams Alumni Center, pollhes the Jahaywak statue in front of the alumni
center. Wellman was taking advantage of the unusually warm weather yesterday to give the statue one more shine before winter arrives.
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Film used to teach class about racism
"These students have a deep concern about doing something about some of the problems that occur on this campus," Evans said.
By Cory S. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Evans said the film was the result of a project done every fall for his class. The class has about 720 students and meets in Hoch Auditorium.
Six different colors of make-up covered the face of the anonymous speaker as he told the story of his racist father.
The makeup represented skin colors of different races. The story represented his indoctrination into a judge's profession and gave the judge others solely by skin color.
Program continues with panel discussion
this father was a barber, Evans said, and at one point in time, when Blacks would come into his shop for haircuts, he would ceremoniously throw them out. During the civil rights movement, his father wouldn't throw Blacks out, but he would explain to them that he didn't have the tools to cut their hair. Then his father would explain to him, Evans said, that if his white customers thought his clippers had touched Black hair, he would lose all of his business.
The anonymous speaker was Daryl Evans, associate professor of sociology, and the story about his father was an introduction for a film on campus racism produced by several of his teaching assistants. The film, shown Thursday, is the first of a two-part program about racism being conducted in Evans' Sociology 104 class.
The film Evans introduced includes interviews with several students about campus racism, historic civil rights footage and movie clips and cartoons depicting racist stereotypes.
The next step will be a panel discussion on racism in 11 for 11
"One of the things that is real important to us is that if students are
going to be made to sit in a class this large, we want to give them something to compensate," he said. "I only give one direction to my teaching assistants and that is to do something creative that will help the students."
That is what the students who made the film had in mind.
"That was the point, to get real KU students to talk about what's going on here" said Tami Clark, one of the producers of the film. "We wanted to take a look at what's going on because a lot of students aren't aware of it."
Rebecca Merz film producer
'Racism is the result of ignorance, especially today. If we can get people to think about it, that will be a first step.'
Clark gave an example of how uninformed many students were. She said that when she told one of her friends that she was working on a film about racism, he asked her if racism really existed on campus.
Rebecca Merz, another of the film's producers, said that the purpose of the film was education.
"Racism is the result of ignorance, especially today," she said. "If we can get people to think about it, that will be a first step."
Representatives of the various minority student organizations on campus, including Black Student Union, the Hispanic American Leadership Organization and Hillel, will participate in the panel. Benvinci, also involved in production of the film, encouraged anyone who was interested to come to today's discussion.
"We're talking about minority groups," he said. "But it's not strictly a minority group affair. It has everything to do with all of us."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSTAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
WEDNESDAY DEC. 6,1989
NEWS: 864-4810
State reassigns property-tax official
By Derek Schmidt Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — The controversial director of the state's Property Valuation Division was removed from his job yesterday.
Hamblin will be replaced by John Luttjohann
Terry D. Hamblin, who had angered lawmakers by failing to provide information to the Legislature, was reassigned from division director to director of collections, according to an announcement released yesterday by Ed Rolfs, secretary of revenue.
John R. Luttjohann, director of taxation, was appointed to replace Hamblin as division director.
"Mr. Hamblin has become a lightning rod for criticism, and the attacks have become increasingly harsh." Rolfs said in a statement. "After discussing the matter with Mr. Hamblin, we are both convinced
The Property Valuation Division,
part of the department of revenue, is
responsible for implementing the
civil and administrative application
of property for tax purposes.
that the war of words and finger-pointing is serving as a barrier to finding solutions to some very real problems taxpayers are facing."
Hamblin, who had been under attack by some legislators for months, did not appear last week at a three-day meeting of the joint Study Commission and United States Sifification, despite repeated requests by lawmakers to do so.
Rolfs confirmed that Hamblin had been told to stay away from the committee's meetings because of the
time he could be expected to be grilled if he had showed up.
State Sen. Phil Martin, D-Pittsburgh and a former division director, was Hamblin's sharpest critic. Martin said he had requested a sales assessment ratio study, which would indicate the accuracy of property values assigned during reevaluation, but that could hold him in November that the information would not be available until May 1990. Martin said.
Late Thursday night, the joint committee approved a motion by State Rep. Bill Roy Jr., D-Topeka, to investigate the legality of the division withholding information from the Legislature.
State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Davrence and a member of the joint committee, said yesterday she was not convinced that Hamblin's removal would expedite the flow of information to the Legislature.
Nonetheless, she said that Hamblin's removal was necessary, although she had not expected it.
"I really did not have the notion that he was out of favor with the administration," she said.
In a news conference Friday, Gov. Mike Hayden declined to say whether he still had confidence in Hamblin. Frank Ybarra, the governor's deputy press secretary, said yesterday that Hayden planned no further comment on the reassignment.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Dawrence and a member of the joint committee, said she was not surprised by Hamblin's removal.
"He should have been there and should have been able to answer many of the questions that the committee had," she said.
Branson said she expected more cooperation from Luttjohann.
"He works very well with the Legislature," she said.
"I wouldn't voice satisfaction yet, but at least Mr. Luttjohnk knows what the problems are. I would hope it's an improvement."
legislature, she said.
Charlton was more cautious.
In a statement, Luttjohann said, "The challenges we face in the next few weeks are great. . . We must first quantify the scope of any insecurity that could assemble a package of changes which are appropriate."
Panel discusses University racism issues
MISSY BROWN
Problems persist some students say
By Cory S. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Angela Cervantes had a bad experience in her English 102 class.
Stephanie Maddox. Kansas City, Mo., freshman, answers a question concerning racial problems on campus.
Cervantes, president of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, said that one day she, along with several other students, came a few minutes late to class. As she sat down, her teacher made some humorous remarks about late students.
See related story
p. 8
*servantes didn't think it was funny.*
She said her teacher also commented that he knew for a fact that all Cubans in Miami were a least an hour late for school, work and everything else.
"I was so upset that I didn't want to speak for the rest of the class," she said. "He apologized later, but by then it was too late. The kids had already got it into their minds."
n
*Perpetuation of this ignorance can only be addressed by forums such as this. Racism doesn't have to exist in this country, but if we don't talk about it, it will perpetuate itself.*
Anthony Dick Haskell student and panelist
Cervantes was one of the participants in a panel discussion on racism yesterday in Hoch Auditorium. Her story is one example, she said, of an insensitivity on the part of some administrators and faculty that perpetuates racism on the KU campus. By hiring people like that teacher, the administration is showing its insensitivity, Cervantes said.
Administrative insensitivity and cultural education were two of the many subjects discussed by the panel yesterday. The panel was sponsored by the Sociology 104 class of Darvl Evans, associate professor of sociology.
It was the second part of a two-part project, the first part of which was a student-produced film on racism. More than 700 students attended, many of whom are in the class.
Members of the panel were: Frenchette Garth, Black Student Union president; Anthony Dick, Haskell student; Megan Chang and Kathryn Mar, representing Asian students; Andrea Katzman and Steve Jacobson, representing Hillel; Chris Alonzo, HALO member and Frank Williams, president of McColum Hall.
To start the discussion, Evans asked the panelists if they thought racism existed on campus, how it manifested itself, what its causes were, and what causes were and what could be done about it.
Garth responded by saying that the fact that a discussion was necessary proved racism existed on campus. She said it manifested itself in one of two ways, overtly with things like name calling, and coverly when people are
Students, panel members evaluate effectiveness of group discussion on racism
By Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writer
"I don't know if the panel is going to solve racism, but it will make people more aware of the problems," said Jill Johnston, Boulder. Colo., sonhorem.
Some students don't think yesterday's panel discussion in Hoch Auditorium will cure the problems of racism.
Mark Riding, a visiting Wichita State University freshman, said talking about racism was a good idea, but he questioned whether it would change people's attitudes, and whether racism would be around indefinitely.
"People think racism is a view, but racism is an installation in a person." Riding said. "It's not a problem, but it is a disease. It has to be cured, not just fixed."
Panel members unargue with members from Steve Jacobson, who that panel of the most important ideas behind the panel was addressing the problem, and to simply help students be conscious that the problem of racism existed.
Panel members disagreed with Riding.
"We're asking you to notice that by not sitting by a Black person, this could be a subtle hint of racism.
Some Black students in the audience cited things such as white students not sitting by Blacks on the bus as subtle manifestations of racist attitudes.
Frenchette Garth, panel member from the Black Student Union, said racial problems would never disappear if students took the attitude that nothing ever would change.
looked down upon because of the color of their skin.
"This is one step, but I don't think it should end here." Garth said.
Daryl Evans, associate professor of sociology, said racism existed and was "bad stuff." If solutions are going to begin, they must be made in an openness ofiversity with efforts like the panel, he said.
we need to do to stop racism," Jacobson said.
Garth said one of the causes of racism was that many people didn't understand other cultures.
"We're asking you to join and do whatever
Dick agreed, saying that racism was perpetuated by the educational curriculum in colleges and high schools. Most subjects are taught
"You folks are supposed to be the future," he said. "If you're not part of the solution, you are part of the problem."
from a white person's point of view with little regard to the contributions of other cultures, a situation that neretauates stereotypes, he said.
"Perpetuation of this ignorance can only be addressed by forums such as this," he said. "Racism doesn't have to exist in this country, but if we don't talk about it, it will perpetuate
Dick said the panel discussion would be helpful.
"You have to look back at the curriculum," Dick said. "Because when you get to this level your minds are already made up."
Katzman said apathy and indifference to racism were also a problem.
itself."
"If you are white and Protestant you don't face discrimination," she said.
Evans said the discussion was meant to get people to think about the problem and recognize that it exists. He said he hoped it had changed a few minds.
"If one person that was here today switched around then we have accomplished something." he said.
E. German party chief arrested
Citizens demand end to corruption political destruction
The Associated Press
EAST BERLIN — Erich Honecker and other former leaders were put under house arrest yesterday, the government disarmed the Communist Party's private army and the chiefs of the once-feared secret police resigned.
East Germans, furious about past corruption, surrounded secret police offices in several cities to stop further destruction of documents that he and his former spouse Honecker, who was party chief for 18 years, and his former lieutenants.
"The former general secretary and president Erich Honecker is among those who are not allowed to leave their houses," DON reported. Wanditz has 23 houses, once filled with Politiburo members and their families.
Under Honecker, the secret police were the main instrument for keeping people under control. The official news agency ADN reported yesterday that its 19 top officials resigned, but the new chief, Lt. Gen. Wolfgang Schwanitz, would remain in office.
The house arrests were an act of "national self-defense" and resulted from "the will of the people," said Harri Haarland, the deputy chief prosecutor.
Schwanitz has criticized the organization's past role in crushing dissent.
Guenter Wendland, the chief prosecutor, also resigned following allegations that he was unfit to lead corruption tribunal. He was a holdover from the Honecker era.
Authorities placed Honecker and other former top officials under house arrest yesterday in their luxurious Wandlitz compound north of East Berlin. The compound has become a symbol of past corruption and abuse.
Communist Party leaders appealed for calm to avoid "anarchy and chaos" in a nation that, in two months, has seen the dismissal of two sets of leaders, mass pro-democracy protests, the historic opening of its borders and promises of free elections and other reforms.
Bodies of kidnapped elderly couple found near Lecompton
The Interior Ministry said the government was disarming the "fighting groups", party-run militias based in factories.
By Rich Cornell Kansan staff writer
Western estimates said the militia had 3,000 active members but could have drawn on reserves of 500,000.
It said the weapons taken away included automatic rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, anti-aircraft and armored personnel carriers.
East Germany's top lawyer, Wolfgang Gogel, was arrested yesterday on suspicion of "criminal extortion," the official ADN news agency said.
On Monday, militia officers had urged the rank-and-file to break their oath of loyalty to the Communist Party.
Vogel handled spectacular East-West spy and prisoner swaps for years and was a confidant of Honecker. He also represented a fugitive East German official, Alexander Schalk-Golokowski.
The bodies of an elderly couple kidnapped Monday morning in Topeka were found yesterday in a field near Lecompton, said Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney.
Honecker and several other members of the old leadership are the main targets of the corruption investigations. He has been expelled from the party, and three members of his Pollituro are in prison.
Lester M. Haley, 87, and Nancy C. Haley, 69, of Topeka, were shot to death. The gunman left them and another woman beside a dirt road. Flory said yesterday at a news conference at the Douglas County Law Enforcement Center. The Haley's
See RESIGN, p. 6
bodies were found together at 1:10 p.m. $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ miles northwest of Lecompton near the Kansas River.
Flory said the kidnapper may have found the Haleys and shot them after sending them away from the car.
"Mr. and Mrs. Haley died of gun-shot wounds," Flory said. "No one is in custody."
Lt. Bud Brooks of the Topeka
l police department said the other
woman, Verne B. Horne, also of
Topeka, ran to a nearby farmhouse
from the intersection on the road.
She called her husband from
the farmhouse and he notified
the police, who began looking for the Haleys and another woman, Ida Dupugherty, who also may have been kidnapped.
Dougherty, a neighbor of the Haleys, is still missing, Brooks said. About 11:30 a.m. Monday, the Haleys went to her house to check on her.
When they walked inside, Dougherty was not home, and a gunman inside the house ordered the Halesy to lie on the floor, Brooks said. Shortly after that, Horne walked into the house to check on the Halesy.
The gunman took the Haleys and Horns to a car in Dougherty's garage
and drove to a dirt road north of Douglas County road 1023 and south of the Kansas River, Brooks said.
The Haleys and Horne were then ordered to leave the car, Brooks said. They ran away from the kidnapper in different directions.
However, Brooks said, police do
"We have several people we're looking at." he said.
not have significant information connecting any of the suspects with the crimes.
Horne described the gunman to police as a Black male, about 20 to 23 years old, five-10 to 6-foot, 140 pounds with shoulder-length black hair, Brooks said.
Doug yesterday's news conference, Flory said investigators from Douglas and Jefferson counties, KU police, the Kansas Bureau of investigation, the U.S. Army and Topeka police searched the area near Lecompont Monday and Tuesday. Volunteers from the area also
Using infrared sensing devices, investigators searched all night from a heliconator, he said.
( )
Searchers found the two bodies yesterday near a deteriorated building, he said. He would not say how many times the Halevs were shot.
Investigators will continue searching the area today for Dougherty and clues concerning the shootings, Flory said. He Loren Anderson, Douglas County sheriff, plan to meet this morning with officials from Jefferson County to coordinate investigations.
2
Wednesday, December 6, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
Sun
Cloudy
HI: 43'
LO: 21'
TODAY
Seattle 51/44
New York 43/23
Denver 45/21
Chicago 38/14
Los Angeles 76/61
Miami 75/63
Dallas 68/40
KEY
Rain Snow
Ice T-Storms
Forecasted by Jack Mabrv
Temperature are today a warm
tonight's low.
Kansas Forecast
Salmin.
40/20 KC
Dodge
42/21
City
Wichita
41/22
48/24
Mostly cloudy and cool with morning temperatures in the low to mid 40s falling throughout the afternoon. There is a slight chance for showers changing to flurries over western Kansas. Lows tonight in the lower 20s.
KU Weather Service Forecast: 984-3300
5-day Forecast
Wednesday - Mostly cloudy and cool with a slight chance of evening sprinkles. High 43°. Low 21°.
Thursday - Mostly cloudy and cold. High 32°. Low 15°.
**Friday** - Partly cloudy and continued cold. High 38°. Low 26°.
**Saturday** - Partly cloudy and warmer. High 51°. Low 34°.
Sunday - Mostly sunny and mild. High 55'. Low 38'.
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▶ Sales of the poetry magazine KADO, a combined effort of Alan Lichter's poetry workshops, will be from 8:30 a.m. to a p.m. today at the east end of Forestoe Hall and the north end of Muskegan Union. The magazine costs $1.
▶ A letter-writing campaign to state legislators, sponsored by the KU Pro-Choice Coalition, will be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the fourth
floor lobby in the Kansas Union.
An open house sponsored by
The Student Senate will be from 1 p.m. to
5 p.m. today at Room 410 on the
fourth floor in the Kansas Union to
open on Monday, July 26th.
A Christmas party and guest
meeting of the Student Alumni Association
will be at 7 p.m. today at
Adams Alumni Center. Yearbook
pictures will be taken.
Information in a story about Hillet on page 14 of yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. Their program is called
the Hillel Little Brother and Little
Sister Program.
Correction
---
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, December 6. 1980
3
Campus/Area
Campaign can't fill Margin's shoes
By Angela Baughman Kansan staff writer
If Margin of Excellence financing were reduced, Campaign Kansas would not take on new significance but could be affected indirectly, campaign officials said yesterday.
Todd Seymour, president of the Kansas University Endowment Association and a member of the campaign executive board, said that because the campaign's purpose was
to supplement what the state provided, it could not be a substitute for the Margin.
"I don't think it's a trade-off," he said.
Campaign Kansas is the University's five-year $177 million fund-raising drive.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring the total financing of its seven institutions to 95 percent of their peer schools and to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent
Margin financing has been mentioned by legislators as a possible revenue source to ease the property tax burden that has them scrambling for solutions.
of their peers.
for someone.
Seymour said he did not think donors would see the campaign as a substitute for the Margin. He said that donors thought the state had a responsibility to support the University and that their contributions were supplemental.
John Scarife, public relations director for Campaign Kansas, said that because the campaign began before the Margin and would continue until June 30, 1992, it still would raise private funds regardless of what happened to the Margin.
He said that if the Margin financing were reduced, it would be a further indication of the importance of private financing.
private funds to shore up those weak nesses," Scarfe said.
"If those increases from the state aren't there, they have to look to
Because some contributors to the campaign are faculty members and part of the Margin money applies to faculty salaries, Scarife said, those faculty members' ability to give could be affected by a Margin cut.
He also said that if Margin financing were reduced, such action could signal to the public that education was not a top priority for financing.
Med Center class helps disabled children
I'll just put it on the ground and watch them play.
Sue Wenner, center, works with Jesse Culwell, 4. Mary Heeter holds Tallatha Gaeff, 4, during a song led by Kay Ritcher, right
By Melanie Matthes
Kansan staff writer
"OK everybody, it's good morning time!" the teacher sang to the four children.
"Is everybody ready for good morning? Call out or raise your hand if you are ready."
you are ready!
A four-year-old girl named Talatha Graeff, or Telly, bounced up and down and raised her hand and the five instructors led the children in a song called "Hello Everybody."
At the end of the song the instructor shook Telly's hand. Telly smiled and her blonde pigtails wave in the air as she bounced on her instructor's lap.
Telly and her three classmates are enrolled in a preschool class conducted at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The class is designed to help the children, all of whom have two or more handicapping conditions, to develop communication, motor, speech and language, social coping skills, and coping with Sue Wenner, head teacher of the multiple handicap preschool.
"We try to make it like a normal preschool so that the kids can learn as much as they are able to," she said.
The preschool is financed through the Wyandotte County public school system and is part of the Med Center's Children's Rehabilitation Unit.
The preschool now enrolls seven children ranging in age from three to five years, Wenner said. When the children leave the preschool, they usually enrol in a special education program offered at a public school.
Joseph Hollowell, director of the unit, said although the name implied that the unit gave in-patient care to handicapped children, it had always provided an out-patient, school setting.
The unit offers services such as pediatrics, orthopedic surgery, special education and hearing and speech pathology, he said.
"It was created to offer those services because there was a big void in those years of a place where a new city was planned, location in three avenues." Hollowell said.
Created in 1988 through federal and local financing, the unit gives condition evaluations and recommends treatment of handicapped children. It also provides treatment in areas such as multiply-handicapped and autistic preschool children.
Hollowell said that in the future he expected to see the unit's focus turn toward evaluation and treatment of infant and preschool-aged children because many public schools were developing their own handicapped education programs.
The unit also will focus on developing community-based education programs, he said.
One such program is the Project EAGLE, he said, which teaches health and child care to underprivileged families from Wyandotte County who have or are expecting an infant.
A program that teaches adoptive parents to care for a handicapped child is another community-based program sponsored by the unit, Hollowell said.
The unit also offers special clinics for children with chronic diseases such as cerebral palsy, spina bifida
1988. She said that working with handicapped children was both rewarding and frustrating.
"Every little thing you see as improvement is a real big thing to them," she said. "It can be a little frustrating because you want to see them achieve as much as they can."
6X7
'We try to make it like a normal preschool so that the kids can learn as much as they are able to'
head teacher of the multiple handicap preschool
and cystic fibrosis. Children with developmental problems who cannot eat or drink properly and school age children with learning problems also can be helped by the unit, he said.
The preschool program recently expanded to include a home-based and center-based program for families with handicapped children under two years old, Wenner said. This program is designed to meet the individual needs of the children and their families by providing in-home services as well as services in the hospital.
Mary Heeter has worked as a teaching assistant in the preschool since she graduated from KU in Fall
Four-year-old Libby Bridge sat on the floor and watched her classmate, Telly, spin around in a scooter. Lying on her back in the scooter, Telly kicked her short, braced legs out in front of her and laughed. Libby smiled, clapped her hands and pushed her classmate across the floor.
"Oh good, Libby, you pushed!" her teacher coed. "Very good! Can you push again?"
Libby pushed the scooter again and clapped in delight as Telly's scooter som around.
"Everybody clap for Libby," her teacher said, clapping her hands enthusiastically.
E. H.
Libby Bridge works on her skills by putting a puzzle together.
Assembly gives some students second chance
By Anita Meyer
Kansan staff writer
Some students who have been academically dismissed may have the chance to be readmitted to the University of Kansas, the college assembly voted yesterday.
Tom Beisecker, chairman of the committee of undergraduate studies and advising, said that students who had failed to meet basic English or math requirements could enroll in English or math courses during the 1900 Summer session.
"We're talking about that group of students who, for some reason, failed to maintain continuous enrollment in English or math," he said. "Whether they enrolled in the class and dropped it or didn't remain enrolled until they met the requirements, they were not on probation."
"If, in addition, they suffered a low grade point average, they were dismissed. What we're doing is giving them the chance to redeem themselves at KU."
Beiecker said that students had to remain enrolled in English courses until they completed English 102 and in math until they completed a course.
He said students who had been dismissed but fulfilled requirements during the summer session would be readmitted to KU in Fall 1990.
Charles Himmelberg, chairman of math, said he approved giving students a second chance.
The assembly also approved curricular changes in undergraduate and graduate programs.
"I believe it's fair," he said. "I believe in a student being able to recover if he's had some problems."
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In graduate studies, these areas were biological sciences, anthropology, history and political science. Changes included course descriptions, titles, credit, course additions and deletions.
Terry Slocum, chairman of the committee for graduate studies, asked for curricular changes in graduate courses.
In undergraduate courses, the assembly approved curricular changes in African and African-American studies, anthropology, Army ROTC, biological sciences, chemistry, communication studies, culture, geography, Germanic languages and literatures, history, microbiology, political science, psychology, theatre and film and women's studies.
The assembly approved classes that would fulfill the bachelor's of psychology and bachelor's of general studies requirements.
Holiday Heat
Cause of tire fire remains a mystery
By a Kansan reporter
The cause for Monday's fireire in Leavenworth County remains uncertain as tires, trash and bushes still were burning yesterday.
The fire, which started Monday morning on the property of R. H. Brauer of Linwood, is now being investigated by county officials and by the Kansas Department of Health Investigation, a department official said yesterday.
Larry Stafford, administrator officer of the Environmental Protection Agency in Kansas City, Kan., said the cause of the fire was unknown.
Chuck Magaha, Leavenworth County chief of emergency operations, said that the fire was under control but that it would keep burning for about two more days.
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Wednesday, December 6, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Bill allowing bar ID checks would waste legislative time
If the idea that is going to be bumped around the next legislative session passes, that person who used to lurk in the corner of the local bar looking just a bit out of place may be returning.
That person, of course, is the police officer who has been absent from bars since September, when a Douglas County judge decided that a person did not have to show identification to an officer who had requested it.
Officers to ask for life in the state.
That, however, is a waste of legislative time.
But now, State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, is considering introducing a bill that would make it legal for officers to ask for IDs in bars.
That, however, is a waste or legislative time. First of all, one would hope that the police have far better things to do than comb the bars searching for the minors in the crowd. Sure, enforcing the drinking age is a good thing, but scouring a bar picking out people who look like minors is too time-consuming.
What should happen instead is that the people who run the bars should be held accountable for who they let in. All bars should card at the door. If that happened, there would be no problem. The officers could do their jobs, and the bouncers would be able to handle theirs.
would be able to lambaste him.
If the police insist on having some kind of bar check to enforce the drinking age, they should have periodic checks of everyone's ID in a bar, much like conducting a speed trap. If that were the setup, no one would be able to argue that he had been singled out for "looking too young" or "acting nervous."
Finally, but perhaps most unrealistically, underage people could stay away from the bars. Because they don't, bar patrons must expect that sooner or later, an officer will be checking their IDs again.
But the Legislature needs to think long and hard about the method they will let those officers use.
David Stewart for the editorial board
Elections commission may add, not subtract red tape
Student Senate is finally taking action to correct the problems they had in last year's elections. They're handing the problem to a commission, especially designed to be unaccountable.
Senate will vote tonight on whether to create an Elections Commission, a body that would operate separately from Senate and would be responsible for running future elections. In last year's election, confusion about the interpretation of spending limit rules resulted in controversy. Common Cause coalition, which won the election in a landslide, spent more money than allowed and was lucky not to be removed from office. In order to retain their seats, Student Body President B, Jake White and Vice President Jeff Morris were told they had to submit a proposal to solve the controversial problem. The proposal was to be on the desk of David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, by Dec. 11.
afairs, by Dec. 11.
White and Morris are still being hounded by the national lobbying organization Common Cause for the use of that organization's name and still haven't submitted the proposal.
White said that the Senate process of developing a plan to deal with the problem was a semester-long endeavor and that the proposal that Ambler must receive for White and Morris to avoid repercussions is forthcoming.
percussions is for convincing. But the creation of an Elections Commission creates more questions than it answers. White said the confusion about the interpretation of spending limit rules, which is what caused the problem in the first place, would be dealt with by the new commission. Senate appears to be passing the buck.
commission. Senate appears to be lacking the commission idea is not without merit. It would remove any undue influence student senators might have over who will replace them. But if the old elections committee had done its job and reviewed coalition spending during the election, this question would have been cleared up the way it should have been, through existing channels.
been, through existing channels. The problem is not the fault of White or Morris, it is the result of lackadaisical management and misinterpretation of rules by the previous student government. Creating a new commission might solve the problem, but it is an unnecessary addition to an already growing bureaucracy. Solve the problem through existing channels.
Stan Diel for the editorial board
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HISTORY
Language is sacred, invaluable ally
I am the kind of person who will make fun of almost anything. My sense of humor, which is usually quite sardonic, once prompted an acquaintance to ask me, "Is anything sacred to you?" I remember thinking, "Good question." I also remember my response, because the first answer to come to mind was also the best, the most honest and the most revealing. I replied, "Language."
Now, at this early and crucial point in my column I know that you, gentle reader, may be wondering: Have I stumbled upon the musings of some sort of God-for-sakens William-Safire-wannabe? If that is in fact your concern, please let me assure you that you have not. I am not to do any nipicking here, although that kind of vigilance may be a logical extension of what I have to say.
Speaking of which, what I have to say is in reaction to the following statement: Words can mean whatever you want them to mean. This view is related to the opinion, perhaps less obvious, that can be paraphrased: Well, it's the nature of language to change, so there's nothing wrong with my going ahead and changing it. Wrong. I have a friend who, years ago, liked to say these things in all seriousness. He has matured considerably since then, but just thinking about such propositions still rankles me. They go against the grain of what effective communication is all about. I would probably dismiss them as laughable if I did not perceive how potentially disastrous they are.
ine definition of words and language in general are mutable, of course; they do change. But such linguistic evolution is properly slight, gradual, and never wholly arbitrary. The simple (and fortunate) fact here is that one person's usage does
Ford Hoffman
Staff columnist
not do the trick. An educated consensus and the passing of time are properly responsible for the unconventional — frequently a euphemism for "eroneous" — becoming the newly acceptable in language, if and when that happens. Otherwise, if taken to the extreme, people would have a control over language that could render dictionaries useless. (The horror, the horror.) A formerly friendly combination of words could mean practically anything and, therefore, essentially nothing.
It has been my experience that words are often more dependable than people. (Hell, some of my best friends are words.) People are frequently not around to help you deal with what you are thinking and feeling, but there are almost always sufficient words to express what you are thinking and feeling without having to destroy definitions or otherwise wreak havoc with the language. All you have to do is get to know Your Mother Tongue a little better. Undoubtedly, much "unconventional" usage is fueled by ignorance — i.e., by simply not knowing the right word(s) to use in the first place. Notice that it is not the masters of the game who are so insistent on changing the rules of play, especially when they already work so well. (I certainly would not claim to be a master of the English language;
out I respect those who are, and I recognize the greatness of such an achievement.
Simply put, to accept the arbitrary nature of language is to forget its function as the main vehicle for communicating ideas and emotions as accurately and efficiently as possible. That accuracy and efficiency are both severely impeded by an expressively liberal view of diction and usage — one in which the correct, established definitions of words suddenly fall prey to personal opinion and caprice.
To illustrate this point, allow me to invoke a truism: If you don't mean what you say, then you will never say what you mean. People cannot read your mind, but they can read (or listen to) your words. And they will, too, if those words are accurately and interestingly written (or spoken). You need not abandon accuracy in order to be interesting, though. In fact, to believe and do otherwise is to demand too much from your (probably dwindling) audience. Again, by insisting on too much you can easily end with nothing, or no one.
I would hope that most of what I have written here is as obvious as it is dry. I have been told, however, that I have an alarming tendency to overestimate my fellow man and my fellow woman. At any rate, one of the greatest lessons to be learned from higher education is how powerful and precise words can be. Language can be an invaluable ally. But like allies, language doesn't respond well to being disrespectfully dominated. Jerk it around long enough and its strength and wealth will no longer be at your disposal.
▶ Ford Hoffman is a Lincoln, Neb., senior majoring in philosophy.
Memories of a well-known woman
the old woman was looking a little tired but definitely alive. "Call me Clio," she said, straightening her gingham dress as she settled into the oak chair in the office.
"The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated," she began. "I know that doesn't sound original. A similar retort has been attributed to an American writer by the name of Samuel Clemens. But you see, everything that's ever been said belongs to me, I believe you will agree. Unlike some people, I don't need a copyright."
"I am surprised to see you," I admitted, "having read in 'Foreign Affairs' that you were, uh, over and that, with the fading of communism, it was all going to be liberal democracy and blue skies from now on. What an unexpected pleasure to see you, and looking so well, too."
"don't give me that, you insolent pup," came the old lady's vigorous response. "I know very well how I must look to you. Well, I wager it it's a damned sight better than you would look if you'd had the century I've just had. There were decades when I hated to out of bed.
"Why, seems all I've had this last century is war, revolution and chaos. How's a body supposed to survive on a diet like that? Haven't had a halfway decent rest since the first decade of the 1900s. That was the life; and now, just when all that peace and nationalism and liberal democracy is supposed to return, they tell me I'm dead! As if I were incapable of leading a peaceful life. All these whippernappers can think of when they hear my name is change and uproar, that's the trouble.
PASCAL H. SCHULZ
Paul Greenberg
Syndicated columnist
They never think of me as a lady " 'Xu, no, I am.'
Yes, that is right.
"You're not the first to think I was over, you know. Some of your kind never even realized I'd started . . ."
"My kind?"
"Don't play innocent with me. Yes, your kind Editorial writers, columnists, wiseacres, philosophers, court jesters, whatever you call yourselfs these days. Imagine. As if they could know me, when of course it is my business to know them: front, back and sideways.
"The Greeks and the Romans were great talkers but, you know, they never took me anywhere, not anywhere definite, anyway. Wasn't till the Jews and their popular offshoot, the Christians, came along 'til folks started saying I was going somewhere.
"Augustine drew me a road map, then Machiavelli showed me the way around it. Voltaire tore the whole thing up and used it for confetti. Gibbon used the same old map but sent me in the opposite direction: away from The City of God and back to Rome. Hegel always spoke to me as if I were a reasonable person; I was flattered but,
really, there are times when a girl has to pick up her heels. Meinecke worshipped me. Historicism, they called this philosophy. Frankly, my dear, it was the only ideology that ever appealed to me.
"merrier liked me, too; he understood what a moody creature I could be. Marx was one of those who thought he had me figured; he had our trip together all mapped out, with all the hotels and motels marked. Like a tourist planning a trip nobody would ever make if they didn't have to. Poor Leopold von Ranke wanted to take me exactly as I was, not realizing how different I am to different suitors. Dilhye doted on me, and Ortega y Gasset may even have understood me. I can't be sure, not understanding myself."
"Well, I really must go. I don't know where, but it'll be historic. My time hasn't come yet, though there were centuries when I wondered how I was going to get through the next decade. Other things may end — ideology is having a tough time of it just now, poor extravagant dear — but there's the rest of my sewing circle: economics, nationalism, science, religion. No telling where they'll lead me. I'm thinking of reviving Imperial Russia, though without the Emperor, of course. What a bore he was. And maybe the Austro-Hungarian Empire, too, though without dear Franz Josef. He lasted so long, people tended to confuse him with me. A little turn-of-the-century peace and progress might be nice. So much to do, so much time to do it. Don't you go printing my obituary."
- Paul Greenberg is the editorial page editor for the Blue Bluff (Ark) Commercial.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, December 6, 1989
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Hurst speakea about Japanese attitudes toward the United States.
Japanese book suggests U.S. lacks productivity
Bv Doug Fishback
By Doug Fishbac Kansan staff writer
The United States lacks productivity, business foresight and corporate ethics, says a new Japanese book that takes a critical look at the United States.
G. Cameron Hurst, director of the Center for East Asian Studies, discussed "A Japan That Can Say No." The people yesterday in the Kansas Union.
' The book, which has caused a stir among lawmakers in Washington was written by Japanese politician Shintaro Ishihara and by Sony co-founder Akio Morita.
Hurst based his talk on his reading of a Japanese version of the book, which he brought back from Japan on Thursday.
In the book, Ishihara praises Japanese know-how in the field of special microchip production and boasts "no one else can make these but us," Hurst said. Even if the United States had the technical knowledge to produce the chips, it could not because it lacks productivity. Ishiha argues
Steve Tripp, who attended the forum, said that criticism of Japanese corporations by other countries was a new prominence in world markets.
He said that the book was "extremely one-sided" in its criticism of the United States.
Ishihara also says that U.S. racial prejudice against Japanese corporations is at the root of what he calls "Japan bashing." Hurst said.
Hurst said that although the book's authors did ignore some Japanese shortcomings, it was an interesting look at U.S. business values.
One chapter of the book describes a U.S. corporate management structure that can plan no further than 10 minutes, Hurst said. He said that the chapter did not issue a blanket criticism of managers in the United States, only those who made their living from manipulating large amounts of paper assets without actually producing anything.
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Wednesdav. December 6, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Kansans return with tales of horrors
By Bryan Swan Kansan staff writer
many U.S. citizens may find it difficult to imagine a life haunted by the specter of government persecution and deprived of civil liberties, but two Kansans have experienced it firsthand in El Salvador.
Paul Rasor, a professor of law at Washburn University, returned last month from the nation's capital, San Salvador, after being part of a nine-person delegation that investigated the two bombings.
On Oct. 31, the headquarters of the Fenastra labor union, an organization that had been outspoken in its criticism of the government, and the offices of the Mothers of the Disappeared, an organization that monitored the lives of people who were bombed, he said. Nine people were killed and 40 injured.
Rasor arrived in the country on Nov. 9 and, two days later, was caught in the middle of a leftist rebel offensive.
Men trace life in El Salvador
He said that there was no doubt in his mind that the government was
responsible for the bombing incidents.
Rasor said he suspected the government also was responsible for the Nov. 16 murders of six Jesuit priests
He said he had been working with the Going Home Campaign, an organization that helped El Salvador refugees who had fled to neighboring Honduras to return home,
11
I was treated badly. I was threatened with death and
and two others in the capital.
"I absolutely believe it," he said.
"There is no doubt about it. It was done in death-squad style. There was a curfew in effect, and one but the other could have gotten in, and one else could have gotten in, and there had been earlier threats."
Tim Lohrentz Newton, Kan.
Another Kansan missed the rebel offensive but had a harrowing experience of his own.
Tim Lohrentz, a peace worker from Newton, arrived in Honduras' Chalatenango province on Oct. 25 and was deported Nov. 2 after being arrested and interrogated by the government.
when he was arrested.
"I was treated badly." Lobrentz said. "I was threatened with death and psychologically tortured."
He described the psychological abuse as being interrogated for 10 minutes by a man with a black hood over his face and being held prisoner by him. He also said he able to hear screams and beatings in other parts of the building.
Lohrentz said three other members of his group also were arrested and held for 30 hours.
He said his organization traveled with 1,300 refugees on buses from Honduras to El Salvador, recorded
Belize Caribbean Sea Guatemala Honduras Chalatenango El Salvador San Salvador Nicaragua Pacific Ocean
KANSAN Graphic
human rights violations and helped people build houses.
Lohrentz said the siege mentality of government troops made them suspect anyone who was poor or was a refugee as a possible rebel or sympathizer.
He said the trip was his fifth to El Salvador, and on previous visits he had talked with church officials and U.S. Embassy workers and had talked extensively with rebel commanders.
Lohrentz said he was afraid that many of the people he had worked with or talked to in El Salvador were imprisoned or dead and that he had not been able to contact any of them.
Andrew Johnson, president of the KU chapter of Amnesty International, said it was common for people to be arrested or abducted by the Salvadoran military, but U.S. citizens usually were left alone.
He said he had come across several Amnesty International newsletters that reported people being detained or executed without due process and that the KU chapter usually restricted its activities concerning El Salvador to letter-writing campaigns to free such people.
Rasor said he had observed a trend within the Salvadoran government of respring to deportation of human-rights monitors and relief workers to silence opposition.
Resign
Continued from p. 1
The house arrests are intended to keep the former Politburo members from fleeing the country. Schalck-Golodkowski, the former top official for trade with the West, fled after allegations that he was involved in huge weapons deals.
"All former Politburo members who after Oct. 19 were no longer members of the Politburo and who are still in Wandltz" were under house arrest, ADN said. Honecker lost his job in a major power reshuffle on Oct. 18. His successor, Egon Krenz, resigned on Sunday.
There were growing reports of bands of angry citizens surging toward local headquarters of the secret police to prevent the destruction of documents that could be used in criminal trials.
About 2,000 East Germans tried to force their way into the secret police headquarters in Suhl, and a delegation of the angry citizens eventually was allowed inside, ADN said. It quoted the local secret police chief, Gerhard Lange, as saying documents there had already been destroyed.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, December 6, 1989
Nation/World
7
Protest group says Navy rammed ship
Greenpeace threatens to take legal action
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The protest group Greenpeace yesterday accused the Navy of "maliciousness" in ramming its flagship as it protested the test launch of a Trident II missile. The Navy says it did not ramp the ship.
"We have a message for the Navy," Greenpeace U.S. Executive Director Peter Bahouth said. "We are going to take legal action. They are going to have to pay us damages."
He declined to give details or say how much the group might seek in damages for Monday's incident, which took place in the Atlantic Ocean 50 miles from the Florida coast just before the submarine Tennessee fired the $28.5 million missile.
The Navy denied that it rammed the 887-ton ship Greenpeace. The service said that it respected the group's right to protest but that it also had a right under international law to protect itself on the high seas.
At a news conference, Greenepeace leaders showed videotapes of two vessels identified as the Navy tugboats Grasp and Kittiwake spraying the decks of the Greenpeace and pulling alongside. The tapes showed gap holes in the hull of the Greenpeace; group leaders said the gashes were caused by rammings from the tugboats.
The videotapes also showed Greenpeace activists in an inflatable speedboat approach what appeared to be an antenna from a submerged submarine. The group's leaders said the object was the radio mast of the Tennessee.
The group said Navy commandos
cut the fuel lines of two inflatable speedboats and returned them to their mother ship.
At the Pentagon, spokesman Pete Williams said, "The Navy didn't ram the Greenpeace boat."
"As far as the right to do this, obviously the United States respects the right of Grepeaceum . . . to work in conjunction with peaceful demonstration," he said.
But he he said that the United States "reserves and will exercise its right to protect its vessels and crews engaged in lawful high-seas activities and protect them from interference or other action by others that would endanger U.S. vessels and their crews."
He said the Greenpeace action interfered with the "legitimate exercise of the U.S. of the high-seas in the waters of the Pacific, a violation of international law."
The protest was part of a "nuclear-free seas" campaign that Greenpeace launched in 1987, Bahouth said. The ship Greenpeace replaced the Rainbow Warrior as the group's flagship after the latter vessel was mined by French security agents while it was protesting French nuclear tests in the Pacific Ocean.
"We do expect to mix it up with the Navy," said Greenpeace leader William M. Arkin.
He said the two Navy vessels not only tore holes in the hull of the Greenpeace but rammed it while a helicopter chartered by the group was attempting to land on its decks. He said the Navy's action in pouring water down the ship Greenpeace's stacks could have caused an explosion.
SAL REGULATOR: The Bush administration began looking for a successor to savings and loan regulator M. Danny Wall yesterday, and the chairman of the House Banking Committee said hearings that led to Wall's resignation were just the beginning of the investigation.
The administration wants a professional regulator to head the Office of Thrift Supervision, rather than an appointee whose chief qualifications are political connections, said an industry source, who spoke on condition of 'anonymy'.
World Briefs
include longtime officials with the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
The administration, in searching for a successor, is consulting Treasury Secretary Nicholas F. Brady and chief economic adviser Michael Bookin, said White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. He said a replacement won't be in place before January, when Congress returns from holiday recess.
FIGHTING IN LEBANON: Israel's jets raided Palestinian guerrilla bases yesterday, its surrogate militia shelled towns in south Lebanon and fighting between rival Shite
Candidates under consideration
Muslim militias spread to Beirut. President Elias Hawaii said he would ask Syria to withdraw its 40,000 soldiers stationed in Lebanon if his new government could establish authority in a nation factionalized by 14 years of sectarian civil war.
Police said 20 people were wounded in fighting between the Syrian-backed Shite militia Amal and the pro-Iranian Hezbollah, or party of God, in Beirut and south Lebanon.
PANAMA CANAL TREATY President Bush spurned the nominee of the Panamanian government yesterday and said he had asked the deputy administrator of the Panama Canal to serve as acting administrator starting Jan. 1.
Bush said the nomination of Fernando Manfredo would allow the United States to comply with a stipulation in the 12-year-old Panama Canal Treaty that the top post at the Panama. Canal Commission must be filled by a Panamanian citizen effective Jan. 1, 1990.
The treaty specifies that the Panamanian government nominate the administrator and the U.S. president appoint him.
Philippine coup rages; 2,000 trapped
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — Fighting intensified yesterday between rebels and loyal forces in the Makati financial district, where about 2,000 foreigners, including more than 200 U.S. citizens, have been trapped in hotels for four daws.
A 60mm mortar round slammed into a squatter settlement near the Makati Medical Center about 6 a.m. (4 p.m. CST Monday). Ten people were taken to the hospital, including a 6-year-old girl who died.
Efforts to evacuate foreigners held by the rebels appeared to have stalled early yesterday.
Two bombs exploded in the capital late Monday, wounding two people. It was unclear if they were related to the coup attempt that began Friday and has killed at least 71 people and wounded more than 500.
Traops loyal to the government of President Corazon Aquino, backed by three armored personnel carriers, began moving toward the hotel district where the foreigners are.
A statement telephoned to news organizations from a rebel spokesman, Capt. Albert Yen, said the insurgents would release the foreigners to dispel suspicions that they were being held hostage.
Scout Rangers were holding 22 buildings in the Makati district, where many foreign embassies and residences of foreign diplomats and businessmen are.
The mutinous soldiers claim that Aquino, swept to power in a 1968 military-civilian uprising that toppled President Ferdinand Marcos, has failed to deal effectively with the country's Communist insurgency and economic problems.
About 400 mutineers from the elite
Czechs demand new Cabinet, threaten strikes
The Associated Press
PRAUGUE, Czechoslovakia — One of Czechoslovakia's two republics named the first government in 41 years dominated by non-Communists, and talks began with opposition leaders about their demands for a new national government.
general strike that the opposition had threatened if the national government was not changed this week.
Ladislav Adamec, the Communist premier, met with dissident playwright Vaclay Havel on demands for a new Cabinet to replace the Communist-dominated one chosen Sunday.
An Interior Ministry announcement said that work on dismantling fortifications on the border with Austria would begin Monday. The government said last week that some of the barbed wire, watch towers and trin wires would be taken down.
Leaders of the Communist-controlled labor organization took the unprecedented step of endorsing a
About 2,000 demonstrating students chanted 'Resigned! Resigned!' as
Jiri Dienstbier, spokesman for Havel's opposition group, Civic Forum, said the discussions would continue today. Miroslav Pavel, who is head of state television and who attended the talks, said they were "very complicated."
Opposition groups say the general strike will take place Monday unless the 21-member Cabinet, which contains only five non-Communists, is replaced before then.
After the government was announced, the People's Party demanded an immediate change to give non-Communists more power. It also demanded the party relinquish control of the Czech interior ministry.
Attention!
December Graduates
We will be taking orders on December 4th-6th from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. for graduation announcements. Announcements should arrive in April 1990. Home delivery is available.
Last day to order!
The KU Bookstores in the Kansas & Burge Unions level 2
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8
Wednesday, December 6; 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Minority recruitment services short on cohesion
By Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writer
This is the second article in a series about the problems of recruitment and retention of minority students.
More than 30 minority recruitment and retention services are offered at the University of Kansas, but the programs lack a single University coordinator for the services.
Marshall Jackson, interim director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said these efforts needed to be institutionalized for more effective action. He said the Kind of sanction by an official University unit.
"It is the first attempt to institutionalize change." Jackson said.
the said coordination was needed because each group was doing its own thing.
"It's a key problem," Jackson said. "We need to make the best use of our resources because many of the groups are aiming for the same students."
Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor,
said, "When we don't coordinate them, they
literally."
She said it was important for the different groups to share information and ideas so the efforts would add up effectively.
Chico Herbison, assistant director of admissions for the office of admissions, said he was putting together a program in which he would
form a committee of representatives from each recruitment and retention group. He said he would like to coordinate the group by the end of this month.
The Minority Affairs Task Force Report states that "the University must begin a coherent program of minority recruitment and retention. We believe that a coherent program is more likely to result if a single high-level designated and charged with facilitation of it."
Members of the Black Men of Today, formerly the Black Male Forum, said they still were seeking channels for the University to listen to their plan, which involved having an administrator coordinate the various programs.
Darren Fulcher, member of the Black Men of Today, said group members did not feel that the administration was sensitive enough to their concerns, which he said were the concerns of all minority students.
It took the task force more than a year to look at minority recruitment and retention problems, he said. Now the report has been interrupted by another group of people, are looking at ways to implement the ideas.
Jackson said he understood some of the Black students' frustration in wanting to see their peers read.
"It takes time, planning and process, though," he said.
"We have to be both active and patient," she said. "It is a multi-year process."
Ramaley said there was never a quick fix to
Presently, some new recruitment and retention programs are being developed which may solve part of the recruitment and retention problems at KU. The Office of Minority Affairs administers a program that would target grade school and junior high school students in the Kansas City area.
problems such as recruitment and retention.
"At that level, we're not pushing KU, but we're pushing education." Jackson said.
The office has not received approval from the school board yet, but Jackson was optimistic about its chances.
A peer advising counseling program also is being reinforced through the office, Jackson said. Through the program, an older KU student can help help young students adjust to the University.
Nevertheless, Jackson said he did not think minority students took advantage of all of the various retention programs that the University offered.
"All of these services are there to enhance their academic experience," he said.
One way to solve this problem would be to provide students with more information about the resources and about the availability of the programs, Jackson said. This semester, he is trying to inform students of these types of programs by attending student meetings such as the Black Student Union and the Hispanic
American Leadership Organization
"Quite frankly, this office, in conjunction with other campus offices, needs to do some recruiting of students to participate in these programs," Jackson said.
Student services, such as assistance with study skills, can be obtained through the University counseling center and the student assistance center. But Jackson said he didn't think students took advantage of these programs.
"It's more than a one-shot deal," he said.
Ramaley said three weeks ago that the office of University relations got together many campus groups associated with recruitment to potential students. They wanted to convey to potential students.
She said retention started with a clear understanding of the University. Retention also is a one-on-one concern, she said.
"It takes a while for people to understand how important these things are." Ramaley said. "This issue now touches everybody's life. Slowly but painfully we will succeed. Everybody, everyday needs to contribute to make this place a supportive environment."
Rally defending Indian activist to be Saturday
Jackson said, "There will be more programming, but people want immediate effects. The reality of it is that it is not going to happen overnight."
The Associated Press
RAPID CITY, S.D. — Two separate demonstrations supporting jailed Indian activist Leonard Pelitzer in tandem Saturday in Washington and Kansas.
The international office of the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee told the Rapid City Journal that it would attend the two demonstrations.
The main demonstration is to be staged in front of the Justice Department building in Washington.
A Midwest rally and march will be held the same day in Leavenworth, Kan. Peltier is serving two life sentences at the U.S. Penitentiary in Leavenworth for the 1975 murders of two FBI agents during a shootout on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.
Pelitzer's defense committee has claimed new evidence surfaced in 1982 that proved he was innocent. But the U.S. Supreme Court in 1987 refused to hear a motion for a new trial.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday. December 6. 1989
9
Price of medical drugs increasing Longer testing periods, more paperwork included as factors
By Travis Butler Kansan staff writer
The costs of many of the new "wonder drugs" have been high. A year's dosage sometimes can run more than $10,000 and the rising costs are likely to continue, a drug company executive said.
Ralph Christoffersen, vice president for research at Smith, Kline Bioscience Laboratories in King of Oceans, addresses the price reasons for the price increases:
"It prudent to do as much characterization of a drug as we can," Christoffersen said. "That takes longer and costs more."
The time needed to develop a drug has lengthened in the last two to three decades. More research is needed to understand its characteristics and characteristics of new drugs.
> The regulatory requirements and the paperwork needed for approval of a drug by the Food and Drug Administration have increased, he said. This work also has increased costs.
The exclusivity period, when a drug company has exclusive rights to market a drug, has remained constant, but developmental times have increased, Christoffersen said. This
effectively gives a drug company less time to recover its investment before competition brings the market price down.
Cam Davis, a pharmacist at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, agreed with this analysis.
"If it's a new medication, a drug company will invest a lot of money in processing their application," he said.
Julia Hewgley, a consumer affairs officer at the FDA's Kansas City, Mo. office, said requirements had become more strict.
In 1987, the FDA reduced the time needed to get new drugs to patients whose life was threatened by a disease, Hewgley said. The program, "Treatment IND," allows companies to sell a new drug to treat these illnesses before the paperwork is completed. However, it does not eliminate the eventual need for paperwork.
"The standard for safety and effectiveness has increased since in the past," she said. "That's true of all scientific areas. It's certainly far more complicated now than it was before."
"It's still required as a matter of law," she said. "It just makes the drug available to patients with life-
threatening diseases as soon as possible."
The high costs generally are not a problem for poor patients, Davis said. Medicare usually will pay for such drug therapy.
"If there is actually a need, they are covered," he said. "Sometimes, a brand-new category of drugs will not be covered. For the most part, that's not a problem. Sometimes, a few silo through the cracks."
Christoffersen cited two ways to reduce the drug costs. First, he would reduce the time the FDA takes to review a new drug, which is about three years. This would increase the patent life, or the time a company has to recover its costs. Second, he would simplify or reduce the number of regulatory agreements needed to file.
Davis said, "As a whole, the best thing is still using generic drugs, once the drug comes off of its patents."
Generic drugs are drugs made with the same chemical formula as brand-name drugs, Davis said. This is only possible after a patent has expired. Since a company does not have to pay development costs on a generic drug, it can price the drug based only on production costs.
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION
10
Wednesday, December 6; 1989 / University Daily Kansan
faird
E. Joseph Zurge/KANSAN
Michael Brandt, Sean Andrew Gutterridge and Scott C. Reeves rehearse 'American Buffalo,' which opens tonight.
Even the audience is part of this play
By Jennifer Reynolds Kansan staff writer
When the doors of the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall open tonight through Sunday, Lawrence will become a distant memory.
the theater will become the front of Don's Resale Shop in a poor, crime-ridden section of Chicago.
The setting is necessary for the opening of David Mamet's "American Buffalo" tonight at 8 p.m.
Outside of Don's, the cold wind rustles fallen leaves on the ground, and remnants of a wino's addiction lie in the street. But it is only the beginning. Inside the junk shop, the world of Donny Dubrow, Walter Cole and Bobby comes to life amid the old furniture, lamps, and bicycles in the crowded, run-down shop.
"We literally had to empty the pro props for this," said Paul Meier, director of the play. "We use no stage lights' and no exposure from the actors. We're all in this world together."
The audience sits in the junk shop itself, in the
furniture sections, so they are forced to be involved, said Michael Brandt, Lawrence sophomore, who plays Walter Cole or Teacher.
"The type of setting doesn't allow the audience to shrink back and think, 'I've got bills to pay tonight,' or something else," he said. "They're involved."
Meier said the setting allowed the actors to be storevillers instead of distant characters.
Audience involvement is crucial to the play because the characters are not likable people,
"At first I hated these characters," Meier said. "They were loathsome."
After more involvement, however, he found the characters more appealing.
unl characters more appealing.
"These characters are very human," Meier
quotes.
Not allowing the actors to dismiss the characters as villain also was important to Meier.
"We generally believe we are in the right, whatever we are doing," he said. "Whatever violence these characters pull, they are doing it for what they believe is a good reason."
a dealer in Don's jewelry box. The dealer purchased the coin for far less than the coin's worth. After discovering this fact too late, the dealer can to rob the dealer's home and retrieve the coin.
The play centers on a buffalo nickel, found by
In the planning, the three begin to bicker and fight. The caper is obviously doomed, but the planning continues until, unable to verbalize the plan's weakness, the men turn violent.
"On one level the play is hilarious," Meier said. "On the other, it is very tragic. It is about how we deceive ourselves."
American business ethics, or the right of an individual to embark on any course to obtain
"The characters' treachery is justified on the same level as business," Meier said. "Each of the characters is operating on their own level of truth."
The play will be shown at 8 p.m. on Dec. 6, 7 and 10. Additional performances will be at 2:30 and 8 p.m. on Dec. 9. Although tickets for the first three performances are sold out, tickets for Saturday and Sunday shows are available at the Murphy Hall Box Office.
Investigators knew Boeing possessed defense documents
The Associated Press
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Defense Department investigators were aware for roughly nine years that the Boeing Co. had classified Pentagon budget documents but never raised questions, a federal court jury was told yesterday.
Three former Boeing security clerks testified the documents were listed in a log used in the company's Rosslyn, Va., office to keep track of classified documents, and the log was regularly checked by inspectors from the Defense Investigative Services
The testimony was offered during the second day of the trial in U.S. District Court for the Southern Bengal region by Boong, executive accused of stealing the documents.
Fowler has pleaded innocent to 39 felony counts, including conspiracy, illegal conveyances of classified documents and mail fraud. He could face 310 years in prison and fines of $225,000 if convicted.
Boeing pleaded guilty on Nov. 13 to
receiving classified documents from Fowler and agree to pay $5.2 million in fines and restitution as well as submit a letter of apology.
The jury also was told Wednesday by a retired Boeing worker that she ran a secret library for classified documents in a Seattle suburb and took some of the papers home to burn in her fireplace when they were outdated.
Gloria Mahaffey, who has been granted immunity from prosecution, said that when she set up the library in 1973 or 1974 she was told the documents contained data "commonly used throughout the industry."
Fowler's attorneys have insisted their client was hired specifically to get the documents for Boeing, they were readily available to defense contractors, rules covering their release were unclear and charges were filed against him only after he refused to tell Defense Investigative Services inspectors who gave him the documents.
Former Du Pont worker denies selling secrets
The Associated Press
Richard Zappa, co-counsel for Bruno Skerianz, said in opening arguments in U.S. District Court that DuPont applied Skerianz about comments allegedly taken from the documents Lyrca plant in Mercedes, Argentina.
WILMINGTON, Del. — The attorney for a man accused of masterminding a $10 million extortion scheme against Du Pont denied yesterday that his client attempted to sell trade secrets for Lycuria fabric back to the chemical giant.
ianz, Raul Armando Giordano and Antonio Ruben Inigo are charged with attempted extortion and conspiracy. If convicted, they face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Zappa said Skerlani never asked Du Pont for money. Instead, the company offered to pay $1 million to set the documents back.
But Assistant U.S. Attorney Edmond Falkowski said Skierian would have sold the documents to a lawyer, but the company had not agreed to pay.
Former Du Pont employees Sker-
The three defendants are Argentine nationals and former employees at the Mercedes plant.
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University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, December 6, 1989
11
Grissom hearing postponed until February
The Associated Press
OLATHE - A preliminary hearing for Richard Grissom Jr., charged in the deaths of three women, was continued until Feb. 26 to give defense attorneys more time.
Attorney calls William's trail unfair, requests new one
The hearing for Grissom, who is charged in Johnson County District Court with three counts of first-degree assault originally was scheduled for Jan. 13.
Griesson, 29, is charged with killing three Johnson. County women, who
have been missing since June. The bodies of Joan Butler, Theresa Brown and Christine Rusch have not been found.
Grissom is being held in the Johnson County Jail in Olathe. His bond has been set at $1.3 million.
11 By a Kansan reporter
A motion for a new trial has been filed by an attorney for John William, the 28-year-old transient convicted of killing a Lawrence boy in July 1988.
William was convicted Nov. 17 of first-degree murder in the death of
The motion, filed Nov. 27 by attorney Ed Collierster J., listed six points supporting the theory that William's trial was conducted improperly.
Richard Settlemyre, 9. Settlemyre's mutilated body was discovered July 14. 1988 in the Kansas River.
Sentencing for William is scheduled for Dec. 21 in Douglas County District Court. The motion will be heard that day.
Collister wrote in the motion that "the verdict is contrary to the evidence and law in this case."
Colllier cited the decision not to suppress statements William made to police as one of the reasons for a new trial.
He also claimed that the prosecution did not present sufficient evi-
Collier also argued that Judge James Paddock erred when he ruled before and during the trial that William was competent to stand trial.
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You'll probably never get to the Antarctic. But you will leave KU. With a portable Macintosh, you'll have the power to be your best wherever your job takes you. On the plane, in the taxi, in the lobby, and in the board room. And you won't need a plug.
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Wednesday, December 6; 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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She's losing a lot on this diet. Perhaps her life.
图16-13 女性肩部肌肉紧张
Already under 80 pounds, she's determined to get even thinner. A distorted view of her own body size leads her to turn down meals. Or to binge on food, then force vomiting. Or to exercise obsessively. Eating disorders like anorexia nervosa (voluntary starving) and bulimia (binging and purging) are serious psychological problems. With physical effects that can even lead to death. Charter Counseling Center, in cooperation with University of Kansas School of Medicine - Wichita, has programs specifically designed to treat anorexia and bulimia. Call Charter Counseling Center of Lawrence today to arrange an evaluation.
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Local Briefs
INQUEST SCHEDULED: A coroner's inquest in connection with the death of a KU student Oct. 13 is scheduled to begin 9 a.m. Dec. 28, said Jim Flory, district attorney, yesterday.
Brian K. Robinson, Topea freshman, was killed when one of the three other men in a Tanglewood complex apartment shot him.
Six jury members from Douglas County will hear testimony from 12 to 15 witnesses during the inquest, Flory said. Then, jury members will decide if they think the shooting was intentional, justifiable homicide or a crime.
Carol Moddrell, county coroner, will preside and instruct the jury on how the law applies to the case, Flory said. If the jury thinks a crime has been committed, Moddrell will order
He and assistant district attorney Rick Trapp will present evidence and question witnesses, Flory said.
Flory will decide if charges should be filed after considering the jury's determination. he said.
an arrest.
"Ultimately, it rests with me," he said.
He said the inquest should last one or two days.
or two days.
EQUIPMENT STOLEN: Stereo equipment, a cordless telephone, a microwave and 30 cassette tapes were taken Monday from a KU student's unlocked apartment, said Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman.
The student told police that the front door of his apartment, in the 1300 block of Ohio Street, was wide open when he returned to it Monday night, Mulvenon said.
The student, Mulvenon said, did not know the serial numbers of any of the items taken, which were valued together at $1,029.
Police report
▶ A Lawrence resident's bicycle valued at $70 was taken Monday from outside a grocery store in the 1000 block of 23rd Street, Lawrence police reported.
► A McCollum resident was pushed and verbally abused by another resident Sunday in the third floor lobby of the hall, KU police reported.
► Two turtlenecks, three pairs of jeans, two T-shirts and blank checks valued together at $75 were taken
Saturday or Sunday from a student's apartment in the 2400 block of Alabama Street, Lawrence police reported.
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© 1989 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, December 6, 1989
13
Jayhawks face SMU Mustangs Undefeated 'Hawks defend No.2 rank
By Dan Perkins Kansan sportswriter
The second-ranked Kansas Jayhawks will play their fourth of five games in 11 days against the South Carolina State Huskies at 7:35 tonight in Dallas.
The No. 2 ranking for Kansas is not the highest the Jayhawks have ever received, but it has been a while.
Kansas was ranked No. 1 by the Associated Press from Dec. 3 to Jan. 14, 1952 and No. 1 by the AP and United Press International from Dec. 3 to Jan. 14, 1957. The 1982 team was Kansas' first national championship team.
Kansas Basketball GAME8
The lack of rest hasn't seemed to hurt the Jayhawks, 7-0, though, as they try to improve on their best start in 32 years.
SOUTHERN METHODIST
KANSAS JAYHAWKS
MUSTANGS Coach: Tom Shumate Record: 1-3
The Mustangs, 1-3, have lost three straight contests since opening the season with a 65-57 victory against North Texas State. Since then, the Mustangs have lost to Vanderbilt, 65-60, and both games they played in the Stanford Apple Classics in Palo Alto, Calif. They lost in the first round to Louisiana Tech, 71-68 and to Lehigh, 69-49 in the third-place game.
Coach: Roy Williams
Record: 7-0
| PROBABLE STARTERS |
|---|
| Player | Ht. | PPG | RPG | Player | Ht. | PPG | RPG |
|---|
| G-Kevin Pritchard | 6-3 | 12.6 | 3.1 | G-Rod Hampton | 6-3 | 6.3 | 4.3 |
| G-Jeff Gueldner | 6-5 | 10.7 | 4.6 | G-Gerald Lewis | 6-4 | 8.3 | 3.3 |
| C-Pekka Markkanen | 6-10 | 6.7 | 3.3 | C-Reggie Muhammad | 6-10 | 2.8 | 2.0 |
| F-Rick Calloway | 6-6 | 9.7 | 5.6 | F-Vernon Perdue | 6-8 | 13.3 | 7.0 |
| F-Mark Randall | 6-9 | 17.7 | 7.1 | F-John Colborne | 6-9 | 18.3 | 6.8 |
Game Notes: Kansas leads the series 19-4. In the last meeting, on Jan. 9, 1989, Kansas defeated SMU 90-82 in overtime. Tip-off is 7:35 p.m. at Moody Coliseum in Dallas. The game will be broadcast on KJHK 90.7 FM and KLR 126 FM. It will also be live telecast on WIBW Channel 13 in Topeka and KZKC Channel 62 in Kansas City.
CONVERSE
The Mustangs are led by 6-foot-9
forward John Colborne and 6-8 forward Vernon D佩尔. Colborne is averaging 18.3 points per game and 6.8 rebounds per game, while Perdue averages 13.3 points per game and 7 rebounds per game.
The Mustangs were 13-16 last season and seventh in the Southwest Conference with a 7-9 record.
games between the two schools
Kansas leads the all-time series against the Mustangs, 19-4, including a 7-3 advantage in Dallas. The Jayhawks also have won five straight.
In their last meeting on Jan. 9,
1989, Kansas won 90-82 in overtime.
Guard Kato Armstrong, who was
declared inelegible shortly after the
game, led the Mustangs with 34
points.
Forward Mark Randall led Kansas with 21 points and 11 rebounds, and guard Kevin Pritchard scored eight points in the overtime period, and 16 overall.
Pritchard, currently 12th on the Kansas all-time scoring list, could move past two-time All-American Jo Jo White tonight with 13 points. Pritchard currently has 1,274 points compared to White's 1,286.
Randall enters the game as the leading scorer and rebounder for the Jayhawks with 17.7 points per game and 7.1 rebounds. Randall also is the Jayhawk to score in double figures in all seven games this season.
Vitale praises Kansas, agrees with ranking
College basketball analyst and flamboyant sports personality Dick Vitele wasn't surprised by another jump in the rankings by Kansas.
"Kansas has been the major sensation in college basketball this season. Vitale said, "I think Kansas been a definitive surprise this year."
Kansas climbed to No. 2 this week in The Associated Press' top 25 college basketball poll, up two places from last week.
During a telephone interview yes
By Paula Parrish Kansan sportswriter
terday morning from an airport in Connecticut, Vitale was profuse in his praise of Kansas.
"Kansas has a well-coached, well-rounded basketball team," Vitale said. "You could obviously see that in the tournament."
Kansas went from being a forgotten champion to being a serious reminder after beating no-No. 2 Louisiana State, and then-no. 1 Louisana Las Vegas on its way to the Dodge NIT Championship, where the Jayhawks beat No. 25 St. John's Nov. 30.
Guard Kevin Pritchard, upon his return from the tournament, said the
Vitale said yesterday that now he expected Kansas, which probably wouldn't face a serious challenge in its schedule until Oklahoma. State Jan.13, to be a prominent team at the end of the season.
team encountered Vitale on the plane ride to Baton Rouge, La. At that time, Vitale told the team there was going to be a big upset in Baton Rouge — Kansas was going to win. But after reaching LSU, the sportscaster changed his tune.
"I said during the tournament that I'd expect them to go into conference play 17-0. I think they'll be challenged before then, but I think they've going to be 17-7. "Vitale said.
Vitale said Kansas, which finds itself one step behind first-place Syracuse and above Georgetown, Missouri, and now fifth-ranked UNLV, is ranked where it belongs.
Vitale was confident of Kansas' ability to pull it off.
"They deserve their ranking," Vitale said. "They are an outstanding ball team."
"Kansas has great basketball tradition. I doubt those 'Rock Chalk Jayhawk' fans at Allen Field House will let them lose."
Baseball swap talk dominates meetings
The Associated Press
Reardon appeared to be headed to Boston, Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd to Montreal and other bill Gullickson to Houston, while also free agents Hube灵 O Brien, Storm Davis and Craig Neeflers went looking for team nets.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Cleveland's Joe Carter moved closer to the San Diego Padres yesterday and Tim Raines and Jeff Reardon also might be on the go as teams tried to trade for a safety at baseball's winter meetings.
The biggest trade so far is Carter, one of baseball's heaviest hitters.
Cleveland and San Diego reached agreement late Monday night on a deal to send Carter to the Padres, provided they can sign him to a new contract. The conditional deal must be completed today or it is automatically off. However, the teams can agree to extend the deadline.
"I know San Diego is a great place to play. You couldn't go wrong there," Carter said from his home in Kansas. "It's definitely true that something finally seems ready to happen."
Montreal was talking about a deal to send Raines to Kansas City in exchange for Danny Tartabull and ears in a swap of major run producers.
The Indians would receive catching prospect Sandy Alomar Jr. and others, possibly Chris James and minor leaguer Carlos Baerga. The clubs said that they had agreed on a pool of players to pick a package, and Cleveland gave the Padres permission to negotiate with Carter.
Jim Turner, Carter's agent, said he met with Padres manager and vice president Jack McKeon for 1½ hours yesterday morning.
"If we get a chance to sit down and negotiate, we'll be done without too much delay." McKenon predicted. "There's enough time to get it done."
It will likely take a multi-year contract at $3 million a season for San Diego to sign Carter, Turner said.
Carter, 29, hit 35 home runs with 105 RBIs and batted 243 last season. He has averaged 31 home runs and 108 RBIs in the last four years.
He already has shipped for houses in the San Diego area, one of the most
KC Royals sign 2 new pitchers
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Kansas City Royals, one day after losing free agent Floyd Bannister to Japan, replaced him yesterday by signing free-agent pitchers Richard Dodson and Steve Crawford.
Dodson has a combined 5-12 record with a 4.46 earned run average for the New York Yankees and Chicago White Sox last season. He has a lifetime 111-109 record and 4 16 RBA in 10 years.
Dotson, 31, and Crawford signed one-year contracts. Crawford was 3-1 with a 2.83 ERA in 25 relief appearances.
The Royals also signed free agent Russ Mormon, who hit .224 with eight RBIs for the White Sox.
"One of our objectives this winter is to bolster our starting pitching, and it is our view that the addition of Dodson helps us accomplish that," Royals general manager John Schuerholz said.
Dotson began his major league career in 1979 with the White Sox. In 1983, he went 22-7 and helped the Boston Red Sox win the American League West championship.
The Royals worked quickly to fill Bannister's spot in the rotation. Bannister, Dodson's former teammate with the White Sox, has been in a two-year contract with Japan's Yasukl Swallows.
Crewford began last season with the Royals' Class AA4 Omaha club and went 3-1 with a 2.93 ERA.
popular living areas for players.
Alomar, 23, drove in 101 runs at Class AA Las Vegas last season and was the minor league player of the year. He has played a few games for the Padres in each of the last two seasons and broke into the starting lineup because of All-Star catcher Benito Santiago.
See TRADES, p. 14
Shockers Jayhawks to battle
By Paula Parrish Kansan sportswriter
In its first matchup since taking the Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic last weekend, the Kansas women's basketball team will face the Wichita Shockers tonight at Allen Field House.
Lea
"They've all been working on their shots," Coach Marian Washington said. "We worked yesterday on all of our shooting, layups, free throws. We had some problems shooting."
Kansas, 32, beat Radford 63-56 and the University of Missouri-Kansas City, 44-41, for the championship last weekend, but could hit only about 39 percent from the field during the entire tournament and only 29 percent against UMKC.
"I'm certainly hoping we'll have better shooting after tomorrow," Washington said.
Forward Shannon Bloxom leads KU with 11.6 points a game
Wichita State comes into the contest with a 1-3 record, having won against Marquette 69-64.
"They're going to be a zone-oriented team." Washington said. "We expect that they're not going to be as quick as we are, and I don't think they match up with us player-to-player."
Last year, the Shockers,
coached by Linda Hargrove, finished the season with a 6-20 season record and a 4-14 conference record (lying or ranking in the team's former matches) final meeting last season, the Jayhwks beat the Shockers
67-82.
Bloxom leads the Jayhawks in scoring so far this season, averaging 11.6 points per game. Page is the team's leading rebounder with nine per game, and Braddy leads the team with an average of 7.4 assists a game.
Probable starters for Kansas in tonight's game are forwards Shannon Bloxom and Terrillius Johnson, both from Alabama. Lisa Brady and Kay Hart.
Washington said Kansas would try to keep the ball moving down the court and to score from the perimeter.
"She's been a player that's been very physical out there on the court for us, but she's had a hard time working through the physical pain," Washington said. "She's been able to do a little bit more to help herself out and we're real optimistic now."
Washington said that medical redshift Marthea McCloud's right knee was operated on again last week. She said that more scar tissue was removed
Oklahoma denies new allegations
"They do tend to play a lot of zone, so we'll need our outside shooters." Washington said.
Washington said she hoped that this would be the last of the operations.
"We're going to try to push the ball a lot."
The Associated Press
NORMAN, Okla. — Oklahoma officials denied yesterday that they face the "death penalty" because of a convicted burglar's allegations that they were still breaking NCAA rules after going on probation last year.
in a copyrighted story, The Dallas Morning News reported that NCAA investigators are looking into
He also said freshman running back Dewell Brewer received illegal benefits and at least one unofficial paid visit to Norman before he signed a letter of intent with the university in February.
K-State women's coach resigns
several serious allegations made by Otha Armstrong III. The NCAA declined comment on the report.
The NCAA imposed a three-year probation on the Oklahoma football program in December 1988 for recruiting and rules violations.
Bv Kate Lee
By Kate Lee and Paula Parrish Kansan sportswriters
Kansas State women's basketball coach, Matilda Mossman, resigned yesterday, two weeks into her sixth season with the team.
Second-year assistant coach Gaye Griffin was named interim coach of the Wildcats.
In a prepared statement, K-State Athletic Director Steve Miller said Moossman resigned because of personal reasons.
The Wildcats, 3-2, were considered preseason favorites to win the Big Eight.
Mossman said that the team's recent road trip to the Domino's Pizza Classic in Missoula, Mont., confirmed her decision to leave. The team lost to Montana 77-62 in the championship game.
"Between practice, recruiting, travel and a family at home, the fun of coaching was no longer there." Mossman said. "At this point, I simply want to review my career options.
Kansas women's basketball coach Marian Washington said Mossman's resignation was a bad announcement for the conference.
"It may well be that I will return to coaching, but at this moment, I need a break." Mossman said.
"When you see a person who's been dedicated to the sport, leave your sport, then it's really kind of sad," Washington said.
"I don't even want to begin to guess why Coach Mossman has decided to leave," Washington said. "It not an easy profession to be in, but she has certainly done a fine job at Kansas State."
"I hope she gets back into the sport before too long," Washington said.
Washington said that if the resignation was effective immediately, which it is, K-State faced a real issue in bringing stability to the government.
Mossman compiled an 83-69 record
k-I State and had a 150-95 career
All-America team led by three Irish
In 1987, she was named Big Eight Coach of the Year after the Wildcats posted a 22-9 record, tied for the Big Eight regular season championship and received a berth in the NCAA tournament.
record. Her 150th career victory came last week when the Wildcats defeated Bowling Green State 72-60 in the first round of the Classic.
The Associated Press
The Associated Press
"Matilda has had a tremendous impact upon our program in her six years as head coach. Miller said it was a huge change and the program was a most difficult one.
Mossman was named coach at KState in 184 after three years as head coach at Arkansas. In her first season, the Wildcats posted a record of 16-13, fifth in the Big Eight.
Passing prodigy Andre Ware and record-setting runner Anthony Thompson, who battled to a photo finish in the Heisman Trophy race, were named to The Associated Press 1989 All-America college football team yesterday.
Last year, the Wildcats finished third in the conference with a 18-11 record. The team also finished third in the conference tournament, defeating Nebraska 74-59 and losing to Oklahoma State. 65-53.
"Although I am personally disappointed in her decision, I do respect her desire to step down," Miller added.
The defense features Butkus Award winner Percy Snow of Michigan State, Outand finalist Moe Gardner of Illinois and Lombardi Award finalists Chris Zorich of Notre Dame and Tim Ryan of Southern California
Colorado's two selections, punter Tom Rouen and offensive guard Joe Garden, were the only Big Eight players selected to the first team. They included three picks on the second team and five on the third team.
Ware, who edged Thompson for the Heisman in the fourth-closest vote ever, shattered 13 NCAA marks and tied two others this season as the quarterback of Houston's run-and-shoot offense. He capped his remarkable year Saturday against Rice by setting single-season records for most completions (365) and passing yards (4,699), falling just one short of Jim McMahon's NCAA mark of 47 touchdown passes.
AP ALL-AMERICA TEAM
Offense:
First Team
Quarterback - Andre Ware. Houston
Running backs - Anthony Thompson, Indiana; Emmitt Smith, Florida
Smith, Florida
Receivers - Clarkston Hines, Duke; Terance Mathis,
New Mexico; Emmanuel Hazard, Houston
Center - Michael Tanks, Florida St.
Center - Michael Tanks, Florida St.
Guards - Eric Sill, Tennessee; Joe Garten, Colorado
Tackles - Jim Mabry, Arkansas; Bob Kula, Michigan St.
Return specialist - Raghib "Rocket" Ismail, Notre Dame
Placeckier - Jason Hason, Washington St.
Defense:
Linemen - Chris Zorch, Notre Dame; Greg Mark, Miami;
Flea - Tim Ryan, USC; Mose Illinois.
Linebackers - Percy Snow, Michigan St; Keith McCanis;
Alabama; James Francis, Baylor
Aubbain - James Francis, Eboray
Backs - Todd Lyght, Notre Dame; Mark Carrier, USC; Tripp
Punter - Tom Rouen, Colorado
Puntier - Tom Rouen, Colorado
nia. The Butkus honors the top linebacker in the country; the Outland and Lombardi awards are for linemen.
14
Wednesdav. December 6; 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Trades
Continued from p. 13
On the free agent front, the two main men stayed put. Robin Yount apparently will not make a decision until after the winter meetings. Mark Davis, coveted by San Diego and in no hurry to make up his mind.
Reardon, however, seemed close to joining Boston. He was 5-4 with 31 saves and a 0.47 ERA for Minnesota last season. The Red Sox also damaged multiple耐力, multi-million contract to connect to another Twins player. Kint Hekbue.
Boyd might leave Boston. He looked ready to accept Montreal's offer of a one-year contract worth $750,000. Gullickson, in Japan for the last two seasons, has a verbal agreement with Houston for a one-year pact worth $1.5 million.
Montreal already has lost free agents Mark Langston, Pascual Perez and Bryn Smith this off-season.
Lefferts, who pitched for San Francisco last season, attended the meetings and attracted immediate interest. San Diego, which is trying to resign Davis, wants Lefferts — espesie that Greg Harris helped him graduate Greg Harris to Philadelphia.
O'Brien has been offered a four-year, $7.4 million contract by Detroit. The Chicago White Sox are showing interest while several clubs are after Davis, a 19-game winner with Oak-
and. In other baseball news:
in other outstanding news:
▶ The Los Angeles Dodgers offered salary arbitration to pitcher John Tudor and outfielder John Shelby, said Fred Claire, executive vice president.
Tudor, 38, was 0-0 with a 3.14 ERA in 1989. He missed most of the season because of surgery on his left elbow, the hip and right tibia in October 1988.
Tudor is a free agent and St. Louis Cardinals manager Whitey Herzog said yesterday the club would like to sign the left-hander.
Last season, Tudor made $1.3 million. He is 105-68 lifetime, including a 21-8 mark for St. Louis in 1985.
Shelby, 31, hit. 183 in 108 games for the Dodgers last season. In 32 games at class AAA Albuquerque, he hit .268. His 1999 salary was $550,000. He also played as an infielder. Julio Franco a three-year contract extension for $7.8 million.
Franco, who hit .316 last season with 13 homers and 92 RBIs, will get a $750,000 signing bonus. He will be one of the top players in 1994 and $2.75 million in 1993.
Franco played six years with the Cleveland Indians before being traded to Texas last winter. The Rangers exercised his option year in 1900 and Franco will be paid $1,225 million.
The Rangers also announced that the club will not offer arbitration rights to free agent outfielder Rick Hornsby, but the club cannot presume him until May 1.
Kevin Mitchell may never win an award for attendance.
The Rangers have offered arbitration to pitcher Craig McMurtry. McMurtry was 0-0 with a 7.43 ERA in 19 appearances in 1989 while spending 3½ months on the disabled list.
A limousine was sent to pick Mitchell up at the airport Monday night but
Mitchell, who missed a workout prior to the World Series, didn't attend Tuesday's game and receive The Sporting News award for Player of the Year.
Officials for the San Francisco Giants were unable to reach Mitchell at his San Diego home yesterday.
Mitchell, who won the National League MVP award, hit .291 with 47 homers and 125 RBIs.
"Kevin didn't miss many things this season," said Giants manager Roger Craig, who accepted the award for Mitchell. "In my 40 years in baseball, I never saw a guy hit the ball any harder."
Mitchell was fined for missing the World Series workout at Candlestick Park three days before the start of the Series against Oakland.
BELGIQUE
BRASS BUCKLE
WE SPEAK YOUR LANGUAGE.
Sweaters that sizzle with warmth for those cold Damn, you should you select one for a holiday gift, we'll wrap it absolutely free.
Mon-Fri 9-9
Sat. 9-6
Sun. 12-5;30
SKOAL LONG CUT. THE ADVENTURE BEGINS!
841-7190
First, get your free samples of Skoal Long Cut. Then, discover the pleasure of the easy-going tobacco you can enjoy without lighting up. And let the adventure go on.
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For free samples of Skool Long Cut in refreshing Mint, rich Straight,
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Suite 98, 251 Main St., Stamford, CT 06901.
I certify that I am ___ years of age*:
Signature ___ Name ___
Address ___ City ___
State ___ Zip ___ Phone No. (___) ___
Are you a regular consumer of any moist smokehouse tobacco? Yes ___
If yes, what brand?
Not available to minors. Offer good in U.S.A. Good where prohibited by law Allow
unless otherwise specified. Custody #C2424
44
VILLWORKS
MILLWORKS
Inexpensive Gifts
For The Budget That Won't Budge!
714
New Hampshire
(T-Shirts, Sweatshirts & Scarves)
$
$50 $50 MONO
Have you had mononeucleosis within the last month?
If so your plasma could make a valuable
In so your plasma could make a valuable contribution to research and earn you $50 at the same time
For additional details call Mark Stanard
at
Lawrence Donor Center 749-5750
JA
814 W. 24th-Corner of 24th & Alabama
LAST TWO DAYS!
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
ARTS & CRAFTS
Businessman needs a college male student for traveling companion to California at midmester break. Major expenses paid. For information write Ron, P.O. Box 3554, Lawrence.
Kansas Union Gallery
Dawn LAP. I never lost anything I ever missed,
and I never found it. Please, please, please.
me near you! Love, S.S.K.
9:00 to 5:00 pm
FAIR '89
Craig S. I'm home for break. Long time since the bait and cottage encounter, I see you to sea, I'm ready.
Classified Directory
2 fabulous white females seek personal satisfaction. For stimulating conversation call Babs-RUS, Marthe Mary and Nancy at your service 864-1801.
100s Announcements
Two nice pretty girls seeking fun guys. Call Kim and Kelli guilting. 864-1084.
105 Personal
Your Wait is Over.
The Happiest Man at PCH.
HEY BANDALL!!!! I can play ball too!!! Michelle.
E.M.G.-3. 8 long years of life! I hate U!!! I hope it fail's
Nihilated - U. Unhilated - A.
Girl (Woman) in KU swathtick who came in One-Hour Moto Photo Nov. 27th. Our eyes met for more seconds, but it seemed like forever. Reply within. Rob.
Donna Karan Sturno
now at the Etc. Shop.
732 Mass.
Michelle.
MAX U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT???
MAX U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT? **
SWM, non-member, self-employed, KU graduate,
bachelor's degree. **
Sow skiing, sailing, camping, harborabse
riding, theatrical plays, quiet eaveswings. Write to:
info@snowski.com
**WHERE** you're a diamond in the rough, but nonetheless beddazing. Your sparkle has brightened my life. I'll treasure the memories always. An Old Friend.
18
110 Bus. Personal
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
CANCUN BAHAMAS! Spring Break 1997
GUANAYENNE Lowest Prices For Information
GUANAYENNE Lowest Prices For Information
Hey Dave Surprise. .Again
Shop creatively this year. Creative Christmas gifts come from creative X-mas shops. An abbreviated list of stores with glassware, line artine and used furniture, picture framing, precious and念念情怀, playboards, Playbios, collector and cheesop rock-n-collar records, vintage cloak room sets, Playboy records, vintage clothing stores, Art Deco art, doc. articulate items, clocks, watches, denies, antique tools, Royal Dublin Museum, quill art, QUANTRILLE'S PLAE MARKET. 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sun and Sat. 10:30. For booth rental info call 442-856-3121.
Comic books, Bounce houses, Fenches, etc. Comic's, 811 New Hampshire. Open Ses. 6 a.m. Sun.
GOING HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS
DRIVE TO MOST major cities in U.S.
USE OUR CABIN!
INFORMATION:
PHONE # 820-386-386
Government Photos. Passport. immigration.
Military documents. Immigration forms.
partial slides. can be a valuable asset to your
collection.
aristide tour. Batam Sep 18th
Bauch & Lomb, Ray-Ban sunglasses
29% off
Gear Mall
The Efc. Shop
722 Mass: 843-6011
Guaranteed five years. Russell Athletic sweats in 14 color. Frances Sporting Gauls, 731 Mass.
Hail your glove in sports bags or fancy packs
Francesca Gooding, 73 Main St., B45-1419.
Sports Gooding, 73 Main St., B45-1419.
are an old-fashioned Christmas by cutting your own cookies and baking them in a FARM. Hot enjoy waffle and candy canes while the kids have free pony rides. Drive east on Highland to the south, 19 miles. Mendocino County Family, 242-371-8000.
Hay now! Super Stop Party day with L.A.
Bronx, 727 New Hampshire. Be there!
272, New Hampshire. Be there!
MASSAGE for the Holidays! Do what elves do: beat stress and injury with the help of lawrence books. Visit www.lawrencebooks.com/Rock & Roll records, Buy-Sell-Quantrille, 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat.-Sun, 10-5.
Time H! With Times sports watches. They run under water,飞 Christmas socks. Francis Sporin 701, Gaillen 843, Mason 419.
Wiggle into Wigwam's warm wool socks, mittens,
gloves. Francis Sporting Goods, 731 Mass.
843-4191
The Yacht Club Bar & Grill
ednesday Specials:
$1 Margartias & Domestics
$3.25 Chicken Sandwich
530 Wisconsin
842-9445
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY I JISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care:
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
AFRICAN ADORNED Unusual jewelry & int'l.
5 E. 7th 842-1376
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE
your full service auto
repair shop. Classic to
computerized.
M.F. 91-216 Vis., Master's Discov.
805-423-2055
M-F 8-6 Visa, Mastercard, Discover.
315 N. 2nd St., 841-6935
120 Announcements
For confidential information, referral & support for AIDS concern calls 814-254-3149. Headquarters: 607 West 46th Street, New York, NY 10004.
Fair No Meer - workers needed for stage crew and security positions Monday, Dec. 11 at the Fair Meer Convention Center sign up in SUA office, 4th floor Union from 8am. For confidential information, refer to www.fairmeercounty.com.
Gary Lashin and students of Kansan and Buddies,
716 SW Jackson, present entertainer, Sharon
Thompson. Dec 15, 18:08 to 10:09 pm. Administration
44. For more information, visit GLASK@
www.glask.edu
or?
They are awful, Joe. Can I have them there?
-Oh, they are awful. Joe. Can I have them retake?
*Key Joe, have you gotten your Senior Pictures taken yet?*
Want to see the Dead in L.A. for free? We have
Walt to see the Dead in L.A., December 6, 12th
Billy or Caley, Billy or Caley
Hay Mary, how did your Seenor Pictures turn
Oh, I forget. It is too late, marry.
No, I heard you can get your picture taken until
the end of this week at Strong Hall.
G
Yay, but you'll need to take your proofs with you to Struggle Hall before the end of the week.
Give your friends ice cream or yogurt for Christmas
Give your friends ice cream or yogurt for Christmas!
Gift Coupons
BASKIN ROEBINS
Ice Cream & Yogurt
1524 w. 23rd 925 Iowa
1524 w. 23rd
925 Iowa
Sailing Club last meeting this semester, Wed. Dec. 6 & Buffalo Bills' 7 p.m., Be Three! **BRETS** MANAGEMENT School for Youth Church, Lincoln St. Suicide Intervention . If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is suicidal, call 1419 Maa., Headquarters Counseling Center.
15
Your Holiday Spirits Start With Schwartz's Retail Liquor Lawrence's largest liquor store 1215 W. 6th
KU PRO-CHOICE COALITION MEETING
- Wednesday, Dec. 6
- 7:30 p.m.
- Regionalist Room Kansas Union
The battle has begun!
Plenary meeting
for next semester.
SOUTH PARK ISLAND from 125
5 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBURT $101
SPRING BREAK
STEAMBOAT from 101
2 5 OR 7 NIGHTS from $132
FORT LAUDERDALE
DAYTONA BEACH $129
from
NILTON HEAD ISLAND from $127
CALL TOLL FREE TODAY
1-800-321-5911
Swatchman
CORPUS CHRISTI/
MUSTANG ISLAND
from $99
6.00 NAVY
*Depending on break dates and length of stay.
130 Entertainment
1. INNOV THE GROOVE . Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot Splits Maximum Party Thrush. DJ J.Ray Velasquares. 841-7035.
140 Lost-Found
Found: White female牙 with one black ear, in eye, is RS Union 12/1. Call 841-6745 or 843-7070
LOST: Black cat, short hair, de-clawed, no tag,
around 1400 block Ohio. Call 842-7984.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babysitter needed to care for 6-month-old infant in our home starting in January. M-F afternoons. 749-3330
Cau Fortier - part-time/full-time. Must be 21 years old, excellent driving record, flexible hours, clean-cut in appearance. Academy Car Rental.
841.4022. EDU/E
CHILD CARE: To care for our 3-year-old son in our home near campus. Approximately 3 day/week. Flexible hours. Starting Jan. or Feb.
Call 847-8796.
Creek Textbooks, KU Booksforums, Part-dime,
$3.50 per hour - Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to
10 p.m. or 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
p.m. Weekends & overtime if necessary. Begin
with 12 hrs of training, then available to be
available to work entire time. Require p.o.
inventory, sales or stocking expenses.
Verify job reference. Apply Kansas
union personnel office. Level 5, Rm $2m. EOE.
First Bank of Kansas full and partial
duty hours. St. In Lawrences. More than minimum wage,
opportunity for advancement. Position open are
hours. Duties include selling Fuel Bank concept
and preparing application forms. Must be 24
hours. Must be clean and clean and
enjoy working with the public. Must have good
work performance records. If interested, apply in
University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, December 6, 1989
15
Gamas & Horge Units hireing for part-time work
Kansas City, Kansas
Jamaica Professional Level. 8-60
Jamaica Personnel Level. 8-60
Two years minimum experience. Pay depends upon experience.
Use of Dos Host machine M, T-4 or T-8.
Logan Business Machines accepting applications for latex delivery person. Flexible hour.
Looking for long-term employee to work 4/10th s.f.m. (including Friday or Saturday evening) and one weekend day shift. Mechanical ability a plus.
JUXIYX RESORTS HIRTS for busy winter, summer seasons. Work and play in Acapulco, Hawaii, Florida, Jamaica. FREE employment information. Write.
Be a NANNY
- Seaside Connecticut towns
- Great salary & benefits,
- Great salary & benefits;
airfare provided
- Choose from warm, loving families pre-screened by u
- Year round positions only
· Must enjoy
Care for Kids, Inc.
PO box 27, Browning, CT 06853
203-852-8111
NANNIERS - Go to interisting places, earn good
gains. Templeton Nancy Agency B3-4445.
Templeton Nancy Agency B3-4445.
Live-in child care positions near New York
Philadelphia, the airbear. Airfare, good salary
benefits. Screened families. Fun support group
PHILADELPHIA N.J. N.J. 215-364-7800 N.J. 215-
364-7800 N.J. 409-671-1190
NANLY OPPORTUNITIES
*Connecticut - twins $250/week*
*Chicago - children $175/week*
*Connecticut - twins $250/week*
*Indian - infant $250/week*
*Children - infants $200/week*
Many positions available.
One year commitment necessary.
Call 215-364-7800.
Needed immediately+ Part-time receptionist Sat
Saturday 10:30 am to 10:30 pm, Colton
Woods Apth. 945-511-7860
$4.00 per hour part time 7 a.m.-11 a.m.
Student needed Monday through Friday
The University Daily Kanman has a
position available for a student to
advertise during the spring
semester.
Requires a firm command of spelling and grammar and a fundamental understanding of the English language. Advertisers will be depending on you, so it is important that they are responsible. We need a self-starter.
You'll work during those times when we publish a newspaper and be off when we don't (like exam week, when you need the time to study).
Contact Jeanne Hines, Sales & Marketing
Adviser, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
864.4358
The Kansan is an equal opportunity employer.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Part-time Student Employment Position
Responsibilities include assisting/advising
students in their university courses;
university procedures; providing individual and
group sessions for study time, student interaction
and course guidance.
group sessions for study-time, student interaction and workshops; and attending weekly meetings. Requirements: Must have been a full-time student at the university for at least one year before taking your first semester work study. Preferred qualifications include familiarity with campus procedures and activities; also excellent communication skills available immediately. Salary $3.50 per hour.
Part-time teller position available, Tuesday and Thursday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., m. to f. Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., m. to f. Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., m. to f. Customer relation skills and previous cashier experience required. Apply at Dougton County Bank.
Full job description/requirements available upon request: Contact Thomas M. Herrera, Assistant Vice President of Human Resources at Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 69054 (913) 843-4311. All materials must be received by 5:00 p.m. December 6, 1989 EEO EMPLOYER. Part-time housekeeping and office cleaners wanted. If you are cleaning and are interested in our jobs, Call Judy at 842-6964
For additional information and an interview, call 845-121 and ask for Larry or Phil.
L moralty nteriority to hire a KU student to work every other night and weekend. Duties include: answering phone and door, light antifoul disposal, providing basic laundry, dividing needs to be neat, have good communication skills and desire to serve others. This work will be in jxnch position for a salary, a furnished room, and a job that requires
Secretary needed immediately for office on campus. Must have word processing. Hours: 12-5. Contact interested Manpower Temporary Service Director. This position will last approximately 8-4 weeks.
Telemarketing + salary + Monday
Thursday, 6 p.m. No experience necessary.
Wanted: Companion for boy, age 6. Monday's
work requires knowledge of the internet.
h. Interferences required. Nonsmoker. Need own
car.
Wanted: Khnn language tutor. Call 842-1122-
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Fix便利房,
good working conditions. Apply Lawrence
Country Club, 842-986. Ask for Frysh.
knowledge. Must have computer & bookkeeping experience as well as general office skills. Lotus experience is helpful but not necessary. Responsibility will involve providing A/R for local convenience stores as well as answering phones and filing. Willingness to learn and expand on computer systems is important. Job duties include performing positive salaries and pleasant working environment. Sand handwritten letter of application and reference.
portrait. Must have neat appearance. Competitive salaries and pleasant working environment. Send handwritten letter of application and resume to Box 180, Lawrence, KS 65003. No calls please.
225 Professional Services
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: 48-hour tec
processing base. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT/RESUME $6.00. 306 Art & Design.
d47v7.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(813) 491-8578
Pregnant and need help? Call Birtlebirth at
Confidential, help/free pregnancy
testing.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-7178.
Suffering from Abortion?
Heartia Restored
Boston Mass
Caleb M. 6791
Confidential response/materials
NOW is the Time
To Make Your
Christmas
Reservations
Fores Are Increasing and
Crowds are Growing
LOWEST FARES
841-7117
TRAFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1-1,000 pages, no job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable wordprocessing; Diana, 843-287 or Ruth, 843-648. Diana.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 843-2035, days or evening.
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing.
Call aptvint 748-3863.
Accurate and affordable typing/word processing.
Spelling checked. Done with time to spare! Sue
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary,
91.25街东路 6; East Lawrence, Call
841-313-1011
Call Barb for your typing needs - term paper.
Computer-IQ printer.
Computer-IQ printer.
462-310 after 5:30.
Call R.J. R's. Typing Services 814-5942. Term paper, legal, theses, calls. No eails after 9 p.m.
Donna's Quality Typing and Word Process-
Term papers, theses, dissertations, letters,
response papers, correspondence letters. Laser prince-
menting applications. Mfrs. M-7th,
8th - 9m.p.m., F-5a M-9m. m-842-7244.
Excellent professional typist does papers accurately, reasonably and fast. Call Julia 843-742-698.
KEYWORKS. Word Processing and Data Entry Services. Dissertation papers etc. *10 + years*
or higher.
Services, Dissertation papers, etc. 10+ years
KU experience. Colette B43-8307
K-S Professional Word Processing. Accurate and
hardy. 841-6345. Call between 1 and 10.
Papers, resumes, images, etc. Common misspellings are "M266". MacProcessing with laser output 84172, 679-0
RESUMES - Written & Laser Printed. 24-hour service. warranty guaranteed. $10-$25. Jay Holliday, Inc. 800-769-3050.
Resumes **Typeset**
Kingston Printing, Inc.
"Making you look good on paper"
804 W. 241 *81-64330*
W. 241 *81-64330*
This lady is hot!! At least her fingers are. Professional typist. You write, I type. Fast & accurate, reasonable rates, available day or evening. Lori 841-8508.
THEWORDCFOHRS-Why pay for typing when you can word-processing? Legal, theses, commercial, IBM 854-01; CSC F.C.C. Daisywhsew, dot matrix, 186st. Since 1983, 854-317.
Will do typing, reports, papers. Type Write Services.
892-4612.
Word Perfect Word Processing, IBM Compatible.
Near Orchards Corners. No calls after 9 p.m.
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have
M.S. Degree. 841.4234.
Word Processing. Macintosh. Spell-Check. Cash only.
748-3191 evenings.
X
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
19" Panasonic color TV for sale. Make offer. Call
Larry 841-4856.
AT&T* Computer 6300, color man, new 32 meg
HD, 300K w keyboard, b43-3338.
Cinestar - Stereo and CD player. Sony 10c sale
for $89. Buy an old age, yrs old. $130 new sell
for $89. Buy an 8x70/750.
For Sale: 1000 Sunitu 40cc motorcycle, black,
white, red, blue, silver. 1000 Honda Speed
50cc moped. Call 644-894-7312
Furniture for sale! A grey & person pit group
furniture set. Large bed with mirror, food table
b/w matching stools, entertainment center,
dining room table, and red table lamp on
cookbook table. Everything in stock.
Really sharp stuff. Price negotiated.
Must be cleaned daily.
FUJI Absolute readiness, 27" SunTower computer system, old excellent condition. $90 at b4-852332
@b4-852332
Graduating, selling queen size sofa bed $275
Graduate, selling duplex bedroom and dryer $1,899
Call 443-811-109
Cell 443-811-109
GOVT SURPLUS! New combat bootes and safety
gear. Field equipment. Field jacket. Field
clothing. Also CARHARTT WORKWEAR
and MARYA KNIGHT WORKWEAR. Field
clothing. 13-4, 13-8, Marya Knight Sales,
S. Marya Knight Sales.
Moving Out Sale - Saturday, 10:9 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
or call 437-7641. Also 83 Toyota Corolla for sale.
Must sell Tandy 1000 with color monitor. Will take
hail offer. Call 437-8743.
Mobile home in Lawrence, perfect for student.
Certified Master's Degree, $2500 or best offer. Mobil Sell. 1-239-896-0000.
RALEIGH technician mountain bike, less than 1
842-687-209. Ask for Max. Karel for
Nintendo with six game cartridges. Great entertainment or Christmas gift. $100. Call 64-854-2800.
Christmas, 12-4. St. Mary Surplus Sales, St.
Mary, NS. 1-47-3734.
1971 Ford Maverick, new battery, runs great and went to Texas. Asking for $30, 864-64374.
1971 Honda CB350B. Clean, low miles, must sell.
1972 Honda M141-177, after 5/30.
Two-way airline ticket from Kansas City to Seatle-
n. 8100. For details (842-9523).
Woon mountain bike on game show. Brand new,
messel. $450.00 #82-297. If no answer, keep me.
***
1976 Toyota Corolla Wagon 4-speed, A/C new,
old and all-season radials. Rumor good, UGT.
841-414-2600
**Snow K1s:** Elan RM-92 165 cm, white with gray
Snow K2s: Elan RM-92 165 cm, women's size a, $159. *Bryan*
kd-820 books.
Ford Grandura, $499.00, 1977 Datam Z800,ZE
with black limited windows, $349.00, Call 841-7495.
1978 Buick Wagon, Auto, AC, Cas/Cb, Radio,
Cruise, ONE ONER, Gauger, 845-3125.
1978 Flat Spyds convertible, black with tan in
tan new ton *London* #2900 *Brown* CA1-641-8800
1904 Portrait 1000 - Kodora hatchback, 60,900 m²
wageningen. Perfectly busy. 843-259-3044
This week's special! *VW Tug* Very clean,
rebul motor. $168. See Check, Yoshi Mianas.
Check for new release.
95 Chevette, very good condition, one owner,
$2600 OBO. 843-1279.
8Round Rooms Serviced: about 800 seats
Nationwide Servicing: 4-door, automatic, AC
PM, Call: 851-239-1676
360 Miscellaneous
RAP/WP1 Can 0a4-127v
T1 VW Bind, runs good, asking $800 OBO. Call
[N4-8599]
[N4-8599]
*$6 Encore, loaded. Very good condition.* $1700
Call Todav!
---
For
Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS
lowest fares and best schedules. On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Don't Wait We'll find the lowest fares
Maupintour
Hillel
Events of the Week
749-0700
Thur., Dec. 7th
7:30 p.m.
Open Forum Meeting
Hiliel House
Wed, Dec. 6th
6:30 p.m.
Little Brother / Little Sister Party
Hillel House
For information and rides contact Hillel at 864-3948
BYO, SELL, DARN LANE
On TV: **Leonard** *MUSIC*; **Musical**
instruments, cameras and more. We honor
Wilma/MCA/M.E.M.X/Dise. Jeyhawk Pawn &
Jewelry, 10 W. w. 4th, 769-1919.
Wanted account to share ride Lawrence-KC near KU Medical Center. Weekdays, 711-948-6998
370 Want to Buy
Want to buy one season ticket for men's basketball.
643-6456.
400s Real Estate
HOME
3-BR apt. in house. Fast walk to WC. Newly renovated, wood floor, dishwasher, window AC.
405 For Rent
2-BR duplex for subunits, AC, dishwasher/washer/crystal bumps, small packs, $270
$390
合
All real estate advertisement 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 other 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 law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
2-Br. Apt. for rent. Avail. immed. Walking distance to shopping. Call 841-8583 anytime.
Quiet room kit, 10b & Tenn. Available Dec. 23,
$140/mo. 841-579-79
b big bedrooms for spring sublease in great
at 128 and Ohio. Kratin or Emily. #45-889
www.kratinandemily.com
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
For Rent : Very clean & quiet experlaboratoi for 1 room. Dedicate 1st, eat 1st, Apartment Apenas:
841-797-3977
Clean, quiet, bright 2 BR apt. in 4-plex. Bus stop in front, private parking in back. $800.00 am + deposit. Unfurnished. Utilities extra Available now. 729-1238 anytime. leave message.
EMERGENCY PLACE
Avail.井 gas heat a water paid, 1 block from campus at 1428 Ohio. Private parking, laundry facilities.
853-7644
sum, to sublease starting January 1st. 749-0011.
Help, appl. backed down down) Nice 2-bdrm.
appl. for rent, $80/mo, low utilities, close to cam-
plex.
2-level/Personal apartment. Spring sublease. Ten minute walk to Wescoe. 841-708-578, $77/month.
A change for the better. Mt. Ross. The luxuries of nearby campus. Near campus. Available now. 841-600-600.
Furnished room w/shared kitchen/bath facilities
Off-street parking. No pets.
811-0000.
for sublease. Two bedroom apartment,
available Januari 10. May on bus route. Rent
$250 per month.
For lease Jan. 1, 3-bedroom apt at 11th and Tennesse-
ssie. $350. Call 641-1649. Leave message
3-birth, spc. across street from campus
building $900./month, 60/month.
Building 8426. -1684. -1672. Leave
Moving to KC7 One-bedroom apartment in the heart of downtown. Carport and more. Great clubhouse facility. Low rent.
Available at West Hill Apk. for next semester:
Spacious one-bathroom furnished, $355 a month.
Water paid. Great local near campus
Location. Lease and deposit required.
811-380-454 or 811-380-348.
Completely Furnished
Studies, 1-2 and 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations. Located in the heart of design and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 841-6359, 749-0455 or 748-2415.
Apartment for sublease at Naimith Hall. A single bedroom on first floor with own bathroom and LOTS of privacy. Have maid services. Leave room for children. Have a rent. I will with denoit sign and half of January rent.
New 1-bed, iam. Very ROMIE, could be for 2 people. Fully furnished, dishwasher, microwave. Bargain bathroom. Cable hookup. W/D face. On RKU w/air conditioning, must remount quickly. Will lease fast. #791-416.
For Rent - Large 3-bedroom apt. Attic bedroom.
825/mo. Utilized费 843-8344
00 per month. **Value $14.99**
Pent Item 30344. *price* $15.00 /unit. *Utilities paid*
$8.00 -坝陵
Nice large attic room for rent. Ann. Jan. 1st.
large clear to small case/ C/$25/mo.
small to large case/ C/$30/mo.
Seeking warm friendly Christian roommates!
Ektonna Community has two good homes for you.
Applications may be picked up at ECM
483-643. 150 Oread. For more information
call 843-643.
One month rent free! Sunrise Village - 4-bdrm.
DW, microm, DW, on bus; Call & leave
after. Free parking.
Sublease Sublease: 3-bdrm, 2.5bath townhouse,
deprived, on bus route, Savannah Village
Call 811-600-1211
Older 81 bedroom, two bathrooms downstreet, wood
floor. plex xardx, 870. M1-9144.
Rooms efficiency and apartments and older well-
kept homes. 8165 and up. 841-4144.
So close to campain! One bedroom apartment for sublease, 12th and Oread. Call 841-387-387.
Spiesson 3-bdmm. dblum, W/D hookup, AC yard,
CAB 4-bdmm. dblum, W/D hookup, AC yard,
$6/dm. leave Message. No dogs please.
audio studio available January. Water, gas and cable cabin. One block from Union (Berkeley) station.
Available Jan. 1: Great studio apartment
$800/month. Low utilizes. Call 823-8310.
GUIDE FIXED 2nd samaster 3rd bedroom and W/DT
Sublease. 1-bdrm. apt., fully furnished, very
elegant; large enough for 2 or 3 people,
route # 84-301.
Mastercraft Management
942.6465
wawher, microwave. On bus route 749-5642.
Subsystem 2-burner apL. 5 minutes from campus.
Roomy. Quit area. $330 mo. Available in
January. 822-4146.
Sunflower House has rooms open for spring semester. Walk to classes and/or downtown, and enjoy group living in a cooperative home-like atmosphere. Low rents include private rooms, laundry facilities, storage facilities, hotel facilities. Call 749-2671 or 814-1848 and leave an appointment or stop by 106R Tennessee.
Sublease: Small one-bedroom apartment
13th 18th & 210th $895.00 - 845-3792.
Two-floor, 1-bedroom apt. W/D, garage, very
clean, lots of space. 824-935-6249,
824-935-8249.
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Reserve Your Home Now We Still Have A Few Completely Furnished Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
Offering:
* Custom furnishings
* Designed for privacy
* Private parking
* Close to shopping & KU
* Many great locations
* Equal opportunity housing
Go to...
Hanover Place - 841-1212 14th & Mass
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
Tanglewood - 749-2415
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A quiet atmosphere
• spacious 2 bedrooms
• close to campus
WINTER SPECIALS!
9TH & AVALON 842-3040
100%
Very cool lbc. lcr, apt. available in January. 1300 bld. Vermont St. gas, water paid. Hankedoid in winter $220/mo, no pets. 843-9473. Leave message.
INSTANT $200 REBATE
Hurry in Today some short term leases available COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- TANNING BED
- VOLLEYBALL COURT
* BASKETBALL COURT
* INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL
* EXERCISE ROOM
- 3 HOT TUBS
- ON BUS ROUTE
THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
$345-$410
MODELS OPEN DAILY
Mon.- Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m.
Sun. 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
*Offer limited one rebate
per lease
expires 1:15-90
430 Roommate Wanted
apt. sublease start Jan Room furnished, ½
util. Call 843-2853.
Christian male needed spring semester to share
4-br. townhouses $172 + 3 % util. on bus route.
$650 per month.
1 or 2 roommates needed. End of Date/Jan./14.
roommate needed. Roommate needed. Route, Free cable. Please call: 149-3810
2 roommates needed for 3-drm. house with W/D,
garage, pets, fireplace, 149-W. 52d Thr. W25h
Female needed to subluate 2-bed apart-
ment, Beginning Jan. 1
Call Home 443-4778
Female non-smoker. Close to campus. Gas,
Responsive landlord. 842-639-8800.
landlord.
Female Roommate needed for spring semester.
Good location. $200.00 + 1/2 utilities. Lease until May. Deposit paid, free cable. 841-3500.
Female roommate needs: Very nice, completely furnished, own room, $130 per month. 749-5268. Female roommate wanted to share a bedroom with another female roommate. Old bedroom furniture. Nice complex. 609. 841-0411. Female roommate for very nice 5-BR townhouse nominee. $165/month, garage. FP, DW. Female roommate for $165/month, garage. FP, DW.
Female roommate wanted for spring semester. 3-br. two bathdups. 2009 University RI $187 per person. Female roommate needed immediately. 2 bdm. Female roommate needed immediately. *nose to KU, energy efficient; has W/D. Call*
Female roommate needed ASAP. Furnished
up to 250 square feet of land; $179 plus tpillow,
kitchen, 842-3538
1
Home roommate(s) needed ASAP. Great location one block from campus. $161./month. Call
Female roommate need for spring. Non-roomer, one room, one block from camp. $170. Roommate need for spring. Non-roomer, one room, one block from camp. $170.
Male non-smoking roommate needed, spring
breakroom rental in Huntington Beach,
820-546-1900 or utilities: Marilyn or Mart.
$1250
THE FAR SIDE
Female roommate needed. Large apartment, bus
route, own room, washer/dryer, dishwasher,
microwave, furnished. $200 + 1% util. 855-656-
10 before 10 a.m. or after 6:00 p.m.
Female roommate needed starring ASAP. Very
expensive. Please call 843-909-6520, $750
per month + 14 utilities. 843-909-6520
GAY MALE non-smoker for roommate only
GAY MALE non-student from campus. $175 % ½ uhts.
GAY MALE non-student from campus. $175 % ½ uhts.
Grad. stud, GWM, 14. 14 yr. in Eur., outgoing,
good cook, activit. Seeking. Peaceful, peaceful
adaptive spirit. Charm. In Christ, like my cat, not
skinny. Skinty. Contact. Christ, like my cat.
5813 Curtis, Acquafredda P2. (P) 8241, Italy.
Looking for a female roommate. On bus
walking routes with no designated stop.
Negotiable + 9 utilities water paid. Available
at bus stops.
ORCHARD CONSULT.
or female counsel or
formal counsel ORCHARD CONSULT.
On bus line, with post,贴 A/C; A/C 107/35,
196/40; A/C 250/40; A/C 280/40.
singer seminar, Sunrise Village, Call 941-8238.
Wale or female roommate was to share 2
January to May, own room in apartment 1453.
Laundry, $15 per month negotiable. Call
800-726-1984.
Lock! Male/m female roommate needed Jan. 1.
Great 2-bedroom Colony Woods apartment - more extra. 1879.50 + 1/4 utilization Call 841-6739 now.
male roommate needed immediately for Jan. 2.
Male roommate wanted: Spring semester to
utilize a 4-bedroom apt $100 per month plus
$125.
811-900-0000
Nested = Female non-smoking roommate. Nice
roommates. Stay in a clean, dry, depot, walking
distance, to campa. Call 845-303-6921.
Male roommate wanted for spring semester to share 3-bedroom apartment. Get master bedroom, bath, walk-in closet. On bus route.
Water - $150 + $15 usages. I41-6977.
Male roommate needed January. Fully furnished block from campus. $185/month. NW41-1963. Male roommate needed to share fully furnished apartment set up setup ($350/month plus $245). NW42-245.
ad female non-smoker roommate ASAP or
sitting semester. 4-bath, on bask, on route, nice
apartment. Deposit required and %/
utilities. Call Jennifer 834-8219.
Need 2 female roommates for 3-bedroom townhouse at Trailridge. Call Cindy 749-054 or 843-7333.
Non-smoking responsible roommate wanted to
transfer to a non-smoking roommate. Grad student required. Must have references.
ROOMMATE WANTED 4 female or male to
share a great room. 1/4 block from campus.
One roommate needed, male or female, to
time Jan 1.叫 Icll 841-0023. $74 per month star-
tax.
Roommate needed immediately - 2 bdmr - furnished -
water pd. $210/mo. - November pd.
dressed well
Roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom house with two others. Washier/dryer. On bus route. $150 + usd. With 799-998.
Roommate needed for second semester. Base-
ment room, own bathrooms, utilities split. Uts
tall.
Roommate needed: Only $178.60/mo. + ½
utilities per month route, bag route. 5
utilities per month route, bag route.
call 843-2983, call 843-2983
Roommate needed for large 2-bedroom apartment in house. Hardwood floors. Fully equipped with 860+ evening. Roommate needed to sublease 3-bdrm. townhouse kitchen and bathroom. Dishwasher, on bus routes. $165/month > utilities.
Roommate needed spring semester. Bus route.
cut, unite, use, and Great location. Punish.
Roommate 841-194-654.
Roommate wanted to sublease 3-bdrm. townhome with two others. Fireplace, trash compactor, dishwasher, on bus route. $180/month + utilities. Call 842-3869.
in many nice houses for non-smoking, quiet female. two nice blocks south KU. Free utilities, cable, WT, IW, C microwave, TV, housecleaner, WT, IW, and 1/15 GW. $402-$420. $189. 811-3690. 841-3690.
Roommate wanted to share 2-bedroom apartment for spring semester. Laird Room, kitchen, dining room, bathroom.
**SPRING SUBLEASE** Fun female needed to
need help with:
495-755-1000, mail.dc.ca; Dail. call:
495-755-1000, mo./us.alt: 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Seeking fun female roommate who's serious about school. Own bedroom, bathroom. W/D, pool, spacious, quiet, very nice. Electric, cable water paid. $232.50 monthly. 923-7268 eaves.
Seeking mature male roommate spring semester.
2 BR, 2 FL, old style. $200. Utilities paid.
843-6529 Nevin.
Easy-going female needs non-smoking roommate for spring. Summer summer. $170 + $\frac{1}{2}$ utilities.
Sublease 2-bed, 2-bath apt. Microwave,
microwave route. Available late
December. 749-148.
Wanted: Fun with female roommate for close-to-campus apartment. Call for information.
Wanted: Roommate for spring semester
Wanted: Roommate for fall semester
Utilities: Call 749-1883, if no answer leave
NAISMITH HALL
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 60044
913-843-8559
Wanted: Woman international student to share comfortable home with American woman graduate student. 20-minute walk from Watson, NY. Email: hwatson@alearnt at AEC - 861-7495. (Weekdays: 749-1800.)
Convenience
- Privacy
- Luxury
Naismith Hall...
these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
Only Naismith can provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free wifi, no mold
limited weekly mail service, "Dine Anytime,
and much more!
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
For more information &
a tour call or come by
today.
By GARY LARSON
10.3.2 解:设 $x_1, x_2$ 为方程 $3x^2 - 4x + 1 = 0$ 的两个实根,则 $x_1 + x_2 = \frac{4}{3}$,$x_1 x_2 = \frac{1}{3}$。
Jason
12-6
© 1983 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Gym
"So, Professor Jenkins! . . . My old nemesis! . . .
We meet again, but this time the advantage is mine!
Hai Ha! Ha!"
16
Wednesday, December 6, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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City addresses tax relief problems
By Dave Wakefield Kansan staff writer
Commissioners send outline of concerns to state Legislature
City commissioners last night approved a resolution outlining problems for Lawrence posed by tax relief proposals that state legislators have discussed.
The resolution, addressed to the Kansas Legislature, comes before Friday's special session when the state legislature discuss property tax relief measures.
"I am sympathetic with the tax-payers," said Mayor Bob Schumm. "I am also one whose tax has changed dramatically. But we also have a need to protect city fiscal responsibilities."
that income and affect the budget, he said.
Next year, the commissioners budgeted for the city $400,000 in interest income, said acting city manager Mike Wilden. Any changes or delays in tax payments will reduce
"We want to try to make them aware of the kinds of problems that could result from some of the relief proposals." Wilden said. "We could find ourselves in August with no money for interest payments."
Wildgen said that the commissioners were trying to keep funds in accounts dependent upon property tax revenues. For example, most accounts were closed when he been stopped until after the special legislative session, he said.
According to the resolution, the commissioners oppose any quarterly payment system for all tax payers. But city commissioners endorse delaying penalties and interest on their taxes when it receives a "circuit breaker refund." The resolution
In 1987, the Mayer's Study Committee on Drug Abuse published recommendations for possible drug programs. Commissioners want to bring back the committee but with increased responsibilities.
In other action, city commissioners also agreed to re-form a citizens committee to study drug problems in Lawrence.
More than a task force is needed, said commissioner Bob Walters. An active group is needed to support programs addressing drug abuse in Lawrence, he said.
The committee would maintain the same name but be a standing committee that could become an ongoing advisory committee.
Commissioners asked the city staff to gather the names of people who might be interested in serving on the committee.
Only Munchers Can Bake A Tree
贯
Great gift ideas for your friends and family. available in cinnamon nut, apple, blueberry, strawberry
Munchers
Bakery
Hillcrest Shopping Center Near Hillcrest Theatres special order by phone or come on in. 749-4324
1900 W. 23RD OPEN 24 HOURS
in water or oil
CHICKEN OF
THE SEA CHUNK
TUNA
6.5 oz. CAN
49¢ limit two
Super Food Barn
OVER 20,000
DISCOUNT PRICES
DOUBLE COUPONS
FOX DELUXE PIZZA
7.6 oz. SIZE while supplies last
BRECK
SHAMPOO OR CONDITIONER
15 oz. BTL.
99¢
HUDSON GRADE 'A'
WHOLE FRYERS
45¢ lb.
limit four
BUSCH BEER
12
12 oz. CANS
regular, light, or natural light
creamy or crunchy
SKIPPY PEANUT BUTTER
18 oz. JAR
$1 59 limit one
CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP
25¢
10.75 oz. CAN
limit four
PEPSI OR DIET PEPSI
98¢
2 ltr. BTL.
GOOD THRU 12-12-89
1900 W. 23
in water or oil
CHICKEN OF
THE SEA CHUNK
TUNA
6.5 oz. CAN 49¢ limit two
BRECK
SHAMPOO OR
CONDITIONER
15 oz. BTL. 99¢
creamy or crunchy
SKIPPY
PEANUT BUTTER
18 oz. JAR $1.59 limit one
Super Food Barn
6. 2013 年全国高校研究生招生考试,本科第一批(420人)录取率为 97.5%。按此确定今年的本科第一批的录取人数。预计2015年全国高校研究生招生考试,本科第一批(420人)录取率为 98.0%,拟从本科第一批中选出500名考生参加2015年全国高校研究生招生考试。
VOL.100, NO.71 (USPS 650-640)
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
THURSDAY DEC. 7,1989
NEWS: 864-4810
Abbey Road
Students march across Jayhawk Boulevard to protest University minority policies.
Keith Thorpe/KANSAN
Black students demand action
By Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writer
The KU administration's trend of lethargic action about minority recruitment and retention should not continue, members of the Black Men of Today said yesterday, after a protest in front of Strong Hall.
"We want action now, not tomorrow," said John Lewis, Kansas City, Kan. senior and group member wait; we can't afford to wait."
The noon protest, which lasted for nearly half an hour, attracted about 80 protesters, while nearly
▶ See related story p. 3
The group distributed flyers with their complaints about the administration and their proposal to end the recruitment and retention problem.
The flyers stated that the Minority Issues Task Force Report diluted the issues and formed meaningless committees.
70 others watched.
Darren Fulcher, Kansas City, Mo., junior and group member, told protesters that since 1980, Black enrollment had been decreasing, although in some ethnic, Indian, and Asian students had been increasing.
Orlando White burns the Minority Issues Task Force Report.
"When you have committees, they can't do anything but evaluate the problem," said Mark McCormick, Wichita senior and group member.
In 1980, there were 879 Black students enrolled at KU, and now 642 are enrolled, he said.
[Photo of a man raising his arm in a powerful gesture, possibly celebrating or expressing a strong emotion.]
Near the end of the protest, five protesters burned the report, while the crowd shouted, "Burn, burn, burn!"
"We want the University to make an effort to do something about this." Fulcher said.
See MINORITY, p. 9
Suspects in custody following Topeka kidnapping, murders
By Rich Cornell Kansan staff writer
A 19-year-old man and an 18-year-old woman were arrested shortly after midnight yesterday in connection with the kidnapping of four elderly Topeka residents and murder of three.
Lt. Bud Brooks of the Topeka police department said police arrested Tyrone L. Baker of Topeka in the Topeka Ramada Inn South and Lisa A. Flannentienst of Auburn in her home. Both were arrested on four counts of aggravated kidnapping, three counts of first-degree murder, one count of aggravated assault and one count of felony theft.
Formal charges have not been filed. Brooks said.
The body of Ida Mae Dougherty, 72, was found near Douglas County Road 2190N, seven-tenths of a mile west of Grover, between 1:30 and 2:15 a.m., Douglas County Sheriff Loren Anderson said.
"D
Yesterday morning investigators also found the body of the Topeka woman missing since Monday, Brooks said.
Three of her neighbors were
People are scared. There was a lot of stuff going on last night. Gary Kroege
Gary Kroeger Lawrence resident
kidnapped Monday morning after surprising a gunman trying to burglarize the woman's home, Brooks said. The neighbors entered the woman's house after becoming concerned about her because her morning newspapers were still in the driveway, but she was not there.
The gunman kidnapped the three neighbors, Lester M. Haley, 87, Nancy C. Haley, 69, and Verne Borne, 68, Brooks said. After driving to Douglas County Road 225E, the gunman let them out of the car.
Later, the gunman found the Haleys and shot them to death, Brooks said. Meanwhile, a woman living nearby saw Sorne and took her home. Investigators began searching for the Haleys and Dougherty after Horne called her husband and her husband called the Toneka police.
Brooks said he would not discuss Pfennenstiel's role in the crimes.
At 1:10 p.m. Tuesday, the bodies of Lester M. Haley, 87, and Nancy C. Haley, 69, were found beside a diapidated two-story stone house on Douglas County Road 2190N, Anderson said.
Carol Moddrell, Douglas County coroner, said Lester Haley died from gunshot wounds in the neck and the abdomen, and Nancy Haley died from gunshot wounds to the neck and chest.
Moddrell, who finished the autopsy of Dougherty's body last night, said Dougherty did not die from gunshot wounds, but would not specify the cause.
Dougherty's body was found about two miles west of where investigators found the Haleys' bodies, Anderson said.
Anderson said the Haleys' bodies were found about a mile northwest of Douglas County Road 1023, which leads to Lecompton, a mile to the east.
Between those points, Anderson said, the gunman let the Haleys and Horne out of Dougherty's stolen car on Douzlas County Road 225E.
Brooks said Tuesday that investigators did not have enough information to arrest any of several suspects in the case. However, later in the afternoon, new evidence and informa- tion to arrest Baker and Pfammentil.
"These individuals, through the course of the investigation, were brought to the forefront of the investigation," Brooks said.
Horne's ability to describe the gunman helped Topeka police identify the suspects. Brooks said, but he was not a law enforcement officer in the gunman in a police photograph.
"She has been involved in the process," he said.
Brooks said the Dougherty killing would be prosecuted in Shawnee County, but the Haley killings would be prosecuted in Douglas County.
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said the evidence from the kidnappings and killings convinced him and the Shawnee County district attorney that they should prosecute the cases in two counties. The two district attorneys will help one another prosecute the cases.
Residents of Lecompont, whose families have lived in the town of 796 for several generations, cannot understand the shootings, said Gary Kroeger, owner of Kroeger's Country Store, southeast of Lecompont.
whose bond was set at $200,000,
probably would be filed today.
A Shawnee County district attorney's office official said formal charges against Baker, whose bond was set at $300,000, and Fannisset, men.
"People are scared," Kroeger, Lawrence resident, said. "There was a lot of stuff going on last night. People were taking precautions."
He said residents bolted doors
many times that were never locked
before.
"There was a lady in here today who said she was scared stiff because her husband was out of town." Kroeger said.
The Haleys' bodies were found on a hill overlooking a grassy field to the north. Past the field, eagles, for which Lecompton is known, live among trees lining the river. To the south and across the road, the hill continues rising and the trees grow thicker, secluding the area between the Kansas River and the top of the hill.
"You don't understand how somebody that young can kill someone that old in cold blood," Kroeger said.
Philippine coup ends for rebels
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — Rebel troops gave up their stronghold in the Makati business district yesterday and returned to their barracks, seven days after launching a coup attempt against President Corazon Aquino.
"This is unconditional surrender," said Brig. G. Arturo Enrile, head of the Philippine Military Academy who led negotiations throughout the night with rebel leaders. "The problem is already finished."
However, rebels who marched the $1\frac{1}{4}$ miles back to nearby Fort Bonifacio were smiling, chanting "No surrender, the fight goes on!" Soldiers at the army base there unfurled a white sheet at the gate saying, "Welcome Home."
rebels still held Mactan Air Base in Cebu, 350 miles south of Manila. However, local officials yesterday were trying to arrange talks there to end the occupation at the last known rebel stronghold.
At least 79 people have been killed and more than 570 others wounded since the coup began Friday.
Rans, Aquino, who faced the gravest crisis of her 3½-year-old administration, expressed relief that the siege was over.
"I would also like to commend those who helped to bring about this end to urban terrorism," she said in a written statement. "We must now all join hands and consolidate our efforts to rebuild what has been destroyed."
Yesterday's announcement came one day after 1,800 foreigners, including about 250 Americans, were evacuated from rebel-held luxury hotels in Makati and Mrs. Aquino declared a national state of emergency.
The mutineers, rifles, bazookas, machine guns and bandoleers of ammunition slung over their shoulders, sang the theme song of their Scout Ranger unit as they marched to Fort Bonifacio.
As the rebels left the skyscrapers and hotels, seized last Saturday, the atmosphere seemed more one of victory than defeat.
"We have won some victories," said rebel Capt. Danilo Lim. "We have made a very strong statement." As the mutineers marched past the exclusive Forbes Park neighborhood, where U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Platt lives, some residents stood on the street and cheered.
"I would like to say that the soldiers are voluntarily returning to barracks." Lim told reporters as he left Makati. "We did not surrender."
Rebel spokesman Capt. Albert Yen said, "We are willing to face the consequences of our acts, but the fight must go on."
Student Senate tables election rules measure
By Lara Weber Kansan staff writer
Last night's Student Senate meeting is still in session.
New elections proposals have been tabled by Senate at the past two Senate meetings. Last night, Senate again shied away from the issue when Michael Diggs' motion to table the bill was passed by Senate members.
After a long debate about a recent proposal for new elections rules, Senate decided to go into recess until Jan. 22 when it will reconvene for a special meeting about elections.
"We are under a time constraint, and something needs to be done immediately," he said. "But I'd rather run on the same rules that caused problems last year than adopt new rules with greater errors. We run the risk of jeopardizing our credibility on this campus. If we don't have credibility we have nothing."
Duggs, off-campus senator, sale he didn't feel comfortable accepting a proposal that might have structural problems that could jeopardize the fairness of the spring election.
The proposal in question would establish an elections commission, independent of Senate, which would determine the elections
► See related story p. 8
rules and deal with all election questions.
After last spring's elections, Common Cause, the winning coalition, was found in a University judiciary hearing to have violated campaign expenditure rules. David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, instructed B. Jake White, student body president, and Jeff Morris, student body vice president, to correct ambiguities in the elections rules or salary cuts and community service work. White and Morris were given until Dec. 11 to present a proposal to Ambler.
Aaron Rittmaster, chairman of the rights committee, opposed Senate's decision to table the proposal.
The Senate Rights Committee, along with several other interested student senators, have been working on revisions to the elections rules since October.
"As far as I'm concerned, what just happened is absolutely ridiculous," he said. "Every person in that room was invited to come to the hearings and committee meetings. Not a single person showed up."
No injuries in fire at Meadowbrook
By Lisa Moss
Kansan staff writer
No injuries were reported, and the extent of the damage was unknown, said Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief. The fire was in Building E, Cornish Square.
Twenty-five to 30 people were evacuated last night from Meadowbrook Apartments, 15th and Crestline streets, after a fire that started on the first floor spread smoke throughout the building.
The meadowbrook answering service received a call that a fire alarm went off at 7:08 p.m., and the fire department was called, said Michael Lee James, Meadowbrook Apartments resident manager.
The building has 12 apartments, James said.
James advised residents to find friends or relatives to stay with for the night. He said residents who did not have a place to stay would be accommodated at Travelodge Motel, 801 Iowa St.
The Meadowbrook maintenance coordinator was working with the city to shut off all utilities for the building, and have the pipes in the building. James said.
McSwin said the flames, which traveled 25 feet across the ceiling of the first floor, were contained to the first floor of the three-story building.
hool of the university building Four fire trucks were sent to the
scene with 17 fire fighters.
The fire department performed salvage operations, vented the building out with fans and checked for spot fires.
The fire appeared to have started in a storage or laundry room, he said.
"Those are the two most damaged areas," he said. "Any time you have a fire in the lower floors, smoke goes up to other floors."
Sandra Stokes, Lawrence senior,
said that when fire alarm went off
she grabbed some clothing and her
two children.
"My 10-year-old said, 'It's a real fire!'"
Stokes said her two-year-old daughter was in the bathtub, and when she to get her, black smoke was pouring out of the vents.
Stokes said she had no insurance and did not know where she would stay.
Arlen Kaufman and Kevin Caffrey, Newton seniors, said they saw smoke in the hall when they were exiting the building.
Anauman said that there would be smoke damage to their apartment and that neither of them were insured.
Mojtaba Noursalehi, Lawrence graduate student, said he and his wife and three children were shopping and returned after the fire started.
C
A Lawrence firefighter drags out a burning mattress.
No, that's not correct. The image shows a sequence of characters. It's a series of numbers from 1 to 90000000000
2
Thursday, December 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
Sunny day.
TODAY
Cloudy
HI: 30°
LO: 19°
Seattle
44/33
New
York
32/25
Los Angeles
77/52
Denver
27/22
Chicago
20/12
Miami
76/58
Dallas
53/36
KEY
Rain Snow
Ice T-Storms
Forecast by Michelle Stahl
Temperatures are today's highs and
tonight's lows.
Kansas Forecast
The temperatures across the state will be chilly today with a chance for snow flurries. Highs ranging from the upper 20s to lower 30s.
Salina
27/19
Dodge City 30/25
KC
30/19
Wichita 35/27
(U Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
5-dav Forecast
Thursday - Cloudy and cold with a chance for snow flurries. Northeast winds 10-20 mph. High 30°. Low 19°.
Friday - Mostly cloudy and cold High 36°. Low 26°.
Saturday - Partly cloudy and warmer. High 47°. Low 32°.
Sunday - Mostly sunny and warmer. High 47°. Low 32°.
Monday - Mostly sunny and mild. High 51°. Low 33°.
A meeting of KU on Capitol Hill will be at 6:30 p.m. today in the Kansas Room at the Kansas Union. Anyone interested in an internship in Washington, D.C., for the summer of 1990 is encouraged to attend. The program will focus on the application process.
A meeting of the Champions Club will be at 7 p.m. today in Parlor C at the Kansas Union.
A letter-writing campaign to state legislators, sponsored by the KU Pro-Choice Coalition, will be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. today in the fourth floor lobby at the Kansas Union.
A meeting of the KU Christian Science Student Organization will be at 6:30 p.m. today in Alcove C in the Kansas Union.
▶ A speech by Forrest Gossett, regional director of the Society of
On campus
Professional Journalists, will be at 7 p.m. today at 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. ▷ A meeting of KU Democrats will be at 7 p.m. today in the International Room at the Kansas Union.
A French Club Christmas party will be at 7:30 p.m. today. Information about the location of the party can be obtained in the French and Italian department office.
▶ A meeting of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will be at 7:30 p.m. today in the Daisy Hill Room at the Burge Union.
A lecture by photographer Mark Klett will be at 7:30 p.m. today in the Spencer Museum of Art auditorium.
The last fall semester meeting of the KU Equestrian Club will be at 8 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union.
Police report
A female student was grabbed Monday by an unknown male as she walked to her car in the 1300 block of Old Street, Lawrence police imported.
A six-inch tall wooden musical reinwarded value at $20 was taken Sunday from a Corbin Hall room door, KU police reported.
A student's car was damaged by a BB or pellet gun Monday in lot 104, west of Ellsworth Hall. Damage was estimated at $200, KU police reported.
> Tires on a student's car were damaged Monday in parking lot 110, east of Jayhawker Towers. Damage was estimated at $80, KU police reported.
Local Briefs
rates will be $2.496. The new rate is for the standard double room and board, said Kenneth Stoner, director of student housing. The standard rental rate now is $2.336.
HOUSING RATES INCREASE: The University of KANSAS housing rental rates will increase 6.8 percent next year.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, December 7, 1989
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Trial set for Ridpath murder case
By Jim Petterson Kansan staff writer
The Blue Springs, Mo., man charged with the Oct. 1 shooting of an 18-year-old Independence, Mo., man in northern Douglas County must must be on charges of first-degree murder in district court judge ruled yesterday.
Christopher W. Mitchell, 19, stood quietly by his attorney, Dennis Moore, as Judge Mike Malone ruled the state had presented sufficient evidence to show that Mitchell could have committed the crime. Mitchell's trial is set to begin Jan. 22 in Douglas County Court.
The body of Timothy K. Ridpath was discovered Oct. 2 next to his car on Douglas County Road 1250E south of U.S. Highway 24-59.
in testimony yesterday, Carol Moddrell, Douglas County coroner, said Ridpath had been shot five times, once in the head, twice in the neck and twice in the abdomen, with a 22-caliber handgun.
The bulk of the evidence against Mitchell came from his girlfriend, Cindy Springs, 17, of Blue Springs, interviewed Mitchell and Scaturo.
Scaturo testified that she had lied to police when she told them she and Mitchell had gone to a movie the
night Ridpath was killed. She said she and Mitchell had made a story about their actions that night to serve as an alibi for Mitchell.
Carrol Crossfield, Lawrence police officer, testified that Scalatro maintained her story through four interviews. He said Scalatro changed her story during a fifth interview on Nov. 23. Crossfield said Scalatro admitted to had accompanied Mitchell out of Blue Springs the night Ridpath was killed.
In her testimony, Saturro said that when she called Mitchell at his father's business from work on Oct. 1, Mitchell sounded unset.
"He sounded weird, different than normal," she testified. "I could tell something was bothering him, and he wouldn't tell me. Finally he told me that he had had it with Tim and was sick of the threats from him."
Scaturo testified that she was aware of a few threats Ridpath had made to Mitchell.
"Tim said he was going to get me back and Mrs. Mitchell (Mitchell's mother) back," she said. "Tim knew me, and Mrs. Mitchell didn't like him. I think he thought we were taking Chris away from him."
In other testimony, Crossfield said Mitchell had told him he was homosexual and had had intimate sexual contact with Ridpath on five
separate occasions.
The last incident, during an evening in May 1898, was succeeded the following morning by a fight between the two men. The fight resulted in a police report being filed and Ridpath sent to the hospital, Crossfield said.
Seaturo testified she knew Ridpath had been harrassing Mitchell in person and over the phone. She said she had known about Ridpath and Mitchell's relationship and said she thought Ridpath had harbored bitterness following the relationship's demise.
Scaturo said Mitchell and Ridpath had planned to meet Oct. 1, the same night Mitchell had taken a gun from his father's business place. At about 7 p.m. that night, Mitchell picked her up at work, she said.
"I got in his truck, and he told me to put these pillows and blankets on top of me," she testified. "I didn't know where we were going. About how we were going. We stooped, heard Tim's voice, and Chris said, 'Follow me.'"
She said she sat on the floor because Mitchell thought Ridpath wouldn't follow them if he knew she was there. Ridpath followed the two in his car.
According to Scaturo's testimony, she remained on the floor as they
drove for about an hour on a highway and stopped at a toll plaza.
Scaturo said that about three minutes after Mitchell left the truck, he turned around and pulled over.
"We stopped, and Chris said not to get out of the truck and not to make a noise, and then he left."
"I had no idea where we were or in what direction we were going," she testified. "I could tell we left the highway because the road got bumpy. Then we went onto a gravel road.
Mitchell soon returned to the truck and drove away from the scene, she said.
"It sounded like someone tapping on a table," she said. "I closed my ears because I assumed it was a gun going off."
"About three to four minutes later I sat up and saw he was shaking." I sat up and saw he was shaking. "About an hour back to Blue Spruce. I can't believe I shot him."
Upon returning to Blue Springs, the couple agreed on a chronology of events that they could use to explain whereabouts that night, she said.
When asked by Martin Miller, assistant district attorney, why she lied to protect Mitchell, Scaturro said she felt she had to be loyal to Mitchell by not turning him over to police.
Engineers make new dune buggy
SUNLAND
By Beth Behrens Kansan staff writer
Jerry Kordonowy works on the car he is building with the Society of Automotive Engineers.
Despite conflicts with schedules and conceptualizations, students from the KU chapter of the Society of Automotive Engineers will culminate a year's worth of work on a dune buggy prototype Jan. 1.
Jerry Kordonowy, Lawrence senior, said the group would be working on the car during the semester break so they would have time to train in Baja-West competition, April 12-14 at Norman, Okinawa.
David Engel, president of the student chapter, said he decided to work on the project to gain practical, hands-on experience.
"We're building the prototype now. That was the hardest thing because there were so many controversies and so many problems. After the competition, we'll modify and redesign it with a lot more knowledge."
Kordonowy, said that about 10 students had worked on the car since the beginning, but he was one of four students working on it this semester.
"With all of our other design projects, we never see it coming into real life," he said. "We've had ideas that sound good on paper, but when you work with a limited budget, some things just don't work."
He said building the car was difficult because of the number of people involved. Integrating ideas to design a vehicle that would work was hard because of the students' schedules.
Kordonwy said two of the students had graduated since the project began.
"It's hard for a lot of kids to get motivated to work on it," he said. "Some of them, like me, have 16 hours this semester. When the kids come down and see that it still isn't kind of makes motivation difficult.
"The actual time you can work on it is another factor. We can only work on it when the supervisor of the shop is here. We can't work on weekends either, so that kind of limits our time
from eight to five during the week. If the shop would be open during weekends, I'm sure we would have been done a long time ago."
Kordonyou said he had spent about 60 hours working on the car since Spring.
Engel said time spent on the car was volunteered unless students chose to help build it as part of an art course or designed course, as Kordonny had.
Kordonowy said the competition would test the car in appearance, acceleration, climb, and endurance.
Don Gyorog, faculty adviser for the group, said the students would compete for national recognition.
Kordonayne said, "The motors are all the same. Judges check them to make sure they all run at the same speed and that there were no modifiers or glitchs in the track, we can find out what we did wrong and modify it for next year."
He said that the KU car would be at a disadvantage because some of the cars were still working with cars they had built years before and had been modifying.
Kenneth Stoner, director of student housing, said that he received a list of hazardous chemicals, including chemicals used in darkrooms, that caused him to question whether the residence hall dark
By a Kansan reporter
"The first thing we need to do is count what we have got and see how many people are really using them," he said.
The five darkrooms are at Oliver Hall, McColm Hall, Lewis Hall, Hashinger Hall and Templin Hall. Would you would not be closed immediately.
The people who use the photography darkrooms in the KU residence halls soon may not have a place to develop their film.
rooms were being used safely
Fred McElhene, associate director of student housing, said that he wanted to find alternative ways for residents to have access from a dorm room on campus so the residence hall rooms could be closed.
Another option being considered is consolidating the darkrooms, Stoner said.
if not enough students were using the rooms.
He said he would consider closing the darkrooms by Jan.1, 1990.
Disorientation gets money from Senate
After lengthy debate, Student Senators last night voted to finance Disorientation, one of KU's longest-standing alternative publications
By Chris Evans
Kansan staff writer
This marks the fifth year that Senators have given money for Disorientation, which covers topics from recycling to rock 'n' roll. The magazine has raised some controversy for its use of profanity and articles such as one concerning masturbation.
A bill financing Disorisonation was voted down by the University Affairs Committee three weeks ago and then approved by the Finance Committee. The issue was brought before Senate last week.
Christine Stanek, University Affairs Committee chairman, opposed financing the magazine. She said the magazine's editors should have gone through budget hearings last semester to receive money this year. Instead, they asked for supplemental funds, which traditionally are given to new organizations.
Until this year, no senator had made an issue of the group's methods to get money. Brian Schwegmann, Disorientation editor, said he would go through budget hearings next semester.
"This is not a new organization," she said. "I'm really getting sick of seeing them come through supplemental. It's time to send a clear message to them to 'Get your act together.'"
"I'll be part of that next year," he said. "The reason we didn't go through it this year is because we're totally disorganized. We're clueless. The only thing we really care about is the magazine."
Many of the rules and regulations common to senators confused the issue for the Disorientation staff members, he said.
"The only people who care about the 'system' are the people right here in this room." he told the senators.
Aaron Rittmaster, Disorientation bill sponsor, said senators had asked that student organizations were more important than Senate procedures.
Stanek said that those rules should have been followed and that financing Disorientation this way circumvented the committee system.
Schwegmann said he thought that was partially true.
"I don't think very much of it had to do with rules and regulations," he said. "I think there was a lot of politicking going on."
Rittmatter said issues concerning personal feelings about the magazine and those concerning loyalties to finished rules were closely intertwined.
"The thing at issue is our own internal system and a service to students," he said. "In that case, it's got to be the service to students."
Graves claims elections in Taiwan are success
Darkrooms developing unsure fate in 5 halls
By Derek Schmidt Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA—Taiwan's first competitive elections were a triumph for democracy, the Kansas secretary of state said yesterday.
Bill Graves, secretary of state, was in Taipei, Taiwan, from Nov. 28 until Tuesday to monitor the elections at the House of the Taiwanese government.
"The Taiwanese are very aware of the progress made in Western democracies, and they want that." Graves said in an interview. "If somebody says, 'Well, we can't have that because our political system is the way it is,' they'll say, 'Fine, let's change our political system.'"
During Saturday's voting, the ruling Nationalist Party won only 58 percent of the total vote, down from 70 percent in 1986. The opposition Democratic Progressive Party gathered more than 30 percent, and the balance went to independent candidates.
Graves and four other secretaries of state were among dozens of delegations and hundreds of journalists who descended on Taiwan for that period. In the ensuing elections since the nationalists fled to England China during the 1949 revolution
Allegations of vote fraud have been widely reported, and opposition voters in Tainan, a southern suburb of Taipei, demanded a recount after losing a closely contested race. The recount would take several days.
Graves said that he saw no evidence of vote fraud and that reforms in the vote tabulation process made it easier to track what the process used in the United States.
"We concluded that even if you attempted to manipulate figures,
you're going to get caught because there was enough public observation of the raw totals," he said.
On election night, the secretaries of state were to monitor tabulation at an election booth chosen by the government.
"We thought we got a chance to see just about everything we needed to see to make valid observations about what was on goon." Graves said.
Ruling party candidates tried to label opposition candidates as dangerously provocative to the Chinese, Graves said.
THE KANSAS UNION
A higher-profile issue was Taiwanese independence from mainland China, which has threatened to militate against Taiwanese independence movement.
"When we got there, we could see that there were a slug of cameras," Graves said. "We think they had agreed to bring all these observer teams to this one place to kind of get a PR kick out of the thing."
Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., said yesterday at a state-house news conference that he had not been briefed on the outcome of the Taiwan elections. He said a Chinese invasion was not likely.
Voters in Taiwan, a rapidly industrializing country, were concerned primarily with quality-of-life issues, such as transportation systems, sanitation, the environment, housing and health care. Graves said.
"The business and industrial development have just taken off, and in the meantime you've still got this country an underdeveloped country," he said.
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Thursday, December 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Quorum should be present before Council does work
The University Council last Thursday rejected two changes in parking regulations recommended by the Parking Board. It did so without a quorum, raising the question of how seriously the Council takes some of its actions.
Because a call for the quorum was not made until the end of the meeting, when the Coucil was scheduled to discuss the Parking Department's budget, the votes on the recommended changes were valid.
Willing to make changes in parking regulations without a quorum, the Council obviously was less willing to tackle an issue such as the budget. Regulations are easier to change or rescind than budget items.
granted, the changes in regulations were relatively minor. One of the defeated changes would have extended the hours of faculty blue spaces to 8:30 p.m. in the lot west of Learned Hall. The other would have opened the lot north of Summerfield Hall at night and changed Lot 35, west of the Military Science building, to faculty and staff until 8:30 p.m. The changes would have affected a tiny segment of the University population.
However, parking is an important issue at the University and is the source of much consternation and debate. It should not have been dismissed as a routine parliamentary ratification, as the Council action implies. Once matters turned to money, the Council was hesitant to take action. It should have been equally concerned when considering such mundane topics as where and when people can park safely on campus.
a quorum should be called at the beginning of each Council meeting to ensure that decisions are being made fairly. If a quorum does not exist, the meeting should be postponed with an explanation for the delay. All the issues before the Council have some importance, or they wouldn't be there. Council members should take time to make sure they get the serious consideration they deserve.
Daniel Niemi for the editorial board
The gift of time celebrates season with holiday spirit
Lend a hand at a local charity this Christmas season. They need your help.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Main St., always welcomes Christmas carolers, said Judith McFadden, director of community relations. She said the hospital also needed people to make tray favors. Patients in the hospital this time of year would welcome visitors. For more information, contact McFadden at 749-6132.
Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania St., has a Christmas adoption program, said director Bessie Nichols. Community members are asked to donate clothes, food and toys. Nichols said that anyone who can adopt a family should call Penn House. A person who cannot afford to adopt a family can help by donating individual items. Nichols said paper towels, toilet paper, toothpaste, detergent, soap and other household goods were especially in demand because those items could not be purchased with food stamps. To help, call Penn House at 842-0440.
The Ballard Community Center Inc., 708 Elm St., needs holiday gift wrappers for gifts given to the center, said Sunny Bradshaw, a center volunteer. People who can spare some time to help wrap gifts should call Bradshaw at the center, 842-0729.
The Salvation Army, 946 New Hampshire St., needs more bell ringers this year. They also need help working with their food program, running the homeless shelter and setting up their toy shop for Christmas. To help, call Susan Beers at the Salvation Army, 843-4188.
Tiffany N. Harness for the editorial board
Correction
Information in an editorial about Tonganoxie High School in Tuesday's Kansan was incorrect. The Tonganoxie School District condemned the 97 students who had walked out in support of their teachers. Also, students who did not return to class that day must serve a six-hour, in-school suspension or six hours of community service.
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No Christmas for Freddie
Christmas is the season for symbols and tradition. It seems that our entire culture is given over to religious and secular songs and images that promote themes of plenty and generosity on hand, yet make more poignant the culture's widespread want and destination.
the culture's widespread wander. Outside our culture, revolution rather than tradition is the season's theme. Closed societies finally could not resist the infiltration of free market values and aspirations flooding in in the form of soft drink advertisements and "Brady Bunch" reruns. Governments topple from within with breathtaking speed, yet do the people below clamor for more freedom and faster change?
courtroom.
So surely, then, the symbol of the revolution might well be the beaching of the Berlin Wall. It was formerly the symbol as well as the fact of the utter barrier between two cultures, one "free" and the other "imprisoned." Now the wall is opened and those behind it are free to ... what? They are free to acquire and consume, that's what. Outside the wall isn't necessarily freedom from persecution or even freedom to be left alone. What does exist outside is the relatively unrestrained culture of materialism.
The traditions and rites of materialism are nowhere more enscribed and celebrated than here in the United States, and it's safe to say that the weeks preceding Christmas have become the apotheosis of this celebration. All around us secular and religious symbols are appropriated and combined in a monolithic liturgy of want and gratification.
We need a focused image of the product of three hundred years of free enterprise, generally unhindered by the social controls the revolution repudiates. Here, then, is that image, an 11-year-old boy named Freddie Jones. Harken, you who would follow us: Freddie Jones is our Spirit of Christmas Present.
want and gratitude. Then, is the end toward which an understanding flight to capitalism surges, the highest realization of the social model where everything is available, for a price. The revolution has its new symbol, and our culture, to which that revolution looks, needs a modern icon of its own.
is our Spirit of a Christian.
Freddie was a bright, engaging fifth-grade who did his homework and took pride in getting good grades. His mother, Nadra Jones, "wanted him to be well-known because he was an intelligent little boy. I thought he could be the first black president of the United States."
Any kid faces long oops in undertaking such aspirations; Freddie's chances were slim to none. In Freddie's culture, no, make that our culture, the dominant free enterprise model has extended to basic constituents of modern life: education, medical care, even minimal food and shelter. Mark this, you who would adopt our social system, we buy these things here, they are merely commodities. The quantity as well as quality of one's portion corresponds to the price one can afford to pay. Although there have been experiments, notably in the 1930s and 1960s, that tampered with the social marketplace, much of the machinery of those experiments has been dismantled in the last decade.
Freddie descended from people whom the founders of our culture kidnapped, enslaved, used and sold at auction. That is, the foundation of our society was built on the bodies of human beings that became merely a commodity. Remnants of this outlook have fostered to this day a pervasive disenfranchisement of their descen-
P. S. NAZARABADI
Stuart Beals
Staff columnist
uants, including Freddie. As a result they have been channeled into a subculture, deprived of equal opportunity to equip themselves for competition in the open market of this society.
market of this social market. Consequently, our culture has added a potent element to the demand-side of the social market equation; despair. Unsurprisingly, it has also provided a ready commodity in the form of drugs. For you draftsmen of the new economic democracies, this is the signal feature of our culture. Whereas per capita demand for food and shelter is relatively fixed, the despair/drug cycle is self-feeding yet open-ended. It is the ultimate realization of the possibilities inherent in our culture of materialism. It is, therefore, the most appropriate theme of our modern Christmas.
Christmas.
Freddie was growing up smack in the middle of this cycle. He had no meaningful address, school officials said; rather, he drifted, sometimes with his sister, from home to home in the tough Kansas City neighborhood around the street with the ironic name Prospect. With him he always carried a blue sports bag, which held his books, a change of clothes, toothpaste and a brush.
books, a change of His mother was in jail, after violating parole restrictions arising from a concealed-weapon conviction, including failure to enter a treatment program for substance abuse. No one knew where Freddie's father was.
Neighbors and friends remember that after school Freddie patiently worked on his homework alone at his grandparents' house. They said recently that Freddie stayed away from drug dealers and ran errands for spare change. A neighbor, Alonzo Dial, said he praised Freddie for his good report cards, adding, "If he missed the school bus, he'd take the city bus. He really had the desire to make good."
A couple of weeks ago, Freddie spent the last night of his life at the home of a friend of his mother. That evening he played school in the den with his sister and other children.
children.
The next day Freddie and his sister returned to the house where they used to live, which police suspect had become a crack house. He wanted to retrieve some belongings. His sister knocked on the door, entered and went upstairs.
Freddie then knocked on the door, the door to the house that had been his home once. Someone inside asked who it was. Freddie didn't answer and opened the door. A gun fired.
I recue turned and stumbled into the street and died. There will be no Christmas celebration for Freddie Jones, if indeed there ever was. Those of us left to celebrate ought to remember that and consider what his life and death represent.
This Christmas is a time of courage and social revolution elsewhere. So should it be here.
Stuart Beats is a Lawrence graduate student.
'Amen' for the Eastern bloc
The latest convert to success theology turns out to be none other than the head of the nominally atheist Soviet empire.
And they used to say this wasnt an age of miracles. Of course that was before dramatic events in Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and now this benediction from the Kremlin.
For the moment, Mikhail Gorbachev seems to view religion as a means rather than an end, a tool of social renewal. On meeting the Pope, he noted that "the moral values which religion generated and embodied for centuries can help in the work of renewal in our country, too."
Lots of folks view religion as a way to another goal — material success, good health, psychological ballast. . . They recommend faith the way others prescribe pills. See some of the televangelists who crowd the screen, especially on Sundays and during the more desperate hours of the night.
hours of the man.
A lyric from Jasmin Jonis, that noted theologian, floats my head on such occasion. It went something like:
"O Lord, won't you buy me a Mercedes Benz/Myrials all have Forsches, I must make amends." Mikhail Gorbachev, that altruist, would never be so crass; he's asking for socio-economic renewal.
"The government is looking to the church to help make the people good hard-working citizens." That's the opinion of Michael Rowe, a senior fellow at a British think-tank devoted to studying religion in the Communist bloc. Marxist daimna doesn't seem to motivate the proterarians any longer, so why not try an older, more established brand? According to this scholar, the Soviet Union's new rulers believe the church "can still instill something useful" — something helpful to the state, of course. That's what any Communist regime would love to have: the Protestant ethic.
PETER SMITH
Paul
Greenberg
Sundialed columnist
Syndicated columnist
This new, enlightened attitude in Moscow is not altogether different from the position of those Americans who complain that, ever since official prayers were dropped from the school day, students have grown lazy and rebellious.
and reprobates.
There are two ways to suppress the religious spirit. The first is to persecute and subvert it, to make it a matter of bought priests and empty ceremony. But there is a second and much more effective method, and it is not unknown in this country. It is to make religion respectable, semi-official, another social agency, a seal of worldly success. This is the American way, and the Soviets, newly interested in American ways, may have decided to adopt this one, too.
decided to adopt this but, this does not mean that deacon Gorbachev's conversion to tolerance is unwelcome. He may now think of religion as only a means to a greater end, but means have a way of becoming ends. What better illustration of that familiar tendency than the history of Marxism itself? The dictatorship that was going to be only a station on the road to utopia developed into a permanent detour.
on the road to baptism.
So welcome, Brother Gorbachev. Whatever your reasons, they may change. Faith has a way of growing.
Amen, heliJaluj and more power to you. As is the case with so many of us, Providence may not be finished with Mikhail Gorbachev yet.
- Paul Greenberg is the Editorial Page editor for the Pine Bluff (Ark). Commercial.
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Lawrence folks friendly
Ever since we moved to Lawrence from Los Angeles last May, I have noticed and appreciated the difference in the young men and women who work the check-out in the grocery stores and drive-up windows in the fast food chains. In Los Angeles the folks were inarticulate and not very friendly. Here in Lawrence I find these people upbeat, warm, courteous and friendly.
I suspect that a majority of these workers are KU students. That, coupled with the friendliness that seems to pervade Lawrence, must be the reason why these people are so much nicer to deal with than their counterparts in Los Angeles. I hope the residents of Lawrence appreciate these young people as I do.
Bob Lewis University Relations
As I read Merceda Ares' column about losing her balance during a bus ride, I was appalled at her as a columnist and at the editors of the Kansan. I can't believe that she would submit and that the editors would accept such a useless bit of self nitty.
No pity for the rider
I'm sorry you lost your balance, but let's put up. This doesn't give you the right to label an entire profession just because you feel sorry for yourself. Even I a "naive" freshman, realize that life is full of unpleasant happenings. If this little incident bothers you this much, I think that you had better take up residence in a closet and quit wasting print ink.
Your solution was sand pits. This is a college campus, not a golf course. Yet I do believe that one campus sand pit would be good. Columnists who waste paper space could go bury their heads in shame.
OK. I can slightly sympathize with you but let's not stop with the bus drivers. Let's get those nasty people, who lay the sidewalks with cracks in them. I bet they do it on purpose so "you" will trip.
David Eschbach
St. Louis freshman
Bus drivers merit thanks
I want to respond to your column from Nov. 30. I'm sorry that the writer fell, but might I suggest to her that while standing or riding that she take advantage of the handrails down either side of the aisle and on the backs of the seats.
No. 2010-01-17
(5)
As for jumping off a rolling bus, I would imagine that the bus driver hasn't arrived at his stop yet. he or she is probably slowing down for pedestrians or other drivers in order to get to their assigned stopping places or a little beyond it to allow the bus behind him pull-in space. Why does't the rider simply speak to the driver and ask, "Are you stopped yet?" Drivers are human!
Both of the drivers on my route are great guys, easy to talk to. The young one with the boom box has a cheerful greeting for almost every student, even in a packed onslaught up on Daisy Hill. The older one has a wife and kids and will give you a progress report on his three-year-old's cold if you ask. Both drivers have gone out of their way to be kind to me.
In the morning, if it's cold, I have a promise that I can stand inside the Burge Union glass doors and if I don't see them in time to trot out to the stop, I can cross the street and be picked up at a non-designated stop corner after he makes his loop.
The evening driver always lets me off at a non-designated corner so that I and my neighbor, who is not my friend, don't walk to school. I won't have as far to walk.
I really think we owe some thanks to these guys, not criticism. When I lived in Japan, I remember watching the daily ritual as the school bus brought back the preschoolers. The bus driver always stepped off with the kids and bowed to the walking moms and their little kids, bowed twice and said in chorus, "Thank you very much," to the bus helper and then the bus driver.
Linda J. Donan
As Christmas is just around the corner, we all might want to take a moment to say our thanks to our bus drivers with a card or a candy cane. After all, they regularly shuttle us up and down the lofty Mount Oread with rarely a "thankss!"
Linda J. Donon
Graham, Mo., graduate student
1
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, December 7, 1989
5
Committees plan 125th anniversary
Ru Kate Lee
Kansan staff write
An old-timers' basketball game and a symposium to look into the future are among plans being made by the University's anniversary of the University of Kansas.
The anniversary will be observed during the 1990-91 academic year. The theme is "Building on a Great Tradition - 125 Years at KU."
Del Shankel, chairman of the anniversary planning committee, said that both the athletic and the lectures and symposium subcommittees had made preliminary plans for events.
Homecoming is one event that may become a part of the celebration; he
said.
"There's also the possibility of a weekend being set aside in the spring for some lectures, parties, etc., with a big, gala event set for Saturday evening," he said.
Shankel said that because 1901 was also the 100th anniversary of basketball being invented by Dr. James Naismith, there was a possibility that an old-timers' game would be scheduled.
"The game would be played in Hoch Auditorium since games were actually played there," he said.
The lectures and symposium subcommittee had made preliminary plans for a lecture series focusing on the history of the University, he said.
lectures," Shankel said. "It would allow us to use some of our best lecturers and most interesting people on the campus."
"It would be a series of six or eight
The first seminar was held to mark the University's 100th anniversary.
He said that a forum similar to one held in 1966, "Inter-Century Seminar on Man and the Future," might be scheduled. The forum would examine both the past and the future of KU and the world.
Bill Conbay, professor of communication studies, who was involved with the first forum, said that it attracted international attention because of its scope.
"I think it would be exciting, stimulating and worthwhile to take the same theme 25 years later," he said.
Campground, ski area will open at Clinton
Lawrence's die-hard campers will will be a place to pitch their tents this winter.
"The whole park is open, except that the main campground one is closed," she said. "You're welcome in the ground two. That's for the hardy folks."
Bob Streeter, regional supervisor
Electricity hook-ups work in most parts of the park, she said, but water is available only at the park office. Marina owners have decided to close their facility, so no rental services will be available.
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"What we did was restrict certain areas because of vandalism," he said. "Clinton has been one that has been gated in the past."
of the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks, said the change was due to a modification of state policy.
By Chris Evans
Kansan staff writer
Butterbrodt said workers at Clinton were preparing the park's three-mile cross country ski trail for winter use.
Clinton State Park will stay open all year beginning this winter, said Mary Butterbrod, office assistant at the park. In the past, sections of the park were closed from Novemeber to March.
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Thursday, December 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Former student testifies for Willner Allegations of incompetence do not describe prof., he says
By Angela Baughman and Doug Fishback Kanean staff writers
A departmental chairman from a Kentucky university told a Faculty Senate committee yesterday that he could not understand why KU administrators were calling for the dismissal of anthropology professor Dorotha Willner.
"I was matsified when I found out she was being charged — in fact, that her tenure was in jeopardy," said James F. Hoggood, chairman of the department of sociology, anthropology and philosophy at the University of Kentucky. Highland Heights, Ky. "I'm still somewhat dumbfounded."
Willner is charged with violation of professional ethics and failure to carry out academic duties. The Uni- torial Justice's case against Willner on Monday.
Hopgood told the Committee on Tenure and Related Problems that allegations of incompetence did not describe the Dorothy Willner he knew.
"I was shocked that she was being charged with being incompetent," he said. "I couldn't imagine how she could be incompetent. It struck me very strange."
Hopgood said that Willner had rendered considerable and valuable service to her profession and that her involvement with anthropological organizations was a credit to the University.
He said that when he saw Willner at a meeting of the Central States Anthropological Society at the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind. last spring, she was "sharp as a tack, as sharp as she ever was."
Hogood took a course from Willner during his graduate studies at KU in 1988. He said that it was a challenging, demanding course and that Willner had been an accessible instructor.
"I found her very congenial, very helpful," Hopgood said. "I had no problems whatsoever."
As a department chairman, he said that the charges against Willner, who has had tenure since 1970, were not sufficient for dismissal.
Hopgood said that the charges did not seem to focus on the basics of teaching and research, but instead dealt with issues of collegiality.
"It itd seem a bit extreme to me to seek to take away someone's tenure for those sorts of things," he said.
Rose Marino, associate general counsel for the chancellor, asked Hopgood during cross-examination whether he was familiar with Willner's recent behavior. He said that he was familiar with the philosophy of anthropology or of issues involving the professor since he left the University in 1971.
Hopgood also said that he had not seen legal briefs that Willner had submitted as evidence of scholarly research for merit salary evaluation in any anthropological journals or elsewhere.
"After that first course, I wanted to take a second from her," he said.
In other testimony, Brian Stone, a former student of Willer's, said that he took two elective anthropology courses and got undergraduate engineering studies.
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, December 7. 1989
Nation/World
7
Thornburgh overrules aides
Inquiry requested on HUD official
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Dick Thornburgh overruled staff members who wanted to order a preliminary inquiry into allegations of political favoritism and perjury against former Housing Secretary Samuel R. Pierce Jr., Thornburgh's spokesman said yesterday.
Thornburgh reversed the recommendation from the Justice Department's public integrity section, sayings that would give basis to conduct a preliminary inquiry on allegations against Pierce, said spokesman David Runkel.
The 60-day inquiry Thornburgh ordered will determine whether he is
should seek court appointment of an independent counsel to conduct a full criminal investigation of the former housing secretary.
Runkel dismissed suggestions that Thornburgh had ordered the preliminary inquiry to deflect charges from Congressional Democrats that he was a former investigative of a fellow Republican and former Cabinet colleague.
The allegations that Pierce awarded Department of Housing and Urban Development grants on the basis of political favoritism and lied to Congress about final nominal hearings last spring were made last month by 19 House Democrats.
The lawmakers cited testimony that Pierce gave to the House Government Operations employment and housing subcommittee that he had not had "hands on" involvement in awarding HUD grants to politically connected developers.
The independent council process was triggered when the 19 Democrats, members of the House Judiciary, called for the formation of allegations to Thoreauph or Nov. 2.
In accordance with that procedure, Thornburgh disclosed Monday his decision to conduct the preliminary inquiry.
Pierce has denied any wrongdoing but has twice refused to give additional testimony to the House subcommittee on the national right against self-incrimination.
Pierce's lawyers have contended that the lawmakers did not provide the Justice Department with any evidence that their client had committed a crime.
The public integrity section, applying that standard as outlined in the independent counsel law, apparently agreed with that view.
Security troubles nuclear arms plants
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Lax protection of high-grade plutonium and other nuclear arms material is emerging as one of the most serious, though least well-known, flaws in the Energy Department's troubled weapons program.
Compared with highly publicized mechanical breakdowns, management failures and environmental violations at the nuclear weapons plants, little has been documented of little lapses and efforts to correct them.
Most official information about protection of nuclear materials, including plutonium and enriched uranium, is classified. Only people with special security clearances are
allowed inside areas of weapons manufacturing plants and laboratories that hold the materials. Several key weapons plants are shut down temporarily for safety reasons.
Evidence is now growing, however, that despite the weapons makers' devotion to secrecy, some federal nuclear facilities have run the risk in attacking the goal of allowing the theft of enough plutonium to build a nuclear bomb.
Members of Congress are suggesting that some Energy Department officials have soft-pedaled the protection problems. Some department officials complain that budget constraints have prevented the filling of security posts with adequately trained people.
Among security flaws disclosed
this week by a house Energy investigations subcommittee:
Argonne National Laboratory-West, near Idaho Falls, Idaho, violated rules last year on controlling access to portable plutonium at a nuclear reactor site at the lab.
Details of the incident are classified, but a senior Energy Department official told a closed hearing of officials that the violation "revealed a deficient and vulnerability" to the diversion of bomb materials to terrorists.
Portions of the hearing transcript were declassified earlier this week.
▶ Quantities of plutonium large enough to make a nuclear bomb were left unattended in rooms without alarms at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory last spring.
BOMBING IN COLUMBIA: A truck bomb containing half a ton of dynamite exploded outside secret police headquarters in Bogota, Colombia, during the morning rush hour yesterday, killing at least 35 people and wounding hundreds.
The bomb was the most powerful to strike the capital since Colombia's cocaine traffickers began a wave of war after the government declared war on them 16 weeks ago.
A spokesman for President Virgilio Garbo said the bombing might be the start of a new camouflage killings by the drug traffickers.
The blast, which tore open a crater 20 feet deep and destroyed or heavily damaged a score of buildings, occurred less than 24 hours after government investigators said a bomb caused the crash of a Colombian jetliner last month that killed 107 people.
SALVADOR FIGHTING: Leifstat guerrillas in El Salvador shot down a military observation plane, and scattered fighting killed five
World Briefs
rebels and two government soldiers, the army said yesterday.
The O-2 observation plane was shot down by rebel rifle fire Tuesday near the town of Ozatian killing the pilot the army said.
The rebel's clandestine Radio Venceremos said that the plane — the second downed in the past month — was shot down as it wired firing rocks at rebel positions.
The Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front broadcast said the rebels have damaged 23 government aircraft during a new offensive that they launched Nov. 11, but military sources refused to confirm or deny it.
SOVIET REFORMS: Lithuania's parliament yesterday fell nine votes short of changing the republic's constitution to legalize multiple political parties, the first threat to the Communist Party's supremacy in the Soviet Union.
The 219-1 vote was shy of the 228 needed for the two-thirds majority, but 84 deputies were absent and 30 abstained. The parliament will vote again today, said Eduard Potashinskas, an activist.
Also yesterday, the Armenian legislature failed to draw a quorum large enough to consider a similar constitutional change, said activist Karen Shakhbazyan in Yerevan.
RIGHT TO DIE: The Supreme Court entered the wrenching "right to die" controversy yesterday as lawyers clashed over whether to permit the withdrawal of life-sustaining nutrition from a 32-year-old Missouri woman.
In Moscow, green photocopied cards appeared yesterday in subway stations and main streets calling for a two-hour general strike Monday to ask the Congress of People's Deputies to rescind the same provision in the national constitution.
William Colby, a lawyer for the parents of Nancy Cruzan, told the justices that if the woman were "lucid for a moment and could come before this court," she would "choose liberty" and ask for removal of the feeding tube. But, he said, the woman will never recover.
Experts predict continued economic growth
The Associated Press
said, but prices range from flat to modest increases.
WASHINGTON — The nation's unprecedented peaceetime economic expansion, entering its eight year this month, will last at least three more years, the nation's top business economists said yesterday.
The National Association of Business Economists said that the latest survey of its members found that 62 percent expected no recession for the next three years.
At the same time, the Federal Reserve Board reported economic activity ranging from stable to modest expansion. Consumer spending varies around the country, the Fed
The economists' forecast was considerably more optimistic than recent surveys by the organization. Last May, for instance, 63 percent of the economists expected a recession next year. Three months later. 37
percent still expected a recession in 1990.
The economy has slowed considerably since the Fed began to boost interest rates to restrain price increases. As inflation pressures moderated, however, the Fed has gradually let rates fall.
In its latest survey of the economy, the Fed said that the Federal Reserve districts that reported prices generally noted flat to modest increases.
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Thursday, December 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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first
Minorities recruiting minorities
Bv Jennifer Metz
Kansan staff writer
This is the third in a series of articles about the problems of recruitment and retention of minority students at the University of Kansas.
Minority recruitment programs could be the deciding factor in bringing minorities to the University of Kansas.
Some students, recruited by various minority groups, are now reaching out to recruit and retain other minority students through various programs.
Marshall Jackson, director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said it was critical to have minority students recruit minorities.
"It is an opportunity for students to see people succeed who are like themselves," Jackson said.
James Jenkins, Kansas City, Mo., senior said he had participated in a recruitment program, sponsored by the Endowment Merit Program, when he was in high school.
The program allowed students,like himself to stay overnight in Lawrence and spend time with students and faculty members.
KU official says student help critical
"I was debating between KU and MU," Jenkins said. "I wanted to go to a big university. Being able to come up here and see what the campus life was like was more beneficial than anything."
The program included touring residence halls, visiting fraternities and visiting with professors. He said he originally wanted to study pre-law, and he got to talk with the dean of the School of Law.
He also got to meet members of student groups such as the Black Student Union.
"Some of the guys who were there with me that weekend are some of my best friends now," Jenkins said.
Presently, the program has been cut to a single day on the campus.
He said the program should last more than one day because there was so much to see when visiting the University.
"Programs are being cut, rather than solutions or advancements being made." Jenkins said.
Since he came to KU, Jenkins has participated in many recruitment activities. He has previously served on the Black Student Union and is presently a member of the Black Men of Today, formerly the Black Male Forum, which is a newly-formed group of individuals at KU who are concerned with minority recruitment and retention.
"I think we should have more minority students involved in recruitment," he said. "You are more apt to listen and feel that you can relate."
Jenkins also is involved in recruitment efforts through his fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpa. Members from the fraternity will invite high school students to KU from the Kansas City area.
"We want to work on getting students up here for a weekend." Jenkins said. "They can spend time with us and stay with us."
Shelley Fraga, Winfield sophomore, said she had participated in the Hispanic Youth Symposium at the University of New York when she was a senior in high school.
The symposium attracts minority students from all over the state of Kansas for purposes of promoting higher education.
"I'd always known that I wanted to go to college," she said. "I came up here and meet a lot of people. I felt like when I walked around the campus."
She said the symposium was a deciding factor when she came to the
For the past two years, Fraga said she had participated in the symposium on the opposite end as a representative from KU.
Fraga said it might be good to have both a minority student and a non-minority student to recruit other minority students.
"It helps encourage them that it is
"This would show minority students that you will be going to school, for the most part, at a school which is mostly non-minority."
large, who was former treasurer of KU's Hispanic American Leadership organization, said HALO had done much to minimize minority recruitment and retention.
important to go to college," she said. "By going to high schools, it shows them that KU is not snob-hill."
HALO members will act as host for the Hispanics of Today Conference, which will be held at KU in February, she said. The conference will be for Hispanic groups from Missouri and land for some high school students.
"I consider myself, very lucky because I got involved with HALO, and I would encourage more students to be involved," Fraga said. "I always felt I was making a difference and making an effect on campus, because this campus is pretty big."
She said she also had volunteered to be a peer adviser in the peer advising program next semester. She was offered the office of minority affairs, allowing an older student to help new students adjust to the University.
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10. 2013-05-27 19:43:38 3209650000000000
1
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, December 7, 1989
9
Minority protest stakes campus claim
By Cory S. Anderson
Kansan staff writer
Students holding hands stopped traffic along Jayhawk Boulevard for about five minutes yesterday as they protested for better minority recruitment.
About 80 students, many members of Black Men of Today and the Black Student Union, held hands in front of Wescoe Hall and walked across the campus in a continuous circle preventing several buses and cars from moving.
"Blocking the street was a great statement," said Kristin Lange, Overland Park freshman.
Lange's statement echoed the sentiments of other students who observed the protest.
"It is good that students are finding a way of speaking out," said Cindy Sanders, Lawrence graduate student. "I think that there are a lot of problems on this campus that need to be addressed."
Sean Riley, Prairie Village junior, agreed with Sanders.
Riley said the protest was especially effective because it was held in front of a large crowd.
"It's good to see that it happened
and it needed to happen."
Maybe the "it" is a typo. "that it"
would be better.
Another student thought that it was
1.
I think that it's important because I don't think anyone's rights should be denied
Hillary Weitz Northbrook, Ill., senior
important to get issues like minority recruitment out in the open.
"It draws out the problem," said Kirk McCabe, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. "Otherwise it might not have if they had had meetings at night."
Hillary Weitz, Northbrook, Ill., senior, agreed that the issue was important.
Athens, Ga. — A crowd gathered on a street in Athens to protest racial segregation.
"I think that it's important because I don't think anyone's rights should be denied." Weltz said.
Weitz urged the administration to be sensitive.
"If the administration wants the students to treat each other as equals then they have to treat the students equally," she said.
Kaith Thorpe KANSAN
The protest was organized by members of the Black Men of Today student group.
John Lewis, Kansas City, Kan.. Junior, talks to students about Indifference to minority issues.
Minority
ALL YOU CAN EAT SEAFOOD & STEAK BUFFET
▶ Continued from p. 1
The group's proposal, printed on the flyer, stated that recruitment and retention programs lacked coordination. It stated, "We feel that since the persons being utilized in her (Ramaley's) plans have no significant power, the entire process is encumbered because everything goes through her and she is not able to devote enough time to the problem."
"This is just the first step," said McCormick, who added that the group would continue to push for better minority recruitment and retention.
Monday, Fulcher went to set up another appointment to meet with Ramaley, and was told that in order to get an appointment, he have to be arranged through the Office of Minority Affairs.
"This is pointless," he said. Rumaley was not available yesterday for comment.
At the protest, the group distributed a version of the proposed measures that was presented a few weeks ago to Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor. Group members said Ramaley did not take the issue seriously, although Ramaley invited them to meet with her again later.
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Complete the form below, or attach a copy of your class schedule, and return it to the KU Bookstore in the Kansas or Burge Unions, either in person or by mail by Friday Jan. 12, 1990. WE WILL HAVE YOUR BOOKS BAGGED AND READY TO PICK UP BETWEEN JAN. 18 & JAN. 25. After that date books not claimed will be returned to our shelves. NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED! Save 25% by purchasing Used Books instead of new. Save your receipt on cash or check purchases and receive a rebate (approx. 8-7%) the following semester.
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Natural areas protected by state group
Kansas' prairie heritage still lives in Douglas County.
By Travis Butler Kansan staff writer
A recent study by the Kansas Natural Heritage Program found 129 high-quality natural areas in Douglas County, said Craig Freeman, botanist and program director. The areas include prairies, woodlands and meadows.
The Heritage Program is at the Kansas Biological Survey on West Campus. The program was created in 1866 to categorize and preserve the state's biological heritage, Freeman said. The program was originally jointly supported by the private group Nature Conservancy and the state of Kansas. In July 1988 the program gained full state sponsorship.
"We were a fairly young program, compared to those in other states," Freeman said. "When we were started in 1986, we were the 43rd program in the national network."
There are three plant species in Kansas protected by federal law, Freeman said. Federal law protects 12 animal species, and state law protects about another 40. The state also is keeping an eye on many other potentially endangered animal species.
the national network.
He said the program had concentrated on identifying and cataloging the rare plants and animals in Kansas. Looking for "natural communities," areas basically untouched by human activity, is the best way to do that, he said.
William Busby, the program's zoologist and data manager, said that while some species were easy to protect, others were difficult. Site-specific animals are easy to protect because only the area needs to be preserved. Migratory animals, including birds and fish, are much harder to save.
THE ARTIST
FATHER
"Much of the world's whooping crane population passes through Kansas on their migration, but
Freeman helps protect 129 natural areas. they don't stop at the same place every year," he said. "Education is important in preserving the population."
Freeman helps protect 129 natural areas.
The program's first two years were spent gathering all known information about the state's natural resources, Freeman said. That work is now complete, except for updating as new information is received, he said. In the past year, the program started doing field surveys to verify and expand upon the existing information.
"These surveys not only verify the existing literature but are a source of new information as well," Freeman said. "We find things we never expected to run across."
The Douglas County study assisted in this effort, he said, but it was mainly a special project to gather new information.
Chris Lauver, the program's community ecologist, executed the study. He said its purpose was to find the best examples of natural communities. "We discovered many new populations of
Mead's Milkweed is one of the three federally protected plants in Kansas.
Twenty-two of the 129 high-quality natural areas in Douglas County have rare plants or animals, Lauer said. In all, the study found 2,800 acres of relatively pristine land.
Freeman said, "We've identified more high-quality prairie areas in Douglas County than in all of Illinois, and Illinois still is known as the prairie state. Unfortunately, they've lost a lot of their natural areas."
Freeman said that Kansas as a whole had not been surveyed on the same level as Douglas County had, and such a survey was not likely for some time.
some time.
"It costs somewhere between $20,000 and $40,000 per county for a detailed survey," he said. "These figures seem to hold throughout the country."
"Chris took one and a half years to do one county, plus parts of six others. There are 105 counties in Kansas, and at the rate of one a year, it would take over a century to complete."
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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, December 7, 1989
1
Religion
Keeping the faith
Story by Angela Baughman
1000
Illustration by Susan Younger
R
religious beliefs often are examined and evaluated during the college years. Students are introduced to many different experiences that cause them to question their values. There are nearly 30 registered religious organizations at the University of Kansas this year. While some are more service-oriented than worship-oriented, the members of each group do share the common bond of a faith. This article examines student involvement with religion and focuses on the three major monotheistic religions: Christianity, Islam and Judaism.
CHRISTIANITY
Christianity is based on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ; Christians believe he is the Messiah, sent by God. They depend on the Bible as the inspired word of God. Christians believe by dying and rising from the dead, Jesus made up for the sin of Adam, thus redeeming the world and allowing all who believe in him to enter Heaven.
There are three great divisions of Christianity: the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Protestant Church and the Roman Catholic Church. The Roman Catholic Church is headed by the Pope; Protestants reject the authority of the Pope. In 1988, there were approximately 1,644,396,500 Christians, 32.9 percent of the world population.
Kris Michaelson, Topeka senior, has been involved with the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship, which has about 40 members, for four years. He attends the First Christian Church Study, 1000 Kentucky, here, and the United Methodist Church at home. Both are mainstream Protestant churches.
"When I came to college, I became more involved than I was before," Michaelson explained. "I'd say most of the students who are involved are very involved."
He said that when he came to KU, Michaelson found his values were challenged more than in high school, and he thought he had to decide how he was going to respond to those challenges. He decided that to continue to trust in his faith was the proper avenue for him.
Michaelaon, who is majoring in organ and church music, said that his parents did not influence his decision to remain religiously active in college and that church as a social outlet was secondary to spiritual guidance.
"I think of it more as a lifestyle," he said. "It guides all of the decisions I make. It gives me a sense of purpose, a sense of direction and a sense of relief, or comfort, that God's in charge of my life."
Michaelson said he thought he would have chosen to be involved in religion even if he had not been brought up that way. Despite the recent incidents involving televangelists, such as Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker, he thought the scandals did not weaken the image of the church but did not help it.
"In every area, you have people who aren't good representatives of the group they're representing," he said. "I think it's sad."
sad. "This is a sad."
Kevin Hackmann, St. Louis sophomore, said that when
he and his friends were at school, he noticed they did not go to church as much as at home. Hackmann, who is Catholic, said he did not go more at home because of his parents but because he had more time and felt more a part of that church community.
"It is hard to stay involved," he said. "My mom pushes me to get to church. I should go more to Mass."
He said that for now, religion was more of an independent part of his life rather than an all-encompassing lifestyle.
"It relaxes me," he said of going to church. "It makes me feel like I can cope with all of this."
"Offerwise I'd be out of it already." be said.
Hackmann said religion would always be a part of his life.
For Jeff Orr, Lawrence junior, religion has always been a part of his life. Orr's father, Richard, is a minister. Orr follows the mainstream Protestant religion of American Baptist. He is a member of a campus fellowship group, but he said that he had fallen out of the habit of attending church.
Orr said he doesn't go to church very often, partly because of work scheduling.
"I also got to the point where church got boring," he said. "I was guessing but not getting much out of it."
said. 'We's going out for getting much better.'
He said when he and his sister were younger, church was a routine they had because of their parents' involvement.
"When you're young, you parents make you go, and
they shoved religion down our throats."
College is a hard place to keep religious faith intact, he said, because students were suddenly exposed to so many different people and ideas. Orr said that his parents did not push him to remain religiously active in college. His father influenced him to believe that the purpose of religion was lost if it was not personal.
"I think religion is something I'll retain for the rest of my life," he said. "I do get things out of it. There's a lot of goodness to be gained from religion."
ISLAM
Islam was founded by Mohammed. Its followers, called Muslims, worship God. Allah in Arabic, and subscribe to the teachings of the Koran. Muslim prayers and the Koran are in Arabic, but not all Arabs are Muslims, and not all Muslims are Arabic. Islam means "submission to the will of God." Its fundamental belief is that there is only one God and that Mohammed is his prophet.
Muslims are expected to make a pilgrimage at least once in their lives to Mohammed's birthplace, the holy
city of Mecca, in Saudi Arabia. There are two major sites in Islam: Sumi and Shite. The Sumi seet comprises about 85 percent of all Muslims. In 1988, there were approximately 890,388,300 Muslims. 17.2 percent of the world population.
Hamed Ghazali, an Egyptian graduate student, is president of the Muslim Student Association, which has about 80 members. He estimated there were from 300 to 400 Muslims in Lawrence and from three million to five million in the United States.
"It's a complete way of life," Ghazali, a Sunni Muslim, said. "You cannot separate daily activities from the religion."
He said all of his time involved his religion. Going to class or playing soccer were just as much a part of his religion as praying, he said. Muslims are obliged to pray five times a day.
"Your whole life is based on the presence of God," Ghazali said.
He said he thought one misconception that people had about Muslims was that they didn't worship God.
"We worship God, who created you and me and everything," Ghazali explained. "It is very similar to Christianity, only we do not see Jesus as the son of God, shetla about the only difference."
that's about the only difference.
He also said that he thought that people believed Anan was a Buddha-type figure but that that was not true. Ghazali said Allah was the Arabic word for God, but it did not mean anything different than the Christian and Jewish God.
Bahal Safadi, a KU graduate from Amman, Jordan, and a U.S. citizen, said Islam guided every part of his life, including his behavior and the way he treated other people.
"To us, being religious keeps one from committing sin," he said. "It actually makes life whole. It's a feeling you have inside."
Regarding Salman Rushdie's book, "The Satanic Verses", which came under fire from the Muslim community last spring, Safadi and Ghazali agreed that it was offensive to Muslims. They said however, that Rushdie did not deserve punishment or death for writing the book, Iran's religious leader at that time, Aatollah Ruhailh Khomeini, a Shiite Muslim, called for Rushdie's death.
Ghazali said the book contained profane language in association with the prophet Mohammed.
Safadi said, "The book was offensive to Muslims all around the world. He does not deserve to be killed. There is no such thing in Islam."
JUDAISM
Judaism is based on the teachings of the Torah. Jews believe that they are God's chosen people and that a divine kingdom will be established on earth. Abraham is considered the founder of Judaism, and Moses is also an important figure in its foundation.
There are three major forms of Judaim: Conservative, Orthodox and Reform. In 1988, there were approximately 18,075,400 Jews, 0.4 percent of the world population.
Kevin Eberman, Overland Park senior, said he became more involved with his religion by a fluke. He said he had a friend who lived at Hillel House, a cooperative living unit for six Jewish students at 940 Mississippi St. When Eberman was looking for a place to live last spring, he decided to move there. Since then, he has become increasingly involved with Hillel activities. Hillel has about 125 members.
"I really didn't have much of a Jewish identity until I got involved with Hillet," Eberman said. "I got a lot more out of it than I really initially wanted, and that's been good."
He said he thought his parents, who grew up in a Jewish neighborhood in New York, were pleased with his increased involvement, but they had left it up to him how involved he was.
Eberman said that his activities had more to do with service than worship and that those activities were; to him, a very important part of being Jewish.
"Being Jewish is more than just being religious," he said. "I would describe myself as, Jewish but not observant."
Laura Cohen, Deerfield, Ill., junior, also lives at Hillel. She said, "Part of Judaism, as it's become, is the community."
Daveen Litwin, director of Hillel House, said that Judaism was open to individual interpretation and community was a very important part of it.
"In my opinion, Hillel is the most pluralistic Jewish organization there is," she said. "Judaism can be very secular without being very ritualistic."
Jennifer Marks is president of Hillel. The Overland Park park said she could always count on her religion.
"It's something that's very personal, and nobody can take it away from me," she said. "When everything else is going wrong, you always have that."
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Thursdav. December 7, 1989 / University Daily, Kansan
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By Steve Buckner Kansan staff writer
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Some big pieces of the puzzle are falling into place for the prospective tenant of the shell building in the East Hills Business Park.
To begin with, the financing to bring Perm Plastic of Creighton, Pa., to town does not appear to be the hurdle it was a month ago, said Bill Martin, director of economic development at the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
"Congress voted to extend Industrial Revenue Bonds until 1990," he said. "That takes the heat off."
Penn Plastic is seeking $6 million in IRBs to expand its operations to East Hills, east of Lawrence on Highway K-10. The company's original plans were to go on a waiting list for any leftover IB money from 1989 projects in Kansas. Martin said the action taken by Congress to continue with IRBs, which were to be phased out at the end of this year, meant that the city would in January send another request to the state for a 1990
"We understand there is a program at the University that deals with the plastic industry on a professional basis that may fit into our needs," he said.
Most of the jobs would be unskilled labor, Lasser said, but there would be an employment possibility for KU graduates.
Although the entire deal for Penn Plastic is not complete, the company has announced its intent to open with twice the production capacity and number of employees it had planned.
Lasser said that no administrative hiring would be necessary and that only a few workers would transfer to Philadelphia plant to train new employees.
Another key step was initiated Tuesday night at the Lawrence City Commission meeting. The commission authorized its staff to apply to the Kansas Partnership Program for a $300,000 low-interest loan that would help finance a 4,000-foot rail spur to be built from an existing Santa Fe branch line to the shell building. Penn Plastic and Santa Fe will spend $155,000 to complete the project.
Harold Lasser, president of Penn Plastic, said the expansion would be for additional capacity rather than another product line.
"The project has grown," Martin said. "They will install four production lines instead of two and hire 100 employees instead of 50."
"We feel we have enough business going on to justify it," he said.
Penn Plastic makes high-density plastic containers. The company will make similar containers for the herbicide, pesticide and chemical markets, said vice president Jay Lasser in an earlier interview. He said the company would employ 170 people at full capacity and intended to open in February.
The shell building is a $1 million, 81,000-square-foot structure built on speculation by Douglas County Development Inc., a non-profit organization affiliated with the chamber of commerce.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, December 7, 1989
13
Jayhawks' defense smothers Mustangs
Bv Dan Perkins
Kansan sportswriter
By now, pressure defense has become a trademark of second-ranked Kansas, but if there was any question, Kansas answered it last
The Jayhawks, 8-9, turned the heat up another notch on defense, holding Southern Methodist to 38 percent shooting and routing the Mustangs, 8-8.
The Jayhawks just missed the chance last night for their first No. 1 ranking since 1957, when Syracuse hit two free-throws with 3 seconds before missing. The Jayhawks last held the top ranking on Jan. 14, 1957.
in the 1966-57 season, Kansas, led by Wilt Chamberlain, began the season with 10 straight victories and finished the season 24-3 with a triple-overtime loss, 54-33, to North Carolina in the national championship game.
This year's squad has a while to wait for that opportunity, but Coach Roy Williams said the team continue to play well in the victory against the Muntzings.
Williams said the defensive intensity the Jahayhaws showed in Dallas last night was the best he has seen from the team this season.
"For a full 40 minutes, that may have been one of our best games defensively," Williams said. "Defense kept us in there in the first half and in the second half, we started clicking on both ends."
That's not good news for the rest of the Jayhawks opponents, considering that Kansas has already knocked off two players before teams with their snooping defense.
Kansas held a comfortable 34-20 advantage at halftime against the Mustangs, 1-4, and then exploded in the second half.
Kansas, which was hitting a respectable 48 percent from the field in the first half, hit 20 of 30 shots in 32-66. He scored 57 percent (32-66) for the game.
Six players scored in double figures for the Jayhawks led by guard Terry Brown's 14 points and four three-pointers.
Kevin Pritchard, Mark Randall and Pekka Markkanen each added 12 points, and Freeman West and Mike Maddox both scored 10.
The 12 points for Pritchard tied him with two-time All-American Jo Jo White on the Kansas all-time scoring list with 1,286 points.
Brown, West and Maddox all came off the Javawk bench, which outscored the Mustangs bench 43-8.
In all, 10 of the 11 Jayhawks that played scored, the exception being guard Todd Alexander.
"We play our bench, and we have a lot of confidence that those guys are going to do a good job for us," Williams said. "They not only gave us scoring, but they also gave us a big lift defensively."
Markkanen, who hit all five of his field goal attempts and both free throws, added a team-high seven rebounds, two blocked shots and two steals. He converted his second steal, near midcut, into a dunk at the other end, giving Kansas a 31 point lead. 73-42.
Things were so good for the Jay-
Hawkins that they were able to forget about the free-throw shooting woes they took with them to Dallas.
The Jayhawks hit 13 of 15 from the free-throw line, including 6 of 7 for Randall, who entered the game hit just 59.6 percent from the line. As a team, Kansas was hitting just 59.9 percent.
"I've said we're going to be a good free-throw shooting team," Williams said. "I've told the players they can't throw and we don't but free throws so I hope that helps."
The victory for Kansas was its eighth in 11 games in Dallas against the Mustangs, and Kansas now leads the all-timing series 20-4.
In the first half the Jayhawks used a pair of strong runs and took a 14-point halftime lead, 34-20.
Kansas opened the game with a string of eight consecutive points before Reginald Muhammad broke it with a 30-24 field goal goal with 4:30 gone in the game.
Markkanen scored the first four points for the Jayhawks and was one of three players with six points for Kansas in the first half.
Pritchard and Brown each hit two three-pointers in the first half.
Kansas 86,
Southern Methodist 53
Kansas (B6)
Calloway 2-5-0-0 5, Randall 3-6-7-1 12, Markhamker 3-5-2-2 12, Hirschman 5-10-0-2 10, Gulsker 5-0-2-2 12, Holmstedt 5-0-0-0 10, Maddox 5-0-7-0 10, Wetton 5-0-5-10, Alexander 0-0-0 0, Total 32.68 15-17-6 16
Patterson 1-3-2-4, 4; Pertue 4-8-2-10, Muhammad
9-1-1, 13-9, Leelew 2-10-4, 9-1-9; Vaintong 4-9-0, 9-
Hampton 3-0-0, 0-0; O'Dell 1-2-0, 2-Mason 1-4-0,
Roberson 0-3-0, Mayfield 0-2-0, Holman 1-2-0
Players to start labor talks
Halftime: Kanasa 34, Southern Meth. 20, 3-point game: Kanasa 7-15 (Brown, 4-6) Brillant, 2-5, Calloway 1, Guederni 0-4), Southern Meth. 2/7 Valentini 3-0), Southern Meth. 2/8 Maranenkorn (Markenker 7), Southern Meth. 2/8 Lewis 6), Assens: Kanasa 15 (Guiderden 4), Southern Meth. 11 (Hampton), Kanasa 18, Southern Meth. 16, Technical Nets:
While the owners — meeting at Nashville, Tenn. — talked of improving relations with players, members of Union have adopted a cautious attitude.
signed in 1965," New York Yankees player representative Don Mattingly said.
44
IDITA
22
STATE
32
Kansas center Lynn Page (44) strips the ball from Lissas Klaassen and gains the rebound
SCOTTSDALE, begun. — The players' union begins serious discussion of its labor negotiations today, hoping to arrive at a bargaining position before wrapping up its annual meeting on tomorrow.
ACC-Big East Challenge even after Svracuse holds off Duke
The Associated Press
GREENSBORO, N.C. — David Johnson made two free throws with three seconds to play last night, and top-ranked Syracuse beat No. 6 Duke 78-76 in the closest game so far of the ACC-Big East Challenge series.
The victory by the Orangemen (5-0) evened the series at 3-3 with two games left to play tonight at East Rutherford, N.J., including the matchup of the top seeds, No. 3 Georgetown of the Big East Conference and 17th-ranked North Carolina of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
seemed to be the one on which the outcome would turn. The inside play was as physical as it could get and the outside shooting, although rare,
Clemson beat Providence 72-71 in last night's opener between the No. 5 seeds, giving the ACC a 3-2 lead in the eight-game series.
Duke (3-1) opened the second half with a 10-2 run and had its first lead of the game. 43, 42; with 16:16 to play.
The game was tied 73-73 after Christian Laetner made two free throws to bring Duke even with 3:05 left to play.
The teams were never more than three points apart the rest of the way, with the scored tied 12 times. For the last seven minutes, every possession
LeRon Ellis then made one free throw with 1:47 left and, after Laettermiss missed two free throws with 1:28 left, Derrick Coleman made both ends of a 1-and-1 to give Syracuse a lead of 76-73, the only margin greater than two points in the final 16 minutes.
Coleman missed a free throw with 39 seconds left and Phil Henderson made one of two to get the Blue Devils within 76-74.
Henderson then scored on a drive with 14 seconds left to tie the game after Syracuse had turned the ball over in trying to run out the clock.
stumbled and appeared to walk but no call was made.
He got the ball to Johnson, who was fouled by Laettner and made both free throws. Duke had one last shot, but McCaffrey short at the buzzer. McCaffrey fell short at the buzzer.
Syracuse called a timeout with 10 seconds left. As Billy Owens was bringing the ball upcourt he
Stevie Thompson led Syracuse with 21 points, while Owens had 18 and Coleman 16.
Robert Brickey led Duke with 21 points and Laetner had 19.
Syracuse appeared headed to an easy, over-the-rim victory when it broke from a 14-10 lead with 13-18 left in the first half with an 18-7 run, with most of the points coming with the Orangemen on the fast break. An 8-0 spurt, which gave Syracuse its biggest lead at 32-17, featured a rebound dunk by Thompson. Coleman scoring from in low on a bank shot after grabbing a loose ball, a layup by Owens after passes from Coleman and Thompson on a break that resembled a hockey power play, and a dunk by Owens on a pass from Thompson.
KU women shoot down Shockers
By Paula Parrish Kansan sportswriter
Coach Marian Washington finally saw an offense she was somewhat pleased with as the Kansas women's basketball team defeated the Wichita State Shockers 87-75 last night at Allen Field House.
"I thought our field goal percentage was much improved, but we still obviously have to work at that free throw line," Washington said.
"Right now, I feel there is a major distrust in the Basic agreement we
Kansas, 4-2, broke out early, running up a 20-8 lead in the first eight minutes of the game, forcing the Shockers, 1,4, to play catch-up for the rest of the half. Forward Terrillian Johnson led Kansas during the run, dropping in 10 of her own, including two show-steaing layups.
Kansas tossed in 49.3 percent from the field, a dramatic improvement from its pre-game season average of 35.3 percent. The 'Hawks shot 59.3 percent, at the line, an increase from their previous overall average of 57.4.
Johnson, who has been averaging 5.8 points per game, was the team's second-high score last night with 14 and with four steals, all in the first half.
"Basically, I just concentrated more on each shot." Johnson said.
The 'Hawks forced 14 turnovers from the breathless Shockers in the first half and parlayed 11 steals into a 45-30 lead by halftime.
The Jayhawks returned to the court in the first nine minutes of the second half to shock Wichita State with a 24-14 scoring run led by veteran guard Lisa Braddy, who tossed in eight. Braddy ended the night with a team-high 20 points and seven assists.
With 1:49 remaining, Wichita State had managed to close the gap to 11, 82-71, and Washington sent her starters back in for the end.
With a 69-44 lead, Washington cleared the bench, giving everyone a chance to score against the Shockers.
"They were, in a sense, at a disadvantage because actually, Wichita had developed some confidence," Washington said. "They were facing a tide that was not necessarily in their favor, and they went out and handled it pretty well."
Kansas 87,
Wichita State 75
Bloom 2:11-6.28, Johnson 7:50-14, Page 4-6-0.9,
Brady 7:10-6.28, Horton 4:9-6.28, Kite 1:6-0.9,
Everly 7:10-6.28, Flood 3:4-6.28, Yoder 3:4-6.
definel 2:0-0.9, Witherstone 0:0-0.9, Truitt 1:
4:6, Bollman 2:0-0.9, Roark 0:1-0.9, Yoder
Matthieu 1-6-0-2, Klassen 3-7-2-2, Lane 5-14-4
Hurd, 19-5-1 27, Johnson, 17-2-1 27, Thodien, 1-0-2, Bacon, 5-11-1-1, Hayman, 0-1-0, Crowle, 3-1-2, Bacon, 3-1-1-1, Bao, Gavage, 0-0-3, Total, 128-7-1 18-30-75
Halfmeer, Kamesa 45-30 Total fouls: Wichita State 21,
Kansas 23 Filed out Wichita State - non Kansas
Kamesa 19 Filed out Wichita State - non Kansas
Kamesa 110, Redbucks. Wichita State 63 (Hurd 11)
Kansas 81, Lansing. Wichita State 81 (Brindley 7)
10 (Glasgow) 7, Lane 3). Kansas 22 (Bridney 7)
Guard leads KU women
Rv Kate Lee
But against the Shockers, Braddy scored on seven of her 10 attempts from the field and was six-of-nine from the free throw line.
Kansan sportswriter
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WHIT
ST
In a game which featured all 15 Kansas women's basketball players, senior guard Lisa Braddy stood out in the crowd last night.
In last weekend's Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic Tournament, Braddy scored only a combined 12 points in the two games against the Radford Highlanders and the University of Missouri-Kansas City Kangaroos.
She shot 70 percent from the field on her way to scoring a team-high 20 points in the Jayhawks' 87-75 victory over Wichita State.
Braddy said she was more relaxed than in the Classic and tried to put it behind her.
After the UMKC game, coach Marian Washington said she thought Braddy was not shooting as straight as she should.
Wichita State sophomore Janet Hurd led all scorers with 27 points.
"I took the time and followed through on my shot," she said. "The past is the past and the present is the present."
Klaassen tries to find an outlet through Shannon Bloxom's defense.
Last night Washington said that Braddy's shooting had improved, enabling her to score more.
"She had a straight line target," Washington said.
She said she had not spent extra time this week working on her shooting.
"We already do a lot of shooting in practice," Braddy said.
Washington said she was espe
siously pleased with the defensive play if sophomore guard Kay Kay Hart. hart had six rebounds and six assists in the game.
aggressive defense that I want Lisa Braddy to be playing," she said. Washington said she was glad to have the chance to play some of her non-starters.
“(Hart) is playing the kind of
Lee Coward's layup with 14:44 to play moved him into 20th place on Missouri's career scoring list with 1,017
Missouri roars against NAIA foe; other ranked teams have easy time
After Smith's 17 and Coleman's 18 points, Buntin had 15, Travis Ford had 13 and Coward had 10.
The Tigers took advantage of the slower team from Hawaii as a majority of their baskets came on layups and dunks. Hawaii-Loa trailed by as many as 63 points, 105-42, and did not score on consecutive possessions until 7:33 remained. Missouri starters combined to shoot 87 percent, 27-of-31, and sophomore Coleman Coleman scored a career-high 16 points, going 5-for-5 in field goals and 6-for-6 in free throws.
No.8 Michigan
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Terry Mills scored all his 17 points in a first half that saw eighth-ranked Michigan shoot 80 percent en route to a 53-24 halftime lead and a 10-51 victory over
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Doug Smith scored 17 points, leading five Missouri players in double figures last night as the fourth-ranked Tigers recorded their highest shooting percentage ever and trounced NAIA member Hawaii-Loa 106-48.
Sean Higgins led the Wolverines with 18 points, Rumelian Robinson had 17 and Loy Vaughn 12 for the Wolverines. They came after dropping their opening game.
Missouri, 6-0, which claimed its 20th straight home victory, came out smoking and took a 23-4 lead with Nathan Buntin contributing 13 in the run. The Tigers had 56-23 at halftime and had shot 48 percent. They shot 75 in the first half, but only the record of 73 percent set against Iowa State in 1982.
The Associated Press
Central Michigan last night.
Central Michigan, 1-14 against Michigan, was led by Terrance Colbert's 10 points.
Higgins' jumper gave the Wolterines a 4-1 lead, and they never trailed thereafter. Central Michigan used 3-point baskets to stay close, hitting a row at one point, until Michigan on a 12-3 run and took 31-18 lead.
Mills scored 11 points as the Wolverines outscored Central 19-2 in the final 6:39 of the first half.
Sullivan, who scored 13 of his 20 points in the first half, hit two jump shots, a 3-point shot and a slam dunk during the open spurt, which was capped by a Tony Kimbro free throw at the 14-17 mark.
It was the second straight time Louisville, 5-1, hit the century mark, having beaten Cleveland State 104-77 Monday.
Louisville's full-court pressure defense forced Vanderbilt, 2-3, to miss its first eight shots and commit three turnovers before Derrick Will
No.11 Louisville
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Everick Sullivan scored nine points as No. 11 Louisville opened with a 14-0 run and never trailed in beating Vanderbilt 101-75 last night.
Central Michigan shot only 33.3 percent in the first half, well below its season average of 47.6 and was outrebounded 20-8.
cox broke the drought with a jumper from the top of the key with 13:55 left in the half.
Louisville then upped its advantage to 26-6 over the next three minutes on the strength of two-3-points from LaBradford Smith, who had to 10 points in the half, one from Cornelius Holden, one-one-point play from Cornelius Holden.
Vanderbilt pulled within 11 points three times, the last at 38-27 at the 2:51 mark, before Louisville scored a 46-39 lead, the half for the 48-31 lead at the break.
And the Cardinals didn't let up in the second half, pushing their advantage to as many as 34 points as four more players reached double figures in scoring before 10 minutes had expired.
No. 20 Arizona
TUCSON, Ariz. — Sean Rooks' 15 points and 18 rebounds keyed an overpowering defense and inside game as 20th-ranked Arizona held Northern Arizona to a McKale Center record-low 20.3 percent shooting percentage in an 84-37ump last night.
Arizona, 2-, raced to a 13-0 lead in the first 5:55 and led the Lumber-jacks, 3-2, 40-11 at halftime thanks to all normal runs of 10, nine and 13 points.
Northern Arizona's 11 points were the fewest ever scored in one half by the Lumberjacks, as well as in Arizona's McKale Center, and NAU's four first-half field goals tied another McKale Center low.
The Wildcats previously held Florida International to 29 percent shooting in 1982.
14
Thursdav. December 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Churches help Russian families adjust to U.S.
By Stacy Smith Kansan staff writer
Alex Plotkhnik and his family left the Soviet Union four months ago with the clothes they were wearing and a few personal belongings in a suitcase.
Today, they are Russians living the American dream.
After years of persecution in the Soviet Union for their Christian beliefs, the Plotnikoffs have found happiness and freedom in Lawrence through the help of local churches.
"You didn't have this type of freedom in the Soviet Union." Alex Pilotnik said through an
Benson Jude, Kansas City satellite director of Lutheran Immigration and Refugees Services, said five Soviet families had settled since July with the help of several local churches in Lewiston, N.J., and the organization has worked for the organization to line up sponsors for the families before they arrive in the United States.
interpreter. "Here, you are free."
"We're really dependent upon finding support in the community." Jude said. "I have found people who are so willing to give of their time. It doesn't cost that much to get the families going."
The Mustard Seed Fellowship, 256 N. Michigan St., has sponsored four families, and the Free Methodist Church, 802 W. 22nd St. Terrace, has
Plotnikoff, his wife, Tonya, and their one-year-old son, Alex, have saved into their new home. Last month, Tonya Plotnikoff gave birth to another son, David.
sponsored the Platinikoff family, the latest group to arrive in Lawrence.
Jude said the churches helped find the families jobs, homes and cars while also teaching them basic living skills to function in U.S. society. Most of the families cannot speak English and therefore, also must be enrolled in language classes.
"We've noticed they have quickly adapted to American culture," she said. "But there's still a lot they have to learn about American ethics and culture."
County Commission asks Legislature to extend tax deadline
By Dave Wakefield Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
system and would mean a loss of interest income for the county, she said.
County commissioners think efforts by legislators to find solutions for the shock of reassessment would be premature at tomorrow's special legislative session.
After reviewing options legislators might be able to enact, county commissioners said they were stumped.
County commissioners last night approved a resolution calling for legislators to extend until Jan. 16 the deadline for tax payments and to wait until next year to consider tax relief proposals
Story idea? 864-4810
"A lot of people want a quick fix," said commissioner Nancy Hiebert. "There are just not any."
The proposals that have been suggested for alleviating the unexpected side-effects of reassessment would cause serious problems for the county, said county treasurer Nancy Hempen.
One suggestion, quarterly tax payments, would require reprogramming the county. computer
Another proposal to reopen the review process would mean the county would not be able to begin the 1990 review process as planned, said county administrator Chris McKenzie.
Reopening the review process would require additional staff or overtime, both of which would cost more money and could lead to further tax increases next year, Hiebert said.
NATURAL WAY
Natural Fiber Clothing and Body Care
820-822 Mass. St.
Downtown
841-0100
JUST IN CASE.
Come to campus & see the world.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Nation World Page
Nation/World Page
In 1987, over 30% of drunk drivers involved in fatal accidents were college-aged people. Don't become a statistic. Don't drink and drive. Plan for a sober friend to drive you home, so the fun never ends.
BUT JUST IN CASE, Secure Cab provides safe and free rides. Secure Cab runs nightly between 11:00 p.m. and 2:30 a.m. Clip this number out and keep it with you. Just in case. Sponsored by the Student Senate Transportation Board
A
SECURE CAB Just in case.
Use is limited. Please respect this service by using it responsibly.
NIHON CLUB
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Elections
SECURECAB Just in case.
A-1 City Cab
842-2432
(Ask for Secure Cab)
Elections for Spring 1990 officers Saturday, Dec. 9th 6:00 p.m.
1012 Emery Rd. #E-1
All members are strongly encouraged to vote.
For more information call 841-1012.
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Jayhawk Spirit
KU
in downtown Lawrence
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after 9pm.
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No coupon required.
On the corner of 9th and Indiana · 749-1397 As always we're open until 2:30 a.m. Fri. & Sat.
Classified Directory
100s Announcements
105 Personal
2 fabulous white females seek personal satisfaction.
For stimulating conversation call Babes-RUS.
Marte Mary and Nancy at your service
064-1801.
Businessman needs a college male student for traveling companion to California at midmiserate host. Major expenses paid. For infor wriiee a report, Won P., Box 306, Lawrence, Kansas.
Chris - Happy 22nd birthday pooch! We've had
various parties for you, we would love
you for a birthday. I love You, I becky
long S. I'm home for break. Long time since the blizzard and cottage escape. Love to see you.
Girl (Woman) in KU swatshirt who came in One-Hour Moto Photo Nov. 27th. Our eyes met for mere seconds, but it seemed like forever. Reply within. Rob.
Lori: The big nineteen! Happy birthday to the best friend & roommate anyone could want. Hope your future fliance comes over because it's guy night. Congratulations.
Not to address, no audience. Can I tell?
E.M.G. 5 long weeks of loneliness I Hate!!! I hope it
MAX U. HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT? **Mariana and Han, hidden treasure abound. In the room where you go, in it comes look for awhile or so. Seat Me. Mike H.-Chicago was incredible. I食品类 & Barry Manilow. I cannot talk to see you & go hide them we adults yet? Love you. The CSU man.**
You've done it! You're graduated! Congratulations! I wish you the best of luck. I know you'll be on a flight with me. We will be alarm clock will go off. What love shaft song will be sung or wun up? Who will you give me air eirlias? How much money do you need a diplomat's daughter? Hey. Let's leave Kerr at the Travel Lodge w/the space shuttle from Los Angeles, where many memories. I'm going to miss you yooo much. Please don't forget me to 12:45, your present will be here.
"Raggy," 21 years. "Wheeve thought White Cane
and bring me so much! I love you. Boo-Boo Rose."
"I love you."
SWEM, noskimer, self-employed, KU graduate,
seem family-oriented lady 25-30. My interests
include ballet, opera, theater, riding, musical
plays, quiet evenings. Write to:
JR, P.O. Box 1395, Lawrence, KS 60044
TANYA you're a diamond in the rough, but nonetheless bedazzling. Your sparkle has brightened my life. I'll treasure the memories shown. An Old Friend
**Inways:** Air-On We girls seeking fun guys. Call Kim and Kohlath妮. 864-1094.
110 Bus. Personal
Shop creatively this year. Create Christmas gifts come from creative X-mas shops. An absolutely awesome area and room for a gift, used furniture, framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade items, art supplies and collector, and cheep rok-n-roll records, vintage clothing, books, Persian rugs, carvural glass, Maxfield Sharp tiles, desks, antiques, toy Royal Doulton, and so much more sturdy. ATTACK MARKET! 811 New York Avenue, Open every Sat. and Sun. 10:3. For booth rental info 824-6816.
CANCUN BAHAMAS! Spring Break 1900!
Firmware '74 - Price $40.95 For information
Guide '74 799-825-6266
comic books, The Comic,
Comic's. 411 New Hampshire. Open Sat.
& Sun.
Donna Karan Sunglasses now at the Etc. Shop. 732 Mass.
GOING HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS!
DRIVE TO MOST major cities in U.S.
USE OUR CARD
INFORMATION:
PHONE # 13/281-3125.
WHEN YOU NEED SOMEONE TO
REALLY LISTEN
Call or drop by Headquarters.
We're here because we care.
841-2345 1419 Mass.
We're always open.
Time it! With Times sports watchers. They run great!! 12:00 a.m. Christmas noons. Friends Spare Goodies. 9:30 a.m.
B.C. AUTOMOTIVE your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized.
M-F 8-6 Van, Mastercard, Discover.
M-F 8-6 Viga, Mastercard, Discover.
315 N. 2nd St., 841-6955
The Yacht Club Bar & Grill
Tuesday specials
75¢ Draws $1.75 Well Drinks
$3.25 Combination Sandwich
620 Wisconsin 842-9445
Government Photos, Passport, immigration, visa, Modeling, theoretical, Advanced fine art portraits. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Tom Swells 749-1611.
Gauusch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sung
28% Below Sung, Retail
The Etc. Shop
732 Mass. 843-6611
Hall your gear in sports bags or fancy packs.
Nike. Rank-pak. Hind. $13.90 - $9.95. Francis.
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721. Mass. 721. Mass. $419.
Guaranteed five years. Russell Athletic athletes in 14 colors. Franz SpartingGoods, 231 Mass.
MASSAGE for the Holidays! Do what else do: beat stress and injury with the help of Lawrence Massage Therapy, buy iPen. Buy iPen-Self-Trade. Quarantil. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat.-Sun. 10-5.
842-1376
AFRICAN ADORNED Unusual jewelry & int'l. folk art.
Have an old-handed Christmas by cutting your own beautifully shaped tree at PINE HILL MUSEUM. An indoor tree is the kids have free pony rides. Drive on East Ridge for 20 minutes, 1-4 miles. The Edmonds Family. 942-387-1.
Hey now! Super Stop Day party with L.A.
Ramblers Tuesday, December 12th at the Bot-
leneck, 777 New Hampshire. Be there!
GAME DAY MEAL DEAL!
6" Cold Cut Combo
Chips & Large Soda
238
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5p.m. - 12 a.m.
SUBWAY
1720 West 23rd
842-4782
Wiggle into Wigwam's warm wool socks, mittens, gloves. Francis Sporting Goods, 731 Mass. 433-419.
120 Announcements
FAIR No More - workers needed for stage crew and security positions Monday, Dec. 11.
Refresherms & entrance fee paid. Please sign up in SUA office, 4th floor from 8-5.
For confidential information, referal & support
Faculty 814-234-124; Headquarters
Counseling Center
Gay & Lesbian events of Kansas and Buddies,
718 SW Jackson, present entertainer Sharon
Thompson. Dec 15, 18:00 to 10:00 p.m. Admission
for more information, call GLSKOR at
804-309-3910.
Hey Joe, have you gotten your Senior Pictures
*phen vet?*
*Hey Mary, how did your Senior Pictures turn out?*
***
No. 1 heard you can get your picture taken until the end of this week at Strong Hall.
-Oh, they are awful, Joe. Can I have them retaken?
-Yea, but you'll need to take your proofs with you to Stroll Hall before the end of the week.
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Suzuki HERITAGE
BREAKFAST
STRESS MANAGEMENT WORKSHOP Sat.
b. 12:30 a.m. Unichair Church, 416 Lincoln Street.
Solicile Intervention - If you're thinking about
hiring someone to visit your house,
b. 841-2594 or visit 1419 Massarhead.
Want to see the Dead in L.A. for free? We have!
already booked tickets. Die, December 14,
2016. Billy or Kenny
130 Entertainment
FLYING — Like Santa. See the PLAZA CHRISTMAS LIGHTS. Airbore. Leave Lawrence on an evening flight, circle Ginkgo Kansas City, 82% sell. Be called a Dale.
GET INTO THE GROOVE . Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot Spits Maximum Party Thrunk. DJ Ray Valesque. 641-7033.
440 Lost-Found
4
Found: White female dog, with one black eye and eye, in KS Union 12/1. Call 864-1723 or 863-4770
LAST: Black, cut short, de-clawed, no tag,
around 1400 block Ohio. Call 892-7984.
15
University Daily Kansan / Thursday, December 7, 1989
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babyssitter needed to care for 6-month-old infant in our home starting in January. M-fternoon.
CHILD CARE: To care for our 3-year-old son is our home near campus. Approximately 7 days/week, Flexible hours. Starting Jan. or Feb. Call 843-5790.
**Credit Textbooks**, KU Bookstores, Part-time.
$5.50 per hour, Monday-Friday (2 shifts available), 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. or 10:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
11th through 14th Dec. 2019, Work Depth 3b, 19th. Must be available to work entire time. Required previous inventory, sales or stocking experience. Ability to lift over 50 lbs. stand for long hours. Applicable to UMN personal office level. Level 5, 380. EOE.
CITY SEEN
A new exciting restaurant is opening in the new AT&T Town Pavilion.
We are now hiring for full and part time food servers hosts and hostesses.
M
Please apply in person
1111 Main, K.C., MO
9am-4pm
816-472-8833
First Fuel Bank of Kansas seeks full and part-time fuel salenforcement for store located at 1500 E. Stirr in Lawrence. More than minimum wage, $6 an hour, 6 a.m.-12 noon, 2 non-a week, and all weekend hours. Duties include selling Fuel Bank concept cards to customers, collecting cash from customers. Must be neat and clean and enjoy working with the public. Must have good knowledge of music records. If interested, apply in person at stirln.org.
$4.00 per hour
part time
7 a.m.-11 a.m.
Spring '90 semester
Student needed Monday through Friday
The University Daily Kansan has a
position available for a student to
advertise during the spring
gatherer.
Requires a firm command of spelling and grammar. We accept the aesthetics of layout. Since our advertisers will be depending on you, we encourage you to read and respond.
We prefer a self-starter.
You'll work during those times when we publish a newspaper and be off when we don't (like exam week, when you need the time to study).
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The Kansan is an equal opportunity employer.
Contact Jeanne Hines, Sales & Marketing
Adviser, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.:
864 735 1940
KITCHEN HELP WANTED
Kansas & burge Uenire hire for part-time stud-
ent. Kansas second semester; Kyron Kynnis
Union Prep Semester.
Two years minimum experience. Pay depends upon completion. Apply at Oasis Hospitals M-2, 4 and 8.
Logan Business Machines accepting applications for part-time delivery person. Flexible hours. 811-694-7350
RAA
2015 Henderson S
Looking for long-term employee to work a shift of 3 to 11 p.m. (including Friday or Saturday evening) and one weekday day shift. Mechanical ability a plus.
LUXURY RESORTS HIRTS for best winter
season. Work and play at Acapulco, Hawaii,
Florida, jamaica. FREE employment information.
Write:
6018 Henderson St.
Chicago, IL 60634
NAMNIES: Go to interesting places, earn good jobs.
Templeton Agency Nagy 864-4443,
Templeton Nagy Agency 864-4443.
Live-in child care positions near New York, Philadelphia, the beach, and other areas. Friendly support group. PRINCETON NANNY PLACEMENT 301. N. Worth St. 418, Princeton, NJ 08500) 697-491-1755 Now accepting applications for clears/cashsheets for temporary positions through January 25, 1990. Contact us for more information availability. Experience preferred, but not required. Jayah bookstore, Top of Nassimhill
Part-time tertiary position available Tuesday and Thursday 2.00 p.m.-5.00 p.m.; Friday 2.00 p.m.-4.00 p.m. Requires a current relationship skills and provision casler experience required. Apply at Douglas County Job Center.
Part-time employment - Construction-type work.
Sanding, painting, woodworking & general labor.
85.00/hr. 84-364.
Part-time housecleaners and office cleaners work in the home office, on commutes, Buckingham Palace is interested in them.
POSITION AVAILABLE
mortality desires to hire a KN student to teach the course. Please call the class: answer phone and door, light janitorial duties and working with the public. This individual needs to be neat, have good communication skills and desire to serve others. This work will be in exchange for a salary, a furnished room.
For additional information and an interview, call 845-1212 and ask for Larry or Phill.
Residential supervisor part-time positions
resident with mental retardation.
For appointment interested in working with
adults with mental retardation. Flexible event,
weekends hours. 84/48/hour. Call for appoit-
ment.
Wanted: Companion for boy, age 6. Monday-
thursday through Thursdays, 4:00-6:30 beginning January
8. Referrals required. Nonsmoker. Need own旅
营. 923-9200.
Sustainable teacher needed for morning preschool and kindergarten. Must be available 9-12 or preferably i.p.m. and be a junior or senior in child development, early childhood or elementary education. Some need for an afternoon set up. Requires classroom techniques. Sunshine Acres. 942-2233.
Secretary needed immediately for office on company. Must have work processing. Hours: 10-3, M-F. If interested contact Manpower Temporary Services, 211 F., 8th, 749-2600. This position will accept full-time positions.
Telemarketing. Salary + commission. Monday
Thursday, 6 p.m. No experience necessary.
B1-1298.
Wanted: Kherm language tutor. Call 843-1102.
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Flexible hours,
good working conditions. Apply Lawrence Coun-
Club, 843-9067. Ask for frank
Zaroce. Inc., seeking full-time secretary/bookkeeper. Must have computer & bookkeeping experience is helpful but not necessary. Responsibilities include processing daily records. A/P position offered to eligible candidates.
experience is helpful but not necessary. Lotus experience includes process information daily records, A/P, A/R for local convenience stores as well as answering phone calls and filling.Willingness to learn new skills and techniques in a portman. Must have neat appearance. Competitive salaries and pleasant working environment. Resume to RR 8, Box 125, Lawrence, KS, 60504. No calls please.
225 Professional Services
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: 24-hour ecourse
processing. Complete B/W services.
PASSPORT/RESUME $6.00. 208 Art & Design.
404-6377
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-4878.
WORKERS' COMP
Auto Accidents & Personal Injury
DONALD C. STROLE
DONALD G. STROLE
Murray
16 East 13th 842-1133
Pregnant and need help? Call Birhtight at Confidential help/free pregnancy testing.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-9718.
TRAFFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offenses
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Suffering Abortion:
White
Hearts Restored
Colby, RS 67701
Confidential response/material
235 Typing Services
1,000 pages, no job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable wordprocessing; Diana, 843-847 or Ruth, 843-848.
- i-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 842-363, days or evenings.
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing
Cellphone: 249-3892
Accurate and affordable typing/word processing.
Spelling checked. done with time to spare! Sun
841-6213.
Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary
$1.25 double-space page. East Lawrence. Call
(312) 437-6080.
Call R.J.'s Typing Services 841-5942. Tape legal, paper, calls. no eails to p.m. Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing resume applications, mailin lists, laser print resumes, application lists, mailing lists. Laser print
rern paper; lists, observations; notes,
resumes, applications, mailing lists. Late print-
ing and spelling corrected. 228G W. 20th St. M-7B.
8a.m. 4p. m-5. 8a.p. 5m-14p. m
Excellent professional tystet doess papers accurately, reasonably and fair. Call Julia 863-2707 KEWYORKS. Word Processing and Data Entry 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. KU experience. Chesapeake 842-8077. Chesapeake 842-8077.
K-5 Professional Word Processing. Accurate and
宜修. 431-643. Call between 1 and 10.
Papers, resumes, themes, etc. Common misrepresentation of data in MacProcessing with laser output 84712-5-84 and 84712-6-84.
RESUMES - Written & Laser Printed, 24-hour service
guidance guaranteed $10-$35. Jay
Savings
Resumes 'Typeset
Kingston Printing, Inc.
"Making you look good on paper"
804 W. 214* *814-6320
This lady is hot! At least her fingers are prof.
hair! She's very well-dressed, reasonable
rates, available day or evening. Loft
THEWORDCORERS-Why Pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, thesus, resume, commercial, IBM-TPC, MAC, CPP, dot matrix, dot matrix, later. See 188-*3147*.
Will do typing, reports, papers. Type Write Services.
842-4612.
Word Perfect Word Processing, IBM Compatible.
Near Orchards Corners. No calls after 9 p.m.
843-858a.
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254.
1. 20 inch - 28mm, 1½ bath, considerable interior space, book-like, skylight, woodland, central vac, and more. Over 500 sq. ft., just south of campus. Located in 17th Street at Hudson at 232-822-2961. Every room is a balcony.
305 For Salt
300s Merchandise
I&T&T Computer $800, color mon., new 32 mug.
ID, 36K computer w/keyboard. 843-3358.
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
19' Panasonic color TV for sale. Make offer. Call
Bailer 841-4385.
FUJI Abolute roadside, 27" Suntour comp.
ments, 9 months old, excellent condition. $90.
Roland at 844-8232 or 844-8234.
For Sale 1000, 1800, 400cc motorcycle, black,
black, black. 400cc Honda轿车, Honda
nissan, nissan. Call 644-844-7777.
nissan, nissan. Call 644-844-7777.
stereo - Stereo and CD player - Sony toie
dong ACDX 10, X9, yrs. old, $300 newel
sold by ESCA
**NOT AVAILABLE**
RT TK7 KC1 to Sarasota F1. Leave 12/30, return
√6. 1091 ORO 1-282-1472.
M-Sat
9-5
Sun
1-5
ETHNIC ARTS & CRAFTS
Furniture for sale! A grey sparson pit group chair, a black spanson chair, a w/ matching chairs, entertainment center, a table, two dining tables, and a coffee table. Everything sharp. Very pleasing. Ready to ship. Frye quotations.
Two-way airline ticket from Kansas City to Seattle.
$150. For details (843-2622).
GOVT SURPLUS!】 New combat boots and safety toe booties. Weld (blankets, gloves, socks and mittens). Field jackets, overcoats, camouflage clothing. Also CARHARTT HORKWEAR.
Won mountain bike on game show. Brand new,
music wall. $150 GIO on .842 209. If no answer, leave.
www.wonbike.com
Snow Skis - Elan RM-903 165cm, white with greylb
Caber ski boots, women's size 8, $125. Ryan
842-7298
*Moving Out Sale* on Saturday, 10:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
or call 867-7451. Also 839 Toney Corolla for sale.
must sell Tandy 1000 with color monitor. Will take best offer. Call 428-3374.
Mobile home in Lawrence, perfect for student
bachelor's or graduate education, furnished,
$2500 or best offer. Mail:
Schoenberg 1, Sullivan 1, 823-896-4720
Graduation, selling queen size bed, $275
nagelatina, $300, waterbed, $850 and driver, $175
Monday Saturday, 8:45 a.m. - 12 p.m.
Monday Sunday, 5:45 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.
Marys Surplus Sales, St.
Marys, MS 1-477-2734
Noon Coffee Light, $40. 12 Hours.
Perfect Christmas Gift! Brand new, tapered,
fitting.
Neon Coors Light. $70. $41-0368.
RALEIGHT technician mounts bike, less than 1 year old. Accident included $275 meal. Call 811-304-7956.
1974 Ford Maverick, new battery, runs great and recently went to Texas. Asking for $300. 864-3547.
1975 Honda CB390. Clean, low miles, must sell. $8,995. 841-4122, e-mail sales@honda.com
1976 Toyota Corolla Wagon,装A/C, new and all-season radios. Runs good, 8775
834-260-8220
1878 Buck Wagon, Auto, AC, Cas/CB, Radio, Cruise, Owner, OWNER, B45 81326.
good. Munt sell. 440 negligible. 841-6233.
Pontiac 1000 Ion 200 door hatchback. 98,000 ml,
w/nowtires. Run perfectly. $1500. 843-3240.
Nissan Sentra. 4-door. automatic, AC.
Nissan Maxima. 4-door. automatic, AC.
GIVE OWNER, Garaged. 945-312-15
1787 Fat Spyder convertible, black with tan interior, new top, 5-tap; $2500. Chris 841-699-179
1787 Chevette, 4-speed/AM/FM, ac runs, RU
84 Enore, loaded, Very good condition. $1700
neg. 842-2424.
On TVa, VCRs, Jewelry, Stereo. Musical Instruments, cameras, and More. We honor Viaa/MCA/M.E.M.X/Dise. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry. 104 W. Bath. 604-791-191.
This week's special: *7 vW Bug* Very clean,
*1655* See Check, Chck Nissan, N294-
824-444
Wanted someone to share ride Lawrence-KC near KU Medical Center. Weekdays, Tim 841-9699.
360 Miscellaneous
Hillel
לכן
For information and rides contact Hillel at 864-3948
Events of the Week
Thur, Dec. 7th
7:30 p.m.
Open Forum Meeting
Hilton House.
M
PEARL HARBOR DAY today!
What a surprise 48 years ago.
USA will never be the same again.
DECEMBER 25 is coming!
That was a silent surprise also.
Will we ever be the same again?
THE SAME AGAIN
May the Gift of that BIRTH-day bless you!
by students and for students
1204 Oread 843-4948
Lutheran Campus Ministry
Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m.
飞机
Call Today!
Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS
Don't Wait We'll find the lowest fares
2-Flr. Apt., for rent. Avail. immed. Walking distance to shopping. Call 841-8581 anytime.
For
Want to buy one season ticket for men's basket ball.
Call 843-6456.
On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
370 Want to Buy
**apartment for sublease at Nalsmith Hall. A single bedroom on first floor with own bathroom and LOTS of privacy. Have maid service. Leave room in kitchen. 1 month's worth of insurance. I with deposit paid and half of January rent.**
2-level/3-person apartment. Spring sublease. Ten minute walk to Wescoe. 941-705-875, $77/month. A change for the better. Mt. Riss. The luxuries of home. Washer/dryers, kitchen, sandwiches. Near beach.
2-bdrm. apt. acet. street from campus.
Spacious, new paint & carpet. Quest. 2-unit
building. $300/month. 641-7632. Leave
message.
Available at West Hills Apa. for next semester:
Sapacious one bedroom furnished apt. $285 a month.
Water paid. Great location near campus
and free parking. Case and deposit required.
81-1900 or 543-884.
2-BR duplon for multiscale, AC, dialkshower
2-BR duplon for multiscale, small petal allowers, 429
@ 841-216-316.
2-BR apt. in house. Fast walk to KU. Newly renovated, wood floor, dishwasher, window AC. $35, no pets. 841-5784, 841-1074.
合
Clean, quiet, bright 2 BR apt. in aplex. Bus stop in front, private parking in back. $295.00 a month + deposit. Unfurnished. Utilities extra. Available now. 748-1338 anytime. leave message.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
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, disability, etc. or 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 law. Our readers are hereby informed that all advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Colony Woods. Must subsize 2-bedroom.
2-bath room, with balcony, leaker,
dishwasher, microwave, open to pool, hut
weight room and more. $35. 740-$590.
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
EMERY PLACE APTS.
Avail. Jan, 1, studio, $280; 1 BH, $235. Both in-
house. Private parking. Library facility for
children. Private parking. Library facility for
children.
Mastercraft Management
943 4155
For lease Jan. 1, 2-5 bedroom apt. at 10 am and 17am,
$330. Call 641-1649. Leave message
For Rent - 2-bedroom duplex one half block south of
KU. $820.00 per month. Phone 814-2107.
Female roommate needed. Huge apt. split-level.
to campus. Great neighborhood. Call 841-977-6287.
For Rent - Basement apt. $315/mo. Utilities paid.
849-8344
Hurry in Today some short term leases available COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
INSTANT $200 REBATE
- TANNING BED
- VOLLEYBALL COURT
BASKETBALL COURT
- INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL
- 3 HOT TUBS
- EXERCISE ROOM
FIRST NATIONAL
$345-$410
MODELS OPEN DAILY
842-5111
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
*Offer limited/one rebate
pires 1-15:90
NAISMITHHALL
For Rent Large 3-bedroom apt. Attic bedroom.
8025/mn. 11thfiftees aq3. 843-8234
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS 60044
913-843-8550
For Host: very clean and superstar toor l or 2 people. Available Dec. 1st, call Aspen Apartments 811-5797.
For sublease: 1st, bedroom apartment.
For sublease. Two bedroom apartment,
available in May. On bus route. Rent
availabie Call 723-605-1908
Furnished room w/shared kitchen/bath facilities for females. Off-street parking. No pet
Furnished apt. in private home. Utilities paid
$200/month. Use of first 1 quiet room. W100, W193,
W248.
Great public Wi-Fi Internet & WEB accessibility,
to sublease starting January 1st. 2009.
Help! Sublease to Nice, New Lisbon,
Nice, North Rhône, north Rhône, close to
camp. Call 249-898-0300 at 8 a.m.
Terr. 843-6313.
Great 3-person house, 16th & Kentucky, near cam-
Most Sublease. Private, private studio apartment at 728 Ohio. Move in now and no rent until February. $875.00 per month. Call 1-917-5555 after 5 o'clock. a.m. Ask for Jamison.
Large studio for sublease with I/AC. Walk to campus, downtown, laundry and bus. $205. Tel 949-1705.
Moving to KC7 One-bedroom apartment available for rent. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, carer and more. Great clubhouse facility. Responsible. For more information call 651-891-6168.
One month's rent FREE! Rent has been lowered.
New 1-badm, airtime. VREM, could be for 2 people. Fully furnished, dishwasher, microwave
Fully furnished, W/D/F, on Gn route. HK route. 749-618.
Nice large attic room for rent. Avail. Jan. inst.
Very close to campus. A/C, $28/mm. $
Free parking. Wi-fi. 150 sq. ft.
*Wanted M or F, grad student preferred, to share large new contemporary home, fully furnished with state of the art security system, 10 bays, 3 bedrooms, $259,000; clean, $215,000 includes all utilities. Joe: 749-4747. Room efficiency and apartments and older well kept homes. $165 and up. 841-4144.
Older 2-3 bedroom home, near downtown, wood floors, nice yard, $875. 841-4144.
So close to campus! One bedroom apartment for sublease, 12th and 12nd. Call 841-3887.
Spacisson 2.3dpm, dblum, W/D hookup, AC, yard,
garage, clean, quiet. Available late December.
$46/mo. Leave message. No dogs please.
708.950.1000
Seeking warm friendly roommates! Kokona Community has two positions available: Office Assistant and Application Applications may be picked up at ECM Center, 1840 Ored. For more information call
Spring Sublease: 3-bdrm., 2.5-bath townhome,
DW, microwave, on bus route, Sunrise Village
Cal. 841-405.
Studio apartment available January; Water, gas
and electricity included; Fiat Fiata). January tree. Call 842-197-1687.
Available Jan. 1: Great studio apartment -
$300/month; Low utilities. Call 842-8310.
and semester. 3-bedroom apt. W7,
tashawah, microwave. On bus route. 78-642-6
ablase 3-bedr. apt. 5 minutes from campus.
quilty. Room area $30 a month. Available in
the basement.
Convenience
- Privacy
- Luxury
$80/month; Low utilities. Bk# 831-850
SUBLEASE, 2nd semester, 2-second apt. W/D.
W/D
Subbase: 1. dbrm. apt., fully furnished, very close to campus, large enough for 1 or 2 people, on bus route. R45-6018.
Sublease: Small one-bedroom apartment
available 13th & Ohio $200.00. 842-3792.
Sunflower House has rooms open for spring semester. Walk to classes and/or downtown, and go on a bike ride.
semester. Walk to classes and/or downstairs, and enjoy group living in a cooperative home-like environment with friends or game rooms, evening meals and free laundry and cleaning facilities. Meet with teachers and leaf messages, or at stop 140 Tennessee.
Sublease Spring Semester: 2-bdrm. apt. in
Grayscale, on KU bus route. Low utilities.
$800/mo, first month free. 749-1012.
Two-level, 1-bedroom apt. W/D, garage, very
clean, lots of rooms. $450.00 or 813.99, $823-249.
Very nice 1-bedroom, furnished. $675.00 or
$823.99. Old Mill Apartments.
$823 + utilities. $849-977 or $813-320.
430 Roommate Wanted
Apt. sublease start Jan. Room furnished, 4/uilures. Call 843-2853.
Christian male needed spring semester to share
4-br. townhouse, $172 + 1/4 utils. On bus route.
Call us: 604-389-2200
1 or 2 roommate needed. End of Dec./Jan/1
Sublease inexpensive.
Available immediately. Call please. Telephone
2 roommates need for 3-bdrm. house with W/D,
garage, pet, fireplace, 9414 W. 820R. Wet.
Room.
Naismith Hall...
these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
Female grad student seeks housemates from NYC.
Room to rent: home SE, or Lawrence;
Fireplace, garden space;
Need needs to include 2 bath 2-bed apart-
ment + $14 electric. Beginning Jan. 1.
Call Home!
Female non-smoker. Close to campus. Gas, water paid. Large bedroom. Responsive landlord. Call 842-6396.
Female roommate needed ASAP. Furnished apartment at Sundance. $179 plus ½ utilities.
Kristen 823-339
Only Naismith can provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free
Female Rommatee needed for spring semester.
Good location. $200.00 + 1/2 utilities. Lease until
Mav. Deposit paid, free cable. 841-3500.
Roommate female roommate for a spring semester. 38+ bf half damplet 2006 University Dr. B147 with a new roommate. 38+ female roommate female roommate needed immediately. 2 bfm ap, close to KU, energy-efficient; has WID
unities, weekly maid service, "Dine Anytime, and much more!
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
Female roommate needed for spring. Non-smoker, own room, one班 from campus. $170. Utilities. call 842-1539.
For more information &
a tour call or come by today
Female romantine needed immediately for spring semester. Surise Village. Call 841-2389.
Female romantine(s) needed ASAP. Great location (block from campus). 461.125m. Call 841-9923.
Female roommate needed. Very nice, completely furnished, own room, $180 per month. 74-509-8326. Roommate required for apartment with grad student. You need only bedroom furniture. Nice complex. $200. 843-0833. Female roommate for very nice 3-BH townhouse-moniker. $185/month, garage, FP, DW
Female roommate requires Large apartment, bus-
fare, own room, washer/dryer, dishwasher,
microwave, furnished. $200 + is税. 855-566-
10 before 11:09 a.m. or after 8:09 p.m.
Female roommate needed starting ASAP. A friendly roommate, on bus, on bus route, $175 each day. Email to: mary.catkins@usgs.gov
Grad. stud, GWM, 84, 14 yr. in Eur. outgoing,
good coach. Activist. Peaceful alternative space, then. Jan.Des, like my cat, not engaged. Eng.ask. contact. Cristopher Krammer.
835 Cersita, Acquistonda (P2) 89414, Irian,
January to May, own room in spa accommod-
apt. for non-smoking females. On KU bus路,
£45 per month per座位. Call 835
435 per month.
Looking for a female roommate. On bus route near Walt-Ward, Mart-Lanck, 4-lets, etc. Negotiable + u. utilities, water paid. Available immediately! Call Pat at 780-796-2150.
Male roommate wanted: Spring semester to
teach English at $100 per month plus 1%
billets. 841-900-763
+ ½ utilities. Call Mark or Pat, P48-6900.
Male or female roommate will share 3 bed/2 bath apartment at ORCHARD CONNERS.
$187/month. Call 841-2517 anytime.
**Look:** 1-male/female roommate needed Jan. 1.
3-bedroom 8-droom Woods apartment needed.
2-bedroom non-smoking roommate needed, spring summer, central location, close to cimarron 5½-8½ acre lot.
Need 2 female roommates for 3-bedroom townhome at Trailridge. Call Cindy 749-0554 or 843-7333.
NEEDED: Female housemate to share more
3-bdr. bran near campus. Jan '96 to ? Tastefully
furnished. W/D, W/F, C.Ian. $250./mo., mu.
Ppl, Fpml. Open-minded music lovers
please reply. maiks_4186. www.music-
Male roommate wanted for spring semester to share 3-bedroom apartment. Get master bedroom, own bath, walk-in closet. On bus route. Free water - $150 + 1% utilities. 814-6977.
Needed - Female non-smoking roommate. Nice贴. Very low rent & utilities. No deposit, walk-in dist. to campus. Call 649-3509.
Male roommate needed January. Fully furnished,
male bedroom, 1DW, microwave table,
shelf, desk, lamp, rug, glass window.
Male roommate needed to share fully furnished
apartment. Sweet setup. $185/month plus
delivery.
Need female non-smoker asperp or AP-
suming semester. 4-bed, 3-bath, on bus route, nice fi-
denced apartment. Deposit required and %
utilities. Call Jennifer #84-8219.
One coommoderate, male or female, to share
One coommoderate, male or female, to share
One coommoderate, male or female, to share
One coommoderate, male or female, to share
ROOMMATE WANTED. female or male to
form department. $4 block from campus.
call desk #205.
Non-smoking responsible roommate wanted to
share furnished 2-bedroom house on campus.
Grade student preferred. Must have references.
403-5345.
Roommate needed: Only $176.00/mo. + ¼
utilities, totally furnished, on bus route, 3 great
roommates, please call: 841-3234.
Roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom house with two others. Washers/dryer on: Bus route $150
Washing machines: A/c $295
Roommate needed for second semester. Bae-
man room, own bathrooms, uitilities split, upla-
ture.
THE FAR SIDE
Roo募mate for large 3-bedroom apart-
ment in Chicago. Roo will pay $18,100/month, Starting January 19, 2016. Roo募mate for sublease a 3-bedroom with two others. Flipframe. trash compact. Roo lease. HVAC.
dishwasher on bus route. $180/month + utilities.
Call 842-3809.
Please contact S. Hodgson at
Roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom apartment
sister/semester. Large bedroom, kitchen,
wet bathroom.
Roommate needed spring semester. Bus route.
cabine, nice. Eddingham. Great location. Fun.
Activity.
Roommate wanted to share modern spacious apartment close to all facilities. Own bedroom.
Rooms in very nice room for non-smoking, quiet female. Two blocks south KU. Free utilities, w/cable, W/D, A/C, microwave, TV, housecleaning, and 1/15/9. $40-$220. $420. [813-765-2130].
Seeking fun female roommate who's serious about school. Own bedroom, bathroom. W/D, space, spacious, quiet, very nice. Electric, cable water paid, $22.50/month. 843-729-2065. ewes:
SPRING SUBLEASE: Fun female needed to
share condo space to campus, W/D, cable. Call now!
1-842-4756. $150.00 %/m². usl call.
Seeking mature male roommate spring semester.
2 BR, 2 FL, old style. $200. Utilities paid.
845-0629-2219 Nevin
Spacious, bright, new carpet! One block from school. Microwave/A/C laundry/Dairy Facilities. Easy-girl female needs non-smoking roommate for summer. Spring summer. #3 + 1/2 utilities. Sublane 2-bed. 2-bath apl. Microwave. dishwasher on bus route. Available late. $59.99.
Wanted: Fun witty female roommate for close-to-campus apartment. Call for information.
842-4718.
Wanted - One committed Christian female to share expense in 4-br. house beginning in
Wanted: Roommate for spring semester.
2-bedroom apartment at Villa 26, 2900.00 + 1/4
utilities. Call 749-1882, if no answer leave
name@.com
Wanted: Woman international student to share comfortable home with American woman graduate student. 28-minute walk from Watson, MA to Boston, MA. (Babylon al AEC 896-7400, (Weekends) 740-1480).
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
Karoon 12-7
16
Thursday, December 7, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
NATURAL WAY - 820-822 Mass St. 841-0100
SUA PRESENTS FREE FINALS WEEK MOVIES 2:00 and 7:00 Each Day
Woodruff Auditorium
December 14 SAY ANYTHING
John Cusak stars in this romantic comedy about two unlikely lovers. 'Controversy arises as they confront love, honesty and family values. PG 13
AUTHOR
December 15 D.O.A.
Dennis Quaid is a college professor who is unwittingly poisoned with a slow-acting, fatal toxin. He and student Meg Ryan have only 24 hours to solve the dangerous mystery of his impending doom. R
December 16 MAJOR LEAGUE
Charlie Sheen, Tom Beringer and Corbin Bernsen are down-and-out baseball players who overcome impossible odds and get a chance at the penant. Margaret Whitton stars as the new owner of the team who wants to keep the team unsuccessful for her own reasons. R
P
December 18 PELLE THE CONOUEROR
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Based on the classic novel, this movie about an aging, Swedish farmer who migrates with his son, Pelle, to Denmark in search of a better life is an Oscar and Cannes Film Festival-award-winner.
December 20 IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE
ROBERT C. FARRER
December 20 IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE James Stewart plays George Bailey, a young man who, after serving his community, is driven to despair as he faces bankruptcy and jail because of missing money his uncle misplaced. He is given a privileged look, though, to see how he has enhanced others lives by being born.
ged
Sponsored by STUDENT SENATE
Greeks bothered by pesky businesses
By Melanie Matthes Kansan staff writer
The offer sounded good.
At the mall or a flashlight.
No strings attached.
The offer sounded good.
But a few weeks later, Joe Gurera was stuck with a $400 bill for merchandise he never ordered.
"They drive me crazy!" said Gurera, house manager of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. 1537 Tennessee St.
The source of Gurera's aggravation is several businesses that are sending unordered merchandise such as cleaning and office supplies and light bulbs to KU fraternities and sororites.
The businesses often call Alpha Tau Omega and offer the person on phone duty a free gift and, Gurera said, a few weeks later they send the packages of unordered merchandise and charge an outrageous price for it.
"And I have never gotten one of those free gifts," he said.
This kind of problem has been troubling business firms for a long time, said George Hart, vice president of the Better Business Bureau of Greater Kansas City.
Because there are so many people a salesman can talk to in a fraternity or sorority, the houses are susceptible to such businesses, said Ar Weiss, Kansas deputy attorney general in charge of consumer affairs.
He said if a consumer received merchandise that he did not order, he was allowed by law to keep the merchandise and not pay the bill.
“It’s an unconditional gift to the recipient, and they can do whatever they want.”
Julie Bennett, house manager of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, 1433 Tennessee St., said she was so tired of the businesses that she recently sold. "We've had a business Bureau and to the company that most recently sent her merchandise.
Bennett was motivated to send the letters after she received $180 in toilet bowl cleaner that she never ordered.
Hart said that when his bureau received letters complaining of this kind of practice, they tried to find where the company was located and referred the complaint to that city. But many of the companies are difficult to locate because they change names frequently.
He said most of the companies that he had referred complaints about were in Los Angeles.
Weiss recommended that fraternities and sisters send a letter directly to the company that sends them unsolicited merchandise and cite KSA 50-617, which is the law that allows the receiver of unsolicited goods to keep the merchandise at no charge.
Kenneth Stoner, director of student housing, said that this problem did not occur in University housing because these residences operate under the state purchasing system. Therefore, it is impossible for such solicitation to occur.
When Brian Nauheim, house manager of the Kappa Sigma fraternity, 1045 Emery Road, receives unsolicited merchandise, he usually sends it back. He said he recently received a case of light bulbs costing about $5 per bulb.
"I don't have any choice but to send it back," he said, "It's a legitimate business, it's just that they charge outrageous prices, and you don't know it until you get the merchandise."
Door
Openings...
The Door is Open for New Residence Hall Staff.
- Resident Assistant
- Assistant Residence Hall Director
- Academic Programming Coordinator
- Scholarship Hall Director
Information and applications are available at all Residence Hall information desks and the Residence Life Office (205 McCollum Hall). Applications are due in the Residence Life Office by Jan. 19, 1990.
MONEY FOR THE TAKING PAYING TOP CA$H FOR BOOKS
MARY A. MAYER
NOW THROUGH FINALS Jayhawk Bookstore
At the top of Naismith Hill
Hours: 8-5 Monday-Friday, and 9-5 Saturday 843-3826
1
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
VOL.100,NO.72 (USPS 650-640)
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
FRIDAY DEC. 8,1989
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS: 864-4810
Margin funds could provide state tax relief
By Kate Lee
and Derek Schmidt Kansan staff writers
Financing for the Margin of Excellence is endangered, several Margin supporters said yesterday.
Gov. Mike Hayden yesterday announced several property tax protections would recommend the Legislature a special session that begins today.
Hayden's proposals include expanding "circuit breaker" relief programs by $80 million. The programs would provide direct tax relief to property owners whose taxes have skyrocketed in the wake of property reappraisal.
the same general fund.
Some say that means the Margin.
To finance the circuit breaker, Hayden proposed a mix of money from at least five sources, including the state general fund.
Some say that means the Margin. The Margin of Excellence is the Board of Regents three-year plan to broaden its education institutions to 95 percent of their peer schools and to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
The Margin is in its second year.
the Margin is in its second year.
"The message that I'm receiving is that the Margin, not only the third year, but the second year, may be in trouble," said Shari Swears, campus director for the Associated Students of Kansas. Swears declined to elaborate.
Frank Ybarra, the governor's deputy press secretary, said in a telephone interview that Hayden was on vacation to education to finance tax relief.
"There's not a single mention of the governor's proposal, Myra sala."
Ybarea said he was not aware of any proposals to divert any Margin money from the current year. He said money for the third year was not specifically targeted for cuts.
But Hayden said last night during an interview with KTKA-TV Channel 49 in Topea that he wanted to balance tax-relief needs with the needs of other programs, including the Margin.
In a statement issued yesterday, Hayden said, "As the Legislature addresses this funding matter, they must strive for reason and fairness and not dismantle programs of education and environmental protection."
Ray Hauke, director of planning and budget for the Regents, said he heard that a source of financing for the current fiscal year
"I have not heard the Regents singled out, though," he said.
"Obviously, it would be an understatement to say that we wouldn't be happy. We would want to know how much was being cut and if it would be restored or would be a permanent reduction."
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, he met yet heread with Hayden and Michael O'Keefe, director of the budget. Hayden did not mention cutting the Margin, and O'Keefe said the administration did not plan to target it for tax relief. Winter said.
Winter said that he was unaware of any serious efforts to divert second-year Margin money, but that the team was a "major, major concern."
"In our new-found zeal to act like we're protecting taxpayers, we threaten to kill programs on which they've been so long, like the Margin," he said.
Winter said he opposed circuit-breaker expansion during the special session, including that proposed by the governor.
"It will negatively impact on general fund programs, including the Margin," he said.
Fire leaves tenants locked out of homes
Kansan staff writer
By Lisa Moss
A fire being investigated as aggravated arson at Meadowbrook Apartments, 15th Street and Crestline Drive, has left residents of Building E homeless for an undetermined period of time.
Maj. William Brubaker of the Lawrence Fire Department said that the Lawrence Police, the KU Police and the Douglas County Sheriff's Department were helping investigate the fire and interview people.
These estimates may be conservative because the value of the 12 apartments and the storage room's contents are not known, he said.
Wednesday night's fire, which was contained to the basement of Build- ing E, caused an estimated $40,000 to residents homeless. Rebuker said.
Brubaker said that it would be two or more weeks until residents would be able to move back into the apartments.
be able to move back into her apartment but was under the impression that moving back would not be possible for several months.
Stokes said that yesterday she went into her apartment to get some belongings and that there was soot on the walls, and everything smelled like smoke.
Stokes' cockatoo was in the apartment at the time of the fire and survived. She said she did not know what had happened but knew it had suffered smoke inhalation.
Residents who did not have a place to stay were accommodated at Travelodge Motel, 801 Iowa /St., last night and Wednesday night. Residents said they did not know if Meadowbrook management would pay for them to stay at the motel tonight.
"My children are feeling distress," Stokes said. "I haven't yet come to grips that this has really happened to me. I am sitting in a hotel room where I have been given some person decided to do this. Lives were not lost, thank God."
Sandra Stella, Lawrence senior,
said she did not know when she would
Kevin Caffrey, Newton senior, said that the damage to his apartment was more extensive than he had expected it to be and that the earliest he and his roommates would be able to move back in was January.
"I am going on to a day-to-day walk in the Meadowbrook is doing a lot for us."
She said she was meeting with the American Red Cross today to discuss four cases.
He said that his apartment looked dingy and that his clothing was smoke damaged.
"Everything smells like it has been hickory smoked." he said.
SIGILLUM UNIVERSITATIS HANSIENSIS
HANS • MAGHAM • QUARES NON COMMERATRICVS
VIRGESC
ESTABLISHED 1863
16
Senate Minority leader Bob Dole discusses project financing for the University
Patricia G. Brüngersgoethel to the Kansai
Dole predicts competition for financing
By Kate Lee
By Kate Lee and Derek Schmidt Kansan staff writers
Universities likely will have to compete more often to receive federal money for construction and other projects, said U.S. Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole
Dole made the comments yesterday after meeting with KU faculty and administrators during the last day of a two-day visit to Kansas.
"It may be the beginning of more competition," Dole said of a move by Congress to shift $5.2 million for a proposed KU bioscience research center to a more general fund administered by the National Institutes of Health. The University of Kansas now must compete against other universities for the money.
The trend in Congress is to favor general competitions instead of financing for specific projects, Dole said, to reduce the effects of "pork barrel" projects that are obtained through political clout, not merit.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said KU would be competitive.
"The University of Kansas welcomes a competition," he said. "We are confident that we will fare well in any such competition. This area represents a legitimate strength of the University of Kansas, and it has for a number of years."
Possible reductions in defense spending resulting from changes in Eastern Europe could lead to less federal spending for research and development, Dole said.
"I felt that we were being less than properly aggressive in terms of getting money for our Kansas universities," he said. "We found many of the very large schools getting the projects."
Dole, a KU graduate, said Kansas universities traditionally had received a disproportionately low amount of federal money for projects.
"I think they do have something to worry about," he said of research institutions. But he added that research probably would be the last area cut from the defense budget.
Dole said that he was excited when the Berlin Wall came down and that the Eastern European changes opened new economic opportunities for U.S. businesses and created obligations for the United States.
The United States must financially support fledgling democracies in Eastern Europe, he said, but must guard against making those nations dependent on U.S. aid.
"It's mind-boggling," Dole said. "There are new developments every day."
At a Topeka news conference on Wednesday, Dole urged caution in responding to Eastern European reforms
Gunman's note blames women for rampage
See DOLE, p. 6
The Associated Press
MONREAL. The gunman who raged through the University of Montreal's engineering school and killed 14 women, carried a suicide letter to the police when men had spoiled his life and he was taken revenge police said yesterday.
In his rampage Wednesday afternoon, the killer — identified only as "Marc" — also wounded nine women and four men before killing himself.
As he roamed through the six-story engineering bulling, firing a rifle, he shouted, "You're all a bunch of feminists!"
Andre Tessler, director of operations of the Montreal police, told reporters the man had obtained a permit for the rifle.
Jacques Duscheeneau, a Montreal police investigator, said at a news conference that police hoped the killer's .223-caliber Sturm Ruger semiautomatic assault rifle would lead to his identification.
One of the wounded students remained in critical but stable condition yesterday. The rest were out of danger.
Montreal
Site of
killings
Canada
Montreal
U.S.
Montreal University
Mont Royal
Park
City Hall
Notre Dame
Cemetery
St. Lawrence River
0 Miles
Knight Hider Tribute NAVIDJAHNT
Knight Hider Tribute NAVIDJAHNT
shots were fired
from the assault rifle
The school was crowded on the last day of classes before examinations, when the killer arrived about 3:30 p.m. CST.
Police said he first shot a woman in a second-floor corridor, then entered a room on that floor where a class of 15 students and 10 female students was in session.
"It was just like Rambo. He had at least two ammunition belts on his chest," said engineering student Robert Leclerc, who was in the classroom.
Witnesses said the killer told the class to separate by sex and sent the men into the corridor before opening fire, killing six more women.
City officials discuss the need for noise control
and Dave Wakefield Kansan staff writers
By Stacy Smith
City commissioners may pass a noise ordinance during the semester interim that would make it possible for police officers to arrest or fine people for excessive noise.
On Dec. 18, city commissioners will study the noise ordinance proposed by the Lawrence Association of Neighborhoods. They could act on the
When KU students return from Christmas break, they should check with City Hall before turning up their stereos.
proposal at their Jan. 2 meeting while students are home for the holidays.
"I think that there is a definite possibility," said Mike Wilden, acting city manager. "They won't wait until students come back in mid-January to act on this."
Mayor Bob Schumm and commissioner Bob Walters said they favored some type of noise ordinance.
Commissioner Shirley Martin-Smith said she would prefer that students and neighborhood
"It needs to be a reasonable and credible proposition," Schumm said. "I think we need to have some kind of noise ordinance."
associations reach an agreement. A noise ordinance should be a last resort, she said.
Commissioner Dave Penny said he did not think a noise ordinance was needed in Lawrence.
"I think this thing is mainly aimed at fraternity, sororites and dormitories," Penny said. "I don't know why there is a sudden rush to put an entire group of them. I'm a little suspect the mollyes involved."
Commissioner Mike Rundle could not be reached for comment.
Student leaders said that it would be unfair for
See NOISE, p. 12
Jury finds Miami officer guilty of killing 2 Blacks
Decision does not lead to more violence
The Associated Press
MIAMI — A Hispanic policeman was found guilty of manslaughter yesterday in the deaths of two Black men, and Black leaders praised the just response to the shooting that set off three days of racial violence.
Miami Office William Lozano, 31,
showed no emotion when he heard
the verdict in the Jan. 16 deaths of
motorcyclist Clement Lloyd, 23, and
driver Daniel Carrion, 24. The two counts carry a total maximum
sum of 45 years.
Circuit Judge Joseph Farina deferred adjudication on the jury's findings, an administrative formality to allow a presentencing investigator to remain free on $10,000 bond and had to surrender his passport.
The televised verdict by the six-member, multiethnic jury brought an inner-city community that feared the trial would spark another round of racial unrest.
He said that by midafternoon there had been no reports of violence.
But community leaders praised the presence of two Black jurors and the almost gavel-to-gavel five broadcast coverage of the trial as reassuring the community that the trial would be fair.
"It just shows that our system works if people will give it a chance to work and that there are other ways of impacting the system than through violence," said Willie Sims, a Black community leader who is a member of Dade County's community relations board.
Miami has been racked by racial unrest four times this decade, including riots in 1980 and 1984 sparked by the death of Blacks.
"We were relieved that justice has been served," said George Lubrin, Blanchard's brother-in-law.
"We are very satisfied that the verdict came back gulty on both counts and that the trial itself was handled with great deftness, attorney for the Lloyd family.
Defense attorneys and Lozano's family did not offer comment and left the courtroom quickly, his wife in tears.
Lozano, who remains suspended with full pay, talked about his case later at his attorney's office.
"I was not given a fair trial from the beginning. There was a lot of evidence denied and quashed," he said. "We're going to look for a new appeal based on the circumstances."
Defense attorney Roy Black said, "From the beginning, every major rulling was against us. To even refuse us the right to present witnesses is bizarre. It was critical for the jury to know the motivation of Clement Lloyd and why he didn't want to stop and why he tried to run over this officer. The jury got a false impression of this case."
Prosecutors told Lozano fired unnecessarily at Lloyd, who was fleeing a police car after a traffic violation. Lloyd died of gunshot wounds and Blanchard died of injury due to the resulting crash. Lozano, a native of New York, fired in self-defense when the motor-cycleist tried to run him down.
"The jury returned what we thought was a just verdict. It was a jury that represents all segments of our society," said Assistant State Attorney John Hogan, the lead prosecutor.
C
The January riot left one man dead and 11 others wounded. Thirteen buildings were set afire, others were looted and 372 people were arrested.
7
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A
2
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
)
Weather
TODAY
Cloudy
HI: 38'
LO: 25'
Beatrice 49/39
New York 28/14
Denver 53/27
Chicago 25/18
Los Angeles 72/50
Dallas 40/30
Miami 77/68
KEY
Rain Snow
Ice T-Storms
Forecast by. Robert Neft
Temperature are today's highs and
tenths' lows.
Kansas Forecast
Highs will be in the mid-30s to lower 40s. North winds will shift to the southwest by evening. Saturday will be warmer and clear with highs in the lower 40s to upper 50s.
Salina KC
38/23
35/22
Dodge City Wichita
47/24 39/25
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
5-day Forecast
Friday - Partly cloudy and cool.
Northerly winds 3-10 mph shifting to the southwest by evening. High 38'. Low 25'.
Saturday - Mostly sunny and warm. Southwesterly winds 5-15 mph. High 50'. Low 28'.
Sunday - Continued sunny and warm. High 52'. Low 29'.
Monday - Turning cool again.
High 36'. Low 18'.
Tuesday - Cool and cloudy
Tuesday - Cool and cloudy with a chance for snow.
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A man knocked a pizza delivery employee onto the floor of a porch Wednesday while another man took two pizzas and cash from the employee, said Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman.
Not good with any other offer exp.12/22/89
Two men take pizza, cash in holdup
- $1 off any 20" sandwich
- 50¢ off any 6" sandwich
By a Kansan reporter
The employee told police that two men attacked him near an apartment in the 1700 block of Ohio Street, Maltoven said. The employee had to deliver two pizzas there, but no one was inside the apartment.
--valued together at $181, the two men ran away each in different directions, Mulvenon said.
After taking the pizzas and cash
The thieves either knew the area well or had planned the robbery in detail because they easily avoided bushes and other obstacles as they ran away, the employee told police.
The employee told police that he did not resist because he thought the men might beat him up if he did, Mulvenon said. The employee was not hurt.
Mulvenon said investigators had no suspects or leads in the case.
On campus
> Three exhibitions, "Ceramics of the Weimar Republic," "Prints of the 1908s," and "Chinese Bronzes from the Sackler Collection," will be on display today through Dec. 30 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
▶ "The Spencer Prespio, a collection of Nativity figures, will be on display today through Jan. 7 at the Spencer Museum of Art.
Three exhibitions, "Ceramics or
▶ A potluck dinner sponsored by KU Bible Study will be at 6 p.m. today at 1919 Vermont St.
▶ A meeting of the KU Folk Dance Club will be at 7:30 p.m. today at St. John's Catholic Church.
A meeting of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will be at 7 p.m. today at the Daisy Hill Room in the Burge Union.
► A concert by the Lawrence Civic Choir will be at 8 p.m. today at First United Methodist Chuch, 946 Vermont St. "The Christmas Story" and other carols will be performed. Tickets are $1 for students and senior citizens, $3 for adults.
A worship service sponsored by KU Bible Study will be at 10:30 a.m. Sunday at the Big Eight Room in the Kansas Union.
> An ECKANKAR worship service will be at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union.
Editor's note
▶ The Kansan apologizes to those gang members' ethnicity in the Page who were offended by mention of 1 story in Monday's Kansan.
THE GREATER KANSAS CITY GRADUATE CHAPTER INVITES OUR UNDERGRADUATE FIJI BROTHERS TO JOIN US
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Police report
Stereo equipment and a radar detector valued together at $797 were taken Wednesday or Thursday from a student's locked car in the 400 block of North 2nd Street, Lawrence police reported.
News from the hill.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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> A pitbull named Pate valued at $100 was taken Wednesday from a Hutchinson resident's car in the 400 block of .orth 2nd Street, Lawrence police reported.
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Campus/Area
University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
3
Two people charged in Topeka murders
By Rich Cornell Kansan staff writer
A man and woman were formally charged yesterday in Shawnee County with killing an elderly Topeka woman Monday. The man was also charged in Douglas County with kidnapping and killing two other Topeka residents.
Gene Olander, Shawnee County district attorney, said yesterday that he charged Tyrone L. Baker, 19, of Topeka, and Lisa A. Pfenennestiel, 19, of Auburn, with one count of first degree murder, one count of aggravated burglary, three counts of kidnapping and one count of conspiracy to commit aggravated burglary.
Baker and Pfennensiel were charged with killing Ida Mae Dougherty, 72, of Topeka.
"The death was by asphyxiation," Olander said.
He would not specify whether she was asphyxicated by stranulation.
Loren Anderson, Douglas County sheriff, said Dougherty's body was found Wednesday morning by investigators in a field near County Road 2190, also known as the River Road, about five miles northwest of Lecompton.
Lt. Bud Brooks of the Topeka police said yesterday that investigators thought that Baker, possibly with Pfennentsiel's help, killed Dougherty Monday morning in her home. They apparently wanted to burglarize the house.
About 11:30 a.m. Monday, Brooks said, a gunman believed to be Baker
was surprised in Dougherty's house by three of her neighbors. The gunman made Lester M. Haley, 87, his wife Nancy C. Haley, 69, and Verne B. Horne, 68, get into Dougherty's car after they walked on in him.
The Haleys and Horne checked on Dougherty because she had not taken her morning newspapers from her driveway, Brooks said. About two miles west of Lecompton, the gunman let them out of the car.
A woman driving on River Road saw Horne waving for help, Brooks said. The woman took Horne to her nearby farmhouse, Horne called her husband and he called the Topeka police.
Anderson said investigators found the Haleys' bodies Tuesday afternoon near a dilapidated two-story stone house beside the River Road.
Olander said he charged Baker and Pfennensiel with the kidnappings of the Haleys and Horne.
Baker's bond was increased yesterday from $300,000 to $500,000, said Sue Carpenter, Shawnee County assistant district attorney.
Pfennentiel's bond remained at $8,000. Carpenter said. Both are at county jail. The county jail. Call for their preliminary hearing should be set by Dec. 14.
Brooks said the burglary and conspiracy charges stemmed from items found from Dougherty's house, including her car. He would not say what other items were found
Investigators from the Topeka police arrested Baker and Pfennstiel around midnight Wednesday.
Brooks said.
Investigators think Baker and Pfennentienst chose to burglarize Dougherty's house at random, Brooks said. He would not say what led police to think Dougherty was killed in her home.
He would not specify whether police think Pfennnestil was with Baker throughout the entire day.
Jim Flory, Douglas County mourn attorney, also charged Baker yesterday, he said. He charged Baker with the kidnappings and murders of the Haleys and the aggravated assault of Horne.
He did not charge Pfennenttiel, indicating that investigators do not need to be with Baker when he brought the Halys and Horne into Douglas County.
Baker's bond was set at $50,000 in Douglas County, Flory said.
Flory will help Olander prosecute the Shawnee County cases until they are resolved. Flory said, Then, a bearer at Baker will allow officers from the Shawnee County sheriff's department to arrest him for the charges Flory filed.
Then, Olander will assist Flory as he prosecutes Baker for the Haley killings and the assault of Horne, Flory said.
Brooks said investigators found a small-caliber handgun, but refused to say where they found it or if the Haleys were killed with it.
Carol Moddrell, Douglas County coroner, said Wednesday that both Haleys died from two gunshot wounds from small-caliber bullets.
Minority protesters stop traffic, office procedure
By Doug Fishback Kansan staff writer
Staff in the chancellor's office closed the office for lunch Wednesday as demonstrators gathered outside to protest the administration's minority recruitment and retention policies.
James Scaly, assistant to the chancellor, said staff in the administrative office complex on the second floor of Strong Hall closed and locked inside. The complex and turned off the lights as the protesters gathered about noon.
Some staff remained in the office and ate their lunches during the protest, he said.
"Most days we're open from 12 to 1." Sally said.
But Wednesday, the office was
- James Scally
Everyone in the administration was going to be gone. There was nobody for them to meet with.'
assistant to the chancellor
closed to let the protesters know that no administrators were available to speak with them.
Members of the Black Men of Today burned a copy of the Minority Issues Task Force report in front of Strong Hall and stopped traffic by repeatedly crossing Jayhawk Boulevard.
Scally said that the demonstration, which involved about 80 protesters, had not posed a danger to staff in the
chancellor's office.
"It was an attention getter and that was all," he said. "People do that once a month and have a perfect right to."
Scally said the office workers did not call for KU police intervention.
KU police did respond, however, said KU police spokesman Sgt. Schuyler Bailey. Three or four onduty officers went to the scene, he said.
Bailey said officers stopped traffic for the protesters' safety while they crossed the street for about two minutes.
"I don't believe there was ever a threat to anyone inside Strong," he said.
Scally the office staff reopened the office about 1 p.m.
---
THE NEW WOODWORKING TEAM OF THE SCHOOL OF HORTICULTURE AT THE FIRE HOUSE IN BERLIN. ONE MAN IS PLAYING WITH A BOX OF PINE TREE MAKES UP A STACK OF TOMATOES, AND THE OTHER MAN IS HANDY FOR EACH STEP. THEY ARE USED TO BUILD WOODEN PIECES FOR HOME DECORATION.
Andrew Morrison/KANSAN
'Tis the season
With the help of an employee, Dutchman's Forest owner Steven Vanderwilde, left, drills the bottom of a tree for a tree stand. Dutchman's Forest tree farm is near McClouth and has about 200,000 Scotch Pine trees.
Council approves Parking Board's budget
By Kate Lee
The University Council yesterday approved two amendments to the Parking Board's proposed budget, including one to reduce the proposed cost increase of residence hall permits, before approving the entire budget.
By Kate Lee Kansan staff write
The other amendment recommended that the $2 fee charged to basketball patrons parking in the new parking garage be increased to $4.
The Council began discussion of the budget at its Nov. 30 meeting, but a vote on the matter was not taken because a quorum was not present.
The proposed permit fee increase would affect all parking permits except emeritus and visitor permits.
The budget proposed a cost increase in residence hall permits, raising them from $23 to $35.
Morris Falman, chairman of the Parking Board, said the increase was necessary because the Parking
Department did not receive funds from the University or the state and had to generate its income through the sale of permits and collection of fines.
Pat Warren, a Student Senate representative to the Council, proposed that the residence hall permit fee be increased to $30.
"There are two reasons for this," he said. "One, many students only drive their cars to school and then park them in the dorm lots. They don't use them after that. They drive
to school from wherever they are from, Denver or Oklahoma, and then basically store them in the lots.
"The second reason is that it is not fair to target one group. If a blue lotto had to be reinforced, would those teams have to be a tax on the residence bills?"
Warren said the $7 increase would generate about $120,000 for the Parking Department, about $20,000 more than Don Kearns, director of the Parking Department, said was used for the residence halls lots yearly.
An amendment proposed by J. Bunker Clark, professor of music history, music and dance, to decrease the hourly rate for using the garage during the day from 50 to 25 cents an hour was defeated.
Iaman said the budget now wou be presented to other carrier groups. their approval and recommendations. The Board would then discuss it with the director of parking services before it was presented to the executive vice chancellor.
KU attorney has a passion for challenges and new places
By Angela Baughman Kansan staff writer
As many things in life do, it all came down to a matter of finances.
Rose Marino did not become a lawyer because she grew up wanting to be one.
She chose the University of Kansas School of Law rather than studying folklore at an Indiana school because it would come up with the institution tutelage.
"I never had any desire to be a lawyer," said Marino, who has been appointed general counsel for the chancellor in 1982. "I never even considered it."
Marino, who was born in Manhattan, Kan, and graduated from Salina High School in 1965, received her law degree in May 1977. Now she is representing the University during dismissal hearings for Dorothy Wellner, a tenured professor of anthropology since 1970. The hearings, which began Oct. 16, are the first of their kind in KU's 123-year history.
The reason she did apply to the school was because she liked challenges. Marino said that some people thought law school would be too much of a challenge for her because she had two little girls at home.
it was sort of a challenge." she said. "I wanted to see if I could do it."
The open dismissal hearings are scheduled to continue until Dec. 22, Marino finished presenting witnesses for the University on Dec. 1.
The majority of her time on the job is spent in preparation, she said.
She said that the office also was involved in reviewing contracts and research grants and in answering questions from faculty and staff.
"With law, there's a lot of tedium, a lot of preparation," Marino said. "In this office, we do a lot that's not litigation."
Besides her duties as associate general counsel, Marino is an adjunct faculty member at the School of Law and serves as adviser to the Turkish and American Student Association which spent 1970 to 1972 teaching English in Izmir, Turkey, for the Turkish-American Association.
"I really do like to travel," Marino said. "I kind of have a passion for going to different and interesting countries, especially Turkey."
She also spent the summer of 1966 in Moscow at the Summer Language Institute. Marino received a bachelor's degree from KU, with distinction, in Russian language and literature in January 1969.
THE WICHITA EAGLE
Before her appointment to the KU campus, Marino worked as assistant general counsel at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Ann Victoria Thomas, general counsel for the University, is in charge of both general counsel offices and has worked with Marino since 1981.
is now recruiting students as sales representatives.
"She's a great colleague to have," Thomas said. "She's very competent and probably goes beyond the call of duty."
As a sales representative, you can earn extra money by selling Wichita Eagle newspaper subscriptions to University of Kansas students during the spring semester enrollment. For more information call our toll free number:
Marino worked as managing attorney at Kansas Legal Services Inc. in Lawrence from 1798 to 1981 and as a staff attorney at Legal Aid of Western Missouri Inc., Kansas City, Mo., from 1797 to 1978.
She said she enjoyed working with indigent people in those jobs, although it could be emotionally draining.
"I really wanted to help people," Marino said. "I loved Legal Aid a lot. I thought it was great."
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4
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
U.S. bases in Philippines prove beneficial to Aquino
Philippine President Corizon Aquino is breathing a little easier since the most serious challenge to her power ended this week. So are U.S. citizens with interests in the Philippines.
The rebellion of part of the Filipino army succeeded in capturing some military bases, causing panic in the government and forcing the United States to take a stand about supporting Aquino.
In the early hours of the revolt, Aquino requested that the United States provide air cover to allow her forces to regroup. At the time, rebels were strafing and bombing the presidential compound in Manila.
The United States, under presidential order, provided cover for Philippine air force bases. U.S. Phantom F-4 fighters pinned down the rebel planes without firing a shot. This allowed the Philippine air force to regain control of the skies and the Aquino government to stay in power.
President Bush was correct in granting Aquino's request for military assistance. The United States has, for a number of years, taken an interest in Philippine affairs. This has not always turned out for the best. U.S. support for Ferdinand Marcos could be called a terrible policy at best.
But Aquino rose to power in 1986 through free elections and, unlike Marcos, enjoys widespread support. She therefore deserves U.S.support in fighting those on both the right, Marcos loyalists, and the left, communist insurgents, who would like to see her fail.
As the United States and the Philippines move toward negotiations concerning the future of U.S. military installations in that country, the Aquino government should keep in mind the role that U.S. forces played in putting down this revolt. The best interests of the Philippines, both economic and political, are served at the moment by the presence of the U.S. bases.
Brett Brenner for the editorial board
Summit provides pattern for dissolving intolerance
President Bush and Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev have each made promising strides on the road to peace by attending the summit meeting last weekend.
Although most arms reduction agreements are scheduled to be decided at a potential multinational summit in Europe next summer, both leaders, by meeting in Malta, have ignited the spark that could open East-West borders.
Bush said he hoped that both superpowers would cut their conventional forces in Europe in the near future and cut an additional 50 percent in long-range nuclear and chemical weapons.
As a result of their meeting, and the likelihood of future arms and trade negotiations, the superpower leaders have elevated us to a new point in history, a point where East and West attempt to communicate instead of dominate. Although Bush said U.S. troops would remain in Europe with ally approval, he was optimistic about the significant meeting between himself and Gorbachev, calling it the beginning of a "new era."
As we enter this new era, we should encourage our leaders to act responsibly and communicate freely and openly with one another. Allow them to remember the past events in Eastern Europe which have demonstrated people's desire for a free world and one which allows them to actively participate in their governmental system.
The people of the world are calling for a world without boundaries, one not divided by East or West, but a world which is united. It is hoped that the future actions of our leaders will reflect the will of the people to negotiate and dissolve the wall of intolerance which has existed between East and West.
Thom Clark for the editorial board
Members of the editorial board are David Stewart, Stan Diel, Brett Brenner, Ric Brack, Daniel Niemi, Craig Welch, Kathy Walsh, Thom Clark, Tiffany Harness and Scott Patty.
News staff
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CONFESSIONS
COULD WE MAKE THAT A HUNDRED HAIL MIKHAILS?
'Atrocious' acts not too uncommon
Sometimes it is difficult not to comment on columns which appear in the University Daily Kansan, but when I read James Madison's recent guest column, I could not resist.
First, let me correct what I think are some errors. Mr. Madison was obviously not raised on a farm. Although he found two male dogs attempting sexual intercourse "atrocious," he errs in concluding that this small sample proves that "nature was the victor" because the act was not achieved. In rural Kansas, such an act is frequently achieved and frustration is not the consequence, as far as we humans can tell. So maybe his comments about the "design of dog" making it impossible for such an act to be completed needs re-examination, unless, of course, he has a narrow definition of what constitutes sexual interactions. I suppose Mr. Madison could find anal intercourse between females "atrocious" because his erotic preferences do not include such sexual choices between consensual partners.
Dennis M. Dailey
Second, he refers to sexual "preference" as the "whole confrontation, between the heterosexual and homosexual community." Erotic orientation is not an issue of preference, which implies choice. Mr. Madison did not wake up one morning as a child and decide he was going to be straight or gay. He just discovered as he grew that his erotic orientation was either for the same gender or the opposite gender, whichever the case may be for him, and then he elected or did not elect through
Guest columnist
time to act on that orientation in his interactions with others. He asserts that this “preference” is nothing other than “sexual gratification, regardless of form,” and concludes that sexual interactions between same gendered persons is contrary to “form” (read unnatural). I wonder what Mr. Madison would say about those persons in our society who “believe” that sexual interactions between persons of different racial backgrounds (read Black/white) is also “sexual gratification, regardless of form” (read unnatural). Would it not be “against nature” for Blacks to be sexually attracted to whites and whites to be sexually attracted to Blacks? Clearly, no such “preference” exists and clearly such sexual attraction is not “against nature,” even if the heterosexual oriented, interracial couple preferred anal intercourse as an expression in their relationship.
Finally, he raised the issue of "other types of sexual vices, such as sex with animals," reasoning that affirmation of homosexuality as an erotic orientation means that there would be no boundaries in the expression of sexual feelings. That is
hardly the case, since, for example, any coercive sexual acts would not be accepted. Animals cannot give consent; however, two men or two women can give consent and that is the issue.
If Mr. Madison would simply say that he has a religious belief that directs him to not "lay down my moral beliefs" and as a result he has a belief that homosexuality is a sin, I would have no quarrel with him. To each his/her own when it comes to theological belief systems. To step outside of his "moral beliefs" and argue from a moral standpoint, he supports a support of his "moral belief" regarding his sexual orientation is another matter. He has tried to argue "regriddess of form," making it easy for me to reject these errors in thinking, yet grant him his moral belief system.
I suspect that Mr. Madison's quarrel with gay people using minority status is much more of a product of his moral belief system, and yes, his homophobia, than it is a matter of "the gay and lesbian community to falsely equate our (African American) positions." Maybe gays and lesbians held out the hope that one oppressed minority would possess the capacity to empathize and support another oppressed minority. Obviously, that is not the case with Mr. Madison, and one can only hope that he is but a small voice amongst his oppressed minority.
▶ Dennis M. Dalley is a professor in Social Welfare
LETTERS to the EDITOR
Madison missed the point
There I was, reading your Dec. 4 column James Madison, when it occurred to me that you missed the point. Somehow you mistakenly equated the word "diversity" with the word "minority." The Celebrate Diversity campaign was not intended to support just minorities but to support diversity in all areas, in all humans. This includes, among other issues, diversity in race, in spiritual observances and in sexual orientation.
The more I read, the more appalled I became. Never mind the triviality in defining "nature." Never mind the complications with your dog story. Never mind the fact that many of your arguments do not-make sense. Never mind the fact that you think in terms of "sexual preference" as opposed to "sexual orientation." Never mind your assumption that a social breakdown would be an undesirable occurrence for this country. And, never mind your homophobic tendencies.
pointing out "the dangers that homosexuality poses for society." In reality, you pointed out the dangers that take place when one group of people considers itself better than another. We are all humans, and we all deserve to be treated with respect and equality. If we regard certain people as being lesser humans than ourselves, then we are in effect playing the role of "little Hitlers." For these reasons and for the sake of diversity, it is imperative that we open our minds before we open our mouths.
The problem, Mr. Madison, is quite simple. You claimed to be
Becki Elkins Lawrence senior
Nature not diversity issue
James Madison, in his column of Dec. 4, titled "Gays shouldn't use minority status," in incorrectly assumed that he was the subject of my column of Nov. 10 supporting the Celebrate Diversity campaign. The person to whom I referred was not African American. I also suspect that he has mistaken some other person for me. If not, he is the first person in my life to describe me as being "frail" given the fact that I stand 6 feet tall and weigh 170 pounds.
As a master's degree candidate studying evolutionary botany, as well as holding undergraduate degrees in biology and cultural
anthropology, I found his argument for what is natural and unnatural to be very simplistic.
Warren Hauk
Warren Hauk St. Charles, Mo., graduate student
Insulted by homosexuals
In response to James Madison's comments on the use of the term "minority" by homosexuals, I am in wholehearted agreement. As an African American, I have long been insulted by homosexuals' use of the term "minority" in order to try to attain the same rights previously accepted minority groups have fought long and hard for.
The term "minority" originally was based on the number of members of a distinct part of a group relative to the collective numbers of the whole group. However, as American English is apt to do, the meaning has transcended the simple numerical meaning and has become a term for non-Caucasian individuals.
However, homosexuals do not fit this description. In terms of numbers they are smaller, but to call themselves "minorities" is an insult to all of us who struggle daily for racial equality. The question of homosexuality is a phenomenon that is contrary to the moral, ethical and religious foundations I have acquired.
Munro C. Richardson Kansas City, Mo., freshman
Oppressed should unite
I am completely outraged by the unjust stance taken by James Madison in his recent column concerning gays. He claims that to equate the positions of gays and lesbians with that of Blacks is false. I must stongly disagree. Oppression takes but one form.
Social movement organizations such as the NAACP and NOW are reluctant to join forces with the Gay Rights Movement. This is a very unfortunate decision. There are an estimated 10 to 40 million gays and lesbians in the United States today. Those figures represent quite a large constituency, even that composed of Black Americans, who advantage of all oppressed groups to form a single coalition and to present a strong, united front against those who oppress them.
I would like to question why Madison felt the need to describe the gay male behind the petition table as being "fail'?". This appears to be nothing more than a senseless, empty stereotype that all or most gay males are effeminate or weak. There is no purpose in perpetuating these stereotypes or those of any other group.
Kirsten E. Schwab Aurora, Colo., graduate student
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
5
English group to give holiday show
Bv Tracv Wilkinson
By Tracy Wilkinson Kansan staff writer
A six-member vocal ensemble from England will present "A Holiday Show" to a sold out house at 8 o'clock on Saturday in Crafton-Preyer Theater.
The King's Singers performance, a stop on their current tour of North America, Europe and Asia, will be part of the Chamber Music Series, according to a University Concert Series press release.
The King's Singers will present a variety of Christmas and holiday carols in combination with other pieces.
They will end with "Arrangements
in Close Harmony," a selection of their songs which ranges from Bach movements to Beatles tunes.
Jacqueline Davis, director of the fine arts concert series, said in a press release that, because the comedy list would be arranged for tickets would be arranged.
To sign up on the list, people must go to the Murphy Hall Box Office.
Nancy Kiser-Caplan, with the concert series, said the office was still waiting for approval for the release of more tickets.
If tickets are available, they will be sold at the box office for $8 and $6.50 for KU students and students from other universities. For adults, the cost is $12 for senior citizens and other
students, and $16 and $13 for the public.
The King's Singers performed in Lawrence during the 1986-87 school year at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 923 Vermont St.
The group formed in 1968 at King's College in Cambridge, England, and have since recorded more than 50 songs. This is their 21st performance season.
Members of the group are Jeremy Jackman, Alastair Hume, Bob Chilcott, Bruce Russell, Simon Carrington and Stephen Connolly.
Before the show, Murphy Hall lobby will ring with the sounds of the Plymouth Festival Ringers.
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Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Dole speaks at conference for disabled
By Melanie Matthes
By Melanie Matthes
Kansan staff writer
The U.S. Congress will continue to blaze a trail in health care programs for people with disabilities, Sen. Robert Dole told a group of about 200 medical and social service professionals, educators and government officials yesterday.
In a morning address to the Governor's Conference on the Prevention of Childhood Disabilities, Dole said he was confident that the conference would come up with ideas that Congress would be able to use to develop legislation.
Yesterday's conference, sponsored by the University of Kansas Medical Center and other state medical associations, will continue today at the Holiday Inn Holdcom, 200 McDonald
Drive
The purpose of the conference is to increase awareness of the preventability of childhood disabilities and to encourage involvement in and support of such programs, said Joseph Hollowell, director of the Children's Rehabilitation Unit at the Med Center.
"There is ample evidence that developmental disabilities can be prevented," he said. "The issues are clear and the possibilities are within our reach. The challenge is great but, by working together to develop these programs, I think that we can go a long way."
Dole said that he had long been a support of programs for people who are blind.
"It occurred to me years ago that, as someone with a disability, I wasn't
doing enough to help the disabled," he said.
Dole was injured when he served in World War II and has a disabled right leg.
He said he had worked to create opportunities and programs for people with disabilities, such as the Americans With Disabilities Act, passed during the last Legislative session, which requires that businesses provide accessibility for people with disabilities.
Dole said that one area in which childhood disabilities could be prevented is
"There are 375 infants born each year added to drugs," Dole said. Many of these addicted infants are going to experience lifetime disabilities."
Hollowell said that many childhood
disabilities could be prevented by interrupting the events that led to injury. Drug abuse and AIDS transmission are instances of events that often lead to disabling injuries.
"Drugs are a big part of handicap prevention that we will deal heavily with in the conference," he said.
Dole said that preventing drug abuse began with education, enforcement and treatment.
AIDS transmission is an issue that also must be looked at carefully. Hollowell said.
The number of children carrying the AIDS virus is increasing. Dole and many mothers with AIDS don't learn that the disease when they deliver their babies.
"Education is important for the prevention of a disease that knows no bounds."
Continued from p. 1
Dole
"I would hope we don't build our hopes on the life of one individual in the world," he said of Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.
An economic pressures grow in the Soviet Union, the Soviet government will troops out of Europe. Dole said, and some politicians demand paratroon strength
Dole also met with Gov. Mike Hewlett Wednesday and discussed the state's property tax problems, the state's property tax problems, and disassociated himself from the issue.
"I have a pact with state legislators," he said. "They don't give me advice, and I don't give them advice."
He did say he supported Hayden's decision to call the Legislature into special session to seek solutions to the problem. The special session
begins today.
Dole predicted that public outlay about the $260 billion government bailout of ailing savings and loan institutions as many as people learned more about.
"I don't mean that people aren't concerned," Dole said. "They just didn't understand."
Dole ended his campus visit yesterday with a tour of the new Dole Human Development Center, named for him.
He said he resisted any effort to have the building named for him, but said, "I was overruled."
Dole said he planned to return to KU, possibly with his wife, Labor Secretary Elizabeth Dole, for the dedication of the Dole Center, which is scheduled for occupancy in summer 1990.
BOTTLE
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International holiday festival
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
Nation/World
Philippine peace talks falter
Rival claims coup will not be the last
The Associated Press
MANILA, Philippines — Talks with rebel holdouts on Cebu Island broke down yesterday after mutineers in Manila laid down their arms, and a political rival predicted more attempts to overthrow President Corazon Aquino.
Cardinal Jaime L. Sin, Roman Catholic archbishop of Manila, endorsed an appeal by Aquino for people to join a mass rally today in support of democracy.
"The future of the nation is in your hands," the cardinal said to Filipina.
In February 1986, hundreds of thousands of people heeded his urgings by filling the streets to help soldiers who had revolted against Marcos. That became the "people
power" uprising that forced President Ferdinand E. Marcos into exile and put Aquino in power.
Much of that support has eroses because of rising prices, other economic problems and charges of incompetence and corruption. When rebels marched back to their Manila barracks yesterday from the Makati town, a week-long mutiny, they chanted 'No noreunder!' The fight goes on!"
At least 79 people were killed and more than 570 wounded in the uprising, which began Dec. 1 in Manila to Cebu, 380 miles southeast of Manila.
What action will be taken against the rebels has not been made clear. Aquino initially warned them to "surrender or die" and later declared a war with the rebels, she allowed loyal military commanders to resolve the crisis peacefully.
After the five previous coup attempts, most rebel officers were simply confined to barracks, and many enlisted men were returned to
Aquino asked the people yesterday, in "a call to the nation" on television, to join the mass rally and "tell the Filipinos that we are a brave nation."
the ranks.
Vice President Salvador Laurel predicted more coup attempts until Aquino addresses what he described as fundamental problems of poverty and social injustice. Laurel was her running mate in 1986 but later broke with Aquino.
In Cebu City, about 400 rebels at Mactan Air Base refused to surrender.
Gen. Renato de Villa, the military chief of staff, pleaded with the leader of the Mactan rebels, Brig. Gen. Jose Commendador, not to carry out threats to blow up the 16 military aircraft at the base.
Commendador refused local politicians' offers to guarantee him and his troops safe passage from the base and said his men would hold out until Aquino called new elections and resigned.
Czech premier submits resignation
The Associated Press
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia — Premier Ladislav Adamec resigned yesterday while still bargaining with the powerful opposition, which has told the Communists to form an acceptable government or face another general strike.
Adamec, 63, announced his resignation at a meeting with non-Communist party officials about changes in the government, said Bohuslav Kucera of the Socialist Party. He
quoted Adamec as saying a new, younger leader was needed to achieve a compromise.
President Gustav Husak asked Deputy Premier Marian Calf, 43, to and continue searching for a solution, an official CTK news agency reported.
Calfa, a Communist, has attended most of Adamec's recent meetings with opposition leaders, who rejected the Cabinet he formed last Sunday.
Adamec had been expected to name a new government today that
would involve some form of power sharing with the opposition.
Adamace's resignation was the latest capitulation to a pro-democracy movement that, in less than a month, has driven activists to relinquish their monarchy.
Also at the meeting yesterday, the Politburo established a commission to "investigate serious cases of abuse of office by certain party officials," and said a special party congress would be moved from January to Dec. 20.
EAST GERMAN ELECTIONS: The Communist Party in East Berlin agreed yesterday to cooperate with the opposition, after 40 years of ruling East Germany using Stalinist methods. Both sides proposed elections in May and agreed to rewrite the constitution.
The Communist Party may even follow the Hungarian party in changing its name.
The first talks between party and opposition delegations were held after publication of the new Communist program. The talks were meant to recommend that parliament schedule elections for May 6.
LITHUANIA: The Communist Party suffered a major defeat in the Soviet Union yesterday when the republic of Lithuania abolished the constitutional guarantee of the party and legalized a multiparty system.
Lithuania's parliament defies Moscow with a resounding 243-1 vote to end the party's total dominance of all political and social organizations, within the Baltic republic. Another 98 deputies abstained or stayed away from the session.
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev has resolutely opposed a multi-party system for the Soviet Union. The challenge to the Communist power structure comes at a time when he faces a crippled economy, general politicalism and demands from conservative communists for more order.
World Briefs
IRAQ TESTS MISSILES: Iraq claimed yesterday that it had test-fired two long-range missiles and successfully launched a rocket capable of carrying satellites into
space, developments that could affect the Middle East's military balance.
Hussein Kamel, minister in industry and military industrialization, claimed in a statement broadcast by state-run Baghdad fired two surface-to-surface missiles with a range of 1.240 miles.
That is sufficient range to reach Cairo to the west, Athens and Istanbul to the northwest, all of which lie on the southern Soviet Union to the north.
If the Iraqi claims are true, the developments will heighten Soviet and U.S. fears of a new arms race in the Middle East.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said he had heard reports that Iraq had developed an intercontinental ballistic missile, but did not know if the reports were accurate.
Police had evacuated the crowded shopping precinct in Lisburn, following an IRA warning telephoned to a radio station 20 minutes before the blast, the Royal Ulster Constabulary said.
BELFAST BOMB EXPLODES: A car bomb planted by the Irish Republican Army exploded in a Belfast, Northern Ireland, shopping district yesterday, injuring 19 people and heavily damaging surrounding stores, police said.
A police spokesman said the bomb, packed into a van parked near the Market Square shopping center, caused widespread damage. Police estimated the size of the bomb at 500 pounds.
Lisbain, seven miles south of Belfast, is the headquarters for the British army in Northern Ireland.
ISRAELIS ACCEPT TALKS: On the eve of the Palestinian uprising's second anniversary, Israeli Prime Minister Mizkham Shakir accepted a U.S. call for talks by Egyptian, Israeli and U.S. officials as a step toward peace, a spokesman said yesterday.
Shamir called a meeting today of the four top Cabinet ministers to approve sending Foreign Minister to Israel, Israeli television reported.
The moves came as the Israeli army clamped an indefinite on 750,000 Palestinians in the occupied Gaza Strip and was expected to limit movement by about 1 million people in the West Bank to block protests linked to today's anniversary.
HUJAN RIGHTS TOLL: Sixteight human rights monitors were killed worldwide in the past year, twice the number in the previous 12 months, an international human rights monitoring organization said yesterday.
Human Rights Watch said 63 of the killings were in countries usually considered to be democratic.
The report said, "the dangers that attend efforts to monitor and defend human rights in some 'democracies' should give pause to the democratic tide that has swept across the world in the 1860s."
The organization said it had little or no information on persecutions of human rights monitors in Albania, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Romania or Saudi Arabia because it is virtually impossible for citizens in those countries to monitor government activities.
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8
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Plastic foam removal nearly finished at cafeterias
By Chris Evans Kansan staff writer
The partial removal of plastic foam products from KU cafeterias is nearly complete, and officials involved with the change are almost satisfied.
"We're 90 to 95 percent changed over for things we're going to be changing over," said Bob Richeon, food services manager of the Kansas Union. "We are pretty much pleased. We have some of our customers
tell us that they would rather we had retained the foam, and there are some who have been very pleased with the paper."
Some people have complained about paper cups that do not hold in liquid for long periods of time and need to be reused, that do not hold in heat be said.
Brian Schwegmann, a student on the University of Kansas Memorial Corporation committee whose members decided to remove foam products, said he was mostly satisfied with the changeover.
"They're probably doing the best they can, given the directive they were issued," he said. "They've done a very fine job of converting to paper. From an ecological point of view we have more reasonable methods."
Schwegmann said he would like to see more reusable, washable plates and cups used in the unions and in Wescoe Terrace Cafeteria.
"That's not very likely unless they receive another directive from the Memorial Corporation," he said.
Richeson said further changes were possible but that he was concentrating on the current changeover.
"In an institution such as ours, it would be difficult to go completely to china and glassware," he said, citing reasons of inventory, storage and breakage.
One remaining decision in the changeover is whether to raise the
price of caferaie products now served in paper containers.
The price of a paper coffee cup, at 3.8 cents, is 93 percent more expensive than the same kind of foam cup, Richeson said. Cold-beverage paper cups cost as much as 23 percent more, at about 4.5 cents each.
People who do not want to use paper products can bring in their own reusable bottles. Richson said, Customers can fill squeeze bottles for 50 cents.
Hashinger to test hall recycling
By Bryan Swan Kansan staff writer
"The key is that they get the recyclables to me in the proper
Mark Akin, co-owner of River City Recycling Co., said he had been contacted last week by interested Hashinger residents and residents who wanted to start a residence hall recycling plan for some time.
Effective residence hall recycling may soon become a reality if a pilot program conducted next semester by River City Recycling Co. at Hashing City Hall proves successful.
He said he hoped the idea would spread to other residence halls and would be a part of next semester's campus-wide recycling program that would include nine campus buildings and 32 collection barrels.
state," Akin said. "Then I can recycle hundreds of thousands of pounds."
he said he had been invited to a recycling forum on Wednesday at Hashinger to discuss the plan with residents.
"We'll unload the barrels and then take them immediately back," he said."We'll come twice a week if we have to. This is one stop, just one big stop. It's not a big
Akin said the plan agreed upon by both parties called for recycling only aluminum and paper. Two collection barrels provided by River City Recycling would be placed in the lobby of every floor, one each for aluminum and paper. Each floor's resident assistant would appoint a recycling coordinator who would be responsible for taking the barrels to the hall's leading dock at least once a week.
deal for us. We already do 100,000 pounds a month of recyclables."
Akin said that housing department officials had expressed concern about the program making him a "candidate" toORS but that they had approved it.
Jennifer Boyle, Hashinger social chairman, said residents had tried to recycle on their own, but the efforts usually died out.
"So many residents wanted to recycle, a lot of individuals do, but it was not organized well," she said. "This way all the floors can concentrate their efforts on one day. I think we have the capacity to do well with the proper organization."
Boyle said Hashinger would not make any money from the program but thought most residents considered the program worthwhile.
January activities to honor King
By Cory S. Anderson Kansan staff writer
A weekend of activities in Lawrence will mark the fifth anniversary of celebrating Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday in January as an official holiday.
The University of Kansas, the Ecumenical Christian Ministries and the city of Lawrence are co-sponsoring the activities to commemorate the birthday of the slain civil rights leader.
The celebration will start at 6 p.m.
Jan. 13 with a banquet at the Kansas
Union Ballroom, said Rev. William
Dulin, president of the ministries.
The keynote speaker for the evening
will be Martin Luther King III.
His speech is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m.
On Jan. 14, a community musical will be conducted at Central Junior High School, 1400 Massachusetts St., featuring several the kU Inspirational Gospel Voices.
On King's birthday, Jan. 15, there will be a commemorative service at the First Regular Missionary Baptist Church, 1648 Verm St. This service is organized by the Indian Junior College, city and Douglass County offices, Dulin said.
Because the activities are scheduled during the last weekend of winter break, Dulin said he hoped they could return early so they could attend.
Banquet tickets cost $20 for dinner and the lecture and $10 for just the lecture. Students in kindergarten through 12th grade can attend the lecture free. Tickets are available at the Office of Minority Affairs, 324 Strong Hall; the Cross Reference Bookstore, 2449 Iowa St.; or from any of the nine pastors of the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread St. The other two activities are free and open to the public.
"We're hoping to get a lot of publicity out before they leave," Dulin said.
BSU show to present top talent
By a Kansan reporter
Mr. Ebony and Ms. Essence of the University of Kansas will be selected Saturday by the Black Student Union at its annual Mr. Ebony/Ms. Essence nageant.
Three men and six women will compete for the titles, said Michelle Wilson, chairman of the pageant committee. They will be judged in six areas: prepared questions, impromptu questions, talent, poise, modeling and overall presentation.
Prizes are $100 for each winner, paid registration to the annual Big Eight Council on Black Student Government Conference and subscriptions to several magazines, Wilson said.
Although talent is part of the competition, it is not the focus, said Frenchette Garth, BSU president.
"Talent is involved but not the only aspect. It also includes things like public speaking and public presence," she said. "The pageant, to the BSU, is a way to show the campus and the community positive role models."
The pageant will be at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Ballroom in the Kansas Union.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
9
Downtown shops revel in cooler temperatures
By Steve Buckner Kansan staff writer
The downturn in temperatures has meant an upturn in holiday business, downtown Lawrence retailers said.
"Actually the cold weather helps," said Joe Flannery, president of Weaver's Inc. Department Store, 901 Massachusetts St.
"It's been good and we've been pleased," Flannery said. "The shopping started in November, a little earlier than usual."
KU students are an important part of his clientele, he said.
"We have, a good KU student trade," Flannery said. "They're good customers."
Ken Campbell, manager of Campbell's clothing, 841 Massachusetts St., said he expected an increase in business as Christmas drew closer.
"It's not quite the Christmas shopping weather," he said. "It should pick up later."
Campbell admitted that his business was off slightly compared to last
year's volume, but he said he wasn't concerned about it.
"It's a little down," he said. "I'm not sure how good a judge that is, though, because last year was our best ever."
Sharon England, manager of Sunflower Surplus, 804 Massachusetts St., said her store's holiday sales were going well and represented an increase from last year, mostly from the sale of sweaters like sweaters and flannel shirts. She part of the store's success was because of its wide appeal.
"We take in in a regional group. We the of ourselves as a one-of-a-kind stone store."
Even businesses such as furniture stores can capitalize on the season with the right approach, said Vernie Wilson, salesman with Johnson Chet Furniture Co. Inc., 722 Massachusetts St.
The special items, Wilson said included wall decorations valets and.
"We're probably not as busy to the extent as a jewelry store or gift item store, but we put in some special items for gifts." he said.
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Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Union events to help students escape stress of final exam period
By Liz Hueben
Kansan staff writer.
The Kansas and Burge unions have teamed with Student Union Activities and Student Senate to plan final study breaks. "Finals: the Holiday Escape" will be Dec. 11 through 22
Activities to celebrate the holidays and to relieve finals' stress are scheduled in both unions for the great escape, including pictures with Santa, a jolly Frank Burge, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Dec. 14, said Toni Mesa, marketing coordinator for the Kansas and Burge unions. Burge was director of the unions from 1952 to 1983.
Kicking off the holiday festivities on Monday will be an international holidays festival sponsored in conjunction with SUA by the Office of Minority Affairs. Mesa said that five to eight participants would display holiday memorabilia depicting how Christmas is celebrated in their native countries from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Dec. 15 on level four of the Kansas Union, students can bring gifts to be wrapped. They are not charged, but she was not yet amped.
Also Monday, students can help decorate the tree in the Kansas Union from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Mesa said she that would be enjoyable for students to work with and for apartments where there was not enough room for a Christmas tree.
but students could bring their own materials to help them in their artistic endeavors.
In the spirit of giving, Student Senate has donated money to SUA to bring five free movies to Woodruff Auditorium throughout the two weeks, including the holiday classic, "It's a Wonderful Life," running twice on Dec. 20, Mesa said.
Students who cannot find quite the right card or gift to express their feelings can make their own holiday greeting cards from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the 13th and make their own ornaments at the same times on the 19th. Mesa said that the Kansas Union would provide the materials.
The information counter, KU Bookstores and the Jaybowl will offer specials during "the escape," and the Hawk Stop and the Hawks' Nest will give away free coffee after 5 p.m. Sunday through Friday and after 2 p.m. Sunday. Coffee will be available from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at the Hawks' Nest.
Sue Morrell, manager of student union programs, said that some students got so caught up in finals and studying that they did not realize the holidays were approaching.
"We don't offer the activities as something to do instead of studying but as relief because you need a break," Morrell said. "We offer the things so students don't get down, depressed and stressed out, because the holidays tend to do that. And when you add the stress of finals, it can get bad.
"We want to say, 'Life might be miserable right now because you have three finals, but it'll get better.'"
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
Arts/Entertainment
11
Trip's caravan rolls to Lawrence
SCHNEIDER AND KRISTA BALDENBERG
Trip Shakespeare, a band known for its poetic lyrics, will perform Saturday night at the Bottleneck
By Jennifer Reynolds Kansan staff writer
F from humble beginnings at a Minneapolis high school dance, to two independence
dance, to two independently released records and an album due on A&M Records in April, Trip Shakespeare has created a sound and an image that baffles fans and critics alike.
The band will play at 9 p.m. Saturday at the Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St.
"They are just real, real hard to explain," said Scott Mathews, Matthedt, Mimm., junior. "They have a really original aura to them."
Scott, who first saw the band at a high school dance, has followed its career from the beginning.
"I would say they play a '60s type of music in the sense that it is some really good guitar and some unbelievable vocals," he said. "I think they are the best singing band I have ever heard."
Jay Mathews, Mahtomedi, Minn., sophomore and Scott's brother, said that the band had been compared to Talking Heads but that the description wasn't very accurate.
"They are like Talking Heads more in stage presence than music," he said. "They are real spontaneous and unpredictable. There is really no one to compare them to. It is a style all their own."
Trip Shakespeare's music combines the heavy bass foundation of John Munson on bass and Elaine Harris on drums with the melodious rhythms of Dan and Matt Wilson on guitar and piano.
Jay, who also saw the band perform at a high school dance, said that
its music hadn't changed much but that its look had.
“At first they had sort of a Beatles look in suits and short hair,” he said. “Now, they dress in Goodwill clothes with the big collars and long hair.”
The Minneapolis-based band also has been known to appear on stage in costumes, including horns and wings, wings or enormous dorsal fins.
The band began in 1848 when Matt Wilson, an English major at Harvard University, placed an ad looking for someone with "wicked percussion hands." Harris, who had recently graduated from Harvard with a degree in biological anthropology, answered it, and the two began to play the Ivy League college band
scene.
Wilson dropped out of Harvard, and he and Harris decided to go to Napoleapolis to start a band. They picked up Munson, a University of Chicago Chinese/humanist senior and created the original Trip Shakespeare.
After the album "Applehead Man," independently released on Gark Records, Wilson's brother Dan joined the band. Dan, a Harvard Phi Beta graduate in environ- ment, will teach depth to their sound. Their second album "Are You Shakespeareienced?" also was released by Gark Records.
"The band's stage presence blows most other bands away," Scott said. "Matt Wilson has an incredible rapport with the audience that really gets it going. Even if it's a really lame audience Matt can bring them on we never seen another band do that."
The band first played in Lawrence two years ago to a crowd of six people, he said. But since its Lawrence debet, the band's popularity has grown enormously.
"They are absolutely huge here," said Bruce Rowley, program manager at student radio station KJHK. "They sell out every time."
Jay, who spoke with Matt Wilson over the phone this summer, asked Wilson whether the band was going to play in Lawrence this semester.
"Matt told me 'Yes, Lawrence is like a second home to us,'" he said.
By Jennifer Reynolds Kansan staff writer
Vespers to celebrate 65 years of tradition
The University of Kansas Vespers will usher in the Christmas season for the 65th consecutive year at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
Vespers, which is presented by the Department of Music and Dance, will feature more than 200 KU music students.
James Ralston, director of choral activities for the event, said the program was for people seeking a dose of holiday spirit.
"It's a festive and beautiful program," he said. "It's become a holiday tradition for the town and the region."
Part of the attraction is the colorful lights, the processionals and the Christmas trees, Ralston said, but the main feature is the music:
The program will begin and end with processional marches. The University Choirs and the University Orchestra form traditional Christmas carols.
For 30 minutes before each performance, carols will be sung from the balconies...James Barnes, assistant to the director of bands, will conduct the KU Trombone Choir at 3 p.m., and Thomas
Ashworth, assistant professor of trombone, will direct it at 7 p.m.
Ralston said the format for Vespers would be the same as in past
years.
"It works," he said. "We plug into the way it has been for years. It is easier than to wax poetic and change everything."
Only one thing has been changed for this year's performance.
"We have changed the finale to a more upbeat finish than before," Ralston said.
He said that in a few years, when Vespers activities move into the Lied Center, the format might change.
"It will be a different visual effect," he said. "The center will also seat only about 2,200 people, so there is a possibility of a Saturday night performance."
Hoch Auditorium seats 3.000
Laurence Lamy, Kansas City, Mo., graduate student, will sing in Vespers for the first time.
"I'm very excited about it," she said. "This performance is special because it's not just any regular performance. It's Christmas time."
Lamy, originally from France, said she enjoyed the Vespers ceremony.
"In France we don't do that kind of stuff anymore," she said. "Some universities do, but I went to a more modernistic one where we didn't."
Vespers is open to the public, and a collection will be taken to support the Vespers Scholarship Fund.
DeVito devises battleground of fun in 'War of the Roses' comedy
By Marc Parillo
Kansan movie reviewer
From the poetic words of Gertrude Stein:
"Rose is a rose is a rose."
In the case of Barbara and Oliver Rose, the two married enemies in Danny DeVille's tale of love gone awry, you might as well throw Stein's argument out the window.
In a nutshell, "War of the Roses" is a darkly hilarious reversal of the oh-so-common phrase between argumentative couples: "Let's work it out."
Kathleen Turner and Michael Douglas play Barbara and Oliver — an overly eccentric couple out of the trenches of lower middle-class status. After 18 years of hard work and commitment, they have built a happy family, a stable, if boring relationship and a beautiful, million-dollar home.
Barbara, unsatisfied with their stale relationship, requests a divorce and demands everything except Oliver's wardrobe.
What the Roses didn't seem to pick up during their marriage was a little flexibility and a sense of humor.
Seem fair?
Not on your life — or theirs for that matter.
Fists start swinging, chairs start flying and
Barbara and Oliver declare war one each other . . . literally.
Determined to hold onto the extravagant house for which each claims sole possession, the Roses commit every heinous, disgusting, inhumane act you can think of to rid the other from existence. Their destructive game of cat and mouse turns their Norman Rockwell lifestyle into a battleground that even Dirty Harry wouldn't want to visit.
If you liked Douglas and Turner in "Romancing the Stone" and "Jewel of the Nile," you'll enjoy them equally well in this film. Turner's high-handedness and Douglas's violent demeanor — reminiscent of "Fatal Attraction" — mold their characters into a delightful, but frightening, variation of mould, double-crossing children.
"War of the Roses" serves as Devin's encore to 1988's "Throw Mamma From the Train." Wrapped up with his usual mix of stunning camera angles and impressive lighting styles, no other director could have
created the film's ominous, psychotic tone so brilliantly other than Hitchcock himself.
"War of the Roses" is like a visual punch bag and a bag of stress relief — if you enjoy intense sarcasm and irrational destruction. But whether you side with Mr. Rose or Mrs. Rose, entertaining leaps and bounds throw the legitimacy of "legal separation" into a whirlwind of chaos and laughter you won't want to miss.
▶ Mac Parillo is a Lenex sophomore majoring in English and film studies.
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Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Forum calls for child-care programs
By Holly Lawton Kansan staff writer
The problems leading to the nation's child-care crisis are easily identified, but solutions must be implemented to solve these problems, speakers agreed at a child-care forum last night.
About 80 people, primarily women, met at the Lawrence Public Library. Auditorium to discuss the crisis and how it affected local parents, businesses and care providers. More than one third of the audience represented day-care providers.
Keynote speaker was State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, who explained the effects of the child-care dilemma and what was being done at the federal and state levels of government to improve it.
"It is so important, particularly in low-income families, that we provide quality care for our children," Branson said. "It's a real crisis in this state. We are cut to the bone in health and day care services."
Branson said the state legislature was taking steps to improve the problems. Attorney General Robert Stephan had formed a day care committee and was calling for a pilot day care program in Topeka for children of state employees, she said.
business jobs, and they love, she said. "This would be a good example of rest of the state and its businesses," Branson said. "Maybe it will get the local businesses to implement their own child-care programs."
Branson also said that Gov. Mike Hayden was planning to announce the instatement of the Governor's Office on Families and Children, which will serve as an advisory to the governor on children's issues. It will coordinate all state children's programs and seek out available grants for planning.
"We need a stronger lobby for better day care," Branson said. "That's why the laws aren't strong enough. If you care, get out and work for this."
There are many factors contributing to the child-care problem, said Peggy Scaly, child care licensing charge nurse for the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department. After paying the
"The median annual income for the single mother is $6,400, well below the federal poverty line." Scaly said. "And the cost for quality infant care is $100 per week. Obviously, this just doesn't work."
providers' salaries, child-care centers have little money left to go to the center. More than 40 percent of the state's licensed centers won't accept low-income children.
"The parents are going to be the first ones to be heard," she said. "We need to work together to get the Legislature's attention."
Gail Shredders, vice-president of the Douglas County Child Development Association, said parents had to take the initiative for their children
Kathleen Brady-Mowrey, chairman of the KU Classified Senate and Unclassified Professional Staff Association Joint Childcare Committee, challenged the members of the audience to involve themselves in the child-care dilemma.
"If you go away enlightened about this issue tonight and are motivated to do something about it, we have achieved our goal," she said.
Intersection of Naismith, 19th on city's list for traffic light
By Steve Buckner
Kansan staff writer
After years of congestion, the intersection of 19th Street and NaiSmith Drive may get a traffic light.
"Hopefully, when students return in the fall, there will be new lights there," said Terese Gardner, city engineer.
Gardner stressed that although the intersection qualified for traffic lights, the final decision did not rest in her office.
"It is tentative on the City Commissioners' approval," she said.
The process of installing traffic lights is extensive, Gardner said.
"It's been on the list for a couple of years," she said of the intersection. "We've conducted traffic counts, and it meets the requirements. We just hired an engineer to add geometric designs."
The designs, Gardner said, entailed two left turn lanes for both directions of 1st Street and right turn lanes for both directions of both streets.
"So, this summer we plan to be working on 19th and Nismath," she said.
Ron Cook, an engineer for facilities operations, said he saw an immediate benefit from a signal at that intersection.
"I think it would improve the flow of traffic, especially on game days," he said.
Many intersections are counted, but few receive lights, she said. The city budget allows for only one new light each year because of the systems' costs. The equipment costs $20,000, she said, and bidding an entire package, which includes installation and labor, could cost as much as $75,000 for one light.
Gardner estimated that the city conducted 100 traffic counts each year. The traffic counts, she said, are done on an as-needed or as-requested basis. In order to get a traffic light, Gardner and her team conduct several surveys that must meet federal standards with respect to the traffic count.
Gardner said that 19th Street would be part of two other engineering studies next year in addition to the University of Smithm. The intersections at Oudaniel Road and Louisiana Street also will be considered for future work.
"We're just doing the engineering," she said. "We may proceed immediately or wait. Again, funding is a big consideration."
Neighbors raise voices about club
By Lisa Moss
Kansan staff writer
The Lawrence/Douglas County planning commission sent the owners of Pizazz a notice citing violations of the site plan approved by the city commission and citing the club's use of a vacant lot not zoned for commercial use, said David Guntert of the planning commission.
Don Schmidt said he would be meeting with city planning officials today to discuss correcting the violations.
The club owners, Jon and Don Schmidt, were given 14 days to respond to the notice. Guntter said
Sue Suepher lives ½ blocks from the club. She said the club was causing problems in the neighborhood.
Parking for the club is not adequate, and a fence to screen the neighborhood from the club was supposed to be put up, Kapter said.
"The property itself is not taken care of at all," she said. "It makes
the rest of the neighborhood look bad."
Kapfer said past owners of the club had maintained the grounds.
Cindy Denny, another neighbor, said she could see the club from her back window.
Denny agreed that the grounds were not properly maintained.
Denny said the Oread Neighborhood Association fought against allowing the vacant lot for the club to be used for commercial purposes and now it was being misused for club parking.
"Pizzazz has a right to be there, but they need to comply with the site plan and they are not," Denny said. "They are not making every effort to be good neighbors."
Owner Don Schmidt said he took possession of the club a year ago and did not know some things had not been performed.
"Up until the letter I thought we had been good neighbors," he said. "Our attitude is cooperation."
Schmidt said he encouraged neighbors with concerns to talk to him about them.
"I don't see any problem with getting things taken care of," he said.
the commission to conduct any meeting about the proposal while students were away. But Schumma said that students had been involved in the process and had been given opportunities to express their views.
Linda Dick, president of the Schweegler Neighborhood Association, said she thought that the city commissioners had put the proposal off for a few years. "I think it's time that it's taken care of."
Noise
But Smith, Walters and Penny said they would favor delaying action until students returned if student leaders requested that they do so.
Yesterday, student leaders met to discuss their position.
"The major parts we will be addressing are alternatives to the noise ordinance," said B. Jake White, student body president. "Education has been one area that has been overlooked."
Continued from p. 1
Student leaders are opposed to an ordinance until other avenues have been explored, he said.
If an ordinance is needed, White said, an independent group should write it. The student leaders are against the ordinance proposed by the association, he said.
One objection to the association's proposal is that it is directed at students and greek houses, he said. Another objection is the stiff penalties for the first offense.
"Two-hundred and fifty dollars or 10 days in jail
for the first offense is unreasonable. "White said
"This does not even allow for a warning."
David Katzman, professor of history, lives across the street from Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, 1645 Tennessee St. He said he would favor a noise ordinance if it were not too restrictive.
"Before 11 p.m., if I'm bothered by noise, I think I can adjust," he said. "Loud stereos at 3 a.m. are a problem."
Katzman said he had called the fraternity and other nearby student living groups when noise became a problem. Only in a few instances, he has, has he been forced to call the police.
Derek Bridges, president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, said he would prefer that students and neighborhood groups solve the noise problem without an ordinance.
Rex Buchanan, assistant director for public affairs at the survey, said that some fossils from the Hamilton Quarry display at the Emporia State Museum.
"These particular types of deposits are rather critical in understanding the biota of that period," he said. He opened, clear windows into the past."
Maples said the fossils were not significant by themselves, but the grouping as a whole is scientifically important. By providing a cross-section of the life in an area, this kind of deposit helps scientists understand what was going on biologically at that time.
Biota is the animal and plant life of a region.
Researchers hope to use the Hamilton Quarry deposits as a guide to understanding and finding similar deposits, Maples said.
"We found a lot of high-quality fossils," Maples said. "Mostly vertebrates, mostly fish. There were a fair amount of insect remains, a few reptiles, a few amphibians and a lot of plants."
"We're trying to understand why it's there and use that as a basis for making a better guess at where others might be," he said.
The Hamilton Quarry deposit is essentially a former river channel, filled with a mixture of limestone and shale, Maples said. The southeastern Kansas area as a whole is a series of alternating layers of marine life and land life, laid down during millenia. The differing layers of the area were caused by the advancement and retreat of the seashore, driven by changes in the sea level.
National Geographic has a trust option for publishing the work if they were willing.
"That's entirely up to them," Maples said. "I haven't heard one way or the other. My suspicion is that they will not be publishing it."
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Maples, an assistant scientist at the Kansas Geological Survey, has been working with Hans-Peter Schultze, a curator at the Museum of Natural History, on the work enhanced by the National Science Foundation and the National Geographic Society. NSF has given a two-year, $100,000 grant to geographic gave a $9,000 grant to support last summer's work.
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Researchers from the University of Kansas and other universities have spent the last six months investigating the site, which is a rock quarry located near project co-investigator Christy Kirchner. Titigators likely will spend at least two more years at the site which is about 80 miles south of Topeka.
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Today, the Hamilton Quarry is a series of trenches in the ground of southeastern Kansas. But 280 million years ago, this site was a home for hundreds of plants, fish, insects and animals, all now preserve as fossils.
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
Sports
13
Kansas shoots for ninth victory
By Dan Perkins
Kansan sportswriter
When the second-ranked Kansas Jayhawks take the floor tomorrow afternoon, their opponent will be a rarity.
Kansas will put its 8-0 record on the line against college basketball's most successful team at 1:35 p.m. in Allenfield House.
The Kentucky Wildcats, 3-1, are one of only two college teams that have more career victories than Kansas. Kentucky has won 1,469 games, compared to Kansas' 1,410 victories. North Carolina is second on the victory list with 1,463.
The Wildcats may lose the top spot on the all-time victory list this season, not because of what they do on court but for what they do off court.
This year's Kentucky team, which is in the first year of a three-year probation, is in a situation similar to the one Kansas faced last season.
The Wildeats are ineligible for postseason play for the next two seasons.
"I'm a little concerned about
them," Coach Roy Williams said after Wednesday night's victory against Southern Methodist. "They are in the same position we were last year. They've got seven or eight guys who can play, and they have a cause."
The Wildcats, led by 6-foot-8 guard Derrick Miller, have no players on their roster taller than 6 feet 7 inches. Miller is averaging 21.8 points per game, coming off a 36-point performance against Tennessee Tech Wednesday night. Kentucky, which has three point attempts in the game with 1, beat Tennessee Tech 111-75. Kentucky hit 18 pointers.
The victory was the second in a row for the Wildcats after losing to No. 14 Indiana, 71-69, in Bloomington, Ind. Kentucky beat Mississippi State, 102-97, in the Southeastern Conference opener.
Two other probable starters for the Wildcats are averaging in double figures.
with 11.3 per game.
Forward Reggie Hanson is averaging 18.5 points per game, and Derson Feldhaus is averaging 11.3. Hanson also is the team's leading rebounder
As a team, Kentucky is hitting only 41.9 percent from the field, including 35.7 percent from three-point range. The Wildcats are hitting 69.7 percent from the free-throw line.
Kansas and Kentucky aren't exactly strangers. The two teams lead the series, and the Wildcats lead the series 162, including a 7-2 record in Lawrence.
Kansas won the last game played between the two schools, 83-66, in Allen Field House on Dec. 14, 1985. That game was the last of 15 consecutive years that the two teams played each other, dating back to 1971.
The Kansas-Kentucky series in the past also saw the two all-time greatest coaches competing against each other.
Adolph Rupp, Kentucky coach for 41 years, compiled a 880-190 record, surpassing F.C. "Phog" Allen's record of 771 career victories. Rupp, a talented native, was also a former player at Kansas on the 1922 and 1923 team that won the Helms Foundation National Championship.
Kansas Basketball GAME 9
KANSAS JAYHAWKS
Coach: Roy Williams
Record: 8-0
KENTUCKY WILDCATS
Coach: Rick Pitino
Record: 3-1
PROBABLE STARTERS
| Player | Ht. | PPG | RPG |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| G-Kevin Pritchard | 6-3 | 12.5 | 3.0 |
| G-Jeff Gueldner | 6-5 | 9.6 | 4.3 |
| C-Pekka Markkanen | 6-10 | 7.4 | 3.8 |
| F-Rick Calloway | 6-6 | 9.1 | 5.1 |
| F-Mark Randall | 6-9 | 17.0 | 6.5 |
Game Notes: Kentucky leads the series 7-2. Rick Pitino, first-year coach of the Wildcats, returns to college basketball after coaching the New Yorks Knicks in the NBA. Tip-off is 1:35 p.m. at Allen Field House. The game will be broadcast on KJHK 90.7 FM and KZLR 168 FM.
Player Ht. PPG RPG
G-Sean Woods 6-2 9.3 2.5
G-Derrick Miller 6-5 21.8 4.5
C-Reggle Hanson 6-7 18.5 11.3
F-Deron Feldhaus 6-7 11.3 5.3
F-John Pelphrey 6-7 8.0 4.8
KANSAN Graphic
CONVERSE
Finnish player adjusts to Jayhawk basketball
By Andres Cavelier Kansan sportswriter
Long before he arrived in Kansas, Pekka Markkanen knew he wanted to play basketball in the United States.
Now he leads the Jayhawks in blocked shots and helps them with his height and size.
But his life goes beyond the boards. Pekka Markkanen's story is different and interesting, for he is the only married and international Kansas basketball player.
MASAS
44
Center Pekka Markkanen leads the Jayhawks in blocked shots
Andrew Morrison/KANSAN
"This is our honeymoon," says Markkanen to his wife, Rikka. When people in Finland get married they go to a house, but we decided to move out.
The 6-foot-10 former high school soccer goalie, who gave up the sport at age 18 because he was too tall, now overcomes overcome extra hurdles at anssau.
Markkanen, 22, and Rikka, 26, both basketball players, got married last July before moving to Lawrence in September. Their new experience has meant considerable changes in their lifestyle.
Andrew Morrison/KANSAN
And foreign.
The language, the Jayhawk fanaticism, the coaches and teammates and American basketball rules are new and distinct for him.
Markkanen, (pronounced PECKU-
mARK muk-uh-nun) finally came to
the United States to play basketball
after wanting o do it for two years.
"I wanted to improve my basketball because Finland is too little," says Markkanen, speaking slowly and carefully. "Everybody knows the U.S. is the best place to play basketball."
Calling every night
Markkanen insisted, and finally he heard about Kansas from the assistant coach of the Finnish national team.
Markkaneen, whose full name is
Juha Pekka Markkaneen, says several schools were interested in him.
Markkanen says, "Kansas and Brigham Young called almost every night during late summer."
"You counted them one day," Riikka said to him one afternoon after practice in the locker room. "There were more than 12 universities."
In September, Kansas coach Roy Williams offered Markkanen a scholarship after seeing videoedot highlights. He will have two years of college experience with CAA regulations, which takes away one year for each year above 20.
Before coming to Kansas, Markkainen had visited the United States twice. The first time was in November 1988 when the Finnish national team toured the country, playing some Division I and II schools that were not too good, he says.
The second time was in June 1989 by recruiting trip to Brigham Young.
But he says one of the reasons he chose Kansas was because he was afraid to become a Mormon.
"There were two other (Finnish) players who changed to Mormons," he says.
Late start
Also, Markkahan says he heard Kansas was a good school and that he knew the Jayhawks had been the 1987-88 national champions.
Markkanen, like most Finns, grew up playing soccer, Finland's other national sport besides ice hockey. Yet, he did not start playing basketball until he was 16.
His wife, Rilkka, (pronounced REE-kun) played basketball for six years during high school, including three for a club team. Last season, she was the highest scorer playing for the second-highest level in Finland. There are four women's club levels and neither men's nor women's college basketball in Finland. Players join clubs up to high
school graduation
"You have played more than me." Markkanen says to his wife.
Markkanen, who also played basketball for his high school team that wore the Finnish high school championship in 1986, later joined the Honu club team, located in his hometown of Jyaskylia, which won the 1987 Finnish national championship.
After he graduated from high school, he spent a mandatory year in the army where he was able to play
basketball as part of a special military program.
Last year, Markkkanen was named the most outstanding player of the year by the Finnish Basketball Federation.
Also, last summer he played for the Finnish national team at the World University Games, in Duisburg, West Germany, averaging 18 points, as Finland went 3-4 for ninth place.
"We weren't a very good team," he said.
Kansas, Nebraska swim teams to meet tomorrow in Lawrence.
See MARKKANEN, d. 14
By Andres Caveller Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas women's team, conference champion for the past two years, will try to improve its 5-0 dual meet record.
The meet is scheduled for 10:30 a.m. at Robinson Natatorium.
Freshman Michelle Wilde, sophomores Barb Pranger and Kelly Redden and junior Lauril Hill are among
rivalry between Nebraska and Kansas."
When the Kansas women's swim team faces Nebraska in a dual meet tomorrow, the Jayhawks will depend on young swimmers who have stepped forward this fall, said swim coach Gary Kemmf.
Leading the Jayhawks is Pranger, who last week qualified at the Arkansas invitational for the NCAA and will be seen such in the 100- and 200-yard butterfly.
"She is probably one of the most talented swimmers I have ever had the opportunity to work with," Kempf said. "She has a tremendous
the swimmers who stepped forward this fall, Kempf said.
"We think we'll swim really fast."
Kemp said. "There is always a big
Pranger, who said she considered this dual meet the focus meet of the fall, said it would not be easy for Kansas to defeat Nebraska according to their times and results that she had seen.
work ethic, she holds swimming as a very high priority, and more importantly, she enjoys it a great deal. She has all the attributes that make a great athlete."
KU to fight 'Backs Winning 'Hawks hope to keep streak
By Paula Parrish Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
"It'll be a lot like our starting five versus our starting five," assistant coach Kevin Cook said. "They run a lot of the same offenses and defensive sets that we do."
The women's basketball team will be pitted against what might seem to be themselves as the Jayhawks face the Arkansas Razorbacks tomorrow in Fayetteville, Ark.
Perhaps that's because the Razorbacks have been guided, to a certain extent, by assistant coach Tracey Mays. Mays was a graduate assistant six years ago for Coach Marian Washington's basketball team.
"Looking at their offense, it's like looking at a mirror image of Kansas," Washington said. "They're very, very aggressive players. They pressure after every made shot."
Kansas, 4-2, are on a run, having won the Lady Jayhawk Dial Classic last weekend and having whipped the Wichita State Shockers 87-75 Wednesday night in Allen Field House.
Kansas, on a three-game winning streak, has picked up its shooting percentage considerably during the last three games.
Util Wednesday, the Jayhawks were shooting just 35.5 percent from the field, including a season-low 29.1 percent against the University of Missouri-Kansas City in the final game of the Classic.
But the Shockers jolted Kansas
into action, forcing the squad to a much-improved 49 percent from the field.
Arkansas has not played since last week but has managed to beat all five of its opponents so far this year.
Center Delmonica DeHorney leads the Razorbacks, averaging 18 points per game and 5.3 rebounds.
"I'd compare them favorably to Vanderbilt," Cook said.
Arkansas guards Juliet Jackson and Amber Nicholas are each averaging at least 12 points per game. They get into trouble against Kansas.
Kansas lost to Vanderbilt 70-64 in a close match for third place at the Hawaii Rainbow Wahine Classic two weeks ago.
"If their initial guards, Nicholas and Jackson, get into foul trouble, then we'll be in good shape," Cook said.
Kansas veteran Lisa Bradby faced Nicholas three years ago in the 1987 Lady Jayhawk Classic that Kansas won, 75-68.
"Nicholas is one of the top five point guards in the country," Cook said. "That will be a good match up between her and Brady."
Probable starters for Kansas are forwardes Terrilyn Johnson and Dave Shareet, center Lynn Page, and Guards Bradley and Kay Hart.
Brady scored a team-high 20 points and seven assists against the Shockers. She leads the team with a season-high 11.2 points per game and 7.3 assists. Page leads in rebounds, averaging 8.2 per game.
Royals sign pitcher
The Associated Press
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The World Series champion Oakland A's lost their third free agent yesterday when the Kansas City Royals signed 19-game winner Storm Davis to a three-year, $6 million contract.
"We feel like we have acquired one of the more successful pitchers in the American League over the past several years," Kansas City vice president John Schuerholz said. "His addition is another step in our objective of strengthening our overall pitching depth this winter."
Davis, 19-7 last season, gets a $500,000 signing bonus, $1 million in 1990, $2.2 million in 1991 and $2.3 million in 1992. Davis has a 35-14 record over the past two years, and is 90-55 in seven AL seasons.
In other baseball moves;
▶ KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Outfielder Willie Wilson and second baseman Frank White, two Kansas City Royals' veterans who had become free agents, will be back with the club next season.
The Royals announced they had agreed to terms with both players on guaranteed one-year contracts.
Kansas football to build on improvement, attitude for 1990 season
By Gene King Kansan sportswriter
Last year at this time, the Kansas football team was taking a long look up the Big Eight ladder as it finished seventh with a 1-7 conference record and 1-10 record overall.
This year, the Jayhawks advanced another rung up the ladder, finishing sixth in the Big Eight with a 2-5 record for conference play and a 4-7 overall performance.
But with the team running and throwing for more yards and scoring more points than the 1988 squad, Coach Glen Mason, has his team headed in the right direction on the ladder.
The rungs get farther apart and more difficult to climb as the Jay-books prepare for the 1900 season.
"We definitely made progress," Mason said. "But the biggest area was in the attitude. We've got players
right now that are enthusiastic about spring practices next year."
Pulling his weight
Sands, who was a second-team all-Big Eight selection, rushed for 1,109 yards on 216 carriers. He averaged more than 100 yards a game and 5 yards a carry. He also led the team in points scored, rushing for 11 touchdowns.
"Tony is a good, tough football player," Mason said. "Pound for pound, he is as good as any back."
in Big Eight all-time passing yardage, just behind Kansas State's Lynn Dickey, with 5,382 career passing yards. Donohoe completed 141 of 256 passes for a 55.1 percentage completion rate. For the first weeks of the season, Donohoe was rated among the top in the nation in passing efficiency.
Commanding the offense in his final season was quarterback Kelly Donchone. He passed for 2,125 yards this season, moving him up to fourth
Donohoe threw 12 touchdown passes and was intercepted 13 times in 11 games.
"Kelly did a fine job for us this year in leading our offense," Mason said.
Donohoe received an honorable mention in the Big Eight this season. He was second in career total offence for Kansas, with 5,238 total yards, behind Frank Seuer, who had 6,117 total offensive yards.
Junior center Chip Budde, also a conference honorable mention; who snapped the ball on all but a few plays to Donohoe for three years.
praised his quarterback.
Smith at the forefront
"Kelly had a pretty good year. He did a good job with audibles at the line," Budde said.
On the receiving end of Donohoe's passes was a host of Jayhawks. Thirteen receivers caught 144 passes throughout the year.
Leading the pack in his last year of eligibility was wide receiver Quininti Smith. Smith had 50 receptions this year for 896 yards. He averaged 18 yards a catch and had eight touchdown receptions.
Smith moved into fifth place among Kansas' all-time receivers with 1,550 total yards. This season he had nine RBJ-ranked job named to first all-Big Eight team.
Mason does have them on the right track.
The offense, comprised of Donehoe, Sands, Smith and company, demonstrated in the 1989 season that
Kansas averaged less than 313 total offensive yards a game in 1988, but the Jayhawks pushed that average to almost 360 yards a game this year.
Kansas' offense, with one more year under Mason's guidance, gained 510 yards more than the 1983 Jayhawks.
That the Jayhawks won four games this year compared to their single win last year, gives some indication of the improvements on the Kansas team.
► The Jayhawks backfield rushed for 1,767 yards this season. Coming off last year's 1,777 yards, it in evidence that the ground game was more successful.
Averaging more than 189 yards a game, the running backs surpassed last year's rushing average by more than 56 yards.
Donoho, and back-up quarterbacks Chip Hilleary and Ron Page combined for a season-passing performance of 2,164 yards. The trio eclipsed last year's mark of 1,865 yards.
On the average, the Jayhawks threw for close to 200 yards a game, while last year, they threw for less than 170 a game.
Kansas put more points on the board this year than it did last season, averaging more than 22 points compared to 17 points a game in 1988.
The Jayhawks still had trouble getting into the end zone in the second half in 1989, but nothing like the second-half scoring woes last season. Kansas scored just 45 points in the third and fourth quarters last year. This year, the Jayhawks scored 129 points in the second half.
See FOOTBALL, p. 14
14
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Football
Line performance improves
Continued from p. 13
Although the opponents were racking up the yards against the Jayhawk defense, the defense did improve this year.
Sophomore safety Deral Boykin anchored the young defense as he was an honorable mention in the Big Eight. Boykin, a former conference defensive newcomer-of-the-year, had 90 tackles and two interceptions.
Outside linebacker Dan Newbrough also earned Big Eight honorable mention and was the Jayhawks' second-leading tackler with 108 total tackles.
Newbrough led the team in tackles for a loss and was second in quarterbacking. He led the line of scrimmage for a total loss to opposing teams of 42 yards.
On a defense plagued with off-season injuries, former starting backfill Roger Robben made the switch to linebacker during the off-season. The team will be beneficial for the Jayhawks as they face the Kansas defenses with 146 tackles.
Another pleasant surprise for Kansas on the defensive side of the ball was freshman walk-on linebacker Wes Swinford. Swinford was an all-time leader in interceptions in Morrison, Okla., but his team played eight-man football.
In his first season playing the 11-man game, he was the team's third-leading tackler with 103.
The Jayhawk defense was ranked worst in NCAA Division I college football last year. Kansas gave up eight touchdowns and scored an age of more than $55 yards a game.
Opponents still gained more than 5,280 yards against the Jayhawks, but with a cut of more than 600 yards from last year's totals.
This year, the Kansas defense, although still sleeve-like, seemed to be able to plus some holes.
Kansas cut a big slice out of the opponents' average offensive performance. This season the Jayhawks had the opposition to 490.5 yards a game.
Last year, Kansas gave up 3,937 yards rushing. In the 1989 season, it gave up 2,928 yards on the ground.
The biggest improvement for the Jayhawks' defense was in their ability to block shots.
The Jayhawks lost ground in their pass defense allowing 2,587 yards through the air in 1969, an increase from just under 1,960 last season.
On the average, Kansas' defense gave up close to $38 rushing yards a game last season. The Jaywhaks also rushed just 102.2 yards and just 86.2 yards rushing a game.
Last season, opponents averaged a little more than 178 passing yards. The Jayhawk secondary gave up close to 215 in 1989.
Opponents were just four points shy of scoring 500 total points against the Jayhawks last year.
Holding their own
It may be a little difficult to put a notch in the win column when the opposition averages more than 45 points per game. The same batting appenntons did to Kansas last year.
But the Jayhawks' defense held their ground a little better this season, giving up just a little more than 34 points a contest.
The statistics not only tell of the improvement, but the players talk of it as well.
But the Jayhawks still had trouble winning the close games this year.
"We improved a lot," Budde said. "We didn't play up to our ability at times, but we did improve."
Twice this season, Kansas was leading the contest but surrendered that lead by the end of the game.
"That game was a turning point for us," Budde said.
Budde complimented the offense for its ability to come back from the deficit and score.
Kansas also led Louisville, but gave up that lead to the Cardinals,
The Jayhawks had an encouraging sign to carry into next season with their come-from-behind 46-44 victory on the final Saturday of the season.
The closest loss this season was a homecoming loss to Iowa State 24-20, then lead into half-time, but gave that to the Cyclones by the time it was over.
Perhaps the most important areas of improvement were voiced by Buddha.
"We started to believe in ourselves," Budde said.
Markkanen
"They now know what they have to do in win," Donhoe said.
Whether that is true or not remains to be seen next season.
Continued from p. 13
Markkanen, who weighs 215 pounds and wears a pink mouth guard for protection while playing, has moved to a different country, where basketball is a major sport during the winter.
A place where popularity was awaiting him.
"When I came here it was totally different." Markkainen says. "I was not used to having people tell me, 'Good game' or 'Hi' when I was on campus. It's funny."
He says, laughing with surprise, that the kids and older people ask him for autoahrs.
Rilkka, who is enrolled in one course and works at a bank, says it is amazing to see people throwing newspapers and waving during the games.
Rikka, who goes to all the home games, says, "In Finland, they (fans) are like in a church."
Like Finnish fans, Markkanen is a quiet person and serious about the game.
A Finnish Javhawk
As Kansas' center, he likes the aggressiveness of the team.
"I like our team because we play good defense," Markkanen says...
But for him, the game is slower in the United States because every time the ball goes out of the court, he has to give it to the referee. Markkanen is accustomed to playing by international rules, which differ slightly from U.S. college basketball rules. He is used to playing with the 30-second rule, which increases the speed of the game; the 45-second rule is used in the United States instead.
"It takes time to get used to the rules," he says.
He remembers that during the warm-up in the first exhibition game, he dunked the ball without knowing it was against the rules.
"I was lucky because the referee knew who I was," he says.
The rules on jump balls also are different in the United States. In Finland, opponents jump for the ball at the beginning of both halves and also after held-ball calls.
These are the kinds of things Markkanken has had to learn here. But if he has any problems, he knows his wife can help him. Rilika usually waits for Markkanken outside the locker room after games and practices.
So far, Markkkanen he enjoys practices with the coaches and his teammates, but finds differences in the coaching style.
"The they are very tough coaches, but also fair," he says.
"If you do things right, they give you positive points and you don't have to run so much after practice."
He also talks about the privileges upperclassmen receive at Kansas. He says seniors and juniors are
"In Finland," he says, "if one player has 10 years of experience and one new player comes for the first time, it's all the same."
Rikka says, "Here, the players respect the coaches more."
Big contribution
Markkanen, has contributed to No. 2-ranked Kansas, starting in all eight games. He leads the Jayhawks with 12 blocked shots and has averaged 7.4 points a game.
He set his 14-point career high during the NIT semifinal against the University of Nevada-Las Vegas on Nov. 23, in which ESPN analyst Dick Vitale said he was a surprise player.
"They didn't really think that he would be able to contribute immediately, but he has given them positive minutes." Vitale said.
On Wednesday, against Southern Methodist University, Markkanen hit all five of his field attempts and had a team-high seven rebounds.
Off the court, Markkannen says he does not spend much time with his girlfriend, but says they understand he would rather be with Rikkei.
The couple, who lived together in Helsinki and in Jyvaskyla for the past four years, now live in an apartment at Jayhawker Towers.
They say they miss the forests and lakes that surround their summer home in Finland and feel foreign to the flatness of the Midwest.
For him Lawrence is a bit small.
Rikka answers, "But you wouldn't have time for it."
Markkanen, who doesn't consider the weather to be cold yet, also misses skating, skiing and fishing, especially at this time of the year, when snow is all over Finland.
Instead, he spends his time playing, resting and studying English.
A physical education major, Markkanen is taking four English courses for non-native students at the Applied English Center this fall — including writing, speaking, structure and reading. He is in the third of four levels and says he hopes he does not have to take any AEC courses next spring.
The Markkanens, who already bought their airplane tickets to go home next summer, don't know yet
After he graduates, he might want to coach, he says. For the moment, he says he just hopes to improve his game and his English.
"We have to decide at the beginning of next year," Rikka savs.
After only a few months in the United States, Pekka and Rikika Markkkanen's first semester of their honey-moon has come to a happy end on and off the court.
In Finland, where the best club players earn up to $30,000 a year, Markkanen could make money if he played for a club.
"But I am here." he says.
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5 E. 7th 842-1376
STRESS MANAGEMENT WORKSHOP Sat.
Dec. 9, 1:30 to 4:30. Umpire Church, 418 Lincoln Street
"'the best value in sight'
SPRING BREAK 90
600 Lawrence Ave. 841-6100
KU.Trailside Bus To 6th & Lawrence Ave.
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW!
fashion eyeland
Optical dispensary
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW!
DAYTONA BEACH $129*
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND $129*
3 OR 7 NIGHTS STEAMBOAT $101*
2 OR 7 NIGHTS PORT LAUDERDALE $132*
HILTON HEAD ISLAND $127*
7 NIGHTS CORPUS CHRISTI/
--suicide intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 814-2345 or visit 1419 Mass. Headquarters Counseling Center.
CORPUS CHRISTI/
MUSTANG ISLAND
from $99
*Depending on break dates and length of stay.
CALL TOLL FREE TODAY
1-800-321-5911
Swarthy
130 Entertainment
140 Lost-Found
GET INTO THE GROOVES, Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional club, radio DJ's. Hot Spins Maximum Party Thrury. DJ Ray Valey. 841-7083.
LOST: X-large grey cat from 1346 Ohio, male,
declawed. We miss him. If found, please call
749-4432.
Found: White female dog with one black ear and eye, in KS Union 12/1. Call 844-4173 or 843-4773 eyes.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Babysitter needed to care for 6-month-old infant in our home starting in January. M-F afternoons, 749-3309.
CHILD CARE. To care for our 3-year-old son in our home near campus. Approximately 3 days/week. Flexible hours. Starting Jan. or Feb. Call 643-5790.
Clerk Textbooks, KU Bookstores, Part-time.
$3.50 per hour. Monday-Friday (2 shift available),
8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m or 10:00 a.m-7:00 p.m.
weekends or overtime if necessary. Begin
a job in the office on Friday and Saturday.
1900. Must be available to work entire time.
Require previous inventory, sales or stocking experience.
Able to lift over 50 lbs. stand for long periods.
Verifiable job reference. Apply Kansas
University.
KITCHEN HELP WANTED
First Fuel Bank of Kansas sees full and part-time fuel saleemission for store located at 1500 E. 28rd St. in Lawrence. More than minimum wage hours, from 6 a.m. to 12 p.m., 2-3 times a week, and all weekend hours. Duties include selling Fuel Bank concept cards to customers, making cash from customers. Must be neat and clean and enjoy working with the public. Must have good knowledge of records. If interested, apply in person at store.
Kansas & Burge Unions hiring for part-time student positions second semester. Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office, Level 5. EQE.
Logan Business Machines accepting applications for part-time delivery person. Flexible hours: 841-801.
Two years minimum experience. Pay depend
on availability. Apply Dob Homes M-T, 34-
bill, 818 New York Avenue, 5th Floor,
northwest corner of Madison Ave.
Looking for long-term employee to work 4 shifts of 10 to 11 p.m. (including Friday or Saturday evenings) and one weekend day shift. Mechanical ability a shifu.
Live-in child care positions near New York,
Philadelphia, the airfare, airbear, good salaries,
benefits. Screened families. Fun support group.
PRINCETON N.Y MANTLE PLACE. 90 N. Har-
ward Ave.
NANNIES. - Go to interesting places, earn good money for a year. Positions in KC and nationwide. Templeton Nanny Agency 824-445.
J. families. Fun support group.
PRINCETON TOWN NANNY PLACEMENT 30. N. Har-
ward, NJ. New caddie position. New accep-
ting applications for clears/cashiers
for temporary positions through January 25, 1990.
New training available for availability. Experience preferred, but not required. Jaynah Bookstore, Top of Nathmith
Hall. 724-630-4700.
Part-time teller position available, Tuesday and Thursday 2:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m., Friday 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Job requirements include customer relations skills and prevician cashier experience. County Bank, 981 & Kentucky, EOE.
Part-time employment - Construction type work
Sanding, painting, woodworking & general labor
Semester Break Work
$9
25 starting
- Entry level positions
* All majors may apply
* Academic credit possible
* Corporate scholarships
* Interview now before final exams
* Start now or immediately after final exams
* Can remain part time when classes resume
FOR INTERVIEW
& INFORMATION
CALL 1-345-9675
VECTOR MARKETING CORPORATION
V
marketing division of
ALCAS
University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
15
Residential supervisor part-time positions available. Otherwise. For payment in working with adults with mental retardation. Flexible evening and weekend hours. 40%-60% call for appointment.
Part-time housecleaners and office cleaners wanted. If you enjoy cleaning and are meticulous, Buckingham Palace is interested in your talents. Call Sue at M4-804-261.
$4.00 per hour part time 7 a.m.-11 a.m.
Spring '90 semester
Student needed Moody through Friday
The University Daily Kansan has a
position available for a student to
proofread advertising during the spring
would be operating on you,
you'll need to be reliable and responsible.
We prefer a self-starter.
Requires a firm command of spelling and grammar and a fundamental understanding of the aesthetics of layout. Since our students are on your lap you need to be reliable.
You'll work during those times when we
publish a newspaper and be off when we
don't (like exam week, when you need
the time to study).
Contact Jeanne Hines, Sales & Marketing Adviser, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.:
The Kansan is an equal opportunity emplover.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
assist teacher needed for morning preschool.
Assist teacher needed for available f13 or
preferably p19, p20 and p21, or development,
early childhood or elementary
development, early childhood or elementary
Willing to learn, Montessori techniques, Sun-
ningville.
Telemarketing. Salary + commission. Monday
Thursday, 6-9 p.m. No experience necessary.
941-1289.
The Learning Club is now hiring daytime servers. Must be able to work during holiday season. Apply at the KU Alumni Center in person. EOE/MFH.
CITY SEEN
A new exciting restaurant is opening in the new AT&T Town Pavilion. We are now hiring for full and part time food servers hosts and hostesses.
Please apply in person
1111 Main, K.C., MO
9am-4pm
816-472-8833
M
**Wanted:** Companion for boy age 6 - Mondays
**Wanted:** Companion for girl age 6 - Wednesdays
**Wanted:** Redhawks required. Non-munker. Need own dog.
**Wanted:** Backpack.
Wanted: Kxhmer language tutor. Call 841-7102.
Wanted: Kitchen utility help, Flexible hours,
good working conditions. Apply Lawrence
Country Club, 842-8068. Ask for Frank.
Zarcoo, Inc., seeking full-time secretary/bookkeeper or computer & bookkeeping experience as well as computer & bookkeeping skills but not necessary. Respon-
sibilities include being proficient in A/R for local convenience stores as well as and work phone and filling. Willingness to learn new technologies and fill out current portfolios. Must have neat appearance. Demonstrated ability to work in a team. Send handwritten letter of application and resume to HR A, Box 165, Lawrence, KS, 69406. No phone.
KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: 24-hour course
PHOTOGRAPHY DESIGN: 24-hour course
PASSPORT/RESUME / 100 hours. 30th Art & Design
Courses.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(310) 457-8721
(310) 457-8721
225 Professional Services
*Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at
*Confidential help free of pregnancy
nesting.*
WORKERS' COMP
DONALD G. STROLE
Attorney
16 East 13th 842-1133
Prompt contraception and abortion services in
*weproc*. 041-9218.
Suffering from Abortion?
Write
Heart Restored
Box 265
Case No. 1043
Confidential response/material
will follow
TRAFIC - DUI'S
Fake ID's & alcohol offences
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
14,000 pages, no job too small or large. Accurate and affordable wordprocessing. Diana. Large.
**Order Woman Word Processing.** Former editor Branfronter your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of letter-quality type. 933-2835, days or evening.
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing.
Call anytime. 748-3683.
Accurate and affordable typing/word processing,
signed checking. Done with time to spare! Use
Dosage for the most efficient.
(Aecrate typing by former Harvard secretary
Eric Duncan) East Lawrence Call; Ms.
Marylia Mardia; 441-123-4567
Excellent professional typist does papers accurately, reasonably and fast. Call Julia 843-9488.
Data Processing and Data Entry Services. Discussion and Data Entry KU experience. Colleta 843-8077.
Call R.J.'s. Typesing Services 814-5924. Tern paper, legal, thesis, ect. No calls after 9 p.m.
Donna's Master Typing and Word Processing
Tern paper, theses, dissertations, letters,
booklets, manuscripts. Mail at
spelling corrected . 2281G W, 2281 St M-Tn.
8a-m.pm J. F-Sa-m.pm 8a-m. ppm J.
K-S Professional Word Processing. Accurate and
fairly durable. 84-135. Call between 1 and 10.
Papers, threes, remunes, etc. Common misspelling corrected at no charge by editor. Typing or MacProcessing with laser output. 841-3722, 6-9 and weekends.
RESUMES - Written & Laser Printed, 24-hour service. Satisfaction guaranteed. $10-$25. Jay
841-9076
This lady is him! At least heats her professional typist. You write. I type. Fast & accurate, reasonable rates, available day or evening. Lori 811-8208
THEWORDCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, themes, resume, commercial, IBM-PAC, MAC, CAF
data, diatrix, matrix. Since 1983.
8531-317
Will do typing, reports, papers. Type Write Services.
842-4612
Worst Perfect Word Processing, IBM Compatible.
None Orchestral Corverses. No calls after # p.m.
Word Processing/Tying: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
HAVE M.S. Degree. 841-8234.
300s
Merchandise
305 For Sale
19 'Panasonic color TV for sale. Make offer. Call
Burlai 841-4385.
Latey 3-bedm. 1½ bath, considerable in size; larger, large panelled den of full wall kitchen, large pantry, and more! Over 200 sq. ft. just south of campus. Bedrooms 85-92. Hudson is at 842-233. Elevation 842-233. Bq 852-231 or 842-238.
AT&T Computer 5000, color mon., new 32 meg.
HD, 380K flowr/wkboard. 842-3338.
Car Stereo - Stereo and CD player - Sony 10 disc auto changer CDX-A10, 2 yrs. old, $1300 new, sell for $650. Ryan K450.
Color TV, 19 inch, only $90. 841-0368.
For Sale: 1900 Sunhil 460ce motorcycle, black,
looks and runs perfect, $500; 1800 Honda Spree
cxo moped, $644; Call 804-6847.
For Sale: IBM Compatible computer, 640 K, $14.
hard drive, 320, drive, 380, hard card. MH.
hard drive, 320, drive, 380, hard card. foam's water, wireless, $200, $167-177. Leaves machine on machine.
FUJI Absolute roadbike, 27" Suntour components, 9 months old, excellent condition. $80.
Roland at 84-8232 or 84-8234
**Furniture for sale!** a grey 6-person pit group/cooking end table with an orange edge. A high-backed, round communal dining room table w/2 and 4 chairs; 2 end tables in dining room table w/2
GOVET SURPLUS!? New combat boots and safes,
glove and gloves, and gloves.
Field jackets, overalls and
clothing. Also CARHARTT WORKWEAR
and KAITRAN MARYS Marpus Sales. S1.
Marys Marpus. 1-457-2734.
Graduating, selling queen size soap, $275
Graduate, selling queen size soap, $850 and dryer, $125
negotiations. Call 843-946-8500.
IBM Compatible computer with 10-month warranty remaining. Flat floppy disk drives and tape drives not included.
Mobile home in Lawrence, perfect for student.
Central air, remodelled. Partially furnished. $2500
Room to sleep. Great kitchen.
**Moving Out Sale - Saturday, 10:00 a.m-2:00 p.m.** or call 847-3410. Also **83 Toyota Corolla for sale. Must sell Tandy 1000 with color monitor. Will take best offer. Call 842-3754.**
Neon Coors Light, $70. 841-0368.
Check out the
Check out the Kansan's Housing Guide for next semester Dec.1, 4, & 11
One-ride trip ticket from Kansas City to Dallas for #78 OBO. Call Kimberly (642-8129).
Pax50 150 Amp - like new $325, Sony Portable
home/car CD Player - like new $19, 10" Ported
Sub, must sell, $200. Pioneer 'band eq. & amp.
<*$0. All OBO. Bt 424-8900.
Perfect Christmas Gift! Brand new, 10-piece,
men's black hüft, low price. Bufalo 841-1466.
Snow Skis - Elan RM-92 165cm, white with gray;
Cabo skis bkd, women's size, 8 W. $155. Iyana
Rhynchus skis bkd, women's size, 8 W. $155.
Two-way airline ticket from Kansas City to Seattle. $150. For details (804-8232).
RTK TKT IG to SensorFi. Leave 12/30, return
116 IG/IQC to 396kFI
RALEIGH technician mountain bike, less than 1 year old. Accessories included $275 mg. Call
MUSEUM GIFT SHO
Museum of Anthropology
Univ. of Kansas
Won mountain bike on game show. Brand new,
4150 IBO. 862-239. If no answer, keep
trying.
1944 Porsche new battery, runs great & recently went to Texas. Asking for $60. 868-6537.
1949 Toyota Corona Wagon. 4-speed, A/C, New and all season radials. Runs good. $775.
340 Auto Sales
M-Sat Sun
9-5 1-5
360 Miscellaneous
1978 Buch Wagon, Auto, AC, CaC/CB, Radio,
Cruise, ONE OWNER, Garaged. 043-632-3125.
On TVs, VCIs, Jewelry, Stereo, Musical
instruments, cameras and more. We honor
Vina/MCA M/E/X.Doe./Jayhaw Pawn &
Jewelry, 1MW. 84 d. 79/119.
ETHNIC
1978 Fast Spider convertible, black with tan interior, new top, 5-speed, $2500. Chris 841-4688. 1979 Chevette, 4-speed, AM/FM/EM cass. 1RU runs.
'84 Encore, loaded. Very good condition. $1700
neg. 843-2542.
ETHNIC ARTS & CRAFTS
1979 Chevette, 4-speed, AM/FM cass, AC, run good.
Must sell. $450 negotiable. 81-6233.
Pontiac 1000 3-door hatchback. 90,000 km.
1049 Pontine 1000-2-door hatchback, 60,000 mi.
w/awetown. Runs perfectly. $150. 843-5504.
1055 Nissan Sentra 2000-2-door hatchback. $179.
Wanted someone to share ride Lawrence-KC near KU Medical Center, Weekdays, Klm 841-9639.
Call Today!
Winston, Winston, Rum perfectly. 11600, 935-234-8
1985 Nissan Sentra, 4-door, automatic, AC,
AM/FM Call 845-1219
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH.
For
Christmas AIRLINE TICKETS
We'll find the lowest fares
Don't Wait
and best schedules. On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
Maupintour
图
749-0700
400s Real Estate
2-BR duplex for sublease. AC, dishwasher/wasser/dryer hoods, small pet allowed, $700
405 For Rent
3-BR brat in house. Fast walk to KU. Newly removed, wood floor dishwasher, window AC, wood base.
A change for the better. Mt. Ries. The luxuries of home. Wetland. Sand tracks. Near riverbanks. Available now. Not yet sold.
2-Br. Apt. for rent. Avail. immed. Walking distance to shopping. Call 845-8531 anytime. Spend $80.00/month. 845-4762. Leave building. $80.00/month.
合
EQUAL
HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
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, or discrimination based on race, color, or nationality, landcap, familial status, or national origin' or 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 law. Our authors are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Apartment for sublease at Nasimith Hall. A single bedroom on first floor with own bathroom. Bathroom and maid service. Leave message 865-3531. Available I to w i with deposit paid and half of January留
Available at West Hills Apts. for next semester:
Sparced one bedroom furnished upstairs, $920 a month.
Water paid. Great location near campus.
Room rates: Lease and deposit required.
841-3600 or 542-3844.
Colony Woods. Must mutable 2-bedroom
bath room, ipt, with halcony, iecmaker,
dishwasher, microwave, access to pool, tub
weight room and more. $385. 749-$390.
FEEDER FAMILY
Studies, 1-2-3 & 4 - apartment buildings. Many great locations, energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 841-1212, 611-5235, 794-0495 or 749-2413.
Mastercraft Management
EFFICIENCY APT. for sublease. Bdroom, deck.
Call Steve 841-7992. Please keep trying.
Avail Jan. 1, studio; $280; I BH $235. Both include gas heat & water paid 1 block from campus at 425 Udgh. Private parking, laundry facilities. 842-764-0.
VILLAGE SQUARE Apartments
A quiet atmosphere
•spacious 2 bedrooms
•close to campus
WINTER SPECIALS!
9TH & AVALON 842-3040
Great 3-person house, 6th & Kentucky, near carport, to sublease starting January 1st. 740-901-011
Help! Suburban backed down! Nice 5-bird camper. Call 740-2894 close, clean to camp. Call 740-2894 after 5 p.m.
Village Museum
For Rent: Very clean & quiet superaudio for 1 to
2 people. Available Dec. 1st, call Aspen Apartments
- 641-5797.
female roommate needed. Huge apt. spi-level.
Guest area. Great neighbor. Call
841-927 for details.
For Rent - Large 3-bedroom apt. Atik bedroom.
$352/mo. Uplifted. paid. 843-8594
For lease Jan. 1. 3-bedroom unit at 18th and Tenth
$59. Call 843-1649. Leave message.
RU $200.00 per month. Phone 841-2107.
Rent - Hassau笔业 $155.00 Utilities paid.
Taxes - 11%
for sublease. Two bedroom apartment,
available January third may. On bus route. Hent
Furnished apt. in private home. Utilities paid.
$8/month. For 1 quiet person. 100 W 19th Floor
3600 N. 42nd St.
Purplished room w/shared kitchen/bath facility for females. Off-street parking. No pets. 841-5000.
Large studio for sublease with HI/AC. Walk to camper downstairs, laundry and 8200. Tel:
Interested in NAISMTHT? Needing someone to
take over my spring lease. Please gift $400 of your
loan to me.
Subclass: 1-bdmr. apt, fully furnished, very close to campus, large for 3 p people, 2 baths, en suite.
Must Sublease, private studio apartment at 728 Oneway. Move to February. $275.00 per month. Call 1-897-3653 after 5 p.m. A.k.a. for James.
Moving to KC? One-bedroom apartment
with a master suite. More
carport and more. Great clubhouse facility.
Located on the second floor.
Sublease: Small one-bedroom apartment
15th allot 18n @ chin $0.96,483.790
Nice large attire room for rent. Avail Jan. lst.
11:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. /229/ $mo./mon.
Check this out! 811-645-2700.
Older 3-2 bedroom home, near downtown, wood floors, nice yard, ness. 875, 841-4144.
FOODBATH - Foodbath Bap. Quirk.
Across from standings 263 but willing to negotiate - Spring sublease. Morgan 865-540.
BOOMMATE: WANTED: Nice, big house.
$190/month. Near campus. Call 892-3257 nights. Roommate Wanted M or F, M or grade student preferential. Room is furnished with state of the art security system, hot tub, weightroom, wash and dryer. Must be a full-time resident in Bloomington. Rooms efficiency and apartments and older wellkept rooms. $165 and up. 841-4144.
Seeking warm friendly roommates?
Kennedy Community has two positions available.
Roommate must have computer skills.
Application may be picked up at ECM
843-893. Oread. For more information call:
843-893
INSTANT $200 REBATE
Hurry in Today some short term leases available COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
- TANNING BED
- VOLLEYBALL COURT
• BASKETBALL COURT
• INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL
• EXERCISE ROOM
• 3 HOT TUBS
• ON BUS ROUTE
$345.$410
MODFLS OPEN DAILY Mon.-Fri. 10-6 p.m.
842-5111
So close to campus! One bedroom apartment for sublease. 190th and Queen. Call 844-2567.
Spacious $8-dim duplex. W/D)wdbound, AC yard,
garage, clean, quiet. Available late December.
$45/mo. Leave message. No dogs please.
749-7587.
Spring Sublease: 3-bdrm., 2-bath townhome,
DW, microwave, on bus route, Sunrise Village.
Call 841-405-605.
Sublease 2-bdrm. apt. 5 minutes from campus.
Room: Quest Room. $330 a month. Available in
late winter or spring.
Study apartment available January. Water, gas,
heat, sewage, laundry and kitchen facilities.
January free. Free phone 848-187-6125.
SUBLEASE, 2 secondmest; 2 bedapot. w/D.
dishwasher, microwave. onibus.路由 749-5869
Available Jan. 1: Great studio apartment $300/mo; Low utilities. Call 842-8310.
1800 NAISMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 60444
913 - 843 - 8559
NAISMITHHALL
•Convenience
•Privacy
•Luxury
Naismith Hall...
Reserve Your Home Now We Still Have A Few Completely Furnished
Apartments Designed with you in mind!
Go to...
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Hanover Place - 841-1212
14th & Mass.
Offering:
* Custom furnishings
* Designed for privacy and safety
* Close to shopping & KU
* Many great locations
*Equal opportunity housing
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
Only Naismith can
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free utilities, weekly maid
MASTERCRAFT
Sundance - 841-5255
7th & Florida
842-4455
service, Dine Anytime,
and much more!
Sublease Spring Semester: 2-bdmr. apt. in
Grayson, on RU bus route. Low utilities.
$60/mo., first month free. 749-1012.
430 Roommate Wanted
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
For more information & a tour call or come by
1 or 2 roommates needed. End of Dec./Jan. 1.
Sublease inceptive apart. Good location. House
nearest public park or parking lot.
2 roommates needed for 3-bdrm. house with W/D,
garage, pets, fireplace 41 W. 4th. Wash. 38th
room.
Apt. sublease start Jan. Room furnished, ½
utilities. Call 843-2853.
today.
Christian male needed spring学期 to share a
4-b houseware $172 + 3.4 utils. On bus route.
11:00 AM - 5:30 PM
Female Roommate needed for spring semester.
Good location. $200.0 + 1/2 utilities. Lease until May.
May. Deposit paid free cable. 841.5390
Sunflower House has rooms open for spring semester. Walk to classes and or downtown, and enjoy group living in a cooperative home-like environment. Low rents include private rooms, TV and game room, evening meals and free laundry. The house is accessible by walk, message, or stop at 146 Tennessee.
Female grad student seeks housemates from Jan.
for 4-bedroom country home SE of Lawrence.
Fireplace, garden space & more. 1-833-4564.
Clean 1-BR furnished apt. Jan thru May. Great campus locale: 865-5915 or 941-3482.
Sublease January, move in December. On-bedroom apartment. New Walk to campus.
Pupilage. Gap space a mile to. 1082-4594.
Non-smoker non-drink. Close to campus. Gas,
water paid. Large bedroom. Responsive
landlord. Call 845-6396.
Female roommate needed immediately for spring semester. Sunrise Village. 841-4238.
9-br, 2 bath duplex. **980 University Dr. $187 per**
+ unities. Utilize C叫应 V or Dae43-3730.
Female roommate needed immediately. 2 bdrm.
Fully equipped KU, energy-efficient. w/H/D. F
42-well room.
Female roommate needed ASAP. Furnished apartment at Sundance. $179 plus ½ utilities.
Kruiter 843-539.
Two-level, i-bedroom apt. - W/D, garage, vcr-
clean, lots of space, room 841 - 842-928-6289.
Very nice 1-bedroom, furnished or unfurnished,
gas heat, AC, walk to campus, Old Mill Ann-
turial.
Female roommate need for spring. Non-smoker, own room, one block from library, $750.
small roommate for very nice 3B townhouse
room, #16/month, garage, FW, DW
84-0526
Female roommate needed. Large apartement, bus route, own room, washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave, furnished. $200 + $ 1% utility. 855-508 for 10:00 a.m. or m. after 6:00 p.m.
Very nice 1-bedroom, furnished and unfurnished,
with large kitchen and large living area.
App.ments: 822 + utilities - 822-$97 per month.
Female roommate needed starting ASAP. Very friendly roommates, on bus, route $170
to the nearest airport.
Female roommate wanted starting January $100/month plus 4 utilities. On bus route. Call
Female roommate needed for spring semester.
Sunrise Village Apt. Will pay part of rent.
842-3579; 841-6129
Male roommate needed January. Fully furnished, own bedroom, D/W, microwave, cable. 1 block from campa. $18/month. New N41-1565. Male roommate wanted for spring semester to own bedroom, bed in walk-in closet, bedroom, bed on wall, walk-in closet. On bus route. Free water - $130 + $1 utilities. N41-4977.
Grad. stud, GWM, 34. 14 yr. in Eur., outgoing,
good cook, activist. Seeking: Peaceful
alternative space, close-in, Jan.-Dec. like my cat,
eng. speak. Contact: Contact Harriet Renne
GWM
January to February a spacious 2-bdrm. apt. for non-smoking female. On Kid's suite, pool, laundry. $215 per month negligible. Call 843-8119
Looking for a female roommate. On bus route,near M-Wart-Mart,厂Q-4less., etc. Rent negotiable + ½ units, water paid. Available immediately. Call Pam at 789-7690.
Look! Male/female roommate needed Jan. 1.
Male roommate needed Mar. 1.
extras. $107.50 + usb. utilities. Call 814-612-9738
Male, non-smoking roommate needed, spring semester, central location, close to Amherst, $150
roommate needed, summer. Call 814-612-9738
Male or female roommate wanted to share a bed/2 bath apartment at CORNER ORNAMERS. On bus route, with pool, cable, A/C. $18/month utilities. *Utilities* #821-2471 anytime.
Male roommate wanted: Spring semester to
utilize a room for $160 per month plus %
utilities. 849-000
THE FAR SIDE
NEEDED: Female housemate to share newer
3rd- ranch near campan. Jan 9 to Tattlefully
bike/ drive/D, Fpk., C.Ian. $200.00/uil.
paid. Have two more mini乐器 males
pay. 811-466-8568.
Non-smoking responsible roommate wanted to
share furnished 2-bedroom house on campus.
Grade student preferred. Must have references.
82-0348.
One roommate needed, male or female, to share Campus Place Apartment. $174 per month starting Jan. 1st. Call 841-8633.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Female or male to share a great apartment, vi block from campus. Call 841-8672.
Need 2 female roommates for 3-bedroom
rooms at Traillridge. Call Cassy K404-8544
8547-7333.
Roommate wanted to share 3-bedroom house with two others. Washer/dryer. On bus route. $150 + % ulls. 749-3998.
Needed = Female non-smoking roommate. Nice housemates with skills and utilities. No depend, walking dist. to store.
Roommate needed for second semester. Base-
ment room, own bathroom, utilities split 4.
$450 per month.
Need female non-smoker roommate ASAP or
senior辅导. 6-bed, 2-on-3 bus, on地板, nice
updressed apartment. Deposit required and %
utilities. Call Jennifer 842-819.
Roommate needed spring semester. Bus route.
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www.alman.com
Roommate needed: Only $175.00/mo. in room, 3 route,最大室mate, 请电话:641-8234.
Roommate wanted to share 2-bedroom apartment for spring semester. Large bedroom, kitchen, washer/dryer. $170 + $1 utils. 843-6407.
Roommate needs for large 30-apartment in house. Hardwood floor, gas water, paid/month. Starting January, 740-986 nights.
Roommate needs to subdue n-238.dwm. townhouse with rent waived to subdue n-238.dwm. Trash compacts dishwasher, on bus route. $150 monthly - utilities.
Call 842-789-6381
ROOMMATE WANTED
- 3 level & spacious
* Share w/ 2 other girls
* Close to campus
* On bus route
* Fully furnished
* Start ASAP
* $189 + util. / month
* CALL 842-4980
(Leave message)
Roommate wanted for townhouse, spring semester. $187 * = utilities, water paid. One block from campus. Own bedroom plus AC, dishwasher, microwave, cables & VCR. $300.
Roommate wanted to share modern spacious apartment close to all facilities. Own bedroom, 870¢, low utilities. Call for info 483-1797.
*FEMALE ROOMMATE
NEEDED*
*$190/mo. + 1/3 utilities*
*Walking distance from KU*
*Own Bedroom/Bath*
*Punished*
Rooms in very nice house for non-smoking, quiet female. Two blocks south KU. Free utilities, microrowave, TV, housecleaning. Ready 1/28 and 1/15/88. $409-$420. Deposit. 81/-369.
CALL 842-5186
Seeking fun female roommate who's a serious about school. Own bedroom, bathroom W/D, pool, spacious, quiet, very nice. Electric, cable, water paid. $223.50/month. 843-7926 eyes.
Roommate! 2 male law students need 1 grad student
campus $230/month * to utility, 767-805
Seeking mature male student spring semester.
2 Br, LF, pl. old style. $300 Ublies paid.
Sale ends 11/5/18.
Spacious, bright, new carpet! One block from the pool. Microwave/A/C/Dishwasher/Laundry Facilities. Easy-going female need non-smoking roommate for spring. Summer option. $770 + 4 utilities.
SPRING SUBLEASE: Fun female need to share condo closets to camps, D.w. cable. Cable closet.
Sublease 3-bed, 2-bath apt. Microwave,
Basis bus route. Available late
December, 76-89.
Wanted: Fun witty female roommate for close-to-campus apartment. Call for information.
842-4718.
Wanted - One committed Christian female to share expenses in 4-br. house beginning in 2015.
Wanted: Roommate for spring semester.
Need: Bachelor's degree or equivalent.
utilities. Call 749-1858, if no answer please.
Wanted: Woman international student to share comfortable home with American woman graduate student. 20-minute walk from Watson, MA. Attend aEC at 8:46AM - 10:06AM (Weekdays) - 740-1460.
By GARY LARSON
© 1983 Chronicle Features
Distributed by Universal Press Syndicate
12 35 7
83 61
3 15
Suddenly, only a mile into the race, Ernie gets a nose cramp.
16
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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Med Center to perform whole organ transplants
By Melanie Matthes Kansan staff writer
The history-making liver transplant that took place last week at the University of Chicago Medical Center is still a few years away from being practiced at the University of Kansas Medical Center, a Med Center official said.
The new surgery, which takes a portion of an adult liver and transplants it to a child, is still experimental, he said.
"I would say that type of surgery is at least two years away," said Jameson Forster, director of the liver transplant program.
It has been performed with some success in Australia, Brazil and Japan. Poor said, and was first commissioned in the United States Nov. 27 in Chicago.
"We need some time to watch and see if it can be applied on a wide basis," he said.
The Med Center does not perform liver transplants now but will implement a transplant program in January, Forster said.
He said the first transplantes performed at the Med Center would be whole organ transplants. The Chicago transplant is an extremely technical surgery and requires experienced liver transplant surgeons.
Christoph Broelsch, the Chicago surgeon who performed the transplant, has been doing liver transplants for a number of years and is qualified to do the surgery, Forster said.
"If the first transplants are successful and work well, we'll look at more technical procedures," Forster said. "But we need to ensure a little ironing out to make sure that this can work smoothly."
Mary Fetsch, public relations specialist at the Chicago Med Center, said that, depending on the expertise of the surgeon, the transplant was
something that could be done at transplant centers across the country.
The transplant is considered a surgical breakthrough because it makes organs available to children who might otherwise die while waiting for a donor.
But Forster he thought that reports that 50 percent of the children died while waiting for a donor were somewhat inflated.
The segmental transplants are performed on children who are elective patients, he said. This means that they are not in the critical stages of liver failure but will need a transplant at some point. These patients often wait for donors while their condition worsens.
Fetsch said that Teresa Smith, who donated a portion of her liver to her daughter, would be released yesterday afternoon. Her 21-month-old daughter, Alyssa, is in critical but stable condition.
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SECTION TWO
FRIDAY DEC. 8,1989
County officials search for key to crowded jail
Inmates could be sent elsewhere
By Rich Cornell Kansan staff writer
Elbow space has become as scarce as sunlight in the Douglas County jail.
As some inmates rolled out sleeping mats in the jail's day area because the beds were full, county officials said two plans could eliminate crowding.
Loren Anderson, Douglas County sheriff, said some inmates could be sent to a jail in another county to relieve crowding in the local jail. He suggested planning that would provide a separate building for work-release inmates.
The jail, designed for 52 inmates,
bases more than 60 men and women
During the day, Anderson said, 15 to 20 inmates who participate in the county's work-release program leave the jail for full-time, paying jobs. They only occupy jail space at night. There are more inmates than beds.
"If it's really crowded at night, inmates can bunk in the day area," Anderson said. "I've talked to a number of inmates who speak favorably to other girls. We're not having any problems with the overcrowding."
The jail will face problems when the number of full-time inmates exceeds 32, he said. Now, about 45 inmates stay in the jail day and night.
Anderson said he expected problems within six months. In response, he included a clause in his departing budget this year that requested commission to finance the housing of inmates elsewhere if necessary.
"They kid of did this number," he said, rubbing his chin.
When he first approached county commissioners to discuss financing his plan, they said they did not know county could afford it, Anderson said.
The commissioners will probably support his plan when its necessity appears, he said. He has no other plan for dealing with the excess of inmates.
It would cost the county about $30 a day to send each inmate elsewhere, Anderson said. But sending them away would cost the county more costs to keep them here because of transportation and manpower costs.
Anderson said he had talked briefly to Rod Nally, Neoosho County sheriff, sending inmates to the jail there. He has committed to anything yet.
Hank Goodman, Neosho County undersheriff, said Sedgewick County officials were paying $90 a day to house three inmates in the Neosho jail. Goodman is looking for more inmates to house.
Anderson said several other jail administrators around the state were offering to keep inmates who were housed in crowded jails.
"There's enough of a market in this part of the state. They're seeing who'll pay what," he said.
County leery of cost
Chris McKenzie, Douglas County administrator, said Anderson's plan had merit.
"You can't help but come to the conclusion that we're at, or near, capacity all of the time," McKenzie said.
He said the commission could
finance the transportation of inmates elsewhere with contingency funds or by borrowing. Contingency funds are set aside for specific capital improvement needs that may arise.
McKenzie said he did not expect Anderson's plan to be put into effect until the next school year.
He said county officials were studying the possibility of building a work-release building, which also would eliminate crowding in the jail.
"I think it's very likely that this is going to happen," he said. "The commission will be to consider if fund to fund the agency funds. I'd prefer not to berry."
Louie McElihaney, county commissioner, said he wanted the voters to decide if the county could afford to send inmates to another county.
"I'm always in favor of putting things like that in front of the people to vote," he said.
McEhaney said he supported a new building for work-release inmates. Financing one would pose no problem to the county, but maintaining and staffing it might cost too much.
Mike Amyx, county commissioner, said he did not know if either plan should be adopted because the com- pondered had not studied them enough.
Plan works elsewhere
Johnson County officials already have sent some inmates elsewhere.
Inmates have been sent to Fort Scott, in Bourbon County, for seven years said Lt. Robert Johnston of the Johnson County Sheriff's Department.
The Johnson County jail capacity is 270 inmates, he said. It no longer meets the county's needs because of the area's growth.
"It's the only solution we have," he said. "We're in the planning stages of building a new one."
The arrangement with Bourbon County has worked out well, Johnston said. Ten Johnson County schools have been transferred from two to 10 months, are there going
Capt. John Zemites of the Johnson County sheriff's department said it cost $50 a day to hold each inmate in the Johnson County Jail, about the county spent to transport and house inmates in other counties' jails.
A total of 70 Johnson County in-
stitute among several several
Missouri laals, he said.
Annette Stenner/KANSAN
"It's far from the optimum way of doing this," Zemites said. "But it's the only thing we can do."
Alec Beth, Bourbon County jail administrator, said he charged Johnson County $28 a day to keep each inmate, $2 less than his usual rate. Johnson County officials have sent inmates to Bourbon County for so long.
The Bourbon County jail can hold 42 inmates, Beth said. Bourbon County has eight of its own inmates. Inmates from Johnson, Sedgwick and Wyandotte counties, however, make the total inmate count about 30.
Beth said inmates from other counties had difficulty keeping in touch with distant family members. Inmates at the Bourbon jail can have visitors from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesdays and from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Sundays. Inmates' children can visit them from 1 to 2 p.m. Sundays.
"We're as full as we comfortably operate," he said. "We have the luxury of having the comfort zone where we operate at."
KATERNWAR
Work-release program helps local offenders
By Rich Cornell
Kansan staff writer
A local judge and a court services officer agree that the Douglas County work-release program creates great better lives for themselves.
Jean Shepherd, Douglas County district court judge, said that through work-release, an offender could be released to a job. This boots self-esteem.
The program also can help an offender's family because the
inmate can continue to provide an income.
"Their families don't get put on assistance and put on that downward spiral," Shepherd said.
Although the crowden common of the jail concerns her, she said, it does not affect how she sentences offenders. She only sentences to the work-release program those are not a risk to the community.
Shepherd considers an offender's previous record, family history, the nature of the crime and
the state's statutes when deciding his sentence.
Intuition also plays a part.
"It's something you can't even name," Shepherd said. "I taught high school six years, and I think that helps. All those kids and all excusees. You see the same excuse here, but for different things."
Michelle Frasure, chief court services officer, coordinates presenting investigations to help the judge sentence the offender.
She said all inmates would benefit if a separate building was constructed.
"The other inmates can get kind of jealous, seeing people coming and going," Frasure said.
The combination of regular inmates and work-release offenders can create tension, she said.
In addition, she said, a new building would help control crowding, which inherently causes problems.
"When people are crowded, in or out of jail, they tend to get frustrated," Frasure said.
The three counties' jail officials come to Beth for help in alleviating crowding problems, not to save money, he said. His county, however, benefits from the extra money because it pays expenses.
"That's the only way we can really keep the doors open," Beth said.
New facility possible
9 Douglas County officials hope to open some new doors of their own.
Mark Matese, director of Douglas County's community corrections department, heads a committee developing a plan to build a facility for work-release inmates.
Matese said a separate facility would provide more rehabilitative treatment to inmates and alleviate the crowding.
"Just in the last year, it's been over capacity just about every day," he said. "We're overpopulated right now."
Removing low-risk, work-release inmates from the $2-bed jail would
provide more room for the other inmates, Matese said.
Matese and his committee members have been studying the possibility of building a structure that would house work-release inmates and a detention center, or halfway house, for recently released inmates of the jail.
The staff would teach classes, provide structure to inmates' lives, and help inmates find jobs. Matees said. Work-release teaches inmates that they have done something wrong and builds self-esteem.
Matese said he would present his plan to the county's advisory board sometime this month and would give it to the county commission next month.
Such a facility would offer the least expensive solution to the overcrowding of the jail, he said. Building a work-release structure would cost about $30,000 a bed, and building a new jail would cost $40,000 a bed. Maintenance would cost the same.
"I personally think there's a definite need," Matese said. "I particularly think that it's justified in terms of overcrowding."
Space would aid efforts
Community corrections would benefit from the new building as well, he department handles offenders sentence supervised probation with surveillance.
The offenders involved have been convicted of low-class felions, such as writing bad checks. They would have been sent to prison if they were not sentenced to the probation, Mattese said. The probation involves a four-step process that takes about two years to complete.
The offenders, Matese said, are watched by officers to determine if they are behaving as their probation requires. The program requires frequent interviews between the offending individuals and providing structure in their lives.
Matese said identifiable substance-abuse problems, found in 85 percent of the offenders, caused many to fail to meet their probation requirements.
The staff at a new structure would provide help to drug abusers, he said. Right now, community corrections cannot do enough.
"We're in the trenches fighting the war," Matese said. "We've been in the battle for years. I don't know if we need the resources to win at this level."
Community corrections also coordinates offenders sentenced to community service, he said. Each year, 1000 people receive service are performed in the county.
With a new building, Matese said,
the department could do more to help
offenders find permanent jobs after
their sentence is completed.
“What we’re trying to do is build a factory to develop these people,” he said. “But we can do that is getting them to work and keeping them at work.”
Rural doctors need help in health care manpower shortage
By Melanie Matthes
Kansas staff writer
Kansan staff writer
On Thursday, Nov. 9, Stanley Handsby began a usual 12-hour day practicing medicine in rural southeast Kansas.
Just before 7 a.m., he started the 19-mile commute from his home in Erie to the hospital in Parsons.
By 10 a.m. the physician had completed a hysterectomy, seen nine patients in the Parsons hospital and visited with an assistant about an autopsy he had performed on a woman who had died in a car accident the night before. In addition to
HAL HEALTH CARE
Kevin Meaten/KANSAN
one of a dozen general practitioners in Neosho County, Handshy is the county coroner.
Handshy's practice is typical of many other physicians in rural Kansas, which is facing the growing problem of inadequate health care.
These communities are plagued by a lack of access to health care, shortage of manpower and statutes and regulations that rural health agencies said Steve McDowell, director of the Office of Rural Health (ORH).
To some rural physicians, these problems mean they work long hours and perform a wide variety of services for a large number of patients. But for many, the small town life is tough. The community outweigh the disadvantages of working in a small Kansas town.
To guide communities to a better
system of health care delivery, the Kansas' Department of Health and Environment in April created the ORH, McDowell said.
The office reviews and develops health care policies and proposals. Its most recent project was a series of meetings with rural health care providers from across the state. Through these meetings, ORH officials will establish an agenda for action on rural health care in Kansas. For physicians such as Handshy, the ORH means the problems of working in a medically underserved community are finally being addressed.
Just after 10 n. m., Handsby began another commute to his private practice in Thayer, where he treated about 14 patients.
During the lunch hour, he drove from Thayer to his practice in Erie where he treated patients until about 7 p.m.
Long days not unusual
For Handshy, most days are similar.
On Saturdays, he works about six hours. On Sundays, he only makes his hospital rounds in Parsons and Chamute.
"We've had two one-week vacations since I've been here," he said. "I've been here since 1983."
Handshy said he treated patients within a 65-mile radius. Some patients travel as far as 150 or 200 miles to see him.
The two closest hospitals are about 19 miles from Erie. In a county with a population of about 20,000, Handyshmets the medical needs of about 30 hospitals by commuting between medical communities and four communities. His duties range from sewing up open wounds to delivering babies.
See RURAL, p. 6A
2A
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
KU student battles with effects of rape
By Liz Hueben
Kansan staff writer
The only thing Kirsten Lawng said she deserved after that party two years ago was a hangover the next day.
Instead, she has endured two years of emotional anguish.
She said she was raped by another KU student after he took her home from the party. She had known him for more than a year.
Lawing said the man was taking her home because she was so drunk she was not aware of what was going on.
"I passed out," said Lawing, Wichita senior. "He was extremely drunk. I woke up, and he was raping me. I realized this person I absolutely hate was raping me. He wouldn't stop."
Lawing never reported the incident to police because she said she did not have a strong enough support system at the time.
"I never called the police because I couldn't handle any more rejections about whether or not I had been
raped," she said, "I didn't want anyone to ask me what I was wearing or saying, "Maybe you wanted this to happen." I felt very alone.
"I'm not very convinced that the police, lawyers and judges in the United States are sensitive about rape issues, and I didn't want to put myself on trial about something I felt so bad about."
She said the same man had attacked her previously in her room residence hall her freshman year, she was able to get away from him.
She still sees the man on campus several times a week, and he smiles and asks why she won't talk to him, she said.
"The next day he wanted to have lunch with me," she said. "He doesn't think what he did was rape.
"Ms.' magazine reported that on a survey of men who said they had forced someone to have sex with them, 48 percent of them said that what they did was definitely not rape."
Charlene Muchlenhard, assistant professor of psychology/women's
studies, referred to a study by Diana Russell in which rape was defined as intercourse through force, threat of force, or when one person was unconscious, asleep or otherwise helpless and unable to consent.
She said Russell found that 24 percent of all women had been raped and that 80 to 90 percent of the rapes had been date rape or acquaintance rape.
Of those raped, Russell found that 30 percent reported stranger rapes and that 1 percent reported date and acquaintance rape.
Lawing said that she tried going through therapy but that it didn't work for her. She said she didn't like the therapist-client relationship.
She also said she had a difficult time telling her parents about the incident.
"It was hard to talk to my parents because I know it hurts them to see me hurt," she said.
Lawing said she turned instead to various support groups to help her get over the burn.
She said she had gotten a lot of
support from Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services (RVSS), Headquarters and Women's Transitional Care Services, which are all local centers that lend support to women who have raped.
She said she also got involved in feminist organizations.
"Through feminist organizations I've met a lot of women who have had the same experiences and believed which is comforting." Lawing said a lot of women who have been raped since they have been at KU."
She has been active in a group on campus called Students Against Violence Against Women and has participated in Lawrence rallies that are paired with national rabewareness campaign "Women Take Back the Night."
She said she got involved in the rallies because she thought the end results of a sexist society were rape and battery of women.
For the past two years, Laws having has to carry around a lot of emotion.
"You question your own judgment.
You question your own personal intuitions," she said. "You have no assurance it won't happen again.
"it's harder after an acquaintance rape for a woman to trust the men she harbor after a stranger rape for a woman to trust the men she can't see."
Sarah Jane Russell, director of RVSS, said studies showed that the same symptoms developed in victims of rape, as in victims of stranger rage.
She said, however, that these symptoms, called Rape Trauma Syndrome, were more intense for a victim of acquaintance rage.
Rape Trauma Syndrome is a set of long-term and short-term emotional problems that a rape survivor may encounter.
The problems include: guilt, emotional shock, disbelief, embarrassment, shame, depression, feelings of powerlessness, disorientation, flashbacks to the rape, denial, fear, anxiety and anger.
Muehlenhard said women got more social support after a violent, stranger rape than after a rape
where the victim knew the offender.
She said there were other long-term harmful effects of rape, which included problematic adjustment to family and work, alcohol and drug abuse or dependency and sexual functioning problems.
However, Muehlenharr added, about 25 percent of all rape victims said that in the long run they were as well off or even better off after the rape for different reasons, including therapy and a change of values.
For Lawing, one problem is that she is very angry. She said she could be prosecuted for harassment more easily than the man could have been prosecuted for rape, had she reported the incident.
"I sprayed ketchup on him at the Glass Onion once. Not very mature, I know," she said.
Lawing does not seem to feel much shame, though shame can be one of rape's effects.
"I'm supposed to feel ashamed about what happened to me. But the person who raped me should be the one who is humiliated," she said.
Date-rape victims often have difficult time convicting attackers
By Liz Hueben
Kenan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
In many cases of rape, a victim does not have the capacity to think very clearly about what kind of support is needed.
One of the biggest decisions for a rape victim is whether to report a rape to police, especially if the rapist was a date or acquaintance.
One problem with date-rape cases in court comes from relatively low rates of conviction.
There are many factors to be considered before making this decision because there are advantages and disadvantages to the legal path.
Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said it was difficult to convict a date-rape suspect because
the testimony in court was basically just one person's word against another's as to whether the alleged victim consented to having sex with the defendant.
“Consent is the big problem,” he said. “In cases of acquaintance rape, you don’t usually have to worry about getting caught on,” or the defendant pleading insanity.
Flory cited one case in which a woman who said she had been raped fied to a nearby grocery store and was arrested in police. Flory summoned the clerk for advice, who said that when the woman came, she was obviously upset and was crying.
But the defendant claimed she consented to having sex with him and was acquitted.
Flory said he was sure there had
been more acquaintance rapes or sexual assaults than had been reported and prosecuted by his office.
In the U.S. legal system, a defendant can be convicted only if jury members are able to find the defendant guilty "beyond a reasonable doubt." Flory said that was tough to prove in date-rape cases.
"In a case of date rape, there are no eyewitnesses, and a rape kit taken at the hospital doesn't prove any wrongdoing. It is whether the victim consented." For more
Flory said such problems arose in any one-on-one crime where there were no eyewitnesses, such as assault.
Another traumatic experience for a rape victim in the courts is that
some defense lawyers try to turn the case around so that the victim is on trial.
Flory said he did not think this had been a problem in Douglas County. He local defense attorneys had done their jobs without attacks on the victim.
To alleviate persecution of alleged rape victims in court, some states, including Kansas, have passed rape shield laws that make a victim's sexual history inadmissible in court as evidence that she would have consented to sexual intercourse with the defendant.
Another factor that causes trauma in rape cases is that the victim has to answer questions about an unpleasant experience that may have happened months before, which forces
the victim to re-experience the rape. Flory said.
There are many stereotypic traits of rape victims in the eyes of society and the eyes of jurors.
Charlene Muehlenhard, assistant professor of psychology and women's studies, said there was a common reason that a woman would cry rape just because she might be angry at her boyfriend, ex-boyfriend, husband or someone else.
"Going through the court system is so traumatic that if a woman really can be forced to get back at a man, there are easier, quicker ways than that." she said.
Kirsten Lawing, Wichita senior and member of Students Against Violence Against Women, said that rape was falsely reported as often as
any other violent crime, yet it was the least prosecuted crime.
crime.
In Douglas County, fewer than $1/4$ of one percent of all reported rapes have been untrue, according to the booklet "Surviving Rape and Sexual Assault in Douglas County," produced by Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services (RVSS).
Legally, Flory said, saying "no" to sexual advances was enough to call subsequent sexual contact rape. But, in practicality, he said, it probably was not enough for a jury.
Gary LaFree, professor of sociology at the University of New Mexico, will book "Hape and Criminal Justice: Society of Sexual Assault," in which he
See RAPE. d. 10A
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
3A
Engineering dean builds life on devotion to work, family
By Beth Behrens
By Beth Behrens Kansan staff writer
Although the love of the Irish shows in his Notre Dame school spirit, the crimson and the blue are not far behind for Tom Mulnazii.
Mulnazzi, associate dean of engineering, said that he came to the University of Kansas 10 years ago to help improve the image of the KU School of Engineering. Since then, he has thousands of miles of Kansas highways driving not only the University but also the importance of safe roads.
"People in Kansas don't even know we have an engineering program at KU," he said. "They think of K-State as the engineering school in Kansas. 'I do seminars all over the state, and part of the reason is to let people know we exist."
In keeping a handle on all of his interests, Mulinazzi said, he doesn't have one job, but three: associate dean, professor, and researcher for the KU Transportation Center.
"The problem with my job is that I can't control my interruptions," he said. "The phone rings, or a student comes in and wants to know about a transfer or why I didn't let them into grad school, so I end up staying up 'until one o'clock Monday night grading exams."
In addition to those obligations, Mulinazzi also advises KU athletes, keeps statistics for the KU men's basketball team, is the chairman of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, chairman of the KU Transportation Study Board and finished serving on the Fulbright scholarship selection committee last month.
Before coming to the University, Mulinazzi was a professor at the University of Maryland, Kathy, his wife, said they lived 15 minutes away from campus, but because of heavy traffic, the drive sometimes would take him more than an hour. She said the stress had caused him to have chest pains.
Mulinzaa said his doctor had told him that his high blood pressure would kill him unless things changed.
Workaholic
"When I lived in Maryland, my doctor said I had to get started on medication," he said. "I said I was going to Kansas and I'd be gone in three months. He said I needed to get a doctor as soon as I got there. I came to Kansas, and I didn't get a doctor for a year because I was too busy."
When he finally saw a Lawrence doctor about 10 years ago to have his blood pressure taken, he was diagnosed as normal. His blood pressure had dropped more than 40 points.
His wife said none of the family members would be happy if they weren't constantly busy, but no matter how involved her husband may be in countless organizations and projects, he keeps one element of his life constantly on his mind: his family comes first.
A story his uncle told him years ago about Italian war heroes became Mulnazzi's own vision of what the importance of family should be.
He said his uncle was fighting against England with the Italian army when he was captured. Because the English offered to send his family money, his uncle joined the side of the English.
"That's why you never see any books about Italian war heroes," Mulinazzi said. "They care about their families too much."
Kathy Mulnazzi said there had been many times their oldest daughter had asked why God had to give her an Italian father because of his strict rules and strong feelings about what a family should be. But she said that that the children came to understand they were fortunate to have a father interested in their activities
Years of coaching softball leagues and being scout master for his son's Boy Scout troops have kept Mulnazizi involved in his children's lives, despite his hectic schedule at work.
His oldest daughter, Teresa Mullinazzi, said her father often tried to put himself in her shoes.
"He sometimes would apologize to me because he wasn't sure how he should act," she said. "He'd tell me, 'I'm sorry,' because he never had a sister and wasn't sure how he should act or respond."
Eduaction came first
Mulnazzi was an only child, born and raised in the blue-collar city of Ottawa, Ill., in a two-bedroom home where his father, Leonard "Happy" Mulnazzi, still lives.
His father had one year of high school education and his mother had only two, but Mulinazzi said there was never a question of whether he was going to college. The only question was where.
"We never really talked about it," he said. "I think they must have realized the importance of getting an education. It wasn't that they were trying to just give me what they didn't have."
He said he was going to go to the University of Illinois, but was accepted at Notre Dame, where he started as a math major.
"After we finished beating each other up, we sat on the ground for a while," he said. "He asked me what I wanted to be and I said an algebra teacher. I wanted to teach math. I asked him what he wanted to be, and he said he wanted to be a civil engineer."
Mulnazi said he had wanted to be a math teacher since he was in grade school because all of his friends had trouble with it, and he knew he could teach it better. But a fight he had with his best friend in eighth grade made him change his mind to engineering.
KANEKO JAPANESE
Tom Mulinazzi reminisces about former students who autographed his football.
"Now, his dad was an engineer, but I didn't know what they did. He told me they built highways and bridges and made sure we all had safe water to drink. I guess I always kept that in the back of my mind."
Summers were spent working for the Illinois Highway Department, and he what he was doing, he evenly deserved his eight grade friend was right.
He said math was too abstract for him, but engineering was more concrete. He never negretted his math background, though, because it paved the way into a career choice that made sense to him.
"My father tells me I'm fortunate to have a job I really enjoy," he said. "It's sad that everyone can't enjoy what they choose to do."
Careful adviser
Julie James/KANSAM
He said when he advised students, including his own children, about the classes they should take, the first thing he asked was whether they took the roughest courses possible so they could leave all options on them.
"When she came back from an engineering weekend in Florida, when she decided that was what she wanted to do, she said, 'Dad, why didn't you tell me about engineering?' " he said. "I told her that if I would have tried to tell her about what I did, she would have
He said he never encouraged his children to follow in his footsteps, because engineering wasn't for everybody. His daughter Christi Mulinazzi recently decided she wanted to be an engineer, but it wasn't because of career coaching at home.
been turned off it."
His daughter Teresa Mulinazzi, KU junior, said she had been going to her dad for advising since she started at the University. Although she said she was a business major, she continued to seek his advice.
"When I go to talk to him, he'll have his secretories hold all of his incisions and put a note on his door to notify him because he's with his daughter."
"His philosophy is, 'If you do you best, that all I can ask,'" she said. "If you don't try, that's when he gets mad. When you go in to talk to him, it's like you are the most important person right then."
She said lists helped him keep his life in order. Mirriads of yellow legal pads trigger lists of things he needed to remember.
Tom Mulinazi said his escape from the rat-razer was baseball. A
die-hard Chicago Cubs fans, he tried to play on the Notre Dame baseball team during his freshman year, but he ended up a bench-warmer.
Now he plays on an occasional softball league team, he said, and is a member of a Ball Park Baseball Club.
Mulinazzi said he got together every week with several other faculty members throughout the University and played statistical baseball.
"It's sometimes really bad because I find myself staring at the wall thinking about my batting order and who I will pitch, trying to figure out how to beat the other team," he even "I've got one rule, and that's that we can talk about University business. You've got to have an escape."
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Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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The Chapter 30 program, also called the Montgomery GI Bill, will continue to assist some veterans who have received Chapter 34 benefits, according to the brochure. But others, including up to 15 local servicemen, will be caught in the cracks.
One such veteran is Mike Lacey, 35, a non-traditional student at the University of Kansas, who served in the Navy.
Veterans who served on active duty for 181 continuous days from Feb. 1, 1955 to Dec. 31, 1976 were eligible for federal benefits to help finance their education, a chance they might not have received otherwise, according to a KU Veterans Services brochure. They were allowed 10 years after leaving the service to complete their education
Lacey said he joined the Navy in 1976 to obtain GI benefits. He was discharged in 1981 and entered Washburn University in 1982 as a part-time student, believing he would have 10 years to finish school.
An opportunity for a better life. The Chapter 34 educational assistance program, commonly known as the Vietnam Era GI Bill, has offered this opportunity to many U.S. veterans.
But the Chapter 34 program is running out. Dec. 31, 1989 marks the end of the Vietnam Era GI Bill. It also means end of benefits for many veterans.
These unlucky veterans will not be able to use the 10 full years to finish their job or them, the dec. 31 closing date comes before the allotted 10-year limit.
Although the closing date of Dec. 31, 1989 was enacted in 1976, Lacey claimed the government not notified him of it, and now he could lose the chance for an education he says he is entitled to.
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Lacey remained a part-time student at Washburn while the government paid for his tuition and books. He said it was necessary for him to work while in school to meet his other expenses.
"I spent four years in the Navy and was promised something by the government, and now they're lying to me," he said.
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Lacey said he didn't know, however, that his time was slowly running out. His plans to finish college and attend nursing school suddenly became more expensive.
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"About a year and a half ago, I got a letter from the Veterans Administration saying I was no longer eligible for benefits after this year," he said. "They said it was the law. But I needed to know any information before then saying this was the law. They should have told me as soon as they knew."
Cindy Smith, veterans services representative for the Kansas Commission on Veteran Affairs (KCVA), and other local veterans were out of lick.
"There is a gap, although not a bus one, where some people did get a bad deal," she said. "They do have a gripe. They're not getting the 10 years they were supposed to be entitled to. But it's not a new grime."
Smith explained why the government was closing out the Chapter 34 program.
"I think the government's standpoint is, 'We have to end this sometime,' she said." The military has never been really good about giving out information about it. But any award letters that they've gotten should have specified the closing date."
Gary Thompson, director of student records and registration in the KU Veteran Services Office, said there was no reason why veterans should not have been notified of the closing date.
"When you leave active duty, everyone goes through an exit program, and you talk about what beaten him. He said that." That information should help be available to them. They should have been notified, probably twice."
Randy Scott, administrative officer for the KCVA, said it was difficult to pinpoint a culprit in Lacey's situation.
Thompson conceded that some notifications were carried out better.
"Usually on the last day in the military, you're so glad to get out you know, not to anything else," he said. "I wouldn't be surprised if they missed it."
"Unless you're getting real close they don't notify you," he said. "The closing date is on the award letter you get every semester, but most people don't read that part. They're interested in the money — they don't read the stuffers."
Scott said it was possible, although highly improbable, that Lacey and the other veterans were never notified or that they missed the closing date.
"We haven't received too many complaints about it," he said. "But whenever there's a change in benefits or a change in the law, there's always someone caught in the cracks."
Tim Boller, legislative assistant to State Rep. Jim Slattery, said there had been proposals to the federal legislature to extend the deadline of the Chapter 34 program.
"I'm on the veterans' side, but it's the law,' she said. "They can appeal all they can do is try to get the federal legislature to change the law."
Smith agreed there was little that could be done to help the veterans.
"It it's very unlikely, though." Boller said. "It would cost $180 million a year to extend it, and that money would have to come out of other vet programs, which are already underfunded."
He said Rep. Sonny Montgomery, chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee and author of both assistance programs, was opposed to continuing the Chapter 34 program because of the cost.
"Everyone involved wants to do what's best for the vets," Boller said. "If we had our wish we'd have the money to help them. But the government really needs to watch its money."
Some veterans who served on the Chapter 34 program will be eligible for the Chapter 30 program, Smith said. They must have served on active duty continuously from Oct. 19, 1984 until at least June 30, 1988. They also could be eligible if they were honorably discharged between June 30, 1985 and June 30, 1988.
Lacey meets none of these eligibility requirements for the Chapter 30 program. He must find other means of financing his education after Dec. 31.
"I'll continue school no matter what," he said. "I'll invest in my education even if I have to go into debt."
Lacey said he was in especially dire financial straits since he and his wife, Dodie, both were working parttime and attending school full-time. They both intend to go on to professional school after graduating, making funds even more difficult to come by.
"We only pull in $15,000 a year together'since we've just working part-time,' Lacey said:'It's a real scramble for funds.'
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5A
THE CATTLE RIVER AUCTIONS
Farmers from the Kansas City area come to the Lawrence Livestock Company to buy and sell livestock.
SOLD!
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Verlin Green yells out the price for eager buyers.
Pendleton
At the end of East 11th street in Lawrence sits a white frame building with a stable area full of hay. The driveway leading to the structure is unpaved and full of bumps.
The building appears to be abandoned, but come Saturday the white frame structure is transformed into a rip-roaring live cattle auction.
The Lawrence Livestock Sale Company, 900 E. 11th Street, is open for business every Saturday. Larry Gallagher has owned and operated the livestock sale company with his wife for $1/2 years. Farmers from the Kansas City area come to Lawrence to buy and sell cattle. The sale includes pigs, cows and calves. Cows are sold for $400 to $700, depending on the age of the animal. Younger cows are brought back to farms and raised; older ones are slaughtered.
Verlin Green has been the auctioneer at the Lawrence Livestock Company for the past eight years, and farmers say he is one of the best. Each week the wood benches are filled with farmers waiting to hear Green call out the right price. Many children accompany parents and grandparents at the auction. James Kaighin of Tonga-onix brings his grandaughter, Missy, 5, to the sale every Saturday. Jean Pribbernow of Haveryville comes every week with at least one of her nine grandchildren.
About 3 p.m., when all the cattle have been auctioned off, the arena clears. The snack counter becomes the crowded spot with hungry workers, sellers and buyers. Trailers are loaded up with cattle and the white frame building once again becomes abandoned. The gravel parking lot waits for next Saturday when it will once again hold the crowd, who hear the cattle call and come to make their deals.
The benches at the Lawrence Livestock Sale Company are filled every Saturday for the live auction.
THE STAR
ABOVE: Dustin Mosler, left, 10, and his brother, Daniel, 6, shoot enemy cows. The boys came to the auction with their father. RIGHT: The cashier's window is the last stop of the day; sellers collect their money and buyers pay for the livestock they purchased during the auction.
Story and photos by Stacey Gore
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Frankie Robinson of Topeka takes a break after working.
6A
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Office examines rural health
By Melanie Matthes Kansan staff writer
Stanley Handsy entered his patient's room with a smile on his face, walked to the side of the bed and reached out to hold the man's
"How ya doin,' kid?" he asked the elderly man.
The patient rubbed his white hair and shrugged his shoulders. The man's wife and relatives waited quietly in the corner of the room.
"You could go to that doctor in Wichita or you could go to Kansas City," Handshy said. "It makes no difference to me, kid, but I want to know where you're going to go I can be in touch with that doctor."
Handshy said that if his patient wanted to see a specialist for his lung cancer, he had no alternative than traveling outside the county.
Situations such as this one, where patients are having to drive more than 60 miles for medical services, are occurring in rural communities (state, said Steve McDowell, director of the Office of Rural Health.
In order to guide rural Kansas to a better system of health care delivery the Kansas Department of Health and Environment created the Office of Rural Health (ORH) in April, McDowell said.
The problems that the ORH has identified with rural health care are the lack of access to services, the shortage of manpower and the need of statute and regulatory changes in rural health care, McDowell said.
Kenna Member/KAMILAN
Handsby, a general practice physician in rural southeast Kansas, said he provided for the medical needs of about 5,000 patients at his private practices in Erie and Thayer. There are about a dozen physicians in western Kansas in the towns of Erie and Thayer and has a population of about 20,000.
RURAL HEALTH CARE
But many of Handsy's patients travel from within a 65-mile radius to
+
If they need to be hospitalized, they must travel to Parsons or Chanute, which are about 19 miles from Erie, he said. If they need to see a specialist, they must travel to a larger metropolitan area such as Wichita or Kansas City. Handy travels every day to four small towns to treat his patients.
Dealing with the problem
McDowell recently traveled to five rural communities to meet with area health care providers and to discuss problems and their proposed solutions.
"I think that in terms of trying to create a dialogue with the rural health care providers, I have succeeded," McDowell said.
The rural health care providers think that it is important to have a resource like the ORH for gathering the input of the rural communities and taking action on that input, he said.
He said that his next step was to put together an agenda for action on the rural health issue. This plan will be based on the input of health care providers and will assure action regarding access to services, adequate manpower and unfair statutes and regulations.
The following recommendations were offered by rural health care providers at a meeting on Nov. 10 at the Onaga Community Hospital. The locations address the rural community's lack of access to medical services.
> Improve community awareness of access problems at the local level and develop community education skills.
> Develop an advocacy group, in
▶ Examine the possibility of cooperative programs with neighboring communities and establish incentives for creation of such programs.
▶ Define the essential services for the rural community and develop a data base to aid in decision-making at the legislative level.
order to provide leadership for action on the access issue.
Rural health care providers also suggested actions addressing the lack of manpower and regulations said they were unfair, McDowell said.
Attracting students to rural areas
areas
The University of Kansas Medical Center has participated in the Kansas Medical Scholarship program since it was established in 1979, said Billie Jo Hamilton, director of financial aid at the Med Center. The scholarship provides tuition reimbursement to medical students who agree to practice in a rural community after they graduate.
Jim Sieler, second-year medical student from Wichita, receives tuition reimbursement under the scholarship. He said that if he had not received the scholarship he would not actively pursued a rural health career.
"I don't want to be the only doc in a town, though" he said. "There has to be enough going on there that I'll be able to take a living and not starve to death."
The Board of Regents recently established a scholarship program similar to the Kansas Medical Scholarship that will provide tuition reimbursement to students who agree to practice in local community when they graduate.
The Med Center currently has 106 students enrolled under the Kansas Medical Scholarship and will participate in finishing Scholarship Program next year.
But the U.S. Congress recently passed legislation that is designed to relieve rural hospitals of the financial burden of less-than-adequate reimbursements,
care are rising medical malpractice insurance and unfair Medicare reimbursement policies.
The state and federal regulations that are affecting the rural community's ability to deliver quality health
Under the former Medicare reimbursement policy, rural hospitals were reimbursed about 35 percent less than urban hospitals, McDowell said, and many rural hospitals depend upon Medicare reimbursements from more than 50 percent of their patients.
The 50 smallest hospitals in Kansas have 80 to 90 percent Medicare patients, he said.
"Your revenue goes right along with that," McDowell said. "If 80 to 90 percent of your patients are on Medicare, that means that 80 to 90 percent of your revenue is Medicare reimbursed."
Premiums too high
Malpractice insurance premiums for the rural physician can sometimes exceed the physician's revenue and, as a result, rural physicians are having to cut back on services that are essential to their obstructed, or are leaving their practices altogether, rural health care providers said.
Handshy said that when he opened his practice in 1982 his malpractice insurance was about $3,000 a year, which included coverage for obstetrics. Although he has never been sued his insurance now is $19,800.
As a result of expensive malpractice insurance and Medicare reimbursement policies, Handshy said that many rural physicians are more careful about the kinds of costs they cause their patients and about their diagnoses of patients. This way the physician protects himself against accusations that he misdiagnosed someone or claimed a reimbursement that was more than the service warranted.
To federal government officials, a medically underserved community is one where a physician treats more than 3,500 patients, McDowell said. But to medical officials, a medically underserved community is one where a physician treats more than 2,000 patients.
Continued from p. 1A
Rural
Physicians few and far between
Cameron Knackstedt shares the burden of serving Phillipsburg's population of 10,000 with his three partners.
"That is very unusual to have that many doctors in a small town," he said. "We are very fortunate."
Knackett said he liked the fishing and hunting opportunities available to him in rural Kansas. The quiet community also provides a good place for him to raise his 13- and 16-year-old children.
But Knackstedt said he considered leaving Phillipsburg before two new physicians recently joined his practice.
The new physicians have lessened the work load, he said, and have allowed Knackstedt and his wife time to get away every now and then. They spend weekends in Kansas City as often as they can.
"If we wouldn't do that, we couldn't be able to stand it," he said.
The program sends first- and second-year medical students to observe a physician's practice in rural Kansas.
Neal Erickson, a second-year medical student at the University of Kansas Medical Center, participated last spring in the rural health weekend program offered through the Med Center.
Erickson said he thought Handshy was lucky that his wife worked in his office because the long days seemed to leave little time for a wife and
Erickson, who is from Overland Park, spent his rural health weekend in Erie with Handshy.
"He sees patients seven days a day he said. There are no days off up his neck."
family. On the Friday that Erickson was there, Handsy had to cancel dinner plans with his family because a patient had gotten hurt.
Erickson said he did not know whether he would pursue a medical career in a rural area, but his experienc did not discourage him from doing so.
Joy and sorrow
"I was really impressed because he was more than just their doctor, he was a counselor and an educator," he said. "He knew every patient and he knew all about them."
At his practice in Thayer, Handshy treated a teen-age girl for an eye abrasion. As he looked into her eye, he teased her about the new boyfriend and gave her some advice on boys and life. He leaned close to her when he talked to her and called her "kid."
When the visit was over, Handsy walked the girl to the door with a hand on her shoulder around her shoulder before he turned back and moved on to the next patient.
On the same day that he performed the hysterectomy, Handsy told an elated woman that she was pregnant and in a man that he had terminal cancer.
He has learned to cope with the depressing aspects of his job by spending time with his animals and open fields of his farmland, be said.
He likes to talk to his mules, J.R. and Sue Ellen, to his wife's horse, Bonnie, and to the many other animals that belong to his collection. Sometimes he likes to just stare across the vast fields of the Kansas prairie and to dream about the house he would someday like to build there.
"You gotta have your games," he said, holding out a handful of tobacco for a hungry mule. "That's how I escape the real world.
“This is what I like to call the unreal world,” he continued. “Tak-ing to you, maybe, maybe that’s what really matters. I don’t know. It’s hard to tell.”
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University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
7A
Insurance driving doctors from rural areas
Bv Melanie Matthes
Kansan staff writer
By moving his medical practice from western Kansas to IIwaco, Wash., R. E. Musser saved about $13,600 a year on his malpractice insurance premiums.
"Not retaining doctors in Kansas is almost epidemic because they don't have adequate state-supported coverage," he said.
Many rural physicians like Musser are leaving their rural practices or are abandoning the practice of obstetrics because of expensive malpractice insurance, said rural health care and state insurance officials.
Musser said he left Kansas a year ago to get away from the poor malpractice environment and to disassociate himself from obstetrics.
"By delivering babies, I was beating myself coming and going," he said.
Musser paid about $18,000 a year for malpractice insurance in Kansas, he said. The cost of this coverage is higher than some physicians because he practiced obstetrics. Had he not delivered babies, Musser said his insurance would have been about $12,000 a year. Musser's insurance now is about $4,400 in Washington without coverage for obstetrics.
The cost of professional liability insurance in Kansas is high as compared to a couple of years ago and
medical malpractice insurance is going up at an even much faster pace, said Bob Hays, supervisor of the professional liability section of the Insurance Commissioner's Office in Topeka.
The lowest possible insurance premiums through the state's insurance plan for a physician who does not practice obstetrics is about $6,000, said Ted Fay, attorney for the Insurance Commissioner's Office. But that amount doubles when a physician decides to deliver babies.
He said that the problems with maplattice insurance was that rural physicians didn't deliver enough babies to cover their insurance costs, whereas urban physicians can make a profit delivering babies.
A survey conducted two years ago by the Kansas Association of Osteopathic Medicine showed that out of 175 physicians, 25 had quit practicing or used a high malpractice insurance, and 64 were executive director of the Association
Physicians leave obstetrics and state
RURAL HEALTH CARE
+
"Statistics show that if you deliver babies, chances are that over four or five years you are going to have a lawsuit," Riehm said. "Even if you are found not guilty, it ends up costing you a tremendous amount of time and money."
Hays said that physicians who did not obtain insurance through a private insurer could receive insurance coverage through the Health Care Provider Insurance Availability Plan, which was passed by the Legislature in 1976. This plan is financed through health care providers and provides liability coverage of up to $200,000 per claim or $600,000 for all claims in one year, depending on the physician's policy.
"Most doctors don't want to give it up, though," he added. "They realize how critical it is in a small town for a doctor to do OB."
The Health Care Stabilization Fund, which also is financed through health care providers, provides liability coverage exceeding the amount covered by the Availability Plan. Hays said. Until June 30, the fund covered excesses of up to $3 million a claim or $6 million for all claims in one year.
But on July 1, a bill that was passed in the Legislature reduced the amount of excess coverage available
through the fund to $800,000 a claim or $2.4 million for all claims in one year, Hays said. However, the bill also allows physicians the option of lower, and therefore cheaper, levels of coverage and will establish an oversight committee to decide whether the Legislature should get rid of the fund altogether.
This is an attempt to get costs to the lowest levels possible. "Hays said"
Since its inception in 1976, the fund has paid $94.5 million in awards and settlements, he said, and most of payments occurred after 1982. As of June 30, the fund was $88.9 million and officials were trying to maintain this balance
Hays said that private insurers had paid about the same amount as the fund had paid for malpractice claims.
"That is why the doctors' premiums have risen." Haws said.
Payments from the fund increased from $13.4 million in 1988 to $18.3 million in 1989.
Fay said that another problem with malpractice insurance was that many rural malpractice cases were decided by juries from those cities.
"People in rural areas don't have much control over their own destiny, so they're argued in their courts," Pay said. "If there is a case in Hugoton, it's filed in
He said that 70 percent of the payments out of the fund in 1988 went to cases that were filed in Wichita.
Wichita."
Rates higher in Kansas
Musser said his malpractice insurance was more expensive in Kansas than in Washington because the Kansas Legislature had not put a cap on the amount that a physician could be charged. A medical malpractice review board analyzes each malpractice case before it reaches the courts.
Because the law places the $1
money on nails filed after July,
1986, the suit did not make it to court before the law was ruled unconstitutional.
"The policy (in Kansas) allows the most frivolous suit to be brought against anyone," he said. "When you get sued, your whole life is torn up."
In 1896 the Legislature passed a law that limited malpractice suits to $1 million, Hays said, but in 1888 the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that law unconstitutional.
Hays said that the only cap on the amount that a physician could be sued was on non-economic damages, or damages such as pain and suffering. These types of suits cannot exceed $250,000.
Therefore, it was like the law was never in effect, he said.
In January, 1988, Gov. Mike Hayden appointed the Governor's Task Force on the Future of Rural Communities to examine rural development issues and to make recommendations for improving the conditions of rural communities.
A resolution to amend the Constitution in regard to medical malpractice insurance is still alive in the Legislature and may be addressed on the first day of the upcoming session.
> No action was taken in the 1980 Legislature to begin a study of the potential of implementing a worker's compensation type of system in medical malpractice cases.
A report issued in July by the Kansas Department of Commerce outlined the status of the following recommendations;
> Some relief programs in the area of medical malpractice costs to Kansas physicians are expected. The Kansas Medical Society formed its own malpractice insurance company with the goal of providing cheaper malpractice insurance for Kansas physicians.
No action was taken in the 1989 Legislature to place limits on attorney's fees in malpractice cases, but an oversight committee was directed to consider recommendations that would provide such limits.
Inadequate Medicare repayments threatening small hospitals
By Melanie Matthes Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
For the Wamego City Hospital, inadequate Medicare reimbursements could mean the loss of almost $300,000 in revenue for 1990, said B. Don Burman, administrator of the 26-bed hospital.
"For a hospital our size, those kinds of losses could mean closure of the hospital." Burman said.
gap between urban and rural hospitals.
And closure of the Wamego hospital would mean the loss of a health care facility that serves the medical needs of about 15,000 people.
Former Medicare reimbursement policies that didn't cover the cost of services were threatening some rural hospitals with closure or drastic cutbacks in staff and services, said rural health care officials.
But a recent change in Medicare policies may mean an increase in reimbursements to rural hospitals and a decrease in the reimbursement
A new policy effective February 1990 is intended to shrink the reimbursement differences by 3 percent, said Sherry Kaiman, government affairs consultant to the National Rural Health Association.
Burman said that the new policy was the first important step in the Congress to make a decision to keep medical services in the rural United States. He said he was pleased with the new policy and hopeful that it would help hospitals like Wamego to operate out of the red.
"It will help some," she said. "But we're still not sure that it will solve many of the problems."
Officials at the NRHA said that in 1986, 87 hospitals in the nation had closed and that by 1990, 600 more will have faced the same threat.
On Nov. 8, 1988, the NRHA, which has a central office located in Kansas City, Mo., filed suit in federal district
court against the Department of Health and Human Services. The suit, which was filed as a class action suit on behalf of seven rural hospitals across the nation, challenges the constitutionality of the Medicare reimbursement policies. One of the hospitals named in the suit is the Mount Carmel Medical Center in Pittsburg.
Kaiman said that the new Medicare policy would have no effect on the NRHA lawsuit.
There is an obvious disparity in reimbursement policies between rural and urban hospitals, said Tony Simons, senior accountant of Medicare reimbursements for Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas.
Former reimbursement rates for rural hospitals in Kansas were about 35 percent lower that the rates for urban hospitals, said Steve McDowell, director of the Office of Rural Health in Topeka.
Although no rural hospitals in Kansas have closed in recent years, he said, many are threatened by that prospect.
The former reimbursement policies were established in 1983. The policies established predetermined amounts of reimbursement based on the type of case treated, not the actual cost of the service.
"From the standpoint of the state, they can determine when a patient no longer needs hospital care," he said. "But what do you do to these people? Send them home and let them get sicker or keep them in the hospital
This reimbursement system has resulted in subtle pressure on rural physicians to keep the cost of services down and the length of hospital stay. Stanley Handsy, general practice physician in rural southeast Kansas.
And the patients that are most effected by this pressure are the elderly because it usually takes them longer to get well, he said.
and run up a huge bill?"
The Mount Carmel Medical Center in Pittsburgh loses an average of $400 in reimbursements for each Medicare admission, said Melnin Goin, senior vice president. Each year the hospital about 2,000 Medicare patients. But the hospital has lost about five years the hospital has lost about $2 million in reimbursements.
"The government is saying, 'You're in the country so it's cheaper for you,'" Goin said. "But the cost is not cheaper, and inadequate reimbursements are impacting the quality of care that is delivered."
Fifty percent of the hospital's patients pay through Medicare, he said.
Goin said that because of limited funds there had been days when he has wondered whether the hospital would be able to cover the pavroll.
The NRHA's lawsuit against the federal government is at a standstill now because NRHA officials are
awaiting the judge's decision on a motion to dismiss the trial, said Robert Quick, communications director of the NRHA. The motion was filed by the Department of Health and Human Services and was argued before the judge in May.
Quick said the NRHA's attorneys contended that Medicare reimbursement policies were unconstitutional.
The original policies were introduced in the 1940 Hill-Burton Act, which established a system of uncompensated care to rural hospitals and was designed to encourage rural communities to either refurbish their health care facilities or to build new ones.
"The rural communities are really getting hit hard by being forced to continue uncompensated care," Quick said.
The Wamego hospital has had to tighten down on staffing because of unfair reimbursements, Burman said.
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Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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MBA degree is everyone's business Program's design broadens options for students in liberal arts
By Beth Behrens Kansan staff writer
When students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are thinking about commencement, Ronna Robertson is letting them know that another two years in school could open doors to corporate America.
Robertson, assistant dean of business, said the master's of business administration program was to top-heavy with applications from undergraduates in the business school. She said students know the option was open to them, especially if they didn't have an undergraduate degree in business.
"The program at KU was originally designed for people with no business background," she said. She went on to mention these people in liberal arts.
"Say that you have a degree in history and you don't want to teach. With an MBA, you can get into marketing, finance, human resources or any other job you like. You can go into a firm and not start out with a sales-level salary."
Because the degree is designed for students without a business background, many of the core courses are background information courses that duplicate undergraduate courses. Students must be bachelor's degree in business are allowed to waive a maximum of three courses, Robertson said.
For each course waived, she said, the minimum number of required courses was reduced by one, making it possible to graduate degrees in business to graduate one semester early from the two-year program.
The difference in prerequisites is one of the ways the program is targeted at students without a business background. To be accepted in the undergraduate program, a student must complete two semesters of calculus. For the graduate program, only college algebra is required.
Robertson said the difference was because of the emphasis of the programs.
She said that the graduate program was directed toward application and that the undergraduate program was based on learning more detail, some of which required more math.
Another difference is that some of the undergraduate courses are repeated at the graduate level to give graduate students background material.
Graduate standards
But lower requirements don't make acceptance to the graduate program easier than acceptance to the undergraduate program
John Garland, director of the undergraduate business program, said that about 60 percent of the applicants to the undergraduate program were accepted each year. Robertson said only between 35 and 40 percent were accepted to the graduate program. She said that most students applied each year, but that a few were admitted to the Lawrence campus and 80 to the Regents Center in Overland Park.
Robertson said that most of those students chose to receive a general management degree, but a student would choose a concentration in one area.
"Some faculty strongly recommend a concentration because it will target you more for that first job," she said. "But there are a lot of other ramifications. You are stuck in that concentration then.
"Other faculty members argue that a student shouldn't concentrate unless they know specifically what they want to get into. Typically, the student will be using all aspects of the general MBA program at some time or another, so generally, I don't suggest a concentration unless they are sure that's what they want to do."
The MBA typically is known as a high-paying fast track into corporate America, and statistics show MBA salaries almost $10,000 higher than business undergraduate salaries.
Based on the results of a School of Business survey of Spring 1889 graduates entering the job market, those KU graduates with an undergraduate degree in business reported an average salary of $22,388. Those with a non-technical undergraduate degree with an MBA reported an average salary of $32,163, and those with an MBA and a technical undergraduate degree, $32,411.
Degree decisions
Henry Schwaller, a student working on his MBA, said that the comparison of salaries should not encourage students with an bachelor's degree in business to come back for a master's degree.
"From what I understand, you may have a higher initial salary with an MBA than with a bachelor's degree, but if you're a good employee, you'll make that much anyway.
"An MBA will take two years out of your life, so the money is the same in the rough sense because you have to consider that you've lost income, that you're not making enough fees instead of making money and that you've lost work experience."
Schwaller, Hays graduate student, said he decided to return to KU to complete his undergraduate business degree by earning a MBA.
"I felt that in my undergrad degree, I missed out," he said. "Maybe it's the business school's fault or maybe it is my own fault in this class, but I've learned more in the last than in all of my undergrad years."
Dana Fox, Winona, Minn., graduate student, also came back to KU to add to her undergraduate business degree. She said her parents were the only ones who supported her decision to continue her education in business.
"Everyone told me I shouldn't get two degrees in the same subject, but I didn't listen," she said. "Personally, I wanted more. When I was here as an undergrad, on the first day of class, the professors would say, 'We're only going to cover this much material. If this were a graduate level course we would develop this more.' But I wanted to know not only how the system worked but why it worked.
"My undergrad was very good, but I didn't feel confident in my abilities. It was more a personal decision than professional."
Robertson said that when students who were interested in applying to the master's program did not know why they wanted to work on the degree, she sometimes would suggest that they get some business experience before they returned to school.
"In many respects, no matter what, part of the applications in the master's program won't be apparent unless they've seen it in practice," she said. "Part of it is the maturation process.
"Sometimes students haven't experienced enough to get the best out of the program that we have to offer. People who have gone out to real life applications. Students are at a higher experience back into the program."
Diane Mielek, assistant director of placement, said that the MBA was a tool to provide opportunities rather than answers.
"The thing about the MBA is that students still have to decide what they want to do," she said. "The MBA is supposed to open doors, but the person still has to focus on what is needed." The MBA program began to take stock of their strengths and weaknesses will still have the same problems.
"It's important for people to know that it's not going to give them all the answers. They need to make some decisions for themselves first."
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Alcohol problems harm KU
Drinking to relieve anxiety or stress can lead to alcoholism, which is a growing problem on campus.
By Stacy Smith
Kansan staff writer
As the sun sets on another school week, students stand outside in the cool fall air waiting for their turn to walk down Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th, St.
Inside, students are packed together in the smoke-filled room, beers in hand, singing to the music from the overhead speakers.
The scene is a typical Friday afternoon at one of Lawrence's 45 bars. What the scene doesn't show, however, is the problem alcohol becomes for many KU students; however, the missed classes, the blues, the fights and the injuries that are caused by problem drinking.
Tony Rock, Liberal senior, said he had missed class because of hangovers after drinking during the week and had gotten into fights in bars when he was drunk. In one brawl, he broke his hand.
The real trouble came last year when he received a citation for driving under the influence. A $500 fine, numerous hours of community service, an alcohol safety program and the loss of his license, however, have not altered his drinking habits.
Rock said he usually went out drinking six nights a week and typically got drunk two or three times each week.
"I don't miss class often because of hangovers," he said. "And I've been drinking and driving. I probably drink vink as much after I graduate."
Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said 95 percent of the disturbance calls the police department received during the weekend involved alcohol. In a typical weekend, between 16 and 25 arrests are alcohol-related.
"It may be a fight, a disturbance or an injury," Mulvenon said. "Or it may be no more than a shoving match. There's probably about a third to a half who are repeat offenders."
Donald Goodwin, head of the psychiatry department at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan, said drinking served as a release from tension for many people.
Len Johnson, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said he got to the Wheel by 2 p.m. every Friday.
"When Friday rolls around, students want to escape reality. Alcoa helps people forget temporarily. It breaks down shyness," he said.
"The Wheel on Fridays — there's nothing better," he said. "It gets crazy."
Johnson said he usually would go to eat after spending more than four hours of drinking at the Wheel Inn, which is a tavern for the rest of the evening.
Johnson said that, on the average, he would go drinking with friends four times a week but that he would never get drunk.
"I usually have 10 or 11 beers but
it's no problem," he said. "I don't get drunk."
Goodwin, who has written numerous books and articles on alcoholism, said drinking became part of his life when he interfered with a person's life.
His study on genetics and alcoholism has proved that the disease runs in families, even when children are not exposed to non-alcoholic environments.
"The tendency toward alcoholism is inherent in some people," he said. "It runs in families even when we aren't raised by alcoholic parents."
Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said alcohol was the number one medical problem at the University.
"It's overwhelming. A lot of students have the impression that you can't have a good time unless you're snuckered," he said. "People feel better about themselves when they're drunk."
able "
"They feel more powerful, more intelligent. All of those feelings that alcohol gives you are pleasur-
Peer pressure is a leading cause of the problem, Yoyckey said, because college is the first time most students have lived away from home, and the desire to fit in with the group is overwhelming.
"It's a means of acceptance," he said. "You want to do what the group is doing."
Some students also use alcohol as a coping mechanism for problems, Yocvey said.
"They perceive it as a release or an escape from their stress or boredom," he said. "They say I can get through today because I know I can get trashed on Friday night."
Alcohol does not create a problem until it begins to interfere with a person's ability to function physically or mentally. Yokev said.
"Any time you pass out, fall down or hurt yourself, that's a problem drinker," he said.
Alcohol abuse is associated with unwanted pregnancies, accidents, rapes and sexually transmitted diseases.
The medical problems that accompany excessive drinking also are a problem. Thousands of brain cells are destroyed every time a person gets drunk, Yockey said.
"The majority of the cases we
Alcohol is a toxin to the stomach lining, nervous system and esophagus. As a result of long-term drinking, people can develop cancer in these areas as well as the liver, mouth, pharynx and larynx.
"You can't repeatedly poison your cells and have them stay normal," Yockey said. "The key word is moderation."
Excessive drinking, however, is not only a problem for college students.
see in the emergency room after 10 m. are alcohol-related," he said. "People get in fights in bars or fall down. There isn't a week that goes by that we don't sew up four or five or even six students."
"Alcohol is a problem in every big company. It is not a problem that stops when you leave college," he said. "In some cases, it gets worse when they leave because the stress increases."
Younger crowd seeks help from campus AA
By Stacy Smith Kansan staff writer
The names of recovering alcoholics used in this story have been changed to protect their anonymity.
One young man, anxious to begin the meeting, read the opening words, "God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot understand, and change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference."
He then introduced himself. "Hi, my name is Chris, and I'm an alcoholic."
"Hi Chris," the group responded in unison.
"I still want to drink, but I know I can't," he said.
Chris, a KU student, is a recovering alcoholic. With the help of Alcoholics Anonymous, he has been able to keep from drinking — one day at a time. Alcoholics Anonymous is just one of several organizations in Lawrence where people like Chris can find help for their alcohol problems.
At a recent AA meeting on campus, the group was diverse. Some participants were KU students, others were KU staff members and a few were members of the Lawrence community. Despite their range of backgrounds and interests, they met for a common purpose - sobriety.
They spoke of their desires, their fears and their ongoing battle with alcoholism.
"I don't want a drink, " I like to have, 1,000 of them," Bill said. "This last week, I had two dreams where 't got drunk. I woke up ashamed. I'm glad to be here. I like to go to these meetings."
Anonymity is the most important element and Alcoholics Anonymous groups work to maintain it in all circumstances. Members give their full names or they can choose to use their first names only.
The meetings revolve around a 12-step program, which begins with members admitting they are powerless over alcohol and that their lives have become unmanageable. According to AA literature, they also come to believe in a power greater than themselves, whether it is God or another spiritual being.
Alcoholics Anonymous offers more than 50 meetings a week in Lawrence, several of which are on campus. The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop drinking. There are no dues or fees for membership.
"There is no shortage of help for people with an alcohol problem," said William Buck, president of the Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism. "In AA and DCCCA, you're seeing more young people recovering. It used to be primarily people in their 40s."
The Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism is a local organization that helps people with alcohol and drug problems. The cost for treatment is based on a sliding scale, which is determined by an individual's ability to nav.
Buck, a physician at Watkins
Memorial Health Center, said counselors evaluated patients to determine whether they were alcoholics or had minor alcohol problems.
"Each individual has different ways that it affects them," he said. "They don't have to drink every day. They might only get drunk every weekend and that makes their life unmanageable."
Bruce Beale, executive director of DCCCA, said about 100 of the 425 people the center treated last year were students.
"Most of them come here because we are the specific drug and alcohol center in town," he said. "A lot of the students that and up here are brought here through the courts. They were arrested for drunken driving or other alcohol-related crimes."
After patients are evaluated to test the severity of their alcohol problems, counselors outline the best course of treatment, Beale said. People with mild problems meet individually with counselors once or twice a week and go to a therapy group once a week.
Those with more serious problems often require detoxification at a hospital or inpatient treatment center. The length of stay varies from five days to a month. After leaving the center, Beale said, they must receive outpatient counseling once a week and join another program such as Alcoholics Anonymous.
"It takes a lot of people until they're arrested, have an accident or lose their job, before they try to get help," Beale said. "But we're seeing a lot more people at younger ages now."
The health education department at Watkins is working to reduce problem drinking at KU with alcohol awareness programs. Mary Altenhoff, health educator at Watkins, said she performed between 30 and 40 programs a year at residence halls, scholarship halls, sororites and fraternities upon request.
"We don't go with the idea of 'don't drink at all.' That's not realistic," she said. "It doesn't go over well. We use the philosophy of responsible drinking."
Some people never admit to having a problem, she said, because the college scene revolves around drinking.
"If they can't ever just say, 'This is all. I'm just going to have two beers, more than likely they have a problem,' Altenhoen said."
Many students do not realize that it takes an hour to an hour and a half to metabolize 12 ounces of beer or 5 ounces of wine or hard liquor, she said. In a study conducted last year, 50 percent of students on campus said they had driven while drunk and 66 percent said they had ridden with someone who had been drinking.
"There's definitely a good number of problem drinkers on this campus, but hopefully, it's short-lived," she said. "Finally and eventually, alcohol catches up with you. It can happen to anybody. Alcoholics aren't the typical skid row bums — they're also college students."
Prof recalls wartime experience in Europe
By Lara Weber
Kansan staff writer
In 1937, the safest place for a young Jewish man was not Austria.
But that's where Harry Shaffer, then 18 years old, was growing up when Adolph Hitter's Nazis began to spread anti-Semitism across Europe.
"When the Nazis came, Austria is a small country." Shaffer said. "There wasn't enough room for Hitler and me. He didn't want to leave, so I left. Being that I'm Jewish, it's lucky that I got out."
Shaffer said his mother had been very insistant on getting out of Europe, even though other Jews thought the problems would not escalate.
"She said it was much too dangerous, and we didn't know what would happen," he said. *
Even though Shaffer, who is now a professor of economics and East European studies at the University of Kansas, was one of the first in Europe to apply for a visa from the U.S. Embassy before World War II, his journey to the United States was not easy.
"When I asked how long it would take, they said, 'at least 20 years,'" he said. "That's how many people had applied to leave."
When he applied for the visa, he was told it would take six months to process. After six months, Shafter was in Paris. He went to the U.S. Embassy to pick up his visa, but he found Vienna for his records, there were no files in his name. They told him he would have to reapply.
Shaffer said it wasn't until years
later that he learned what had happened to his file.
"Two American vice counsels had taken out files and put others in for money," he said. "That dashed my hope to come to America for a while."
Shaffer spent a year in Italy and prince before he was able to obtain a villa, where several of his relatives lived. He stayed in Caba for two years.
"In four years, under the GF Bill. I got my bachelor's degree, my master's degree and one course from my Ph.D.," he said.
Finally, in 1940, he got a visa to the United States and moved to New York with his mother.
After serving in the U.S. Army to two years in military intelligence, Shaffer was eligible for money for school under the GI Bill.
He earned a doctorate 10 years later, in 1958, at the University of Kansas.
Now, at 70, Shaffer is wrapping up his career at KU after more than 30 years of inspiring students to appreciate the arts and planning to retire after the spring season.
"It's not that I want them to get the technical points," Shaffer said. "like to make it interesting, with examples and lakes."
"You are supposed to retire when you are 70," he said. "My birthday was Aug. 28, the first day of classes, so I got an extra year to teach."
With a heavy German accent, Shafer uses a sense of humor to impress upon his students the difference
His favorite class to teach is Economies 104, a class for non-economics majors.
between the national debt and the national deficit.
"To cut the deficit is easier said than done," he said. "If you like Reagan or not, and I can't say I was crazy about him, he did want to cut the deficit. But the debt, it doubled in eight years. The debt increased as much in eight years as it did between 1776 and 1980."
Shaffer said he had been using examples from current world events to demonstrate economics in action. Watching Europe
Shaffer said he tried to show that extremes were not necessarily the best for a society. He uses the Soviet Union and the United States to prove his point: neither a totally planned economy nor a totally free market can be successful.
"Before the 1930s, America had no social programs, and we had the worst depression of our history," he said.
The recent reforms throughout Eastern Europe spark a special interest in Shaffer, not only because of his Soviet studies, but because he has many friends throughout Europe, some in East Berlin.
"Six months ago, there was not a soul in the world that would've predicted these changes so quickly," he said.
But now, he said, most people believe in what Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev is trying to accomplish
"In my opinion, what Gorbachev wants is to get the best of all possible worlds," he said. "He wants to combine the apparent greater efficiency and productivity of a market economy with some undeniable benefits of socialism: free education, medical
care, guaranteed employment."
Germany, he says, is a different case than the rest of Eastern Europe. With the recent travel freedoms granted to East Germans, however, Shaffer said that many probably would stay in East Germany.
"Many visit West Germany but return primarily because the government said they were free to come and go," he said.
Shaffer first returned to Europe in 1964, when he traveled to Munich, West Germany.
"The Germans want to rectify the situation," he said.
Being Jewish made his experience there different, he said. He was not about continued anti-Semitism but about his views changed after he arrived.
A monument outside a resort called Baden-Baden, about 100 miles south of Frankfurt on the Rhine River in West Germany, helped change Shaffer's view of the Germans.
"They had erected a monument to 'our Jewish fellow citizens.' he said.
"It was a very moving experience to find that kind of monument in Germany." Shaffer said.
An inscription on the monument stated: "And not one of us raised his hand in protest. To remember is to ask for forgiveness."
The same attitude was not found in Austria, however. Shaffer said that while he was in Europe he saw a survey the Austrian government had taken showing that 40 percent of respondents were very strongly anti-Semitic. He did not return to his homeland.
Activism brought him to KU
"I believe in equality of all human beings," he said. "An individual should be judged on his or her actions and not race, sex or country of origin."
Shaffer says he knows there are still leFTer anti-Semitics from the Nazi era but that there are racists in this country as well.
His belief in human equality has prompted activism in many organizations, including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Americans for Democratic Action and the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy.
Shaffer came to the University in 1966, after teaching at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, for six years. He left Alabama because of a controversy over admission of a Black female student to a college in Alabama. The Board of Regents in Alabama denied her admission, so Shaffer and several others decided to leave Alabama in protest.
"I felt, under these circumstances,
I could no longer be associated with
them."
In 1884, Shaffer met his present wife, Betty.
Shaffer applied to the University and was hired by the department of economics, sight unseen.
With a smile, he tells about meeting her in a train station and persuading her to leave her Newport Beach home to come to Lawrence. They were married in 1887.
Shaffer has lived in Lawrence since, with the exception of a summer spent as a visiting professor at North State College in Oregon in 1983 and a professor at the University of California—made from 1972 to 1974.
Betty Shaffer said they were in a train station in New York when they met.
"We were both going to Boston, and we sat together on the train," she said. "After four-and-a-half hours we knew we were meant for each other."
She refers to her husband as her 'soul-mate' and says their marriage has worked out beautifully.
Shaffer says his greatest love is traveling. Though most of his experience has been in Europe, he also has been to Costa Rica and all over the United States.
He and his wife belong to an international organization called Selvas, which matches approved travelers with volunteer hosts throughout the world. Shaffer said the program was devoted to the establishment of friendships and relations.
The Selvas program always pro
provides interesting experiences, Shafi
feel said. Once, with a family in
France, he and his wife stayed up
and danced until 3 a.m. And in West
East Berlin, he arrived at a home to
find they were included in a dinner
party of 11 people they had never met
After Shaffer leaves the University, he says he hopes to be remembered for awakening students to world economic problems.
Then he pauses and says, "I'd like to be remembered for, in my own little way, as having tried to do something to make this world a better place to live in."
10A
Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Ex-Jayhawk plays to win as entrepreneur
By Rich Cornell Kansan staff writer
As a forward with the Kansas basketball team, Chris Piper played with unequaled determination in front of thousands of fans.
As an entrepreneur, he works with the same determination in a quiet warehouse north of the Kaw River.
Piper is pleased with his decision to buy Screen-It Graphics, 315 Northeast Industrial Lane. Other than playing forward with the Chicago Bulls, he cannot think of a better way to earn a living than working for himself. And Piper realized years ago that he would never play for the Bulls.
"There comes a time when you've got to face reality, and my reality was there would be no pro basketball," he says.
So, with financial help from a local businessman, Piper took over Screen-It Graphics only weeks after graduating in Spring 1988 with a business administration degree.
Piper's company has designed 80 logos for squeeze bottles since he bought it more than a year ago. Rich Cornell/Special to the KANSAS
Soon after that, he bought our his partner, taking full ownership of the house.
"It's been a real learning experience," he says. "You're definitely not prepared for the business world."
His company produces specially printed T-shirts and plastic squeeze bottles. Looking across the room at the orange, red, blue and yellow bottles on the shelf, Piper says he now realizes how much owning a business entails.
He employed six people when he started, but during the busy summer months this year he needed 26, he says. The responsibilities of liability, taxes and employees surprised Piper when he started.
"You don't learn that in school," he says.
Rich Cornell/Special to the KANSAN
Piper keeps track of the company's finances and seeks new clients, he says. He has emphasized the production of squeeze bottles for local businesses and the printing of bottles for nationwide companies. For example, Screen-It Graphics printed this year's World Series bottles.
"When I had classes, I made it a rule not to take any before 10:30," he says.
Waking up early presents another challenge.
"I'm not going to go out and be a computer technician because people think that's a neat thing to do," he says. "I don't need the glamour. I need to succeed. Whatever I do, I want to succeed at it."
Because he does not crave recognition, Piper never wanted a high-profile job.
Art BRIGGS SERIES WILD S
"I can make as much money here and be my own boss."
Piper's mother, Bonnie Stephenson, says her son has always been that way. He learned the value of independent determination from his family.
"We're all very determined people," she says. "I think he was born with determination. He does his best, and it still isn't good enough."
The first KU graduate from his family, Piper did not understand why he received so much attention during college basketball years, Stephenson says.
Stephenson says Piper is a private, humble person. He doesn't often share his thoughts, even with her.
"I've watched him get asked for autographs, and he would ask, 'Why do you want mine? I'm just Chris Piper,' she saves.
She likes her son's sense of humor. In junior high school, his imitation of a dog on the Saturday morning cartoon, earned him the nickname "Snaggle."
People often do not recognize his humor, Piper says, and expect him to be humorous.
"A lot of times I have to let people know I'm joking." he says.
His subtle approach to humor carries over into his leadership style. He emphasizes the importance of
Piper considers providing a steady income for his employees an important measure of business success.
In addition, he wants further growth.
"I think success is building," Piper says.
Kansas' co-captain do so during the 1987-88 championship season.
Former Kansas coach Larry Brown says he enjoyed watching Players from an average, unrecrimited player, the leader of a championship team.
"he was kind of shy at first," he said, "and hard-worked" kid who gets everything wrong.
His former coach and teammates know he can build; They saw the
Brown says he likes Piper's attitude.
"Dealing with me, you've got to have a great sense of humor," he
Brown says his outbursts and perfectionism never faded Pipei, who placed tougher demands upon himself than anyone else could.
more he teaches them, Brown says. From Piper, he learned the importance of unselfish players who use all of their abilities. Now coaching the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association, he wants more players like Piper. "I learned to learn from him."
"I learned to keep looking for guys like him," he says. "I look for guys who sacrifice to help other kids do what they do well."
Piper also taught his teammates Guard Jeff Gueldner says Piper showed him that hard work could make him important to the team. He was a key player in the game of the NCAA tournament during Kansas championship season.
He says he models himself after Piper's dedication both then and now.
"He doesn't like people to outwork him and takes it personally if they do," Guiderl says. "If he goes and sits at Robinson, he's really intense."
Forward Mark Randall says Pip-
example made him a better
defeat.
"He typifies a lot of the things I want to be when I graduate."
In a game against Notre Dame.
"He's probably the best post defensive player I've ever played with or played against." Randall says.
One time, Piper's example was not enough, and he had to remind Randal.
when Randall failed to tell Piper a certain Notre Dame player was screening him, Piper's defensive assignment easily scored.
After that mishap, Randall says, Piper grabbed him, yelling that he had better remember to warn teammates about screens. With the look in Piper's eyes as a reminder, Randall never forget again.
Piper shows the same competitiveness as a businessman.
"Pipe's going to keep pushing and keep pushing," Randall says. "He's going to work until he's satisfied."
"He might never be totally satisfied." he added.
Piper says he hates to lose more
than anything in the world
"I won't play racquetball because I'm no good at that at all."
He even got annoyed when he could not ski as well as his girlfriend, he says.
Piper doesn't want to lose in the business world either.
He says he wants to build a thriving, growing business in Lawrence, where he has lived since the third grade. Piper doesn't like to tell people he was born in Manhattan, Kan., and he says he cannot imagine another community where he would rather live.
Many Lawrence residents initially come to Screen-It Graphics because
they recognize his name, Piper says. He appreciates their help but wants people's business for other reasons.
"I want people to come to us best to provide quality of work and the type of people needed."
Although he strives to succeed, Piper says, he maintains a relaxed attitude about his business and everything else.
"I don't believe in serious customs," he says. "I wear shorts to work when it's nice. I like to enjoy things."
He smiles at that, remembering that, as the boss, he sets the dress code. No one will tell him to put on trousers and a tie.
Lawrence, KU offer help for rape victims
By Liz Hueben
Kansan staff writer
1.
One in four college men admitted having used sexual aggression with women, according to a survey cited in the pamphlet "Aquainautica." In Dating Dangerous" produced by the department of student life.
People could ask, "If it happens, what can we do?"
College women could ask themselves, "If it happened to me, what would I do?"
When a rape occurs, the victim might have a hard time adjusting to school, said Robert Turvey, of the Student Assistance Center.
There are a number of services and resources available to a rape victim who are directly related to KU, and are local service (see Directory).
He said one purpose of the center was to help students handle academic pressure after a trauma.
"We don't want a student who has been raped to have to run around and tell the story eight or nine times." "Turvey said.
He said the center would contact faculty and find out what could be done for the student to either receive incompletes for class grades or to finish the semester in some way after a break.
Turvey said that this could be done without the professor knowing exactly what happened and that faculty in general had been very responsive without asking too many questions.
He said that the number of students coming to the center after a rape had increased greatly this semester but that he did not think the incidence of student rape had increased.
"My sense is that students are more prone to contact someone about this than they were even a year ago. They usually ask the same questions, like 'Was this rape?' though," Turvey said.
Officials at the University of Kansas said they were trying to find the best way to handle the problem of date rape.
Robert Shelton, University ombudsman, said he had put together an informal task force in Spring 1989 to examine the ways to help improve the capacity for various parts of the University to assist rape victims and address rape issues.
Shelton said he did not have the power to appoint groups, but that an ambudsman, he had a responsiblity to govern the group has remained informal.
Danny Kaiser, assistant dean of student life, said that the code already covered rape but that it did not use the word because the wording is general enough to include all kinds of violent crimes.
One idea of the task force was to change the wording of the code of student rights and responsibilities in the law, the word rape or sexual assault.
The code's Article 22, section
RAPE COUNSELING AND SERVICES
Crisis Help/Counseling:
Douglas County Rape Victim Support Services 864-2345
University Counseling Center, 864-3931
KU Psychological Clinic, 864-4121
Watkins Hospital Mental Health, 864-9500
Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center, 843-9192
Women's Transitional Care Services, 841-6887
Social Rehabilitation Services, 841-6541
Medical Help:
Lawrence Memorial Hospital Emergency, 749-6162
Watkins Memorial Health Center, 864-9500
Legal Help:
District Attorney. 841-0211
Academic Help:
Douglas County Legal Aid, 864-5564
Academic Help:
Student Assistance Center, 864-4064
Information on Banks/ Data Banks
Information on Rape/ Date Rape;
Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service, 843-9985
Leave Message
Department of Health Education, Watkins Memorial Health Center, 864-9570
A. 1, reads, "An offense against a student is committed when a student: Threatens the physical health of another person, places another person in serious bodily harm, or uses physical force in a manner that endangers the health, welfare or safety of another person."
Kaiser said he wanted to clarify the code so that students would know that Article 22 points precisely to rape as an offense.
Kevin Masten/KAN5AN
Muehlenhard, who is a member of Shelton's task force, said there were difficulties involved in decision to授奖 the University's power could go.
"The university only has jurisdiction over things on campus or during official University functions," she said.
Lawing said that to begin to
Muehlenhard said she would like
She said the task force had talked about putting a course like that into freshman/new student orientation.
Shelton said the movement to form the task force got started at KU because of the book "Sexual Assault on Campus: What Colleges Can Do," published by the Rape Treatment Center at the Santa Monica Medical Center in California.
He said he had toyed with the idea of an umbrella sexual abuse and sexual assault organization on campus that would include representatives from groups that currently worked independently on the issue.
to see a mandatory course at KU dealing with sexism, racism, violence against women, heterosexism and all kinds of bias.
Rape
LaFree said that at every point in the legal process, the stronger
"We ask where women were and what they were doing to make the men do what they do." she said.
In a telephone interview, LaFree said he found that jurors held prior relationships of the victim and the victim's sexual reputation to be more important in the determination of the case than either the use of weapons or prior record of the defendant.
▶ Continued from p. 2A
the various factors that influence jurors in rape cases.
He said that if as a whole, jurors' sex-role attitudes were not consis-tious in those of the victim, the jury would more likely to acquit the defendant.
He also said the reverse was true. He said a sex-role conservative juror would more likely indict the defendant if the victim was also sex-role conservative.
the prior victim-offender relationship, the more likely it would be that the case would drop out of court.
"You'd think knowing the attacker would be good, for identification purposes," LaFree said. "But no matter how slight the relationship between the victim and the offender, it has a detrimental effect on the victim's ability to get a guilty verdict for the defendant, even if it was someone who just checked you out at the grocery store or a cab driver."
Lawing said the legal system tended to place the blame for a man's actions on the woman.
remedy the court situation, society needed to redefine rape. She said a society was needed that valued women enough not to let rape cases disappear in the legal system.
The RVSS booklet lists four main advantages or benefits to the victim who reports a rape:
▶ The assaultal probably has attacked others and probably will attack others if he is not stopped.
The report may help substantiate the survivor's report and may protect others from having the same thing happen to them.
There are, however, some advantages to reporting a rape and following through with the trial.
► The victim will become her own advocate and defender. The act of reporting helps her regain control
over her life and lets the assailant know that she is not powerless to do something about the assault. ▶ The report will help victims become eligible for financial compensation from the state to cover any medical or psychological assistance they receive as a result of the attack. The report will ensure that initial visits for examination at the hospital will be paid for by Douglas County.
The victim is protecting herself against further harassment by the assault.
Lawing said she admired any woman who went through with prosecution.
"I have great respect for every woman who has taken the legal route because in rape cases you feel like a martyr," she said.
Fate of Flint Hills remains uncertain
Kansan staff writer
Ranchers, government oppose each other.
By Jim Petterson
Kansas staff writer
A red-tailed hawk, started by an approaching car moving slowly across Fox Creek bridge, screeches and swoops low across the gravel road, shattering the vast stillness of the rolling Kansas Flint Hills.
The hawk perches near the top of a great cottonwood tree and looks north across the 10,894 acre Z-Bar Ranch, oblivious to the emotional battles being waged to determine the future of the ranch.
The National Audubon Society signed an option to buy the ranch in July 1988 and wants to transfer control of the ranch to the government. The society would like to see the ranch managed by the National Park Service as the "Flint Hills National Monument."
The ranch is about 20 miles west of Emporia in Chase County. Two small towns, Strong City and Cottonwood are within a few miles of the ranch.
Ron Klataske, regional vice president of the Audubon Society, envisions the proposed monument as an opportunity for people to see and learn about the natural history of the prairie.
"I see as the monument's most important value, the educational and inspirational value of giving people the opportunity to see the native grasslands of the Flint Hills," he said. "I was inspired by it, to learn about it and give appreciate the cultural legacy of ranching and farming in this area."
Corrals near the barn would be perfect for demonstrations of ranching activities, he said. Cattle grazing could continue on thousands of acres, and other tracts of land could be used for hiking, camping, horseback riding or the reintroduction of native wildlife such as antelope, bison and elk.
Local community leaders support Klataske's vision of the monument as an educational tool. They also see it as a chance to pump some economic life back into the aling Chase County economy.
Local ranchers oppose monument
Some ranchers are still angry over a 1977 attempt to create a Prairie town, in a proposal the government would have ranches to sell about 150,000 acres of
But many Flint Hills ranchers, backed by the two largest Kansas agricultural organizations, the Kansas Livestock Association and the Kansas Farm Bureau, are fighting the proposal.
Flint Hills land for a national park. The proposal was abandoned in 1890.
Opposition to the monument is centered on two arguments. First, local ranchers say, the government already owns too much land that should be in private hands, and it should not acquire any more.
Ranchers say they also fear that, if the government buys the Z-Bar ranch, it will use eminent domain, the government's right to takeover private land for public use with fair compensation, to expand the boundaries past current Z-Bar property lines.
In the early 1970s, at the height of the original prairie park dispute, ranchers and other Flint Hills residents organized and formed the Kansas Grassroots Association. Rancher Chuck Magathan now heads the organization.
"We're just a group of farmers,
ranchers and just about anyone that
has a concern for the Flint Hills and
them in private hands," he said.
Magathan said the group opposed the monument proposal because members were worried about the National Park Service someday trying to enlarge the park by acquiring more land.
"They say the monument will be just 10,000 acres, but past history of the park service shows it has a history of making monuments and parks grow to much larger sizes," he said. "We don't want the government coming in and taking 100,000 and 200,000 acres."
One Chase County rancher, whose property borders a portion of the Z-Bar Ranch, echoed Magathan's fears of government control of the ranch.
"The conservationists have been wanting a prairie park for years." Carol Jory said. "Eleven thousand acres is really a come-down from the more affluent acres. I kind of wonder if they will allow it, big enough with all the recreation they have projected for it. I just don't see how it would be enough."
Gary Burch, another Chase County rancher who owns land adjacent to the barn, said he thought the monument should do little for the local economy.
"The park won't save local businesses," he said. "Tourists just need to flock in here to see grass they can drive through for miles."
Bruch said he was opposed to the monument proposal because he had worked hard to build a good life in Chase County and didn't want to jeopardize it.
"Things get started and just don't
See FLINT; p. 11A
University Daily Kansan / Friday, December 8, 1989
11A
Flint
Continued from p. 10A
end," he said. "We don't have the time, or the money to fight this thing. I don't think people realize the jeopardy this puts our lives under. They hassle you to the point they wear you out. I'm tired of it, but we can't quit."
From cattle ranching to conservation
The ranch was assembled by S.F. Jones in the 1870s. Jones was a pioneer cattle king who came to Kansas from the South with "money sticking out of every pocket," written by Charles L. Hall, a former Kansas State University associate professor of architecture.
Jones set out to build one of the finest restaurants in the county. He spent $25,000 on the construction of an 11-room Victorian house and $15,000 to raise the three-story barn, according to the building plans. The house, the barn and a one-room kitchen are listed in the property are listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Ownership of the ranch changed hands several times before 1935, when George Davis acquired the land and turned it into the Davis-Noland Merrill Grain Co. The name was later changed to the Z-Bar Cattle Co. and was sold in 1986 to Boatman's
First Bank in Kansas City, Mo.
The National Audubon Society signed the option to buy the ranch from Boatman's in 1983 and worked with Chase County community leaders to prepare a proposal for the establishment of the prairie monument.
Ley Fowler, Strong City city attorney, said some Chase County residents realized a local effort was going to be necessary if any plan of developing a national monument was to proceed.
"In the first part of March, the cities of Strong City and Cottonwood Falls passed a joint resolution creating the Flint Hills National Monument Association," Fowler said.
The committee was formed to identify local concerns about the monument and to draft a bill for the creation of the Flint Hills Prairie National Monument. Fowler was elected chairman of the committee.
The Association now has about 1,000 members in 21 states, said Larry Bayer, Strong City mayor.
Monument could mean economic survival
Ken Harder, Cottonwood Falls mayor, said he supported the proposal because the monument would
be good for local communities
"We've seen a steady decline in population in Chase County," he said. "I feel we're fast getting to the point where we're not going to have the critical mass of people and dollars necessary to keep these communities viable.
"My goal is to get this national monument in because I feel it will bring in enough tourists and dollars to keep stores open and keep the service businesses in for the benefit of the people who live here."
Bayer agreed.
"We're fighting for our survival," he said. "We don't have any option anymore. It has to happen for our sake. We'll just continue on until we have enough support."
The National Audubon Society estimated that the proposed monument would attract from 100,000 to 300,000 visitors and require a staff of 10 to 15 full-time workers.
According to an analysis and projection report prepared by Emporia State University, just 100 visitors a day, 36,000 a year, would bring an additional $1.2 million into the Chase County economy and create 117 new jobs.
"That's why this proposal looks so promising," Bayer said. "Visitors will come and hopefully spend the
day and take back with them the experience of actually going back in these hills. I can see no harm or damage being done to anybody."
Klataske said he was disappointed with the attitudes of the monument's opposition and called their lack of support selfish.
"They need to be interested in more than just cows," he said. "Their position and the tactics that they've used in fighting the monument proposal have really not demonstrated a diverse and thoughtful organization.
"They've just come out of the chute saying, 'We don't want the federal government to own any land.' I think it's very shortsighted because of the fact that a piece of property of this nature, administered for the public trust and for the enjoyment, education and inspiration of all Americans and all Kansans, would greatly enhance the understanding and appreciation of our ranching and farming culture.
Last June, the Kansas Congressional delegation wrote a letter to the director of the National Park Service requesting an evaluation of the Z-Bar Ranch to determine its suitability for
From prairie to politics
induction into the National Park System.
On Sept. 8, U.S. Rep. Dan Glickman, a Kansas Democrat, disclosed a decision by the park service to conduct a study and pay for it with existing funds.
In a letter written by James Ridenour, director of the NPS, to Glickman, Ridenour explained why the study would be conducted.
"Currently, no unit of the System is devoted to managing and interpreting a prairie area for the benefit of the citizens of the country and our foreign visitors," he wrote. "Because the once vast prairie played such an integral role in the history and expansion of the United States, the Service has long sought to fill this gap in the System."
In his letter, Ridenour wrote that it was unusual for the park service to conduct a new area study without authorization and money from Congress. But, he said, the monument proposal would be examined because "we are free to examine the entire range of management alternatives."
Earlier this year, the Kansas delegation asked a House of Representatives committee to provide $50,000 for a feasibility study of the monument proposal. When no money was approved, the delegation elected to
ask the park service to conduct the study.
Because of the opposition to the monument proposal, Ridenour said, the study would "take an unconstrained look at a variety of options including those that would not acquire an NPS presence for management of the area as a park."
Randy Baines, superintendent of the Homestead National Monument in Nebraska, was selected to head the team that will study the Z-Bar Ranch proposal.
"Our mission is to review the Z-Bar site for historical and national significance," he said. "We will also see if it meets the strict criteria of a national park for inclusion in the National Park System.
Baines said that study team members hadn't been selected yet and that he planned to fill team posts with specialists from several Kansas universities, including the University of Kansas.
"My mission will be to see if the Z-Bar fulfills the requirements," he said. "I'd like to have a year to a year and a half to complete the study. I want to see the prairie through one complete growing season. It's important to see the area in different seasons."
d
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1
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Friday, December 8, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Haack shows fire as cool competitor
KU
Softball coach Kalum Haack advises freshman pitcher Jill Baliew
E. Joseph Zurgu
By Gene King
Kansan sportswriter
Take some intensity, a burning desire to win, and throw in a few softer qualities and the end result is Kalum Haack, Kansas' softball coach.
In his second season at the helm of the Jayhawk squad, he has already instilled into the women on his softball team the same kind of intensity that he exuded as a collegiate football player.
In the fall season, the Jayhawks lost only three games and won 16.
"I don't think we should have lost any. I know I'm "greedy when it comes to that."
Intensity not only rules his coaching but his everyday life.
"To be successful, the more intent you are, the more likely you are to strive for perfection." Haack said. "I want to win real bad."
Haack, one of two boys in his family, grew up in Hempstead, Texas, where he was a stand-out athlete at Hempstead High School.
His toughness came early, especially with a name like Kalum. He that his parents got the name from the credits at the end of a movie.
Perhaps the biggest influence on Haack was his father, Charles, or "Butch" to most people.
One of the biggest thrills for Haack was when he played on the same softball team with his father during the summer.
Haack said that his father taught him to be competitive when he was young and that a lot of mistakes should not to be tolerated.
"I felt he was hard on me at the time," Haack said. "He would make me so mad at times. But I realize now that it was good for me. He wanted me to be the best that I could be.
"There is nothing wrong with being competitive."
Haack took that competitive eagel and carried it through his collegiate football career at Sam Houston State, in Huntsville, Texas.
He was an all-conference linebacker and entertained thoughts of playing professional football, but he was too small, he said.
Haack began his collegiate coaching career as an assistant softball coach at Sam Houston in 1980. He then went to coach at Memorial
Parkway Junior High School in Katy, Texas, for one year.
Haack got his first taste or the Big Eight Conference when he became an assistant softball coach at Nebraska in 1983.
His love for football resurfaced
Haack got his first college softball head coaching job at his alma mate, Sam Houston, in 1986, before coming to Kansas in 1987.
when he became a defensive end coach at Katy Taylor High School, also in Katy, Texas.
Impulsiveness and a proposal
Intensity surrounds Haack. His wife, Leslie, is just as intense, and the two have had some heated battles. Neither would elaborate.
The two met while she was a freshman pitcher at Sam Houston during Haack's first stint there.
When Haack went on to coach at Nebraska, Leslie Haack and three other players followed.
"I hated him when he was the coach," she admitted. "We would hate it when the head coach would leave, putting Kalum in charge."
"I was homeschied for Texas when I went to Nebraska," Leslie Haack said. "He realized I wasn't happy. Kalum was from Texas, and he was lonely. That was probably one of the reasons we started dating.
Even though the two clashed at times, that perhaps was one ingredient for the attraction.
The two dated in secret for just two and a half months before Haack popped the question.
"On our first date we went dancing, and I called him Coach Haack all night."
"No one knew about us until we announced our engagement," she said.
They were at Grandmother's, a bar in Lincoln, Neb., on Dec. 29, 1984, when he proposed. He asked her over the public address system in the bar and had the waitress bring the ring to their table.
"He is always doing impulsive things, more so than people think. It kind of makes me nervous. He will come home with roses, and he leaves me notes all the time," she said.
Leslie Haack, a student in the education program at KU, said that she would be happy with Lawrence and that they needed to stay here for a long time.
She said that it had been an adjustment for her, though, and that she missed the beaches in Texas.
She said that she was ready to stay in one place for a while.
"I have moved six times in the last five years," she said. "We bought a house and are ready to make Lawrence our home."
One reason that Haack and his wire are willing to make Lawrence their home has to do with Haack's desire to build the Kansas softball program into a winner, not just in the conference but on the national level.
On the road to victory
During his first season at Kansas, the Jahyhaws went 33-32.
"As a coach, he is tough ano harsh," Leslie Haack said. "You have to learn to match his intensity."
The women who play for Haack do so with some hesitation. On the field, he is a menacing sight.
During one game, a Kansas player stole second with a runner on third and was thrown out. While she was jogging off the field, Haack stopped because he was expected to make the point clear that he was unhappy with her effort.
Haack immediately pointed out the fact that if the one player had not been thrown out at second, she, too, would have scored.
The player walked into the dugout and sat down. A few pitches later, the batter got a single, scoring the runner from third.
This happened in the bottom of the sixth Inning with the Jayhawks winning 6-0.
Emotion on the field
Gayle Luedke played one season for Haack and now is a student assistant coach. "Some of the girls don't know how to approach him due to his intensity on the field," Luedke said.
"Only a few of the players are actually scared of him."
Haack coaches with positive reinforcement as well, Luedke said.
"He emphasizes the positive. He points out the things you are doing wrong, but when you make a good play, he gets excited about it.
"You feed off of his emotions." she said.
"The first year, there was a lot of turnover among the team," she said.
Leslie Haack said she could see that some of the players were intimidated by her husband on the field.
Luedke pointed out that some of the younger players were more apt to shy away from the coach.
"Some of the freshmen seem to be
more apprehensive around Coach Haack," she said.
Robanna Braizer, pitcher for Haacea the last two years, said that he was hard to get to know on the field but that she "has all the respect in the world for him."
Haack's intimidating demeanor on the field not only gets across to the opposing team, but also to his own team.
"He is very intimidating to a lot of us." Brazier said. "You don't know what to expect.
"His first year here, he was an intense, intimidating person. But, this last year, you could see he was not as harsh."
Mellowing out
His wife could see that too.
But there are two sides to every coin.
"He has mellowed since he has been at Kansas," Leslie Haack said. "He knows he has the players with the athletic ability he needs to be a winning team."
Haack has his soft side off the field, too.
Luedke has seen both sides of Haack, the coach and the person.
"He is funny and fun to be a roarer," I lauded said. "I wish that all the players were able to see this side of him."
With his team on the winning track, Haack now can concentrate on the quest for a Big Eight title.
"He's committed to this program." Lester Haack said.
"He said it would take three recruiting classes before he had the team he wanted to take it all the way. Things seem to be on track."
Haack said that after he had established himself as a "perennial power" in NCAA softball, he would like to move on to administration of college athletics.
"I would like to be an athletic director someday," he said, "I can't coach forever. It would be a nice change and a step up."
But for now, he is concentrating on bringing KU another national club that was founded by black and everyone associated with almost and Kansas softball says he can.
The bottom line, Luecked said, is that "he just loves to win."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
MONDAY DEC. 11,1989
ADVERTISING: 864-4358
NEWS:864-4810
Senate spares education Margin of Excellence may be headed for trouble
By Derek Schmidt Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — Higher education escaped unscathed Saturday as the Senate killed a proposal to raid state budgets to pay for property tax and the third year of the Margin of Excellence still could be in trouble.
About a dozen witnesses told the Senate Ways and Means Committee that a $93 million relief bill passed Friday by the House of Representatives would unacceptably strip state budgets.
William Brundage, president of the Kansas Technology Enterprise Corp., said the bill's provision to take $17 million from economic development funds would cripple research at some state institutions, including the
See related stories p.11
Higuchi Bioscience Center at the University of Kansas
"There's no way we could achieve what we've been doing," he said.
State investment in the Higuchi Center is designed to nurture a fledgling pharmaceutical industry in Kansas, Brundage said.
Michael J. Steinle, a Kansas State University graduate student, told the committee that the bill would cut money he needed for cancer surgery.
State Sen. Wint Winton Jr., R-
Lawrence, said that by killing the bill
the Senate had sent a pro-education
message.
"We're not going to balance the tax problems on the backs of higher education alone," Winter said. "But
it doesn't send the message that we're not going to talk about tax relief. I don't blame anybody for triving."
Money for the current Margin probably is not in danger of being diverted to tax relief, but financing interest and year still is shaky, Winter said.
The Margin of Excellence is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring the total financing of its seven institutions to 95 percent of their peer schools and to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
A majority of senators agreed that the House bill was carelessly crafted.
The House on Friday adopted a 25 page amendment by State Rep. Bill Roy Jr., D-Topeka, that represented the
See MARGIN, p. 6
WHAT THE LEGISLATURE
DID
▶ Extended the deadline for paying taxes from Dec. 20 to Jan. 16.
▶ Permitted those taxpayers who protest their taxes to pay one quarter of their taxes by the deadline, instead of the one-half for January.
▶ Permitted quarter payment would be due March 20 and the rest on June 20.
► Reduced the annual interest rate on late taxes from 18 percent to 12 percent.
Returned utility inventories, such as coal piles and natural gas stored underground, to the property tax roles.
- Authorized local units of government to reconsider their budgets and roll back mill levies.
- Reopened the local appeals process to allow taxpayers to protest the reappraised values of their properties.
No doubt about it, Jayhawks on a roll
By Dan Perkins
Kansan sportswriter
If there were any doubts as to why the Kansas Jayhawks are ranked No. 2 in the nation, they were erased by a move to the NFL. The question is, "How can anyone be better?"
The Jayhawks improved their record to 9-9 with a 150-95 record-breaking rout against the Kentucky Wildcats, in a game that near the end had the crowd shouting, "We're No. 11"
The score is not a mistake — 150 points against the all-time winning- college basketball program in the history of the game.
The Jayhawks excelled in every statistical category as they set five school records and won their 350th
game at Allen Field House against just 87 losses.
Coach Roy Williams summed the entire game with just four words. "Today was our day," Williams said.
The 150 points broke the previous high for points in a game, 127 points, which Kansas scored against Iowa State on Jan. 7, 1989. Against the Cyclones, Kansas scored 71 points in the second half.
Kansas nearly broke that record twice against the Wildcats, 3-2, who were playing with only eight scholarships. It was the year of a three-year NCAA probation
Racial joke prompts KBI director to quit
Kansas scored 80 points in the first half and added another 70 in the second half.
See KENTUCKY. d. 13
By Rich Cornell and Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writers
A racial joke told last week led to the resignation of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation director on Saturday.
Former KBI director Dave Johnson resigned after a column addressing the joke appeared Saturday in the Kansas City Times.
Ted Frederickson, KU associate professor of journalism, wrote the column during the last week of a reporting assignment with the paper.
In his column, Frederickson said Johnson told him the joke during an interview concerning a triple murder that took place last week in Topeka. One of the two people arrested for the killings was Black.
While Johnson answered questions about the killings, Johnson told them a joke about a "buck nigger" teachable character from a box with his wife. Frederickson said.
Saturday, Johnson announced his resignation after 21 state legislators asked Bob Stephan, Kansas attorney to discipline Johnson for his remarks.
Johnson said in his letter of resignation that the joke was taken out of
Stephan said he accepted Johnson's resignation with deep regret and named James G. Malison as acting director the same day.
"I am sure you are aware that my performance has not indicated that I am a racist," Johnson said. "It is not my intent to criticise any criticism of
the KBI, office of the attorney general or law enforcement in general."
Rittenksson said yesterday that the column allowed him to explore the issue of racism better than a news story would have.
"I wanted to provide context for the joke," Frederickson said, "not just tell that he told a racist joke but also show that he and how it affects others." lives.
He said he expected a reaction to Saturday's column but did not think the reaction would be as dramatic as it was.
The joke bothered Frederickson because it came from the director of the state's most important law enforcement agency, he said.
"I've heard those jokes before,
variety everyone has." Frederick-
kern was shocked.
He said he hoped racist jokes would no longer be acceptable.
John Pinegar, deputy director of
the U.S. Army Research Laboratory,
begun a search for a new director.
Pinegar said neither Johnson nor anyone else in the bureau was racist or held derogatory beliefs about him, and he explained why Johnson told the loke.
"The entire matter has been taken totally out of context." Pinegar said.
Skeptical, junior journalism student Makia said it was important that Prederickson brought the issue to the public's eye.
"To tell a joke with a Black man and a white woman makes you wonder what attitude the former director
See KBI, p. 6
Snow and ice hamper travel
By a Kansan reporter
Slick streets hampered area motorists last night as snow and ice temporarily closed some roads and made driving hazardous.
Lawrence police reported that trucks were spreading sand on city streets by early evening. They reported "several accidents" by late last night but did not have an exact number.
The Douglas County Sheriff reported several non-injury accidents on county roads.
The Kansas Turnpike Authority reported that westbound cars were backed up to Kansas City on I-70 because of an accident on the Kansas River Bridge about 9 p.m.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported 50 to 70 accidents on highways in the Topeka area and that sections of I-70 were closed as early as 8 p.m.
Officials predicted streets would remain hazardous. Forecasts call for continued cold temperatures, with highs about 20 degrees.
PENNIE SCHREIBER
STUDIO
Derek May, right, jokes with card collector John Leonard.
Rookies, pros demand show's baseball cards
By Steve Buckner Kansan staff writer
They came, they looked, they negotiated and above all, they bought.
Such was the scene Saturday at a baseball card show conducted by 25 area card dealers at the Holiday Holidee, 200 McDonald Drive.
The show was attended by kids of all ages. A steady stream of children, college students and adults methodically leafed through the dealers' notebooks and bins of the value 2 $\frac{1}{2}$ inch by 3 $\frac{1}{2}$ inch cardboard rectangles, which sported pictures of Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays, Jose Canseco and Bo Jackson.
A card show demonstrates a classic market economy. Card prices depend on the player, the year of the card, its condition and its scarcity. Star cards range from several hundred dollars for a Mantle or a Mays to $10 for Jackson's 1986 rookie card.
Average players' cards, known as "commons" in the cardboard caste system, can cost several dollars for cards from the 1950s and 1960s, to several cents for a deck of cards. The manufacturer, complete 1989 sets, which contain 600 to 800 cards, cost from $20 to $40.
The popularity of baseball cards
has surged during the 1980s, and dealer Mark Skinner said he saw no end to the collector's demand.
"It seems like it's picking up,' he said. "I see it keep going up."
Skinner, who has owned and operated a card shop in Gardner with his wife since the summer of 1988, said his sales had been excellent this year. Card shows, which he attends once a month to add to his sales, can be lucrative, with sales as much as $1,000.
Skinner he involved his family in his business. His wife helps run the store and his two children, Michelle, 9, and Matthew, 6, have their own collections. When asked to list today's names, Skinner was able to name more players than her father.
"It's a fun hobby, it's clean and can be done as a family." Skinner said.
"They're just like kids," Skinner said with a laugh.
Most of his customers are adults,he said.
Baseball cards also can have appeal for college students with little background in the game. Lori Huffman, Greely, Colo., sophomore, fits that description as an unlikely novice Colo.
Her interest was piqued this summer after she attended some minor league games in Denver and then discovered baseball cards,
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Dale McCandless waits for buvers at his son-in-law's table.
she said. Her collection now numbers in the thousands after spending $600 on cards this summer. A few hard lessons were learned along the way.
"At first I bought cards for the way they looked," Huffman said. "Then I learned to watch the newspaper to learn about players before putting more money into it."
She said some dealers had tried to take advantage of her.
"I was at a show in Denver and asked a dealer what he wanted for a Jim Abbott card." Huffman said. "He said, "$15 for a pretty girl like you," I said, "Sorry, it's worth $10 in the book," and walked away.
Her hobby has drawn mixed reactions from her friends, she said.
Czechs cheer as non-Communists take power
The Associated Press
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia — A government controlled by non-Communists took power yesterday for the first time in 41 years, and tens of thousands of people jammed the nation's streets to celebrate the historic victories of their peaceful revolution.
President Gustav Husak, the nation's last old-guard Communist leader, resigned after swearing in the new government, which includes two men who were persecuted as dissidents until just two weeks ago.
In a key compromise, the Justice Ministry, which runs the nation's secret and uniformed police, will be run by a leading disident, the new Communist premier and a Communist Party member proposed by the opposition.
The new 21-member government contains 10 Communists, two of whom enjoy opposition support, seven non-party members and two members each from the small Socialist and People's parties, which recently broke ties with the Communists.
More than 100,000 people crammed Prague's Wenceslas Square to hear opposition leader Vaclav Havel, S3, and other dissidents who suffered jail terms and harassment for 13 years, catalogue the successes of their fight for democracy.
The embattled Communists have granted stunning concessions, which include opening borders, promising free elections and eliminating their monopoly on power.
E. German changes not part of research
By Angela Baughman Kansan staff writer
Ron Francisco's research topic has become recent history, much to his surprise.
Francisco, associate professor of political science, who specializes in Soviet and East European studies, lived in Berlin last spring to study how elites in the Communist party were elected, primarily in East Germany.
The Communist-run government since has met its demise with the resignations of East German leaders Erich Honecker and Egon Krems and
a restructuring of the government to include non-Communists. On Nov. 9, the Berlin Wall was opened to allow free travel and from the West. The Czechoslovakian government recently has experienced similar changes.
He said he had been using new methods to study the election process. Francisco had talked to all of the top specialists in the East German government, who said at the time that no political change was expected.
"My six months of research has become obsolete." Francisco said. "All of the theories are moot at this point because they no longer elect leaders this way."
"Nobody thought there was going to be anything but stability as long as Erich Honecker was alive," he said. Egon Krenz was Honecker's long-
predicted successor, and no change was anticipated when he assumed power.
He said that there had been no hint of democratic reforms in Eastern Europe.
"Anybody who tells you they fore-saw this — be skeptical," Francisco said.
The professor lived in Berlin from 1972 to 1973 and for brief periods in 1976 and 1983. Francisco said that when he arrived in East Germany last spring nothing had changed. Newspapers still reported that people were being shot in their attempts to get over the Berlin Wall.
Francisco said it was the opening of Hungarian borders, and the subsequent mass exodus of East Germans that caused the breakdown of the Communist government, not internal factors.
Ramaley's home gets burglarized
Burglar entered Judith Ramaley', house through an unlocked front door Friday, taking 140 jazz and classical compact discs and a stereo system. Lawrence police reported.
Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, told police someone entered her house, in the 2000 block of Quail Creek Court, while she was gone between 8:30 a.m. and 10 p.m. The theft took the compact discs, a turntable, a cassette deck, a receiver and two speakers, leaving through a sliding glass door.
The items were valued together at $3,709.75, the record stated.
Ramaley was unavailable for comment.
2
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Weather
Sunny
Cloudy HI: 20° LO: 8°
TODAY
Seattle 42/33
New York 34/19
Chicago 23/6
Denver 18/0
Los Angeles 69/45
Miami 74/67
Dallas 33/14
KEY
Rain Snow
Ice T-Storms
Forecast by Jack Mabry
Temperature are today's highs and
touchets lews.
The following table shows the results of a study comparing the effectiveness of different treatments for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The results are based on a randomized controlled trial with 200 subjects.
Kansas Forecast
A blast of arctic air will move into Kansas, bringing bitterly cold temperatures throughout the week. Highs in the upper teens to low 20s. Temperatures tonight will be below 10.
Salina 18/4 KC
Dodge 19/7
City Wichita
18/5 23/8
5-day Forecast
KU Weather Service Forecast: 864-3300
Monday - Mostly cloudy with gusty Northwest winds 15-25 mph. High 20', Low 8'.
Tuesday - Cloudy with a chance for light snow. High 18'. Low 6'.
Wednesday - Partly cloudy and cold. High 15'. Low 3'.
Thursday - Mostly cloudy and a chance for light snow, High 11'. Low 1'.
Friday - Partly cloudy and continued cold. High 13°. Low 4°.
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THE KANSAN is accepting applications for staff columnists for the Spring semester. Contact John Milburn or Liz Hueben at 864-4810.
Correction
THE KANSAS UNION
Sign-Up for Spring Leagues
Jaybowl
Information in a story on page 1 of Friday's Kansas was incorrect. Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole graduated from the University of Arizona.
Monday Mixer 7 p.m. Thursday Guys'n'Dolls 7 p.m.
Tuesday Tri-Mixer 7 p.m. Friday T.G.I.F 4 p.m.
Wednesday Mixer 7 p.m. Sunday Mixer 6 p.m.
> Because of a reporter's error, statistics were incorrect on page 24 of Friday's Kansan. Charlene Muehlenhard, assistant professor of psychology/women's studies, said that one year after a rape, 20 to 25 percent of all victims showed no symptoms of rape trauma, and a few of them even
Leagues begin the week of January 22nd Sign-Up at the Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One - 864-3545
reported being better off because of re-evaluation or therapy.
▶ A telephone number was incorrect in a graphic on page 10A of Friday's Kansan. The number for the Rape Victim Support Service is 841-2345.
Because of an editor's error, one of the sponsors of the Martin Luther King Jr. birthday celebration was misidentified in Friday's Kansan. The Ecumenical Fellowship of Lawrence will sponsor the events.
Briefs
NALLS MAY CLOSE: No University of Kansas residence hall will be open during the winter break unless 50 residents sign up before p.m. Dec. The student housing department.
Fred McEilenhein, associate director of student housing, said nobody
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
3
KU student dies in one-car crash early Saturday
By Lisa Moss Kansan staff writer
A 21-year old University of Kansas student was killed early Saturday morning in a one-car accident on U.S. Route 57 near the Shawnee-Douglas County line.
Scott Tredway, Winfield sophomore, was driving east when his car left the road, hit a sign and went airborne over a driveway before Kansas on a ditch, a spokesman for Kansas Highway Patrol in Topeka, said.
Gale Trewaday, Mr. Trewaday's mother, said her son was a photographer for Flashback Photography in New York and from a work assignment in Toppea.
Mr. Tredway loved art and music and always wanted his friends to go to art museums with him, his friend Bill Heman, Highland Park, III., junior, said.
"He was an incredibly well rounded person," Hoffman said. "He was liked and loved by everyone he came in contact with. His friendships and the happiness of others around him were important things to him. He would do anything for friend or for anyone, for that matter."
Mrs. Tredway said her son intended to be a political science major. He was on the debate team in college, but he didn't do anything related to speech or debate.
Herb Johnston, Winfield junior,
went to high school with Mr. Tredwav.
"He was the most vibrant and unique individual I have ever known." Johnston said.
Heather Holdsworth, Lee's Summit, Mo., freshman, described Tredway as a good person to talk to.
"He would always show you the bright side," Holdsworth said. "He wouldn't let you be upset. He would tell you, 'I am not going to let you be upset.'"
Todd Moen, Clyde senior, agreed that Mr. Tredway was a good friend.
"If there were a time that a tragedy would occur in life, Scott would be the one to talk to." Moen said of the attack, which hard that the tragedy concern him."
Fellow Templin Hall residents who knew Mr. Tredway were shocked by the death, said Nate Rinnert, Templin resident assistant.
"It makes you realize that you are not invulnerable," Rinnert said. "It makes you think of the kinds of things you never think about."
Residents who lived on Mr. Tredway's floor said he enjoyed photography and playing the guitar.
Edward Heck, a counselor at the University Counseling Center, informed Templin residents that the counseling center was available to anyone who wanted to talk about the death.
"We provide an outlet for them," Heck said. "When something like this happens, we try to be as unintrusive as possible."
Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Winfield First United Methodist Church. Mr. Treddle and his older brother and both his parents.
The details of the accident are still being investigated, the highway patrol spokesman said.
Hurquah Jordan escorts Veronica L. Williams. The two were crowned Saturday evening
Pageant displays talents of students
By Cory S. Anderson Kansan staff writer
Anticipation mounted as the audience of the 1989 "Express Yourself - Mr. Ebony/Ms. Essence Paget" waited several extra minutes Saturday night for the announcement of the winners.
"The scoring took a little longer than anticipated," said Sue Burtin, Kansas City, Mo., senior one of the nageant's announcers.
When the results were anounced, Marqueel Jordan, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore was crowned Mr. Ebony and Veronica Williams, Wichita sophomore, was crowned Ms. Essence.
COLLEGE OF SPORTS
About 300 people attended the pageant sponsored by the Black Student Union at the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The contestants, six women and three men, were judged in six categories: prepared question, impromptu question, talent, poise, modeling and overall presentation.
For the talent portion of the competition, Jordan played Luther and Lyle, who had a saxophone. This was Jordan's first semester at KU. He transferred
Williams and Jordan each will receive $100, paid registration to the Spring 1990 Big Eight Council on Black Student Government in Lowland State University and subscriptions to several magazines.
from Kansas State University and is majoring in liberal arts. He plans to study electrical engineering.
"I feel really good about it," Jordan said about winning the competition. "The night went so on, I felt like I did well and everyone did well."
"I felt like everyone was really good." Williams said. "I couldn't believe they chose me over the other girls."
Williams is majoring in accounting and plans to go to law school. She said that she wanted to start
her own law firm.
Wilson said that half of the profits from the pageant would go to pay registration fees for BSU members attending the Black Student Government Conference.
Michelle Wilson, chairman of the pageant committee, said she was pleased with the event.
Court ruling could mean county must buy back bonds
Kansan staff writer
Rv Dave Wakefield
Sarah Stan Willer
Officials will decide this week whether to fight a court ruling that Douglas County commissioners exceeded their authority in issuing bonds for the South Lawrence Trafficway.
The Kansas Supreme Court, in a unanimous decision Friday, ruled that the county attempted to circumvent a requirement in state law that requires voters to approve bond issues used to finance arterial highwavs.
"A county cannot avoid the financing scheme simply by changing the designation of its proposed highway," said the opinion written by Justice Harold S. Herd.
The $4 million in bonds was issued in August 1985 to finance the county's share of the joint Lawrence-Douglas County project to build the trafficway. The proposed 14 mile, 865 million highway would begin east of Lawrence on Kansas Highway 10 and run around the south and west sides of Lawrence to link with U.S. Highway 40 and the Kansas Turnpike west of Lawrence.
The court did not indicate what action the county must take to rectify the situation, leaving the decision up to county commissioners. The county may have to buy back the bond issue, which would include paying the debt to the bank that made, no more funds raised by the bond issue will be spent, said Chris McKenzie, county administrator.
McKenzie said that only about $235,000 of the $4 million raised by the bond issue had been spent, mostly for an environmental study. The rest of the money has been invested and is earning interest, although state law does not allow it to earn more interest than the county pays for the bonds, he said.
County commissioners will discuss several options this week, which include holding a public vote, buying back the bonds and filing for reconsideration of the ruling.
"The attorneys working on the case will probably recommend to commissioners to file for reconsideration." McKenzie said McKenzie said that the county might file
McKenzie said that the county might file for reconsideration because there was information that the court did not consider.
A motion for reconsideration requests that the court justice reviews certain information, laws or precedents that may have been overlooked when making their original decision.
The county argued that the highway was a circumferential loop and was not covered under the state law that applied to county arterial highways. The county also maintained, and the district court and attorney argued, that the highway should allow counties to hold a vote to issue bonds but did not restrict them from issuing bonds under home rule powers, said McKenzie.
way and bypass, was improperly avoiding a public vote on the bond issue. Blevins lost in district court and the court of appeals before taking the case to the State Supreme Court.
The high court agreed that the county had discretionary powers to not designate the road as a county highway but said that the county still must hold a vote.
"This proposed highway qualifies as an arterial highway." Herd wrote.
If the county were to decide to build such a highway and issue general obligation bonds, Herd said, then state law would be the exclusive method to accomplish that end.
After fighting the county for two years and spending more than $5,000 on the lawsuit, Blevins said he felt that it was the best investment he had ever made.
Kansans awarded film Ozzi
By Jennifer Reynolds
Kansan staff writer
Brad Jordan noted an improvement in yesterday's announcement. Film Institute's director
"The statues are getting better," he said. "The old ones were an old stick of wood with a plastic reel on top. Now it is a stick of wood painted black with a plastic reel on top."
But Jordan, who received the Ozzi award in the music video competition, said it was the honor that counted.
The Ozies, presented each year by the Kansas Film Institute, are awards given to filmmakers from, or connected with, the state of Kansas.
Besides handing out awards in 12 categories, this year's ceremony in Liberty Hall, 642 Massachusetts St., honored Bruce Linton, retired KU professor of journalism and radio and television.
Linton, the chairman of KU's radio/television and film department for 30 years, received the Life Achievement award as a television and film educator.
Chuck Berg, professor of theater and film, helped present the award. He summed up the feeling of students, co-workers and other admirers of Linton's work in one sentence.
"In the immortal words of Duke Ellington, 'We love you madly,'" he said.
Linton thanked the University of Kansas and his students for all the things he had accomplished.
"I am thankful, pleased and flattered," he said. "I don't think the fat lady has begun to sing at the KU program. They are still moving forward and making progress." The Grand Ozi, given to someone connected with Kansas who has made an important contribution to the NBC miniseries "Cross of Fire."
The miniseries was filmed entirely in Kansas and had 30 to 40 Kansans in the cast.
Search narrows for city manager consultant
Bv Dave Wakefield
By Dave Wakefield Kenson staff writer
A Liberty, Mo., management consultant probably will be hired this week to head up the search for a new city manager, a search that is expected to take from three to six months, city officials said.
The consultant, Robert Saunders, will address commissioners this afternoon at a 2:30 p.m. study session that will include discussion about the city manager selection process and the needs of the community Development Block Grant Advisory Board.
Mayor Bob Schumm said last week that commissioners had agreed at their last study session that Saunders was
Commissioners became acquainted with Saunders earlier this fall at a planning retreat.
Commissioner Shirley Martin-Smith said she favored Saunders because he was acquainted with the commissioners and Lawrence.
Saunders, a graduate of KU's city manager program, was a city manager for Bellon, Mo., and Liberty, Mo. during the 1960s. He spent 15 years on the faculty of the University of Missouri-Kansas City, where he was associate dean of business and public administration and director of the Center for Management Development.
Saunders, who specializes in executive recruitment, said one of the important parts of his approach would be to develop a consensus among commissioners about what type of person they were seeking.
A profile of the successful candidate would be developed on the basis of a questionnaire and commission discussion, he said. Saunwers would use the profile to screen candidates to a field of 10 to 12 names, he said.
Other services would include advertising the position, recruiting desirable candidates, checking references and obtaining a copy of the resume.
Saunders would charge an hourly fee not to exceed $9,750 plus direct out-of-pocket expenses, according to a letter sent to commissioners.
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Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Opinion
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Navy shouldn't have used force against Greenpeace
One would think that the Navy has had enough accidental trouble recently without going and ramming a ship on purpose.
Of course, the Navy denies that it rammed the Greenpeace as it tried to stop the submarine Trident from test-firing a Trident II missile.
The courts are going to have to decide who is right and who is wrong in this case, which is basically a my-word-against-yours battle. The question, though, will probably come down to whether the Greenpeace had the right to be in the waters at all.
And it did. The U.S. Navy can't mark off sections of sea and post 'No Trespassing' buoys. The Navy may or may not have rammed the Greenpeace ship, but the gaping holes in the ship's side seem to indicate that someone didn't want the protesters around.
If Greenpeace wants to make an effective protest, they will have to put themselves in dangerous positions. Obviously, Greenpeace members are quite willing to do that; they have been doing so for years. They were practically sitting right on top of the Trident II. The blast of the missile would no doubt have been a little worse than being rammed by a ship.
Greenpeace's leader, William Arkin said, "We do expect to mix it up with the Navy." Referring, one would assume, to the legal action Greenpeace will file. The idea of legal action seemsilly, though. Greenpeace knew it was provoking the Navy ship. That was the intent. If the Navy did ram the Greenpeace, it was probably analogous to slapping in frustration someone who is getting one your nerves.
That doesn't make the Navy right. It should not have used force against Greenpeace, but legal action is not likely to help much. Greenpeace probably should stick with its area of expertise: "mixing it up" during protests.
David Stewart for the editorial board
Boeing should be punished for obtaining documents
The disclosure that Boeing Co. officials had access to classified Defense Department documents and that federal investigators knew of the violations yet did nothing doesn't fly very well.
The findings, made public during testimony in a U.S. District Court trial of Richard Lee Fowler, make charges that defense industries knowingly bilked the federal government of millions of dollars seem even more real and widespread.
Fowler claims he was hired by Boeing specifically to attain the documents. His attorneys are basing his defense on the basis that the documents were readily available to defense contractors, and rules for their release were unclear. They are also pointing to the fact that Fowler was arrested and charged only after he refused to tell federal official who gave him the documents.
Gloria Mahaffey, a retired Boeing worker testified that she ran a library of classified documents for her employer. She said the library was set up in the early 1970's and that she was told the documents contained data "commonly used throughout the industry."
As evidence of abuse in one of the country's leading defense manufacturers continues to mount it is becoming plain to see how vulnerable the current system of defense procurement is. An overhaul of the system is not only timely, but necessary. Any discrepancies or loopholes that exist in the laws governing access to classified documents should be eliminated.
Federal investigators should also be more thorough and earnest in their inspection of industry files.
Boeing pleaded guilty to having classified documents and has agreed to pay a $5.2 million fine. But, fines may not be enough in the future if current trends hold true and more violations are found, in Boeing and throughout the industry.
Brett Brenner for the editorial board
Members of the editorial board are David Stewart, Stan Diel, Brett Brenner, Ric Brack, Daniel Nieml, Craig Welch, Kathy Walsh, Thom Clark, Tiffany Harness and Scott Patty.
News staff
David Stewart ... Editor
Ric Rack ... Managing editor
Daniel Niemi ... News editor
Gordon Winnann ... Photographer
Stan Diel ... Editorial editor
Jennifer Corseu ... Campus editor
Elaine Sung ... Sports editor
Luca Husar ... Photo editor
Christine Willner ... Art/Film director
Tom Ebben ... General manager, news adviser
Business staff
Linda Prokop ... Business manager
Debra Martin ... Local advertising sales director
Jerre Medford ... National/regional sales director
Jill Lowe ... Marketing director
Tami Rank ... Production manager
Carrie Slaninka ... Assistant production manager
Cindy Townsend ... Co-op manager
Eric Hughes ... Creative director
Christian Dool ... Classified manager
Jeff Meeesy ... Tearsheet manager
Jeanne Hines ... Sales and marketing adviser
Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position.
Guest columns be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed.
The Kansas reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansas newsroom, 111 Stuartier: Flint Litt. 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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MKANEILY Chicago Tribune
I HOPE ITS JUST SEASICKNESS...
POPPY'S ARK
Steps to sensitivity might be rocky
It's difficult for the Kansan to respond to charges of prejudice without opening itself to further attack. "They are defensive, so it must be true," the argument goes.
Despite recent accusations, however, the Kansan makes an effort to be sensitive and raise our readers' awareness of the issues.
We were accused of being racist because of an article on the front page of last Monday the Kansan that described Lawrence gang activity. In the seventh paragraph, we included information given to us by a police spokesman that the gang members were Black and Hispanic.
It would be easy for me to just forget about this issue and not comment on it. I am in the process of turning over control of the Kansan to next semesters, so I don't know how to get the non-louder have anything to do with the newspaper.
But that doesn't mean I can forget about the issue of racism. Although I can see the point of the people who say that mentioning race in an article about gangs only enforces stereotypes, I have to shake my head in sorrow that these people don't see the larger picture of what we've done this semester on the Kansas.
Since the semester began, we've had two reporters working full-time covering minority affairs. Never before has the Kanans dedicated that much time to the issue. And never before has the paper tried to be so conscious of the way it portrays minorities.
We've made many subtle changes. Making the B 'in' Black "uppercase" was a difficult decision, but it was something that I thought we needed to do. Before I became editor, the Kansan received at least three calls requesting the change. Some people in the School of Journalism and some staff members were against it, but I rejected arguments that said "it is pandering to Blacks" and "it is unfair to whites" and went ahead with the change because it seemed to be what our readers wanted to see. I've received only one poorly worded complaint. Perhaps no one else even
M. SABA
Dave Stewart
Editor
noticed.
Skip Turner, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, speaks each semester to the Advanced Reporting class, which makes up the Kansan's reporting staff. I've listened to him speak twice, once when I was a reporter and once this semester. He has some interesting things to say.
His main focus is on photographs. He says that Blacks are portrayed in the paper in only four basic ways, and all of them reinforce a stereotype: clown, actor, musician or athlete.
Before a picture can get in the paper, a photo editor must present it to me, the managing editor and the news editor during our daily news conference. We keep Turner's lecture in mind when a photo shows a minority in a stereotypical situation. I can recall one time when a photograph of a Black woman in a graduation session was submitted for the front page. It ended up running a few days later — buried inside.
Are we being oversensitive? Perhaps, But I wouldn't say that being oversensitive is wrong. Before we can truly rid ourselves of racist attitudes, we have to face those attitudes head-on.
The Minority Issues Task Force report mentioned the Kansan's policy, style and layout guide specifically. The guide is an in-house publication that sets editorial policy for the staff. The task force wanted us to include something about sensitivity to minorities, which I did. It reads, "Be sensitive to the concerns of minorities. Realize that not all people celebrate the same holidays or have the same values. Try to stay abreast of the events that are going on in your sources' lives, no
matter what their race, religion or sex."
That statement may not go far enough. Maybe next semester's editor will see fit to add something about avoiding stereotypical judgments. I don't know.
I do know, however, why race was mentioned in the gang story. The Kansan's main goal, no matter how sensitive we try to be, is to present the facts. That's plain and simple. If, by our decision to give that information, we have offended anyone or made anyone think that we aren't being sensitive enough, all I can ask is that you look at our recent steps forward and forgive us for the mistakes we may make on the way toward wiping away racist attitudes.
I had meant to use the space for my last column to name all of the people who have worked behind the scenes this semester. I don't have room enough to show I'm sorry. But I would like to thank a few noelle:
Candy Nieman, planning editor, who didn't take a day off the entire semester and made an extremely difficult job seem so simple:
Carrie Harper, production editor, who got up at 5:30 a.m. three times every week to supervise paste-up, a job that's never been done before on the Kansas;
Ric Brack, managing editor, who complemented my sometimes-lacking news judgment and tried to
Daniel Niemi, news editor, who stayed late most nights shading a mediocre reporter into a good one;
and to the rest of the editors, reporters, copy editors and photographers, who worked long hours for little or no pay.
Thanks, everyone, and congratulations for a semester well-done.
▶ Dave Stewart is a Broken Arrow, Okla., senior majoring in journalism.
Moynihan must complete the story
The words were those of Daniel Patrick Moynihan, senator from New York and eloquent man. They may be found in the Congressional Record of Nov. 19, 1989. The senator was recalling his last conversation with the late lorete of the University of Central America in El Salvador, Ignacio Eliacuria, victim of one of the more barbarous massacres in that country's pitiless civil war.
"I asked the one question I had come to learn about," Son. Meyihan recalls, "the question central to American policy. Were the Sandistas sending arms to the guerrillas?" Good question. The rationale for U.S. aid to the Contra rebels in Nicaragua was the role of that country's Communist regime in supplying arms to the guerrillas in El Salvador.
So, asked the senator back in 1893. "Were the Sandinistas sending arms to the guerrillas? Were they, that is, intervening in El Salvador?" The answer: "The rector replied no, they were not. I asked, had they been? He said, yes. And so I asked why then were they now not? And he answered, because the United States was sending so many arms to El Salvador that there were more than
DANIEL T. WOODS
Paul Greenberg
Syndicated columnist
enough to go around."
Sen. Moynihan's conclusion: "So there it was." The administration's policy toward Nicaragua at that point; I am sorry to say, although it has been said before and by others, had become a lie."
If Daniel Moynihan is willing to look, he can see a lot more than a shotgun now. A two-engine Cessna aircraft that came crashing to earth 65 miles southeast of the Salvadoran capital last week carried a mini-arsenal of sophisticated weapons obviously destined for the rebels in El Salvador's brutal civil war. The arsenal included Soviet SAM-7 anti-missile aircrafts, 75mm recoilless rifle grenades and a 75mm recoilless rifle to fire them, plus a Redeye anti-aircraft missile
made in the United States. But the flight plan found in the wreckage was evidence enough; the plane had taken off from Managua, Nicaragua's capital, and headed for an airfield in south-central El Salvador.
The conclusion should be clear: The Stalinists continue to ferry arms into El Salvador.
Let's be more charitable to Sen. Moynihan than he was to the Reagan administration. Let's not call him a liar. He was only retelling what he had been told.
But now that Sen. Moynihan has made this little speech about Managua's not intervening in its neighbor's affairs, he has an obligation to tell the governor that she should send a lot more than shotgunsto their comrades.
Without such shipments from Nicaragua or Cuba, would the guerrillas in El Salvador have launched their latest offensive, with all it has been of civilian casualties and murderous retaliation?
▶ Paul Greenberg is the editorial page editor for the Pine Bluff (Ak) Commercial.
CAMP UHNEELY
BY SCOTT PATTY
TWAG THE NIGHT BEFORE FINALS
AND DEEP IN MY GUT,
AN ULCER WAS FORMING
THE GIRL OF A COCONUT.
FOR THE PAST SIXTY HOURS
I'VE BEEN CRIMMING MY
BRAINS
WHILE JOLTS OF CAFEINE'
DANCE IN MY VEING.
STORE IN HALL
WHEN WHAT TO MY TIRING
EYES SHOULD APPEAR
WAS JERRY GARCIA
AND EIGHT TINY REINDER
Ho Ho
Ho, MAM!
RUDOLF
NATIONAL
DOMINION
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
I WAS TOO HIGH STRONG
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AND SAD CAME BACK LATER
AFTER IVE TAKEN A HAP.
BUT HE HEARD ME COMPAN
AS HE DROVE OFF IN HIS JEEP
"HOW CAN I BE MERRY
WITHOUT ANY SLEEP?“
Vacation
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
5
KU AND LAWRENCE EVENTS CALENDAR
Monday
> The department of African and African-American Studies will present Ralph Crowder, history graduate student, who will speak on "Street Scholars: Self-Trained Black Historians" as part of an ACDC event noon at ACDC in the Kansas Union.
Dec. 11
> The Transcendental Meditation Club will have a group meditation at 5:30 p.m. at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. All students, faculty and staff who practice transcendental meditation are invited.
▶ The KU Hipanic-American Leadership Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the International Room in the Kansas Union.
The KU Tae Kwon Do Club will have a meeting and workout at 207 Robinson Center.
Tuesday
► The Graduate Executive Committee of the Graduate Student Council will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.
Dec.12
> An all-student holiday celebration sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services
of Kansas will be at 7 p.m. at the Hashing Hall Theater.
Games of adventure great computer gift
By Travis Butler
Kansan staff writer
"Are you a smooth, suave, single guy on the make, or maybe you fancy yourself the sleek, sexy femme fatale? Whoever you are, get ready for a look at the other side of life. In the case of Joey McCormick, sure Suit Larry III; Passionate Patty in Pursuit of the Pulsating Pectorals, you're BOTH!"
Those are the words printed on the package of Leisure Suit Larry, one of the hottest computer games this holiday season. It heads the December sales list. A computer software dealer, and is selling strongly at other stores.
Other popular game categories this year include simulations and children's educational games.
Leisure Suit Larry is one of several new games that expands on an original computer game category known as adventure games. In the original adventure game, called Adventure and released during the 1970s, players explored a cave system, fought monsters and gathered treasure by typing simple commands such as GO WEST, GET SCROLL and KILL TROLL. Later variations added graphics and greater depth.
The Leisure Suit Larry games added a sense of humor and an adult theme to the traditional adventure format, said Kevin Underhill, a sales clerk at the Babbage's store in Oak Park Mall, Overland Park. Other adventure games have worked on improving sound and graphics.
"A lot of these games are starting to use digitized graphics and sound, which is great as long as it goes along with the game," he said. "But a lot of companies are spending more time on the graphics than they are on the
game play. Pretty soon, the game gets boring."
Shem Retaway, a sales representative at Computer Plus, 601 Kasold Drive, said not all of the new, flashier games were boring. He likes the game Mean Streets, a detective game set in 2033. The player's mission is to find the killer of a prominent university professor.
This trend toward realism also is seen in the increasing popularity of simulations. Games such as Falcon, an F-16 fighter simulation; F-19 Stealth Fighter; Test Drive II; and Sim City are popular year, said John Smilid, manager of B. Dalton's Software Etc., in Overland Park.
"You can go to a warehouse that the professor owns," he said. "You find the address in his house. When you get there, you have to go through a shootout before you can get in. Once you're i, you can search for clues and even break into his computer to get information."
Underhill said Sim City also was popular at Babbage's. Sim City allows the player to design and run his own city. He sets up housing, industrial and commercial districts, runs roads to connect them and sets up power plants and power lines. All of this costs money.
Then the fun starts.
People start moving in, buildings start going up, and cars start moving on the road. Police and fire protection and road maintenance must be budgeted and paid for with taxes. Otherwise, crime will go up, roads will break down, and people will start moving out.
Smidi said the game also was available for Macintosh, Commodore 64/128 and Amiga systems. The game is selling well on all three.
Handicapped students contend for easy access
By Mark McHugh Kansan staff writer
Transportation on campus, for most students, is relatively simple.
But for Nivene Young, who is visually impaired, this is not always the case.
She catches a bus near her apartment at 11th and Tennessee streets, rides to the front of Bailey Hall and steps off.
She has memorized routes to Bailey and Malott halls, where her classes are, and that helps her get around.
But that doesn't solve her accessibility problem.
"I'd like them to meet with and ask us really what we need and ask how they can serve us," she said. "When we go to class, no professor is going to say, 'Don't take this test because you have a disability.' We're competing against other students, and we're not getting an even advantage."
"When I first came to school, the Student Assistance Center provided me with a student from their office to help me out," she said. "And we tried different routes, but because of the (constriction) situation by Haworth, we were never able to pick out a route. He has graduated, and they've never offered me another guide, and I've just about given up.
Glen White, training director of the KU Research and Training Center on Independent Living, said that overall benefits were still able but that it could be improved.
"So basically, in my head. I put together the two routes we had, and I ask questions as I so along."
Young, New York City graduate student in special education, said, "We've been at the center provided her with transportation during the icy winter months.
Such things are helpful, Young said, but are not enough.
"I think more money could be allocated to retrofit buildings." he
White, who also is a member of the architectural barriers committee, cited the Dole Human Development example of accessibility awareness.
said. "We've done well, but we shouldn't stop. We need to continue to allow students with disabilities more access on campus."
"They should open up other areas of the stadium and give people some option where to sit," he said. "They don't have sections for Blacks or Jews, so why should we be any different?"
Robert Turvey, associate director of the Student Assistance Center, said the geography of the campus was a barrier to accessibility.
The committee routinely reviews all plans for campus buildings.
Young said that a professor of hers once asked her what building was more accessible for her and then asked to have the class in that building.
White said that planners should make buildings easily accessible to people with disabilities and that the cost of improved accessibility would be less than 1 percent of the total building cost.
If a student with a disability has a difficult time getting to a class, the center will re-locate the class, Turvey said.
White said that seating in Memorial Stadium, however, did not comply with needs of people with disabilities and that he resented the fact that they were singled out and had to sit in a designated section.
"I think it's going to be a premier building," he said of the Dole Center.
Turvey said renovations at Snow Hall and Corbin Hall, which include new elevators and ground-level entries, would provide more accessibility to people with disabilities. He connected tunnel connecting Gertrude Sellhardt Hall and Corbin would be enlarged for people who used wheelchairs.
By Melanie Matthes Kansan staff writer
Kansas lacks minority doctors, med students
A low number of minority doctors in Kansas means that some communities are going without medical care, medical officials said.
"People in any profession tend to go back to practice where their roots are," said Dannie Thompson, former director of the Kaw Valley Medical Society.
And when there are a small number of minority students graduating from medical school in Kansas, that leaves a small number of doctors practicing in minority communities.
Although the number of underrepresented minorities enrolled at the University of Kansas Medical Center is increasing, some officials say there still are not enough minority students.
"Where you've done your training where you're likely to stay," he said.
"My goal is in five years to have that number of minority students," Williams said. "Eventually, one would think we would soon have a pipeline of minorities going back to serve the minority community."
About 17 percent of the first-year medical students are minorities, said Melvin Williams, director of Minority Affairs at the Med Center.
But Williams said he would like to see that number increase to 25 percent.
Although Kansas has a low minority population to begin with, the percentage of minority doctors is low compared to other states, he said.
Thompson estimated that about 5 percent of Kansas doctors, including Black doctors, were minorities.
He said that about 55 Black doctors were in Kansas and that the majority of them practiced in the Kansas City area.
And when there are no doctors to serve minority communities, Thompson said, those minorities don't need medical care outside their community.
"Either it's too inconvenient or difficult, and they choose not to make that effort." he said.
Williams said that the problem was similar to health care in rural com
"Those who can't afford it won't go to a doctor," he said.
munities.
Kansas lacks financial incentives to keep minority medical students in the state and, as a result, Thompson said, qualified minority students are going to schools where they can get scholarships.
minority students who graduate from medical school was lower than the average score for majority students.
Minority students with good grade point averages and good medical school admission test scores can go to college without paying, Williams said.
"They're recruited just like you
result your basketball and football
play."
But some minorities have a problem getting accepted to medical institutions because of admission qualifications, but admission test scores, Williams said.
"Some schools set up criteria that they feel nondiscriminatory," he said. "If a student has a certain GPA and a certain MCAT score, they can get into medical school regardless of race.
Schools in the forefront of recruiting minorities consider qualifications other than test scores when admit minority students, Williams said.
KU admits minority students on criteria such as academic career, personal background and living conditions, he said.
He said that studies have shown that the average MCAT score of
Some minority students who can't afford to study medicine choose to study other fields rather than leave the state, Thompson said.
Williams said that the Wesley Foundation Minority Scholarship Grant, recently given to the Med Center, worked perfectly with another grant that financed a program designed to prepare minority high school students for medical school.
The Wesley Foundation Scholarships will help minority students pay for medical school. It is the first scholarship at the Med Center that is designated specifically for minorities.
The Department of English Congratulates the Winners of the Fall 1989 English 101/102 Essay Writing Contest:
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Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
---
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GREEK SYSTEM
The Greek Community raised approximately $38,500 this semester for the following philanthropies:
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KU Cancer Research Little Pals of Lawrence Leukemia Society Miami Project Salvation Army United Way The Villages
In addition, there were 2000 cans collected in canned food drives and countless hours of community service.
--taxes from Dec. 20 to Jan. 16.
► Permitting the taxpayers who protest their taxes to pay one quarter of their taxes by the deadline, instead of the one-half formerly required. A second quarter payment would be due March 20 and the rest on June 20.
► Reopening the local appeals process to allow taxpayers to protest the reappraised values of their properties.
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$83 million relief proposal. Sixty-four representatives voted for the measure, although copies were not available and few of them had read it.
Continued from p. 1
State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Shawnee and chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, said the bill created an entitlement program that would oblige the state to provide relief to everyone who qualified, even if the cost exceeded the $93 million estimate.
"We don't know the cost of this," Bogina said. "It could be $82 million or $123 million."
"I think it' s a lot more cruel to be receptive and dishonest than to tell people the cruel facts of life," he said.
Bogina adjourned the committee without voting, effectively killing the bill. Another Senate committee began drafting a tax-relient bill for the Legislature to consider during the regular session, which begins Jan. 8.
"I think common sense prevails here today — that you don't do things of this magnitude in 24 or 36 or 48," said State Sen. Jim Allen, R-Ill.
State Sen. Fred Gaines, D-Augusta, said legislative actions that reopened the tax appeals process and extended the deadline for tax-payments would ease the state's tax problems.
Gaines said killing the bill was the only way to prevent raising false hoops of tax relief.
*Extending the deadline for paying taxes from Dec. 20 to Jan. 16.*
"I'm wondering if by the time we come up here in January a lot of these problems will have solved themselves," Gaines said.
Winter said the Legislature could not implement tax relief during the war.
Among measures approved by the Legislature are:
"We can't solve the problems of two decades in two days," Winter said. "We're all here to try and find a solution, but this bill is not a solution. It's a smoke screen. I think it perpetuates a fraud on those people who expected some relief."
- Reducing the annual interest rate on late taxes from 18 percent to 12 percent.
- Authorizing local governments to reconsider their budgets and lower property tax rates.
Winter cited a survey by the Douglas County appraiser of 45 businesses in the county, which revealed that property taxes declined for 21 of them. Of the 24 that faced tax increases, the House bill would assist only five, paying 5.9 percent of their total tax increase of $216,757. At least one of those businesses would pay more for the bill's excise tax on inventory than it would receive in tax relief.
"I really thought this bill was a disaster." Winter said.
"Once you begin down that path of dismantling the program, it will have a more complex structure."
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, agreed that the session was too hurried. But she said she wanted the Senate to revise the House bill and keep it alive.
"I'm disappointed that we could not get a circuit breaker passed," she said, referring to the name used by legislators for the tax-relief proposal.
to strip $25 million from the state highway program would ripple through the program, possibly crippling the state's ability to sell highway bonds. If that happened, Edwards said, the entire program would die.
Several of the bill's other financing methods were blasted by committee members and witnesses.
Bud Grant, a lobbyist for the Kansas Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said that placing a 2 percent excise on inventories was nothing more than another property tax.
State Sen. Paul Feleciano Jr., D-Wichita, agreed with Edwards.
"I think if it looks like a duck and walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's probably a duck, and by gosh this is a property tax," he said. "The reason we're here is because there's a tax problem in this state. So far, the solutions we've talked about are raising taxes."
Horace Edwards, secretary of transportation, said that a provision
Returning utility inventories, such as coal piles and natural gas stored underground, to the property tax roles.
KBI
Continued from p. 1
had with the case, in light of the fact that a Black man and a white woman were arrested." Green said.
Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, said that Johnson's joke served as a reminder that racism was widespread.
Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism,
"It indicates a tolerance of racism," Adams said. "Some marvelous people, as measured by their ability, are just messed up by this problem that can't go away in a generation or two."
said that the disclosure was justified.
"Reporters have a duty to inform the public of any manifestation of racism," Kautsch said.
> The Associated Press contributed information to this story.
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
Nation/World
7
Baby undergoes third surgery First living-donor liver recipient's condition critical but stable
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — The young recipient of the nation's first living-donor liver transplant successfully had surgery yesterday for the second time in two days to stop bleeding on the surface of her new organ, hospital officials said.
Twenty-two-month-old Alyssa Smith was taken to surgery at 10 a.m. yesterday after an operation the night before failed to stop the bleeding, said Mary Fetsch, a spokesman for the University of Chicago Hospitals.
The bleeding was controlled, and Alysa was out of surgery at 3 p.m., said Christoph Broesch, a physician in Chicago.
She was listed in critical but stable condition in the intensive care unit, which was her condition before undergoing the operation.
On Friday, doctors at the University of Chicago
Medical Center removed the left lobe of 20-year-old father Robert Jones' liver and implanted it in the infant. Jones' condition was upgraded from critical but stable to serious but stable.
Doctors first detected the bleeding Saturday afternoon when the child's abdomen had swelled, Fetsch said.
Fetsch said it was a common problem that happened in 30 percent of all liver-transplant patients.
"You just never know when it's going to happen, but it's something that's controllable and something you can manage." she said.
It was the same problem that prompted doctors to perform an operation on Alyssea within 12 hours after she was given part of her mother's liver Nov. 27.
The infant's mother, 29, was released from the hospital Thursday.
Attack on apartheid planned
The Associated Press
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Anti-apartheid leaders yesterday announced a militant strategy of civil disobedience and political pressure and urged South African whites to join them for the "final onslaught on apartheid."
The plans were adopted late Saturday at a closed session of the largest anti-aparthheid conference conducted in South Africa. It was attended by
4,662. Black, white, Indian and mixed-race delegates from 2,128 organizations.
Several major Black organizations to the left and right of mainstream anti-apartheid groups either boycott conference or were not invited.
But Murphy Morobe, one of the organizers, said the Conference for a Democratic Future was a roaring success.
"Business was concluded in a spirit
of unity unprecedented in any gathering in the past with such a disparate array of organizations," he said at a news conference.
One resolution urged whites "to break decisively with all apartheid forces and side with the majority." It urged them to conduct solidarity marches into Black townships and sequestered cities in municipalities by merging white cities and their adjoining Black ghetos.
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MOURNERS GATHER IN MONTREAL: Thousands of grieving men and women filed by a row of white coffees yesterday, paying respects to the 14 women killed by a gunman shooting. "I hate feminists," in Canada's worst mass murder.
A funeral service for nine of the victims will take place this morning at the Notre Dame cathedral. The other families scheduled private ceremonies.
The flower-draped coffins of eight of the victims were placed in the University of Montreal's hall of honor, and mourners passed by quietly in single file.
ABBORTION STANCES CHANGE! In dazzling leaps or small steps, Republican and Democratic candidates are moving away from anti-abortion positions as they prepare for 1990 campaigns that promise to spotlight the divisive issue.
Police said that Marc Lepine, 25, burst into the University of Montreal's engineering school Wednesday and shot at women he encountered before killing himself with his semi-automatic rifle.
Another resolution urged an escalation of confrontational activity by Black trade unions. It said workers should be prepared to occupy the Johannesburg Stock Exchange if necessary to prevent possible privatization of important state enterprises such as the postal and transportation services.
Perhaps the most important resolution, Morobe said, was a demand for non-racial elections for an assembly that would draft a constitution establishing a one-person, one-credit system for South Africa.
President F.W. de Klerk has rejected the concept of such an
assembly. He has offered to negotiate a new constitution that would extend limited political rights to the Black majority of 28 million, but he wants Black negotiators chosen in segregated elections.
Since taking power in August, de Klerk had made several conciliatory moves aimed at promoting negotiations between Blacks and the country's 5 million whites, who control the government and the economy. He has freed some prominent political prisoners, prohibited the segregation of beaches and permitted previously banned opposition activities, including meetings such as the conference.
However, delegates adopted a res
olution saying de Klek's proposals were "designed to enmesh our organizations and people in schemes to maintain the status quo."
Other resolutions urged parents and students to defy school segregation policies, demanded land redistribution and urged young white men to refuse mandatory military service. Delegates also demanded appointment of an independent commission to investigate allegations that police death squads have killed government opponents.
Morobe said, "The conference ... took the view that President de Klerk's reform initiatives are devoid of substance."
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8
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Hillcrest students devoted to self-imposed worldwide goals
By Chris Evans Kansan staff writer
Most of the members of what has been called Lawrence's most successful, expansive and enthusiastic recycling team are under 5 feet tall.
The kids who make up the team at Hillcrest Elementary School, 1045 Hillfort Drive, take the praise well.
"It's just trying to save the world," said Maggie Heck, sixth-grade participant in the school's Youth In Action program. "Grown-ups do a bad job of
With 54 active members in the program, the city's youngest environmentalists have stopped or limited the use of plastic foam products in their school and at least four local grocery stores. They have built or have and others build bins to collect items throughout Lawrence.
By presentations and other methods, they have increased environmental awareness citywide.
"They really have been more influential on getting certain programs started than any other local group," said Patricia Marinov, city police commissioner. "It's going to be any changes, it's going to come through these kids."
"These are some of the leaders of our community."
Helen Tuley, gifted program coordinator, started Youth In Action last year. Since then, students from kindergarten through sixth grade were taken the program away from her.
And they are rolling. Last year, they used money earned from recycling to send school supplies, clothes and toys to the students. The tows arrived on Christmas Eve.
This year, after California residents were shaken by the Oct. 17 earthquake, the students called an emergency meeting and decided to send $75 to help the residents. They
called the meeting while Tuley was out of town.
The students work to fulfill a city goal, a state goal and a world goal. Their city goal is to have a bike path in Lawrence. Their state goal is to replenish one of Kansas' diminishing wetlands.
"We recycle, and we use our money from recycling to go to Cheyenne Bottoms," said fourth-grader Sonya Shaukt. "We help save our environment and wildlife."
T
They really have been more influential on getting certain programs started than any other local group. If there's going to be any changes, it's going to come through these kids.'
— Patricia Marvin City recycling coordinator
Sixth-grader Heck was anxious to show the Environmental Service Award that they had received from the agency, which also contributed to Chevonne Bottoms.
"Careful, don't drop it," one of her friends cautioned Heck as she tried to lift up the plaque.
Heck returned the warning with a stern look...
"I'm not a fifth-grade." she said.
"I'm not that immature."
The group's world goal has yet to be decided, said fourth-grader Tlalit Dori.
"We think that it's very important that kids help other kids around the world," she said. "We've thought about sending money to Peru for kids to buy school supplies because they don't have enough school supplies."
Concerning plastic foam products, group members are ready to take on one of their biggest adversaries —
"What we're planning to do is go to McDonald's," Dori said. "One person will go in and ask for a McChicken sandwich, and say I want it, but I don't want it on Styrofoam. And then another person will go in and ask for a McChicken sandwich, and say I want it, but I don't want it on Styrofoam."
McDonalds.
"Maybe after five people, they'll get the idea. We're just trying to give a hint."
The hint these children are giving is that they care, Tuley said, and that they are willing to work to change what they see wrong in the world.
"These kids give up almost every recess to make posters, to separate trash," she said. "We have so much material and we all done in one business meeting."
What is discussed at business meetings gets taken to the community, as these students go to places like the Salvation Army to help cook and serve meals and as they go to their parents, demanding that adults take a more responsible role in what is happening to their environment.
The environmental presentations they have made, with their puppet-mascot named "Waldo," have taken center stage at both the schools and the city commission.
Tuley said that from time to time, parents asked her why she did not pursue more "worthwhile" goals, such as teaching kids about drugs to just say no to them, or such preaching is not always necessary.
"These kids have a really positive self-image," she said. "If they have a really positive self-image, then they are more likely to tell those things people worry about."
Tuley seemed to have more to say, but she was cut off as three of her students ran up to her yelling and giggling. Some of the members of the city's most successful, expansive and enthusiastic environmental team wanted to run outside and play.
Hilicrest Elementary students are helping Lawrence reach environmental goals.
KU Housing Guide
Interested in NAISMITH?
Needing someone to take
over my spring lease, Will
pay $400 of your fees.
Call Lori at 841-3842
A.S.A.P.
LOOKING for a female roomate.
On bus route, near Wail-mart,
Food 4 Less, etc. Rent negotiable
+ 1/2 utilities, water paid, available
immediately. Call Pam a 749-7696
GRAD STUDENT LOOKING
FOR APARTMENT/HOUSE
TO SUB-LEASE SPRING
SEMESTER
314-445-6989
Apartment Sublease
• Starts January
• Room furnished
¼ utilities
Call 843-2853
ROOMMATE WANTED
- 3 Bdrm Apt.
* 3 level & spacious
* Share w/ 2 other girls
* Close to campus
* On bus route
* Fully furnished
* Start ASAP
* $189 + util. / month
* CALL 842-4980
(Leave message)
SPRING SUBLEASE
2-Level/2-person Apartment.
Ten minute walk to Wescoe.
Call 841-7085
$375/month.
Female Roommate Needed
• Huge, Split-level Apt.
• Very Close to Campus
• Great Neighborhood
Call 841-9277 for details.
841-5444
Open 1:00-5:00 daily
Roommate Wanted!
January to May. Own room in spacious 2-bedroom apartment for non-smoking female.
On KU bus route. Pool, laundry,
$215 per month. Negotiable.
Call 843-8119
Female Roommate Needed Completely furnished, very nice, own room, 1/2 utilities $180 per month 749-5206
Roommate Wanted!
- On-site Management
EDDINGHAM
EDDINGHAM PLACE
24th & Eddingham (next to Gammons)
PLACE
Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Management, Inc
OFFERING LUXURY
2 BR APARTMENTS
- Exercise weightroom
- Fireplace
* Energy efficient
BRAND NEW
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
*8-plex at 541 Michigan
*3-plex at 925 Indiana
Available Jan. 1990
6-3 bed apartment:
washer/dryer, 2 full baths,
all appliances, microwave and some
with fireplaces.
Call 749-5275
Raw Valley Management, Inc.
- Energy efficient
- contract
- 10 or 12 month
- Swimming pool
2 BR APARTMENTS
or Doug Compton 841-8468
- Laundry room
* Plumbing
Apartments
2111 Xasold
843-4300
- 2,3 Bedrooms
- Free cable
- Water paid
- Pool
Close to bus route
Roomate Wanted
Colony Woods, 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom gt, with balcony, ice maker, dish washer & microwave.
Access to pool, hot tub, weights room and morel 4395, 749-5390
Available NOW!
Adrianne Wanted
for towneer, one half-of utilities, water paid. One block from campus.
Own bedroom plus A/C, dishwasher, micro wave, cable & VCR.
Call 749-7458.
Apartments
for very nice clean house large backyard, garage, workshop,
& in d'fireplaces and west. West of 25th & Kamalia 25th & St. tern.
824-8341
Must Sublease
Quail Creek
2 roommates needed
901 Kentucky Suite 205
841-6080
- Close to bus route
HARVARD SQUARE
2 Bedrooms Available
- Gas heat Pd
- All applicances
- Excellent location
KVM
- Water Pd
2105 HARVARD
There's no place like home.
- On Bus Route
Call & ask Pat about the advantages of Cedarwood:
*1 and 2 bedroom
*Newly redeco-
apts. & duplexes
*Air conditioning
Cedarwood Apartments
rated units
*1 and 2 bedrooms
Your home
away from home.
Air conditioning & pool
Bus Route
*Close to mal
*1 block from KU
Bus Route
OWN BEDROOM
OWN BEDROOM
in a 2 bedroom apartment
✔ Only 4 bunks, from campus
✔ 3 beds, in the basement
Move in by yourself or with
a friend, Sublease Jan-May
$167 a month. Call Nik: 841-9967
*Close to mall
*Studios
Available NOW!
•Quiet studios
•Free cable
•Water paid
•Pool
•Close to bus route
1411 Cedar-
wood ave. 843-1116
Apple Lane Apartments
2111 Kasold
843-4300
--these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
--these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
Available NOWI
NAISMITHHALL
1800 NAIMMTH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS. 60444
913 - 843 - 8559
Convenience
- Privacy
- Luxury
Naismith Hall...
Only Naismith mith can provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free utilities, weekly maid
untiles, weekly maid service," Dine Anytime," and much more!
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
For more information & a tour call or come by today.
- EXAMPLE ROOMMATE NEEDED *
* For Spring Semester
* Good location
* $200 + ½ utilities
* Lease until May/Deposit Pd.
* Free Cable CALL 841-3590
today.
SUBLEASE
2 bedroom/2 bath
Microwave, dishwasher,
on the bus route.
Available late December
749-4158
Roommate Wanted:
(grad student preferred) to share large, new, contemporary home. Fully furnished with state of the art security system, hot tub, weight room, washer & dryer... Must be clean $315.00 includes all utilities. Call Joe 749-4747.
South Pointe
1,2,3&4
Bedrooms
- pool & vouchepai
- Quiet location
- On bus route
- Small pets ok
- Small pets ok
- Intransitive
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care & heat
- gas & heat
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2166 w. 26th
Open 9-6, M-F
842 6446
KVM
KAW VALLEY MANAGEMENT, INC.
FREE RENTAL ASSISTANCE
- Studio * 2 Bedrooms
- Furnished 1 Bedroom
- 3 Bedrooms - Unfurnished
- 10 or 12 month leases
901 Kentucky Suite 205 841-6080
meadowbrook Close to campus & far from crowded
- rolling hills
- voted #1 complex in Language
- furnished studios
- on the bus route
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Call today!
M-Sat. 8-5, Sun. 1-4
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Difference
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Many Locations • Many Floor Plans • Intimate townhomes to full service complexes• Move up to
Open Daily WASTELEAVE
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
9
A WANDERER NO MORE
Before moving in with ilene, McWilliams spent his days roaming.
sharing is caring
"need has no season"
The holiday season brought McWilliams a temporary minimum-wage job ringing bells outside grocery stores for the Salvation Army.
Lawrence street person finds new job, home
Story and photos by AndrewMorrison
While most people still are trying to find that perfect Christmas gift and preparing for a big holiday party, some people still search for jobs, food and places to live. However, Lawrence now has one less street person
However, Lawrence now has one less street person because of a temporary job and a friend.
John McDaniels, 38, had been homeless for almost half of his life.
He now works as a bell-ringer. He moved in with his friend Ilene, who prefers that her last name not be used, in early November.
"It's all right," McDaniels said about living with Irene. "I just hope it works out. It is right now."
Iiene said, "Hopefully John can find work in January because the bell ringing is only temporary."
McDaniels said that the bell-ringing was easy work at minimum wakes but that it could be frustrating.
"Most people walk right by, and you can tell they have money." he said. "They just don't care."
"I was just passing through, and I sort of got stuck he said. "I met some people, and they talked me into it."
A native of Lawton, Okla., McDaniels left home when he was 16. His parents split up when he was 11, and after four years of bouncing back and forth between his mother and father. McDaniels decided to strike out on his own.
He said he came to Lawrence a little more than a year ago after wandering from place to place in North America, including Canada and Mexico.
McDaniels said he spent most of his time in Lawrence homeless and walking the city's streets.
He said that occasionally he had found an odd job. He also picked up aluminum cans for money.
Finding food wasn't as much of a problem for McDaniels, however, because two organizations in Lawrence serve free meals: the Salvation Army and the Lawrence Interdenominational Nutrition Kitchen.
"Sometimes the food is good, and sometimes it 's bad." Melanie said. "Sometimes I tell them that I wouldn't eat it."
"One day I'll get a job, but I don't know when that day is."
BREWING THE CHICKEN
McWilliams now has some income, but he still eats a free lunch.
Abbey is feeding me her cookies. I can't help but smile. She's very sweet. I'm so grateful for her kindness and care.
McWilliams and llene sit and eat breakfast in their $185-a-month, one-room Lawrence apartment.
McWilliams periodically checks the local job listings at City Hall.
10
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Open 'Til Midnight During Finals For Late Night Scoobie Snacks!
PUP'S
Fuel
Large cheddar fries &
large Coke only
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after 9pm.
Only during finals!
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As always we're open until 2:30 a.m. Fri. & Sat.
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finals
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finals
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Come to
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Where: Oliver Hall Cafeteria
When: Monday, Dec. 11
8 p.m. - 11 p.m.
LIVE BAND !!
Chairman donates to Slavic collection
By Anita Meyer
Kansan staff writer
The Slavic languages and literatures department stands one step closer to a departmental library, thanks to a gift from department chairman Stephen Parker, a Watson Library official said Friday.
Parker recently donated a collection of more than 2,000 volumes of 19th and 20th century Russian literature to the library. The collection was part of one that belonged to his mother, Fan Parker, professor emeritus at City University of New York, Brooklyn.
"I've been accumulating a lot of her books over the years, and I decided now was a good time to honor her." Stephen Parker said.
He said the collection included important works by Russian authors Boris Pasternak, Alexander Pushkin and Feodor Dostoevsky and others.
Gordon Anderson, Slavic library director at Watson, said the collection was an important addition to the KU Slavic collection. He explained that as the collection grew, the department came closer to having its own library, rather than just a se
"I'ts an impressive collection," he said. "It 'tats a lot of very good works. Really, it's the quality of increase rather than quantity. It's really strong in its books on Russian art."
tion at Watson.
Parker said he hoped the collection would increase the studies of undergraduate and graduate majors in the Slavic department.
"Our enrollment is going up," he said. "We have 30 graduate students, and declared majors keep going up." I think a lot has to do with the increased interest in Russia."
Anderson said the existing Slavic collection was nationally recognized and had been designated one of 11 Russian and East European studies.
The program is in the second year of a three-year grant from the U.S. Department of Education. The Slavic department receives $180,000 each year and uses the money primarily to train professors.
"We've been building toward a departmental library." Anderson said. "The collection will go toward the establishment of one."
Rhodes trust names 32 scholars for 1989
The Associated Press
CLAREMONT, Calif. — A West Point swimming champion who is studying Chinese and plans a career in military intelligence was one of 32 Americans named Rhodes Scholars, the Rhodes Scholarship Trust announced yesterday.
The winners of the prestigious scholarship, who receive two years of study at Oxford University in England, were chosen in nationwide competition. On Saturday the trust is based at Poma College in Claremont.
Yale and Princeton each had four scholars, Harvard had three, and Georgetown, Kansas State University, had one. At West Point, N.Y., each had two.
This year's list contains 18 men and 14 women. Women have been eligible for the scholarship since 1976, and so far 154 have won it.
Martina Vandenberg, a 21-year-old International Relations major at
Pomona College, said she was the last candidate interviewed Saturday and thought it was "a lost cause" when she was not among four students called back for more interviews. An hour later she learned she had won the scholarship.
In Grand Forks, N.D., Mary Ellen Preston said she was "absolutely thrilled" that her son, Mark Sommerville, 22, had won a scholarship. Sommerville is studying electrical engineering and fine arts in a dual-degree program at the University of Texas at Austin.
The list of scholars has references to 25 states. But the candidate-provided address often is a residence for the academic year and does not necessarily reflect the home state of the Rhodes scholar.
Among the qualities sought in Rhodes scholars are proven intellectual and academic excellence, integrity, respect for others and the ability to lead and to use talents fully.
Friends call murdered couple caring, helpful
The Associated Press
TOPEKA — Lester and Nancy Haley were the best of neighbors, always willing to join a party, do a favor or check on a friend. But their concern for a neighbor led to their deaths after they stumbled upon her killers, police said.
When Haley noticed Ida Dougherty's newspaper lying in her driveway last Monday, he and another neighbor, Verna Horne, wanted to make sure the 72-year-old woman was all right. They let themselves in with a key and an unlocked door. The lady had stayed in the house after burglarizing it, police said. Dougherty was already dead
A short time later, Nancy Haley became worried about her husband's absence and went to the Dougherty home, where she too, encountered a guaman. Hours later, the 69-year-old Nancy Haley and her 87-year-old husband, a retired architect, would be shot to death and Horne, 68, would barely escape with her life.
Tyrone Baker,19, was charged Thursday with murder in the deaths of the Haleys and Dougherty. His girlfriend, Lisa Ann Pfennsteil,18, was charged with murder for Dougherty's death. Both of them face a variety of kidnapping, burglary and robbery charges. They have not entered pleas.
"We've had three individuals who were the epitome of respectability all their lives," said police spokesman Lt. Bud Brooks. "All were professional people with good educations. And they were tragi-
cous, selfish and often dropouts who were going down the wrong track of life."
The suspects did not know the victims; the crimes were random acts of violence. Brooks said.
"They pickd out Dougherty's house by happenstance," he said. "It was a burglary. They had tried several other houses, and this one apparently was easier to get into."
The neighborhood where the victims lived falls short of wealthy but surpasses comfortable. Older homes wear holiday trim of red curtains and floral shades to reflect their owners' pride through fresh paint and tidy vards.
Colby Hamilton, who lived across the street from the Haleys, called them "good friends and good neighbors." They always do
Court and police records outline a chain of events dictated by chance. Investigators said they determined what happened in cases with Horne and Pfannenstein, who is cooperating with police.
what they could to help you out in any way," he said.
After breaking into Dougherty's house late Sunday night, investigators said the suspects robbed the retired real estate agent, suffocated him with a gas bottle her body in the trunk of a car before dumping it in Douglas County.
The two returned to her house and opened her wrapped Christmas packages and looked for others items to steal. They spent the night in the house and were surprised when the neighbors let themselves in to check on Dougherty the next day.
Phamnestiel said Baker drove the Haleys and Horne to the same area where Dougherty's body had been dumped. During the drive, Baker was able to find Baker $1,000 each to let them go, an offer he appeared to consider.
But Baker ordered them to lie on an embankment while he went to make sure Dougherty was dead, police said.
The three ran into the woods, and Horne volunteered to go for help while the other two hid. She found her way to safety, unhurt. But on Tuesday, the Haleys bodies were found by another least twice. Dougherty's body was found Wednesday, covered with leaves.
The two suspects were in custody Saturday; bail for Baker was set at $500,000 and Pfannenstiel's at $200,000. Police said neither has a criminal record although Baker is suspected since February and Pfannenstiel had a history of running away from home.
The Haleys, both widowed, were married in 1975. Retirement for them meant visiting neighbors, socializing with friends and, for Haley, playing golf.
"They were the model of family life," the Rev. Charles Erb said at the memorial service Friday at First Congregational Church.
"By the grace of God, they sat next to each other." Erb told the crowd of about 400 mourners. And on that fatateful day when the consequence bands as a sign of peace, "they held hands and the fell in love."
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University of Kentucky
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make your own creature cards
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the holiday
Main Lobby-Level 4-Kansas Union Tuesday-December 19th 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sponsored by the Kansas and Burge Unions and
It's No Secret.
It's Good Food.
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Have a brush with fame. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Arts/Entertainment Page
Class Countdown
Tonite
SCHOOL'S OUT/CHRISTMAS
CHEER PARTY
All ages 18 & above
901 Miss. 749-7511
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ticket price includes:
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Senate debates cigarette tax Margin's third year might be up in smoke without financing
By Derek Schmidt
By Derek Schmidt
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — A bill in the state Senate would tax tobacco products to finance the third year of the Margin of Excellence.
On Friday, State Sen. Dick Bond, R-Overland Park, and State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, filed the bill, which would raise by five percent the number of cigarettes and by 5 percent the tax on other tobacco products.
The increase would bring the tax on a pack of cigarettes to 29 cents and would be paid by tobacco wholesalers.
Winter said he and Bond chose a tobacco tax because it was acceptable to many people and because the state should discourage tobacco use.
Bond said the tax would generate $1 million a month, and the money would be earmarked for the third quarter, beginning, which now is in its second year.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring the total financing of its seven institutions to 95 percent of their peer schools and to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers.
The senators had the proposed tax was designed to support the Margin
during a tight budget year.
"This bill is out of a great fear that there will not be the money in the general fund to fund the third year of the Margin." Bond said.
The second year of the Margin was financed in full at $29.16 million. The Regents are requesting $45.48 million — an increase of $16.32 million — for many money supporters worry that the additional money will not be available.
"We're going to be lucky out of the general fund to be able to fund the base budget for higher education," Bond said.
The base budget would provide $29.16 million in year three.
The $4 million difference between the $16.32 million requested increase and the estimated $12 million generated by a tobacco tax still would have to come from the general fund, Winter said.
"Without the tax, it's going to be really tough to do it," he said of fully financing the third year. "With the tax it's still going to be hard."
Twenty-three of the 40 senators are co-sponsors of the bill, virtually ensuring Senate approval when the bill is debated after the Lawmakers meet. If Finance predicted the Senate would take up the bill in February.
Support in the House of Representatives is not as certain.
"I question whether this funding method will have the buoyancy it takes to pass through both houses," said House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg. "What we're going to do instead of taxing big business is end up taxing every guy on the street. It's easier."
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
Winter said he was disappointed at *Earkis*' doubts of House support for the
"I think the House is going to have to decide whether they're really for the Margin of Excellence or not," he said.
Barkis said he doubted if a tax increase, even on cigarettes, would have house support in the wake of the state's property tax problems.
Barkis said that he would support the Margin and that even though he doubted the cigarette tax would have been not was personally on吾话 to it.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-
Louisiana, questioned using a
tolerance test.
ASK lobbies in Topeka for Margin
By Kate Lee
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA — After hearing that financing for the Margin of Excellence could be in danger, Associated Students of Kansas organized a trip to Topeka to demonstrate continued student support for the Margin.
The Margin is the Board of Regents three-year plan to bring the total financing of its seven institutions to 95 percent of their peer schools and to bring faculty salaries to 100 percent of their peers. The Margin is in its second year, and several legislators have said that third-year financing could be in jeopardy because of budgetary problems.
On Thursday evening, ASK representatives contacted students through a phone network to organize the trip.
"We phoned people from the lobby-day list and Student Senate committees," said Bill Moseley, vice
Mark Tallman, executive director of ASK, said it had become clear during the week that financing for the Margin was in trouble.
chairman of the ASK Board of Directors. About 60 KU students made the trip.
He said, "The funding for the tax relief has to come from one of three places: new revenues, which means raised taxes, the highway plan or from everything else, of which the Margin is a part."
Moseley said, "We were very visible. I talked to several senators and representatives, and they knew we were there."
Tallman said the students were in Topsail to remind legislators about the need for a new law.
"Legislators recently haven't been hearing about the Margin," he said. "Part of this is to remind them that the Margin is important."
Mary Robertson, Lawrence senior, said she went because of what the church said.
"I learned more from the professors that the Margin brought in," she said. "It won't affect me directly, but it affects the long term if faculty leave and classes have to close. I would hate to see KU do that."
"I think it's important for students to teach and show that they know what's going on."
Sallee was particularly receptive, Schuetz said.
Scott Schuetz, Horton senior, said he was able to talk to State Sen. Wint Winter, R-Lawrence, and State Rep. Don Sallee, R-Troy.
Schuetz said he thought the students accomplished their goal of being noticed by legislators.
"He's very public-oriented and willing to listen." Schuetz said. "He definitely represents the queetus in his district."
"Most of us had on KU sweatshirts, so they knew something was up," Schuetz said. "We did our best with the time we had, and I think we were effective."
It's No Secret. It's Good Food.
RUNZA
2700 Iowa
Your paper, your news. KANSAN Campus-Nation/World-Sports-Weather-Arts/Entertainment
SUA PRESENTS FREE FINALS WEEK MOVIES 2:00 and 7:00 Each Day
Woodruff Auditorium
December 14 SAY ANYTHING
John Cusak stars in this romantic comedy about two unlikely lovers. Controversy arises as they confront love, honesty and family values. PG 13
December 15 D.O.A.
Dennis Quaid is a college professor who is unwittingly poisoned with a slow-acting, fatal toxin. He and student Meg Ryan have only 24 hours to solve the dangerous mystery of his impending doom. R
Charlie Sheen, Tom Beringer and Corbin Bernsen are down-and-out baseball players who overcome impossible odds and get a chance at the penant. Margaret Whitton stars as the new owner of the team who wants to keep the team unsuccessful for her own reasons. R
BOND
Based on the classic novel, this movie about an aging, Swedish farmer who migrates with his son, Pelle, to Denmark in search of a better life is an Oscar and Cannes Film Festival-award-winner.
December 18 PELLE THE CONQUEROR
James Stewart plays George Bailey, a young man who, after serving his community, is driven to despair as he faces bankruptcy and jail because of missing money his uncle misplaced. He is given a privileged look, though, to see how he has enhanced others lives by being born.
December 20 IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE
DENNIS MURRAY
AND LOUIS WASHINGTON
Sponsored by
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2 Hot Dogs
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2—16 oz. Soft Drinks
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10" Deep Dish Pizza
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12
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
---
f i n a l s:
the holiday escape
12 Days of Finals Drawing
A drawing each day beginning Dec.11th
Prizes include:
Dec. 11th: 6 tickets to the KU vs. Pepperdine Game on Dec. 16th Dec.
12th: Two Russell Athletics Sweatsuits Dec. 13th: 18-Speed Bicycle
Dec. 14th: 5" B & W Television Dec. 15th: 6 tickets to the KU vs.
Arizona St. Game on Dec. 22nd Dec. 16th: 4' Stocking filled with
merchandise (min. $200 value) Dec. 17th: 36 free video tape rentals,
two for each weekend during the Spring Semester Dec. 18th: Yamaha
Razz Motor Scooter Dec. 19th: 4' Stocking filled with merchandise
(min. $200 value) Dec. 20th: Two Russell Athletics Sweatsuits Dec.
21st: Priceless Banner from the 1988 NCAA Midwest Regional Basket-
ball Tourney, Pontiac Mich. Dec. 22nd: KU Cross Pen & Pencil Set.
Also: Free Textbooks drawing at both of our buyback locations!
KU
KU
KU Bookstores
Kansas and Burge Unions
No Purchase Required. Union Employees and Their Families Are Not Eligible.
--for your patronage of our copy centers this past semester.
Thank You
Good Luck On Finals!!
Have a Safe and Happy Holiday Season
from the
University of Kansas Printing Service
Copy Centers
Wescoe Kansas Union
Burge Union Learned Hall
Museums struggle to prevent deterioration of their exhibits
Temperature control is one way to avoid decaying of artifacts
By Anita Meyer
Kansan staff writer
The signs in the Museum of Anthropology ask, "What happens when a culture dies?" But the exhibits that represent that culture may be dying themselves.
Ann Schlager, conservator of the museum, said that heat and humidity control was important in saving artifacts. The museum's staff members are now trying to prevent the decomposition of the artifacts housed there.
"When Spooner Hall was built as the University's first library, it was difficult to control humidity or heat," she said. "When we moved in here in 1979, we got boxes and boxes of stuff that had been stored all over. There was some stuff that was almost completely gone. We had weavings from the early 1800s that are just threads.
"A lot of damage had occurred because there were large fluctuations in insect and humidity. Much of the damage was caused by thrips."
She said that the museum had been able to stabilize deterioration of much of the collection but that some of it was already destroyed.
"We had some Southwest weavings that were in tatters," she said. "Some of our basket collection was destroyed because of rodents and cockroaches eating food remains."
She said that ideal temperatures for mixed materials that included wood, leather and beads were 68 to 72 degrees with a fluctuation of 5 degrees within a 24-hour period. Ideal humidity was 45 to 55 percent with a 5
percent fluctuation within a 24-hour period.
"I'm able to control the heat with window air-conditioners," she said. "I can pretty much control the humidity with humidifiers or de-humidifiers."
Schlager not only tries to keep the museum of anthropology's exhibits intact, she also travels across the state surveying collections and giving advice for maintenance.
The conservation program is not limited to museums. Schlager said she has been coordinating a class that teaches conservation to museum studies majors. The course, *Procedures and Procedures*, is taught every two years in the spring.
George Byers, curator emeritus of the museum of entomology, said he was not concerned about controlling heat or humidity in the Museum of Entomology.
He said that the museum had been evaluated in 1906, eight years after its opening, and that no deterioration had occurred.
"We don't really have a lot of deterioration," he said. "Some of the insects fade from exposure to light, and we do have some that are brittle, but there's not that much deterioration.
John Wilson, curator of American and European art at the Spencer Museum of Art, said that because the museum had been built as a museum, heat and humidity controls had been installed.
Schlager said that the museums of anthropology and natural history were two museums on campus that had received grants for artifact conservation.
Sandstone search prevents repairs
By Liz Hueben
Kansan staff writer
For more than 10 years, University officials have been trying to find out where the red sandstone used to build the Museum of Anthropology came from, said Allen Wiechert, director of facilities planning.
This problem, coupled with a lack of financing, has kept facilities planning officials from being able to maintain the museum, also called Snooner Hall.
The University this year received $100,000 for repairs to the building, which will be 100 years old in 1994, Wiechert said.
Wiechert said repairs to the building had been on a list of things to do for about 10 years but became high priority last year.
Although the $100,000 was not
enough to complete repairs, he said it would at least help get them started in the areas that needed it the most.
The columns in the front of the building have sustained noticeable damage from water. The northern column on the front of the building is starting to crack and lean away from the building.
Wiechert said the repairs would be expensive. They would involve stabilization of settlement and moving the stone back into place.
The elements have taken their toll on the sandstone, which Wiechert said was not a good building material.
Wiechert said the other stone used on the building was limestone, which came from Mount Oread. He said the limestone was more dense than the sandstone and had held up better through the years.
Because sandstone is porous, he said, water can get into the columns and freeze during the winter.
Grisafe said the question of the sandstone's origin had been a tough one because of a lack of references.
David Grisafe, associate scientist at the Kansas Geological Survey, said another problem with sandstone
"That is a common problem with historic buildings. No records were kept, especially on the outside of the building. We can't find the quarry," he said.
was that it was poorly bonded and tended to flake off easily. But it would with a stone strengthener probably would help consolidate the stone.
Grisafe said that research led him to believe that the sandstone came from Colorado but that he didn't know precisely where.
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Sports
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
13
Kentucky loss reinforces poll ranking for 'Hawks
Continued from p. 1
The Jayhawks set school records for the most field goals in a game, 52; most three-point field goals made, 10; and most assists in a game, 36.
Kansas and Kentucky also combined to set an NCAA record for most three-point field goals attempted with 57.
Kentucky coach Rick Pittino argues a call as referee Ed Hightower slaps him with a technical foul after Pittino threw a towel on the court
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
Even the weakest part of the Kansas team early this season, free-throw shooting, shone in the game.
Kansas, which was hitting only 62 percent from the line, nearly broke the school record of 38 free throws the Jayhawks hit 36 of 44 (82 percent)
The game belonged to guard Terry Brown, who led the Jayhawks with 31 points, including a school record of seven three-pointers.
Brown said the sellout crowd of 15,800 had a lot to do with his performance on Saturday.
"When the crowd gets all noisy, it just pumps me up more," Brown said. "I have more confidence in my team than it when the crowd gets up like that."
Williams said he felt bad for Kentucky coach Rick Pitino, but that there wasn't much he could do about the final score.
"I'm human," Williams said. "I was sitting there loving what our guys were doing, but at the same time feeling some compassion for the other team. But we weren't pressing him, so you can't tell your kids not to play."
Despite the huge disparity in the final score, games started out underperforming.
Kentucky opened with a quick five-point lead in the first 32 seconds
of the game, including the first of seven first-half three-pointers by guard Derrick Miller just five second-seconds finished with a game-ball 33 points.
Kansas scored the next six points, but couldn't break away from the Wildcats' tough, pressing defense until the last 2% of the half.
A jumper-by guard Kevin Pritchard gave Kansas a 68-57 lead, and from then on Kansas never led by less than 10 points.
Pitino, in his first year with the Wildcats, tried everything to keep the Wildcats in the game, including a couple of talks with the referees.
He picked up his second with Kentucky trailing 94-70 early in the second half.
Jordan, who led with eight assists,
said Pitino's antics actually fired the
Jayhawks up more than the Wildcats.
"He was crazy," guard Adonis Jordan said. "I thought they were going to throw him out of the gym."
"It fired us up because it was like he was disrespecting our house," he said.
The Jayhawks outscored the Wildcats 12-4 in the last few minutes of the half for a 90-61 halftime advantage.
At the half, Kansas already had five players in double figures, led by Pritchard and Brown with 13 points apiece. Center Pekka Markkanen added 12 and guard Jeff Gueldner
and forward Mark Randall each had 11 points.
ued to score bucket after bucket against Kentucky's defense that began to wear thin with heavy foul problems.
Kentucky had four players with three fouls at halftime and three Wildcats fouled out of the game in the second half.
Brown led the way for the Jay-
hawks with four second-half three-
pointers. The junior college transfer
scored 31 points, the first time this
In the second half, Kansas contin-
season that a Jayhawk has scored more than 30, for a new season and career high.
Kansas opened up a 20-point lead with 18-29 remaining and quickly scored four points on a field goal. Rick Calloway, with a 16-6 run in a 4/4 minute stretch.
points on two consecutive dunks by Calloway, giving Kansas a 124-83 lead with more than 6 minutes left to play. Calloway finished the game as the second-leading scorer with a season-high 21 points.
The Jayhawks broke the 127-point game on three possessions by Brown.
Brown hit two more three-pointers in the next two minutes, giving the Jays a 10-9 lead.
The advantage increased to 41
The first of those two three-pointers started a 19-0 run by the Jaya-hawks that ended on a free throw by Kentucky forward John Pelphrey, with 1:33 left to play and Kansas leading 150-90.
"I think at the end of the game, it was one of those kind of things that snowballed, everything we touched turned to gold and everything they touched, you fill in the blank." Williams said.
KU paced by Brown 3-pointers
KANSAS 30. KENTUCKY 25. UK
By Paula Parrish
Kansan sportswriter
Kansas was the show, but "Downtown" Terry Brown was a definite star in the Jayhawks' 150-95 march against the Kentucky Wildcats.
"Basically, I just like shooting three-pointers." Brown said after Saturday's victory. "I definitely like the three-point shot."
Brown, one of seven Kansas players who ended Kentucky's nightmare in double digits, led the Jayhawks in scoring with a season-high 31 points, dropping in seven of 10 three-point attempts in only 19 minutes of total playing time.
"I was surprised, really," Brown said of his scoring streak. "I thought I had about 20, so I was really shocked."
Adonia, Jordan and Nehemiah Bradday scramble for a loose ball in the Javhawks' rout of the Wildcats
Kansas and Kentucky set a new NCAA three-point attempt record with 57. The previous record was 55. Kentucky guard Derrick Miller led the Wildcats with 32 points, tossing in eight of 19 three-point attempts.
Brown's scoring blizzard pushes Kansas to a new record of 10 for the most completed three-pointers in a game. The previous record was nine, set against California two years ago. "I got lucky. I hit a hot streak," said Brown, who chose to wear No. 3 because of his shooting ability. "I've just been trying to make a name for myself."
Not much chance of anyone forgetting about "Downtown," as the 6-foot-1 guard has led Kansas in scoring twice on his way to tossing in 21 in the Jayhawks' 103-48 victory against Tennessee-Martin and 14 in the team's 86-53 victory.
against Southern Methodist.
"I said even last year when we first recruited him, if I didn't screw him up, he'd be a good shooter, and so far I've stayed away from that part of it," Coach Roy Williams said. "I think he's a good shooter, and he felt it, and our guys did a good job of getting the ball to him."
Brown scored only 13 points in the first half but rocketed to the top with 18 points in the second half, nine of which came from three three-pointers in a 26-4 Kansas scoring run in the last six minutes of the game.
"The noise of the crowd really pumps you up." Brown said. "Sometimes it was so loud, when we called out the plays, we had to get up close to hear each other. The crowd was unreal."
Brown, who brings the ball back behind his head to drop in his now infamous three-pointers, said he had a thing that way since he was 7 years old.
"To develop a shot like that, you've got to spend a lot of time on it," Brown said. "When I bring it back like that, it makes it kind of hard for
the defensive player to block it."
Although his coach doesn't pay much attention to Kansas' No. 2 national ranking, Brown voiced a little more concern.
"We're just as good as any team. I think we should be up top," he said.
As for the nickname "Downtown" said he didn't mind it.
"Everybody calls me that," he said. "They've been calling me that ever since high school. At first I didn't like it, but I guess the name fits. Now I like it."
Numbers mean beauty for baseball statistician
By Dan Perkins Kansan sportswriter
The man who "knows baseball" isn't exactly the first man who comes to most people's minds.
People who think they know who "knows baseball" have spent too much time watching the multi-genre video games numerous television commercials.
People who have their heads stuck
in the ice in a pool of blood.
Bill Kinses, baseball player.
But the 40-year-old author doesn't particularly care if the people in this area know him. In fact, he prefers they don't.
James, a Winchester resident, and author of The Baseball Abstract, written annually from 1977 to 1988, said hometown fame was useless.
"The ideal solution would be to be famous everywhere except your hometown," said James, while the portable radio on the file cabinet behind his desk broadcasted the Kansas-Missouri football game. "You know that the marketable and you make your money through your reputation. When fame is close to you, people tend to want things from you."
"Joe Garagiola said it best in his book, 'Baseball's a Funny Game,' when he said local people truly regard you differently than national people do."
Obsessive baseball fan
Living in Winchester, James will never have to be worried about an abundance of people wanting things from him.
Winchester, which is about 30 miles north of Lawrence, is a town of about 25,000.
described the town this way.
Newsweek, in an April 1984 issue.
"Approximately 65 miles northwest, and $ \frac{2}{3} $ light years in outlook, from the artificial turf and goldchain ambiance of the Kansas City Royals' ballpark . . . Winchester is the kind of Kansas town where cornfields are visible from every street corner."
James lives about two blocks from the downtown of this community in a large Victorian house, which used to be the city nursing home, with his wife and mother an in-home artist, and their two children, Rachel, 3, and Isaac, 1.
"The level of Winchester is really good because my neighbors know who I am, but I also know who they are," James said. "If you get away from this area and your name is known, you get into a lot of weird relationships where people know you how to talk to you, how awkward to be talking to people and they know you who are, but you don't them at all. It's dehumanizing."
James' office in Oskaloosa, about 10 miles southwest of Winchester, is just as obscure as Winchester.
The sign above the door reads "Northeast Kansas Mental Health," which occupied the space before James.
Once inside, though, it is obviously an office meant to please a self-proclaimed "obsessive baseball fan."
The bookshelf on the far wall is packed with books, including a row of about 20 bound volumes of the Sporting News resting above books ranging from biographies of Dizzy Dean and Mickey Manble to recent baseball media guides.
"It's much more comfortable being in relationships where you deal
See JAMES. p. 14
Improving KU football will tackle tougher schedule next year
Team set to face Miami and Virginia
By Gene King
Kansan sportswriter
The Kansas football team, led by second-year coach Glen Mason, posted a 4-7 overall record and finished sixth in the Big Eight Conference with a 2-5 record.
The schedule is made of tougher teams, but the Jayhawks will be improved and ready for new challenges.
Next year Kansas will face at least four teams that will have played a bowl game on Jan. 1, 1980.
The Jayhawks open the 1990 season at home against Virginia. The Cavaliers finished 1-2 this year and second in the Atlantic Coast Conference last year. They will play in the Florida Citrus Bowl against Illinois.
In the third week of the season, the Jayhawks start a four-week stint of away games. They travel to the commonwealth of Kentucky to take on Louisville. The Cardinals defended pass in Lawrence 33-28 this season.
Kansas then meets Oregon State in Lawrence. The Beavers finished 4-7-1 and had a 3-4-1 record in the Pacific 10 Conference.
In addition, the Jayhawks will be playing conference opponents Nebraska, which will be playing Florida State in the Sunstik Flesta Bowl, and Colorado, which will be playing Notre Dame in the Federal Express Orange Bowl.
"It is a very tough non-conference schedule," Mason said.
After two Big Eight games on the road, Kansas will play its last non-conference game against the 1989 second-ranked Miami at. Miami. Miami will be playing Alabama in the USF@G Sugar Bowl.
Recruitments, scholarships part of strategy for KU football coaches
The Jayhawks lose one starting senior from the defense and four
By Gene King
Kansan sportswriter
Kansan sportswriter
Santa Claus and Kansas football coach Glen Mason have a lot in common.
Both will fly across the country this month and bring smiles to a lot of families.
The Kansas coaching staff has been visiting recruits' homes almost non-stop since Dec. 1. Recruiting has been a strong point for a dismal but improving Javhawk team.
Mason recruited safety Deral Boykin, the 1938 Big Eight defensive newcomer-of-the-year, and defensive tackle Gilbert Brown, the 1969 preseason newcomer-of-the-year, as well as a number of other starters on the 1969 squad.
But for this season, the Jayhawks are contending with some big-name universities for student
athletes.
R. D. Helt, recruiting coordinator, said Kansas was competing with schools such as Purdue, Iowa, Miami (Fla.) Land Florida State, as well as the Big Eight schools.
"I's awfully early to tell." Helt said. "But things are going well. There is a lot of interest in it."
seniors from the offense.
For now, though, Helt said things were looking good.
Kansas had 25 scholarships available this season, but a few of those, Mason said, were reserved for some walk-ons who performed well this season.
Players such as linebacker Wes Swinford, a former eight-man player from Morrison, Oka-, and the third-leading tackler this season, are in the running for some of the 25 scholarships.
Linebacker Dan Newbrough is the only departing senior on the defense. Quarterback Kelly Donohoe, tight
"If I were Mr. Swinford (Wes' father)." Mason said earlier in the season, "I would correct my son to receive a scholarship."
The NCAA set a limit of 95 on the number of scholarship players a team may have during any one season.
Even by using all 25 scholarships this year, and barring any off-season injuries, Hell said that the Jayhawks only would have about 80 athletes on scholarship for the 1990 season.
"Because of our lack of number," Mason said, "we have to recruit across the board."
Helt said the rebuilding process was a slow one.
end John Baker, wide receiver Quintin Smith, and lineman B Hundelt will not return to next year's offense. "Losing Kelly is a big loss for us."
"In our minds, it is a marathon, not a sprint," he said.
center Chip Budde, said. "We will miss his experience next year." Replacing Donohoe may be quarterback Chip Hilleary, who played in
center Chip Budde said. "We will four games and completed four of miss his experience next year." nine pass attempts.
See SCHEDULE, p. 14
14
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Schedule
Continued from p. 13
Also vying for the starting job at quarterback will be Nate Florrell. He is a freshman. He ran the scouting offense throughout the season.
Returning for Kansas will be tailback Tony Sands, who rushed for 1,109 yards this season. Receivers Kenny Drayton and Jim New also return. They rotated every other series all year.
Sands will probably team up with fullbacks Maurice Hooks and Maurice Dougais, as well as backup tailbacks Frank Hatchett and Monte Cozzens, to help sustain the Jayhawks' running attack.
After starting for three years at center, ironman Buddle will return for his final season. Guards Scott
Inwalle, John Fritch and Marino Vidoli, all started throughout the season, will probably return to com- munication at the top spots on the depth chart.
Sophomore Christopher Perez is the only starting offensive tackle returning.
On a defense that was one of the worst all around this year, the Jayhawks will have depth, experience and proven players next year.
Linebacker Curtis Moore, who sat out all season because of a knee injury he suffered in 1989 spring drills, was named the Big Eight defensive newcomer-of-the-year in 1988. Moore spent most of the 1989 season working out in the weight
room improving his 6-foot-1, 230-
pound frame.
Linebackers Wesley Swinford, Roger Robben and Lance Flachabarth will have one more year of Big Eight experience. The trio combined this season for 309 tackles.
In the 1988 season, he led the Javahawks with 129 tackles.
The entire secondary, which started six players, will return next season. With the addition of redshirt transfer Pat Grogan to the defensive backfield with Boykin, cornerbacks Tim Hill and Doug Terry, safety Jason Priest, and Paul Friday and Hassan Bailey, who both played games at corner and safety, the secondary should complement the
defensive line and linebackers.
Your paper, your news. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"They (the defense) could go from the worst, to one of the best," he said.
By adding Moore to the defense, which was anchored by Boykin and 6-4, 322-pound defensive tackle Gilbert Brown, the power of the Jayhawks could become their defense, Donohoe said.
The outlook remains good for Mason, his staff and his players.
STOP!
"We would like to go to a bowl." Budde said. "It is obtainable."
Budde emphasizes the teams' feelings for next year and the positive attitude that is now held by Jayhawks.
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.James
Continued from p. 13
High-priced New York
with people on a more even basis. In a small town, everybody knows what you do for a living, what everybody does for a living and who their kids are. But in the city, only a few people have identities. The New York people as a whole have fewer identities."
James, whose publisher is in New York, said he enjoyed New York City, but it wasn't the place for him.
"It's a wonderful place," James said. "I like to go there and visit, but
it's really hard because there is so much going on that it's hard to get any work done. It's a lot easier to get work done out here.
"It's also a lot more expensive. That's one of the things about trying to make a living as a writer; there
are a whole lot of opportunities in New York City, but things cost eight times as much," James said, before showing he knows more than baseball numbers. "No, they don't, they cost 40 percent more.
NCAA interested in Switzer's gift giving
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY — Barry Switzer says a pigskin briefcase he gave to quarterback Jamelle Holiway as a graduation present was one of many gifts he handed out during his years as coach at Oklahoma.
“There’s no telling how many golf bags I’ve given away to friends,” Switzer told The Daily Oklahoman in Sunday’s editions. “Jamelle is not the only kid I’ve ever given a shirt or a sweater to. Kids that didn’t have a
shirt, I said 'Here, take this one.' But she gave them to kids who were not given them.
Switzer said he had received the briefcase as a gift, and that he gave away other "freebies" such as shirts to athletes and non-athletes during his 16 years as the Sooners' head coach.
Switzer was responding to a story in Friday's Los Angeles Times in which Holley said Switzer had been drunk and frisked and given him a leather snort bag.
briefcase and said he would like to have it. Switzer said he had promised it to him if he would get his degree, and said that while Holieway is a correspondence course short of graduation, he gave the briefcase to him when he left Oklahoma earlier this year.
An athlete is prohibited from receiving a gift after completion of his eligibility if it is in recognition of his athletic accomplishments, but NCAA rules provide only that he could no longer participate in athletics. Holway had used up his
Switzer said Holieway had seen the
David Berst, director of enforcement for the NCAA, has said the NCAA is primarily interested in incidents that occur after a school has been placed on probation. The Sooners were hit with a three-year probation on Dec. 19.
eligibility when he got the briefcase.
In reference to Holleway's claim that Switzerland bought him drinks, the former coach said, "I probably bought him a beer, not a mixed drink, sometime in a restaurant in the off-season."
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120 Announcements
ATTENTION LAWRENCE GAXS: Take a break, from finals and attend a party in your honor Saturday, December 16. At the Other Side, 311 W. 27th St., Special drink prices with proper lawrence ID.
Gay & Leiblin Services of Kansas and Buddies,
71 SW Jackson, present information Sharon
Thompson. Dec. 15, 18:00 at 10:00 pm. Admission
more; information call GLAJOR at
846-390-391
Each one is 122 feet long, 78 feet wide, and weights over 208.100 lb., including the hydrazine and nitrogen tetrafluoride tanks. What mechanical maris? is that? College Bowl Feb. 10, 1990.
1. conditional information, referral & support for AIDS concerns - call 841-2345, Headquarters Counseling Center.
Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 814-2345 or visit 1419 Mass., Headquarters Counseling Center.
Gift Coupons
Give your friends
C
yogurt for Christmas!
Ice Cream Yogurt
1524 w. 23rd 925 Iowa
5 OR 7 NIGHTS
STEAMBOAT from $101
DAYTONA BEACH from $129*
FORT LAUDERDALE from $132*
RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE NOW!
SPRING BREAK 90
7 NIGHTS
SOUTH PADRE ISLAND from $129*
HILTON HEAD ISLAND from $127
CORPUS CHRISTI
MUSTANG ISLAND
from $99*
1-800-321-5911
SUNCHALL
RESTAURANT
*Depending on break dates and length of stay
130 Entertainment
GET INTO THE GROOVES Metropolis Mobile Sound, Superior sound and lighting. Professional studio, radio dJ '87, Hot Spam Maximum Party Thrust, DJ Ray Valouza. 841-7833.
140 Lost-Found
Found: White female dog with one black eye, in RS Union 12/8. Call 843-6173 or 843-6770
LOST: X-large grey cat from 1346 Ohio, male.
declawed. We miss him. If found, please call
784-432.
Missing nose. Small black calceau cat, female.
Striped nose and white cheek. Please call 943-9478.
200s Employment
205 Help Wanted
Assistant preschool teacher wanted for nationally accredited center. Team teaching approach begins Jan 11th. Hilltop 844-490 for information. Equal Opportunity Employer.
Babysitter needed to care for 6-month-old infant in our home starting in January. M-F afternoons, 740-3530
New England's oldest and largest nanny agency is looking for well-qualified applicants. Excellent tutoring opportunities at Briar, talk to a nanny who loved it. Call or write Julia Berta, 219 Priveir Floor, Manhattan, KS 65020.
**WILD CARE:** To care for our 3-year-old son in case of emergency. Flexible. Floble hours. Start Jan, Jan.
Mark Textbooks, KU Bookstores, Part-time.
Nett Textbooks, KU Bookstores, Part-time.
9:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m., or 10:00 a.m. to 2:00
pm. Weekends & overtime if necessary. Begin
weekdays on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday. Must be available to work entire time.
Required previous inventory, sales or stocking duties.
Must have 5 years of experience. Verifiable job
reference. Apply Kansas
.
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
15
First Fuel Bank of Kansas seeks full and part-time fuel salesman for store located at 1500 E 3rd St. in Lawrence. More than minimum wage, required hours: 8 a.m., 2 o.m., 12 noon, 2 a.m., and all weekend hours. Duties include selling Fuel Bank concepteurs from cash customers. Must be neat and clean and enjoy working with the public. Must have good work performance records. If applied, apply to Fuel Bank of Kansas.
Kansas & Harge Union burglar for part-time work
Kansas City Office, KC. Kansas City
Union Personnel Office, Level 5. EGQ
Two years minimum exp upon request.
upon application. Apply at Homestead M, T-8
4260 W 35th St.
NANNIES - Go to interesting places, earn good money for your life. Positions to Cities and Nations are available.
Logan Business Machines accepting applications
short-time delivery person. Flexible hour sats
responsible for delivery.
Semester Break Work
$9
- Entry level positions
- All majors may apply
- Academic credit possible
- Corporate scholarships
- Interview now before final exams
- Start now or immediately after final exams
*Can remain part time when classes resume
FOR INTERVIEW
& INFORMATION
CALL 1-345-9675
VECTOR
MARKETING
MANAGEMENT
marketing division of
NANNIES
ALCAS
Live-in child care position near New York,
Pulliambeh, the beach. Airfare to New York and/or
ground travel provided.
Staffing at St. Francis School,
Sl4, 116, Friston, N.J. (n0500) 499-6135.
Now accepting applications for clerks/cashiers
and front office staff.
Mortemouth, MA, 02780. Marchauger, Jana; yy. to yy.
In-person only. Availability. Experience preferred, but not required. Jayhawk Bookstore, Top of Nailmall Hill 11th Crescent Road
Part-time tour position available Tuesday and Thursday 2:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m.; Friday 9:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Prior to customer relations skills and previous caster experience required, Apply at Douglas County Airport.
Part-time employment - Construction-type work.
Sanding, painting, woodworking & general labor.
$5.00/hr. $49.300
Part-time housecleaners and office cleaners in Birmingham, matricula, Buckingham Palace is interested in housekeeping.
Secretary need immediately for office on campus. Must have word processing. Hours: 12-5. Interested contact Manpower Temporary Services. This position will last approximately 5-8 weeks.
Residential supervisor part-time positions
within the intensive care unit
820-850. For students in working with
adults with mental retardation. Flexible evening
and weekend hours. 84-hour/school. Call for appointment.
A new exciting restaurant is opening in the new ATRT Town Pavillion. We are now hiring for full and part time food servers, hosts and hostesses.
CITY SEEN
Please apply in person
1111 Main, K.C., MO
9am-4pm
816-472-8833
M
Substitute another needed for morning preschool and kindergarten. Must be available 8-12 or older children. Some need special education training. Some need for an aftercare Willing to learn, Montessori techniques. Sunny location.
Telemarketing. Salary + comission. Monday
Thursday. 8-6 p.m. No experience necessary.
941-1200.
The Learning Club is now hiring daily servers. Must be able to work during holiday season. Apply at the KU Alumni Center in person. ROE/MPH
Wanted: Companion for boy, age 6. Monday
through Thursday, 4:09:5-1:30 beginning January
5. Reference required. Nonmoker. Need own
transportation. 442-9090.
Wanted: Kitchen utility help. Flexible hours,
good working conditions. apply Lawrence County
Zarec, Inc. *seeking full-time secretary/bookkeeper*. Must have computer and experience in work with general office skills. Locus on computer skills include processing daily records. ATS.
A/R for local convenience stores as well as answering phones and filling. Willingness to learn and expand on several computer systems is im-
and expand on several computer systems in Import. Must have out appearance. Important. Send hardwritten letter of application and resume. 2, fax 106, Lawrence, KS, 69000. Please please.
225 Professional Services
BU PROTOTYPE DESIGN SERVICES: 36-hour use
for each design. Prototypes are 800-Art & Design
BU $750; RESUME $600.
Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-9718.
PRIVATE OFFICE
Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services
Overland Park
(913) 491-6878
Pregnant and need help? Call BIlight-at-risk Confidential help/help pregnancy testing.
TRAFFIC - DGI's
Fake IDs G alcohol offences
other criminal/civil matters
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
Suffering from Abortion?
Write
Hearts Restored
Bott 988
Cubby 6720
Confidential response/material
will follow
WORKERS' COMP
Auto Accidents & Personal Injury
Attorney
DONALD G. STROLE
16 East 13th 842-1133
235 Typing Services
1-1,000 pages, no job too small or too large. Increase and affordable wordprocessing; Diana.
1-der Woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of literacy type. 843-305, days or evening.
Fast, accurate and affordable wordprocessing.
Call anytime 748-3963.
Call anytime 749-3863.
Call R.J. '7's Typing Services 941-5942. Term papers, legal, ects. No calls after p. 9m.
Domina's Quality Typing and Word Processing.
Domina's Quality Typing and Word Processing. resumes, application, mailing lists. Laser printing & spelling corrected. W 201W. W 25th M.-T. Th
Excellent professional typist does papers accurately, reasonably and fast. Call Julia 843-3429.
KEYWORKS. Word Processing and Data Entry
Worksheet 843-3429. dc. *16* + years KU experience. Coletta P. 843-3429.
K-5 Professional Word Processing. Accurate and affordable. 841-8345. Call between 1 and 10.
Papers, these, reseumes, 46k, Common mipelepil-
paper
This lady is hot! At least her fingers are. Professional typist, You write, I type. Fast & accurate, rateable reasons, available day or evening. Lori 841-4508.
THEWORDCTOR5-Why pay for when you can have wordprocessing? Legal, theses, commercial, IBM-PAC, MAC, CPM, Datayapex, dot matrix, laser. Since 1983. 831-547.
Will do typing, reports, papers. Type Write Services.
842-4612
Word Perfect Word Processing, IBM Compaq.
Orchard Corders. No calls until 9 p.m.
or e-mail.
Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes,
Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in
spelling, grammar, editing, composition.
Have M.S. Degree. 841.4254.
300s Merchandise
305 For Sale
1-story 3-bdrm. 1½ bath, considerable in-
terior space. 2-story 3-bdrm. 1¼ bath, coor-
dine bookcases, l雅灯光, woodflower, central vac,
and more! Over 200 sq. ft., just south of campus.
Library hours: 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Hudson estates #824-825. Eleves #824-829 or B45-838.
AT&T Computer 8300 color, new, new 23 mag.
HD, 860 Knopp w/ keyboard. W43-3338.
Color TV. 19 inch, only 900. 841-0888.
For Sale 16051 Sumiki 400cc motorcycle, black,
black. New condition.
Honda Spree 350cc moped, black.
Call 864-459-7444
For Sale! IBM Compatible computer, 600 K. $4,
hard drive, $1" drive, mdb, hard card. $3"
math coprocessor; $800 complete. Queenize watered,
dustless. $99, $80. $803-176 Leave
message on machine.
GOTT VIE SURPLUS! **New** combat boots and safety booties. Wool (blankets, gloves, socks and mittens). Field jacketes, overcoats, camouflage clothing. IOA CHAIRHAT* WORKWEAR Wool Coat. St. Mary's Christmas Old Christmas, 13-4. St. Mary's Surplus Salem, St. Marys, KS. 1-473-2734
FUJI Absolute roadside, 27" Suntour compo-
sure, 9 month old condition. cooridion. $500.
MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology Univ. of Kansas
IBM Compatible computer with 10-month warranty. Desired Windows 7 driver and monitor system monitor. Call 693-8417.
Gradulating, selling queen size sofa, $275
Gradulating, selling queen size dress, $275
Call 943-6118
Call 943-6118
M-Sat Sun
9-5 1-5
Neon Coors Light. 779. #41-0368.
One round-trip ticket from Kansas City to Dallas
for 79.020. Call Kimberly (884-1626).
must sell Tandy 1000 with color monitor. Will take best offer. Call 418-3274.
ARTS & CRAFTS
Perfect Christmas Gift! Brand new, 10-speed,
men's black buffalo low price. Book 841-1468-
HT RTK RC1 to Sarasota FL. Leave 12/30, return
12/31.
Wonnin holdin on game show. Brand new,
must sell. $150 OBO. Call no. 892, if answer key,
does not work.
Walking Liberty Silver Dollar, an advertised on CNN TV at $25.00 -Same coin, pearl sale, at 89.00. Great Plains Coins, Kidridge Hotel, 105 W.7th, 943-8001.
car/bus/CB CP say like like like $190. for portable
car/bus/CB CP say like like like $190.
Tandem 7-band f; amp, a-
all OR BAND 7-band f;
ALL OR BAND 7-band f;
Walking Liberty Silver Dollar, an advertised on CNN TV $49.95 = same coin, pure silver, sale at $8.00. Great Plains Coins, Eldridge Hotel, 100 W. 79th, 800-6631.
TDC BLADE PROJECTOR with case and extra balloon. $500. Excellent condition. 843-999-6000.
X-Men silver bars, starring jewelry all glazed gold
Marauder silver bars, starring jewelry all glazed gold
Celldale. Edlard hotel, M10, W7th, 46-8001
X-Max Bar s bars, starling jewelry glazed glass supercutter bar, 100 W, Platinum finish, 10x10, 10x10
1973 Buck Wagon, Auto, AC, Can/CB, Radio,
Cruises, ONE OWNER, Gear 845-3128.
1973 Fiat Spad convertible, black with tan in-
ternet loan $2000 ($2000 * 81.88%)
1974 Ford Mavicer, new battery, run great and recently went to Texas. Asking for $800. 684-8577.
1976 Toyota Corona Wagon. 4-speed, A/C, battery and all-season radios. Run good, $750.
340 Auto Sale
1750 Chevette, 300 AM/FM Cass, AC, runs
good. Must sell. 490亏损值. 841-8232.
1065 Nissan Sentra, 4-door, automatic, AC,
AM/FM. Phone: 843-1219-121
Ford Escort 1985 - 2 dr. - Auto - loaded. 68K excellent condition. AM/FM stereo, cassette player. 3200. 841-8590
1942 Posting 100+ 2-door hatchbacks, 80,000 m³
w/awntrees. Runs perfect. $1860, 843-5040.
*84 Encore, loaded. Very good condition. $1700*
*ng. 962-3542.*
6000, *minus* 3000, *max* 8000, *heightcap* 944-8620,
*Porton 10410* port 2 "dock hatchee", 80,000 ml,
*Porton 10410* port 3 "dock hatchee"
On TVs, VCRs, Jewelry, Surgeon, Musical Instruments, cameras and more. We honor Viere/MCA/M.EX.D/C., Jayhawk Pawn & University, 1MW B.W. #78, 41019-12
360 Miscellaneous
Flane Ticket to Houston, Texas from KCI December 6th/January 4th. Very Cheap. Call
BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH
Wanted someone to share ride Lawrence-KC near KU Medical Center. Weekdays, Tim 041-0809.
Hillel
שולחן
Events of the Week
Final Foods
Tues. Dec. 12
Thur. Dec. 14
Mon. Dec. 18
Wed. Dec. 20
For information contact Hillel at 864-3948
9 pm at Hillel House each night
Call Today!
Plane
For Christmas
AIRLINE
TICKETS
Don't Wait We'll find the lowest fares
and best schedules. On Campus Location In the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts
---
Maupintour
400s Real Estate
405 For Rent
amount for sublease at Naimith Hall. A single bedroom on first floor with own baths message 865331. A lavish maid service. Leave messages 865331. A lavish wiith deposit paid and half of January rent.
3-BR plaques for sublease. AC, dishwasher
5-BR plaques for small pet allowance, $700
per month, 941-216-8.
iunex. house. Walking
chance to shopping. Call Mi-714-
3055. A change for the better. MI-714. The luxuries of home: Washers/dryers, kitchen, sandboxes. Available now. 841-6900.
4-BR apt. in house. Fast walk to KU. Newly renovated, wood floor, dishwasher, window AC, 385, no pets. 941-5784, 941-1074.
Colony Water. Must sublease 2-bedroom,
2-bathroom apt. with balcony, jeekmaster,
dashwater, microwave, access to pool, hot tubes,
weight room and more. $355. 749-598-656
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 relation, intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination."
合
Available at West Hill Apt. for next semester:
Spacious one-bedroom furnished apt., $265 a month.
Water paid. Great location near campus
Roommate required. Lease and deposit required.
81-340-950 or 84-384-950.
Studios, 1-2-3 & 1 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 941-1212, 941-0535, 749-0645 or 749-2415.
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
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 advertisements in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
EFFICIENCY APT. for sublease. Bdroom, deck.
Call Steve 841-7982. Please keep trying.
Female roommate needed. Huge apt - split-level.
Very close to campus. Great neighborhood. Call
814-9277 for details.
Farmed room w/shared kitchen/bath facilities for utensils. Off-street parking. No pet.
For sublease. Two bedroom apartment,
available January then May. On bus routes. Rest
on balcony.
For lease Jan. 1. 3-bedroom duplex at 13th and Tenth
address. $300. Call 851-9689. Leave message.
For rent 2-bedroom duplex one half block south of
N11. $425.00 per month. Phone 851-3107.
ENERGY PLACE APS 14.
Avail. Jan., Feb.
Both include gas water tailed 1. Book from campus at 1458 Abb. Private parking, laundry facilities.
402-704-
For KU. $200.00 per month. Phone: 614-217-817.
Per Rent - Basement apartment. $155.00. Utilities. Used.
Fwd Bath - Large 3-bedroom gat. Attric bedroom
865/700, 1131480 ashley 865/700
Furnished apt. in private home. Ullained pay.
Bursaid apt. for 1 quiet person. W10. 19th W.
18th Floor.
Great 3-person house, 10th & Kentucky, near campus, to subminute January 1st. 740-601-1
Help! Subnumerate backed down. Nice 3-diment.
spt. kb. /850/mh, low utilizes; close to cam-
sroom.
Moving to KC? One-bedroom apartment available for rent. Washer, dryer, dishwasher, carpet and more. Great clubhouse facility, more information call 91-246-8350. Must Submit
Large studio for sublease with I/AC. Walk to campus, downtown, laundry and bus. $305. Tel 791-7900.
Must Sublease: Quire, private studio apartment at 729 Ohio. Move in now and no rent until February. $723.00 per month. Call 1-591-5555 after 5:00 p.m. Aak for James.
Cell. Call 782-9044 after 5 p.m.
Large studio for sublease with H/AC. Walk to Ackerson.
Nice large sitter room for rent. Avail. Jan. Int.
Check out 911-432-5800. $250/mo. /room.
Check this out 611-043-5800.
Older 2-3 bedroom home, near downtown,
wood floors, nice yard, $390. 814-4144.
ROOMMATE WANTED: Nice, big house,
$150/month. Near campus. Call 823-2578 nights.
Roommate Wanted M or F, grad student prefer-
nished with a diploma of the state security system,
hot tub, weighroom, wash and dry. Must be
cash. $115/month includes all utilities. Joe 749-4747.
**calls warm friendly community rooms?**
Kentonia Community has two positions available
for ECM room staff.
Applications may be picked at an ECM
Center, 1904 Oread. For more information call
Rooms efficiency and apartments and older well-kept homes. $116 and up. 841-4144.
So close to campus! One bedroom apartment for sublease, 12th and Orden. Call 941-3887.
sublease. 12th and Oread. Call 841-3887.
Studio apartment available January. Water gas.
and cable paid. One block from Union (Berkeley Flats). January free. Please call 824-1937.
INSTANT $200 REBATE
Available Jan. 1: Great studio apartment - $300/mo; Low utilities. Call #24-8310.
Hurry in Today some short term leases available COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS
APARTMENTS
- TANNING BED
- TANNING BED
* VOLLEYBALL COURT
* BASKETBALL COURT
* INDOOR/OUTDOOR POOL
* EXERCISE ROOM
* 3 HOT TUBS
* BUS ROUTE
MUSIC
$345-$410
MODELS OPEN DAILY
Mon. - Fri. 10-6 p.m.
Sat. 10-4 p.m. Sun. 12-4 p.m.
842-5111
1301 W. 24th
*Offer limited one rebate
per lease
expires 11-90
SUBLEASE. 2nd metendr. 2-bedroom apl. W/D,
dishwasher, microwave. On bus route. 749-5682.
Subasebe: 1-bdmr. apl. fully furnished, very
well suited. -ough for 1 to 3 people, on
bus route. 845-5018.
Sublease: 13th, one-bedroom apartment
available 13th & Ohio; $200.00; $43-3792.
Sublease January, move in December. One-
way lease. Walk to campus. 830/non.
814-504-6900
Sublasse Semester: 8-bdrm. apt. 1,
Grysstone, on KU bus route. Low utilities
Sublease Jan-July 2-bedroom, $850.00 + utilities +
demships. Catch to cunombs, 249,866.
upstairs. Call 704-6971 or 841-6941 and leave laundry facility
OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M.
Reserve Your Home Now
We Still Have A Few
Completely Furnished
Apartments
Designed with you in mind!
**Offering:**
* Custom furnishings*
* Designed for privacy*
* Private parking*
* Excellent location & KU*
* Many great locations*
* Equal opportunity housing*
Go to...
VILLAGE SQUARE
Apartment
Kentucky Place - 749-0445
1310 Kentucky
A quiet atmosphere
•spacious 2 bedrooms
•close to campus
WINTER SPECIALS!
Hanover Place - 841-1212
14th & Mass.
NAISMITH HALL
Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida
9TH & AVALON 842-3040
1800 NAIMSMITH DRIVE
LAWRENCE, KS 60414
913 - 843 - 8559
-Convenience
-Privacy
-Luxury
Naismith Hall
these words have
Only Naismith can
Naismith Hall...
Tanglewood - 749-2415
10th & Arkansas
provide students with hassle-free living. Take advantage of our front door bus service, free utilities, weekly maid
service, "Dine Anytime and much more!
these words have come to mean something special to KU students.
MASTERCRAFT
842-4455
Now Leasing For Spring Semester!
For more information &
a tour call or come by
today
Two-level, 1-bedroom apt. W/D, garage, very
clean, lot of space. $450.10 - $833.95 - $243.24.
Very nice 1-bedroom, furnished or unfurnished.
Messions. $300 + utilities. $843-977 or $833-200.
Messions. $843 + utilities. $843-977 or $833-200.
430 Roommate Wanted
*FEMALE ROOMMATE
NEEDS*
2 roommates needed for 3-drum 'house with W/D,
garden, patio, fireplace. #414. B4. w/ 5th floor.
*$190/mo. + 1/3 utilities*
*Walking distance from KU*
*Own Bedroom/Bath*
*Punished*
CALL 842-5186
Claim 1-BR furnished appt. Jan thru May Great cem-
mium. Inc. 601-038 or M14-017
Female roommate needs for spring semester.
Brand new apartment. Two blocks from campus.
Own bedrooms. Washer/dryer, dishwasher.
microwave. 841-4163
campus location. 801-391-0411 or 801-391-0752.
Female graduate student seeks housemates from Jan.
for 4-bedroom country home SB of Lawrence.
Accepting for enrollment in spring semester.
Female Roommate needed for spring semester.
Good location. $200.00 + ½ utilities. Lease until
May. Deposit paid, free cable. 841-391-060
Sunflower House
Student Co-op
Private Rooms
Low rates
Great Location
1406 Tennessee
749-0871
female romaine tendered for warm semen at midnight, 4pm, to the month's midpoint + untilition. Call Vishli or Sara at 842-793-8.
female romaine needed immediately + 2 bdm. ap close to KU, energy-efficient; has W/D. I
**
Female roommate needed for spring. Non-smoker, oven one,班 from campus. $170
½ utilities. Call soon 482-349-8100
Female roommate needed immediately for spruce-
ing up the bathroom. Female roommate need-
ed. Large apartment, bus,
room, own room, washer/dryer, dishwasher,
dishwashing machine. 862-300-
before 10 a.m. a.m. or: 6:10 p.m.
before 10 a.m. a.m. or: 6:10 p.m.
Penale roommate wanted starting January.
8/10/month plus 1% utilities. On bus route. Call
641-6822
Pemale roommate needed starting ASAP. Very friendly roommate, own room, on bus route, $170 per month + ½ utilities. 843-509-6280
Female roommate needed for spring semester.
Sunrise Village Apt. Will pay part of rent.
845-3579 841-4129
Male roommate wanted: Spring semester to share 2-bedroom apt. $160 per month plus ½ units. 841-4000.
Lockit! Male/female roommate needed Jan. 1. Great-Bedroom Holiday Woods apartment must be occupied by male or female roommate wanted to share 3 rooms. Male or female roommate wanted to share 2 rooms. On bus route, with pool, cable, A/C. $1/month
Need 2 female roommates for 3-bedroom townhouse at Trailridge. Call Cindy 749-6854 or 845-7333.
below. Offer is for non-smoking females on KU buk
after 5:45am. $15 per month request. Call
851-269-2000.
Grad.驻, GWM, 84, 14 yr. in Durl, outgrowing good, cook activist. Seem peaceful adaptive noun, close to Corsica my cat, not Corsica. Coatstone. Coatstone. 6038 Cersita, Acquiredrea (2) 6802, Italy 1011
NEEDED: Female housemate to share newer 3-bdr. ranch camp near Janet. 96 to Tastefully好房!Cian, Cian. $1,000.00/mo. Have a. 2 days. Open-minded music lovers please reply. 841-0066.
THE FAR SIDE
Needed - Female non-smoking roommate. Nice apt. Very low rent & utilities. No deposit, walking dist. to campus. Call 642-3599.
Male roommate needed January. Fully furnished, own bedroom, D/W, microwave, cable. 1 block from campus. 148/month. New York 941-1564. Roommate wanted for spring semester to stay at our apartment. Bathroom, bedroom, bedroom, walk-in closet. On bus route. Free water - $10, half + $1 utilities. 814-6977.
One roommate female, male or female, to share
14 weeks ago 1475 pm 1747 pm
start 1am. Job #814-8023.
Non-smoking responsible roommate wanted to share furnished 2-bedroom house on campus. Grad student preferred. Must have references. 845-3045.
Need female non-smoker asperp ASAP or
semester. 4-bed, 2-room, on bus route, nice
updition apartment. Deposit required and
% utilities. Call Jennifer 941-8210.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Female or male to share a great apartment. 1/4 block from campus.
Roommate needed for second semester. Basement room, owen bathroom, utilities split ¼. Cut
Roommate wanted to share modern spacious
bedroom. Call 843-1797.
210, low utilities. Call for info 843-1797.
Roommate needed for large 3-bedroom apartment in house. Hardwood floors, gas, water paid. $180/month. Starting January. 749-598 evenings. Roommate wanted to lease a sub-dlrm. townhouse with two others. Fireplace, trash compactor with two others. Bar range. $180/month + utilities. Call 842-389.
Roommate wanted to share 2-bedroom apartment for spring semester. Large bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, kitchen, laundry room.
Roammate-niced spring semester. Bus route.
Roommate- Great location. Fun
roommate. Claus 841-194-276.
Claus 841-194-276.
$170, low utilities. Call for info 843-1797.
Roommate 2 male lawn学生 need 1 grad student to share large 3 BR/3 BTH duplex near campus.
$225/month + ½ utility. 749-765.
Rooms in very nice house for non-smoking, quiet female. Two blocks south BU. Free utilities. C-microwave, TV, housecleaner. Ready 12/8/08 and 1/15/08. $400-$420.贷门价. $341-609.
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By GARY LARSON
© 1988 Universal Pictures Syndicate
"Hey! You wanna kick me? Go ahead! C'mon, tough guyt Cat got your tongue? Maybe he took your whole brain! ... C'mon! Kick met!"
16
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
1. The first line is "Theorem 4.1". This is a statement of a mathematical result.
2. The second line is "Solution for (a)."
3. The third line is "(b)".
4. The fourth line is "(c)".
5. The fifth line is "(d)".
6. The sixth line is "(e)".
7. The seventh line is "(f)".
8. The第八行 is "(g)".
9. The第九行 is "(h)".
10. The第十行 is "(i)".
11. The十一行 is "(j)".
12. The十二行 is "(k)".
13. The十三行 is "(l)".
14. The十四行 is "(r)".
15. The十五行 is "(s)".
16. The十六行 is "(t)".
17. The十七行 is "(u)".
18. The十八行 is "(v)".
19. The十九行是空行。
20. 第二行:"Theorem 4.1".
第二列:"Solution for (a)."
第三列:"(b)".
第四列:"(c)".
第五列:"(d)".
第六列:"(e)".
第七列:"(f)".
第八列:"(g)".
第九列:"(h)".
第十列:"(i)".
第十一列:"(j)".
第十二列:"(k)".
第十三列:"(l)".
第十四列:"(r)".
第十五列:"(s)".
第十六列:"(t)".
第十七列:"(u)".
第十八列:"(v)".
第十九列:空行。
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Saturday bus to be rerouted
Rising costs result in cancellation of service to downtown
By Bryan Swan
Kansan staff writer
Beginning at the end of the semester, students will no longer be able to ride on Saturdays to downtown Lawrence on KU on Wheels buses.
The cost of the service has been split since October between the Lawrence Bus Company and the Student Senate transportation board.
Charles Bryan, KU on Wheels coordinator, said the bus route was canceled after a surprise decision in October by the Downtown Lawrence Association to no longer finance the bus service.
He said one reason for the cancellation was simple economics. The service cost the association $23 an hour for seven hours a day and averaged 106 passengers paying 75 cents each. The other reason was the service availed twice its income.
Elizabeth Jurkowski, transportation board chairman, said Mike Vieux, director of the association, had informed her that its operating funds had been cut in half by the loss of Business Improvement District funds. Consequently, the association's board of directors decided to terminate the service. Other services, not related to KU, have also been cut.
The Business Improvement District was implemented in January 1988. Downtown businesses were assessed fees based on storefront size and location to pay for downtown promotions, advertisements, salaries and expenses. Commission decided June 30 to cancel the controversial program.
Jurkowski said the transportation board and the Lawrence Bus Company were developing a new Saturday route for next semester. The route likely would include 23rd Street, from Naismith Drive to Iowa
Street, and Iowa Street, from 23rd Street to 28th Street.
"It will be a completely new route," Jurkowski said. "We feel it will provide new opportunities for more students that live off-campus."
Bryan said he did not think the new route would include downtown and that the association would not provide any funds for the new route.
"This is not a slap at the DLA," he said. "We had been working on this for a month, and the meetings were unproductive. This will have restaurants. This will have grocery stores. It will open up a lot of opportunities, that the transportation board has probably made a good move."
Bryan said that since the transportation board would pay for next semester's service, KU on Wheels bus passes would be honored. He said the changes had provided the board an opportunity to improve the system
New aid forms may be confusing
By Doug Fishback Kansan staff writer
Starting today, KU students seeking financial aid will find potentially confusing changes in the federal form used to determine eligibility.
The American College Testing Program's Family Financial Statement, or FFS, has a new format for students seeking eligibility for the 1990-91 academic year. Not under the guidance of a faculty applicant's rejection, said Carol Collier, assistant director of financial aid.
In the past, the form included basic questions used to determine need, but they were scattered among other items. This year, Collier said, the basic questions, or "simple needs test," were in a separate section, items 1-49, at the beginning of the form. The 50th of the form's 114 items is left blank for the student's signature.
Collier said that financial aid officials were afraid that students would stop at the signature block and not the remaining items on the FFS.
"People tend to think, I'm signing off on this, and that's the end of it," she said.
If an FFS is rejected, the applicant will be allowed to refile, he said.
"Because of changes in the system, I think the earlier a student files, the better off he will be." Collier said.
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said that the new forms would include an information sheet that lists all the items to complete all the items on the form.
The remaining items request information about students' and parents' income and assets, expense estimates and previous student loans.
She said that financial aid staff would be available to help students understand and complete the new curriculum, and provide questions to call or visit the office.
"We're trying to minimize confusion for the students." Collier said.
Students could qualify for financial aid on the basis of the questions in the simple needs test, but if they do not, their applications will be rejected if the remaining items have not been answered. Collier said.
sion for the students." Collier said. In addition to changes with the financial aid form, a new computer screening will verify citizenship status and registration with the Selective Service. The screening also will
On the old forms, the signature was the last item.
Other changes this year include the automatic rejection of statements bearing questionable financial data, she said. Such data would include large business losses or illegible figures. Leaving the birthdate or personal income questions blank also will result in rejection. Students should enter a zero instead of leaving items blank, Collier said.
She said that the eligibility requirements for financial aid had not changed, only the format of the FFS.
In the past, statement evaluators would call financial aid offices for clarification of suspicious data, but students now will have to file special correction forms or resubmit their FFS, she said.
use the student's social security number to check for a history of loan defaults, Collier said.
Students who have a significant change in their financial situation still will be able to file a special application to consideration of eligibility, Collier said.
ACT will accept the new FFS from Jan. 1, 1909, to May 1, 1911, according to instructions on the form. The old form, which beginning today is no longer available from the office, will be accepted until May 1, 1909.
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SECTION TWO
MONDAY DEC. 11, 1989
Electric holiday
NORTHWESTERN CITY OF WASABU
The Country Club Plaza dons its Christmas best with 156,000 lights in a spectacle that draws sightseers from across the nation. This year, the Plaza celebrates 60 years of lighting tradition.
JACK HENDERSON
Keith ThorpeKANSAN
Actress and KU grad Dee Wallace Stone turns on the lights.
No vacancy on Plaza when lights come on
By Liz Hueben
Kansan staff writer.
In the hotels and streets of Kansas City's Country Club Plaza, throngs of partiers flocked to get a look at the annual Plaza lighting ceremony Thanksgiving night.
Thanksgiving is one night when hotels around the Plaza are booked solid year after year.
Some families and friends want to view the lights from their own private rooms away from the crowds and traffic jams.
Some just want to party. The partiers crowded together on hotel balconies and cheered as the switch was flipped.
A room in a Plaza hotel cannot be rented on a whim from Thanksgiving day. Most of the hotels start offering rooms as far as a year in advance.
Some want to kick off the holiday season in a special way with the yearly tradition.
Heidi Zingsheim, reservation clerk for the Alameda Plaza Hotel, said people who had stayed at the Alameda on previous Thanksgiv-
ings had priority for reservations for the next year.
She said if those guests had not confirmed their reservations by June, then people who had sent them to her would have a first-come, first-serve basis.
Zingsheim said some families had stayed at the Alameda every Thanksgiving since the hotel opened in 1972.
Although the Alameda's glass elevator, with its excellent view of the Plaza, wasn't in service this year because of renovation, Zingsheim said the hotel was booked solid. In January, the Alameda will become the Ritz-Carlton of Kansas City.
"We look forward to starting new traditions next year as the Ritz-Carlton," she said.
A reservation clerk at the Marriott Hotel said it followed the same procedure, giving priority to past guests until July.
"Hors d'oeuvres and liquor are very expensive. A 12-pack of beer costs $20. But people will pay it because it's a lot of fun sitting in a room drinking and eating and watching the lights," she said.
But management of the Raphael Hotel, just down the road from the Alameda, likes to book new guests into the rooms; rooms are offered as soon as letters start flowing in,
Rooms in hotels around the plaza range from $110, at the Hilton Plaza ima, to $500, at the Hyatt Regency giving, depending upon the view.
that night than on other nights because the demand was higher.
The Raphael offers rooms from $250 to $350 and requires guests to buy all food and drink from the hotel. Hill said prices were higher
At the Marriott and Hilton, both at 45th and Main streets, the number of rooms with a view of the lights is limited.
with no priority for former guests, said Karen Hill, Raphael reservation clerk.
Lights have brightened city, lives for 60 years
By Kate Lee
Korea staff writer
Kansan staff writer
What began in 1925 with a single strand of lights has become a yearly tradition drawing crowds annually number more than 150,000.
This year marks the 60th Anniversary for the Country Club Plaza Lights, said Brenda Tally, director for the Plaza Association.
"If you subtract it, it doesn't make 60," she said. "But for four years during World War II, the lights were off."
Tally said Charles Pitrat, a J.C. Nichols employee, hung the first of the Country Club Plaza Lights in 1925.
Tally said the largest crowd for the Thanksgiving night lighting ceremony was 275,000 in 1988.
The lights will be on each night from 5 p.m. to 3 a.m., she said.
There are no special activities planned to commemorate the anniversary of its opening, an anniversary lights站 stop Dilard's, 400 W. 47th St. La Bonne
Bouchee, 618 Ward Parkway, and Swanson's. 111 Nichols Road.
Tally said the lights would be on until Jan. 22, 1990 in celebration of the anniversary.
People come from around the world each year to walk around the Plaza, shop and see the lights, she said.
There are, however, alternate means of transportation available.
Pat Petty, of Surrey's Limited on the Plaza, said surrey and sleigh rides are available each night during the holiday season. Surrey rides are available from 6 to 11 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and from 6 p.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday.
"The rides are really popular." she said. "There are tour groups that come through Kansas City and book rides in advance and there are hotels around that offer gift certificates for rides."
She said large sleighs were available for $6.50 a person for adults and $3.50 for children under 10.
Mall retailers go all-out for Christmas rush With high sales in sight, intricate preparation for season began months ago
By Steve Buckner
Kansan staff writer
When it comes to long-term, all-out assault, leave-no-customer-unblitted planning, few entities can outdo that modern symbol of the holiday season, the shopping mall.
"We're ready!" declared Cindy Riley, general manager of the Indian Springs Shopping Center, I-435 and State Avenue, Kansas City, Kan.
"Our decorating started in November, with preparation in August," she said. "We planned our ads in July and August, and the merchandise in some of the stores was bought in June.
"Retailing is a reactionary thing, but you have to plan ahead."
"It's our biggest season," said Riley, who estimated that her shopping center would earn from 30 percent to 40 percent of its annual sales between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day.
Although the amount of preparation may be comparable to the Allies landing at Normandy, the stakes are high for retailers.
The strategies to attract business to Indian Springs were two-fold, she said. A heavy radio advertising campaign and gift guide supplements in the mail to the shopping center, Riley said. Once shops arrive to the 19-year
old, 100-store store, she said, they are treated to a revamped decoration package appearances by Santa Claus and entertain groups from the area.
Similar tactics are being used at the West Ridge Mall, 1801 S.W. Wamaker Road, Topeka, marketing director Suze Smith said.
"We have an aggressive marketing program," she said. "We have a variety of community service events and marketing to bring in consumers."
The community service events, Smith said, include the Salvation Army's "Angel Tree," which contains the names and gift wishes of needy children and a gift wrapping
service sponsored by the American Red Cross. In addition to an all-media advertising blitz, she said, the mall's marketing efforts also include a European trip giveaway.
Smith said West Ridge should have increased Christmas sales because the mall had grown from 40 stores when it opened a year and a half ago, to more than 100 stores this year.
"It's definitely our busiest time of the year," she said. "We'll do 35 percent of our business as a mail Traffic already has picked up. We could see a definite increase since the first week of November."
The Christmas story remains
"We add to it every year," she said. "We plan a good six months in advance. We slowly get up to it, but when September gets here, we're buckling down and get squared away."
Decorations are at the heart of Oak Park's efforts, Powell said. She and her co-workers decked the mall with 35 individually decorated Christmas trees and even lightened its Fir trees, she said. They also assembled the elf depot station and Santa's castle for
pretty much the same at Oak Park Mall, 11481 W. 95th St., Overland Park. Planning, said Jane Powell, marketing director, was of the utmost importance.
In addition to the train, the mall features a 16-horse merry-go-round and visits to Santa's lap are not only photographed, but are filmed on VHS tape as well.
the Christmas train ride, Powell said.
As if all the pre-Christmas promotions weren't enough, there remains the wonder known as the post-holiday sales. Riley of Indian Springs said these sales were an important part of the season.
"It's very strong," she said. "People get money for gifts, there's the return factor and there are the clearance sales."
2A
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
KENNEDY BUSH
BUSINESS CENTER
Living doll
E. Joseph Zurga/KANSAN
'A Holiday Fantasy displayed at Nelson
Six NY interior designers make versions of 'A Starry Night' in museum galleries
By Jennifer Reynolds Kansan staff writer
Plaza shoppers laugh at the live mannequins in the display window of Hires department store.
many fantasy and starry nights extend beyond childhood imaginations at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Mo.
Six interior designers, each given a gallery at the museum to decorate, will reach into their imaginations and personalized styles to create their own versions of the theme "A Starry Night."
The finished products, titled "A Holiday Fantasy," are on display at the museum.
Gina O'Neal, publicity director for the museum, said the six New York designers all were from Kansas City originally.
"The galleries will be the highlight of the Christmas activities at the museum," she said. "Each designer will create something totally new and unique."
The fantasy galleries officially opened Dec. 2 at Saturday Night Live II, the second membership gala this year at the museum, O'Neal said.
The designers, Tice Alexander, Thomas Britt, Melvin Dwork, Richard Barris, Richard Lee Rickey and John Saladin began work on the galleries Nov. 27.
To complement the holiday fantasies, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of
Art will display a 22-foot Christmas tree encompassed in thousands of white lights, O'Neal said.
T
The lighting, a holiday tradition now in its fifth year, was at 3 p.m. Saturday at Kirkwood Hall in the Bronx. The tree will be on display from Jan. 2.
Lisa Massoth, spokesperson for the museum, said 18th Century nativity figures would surround the base of the tree.
Helpful hints for consumers to avoid bad Christmas deals
The galleries will be the highlight of the Christmas activities at the museum. Each designer will create something totally new and unique.'
- Gina O'Neal publicity director
"The figures include angels, shepherds, the three wise men and their attendants made up of Orients, the seven arch burgers and peasants," she said.
The figures have been on loan to the museum from the University of Krakow.
Crowning the tree will be a 40-inch star made of copper, gold, silver, and crystal.
Now that full-fledged Christmas mania has commenced, a world of enticing buys is available for holiday shoppers in malls and department stores.
By Holly Lawton Kansan staff writer
Although the season is heavenly for many shopper, consumers should
learn how to protect their money and how to prevent ripoffs by stores, consumer advocates said.
"Shopping comparatively is the best thing a consumer can do," said Julia Pitner of Consumer Affairs, 700 Massachusetts St. "This is especially true when buying computer items. Wholesale stores and magazines are good places to check out prices
before buying to make sure they're getting the best price."
"A store is only required to refund money for defective merchandise,
Pitner also warned against buying a product before checking the refund and return policies of the store. Most stores have established their own policies regarding cash refunds, exchanges, credits and layaways.
and even then it has the option of repairing or replacing it first," she said.
Consumers should also inquire about warranties or service contracts before buying, Pitner said.
Jean Kutzley, assistant attorney general for the consumer protection division of the attorney general's office in Topeka, said many stores used the 'bait and switch' method to consumers to purchase merchandise.
said.
Some stores may bring in extra stock that doesn't really belong to the store, she said. They may also advertise "clearness" or "liquidation" sales to make the consumer think the store is going out of business.
"People go into those stores thinking 'Oh wow, they're practically giving everything away.' " Kutzley said. "But they're not. It's just regular sales, but they want you to get in there somehow."
She also said stores sometimes raised their prices during the holidays and then lowered them again as their Christmas "sales."
"That seems to be particularly bad with gold jewelry," Kutzley said.
"They can get away with it because there's virtually no way to tell how much that should cost. It fluctuates with the market."
However, this sort of activity is a direct violation of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, she said. Consumers who report patterns of fraud in stores may indicate an investigator by the consumer protection division.
Kutzley said the consumer protection division handled about 5,000 complaints a year, but the number upward during the holiday season.
"We get all kinds of complaints, everything from siding to VCRs that don't work," she said.
To all faculty and students at KU ...
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HORRIBLE LITTLE PRESENTS
A CINEMAS FILM
MARY KAT DUMWANTOS
FEATURING MICHELLE GORDON
The Night of the Mary Kay Commandos By Berke Breathed Other Berke Breathed titles available
THE READ
BOOKSHOP
INNESSTOWN
1
University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
3A
Festival kicks off Christmas in Topeka
By Derek Schmidt
Kansan staff writer
TOPEKA - The statehouse rotunda usually is a solemn place, guarded by statues of prominent people from Kansas history.
The stony countenances of Dwight Eisenhower, Amelia Earhard, William Allen White and Arthur Capper gazed upon dancing and singing during an ethnic festival Nov. 24, the beginning of the holiday season in Topeka.
"My grandfather couldn't understand celebrating Christmas until he got to this country," said James D. Baird, a member of the Topeka St. Andrew's School.
Dressed in a Scottish kilt, Wallace operated a table of Scottish Christmas lore during the festival. He told passers-by that Christmas was considered a pagan holiday in Scotland until the 20th century. Scots celebrated Hogmanay, he said, which is an annual festival at the end of the year.
"People think I'm crazy when I say we didn't celebrate Christmas, but it's true," he said.
The Capitol rotunda is decorated with eight Christmas trees that are covered with popcorn strings, paper chains and homemade ornaments. Red bowls and evergreen roping hoops are circular railings around the rotunda.
Topeka civic groups donated and decorated the trees, which were unveiled Nov. 24 during the ninth annual Festival of Carols. They will stand in the Capitol until after the holidays, said Marsha Sheshan, vice president of public relations for the topeka Chamber of Commerce.
The Festival, which is supported by corporate and private donations, kicked off the holiday season in Topeka. More than 2,500 people turned out for downtown wagon rides and a large number of decorations on the 30-acre statehouse grounds and the grounds of the state judicial center.
The trees and lights will remain
through the holiday season, but the ethnic festival Nov. 24 was the climax of the celebration.
Baggipie music echoed through the capitol halls and then faded as Irish dancers
Food is an important part of the Irish Christmas tradition, said Martha Owen, a member of the Shamrock Chapter of the Irish American Cultural Institute. Most important is plum pudding.
"It it got Irish whiskey in it," said Owen, who was born in Oxford, England.
The cultural festival demonstrated different ways that people celebrate Christmas, but it also showed similarities.
"The essential part of Christmas is still the same." Owen said.
Barbel Ketter of Topeka operated the German-American Christmas table. She said she had participated in the festival for several years.
"I want people to know our traditions — the way we decorate our tree, and how we celebrate."
Christmas in Germany includes an
advent wreath with a candle lit for each of the four weeks before Christmas, Ketter said. It also includes a miniature small soldier-like children's toys.
He said he had tried to telephone his two teen-age children twice since he had been in Topeka, but both times had been in West Berlin.
Bernd Wischroch attended the festival and spent most of his time speaking German to the German-Americans, Wischroch, who lives in East Berlin, discovered last year that he had relatives in Topeka, he said through an interpreter. He applied for a travel permit and left Berlin Nov. 9, shortly before the Berlin wall was opened.
Kay Wischropch of Topeka, one of Wischropch's relatives, said that meeting Bernd Wischroph had been a Christmas present for her family.
"He fit right into Christmas real well," she said.
Wischrop will return to Berlin this week, but Kay Wischrop said that he wished he could stay through the Christmas season.
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4A
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
60 YEAR
Singing tradition
The Kansas City Symphony Chorus entertains the crowd with carols and traditional Christmas music at the Plaza lighting
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"I want to do singing as a career and so I take every opportunity I can," Davis said.
Both women said that the desire to make singing a career was important.
"There were anywhere from three to five practices a week," Welling said. "It was difficult. I had to learn to budget my time wisely, to make other hours for my sorority, school, friends and study."
Good Times group spreads good cheer
Davis and Welling said they had been practicing for the season and opening night since late October.
Welling said that although she was majoring in theater and film, not voice, she had been singing since she was a little girl, and that she too would take any opportunity presented to make singing her career.
Welling, also a member of KU Jazz Choir, said the show went smoothly for the group's first public performance.
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The group was directed by and the music was arranged by Molly Jessup.
"It was great," she said. "It was an honor. The mayor was there, of course. There were a few little things, but I know we looked good and we sounded good."
Stefanie Beth Davis, Topeka, and Gigi Kae Welling, Tusa, Okla., are members of an eight-member singing and dancing troupe which will perform at Crown Center Shops in Kansas City, Mo;
The troupe, called The Good Times Co., made its debut Friday evening at the Mayor's Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony.
By Tracy Wilkinson Kansan staff writer
"It was kind of cold, but it went really well," Davis said.
Two KU sophomores are helping to spread greetings and cheers with music and dance throughout the holiday season.
The Good Times Co. will perform three times a day every Saturday and Sunday until Dec. 24 on level one of Crown Center Shops, said Cindy Eaton, marketing publications specialist for Crown Center.
Davis and Welling said that Friday's performance was a good one.
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Davis said that auditions were held in mid-October at Crown Center and that about 100 people tried out for the group.
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5A
MARY MCCAULAY
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Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansas
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Contest turns into tradition Neighborhood flooded with Christmas lights and sightseers
By Bryan Swan
Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
It started eight years ago as a game of Christmas one-upmanship between a few neighbors. Now it is a game of attracts visitors from all over Tepeda.
The lights that adorn the houses, bushes, trees and sidewalks of the Oak Hills neighborhood are an eye-dazzling collection of glowing reds, blues, greens and whites. Decorations ranging from reindeer to noel candies can be found in numerous lawns.
Dale and Rosalie Griffith are used to all this, and in part, are responsible for starting it. Eight years ago they decided to get into a contest with a few of their neighbors to see who could win the arrangement of Christmas lights.
"It started as a contest between four of us at first." Rosalie Griffith said. "We would hide in the basement and do our wiring there, like a big
secret so no one would know. Every year we would try to outdo each other, and it caught on. Now, pressure from other families has spread it over the last four years."
Dale Griffith said the Christmas spirit routinely deprived him of his ladder and staple gun, as all his neighbors scrambled to get their lights and decorations in place by the end of Thanksgiving.
"I vowed I wouldn't add more than $100 a year until I got the house how I wanted it," Griffith said. "It costs $75 a month for the electricity, too."
She said that now she joked with new neighbors, telling them that when they signed the contract to buy their house they also agreed to put up lights during the holiday season and follow the tradition.
"The first three years just a few of us did it, but now the last couple of years four or five new houses have been built and that increases an already large number," he said.
John Marobi, who moved into the neighborhood in April from Minnesota, said he enjoyed participating in the tradition.
Marholi said he was surprised by the amount of traffic that flooded the tiny neighborhood just to see the lights.
"It's nice, like a whole city out here at night," he said. "It's fun, and I'll do more to the house next year. I like to go out and see people about 1,600 to 1,800 lights up now."
"The traffic hasn't started yet; this is only part of it," he said. "Soon it will be bumper-to-bumper, 'all the way down the street.'"
Rosalie Griffith said that the neighborhood had asked the police to put in one-way signs to prevent the area's numerous cul-de-sacs from becoming miniature versions of gridlock, but that the idea didn't work.
She said that the Topeka Trolley and vans from nursing homes and hospitals also visited the neighborhood.
Snowcreek opens next week
Bv Lisa Moss
Kansan staff writer
There are differences between skiing in Weston, Mo., and skiing in Colorado, but Weston is easier to get to.
Snowcreek is a ski area covered with man-made snow, said Linda Grenier, Snowcreek business manager.
The snow is made by snow guns that mix air and water at freezing temperatures to produce snow, she said.
"It is done much the same as mother, Nature, but it is more forceful."
The temperature has to be 30 degrees Fahrenheit to produce the snow. When temperatures are in the teens more snow can be produced, she said.
Grenier said that there were misconceptions that the snow was artificial, but she said that it was real.
Mark Lesher, Triangle fraternity rush chairman, said that he had organized two group trips to Snow-creek last year.
"It's a good deal because they reduce the price for the group," he said. "For being as far away from
the mountains as we are, it is fun. It is as fun as Colorado? No." he said
He said that the two times he was there the chair lift lines were not long.
"The runs are short, but they are fun." he said.
"I go to Colorado just about every year," he said. "For a day it (Snow-creek) is pretty good."
Scott Canfield, Great Bend senior,
said that he had skied at Snowcreek
once last year.
Canfield said that the prices at Snowcreek were reasonable.
Snowcrew has 11 runs, two tripe-
chair lifts and three rope tows.
And for those who need help, there is a complete ski school that has all levels of lessons available.
Snowcreek opened temporarily for Thanksgiving weekend.
Grenier said that the slopes will open Dec. 15. Snowcreek will be open seven days a week: Monday through Thursday from 1 to 10 p.m., and Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. and midnight to 6 a.m. Midnight sessions will not begin until
Because of the warm weather and because there was not a lot of publicity about the opening, the slopes were not very crowded, Grenier said.
Grenier said that a lot of college students skied on Friday and Saturday during the late hours.
after Jan. 1.
Friday from 5 to 10 p.m. is teen night, a discount night for younger people including college students.
"You don't have to be a teen," Grenier said. "It is just called teen night and you have things that suit to younger people and plan different events."
She said that there were no age restrictions for the discount. The special is $20 for a lift ticket and ski rental.
Group discounts also are available for 25 or more people and can be arranged in advance through the group coordinator.
This year, for the first time, Snow-
Year's Eve from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Grenier said that this would be a non-alcoholic celebration.
"So if someone wants to celebrate this, this would be a good place to do it."
During the week of Christmas,
Snowcreek will be open from 9 a.m.
to 10 p.m. The slopes will be closed
Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
Tree farm harvests Christmas business
By Jim Petterson Kangan staff writer
About 25 miles northeast of Lawrence, over a hill and across a gravel road from what Tom Higgins calls the "radar golf ball," is possibly the largest Christmas tree farm in Kansas.
Dutchman's Forest tree farm, just east of Oksaloosa, is on 200 acres of rolling Kansas hills. Higgins, one of the farm's operators, stood on the porch of a farmhouse and surveyed the land before him.
He pointed to his left and said, "We've got 200,000 trees planted out there."
To his right was a grove of Locust trees. Just beyond the trees, across a field of yellow grass, was the "golf ball."
"That's really the radar for Kansas City International Airport," he said.
The tree farm, or forest, covers the entire side of a large hill near the house and continues on behind an aging white barn.
"We've got the largest Christmas tree farm in Kansas," Higgins said as he cleared off a spot on a ragged couch in the farmhouse and sat down. "All number one, Scotch Pines. That means there's no holes in them."
Dutchman's Forest is a "choose and cut" tree farm owned by Steve Vanderweide of Lake City, Mich., Higgins said.
"We give families wagon rides out to the field and they can select and cut down their own trees," he said. "Once they get their tree, they can come to the barn and have coffee. They will go to the barn and a fire so people can set warm."
Ed Themw is in charge of driving the tractor-drawn cart filled with potential lumberjacks into the forest.
"Families come out here and the kids like running through the trees," he said. "They always walk from one end to the other before they find the tree, then turn around and let their younger sons cut down the tree they choose."
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
7A
THE CHRISTMAS TREE IN THE CITY
Deck the Halls
E. Joseph Zurga/KANSAN
A Christmas tree decorates the shopping area at Halls on the Plaza.
Hallmark is working ahead Mother's, Father's Day cards are produced during Christmas
By Beth Behrens Kansan staff writer
Kansan staff writer
"We work in the future for seasonal cards," he said. "Unseasonal cards like birthday and anniversary run year-round."
Cochran said the cards would be stored for about six months after production in distribution centers in Enfield, Conn., and Liberty, Mo., before orders would start coming in for them. He said artwork for the Christmas card line in 1991 probably had started already.
The Christmas shopping season officially started Nov. 23, but the seasonal cards on the production floor at Hallmark cards, inc., are for Mother's Day, May 13th, and Father's Day, June 17th.
Production for next year's Christmas cards will start in February or March, said Don Cochran, a press operator for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City. Mo. Works at the plant and at the Hallmark Visitors Center at Crown Center where the public can see how cards are made.
Hallmark produces more than 11 million cards daily in its plants in Lawrence, Kansas City, Leavenworth, Topeka and Osage City. The
privately owned company employs 3,325 people in those production plants and more than 19,000 people world-wide.
Cochran said that the time it took to produce a card depended on the intricacy of the design. On the average, a card will run through five or six different machines before it is boxed and stored.
Cards start out as drawings conceived at the artists' tables. The drawings are scanned by a machine that reads the colors used in the original. Separate films are produced for each color of printing ink that will be used to reproduce designs on cards.
The film images are transferred onto light-sensitive printing plates. The printing plates are wrapped around press cylinders. As paper runs through the press, ink colors will be added one at a time.
That is only one of the methods used. A card could also be screen printed or have photos reproduced.
That is only the beginning
From there, the card may be cut into a different shape, the figures on it may be embossed. I so the figures on them are raised, or glitter may be added to it.
Cochran said a more intricate design would take longer in production and increase the cost of the card.
Dick Cook works on a cutting die that cuts cards into different shapes
He said the dies had to be shaped by hand from thin strips of metal. The time it added to production depended on how many cards would run on one lithograph sheet. A lithograph sheet is a sheet of printing paper that has about 30 different cards on it.
He said the card he was working on, a Mother's Day card with a jagged edge, already had taken about eight hours and would take about eight more to complete. The cards were printed on will have four of those cards on it, so four of the cutting dies have to be made.
Cochran said the cards on a lithograph sheet were all different to keep production on several cards at a steady level. He said this would speed production because the presses were set to handle each card until once instead of having to stop and reset each machine for each new card.
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8A
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
9A
Final exam of 1980s' sex, flies and videotape
The Associated Press
What do you remember about the '80s?
1. Identify:
1. Martin Van Buren
2. Captain Midnight
3. Winky, Blinky, Pinky and Clyde
4. Commander Zero
5. Dakar Murkroos
6. Jack Napier
5. Debra Murphree
6. Look Napier
9. Marilyn Louise Harrell
10. Celeste
7. Monkey Business
8. VHS
11. Of the family Tephritidae, the
12. Sydney Biddle Barrows
13. Gordon Sumner
ANSWERS
1. Before George Bush, the last sitting vice president to be elected president. A Democrat. In 1836.
2. The satellite "hacker" who invaded HBO's satellite broadcast with a video protest message in 1986.
3. The four pursuing "ghosts" in the film.
4. Eden Pastora, a commander in the Sandinista revolution who defected in 1981 to lead a Nicaraguan rebel group.
5. The tattooed prostitute who allegedly engaged in voyeuristic sexual encounters with televangelist Jimmy Swaggart. She married in 1988 while in jail on a three-month prostitution sentence and planned to make a new life with her husband and three children in Indiana.
hoodlum (played by Jack Nicholson) who became the demented Joker after a tragic plunge into a chemical vat.
6. In "Batman," the Gotham City
7. The ship on which Gary Hart embarked on a brief voyage with sometime-model Donna Rice.
D. Dubbed "Robin HUD," she was charged with embazing $6.5 million from the Department of Housing and giving some of it to the poor.
8. A trademark for Video Home System, the 1980s' ubiquitous VCR format introduced by JVC Corp.
10. The most successful toy company of the '80s surged to the top of the industry on Cabbage Patch Kids and was bought out by Hasbin
11. AKA the Mediterranean fruit
fliv. or Medliv.
12. The "Mayflower Madam," the
elegant, attractive descendent of Pilgrim stock ran an exclusive call-girl service whose clients reportedly included influential men in the United States.
13. Sting! former lead singer of the rock group Police, closed the '80s as Mack the Knife in "3 Penny Opera" on Broadway.
1. The native land of "Jeopardy" host Alex Trebeck.
II. "Jeopardy" Section
2. The ultimate vogue word of the 1980s, a sort of uneasy catch-all to describe contemporary art, literature, rock music, etc.
3. A site is a pro-
bation.
4. Two years' probation, 1,200
hours community service and a
$150,000 fine.
5. Opus and Ronald Arn.
6. Kristin, Sue Ellen's younger
5. Opus and Ronald Ann.
sister.
7. The Australia II.
8. RJR Nabisco.
9. Rafael, Michelangelo, Leonardo and Donatello
10. "Mistakes were made."
12. Venus, "The Goddess of Love." ANSWERS
1. Wrong. I'm sorry. You didn't phrase your response as the question, "what is Canada?"
**room 101**
3. What are benesec Spodus
Mackenzie's two green raccoon?
4. What was Oliver North's sentence?
5. Who are the only characters of Berke Breathed's "Bloom County" to survive in his new comic strip, "Outland"?
7. What Australian 12-meter yacht took the America's Cup away from the United States for the first time since 1851?
8. At $25 billion, what was the biggest-ever leveraged buyout of a company? 9. Who are the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles?
6. Who sho J.R.?
10. A trick answer. What did Ronald Reagan say about Iran-con-raims transactions, Pete Rose and Rob Lowe and Rob Lowe about his home videos?
11. How many days of his eight-year term did President Reagan spend in California? (Of those, 335 men had his ranch outside Santa Barbara).
World was at war for most of decade
12. What was Vanna White's debut, in the title role of a made-for-TV movie?
The Associated Press
The decade of the 1980s produced a familiar chronicle of wars — from the savage Iran-Iraq War, which broke out in 1980 and dragged on for eight years, to the short, bloody fight between Britain and Argentina about the Falklands Islands, a conflict that blew up in 1982.
Lebanon was ripped apart by civil war and ended the decade as it started it, in a flood of Muslim and Christian blood. Wars scourged Africa from the sands of the Sahara to Europe. The dead often went uncounted, and the living often lived on in the misery of famine and flight.
Here is a brief look at some major conflicts of the decade:
IRAN-IRAO
AFGHANISTAN
United Nations estimates that 1.5 million Afghans have died. Moscow says 13,310 Red Army soldiers died.
The eight-year war was the decade's longest conventional military confrontation. Casualty estimates vary widely and are as high as 1 million dead on both sides, two-thirds of them Iranian.
LEBANON
Continuing civil war between Soviet-backed government and U.S.-supported insurgents. Moscow withdrew Soviet troops in 1989. The
Civil war that started in 1975 continues, with casualties mounting to more than 150,000, most of them civilians. The Israeli invasion of 1982 led to additional casualties, including 654 Israel war dead. Almost 300 U.S. and French peacekeeping soldiers were killed in 1983 bombings.
FALKLAND ISLANDS
Argentina and Britain engaged in a short, bloody war in 1983 about disputed islands in the South Atlantic. During the war, the United States 712 Argentines and 255 Britons dead.
EL SALVADOR
In a conflict that began in 1979, leftist guerillas have been battling the U.S.-supported Salvadoran government, and more than 71,000 Salvadors have died, mostly civilians.
NICARAGUA
Since 1981, Sandistina government troops and U.S.-supported contras have been locked in sporadic conflict, but the war appears to be ending.
12
Keith Thorpe/KANSAN
Carriage ride
Martilyn Brune of Lawrence pilots Duke the horse and a 120-year-old carriage through the streets of the Plaza.
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11
10A
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
Sergeant enjoys police work emphasizes crime prevention
Bailey's plans for law school dismissed after he discovered love for law enforcement and keeping the peace in Lawrence
By Bryan Swan Kansan staff writer
A display case in the lobby of the KU police station states "Crime: It can happen to you. Prevention is the best defense."
This is more than a slogan to Schuyler Bailey, KU police sergeant. Stopping crime before it happens is a big part of his life, and something he greatly enjoys. He conducts crime prevention programs for the KU police and serves as one of the department's spokesmen.
Bailey knows firsthand the angry, disturbed feelings that many people experience after being the victim of a crime. He still remembers the time, long before becoming involved in police work, when someone broke into his apartment.
Bailey said that while attending Northeast Missouri State University in Kirksville, Mo., he had planned to adhere to his father's wishes and enter law school but soon discovered that it was law enforcement that appealed to him the most. He said his apartment was just down the street from the police station.
"I'm not sure if that had an effect on my decision to go into law enforcement," he said "but I remember a real bad feeling. I felt violated."
"I majored in criminal justice and planned to go to law school, but I got involved in law enforcement and I knew I loved it," Bailey said. "My father and I talked when I went in, and he expected me to go to law school. I had to tell him that I wanted to change my career plans slightly. He said as long as I was happy it was OK, and that was important."
Sqt. Bailey takes pride in stopping crimes before they happen.
X
After graduating in 1983 and moving to Lawrence the next year, he gradually worked his way through the ranks after joining the force. Bailey worked as a part-time dispatcher and later as a reserve officer until a full-time position was available.
"A full-time position was open so I went for it," he said. "I decided this is where I wanted to be."
Bailey said that the unpredictability of the job appealed to him. He said that no two days were the same and each day was different for six days, each day was a new adventure.
He still was clad in his immaculate blue uniform from earlier in the day, when he had participated in the local chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving's red ribbon campaign. The campaign's goal was to reduce drunken driving during the holidays. Representing KU police during such events is part of Bailey's efforts to nip potential tragedies in the bud.
"It it's unfortunate that some people go to work just because they have a job that is not so prestigious still enjoying it. I'll probably do this job until I can't do it anymore."
Bailey said that despite the increased number of crime prevention programs conducted this year, nearly double the amount of all of last year, and the department's best efforts to stem the growing number of thefts on campus, the numbers continued to increase.
"It does get frustrating when you try so hard," he said. "We've got a more educated public, but the thefts still so up."
take precautions against crime and more criminals from Topeka and the Kansas City area coming to Lawrence.
Bailey said the increase could be attributed to students who did not
He said an unusually high number of parking permit and bus pass thefts this semester also contributed to the higher crime rate.
"We've not had that in the past, nothing along those lines," he said. "Someone has found they could turn a profit with those things."
Bailey was interrupted by the phone in a lieutenant's office, which refused to stop ringing. The police scanner in the corner of the room spat out endless snippets of radio traffic. Someone entered the room to get Bailey's signature on a document. Police personnel could be heard hustling down the hallway through a door, then clicking it all off with a grin and another skip of coffee from his Ghosthusters II mug.
"It's one of those days," Bailey said.
"We're behind today." Longaker said. "We had numerous internal meetings for this morning and haven't one of them yet. We haven't even had lunch. We do a lot of shuffling. We don't just work 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. it's really hard to set
Jeanne Longaker, KU police lieutenant, entered her office, which was decorated with numerous types of police uniform headware, plaques, portraits and a jolly plastic pig dressed in police blues, and an old schoolmate who didn't do a cheerleader off. Bailey had to be prepared to leave at a moment's notice to attend a meeting postponed earlier in the morning.
anything in concrete."
Bailey said there were no typical days as a police officer, and sometimes he could have a quiet 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. schedule, only to have programs or meetings after the regular work day.
He said that the 24-hour-a-day demands of police work sometimes were imposing or overwhelming and that one's life could be dictated by the job.
"There are times when you have to say this can wait, or I'm going to finish this in the morning and do something with family and friends." Bailey said. "You have to have a life that is important to you and sometimes you have to think about it, look at a calendar, for a family event."
He said that a rape scare last fall on campus was a good example of
how regular work schedules and time for one's personal life could be absorbed by the job.
Bailey said that the crime prevention program switched from a passive to a more aggressive stance at the prompting of housing officials, students and parents.
"They were scared," he said, referring to the general mood on campus. "Fear can grow. That's when we decided to step in with the facts that we knew. First, it quelled rumors and erased fears, amd second, maybe someone would tell us what was going on."
Bailey said that since the rape scare, the demand for crime prevention programs had increased but without the prompting of such a scare, which he interpreted as a sign that students were more aware of the dangers.
Despite the heavy schedule of programs, meetings and daily duties, Bailey finds time to pursue an outside interest that one day may prove useful. He recently finished a 10-week course in sign language through the parks and recreation department.
"I did it because I was curious," he said. "It was very hard, and like the instructor said, it's like learning a whole new language. I still can't do it very well."
Another testiment to Bailey's ability to juggle time was the fact that he had already finished his Christmas shopping.
"I hate to shop in stores when it's close to Christmas," he said. "I like to sit back and laugh at everyone else going crazy."
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University Daily Kansan / Monday, December 11, 1989
11A
Reagan's hometown mirrors decade's twists
The Associated Press
DIXON, III. — It was the decade when glasnost came to small-town U.S.A. and the hero from Hennepin Avenue did folks proud — he moved into the White House.
The 1980s began in Dixon with a celebration: Boyhood resident Ronald Reagan was elected president. They ended with small-scale superpower summity. The town opened up a friendship with a Siberian city.
But between the triumphs came tough times. And in many ways, Dixon's decade typified the highs and lows of Midwest rural towns. Unemployment rose, then fell. Farmland values dropped, now they're rising. The community lost a giant employer but gained another one.
"I would call it (the '90s) a roller coaster where you start and stop at the same point, but you have a hell of a ride in between," said Mayor James Dixon, a sixth-generation descendant of the town's founder.
1968
Ronald Reagan
"When we started the '80s everybody's thoughts were, 'Well, we don't want to make changes.' We were looking backwards, if you ask me," he said. "Today, we've been through tough times and we know that we've
Not surprisingly, some say Reagan was an inspiration.
"When you hear the president of the United States say he's proud of his hometown, you think, 'Hey, maybe I should be,'" said Linda Brantley, who owns a jewelry store with her husband.
got to live with change."
Reagan may be out of the national spotlight, but he's not out of the hearts and minds of Dixon residents.
A Reagan museum and statue are planned. They will join the Reagan bridge and renovated white-frame home at 816 S. Hennepin Avenue, located in the Reagan bloom in the 1920s. He returned to a birthday visit in 1984.
The mayor and others say Dixon's future is more promising compared with a decade ago because of the healthy economy. But a new upbeat, can-do attitude has helped, too.
Foreign visitors also have made the pilgrimage, including a delegation from the Soviet Union's northernmost city, Dickson, Siberia, which in 1988 established sister-city
"I don't think the Dickson-Dixon exchange is just a nice little thing between two little cities," said the mayor, who traveled 13 time zones this spring to the remote Arctic city. "Its importance is that we're just one drop in a flood of change."
ties with Dixon.
Although Dixon hasn't strayed from its conservative leanings — Reagan won 83 percent of the 1984 election, the decade has seen cultural changes.
In the high school, more boys were wearing earrings, more computers were used, the cafeteria added a salad bar. The girls' teams did better than the boys. In stores, people bought Nikes and Liz Caiorones. In the library, folks checked out "Clan of the Crown" books, "I," and "The Ladies of the Club" and anything by Stephen King, Tom Clancy or Danielle Steel. In town, there was a new event — an antidrug "Just Say No" parade.
But bread-and-batter issues were bigger than food and fashion in the past.
15,000, which greets visitors with a white arch decorated with the town's name in neon.
The early '80s were years of economic despair.
About half of Dixon's economy depends on agriculture. When the farm crisis hit, business failures and bankruptcies followed. Four farm implement dealers in the area have shrunk to one.
A steel wire mill in a nearby town closed much of its operations, leaving hundreds without jobs. It has since restored some of them.
Then, in 1983, a state home for the mentally retarded shut down. Its workforce of 1,000 had made it Dixon's largest employer.
Property values fell, school enrollment dwindled and the district's debt increased. Dixon's confidence was shaken.
"We lost population," Brantley said. "We lost business. And we lost attitude."
The turnaround started in mid-decade. School district voters approved a tax increase in 1985. The
home for the retarded was remodeled into a state prison, providing hundreds of jobs.
With a new, smaller home for the retarded and a branch of Illinois' transportation agency, the state remains Dixon's No. 1 employer.
Dixon also traded its laissez-faire business style for a hard-nosed, competitive approach.
"We're a lot better prepared for the '90s than we were for the '80s," said Chuck Beckman, Chamber of Commerce president. "The '80s attitude was there nothing we can do about it if an industry says, 'We're going to close.'"
Now, he said, "We've been able to go to them and pretty much convince them the workforce is good; this is the place they ought to be. You have to be willing to go to people and say, 'What will it take? What's the problem?' Is there something we can do?"
As Dixon enters the '90s, Brantley says, "everything is in place. It's just a matter of blossoming."
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12A
Monday, December 11, 1989 / University Daily Kansan
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The 80's: Decade of disaster
Man-made, natural cataclysms caused widespread damage
The Associated Press
The Earth shook, erupted, collapsed, caught fire and spawned vicious storms with regularity through the 1980s, killing tens of thousands of people around the world. But the decade's cataclysmms also included new forms of manmade tragedy.
SEPT. 19, 1985 — Earthquake strikes Mexico City: 7,000 die.
Here is a review of some of the decade's worst disasters:
NATURAL DISASTERS
MAY 18, 1980 — Mount St. Helens volcano in Washington state erupts with power equivalent to 500 Hiroshima bombs. This blast and two followed within the next month killet fire damage increased more than $3 billion in damage.
MAY 24-25, 1985 — Cyclone out of Bay of Bengal comes ashore in Bangladesh; some 11,000 killed.
OCT. 11, 1880 — Earthquake in Algeria kills 6,000 and leaves 400,000 homeless.
NOV. 23, 1980 — More than 3,000 killed and 300,000 left homeless when an earthquake, Europe's deadliest in 65 years, devastates southern Italy
AUG. 21, 1986 — Cloud of toxic gas from volcanic Lake Nios in Cameroon envelopes several villages, killing 1,746 people and injuring 874.
NOV. 13-14, 1985 — Colombia's erupting Nevada del Ruiz volcano melts snowcaps, causing a massive town of Armero, killing 25,000 people.
MAY 7, 1987 — Approximate start
of Chinese fire fires that
kill 119 people.
SEPT, 12-16, 1988 — Hurricane Gilbert, Category 5 storm with winds up to 160 mph, strikes Jamaica, Hawaii and Texas, killing some 300 people.
OCT 19-25, 1988 — Hurricane Joan-bahamian
Johnson-in Central America
Recent disasters and their costs Since President Bush took office, there have been three major environmental disasters. Map shows dates and approximate cost.
DEC. 7, 1988 — Earthquake registering 6.9 on Richter scale kills 25,000
Since President Bush took office, there have been three major environmental disasters. Map shows dates and approximate cost.
Exxon Valdez oil spill
March 24, 1989
Cost: $1.3 billion
Prince William Sound
Hurricane Huge
Sept. 18-22, 1989
Cost: $4 billion
San Francisco
Charleston
San Francisco earthquake
Oct. 17, 1989
Cost: $6 billion-$7 billion
Puerto Rico
Virgin Is.
Knight-Ridder Tribune News/BILL BAKER and JUDY TREIBLE
OCT, 17, 1989 — Earthquake measuring 7.0 on Richter scale rattles San Francisco Bay area, killing 67 and causing estimated $7 billion in property damage.
SEPT. 17-21, 1989 — Hurricane Hugo sweeps through Caribbean and into Charleston, S.C., with 135 mph winds, killing 62.
TRANSPORTATION DISASTERS
AUG. 12, 1865 — In the decade's worst air disaster, Japan Air Lines 747 crashes into a mountain near Tokyo. Four passengers survive the crash.
DEC. 12, 1985 — Arrow Air charter DC-8 crashes shortly after takeoff from Gander, Newfoundland; all 236 of the plane die, including 248 U.S. servicemen.
DEC. 20, 1987 — Philippine passenger ferry Dona Paz collides with a tanker and sinks; more than 3,000 holiday travelers are killed.
AUG. 16, 1897 — In the decade's worst U.S. domestic plane crash, Northwest Airlines MD-80 crashes on takeoff at Detroit Metropolitan Airport, killing 156. One passenger, a 4-year-old girl, survives.
JUNE 4, 1989 — Gas explosion in Ural mountains of Soviet Union
engulfs two passing trains, killing 645.
INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS. FIRES
MARCH 27, 1980 - Offshore platform housing oil workers capsizes in North Sea off Norway, killing 123 men.
NOV. 21, 1980 — Fire at MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas kills 87 people.
FEB. 15, 1882 — World's largest floating oil drilling rig, Ocean Ranger, sinks in storm off coast of Newfoundland, killing 84.
DEC. 3, 1984 - Leak of deadly methyl isocyanate gas at Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India, kills 3,598 people, injures 20,000.
SEPT. 16, 1986 - South African gold mine fire kills 177.
APRIL 26, 1986 — Explosion and radiation leak from Soviet Union's Chernobyl nuclear power station kills unprotected workers. Unconfirmed reports say 250 died.
DEC. 31, 186 — Fire at Dupont Plaza hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico, kills 97. Three hotel employees later plead guilty to arson charges.
JULY 6, 1988 — Piper Alpha oil platform explodes in North Sea, killing 187.
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