THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOL.100, NO.T42 T THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF T THE UNIVERSITY OF KAANSAIS (USPS 650-640) TUESDAY, May 1, 1990 ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS:864-4810 Police sought missing person near body site By Steve Bailey and Bryce J. Tache Kansas staff writers By Steve Ballev Although the body found Friday afternoon in East Lawrence has not been identified, area residents say it may be connected to a missing-perimeter investigation in their neighborhood and the Lawrence Police Department. Gene Bickford, 723 New York St, said yesterday that men identifying themselfs as detectives questioned him and his wife earlier this year about the disappearance of a young woman. "They said that she had been dropped off right across the street from us on Halloween night," he told me. "That was the last time she was sleep." Bickford said that detectives showed him photographs of the missing woman but that he did not recognize her. Other area residents, who asked not to be identified, remember being questioned several months ago. Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, confirmed that a missing-person case involving a young woman was pending. He would not say whether it was connected to the ongoing investigation. "We have had several reports of missing persons in the past year," he said. "You can't tie a missing person case to a specific area." Mulvenon said the department still could not confirm the age or race of the body, which was found in the 800 block of East Eight Street. "Because we are not 100 percent sure, we are not going to say one way or another," he said. However, authorities have determined that the body probably is not one of three missed Johnson County shooters. No evidence believe were murdered last summer. Richard Grissom Jr. is charged with murder in connection with the disappearance of the three women. Mulvenon said authorities had ruled out a connection with the Grisom case because of physical difference, but the unidentified women and the unidentified body. "At this point there is not any indication whatsoever that any of those three victims is involved in this See BODY, p. 5 Another hostage is freed The Associated Press DAMASCUS, Syria — U.S. hostage Frank Reed was released yesterday after being held almost three and a half years by Shiite Muslim kidnappers in Lebanon. U.S. hostage freed in nine days. Syrian officials said that Reed, a 75-year-old student from Malden, Mass., was freed in Beirut at 12:30 P.M. and driven to the Syrian capital. President Bush hailed Reed's release as Bush welcomed former hostage Robert Polhill to the White House, another U.S. educator who was freed in Lebanon on April 22 after 39 months in captivity. Bush asked Syria and Iran for their help in escaping and said things seem to be moving, but that there could be no rest until all hostages are free. Reed was handed to officers of the Syrian army contingent that controls east and north Lebanon as well as Muslim west Beirut, where he kidnapped Sept. 9, 1986, said the officer, who refused to be identified. There are still 16 Westerners, including six U.S. citizens, held hostage in Lebanon. "I hope this is a forerunner to the release of the other American hostages and the others from other countries, and against their will." Bush said. The Iranian newspaper Teheran Reed's family rejoices in release; hope still alive for other hostages MALDEN, Mass. — Fiff Reed always said she would not believe her husband was free until she saw a picture. The Associated Press Yesterday, pictures from Syrian television gave life to the joyous news from the State Department: Frank Reed was coming home at last. And that first TV footage showed a man very different from the haunted prisoner in the earlier Polaroid shots sent to news agencies in Lebanon. "He looks great. He's in a suit," Fifi Reed said. Relatives who crowded around the TV set in this suburban remarked that Reed had a beard now bored with his work, but he was almost three and a half years by Islamic extremists. "It's real, it's definitely real," said Reed's daughter, Marilyn Langston. The Syrian-born Fahima Reed, "Fifi" for short, wanted to share her joy with the relatives of those hostages still in Lebanon. "That's my basic thought of the moment, I want to see everybody happy as I am now," she said. In Boise, Idaho, the mother of hostage Jesse Turner said that she fell joy for Reed's family and that she said, "I'm ready." Times said Tuesday that unless Washington answers the latest releases with goodwill gestures, no more U.S. citizens will go free. Reed appeared pale and smoked a cigarette following his release. "I was hopeful that it would come to pass," said Turner's mother, Estelle Ronneburg. "Now we're down to six Americans." Shortly before 2 p.m., the State Department telephoned word of Reed's release to his family's home in Malden, where relatives and a crowd of reporters awaited word. "I'm thrilled. I'm overjoyed. I'm everything — all of the above that describe happiness." Fiff Reed said. "I really hope that he's in good health. That's all I care about now." Asked whether she thought the family might return to the Middle East, she said. "We stay here, no way of leaving." Fifi Reed, 39, planned to travel to Germany to see her husband. She said her sister in Damascus would return for a visit. At a briefing at the ministry, he While the family awaited word, Reed's 91-year-old mother, Leota Sprague, said she never had lost faith that her son would be free one day. said he could not answer some questions out of concern for the other hostages — "I do not want to anything that could harm them." The freed captive appeared in reasonable health. He was clean- He said he hoped the other hostages would be freed soon, but would not say if he saw any of shaven, and wore a dark suit and a blue tie. His voice was huskv. See FAMILY. D. 5 See HOSTAGE. D. 5 PABLO VIVIENDA Canvas homework SenEx passes plan to diversify groups By Pam Sollner John Hammer, Wichita Junior, was intent on his work as he finished an untitled painting for his class in the Art and Design building. Kansan staff writer The Senate Executive Committee voted yesterday to forward recommendations to University Council and reorganizing organized living groups. The council will meet Thursday afternoon for the final time this semester. The University Senate Committee on Human Relations this year was put in charge of making recommendations that would reduce discriminatory behavior on campus and in areas within, both on and off campus. SenEx reviewed the committee report two weeks ago and appointed a two-member subcommittee to refine the recommendations. The four recommendations that will be forwarded to the council are: > That the Office of Student Affairs urge Greek associations to implement an aggressive minority recruitment program with reasonable goals and means, and criteria for determining annual progress. - That the Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Association start a progressive series of workshops and meetings to create a better level of communication with the Black Pan- hellenic Council and adjust their membership recruitment process to increase access by the multicultural community. - That the University continue to analyze the distribution of students by ethnicity, race and geographical by sex and fraternity houses. That the 1990-91 Human Relations Committee work with the Office of Student Housing to devise a plan to distribute cultural, racial and ethnic groups in campus residence halls and scholarship halls to more closely resemble the distribution of the student body population. Of the seven recommendations, SenEx opposed three of them: That the University register only those organizations that admit new members on the basis of published qualifications. - That situations, conditions or policies that may be identified as problems for racial or ethnic groups are problems for students generally. That the Board of Regents be asked to revise and strengthen the "Regents Policy on Organizational Membership," which gives student groups the right to choose their members. Required placing of students in Math 002,101 set for fall ACT scores would be used to decide between sections By Carol B. Shiney Kansan staff writer Philip Montgomery, associate professor of mathematics, said placement would be based on ACT scores. Students who score less than 20 on the math section of the ACT will be placed higher, and who score higher can take Math IU. The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will begin mandatory placement of students in algebra and intermediate mathematics classes in the fall, an associate professor of mathematics said yesterday. Math 002, intermediate mathematics, and Math 101, algebra, are taught by the SIMPL plan, which stands for Self-Instructed Masters Plan. A 97-page report about SIMPL that was recently submitted to the college recommended that admission to all algebra courses be based on a Previously, students could enroll in either course at their discretion. James Muyksen, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said he decided to place students based on ACT scores because of the report about SIMPL the college had to bear that the college needed to give more guidance to students. placement test. 'We certainly don't want people to have to take a course they wouldn't need to take.' James Muyskens Muyaksen said incoming freshmen received a suggested class schedule based on interests, ACT scores and high school courses. The suggested schedule now will state what math course a student would be assigned. "I think it is really unfortunate when a student enrolls in 101 and can't make it, but could have if enrolled in 102," he said. Miyukens said there would be an appeals process for students who wanted to take higher math courses. The program was studied because of complaints about the program from parents and students and a high attrition rate, the report stated. Of the 23,027 students who enrolled in the courses during the past five years, 39 percent dropped and 15 percent withdrew. Of the 46 percent who completed their enrollment, 37 percent passed. "We certainly don't want people to have to take a course they wouldn't need to take," he said. The SIMPL program was studied for about a year and a half by a seven-member committee appointed by the college. The report, which made four main recommendations, was submitted to the college for review. Muyksens said mandatory placement would enforce prerequisites that already existed. He said students were likely to fall courses if they did not have the prerequisites. According to the report, SIMPL was the type of instruction first used in 1961 to teach Math 902. Since 1984, it has been used to teach Math 103. Ann Dean confronts notoriety Racial incident has spurred unwanted recognition at KU By Eric Gorski Kansan staff writer Ann Dean buried her head in her lap and covered her eyes. She doesn't like to talk about herself. But during the past few weeks, everyone on campus has been talking about her. Dean, St. Louis sophomore, has been in the middle of racial tensions at the school and will be attending morning of March 30, when she was delivering pizzas. Dean was on the second-floor landing of the Sigma Alpha fraternity fraternity, 1301 West Campus Road, when a member of the fraternity skipped a pizza out of his kitchen and received a racial insult to her, according to police reports. Matthew Willenborg, St. Louis freshman, was suspended from the fraternity because of the incident, although he denied making any racial comment. He will not be present last week after a separate reported battery April 21. He was charged with disorderly conduct and misdemeanor battery in connection with the March 30 incident. The confrontation at SAE has spurred students to demand administrative action to improve KU's racial climate. After a student protest April 11, Chancellor Gene A. Bugd outlines steps to improve the racial environment at an impromptu conference attended by about 350 students in the rotunda of Strong Hall. But she does not want her name to be in the forefront. Dean feels more comfortable talking about Dean attended the meeting at Strong and thanked people who had supported her. Perspectives on racial climate p. 1b the issues, and she squirms at questions about her personal life. The fact that I am the person that this happened to be is surprising. Dean said, "I don't like being famous. It's scary." Unexpected notoriety Ann Dean lives with seven other women in a house on Mississippi Street. During the past month, they have been more than her roommates. They've been her answering service. "Newspaper and television people. We had about 50 phone calls a day," said Kara Gannon, one of Dean's roommates. "We couldn't call anyone because we'd be interrupted." Since April 2, Dean's name has appeared more than 70 times in the University Daily Kansas. She has been mentioned on the Kansas City area television news. She and her colleagues strangers talking about her in a Lawrence restaurant. "At least 10 people come up to me every day and say, 'Are you Ann Dean?'' she said. "I never expected this." Before March 30, Dean lived the life of a normal college student. She is in the College of Liberal Arts and teaches English at her semester, she is taking classes in English, anthropology and environmental studies. Dean, who is paying half her way through school, 1 4 See DEAN, p. 5 2 Tuesday, May 1; 1990 / University Daily Kansan Weather SUNSHINE TODAY Cloudy HI: 57* LO:43* Seattle 66/47 New York 71/52 Denver 56/36 Chicago 50/41 Los Angeles 67/53 Dallas 66/63 Miami 88/73 KEY Rain Snow Ice T-Storms Forecast by Michael Simon. Temperatures are today's highs and tonight's lows. Kansas Forecast Cloudy in the west to mostly cloudy in the east. There is a chance for rainfall across the state from southwest to northwest. High from the mid to upper 30s to low from the mid to upper 30s to lower 40s east. Salina 54/44 Dodge City Wichita 49/45 58/49 5-day Forecast Wednesday - Cloudy with a chance for showers or thunderstorms. High 56°, Low 39°. Tuesday - Mostly cloudy with a slight chance for late afternoon showers. High 57°, Low 43°. Thursday - Mostly cloudy with a chance for rain in the morning. High 58', Low 40'. Friday. Mousy sunny by ooow and warmer. High 63'. Low 43'. Saturday. Saturday - Sunny and seasonably warm. High 71'. Low 57'. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals period, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, K6045. Break Fast For Finals The answer for all those late night and early morning Study Sessions Carol Lee Donuts. Special 4 - 6 p.m. Buy 6 Get 6 FREE! 842-3664 • Open 5 a.m. - 6 p.m. • 1730 W. 23rd Spring brings pool sharks Apartment managers say after-hours swimming is an increasing problem Bruce Johnson, a former courtesy judge at Colony Woods Apartments, 1301 W. 24th St., said there was a growing problem of people going into the apartment counselor's pool area after closing hours. Summer is getting closer, and many people are getting the urge to swim. Because everyone does not has a place in the pool. By Curtis Knapp Kansan staff writer "That's why we're cracking down on it," he said. "To not do anything about it would cause it to just get bigger." eight people were charged with criminal trespassing April 21 and 22 and were issued notices to appear in Lawrence Municipal Court after using the hot tub after closing hours at Colony Woods, Lawrence police "It wouldn't matter if they climbed the fence to get into the pool or broke into somebody's house," Johnson said. "It's still the same thing, criminal trespassing." Burgers, Johnny. Jane Ellis, manager at Colony Woods, refused to comment. Don Tayler, manager for Park-25 Apartments, 2401 W. 20th St., said there had been some problems in the past of a $130,000 apartment on the second floor. The decision to press charges in each case rests with apartment managers, Johnson said. remining the Park-25 pool areas after closing hours. "We be injured a few, and that usually takes care of it," he said. He said there had not been any problems this year because the swimming pools had not yet been filled. Hank Guck, co-manager for Orchard Corners Apartments, 1465 Apple Lane, said he had never experienced a real fire. Slightly Older Americans for Freedom will sponsor a free public lecture at 8 onight at the Kansas Union Ballroom. William M. Kunster, civil rights and criminal attorney, will speak about "The Rise and Fall of the Bill of Rights." "We've busted a few, and that usually takes care of it," he said. He said there had not been any problems yet this year because the pool had only been open since Tuesday. Chris Sieffert, assistant manager for Sunrise Apartments, 837 Michigan St., said there had been occasional problems with people entering the pool after hours and skinny-dipping. He said the trespassers, who were often drunk, usually were just asked to leave the pool. Tom Porter, Lawrence city prosecutor, said trespassing was a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail or a $500 fine or both. The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. On campus **Orthodox Christians on Campus will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union.** The Spanish Club will sponsor a Spanish language conversation table at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. The Commuters' Club will have a luncheon at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove in the Kansas Union. The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a resume writing and interviewing skills workshop at 2 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at Parlors A and B in the Kansas Union. Kirk Day will make a slide presentation about his recent research in the Amazon rain forest. The KU Cycling Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in front of Wescoe Hall for a fast-paced ride. Scott Beaven, Shawnee graduate student, received an Office of Naval Research fellowship for $20,000 a year for three years. Ronnau received his fellowship for remote sensing research of clouds. He said that his initial reaction was surprise but that he would have researched the project regardless of whether he had won the fellowship. "I was convinced that I was going to do the work one way or another, whether or not I was poor," he said. "The main thing is that it's reflecting really positively on the University and the work we do here." Donna Haverkamp, Wetmore senior, and James Ronnau, Lawrence graduate student, each earned $22,000 a year for three years. Ronnau said it would take 2½ years to complete his project, in which he will develop a type of radar that would be able to study and distinguish between different types of clouds. His eventual goal is to design portable radar equipment to be used in an aircraft. either cloud particles or large bodies of clouds. There is no equipment sophisticated enough to study both at the same time. "We're simply developing things that will help us to fill that gap," Ronnaus said. Student engineers receive fellowships Beaven, ONR fellowship recipient, that said that he was pleased to receive the fellowship and that he would use it for research on the most pressing research of wet and dry oceans. Although he has no specific plans about what he will do for his research, Beaven said he probably uses a radar to simulate radar return from sea ice. Three KU engineering students have received fellowships for research in the field of radar remote sensing. He said existing radar was for Beaven said remote sensing was a way of studying topographical contouring of the earth with radar. He said the procedure used radar equipment that sent many bursts of radar into the water or ice. Scientists then measure the amount of time it takes for the signals to travel to the top, and this is called the top. These readings are graphed to determine the topographical contours of the land beneath. "What we are trying to do is to get information about the earth without actually standing and measuring," Beaven said. Haverkamp received her fellowship for research in remote sensing of arctic ice. Police report A student's clothes valued together at $43 were taken Sunday evening from a dryer in the 1300 block of West 24th Street. Lawrence police reported. ■ A student's truck valued at $18,000 was taken Sunday morning from the 500 block of Greystone Drive, Lawrence police reported. ■ A student's car window was broken, and items valued together at $300 were taken Sunday morning from the 500 block of Wisconsin Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was $300. A student's motorcycle valued at $3,900 was taken Sunday from the 2500 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported. A bicycle valued at $400 was taken Saturday or Sunday from the 1700 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. By Sandra Moran A bicycle valued at $75 was taken Sunday morning from the 500 block of Indiana Street, Lawrence police reported. Kansan staff writer Varsity Cheerleading Lisa Buckelew Crimson Crew Jackie Schmalzried Amy Gilbert Jana Welsmeyer Julie Smith Shannan Fisher Sandy Van Nice Christy Cramer He said there was no way police could prevent thefts because they did not have enough personnel to spend time patrolling targeted areas. He said he had in preventing thefts was cooperation from the community. "You have to keep your eyes out for your neighbor," Mulvenon said. "The police simply can't be everywhere." "I think it would be a lot better if the cops would come around," Walton said. CONGRATULATIONS TRI DELTAS! Mulvenon said the apartment complexes were more tempting to thieve because there were more cars in one area. Many of the cars in that area are who have high priced stereo equipment and radar detectors. Walton said he relied on police patrols to prevent thefts. During the weekend two cars were burglarized at Colony Woods, according to Lawrence police reports. A car window was broken, and a sunroof was taken from another car. Mulvenon said that police would try to establish a pattern through the crime analysis division but that patterns were hard to determine because of all the different vehicles in car burglary incidents. He said people should lock their cars even though that would not be a sure prevention of theft. Jane Ellis, manager for Colony Woods Apartments, 1301 W. 24th St.. collated comment. Darrin Walton, manager for Hillview Apartments, 1745 W.24th St., said there had been one burglar in the past month at Hillview. A resident's car window was broken Many times a car window is broken, and that is a pattern, Mulvenon said. In other cases, certain areas are targeted or cars are broken into by drilling out the lock. Student Senate Crimson Girls Sheri Villines Stacy Elwell Jayhawk Mascot Alternate Lizzie Weaver Alpha Kappa Psi New Initiate Amy Hunter Amber Atkinson Corrections He said there was no way to determine why car burglaries were increasing. He said it was possible that thieves wanted to hit the areas before students left home for the summer. "Periodically we have certain apartment complexes that are targeted by the auto thieves more residential areas." Muylenon said. He said it was possible that more burglaries occurred on those streets because a lot of apartment complexes were located there. Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said one of the areas where burglaries were occurring was on 23rd and 24th streets. During the weekend, six cars were burglarized on 24th Street and one was burglarized on 23rd Street. "You could make an argument for about anything," he said. Car burglaries are increasing in Lawrence, and residents of apartment complexes could be the ones feeling the brunt of the increase, a Lawrence police spokesman said yesterday. University Daily Kansan Missy Miller (Production Manager) Jackie Schmalzried (Regional Sales Manager) Wendy Griswold is misidentified on Page 4 of today's Kansan. Griswold is not a student senator. Automobile burglaries on the rise Y! ROOM MATES They Become MONSTERS CAN YOU HANDLE 2 OR 3 JECKLES & HYDES? PROTECT YOUR PRIVACY! 2 Bedrooms Just for you and a friend starting as low as $295.00 to $450.0 Water and basic cable paid Reserve Now for Fall! 15th & Crestline • 842-4200 Open 8-5:30 M-F, 8-5 Sat., 1-4 Sun. **Legation.** Because of an editor's error, MEADOWBROOK Frank Reed was held captive in Lebanon. By Curtis Knapp Kansan staff writer Because of a copy editor's error, a Page 1 headline in yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. U.S. hostage Story idea? 864-4810 Ride the Bus Downtown on Saturdays! Natural Way and KU On Wheels 820 Mass. 841-0100 NATURAL WAY - 820-822 Mass St. Learning Disabilities Support Group presents: "Help, Hope, Survival: Coping with College" A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Guest Speaker, Dr. Hugh Catts May 1st, 7:30 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union ALL DAY ALL with Vista Drive In FREE Vista Travel Mug YOUR FAVORITE SPECIALS from Open to Close Monday-Thursday. APRIL 30-MAY 3: 6 A.M.-10:30 A.M. Travel Mug with purchase of regular order of Biscuits & Gravy 10:30 A.M.-11 P.M. Hot Fudge Brownie a la Mode Vista Mahatma Tawhida Laurence Wishka 99¢ Vista DRIVE IN 1527 W. 6th 2 Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Weather SUNSHINE TODAY Cloudy HI: 57' LO:43' Seattle 66/47 New York 71/52 Denver 56/36 Chicago 50/41 Los Angeles 67/53 Dallas 66/63 Miami 88/73 KEY Forecast by Michael Simon. Temperature are today's highs and tonight's lows. ☑ Rain ☑ Snow ☑ Ice ☑ T-Storma Kansas Forecast Cloudy in the west to mostly cloudy in the east. There is a chance for rainfall across the state from the 40s to upper 50s. High from the 40s to upper 50s. Lows from the mid to upper 30s to mid-40s east. Dodge City 49/45 Salina 54/44 KC 54/46 Tuesday - Mostly cloudy with a slight chance for late afternoon showers. High 57', Low 43'. Wichita 58/49 Wednesday - Cloudy with a chance for showers or thunderstorms. High 56', Low 39' Thursday - Mostly cloudy with a chance for rain in the morning. High 58', Low 40'. Friday - Mostly sunny by noon and warmer. High 63'. Low 43'. Saturday - Sunny and seasonally warm. High 71'. Low 57'. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and final period, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. **Postmaster:** Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. Break Fast For Finals The answer for all those late night and early morning Study Sessions Carol Lee Donuts. Special 4 - 6 p.m. Buy 6 Get 6 FREE! 842-3664 * Open 5 a.m. - 6 p.m. * 1730 W. 23rd Student Senate Amber Atkinson Varsity Cheerleading Lisa Buckelew Crimson Crew Jackle Schmalzrled Amy Gilbert Jana Weismeyer Julie Smith Shannan Fisher Sandy Van Nice Christy Cramer Jayhawk Mascot Alternate Lizzle Weaver Apartment managers say after-hours swimming is an increasing problem Bruce Johnson, a former courtesy guard at Colony Woods Apartments, 1301 W. 24th St., said there was a growing problem of people going into the apartment complex's pool area after closing hours. CONGRATULATIONS TRI DELTAS! "That's why we're cracking down on it," he said. "To not do anything about it would cause it to just get bigger." Summer is getting closer, and many people are getting the urge to swim. Because everyone does not has a place in the water. Jane Ellis, manager at Colony Woods, refused to comment. Spring brings pool sharks Eight people were charged with criminal trespassing April 21 and 22 and were issued notices to appear in Lawrence Municipal Court after using the hot tub after attending at Colony Woods, Lawrence police reported. By Curtis Knapp Kansan staff writer Alpha Kappa Psi New Initiate Amy Hunter "It wouldn't matter if they climbed the fence to get into the pool or broke into somebody's house," Johnson said. Don Taylor, manager for Park-25 Apartments, 2401 W. 25th St., said there had been some problems in the past of people entering the Park-25 pool area after closing hours. The decision to press charges in each case rests with apartment managers, Johnson said. He said there had not been any problems this year because the swimming pools had not yet been filled. Hank Guck, co-manager for Orchard Corners Apartments, 1465 Apple Lane, said he had never experienced University Daily Kansan Missy Miller (Production Manager) Jackle Schmalzir (Regional Sales Manager) "It's still the same thing, criminal trespassing." people entering the Fark-25 pool area after closing hours. We busted a few, and that usually takes care of it," he said. Chris Steiffert, assistant manager for Sunrise Apartments, 837 Michigan St., said there had been occasional problems with people entering the pool after hours and skinny-dipping. He said there had not been any problems yet this year because the pool had only been open since Tuesday. He said the trespassers, who were often drunk, usually were just asked to leave the pool. Slightly Older Americans for Freedom will sponsor a free public lecture at 8 on tonight at the Kansas Union Ballroom. William M. Kunster, civil rights and criminal attorney, will speak about "The Rise and Fall of the Bill of Rights." The Commuters' Club will have a luncheon at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove K in the Kansas Union. The Spanish Club will sponsor a Spanish language conversation table at 11:30 a.m. today at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. Crimson Girls Sheri Villines Stacy Elwell The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 130 Robinson Center. Tom Porter, Lawrence city prosecutor, said trespassing was a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in prison. The KU Cycling Club will meet at 6 p.m. today in front of Wesco Hall for a fast-paced ride. On campus ■ The Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center will sponsor a resume writing and interviewing skills workshop at 2 p.m. today at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. Environs will meet at 6 p.m. today at Parliars A and B in the Kansas Union, Kirk Day will make a slide presentation about his recent research in the Amazon rain forest. Orthodox Christians on Campus will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Governor's Room in the Kansas Union. They Become MONSTERS ! CAN YOU HANDLE 2 OR 3 JECKLES & HYDES? PROTECT YOUR PRIVACY! 2 Bedrooms He said the procedure used radar equipment that sent many bursts of radar into the water or ice. Scientists then measure the amount of time it takes for the signals to travel to the top and back again. At the top, these readings are graphed to determine the topographical contours of the land beneath. "What we are trying to do is to get information about the earth without actually standing and measuring," Beaven said. Beaven said remote sensing was a way of studying topographical contouring of the earth with radar. ROOM MATES.7 Haverkamp received her fellowship for research in remote sensing of arctic ice. Although he has no specific plans about what he will do for his research, Beauven said he probably would like to simulate radar return from sea ice. Beaven, ONR fellowship recipient, said that he was pleased to receive the fellowship and that he would use it for his research, using research of wet and dry oceanes. "We're simply developing things that will help us to fill that gap," Ronnaud said. either cloud particles or large bodies of clouds. There is no equipment sophisticated enough to study both at the same time. Ronnau said it would take 2½ years to complete his project, in which he will develop a type of radar that would be able to study and distinguish between different types of clouds. His eventual goal is to design portable radar equipment to be used in an aircraft A student's clothes valued together at $431 were taken Sunday evening from a dryer in the 1300 block of West 24th Street. Lawrence police reported. Student engineers receive fellowships "I was convinced that I was going to do the work one way or another, whether or not I was poor," he said. "The main thing is that it's reflecting really positively on the University and the work we do here." A student's truck valued at $18,000 was taken Sunday morning from the 500 block of Greystone Drive, Donna Haverkamp, Wetmore senior, and James Ronnau, Lawrence graduate student, each for $2,000 a year for three years. A student's car window was broken, and items valued together at $300 were taken Sunday morning from the 500 block of Wisconsin Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage was $300. Scott Beaven, Shawnee graduate student, received an Office of Naval Research fellowship for $20,000 a year for three years. 15th & Crestline • 842-4200 Open 8-5:30 M-F, 8-5 Sat., 1-4 Sun. He said that his initial reaction was surprise but that he would have researched the project regardless of whether he had won the fellowship. Three KU engineering students have received fellowships for research in the field of radar remote sensing. By Sandra Moran Ronnau received his fellowship for remote sensing research of clouds. Police report He said existing radar was for Kansan staff writer Just for you and a friend starting as low as $295.00 to $450.00 Water and basic cable paid Reserve Now for Fall! A bicycle valued at $400 was taken Saturday or Sunday from the 1700 block of Ohio Street, Lawrence police reported. MEADOWBROOK A student's motorcycle valued at $3,900 was taken Sunday from the 2500 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police reported. Walton said he relied on police patrols to prevent thefts. A bicycle valued at $75 was taken Sunday morning from the 500 block of Indiana Street, Lawrence police reported. Corrections Darrin Walton, manager for Hillview Apartments, 1745 W. 24th St., said there had been one burglar in the past month at Hillview. A resident's car window was broken. "I think it would be a lot better if the cops would come around," Walton said. "Periodically we have certain apartment complexes that are targeted by the auto thieves more residential areas." Muhvenoon said. Jane Ellis, manager for Colony Woods Apartments, 1301 W. 24th St., declined comment. start During the weekend two cars were burglarized at Colony Woods, according to Lawrence police reports. A car window was broken, and a sunroof was taken from another car. Wendy Griswold is misidentified on Page 4 of today's Kansan. Griswold is not a student senator. He said it was possible that more burglaries occurred on those streets because a lot of apartment complexes were located there. Mulvenon said the apartment complexes were more tempting to thieves because there were more cars in one area. Many of the cars students who have high-priced stereo equipment and radar detectors. Many times a car window is broken, and that is a pattern, Mulvenon said. In other cases, certain areas are targeted or cars are broken into by drilling out the lock. Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman, said one of the areas where burglaries were occurring was on 23rd and 24th streets. During the weekend, six cars were burglarized on 24th Street and one was burglarized on 23rd Street. He said there was no way to determine why car burglaries were increasing. He said it was possible that thieves wanted to hit the areas before students left home for the summer. He said there was no way police could prevent thefts because they did not have enough personnel to spend time patrolling targeted areas. He said he had in preventing thefts was cooperation from the community. Mulvenon said that police would try to establish a pattern through the crime analysis division but that patterns were hard to determine because of all the different creatures in car burglary incidents. Frank Reed was held captive in Lebanon "You have to keep your eyes out for your neighbor," Mulvenon said. "The police simply can't be everywhere." Automobile burglaries on the rise He said people should lock their cars even though that would not be a sure prevention of theft. "You could make an argument for about anything," he said. By Curtis Knapp Kansaan staff writer Car burglaries are increasing in Lawrence, and residents of apartment complexes could be the ones feeling the brunt of the increase, a Lawrence police spokesman said yesterday. Because of a copy editor's error, a Page 1 headline in yesterday's Kansan was incorrect. U.S. hostage Because of an editor's error, Story idea? 864-4810 Ride the Bus Downtown on Saturdays! Natural Way and KU On Wheels 820 Mass. 861-0100 NATURAL WAY - 820-822 Mass S Learning Disabilities Support Group presents: "Help, Hope, Survival: Coping with College" Guest Speaker, Dr. Hugh Catts H H H H May 1st, 7:30 p.m. Big Eight Room Kansas Union ALL DAY with Vista Drive In ALL YOUR FAVORITE SPECIALS from Open to Close Monday-Thursday. APRIL 30-MAY 3: 6 A.M.-10:30 A.M. FREE Vista Travel Mug with purchase of regular order of Biscuit s & Gravy Vista Manhattan Yorkau Jarretton Wichita 10:30 A.M.-11 P.M. Hot Fudge Brownie a la Mode 99¢ Vista DRIVE IN 1527 W. 6th Campus/Area University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 3 KU urges change in military policy Ramaley report says ban on homosexuals should be reversed By Pam Solliner Kansan staff writer KU is expected to urge two national associations to ask the Department of Defense to reconsider its membership policies concerning sexual orientation, Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday. "I think that's the most responsible action for the University to take because it goes to the source," Ramaley said. She presented a report to the Senate Executive Committee, comparing the ROTC and University Police forces in sexual orientation in KU programs. Ramaley led Chancellor Gene A. Budig would join administrators from other member universities in asking the Association of American Universities and the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant College to take on positions on the committee to Pensacola, Florida, reconsider its exclusion of homosexuals in the armed forces and other programs. She said a stance from the two associations would provide a powerful statement. Members of University Council requested the policy clarification in response to recent national attention to two cadets who were disenrolled from university ROTC programs. In the report, Ramaley discussed the policy stating that homosexuality is incompatible with military service. But she said the University's ROTC program abided by the campus equal opportunity statement. It gives students the right to take military science courses without fear of denial based on the grounds of sexual orientation. 'Homosexual acts are against the laws of God and man.' —Clay Belcher, SenEx member Clay Belcher, SenEx member, expressed his opposition to Ramale's position. "Homosexual acts are against the laws of God and man," he said. Belcher said that ROTC and the Pentagon should continue to exclude homosexuals from its programs and that the University should not make any new policy or reinterpret their policies to counter this. Lorraine Moore, SenEx member, said, "Dr. Ramaley's position is in line with the University, and I, at least, support it." SenEx voted to forward the report to University Council, which is scheduled to meet Thursday. SEA ARRANGEMENT BOAT CLUB Keith Thorpe/KANSAN Pots to go Mike Gabriel, Chico, Calif., graduate student, throws a pot during "Gabe's" Pottery Show in the Kansas University Art Gallery. Gabriel said that it took about 15 minutes to throw an average pot but that it took several days to complete the process. First measles case becomes mere blemish on KU reports The first suspected case of measles reported April 8 in Douglas County was not measles after all, a KU health official said yesterday. Bv a Kansan reporter Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said blood test results received yesterday confirmed that the first case believed to be measles actually was another rash illness. I am very pleased, but I am not surprised about the test results." Yockey said. "This one truly was only a suspected case. I expect the other two we treated here to come back with different results." Yockey said Watkins still had not treated other suspected cases of measles since the last case was reported the week of April 9. "We hope we have seen the last of the messes cases this year," he said. Controversial Black leader to speak at KU "We are still not out of the clear, but this is a verv good sign." Ioney said he expected later this week to hear the results of the other two cases reported at Watkins. Douglas County has tallied nine suspected cases of measles since April 9. Of the nine cases, three involve KU students, four involve infants and two involve Lawrence adults. B Barbara Schnitker, director of nurses at the Douglas County Health Department, said none of the blood results from the other cases reported in Douglas County had been received. "We haven't had any cases reported here for the last week or so." Schnitker said yesterday. "We expect to get the results from some of the other suspected cases very soon." By Jonathan Plummer Kenson staff writer Kansan staff writer A controversial Black activist is scheduled to speak on campus today, but a member of the group sponsor should not students should not be concerned. Sponored by Black Men of Today, Steve Cokely is scheduled to speak at 1 p.m. today in front of Wescoe Hall. Cokely was fired May 5, 1988, from his position as a Chicago mayor's side after the Chicago Tribun reported that he had-made state laws, such as "dewis physician have subjected Blacks will the AIDS virus." Daveen Lifin, KU Hillel director, said she knew of Cokely only from newspaper articles. "From what I understand," Lilwin said, "they are bringing him here as a motivator of Black pride and Black activism." He's not Semitic statements, which as far as I am know have not been retracted, are of concern to us. "I think it is important that we support Black unity and Black pride, but we are concerned that, even out in the very painful and hateful statements." Mark McCormick of Black Men of Today said, "If we really thought that he was anti-Semitic, we would not bring him." In a telephone interview yesterday, Cokely said that his comments in the Tribute were taken out of context. He said he made the comments while reading aloud the text of a student editorial that had misquoted him. "I read the article in full," Cokely said, "including the two names of the authors and the three quotes attributed to me. The article said that 'He was a black man who injected Blacks with the AIDS virus.' I was teaching the audience how white students react to a strong Black speaker." He said he told the audience that he had seen television and newspaper reports of South African and Israeli doctors who had infected African children with the disease in order to test a vaccine. Cokely said that eight months later, the Anti-Defamation League of B'nal B'rith, a U.S. Jewish service organization founded to combat anti-semitism, presented a transcript and tape of the speech to the Chicago police but edited out portions that attributed the statements $\emptyset$ the newspaper. He said the league brought the tapes to the mayor's attention after other attempts to discredit him had failed. He said they had checked earlier to learn whether he had a police record and whether he had made an inordinate amount of money. "It didn't start with the tapes; it ended with the tapes," he said. Cokely said the league was not acting in the best interest of Jews. "The Anti-Defamation League, which is a white hate organization, is stirring up racial hatred in the country," said the seriously hurting all Jewish people. Cokely said that because of greed and bigotry, he did not rule out the possibility of doctors doing such things somewhere. "Do I think that they could?" he said. "Damn right." Cokely said that whether he made the statements, the accusation acted as a conviction in many people's minds. McCormick agreed and said that repetition of the statements attributed to Cokely was due to the lack of information and minority reporters in newsrooms. All-nighters could get students a hospital room instead of an A Kansan staff writer By Steve Bailey Kansas staff writer Charles Vockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said sleep deprivation and large But lack of sleep and large amounts of caffeine can do extreme damage to the body during a time of stress. To avoid good shape, health advises adults. With finals starting next week, many KU students will spend excessive hours finishing projects and studying for exams. "Staying up all night a couple of times in a row could cause the body to break down and cause grand mal, epileptic-type seizures or very accelerated heart rates," he said. "We have seen some students who overdose on caffeine and come in with heart rates of between 160 and 180. That is very uncomfortable for the student." amounts of caffeine could have devastating acute and long-term effects on the body. Yockey said the immune system Yockey said there was no substitute for adequate daily sleep when triving to stay healthy. to bring to my memory. 'No one can get by with less than four hours of sleep a night for a very also tended to break down during periods of exhaustion, making the risk of catching bronchitis, mononucleosis or strep throat much greater. "It is always sad when we see students who are so sick that they cannot go and take the test they must up three night studying for," he said. Linda Keeler, coordinator of the Mental Health Clinic at Watkins, said depression also could be a problem during this time period. Keeler said that exams usually were not the direct cause of depression but that stress-related problems because of anxiety about exams could contribute to feelings of depression. long period of time," he said. "It becomes a potential problem when it starts to build up night after night." While studying for finals, health officials recommend that students take these measures to decrease the risk of becoming ill: - Get an adequate amount of sleep each night. At least eight hours is recommended. Do some sort of aerobic exercise on a daily basis. Exercise is a stimulant and helps the body relax and stay fit. Eat three moderate-size meals a day instead of eating only one enormous meal. Starving the body most of the day and then eating a large meal upsets the body's energy levels. - Keep caffeine intake to a minimum. Small amounts of caffeine do not harm the body, but larger amounts can cause periods of insomnia or an accelerated heart rate. TONITE Abzolut Model Search Semi-finals Come see: 12 of the HOTTEST Ladies compete in swimsuits and formalwear for over $3,000 in cash & prizes $2 Pitchers WED. BEACH PARTY swimsuit & tan competition Ladies--1st place $100 cash Men--1st place $50 cash Wear your swimsuit & get in free THURS. HEY LADIES... Experience 6 of K.C.'s bottest male dancers Doors open at 7. Show begins at 8. Men party at Sbarkey's during the performance. Last Ladies Nite of the school year. 25¢ Draws IZZAZI 901 Miss. 749-7511 & up admitted 4 Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Flag-burning again Old issue sees resurgence in Kansas Legislature as legislators jump on false political bandwagon Editor's note: Unlike the Kansas Legislature, the Kansas editorial board does not have time to rehash the flag-burning issue that was brought up again last week and has passed the House and Senate, both in special session, costing the taxpayers extra money. Consequently, the board has decided to rerun its flag-burning editorial, which appeared Sept. 15, 1989 and Feb. 27, 1990. ere they go again. ignites such a situation. There are better things to worry about. In case of billion-dollar budget deficits and the reappraisal issue, is this the only thing the legislature can find to do? Here they go again. It's time for someone to blow out the flame before this flag-burning issue ignites further. constitutional rights of symbols The representatives think that by voting for legislature, we educated public should get worried when our representatives jump on a bandwagon that promises to do little but ride straight over our constitutional rights of symbolic sneech. an anti-flag-mutilation bill they will be gaining votes when they run for re-election. If they think we want our rights to be restricted because of the recent flag-burning furor, so be it. But that kind of pandering to poorly thought-out public opinion deserves to be punished. issued. representative who votes for a bill or amendment that would restrict our rights to any kind of speech should be re-elected. Period. Granted, burning a flag may offend some people. That's the point of burning a flag. It may be immature, but it's symbolic speech and it's protected by the First Amendment. and it's proof A bunch of protesters may not have much better to do than set fire to a flag, but we should hope that our representatives in Topeka have more to worry about than what those protesters are doing. p. Maybe someday this issue will burn itself out. The editorial board Briefly stated Two home, six to go. One by one U.S hostages are being released by their Middle East captives. The hands-off policy in dealing with terrorists has proved to be the effective way in bringing home innocent citizens. Once all hostages are home, then the possibility of normal relations with Middle East nations can exist. It's time to stop paying attention to what Mark Creamer has to say. Last week Creamer was found guilty of possession of marijuana for a September incident in which he smoked a marjijuana cigarette at the Douglas County Judicial & Law Enforcement Building. He now has announced his candidacy for the U.S. Congress. He has generated much attention, but wise people should not support him. They give us 31 flavors, we send them years ten years out of style Sounds fair to me. BASKIN KOBBINS 31 FLAVORS Looks wasteful Recycling more important than Union aesthetics B because the bins for aluminum cans are not aesthetically pleasing,some people say, we should not worry about recycling. cling. According to officials at the Kansas Union, the two recycling bins in the Union, which some students did not know existed, are enough. If there were more, the Union, in its beauty, would be desecrated. Octavia O'Dea, a custodian in the Union, said she picked up nearly 100 empty aluminum cans a day. Obviously the two bright yellow bins in the TV room and the Jaybowl are not enough — at least not where they are. It will not be convenient to recycle in the near future. It will take a little effort. It may also take some not-so-authetic bins in places that aesthetes, such as James Long, director of the Unions, and Jeff Morris, former student body vice president, deem unpleasant. Recycling aluminum is just a small part of acting locally to save our environment. We should concentrate on the existing effort to recycle aluminum rather than invoking a sanctimonious defense of beauty and obstructing the efforts of those who care. Liz Hueben for the editorial board LETTERS to the EDITOR Reaction disturbs As a former KU civil rights activist during the 70s and a vice chairman of Lawrence Congress On Racial Equality (CORE) during 1964-65, I was somewhat dismayed by the strength of the reaction at the student where a student insulted a Black woman at a KU fraternity house. It brought to mind an incident from my past. in 1987, my parents and I moved to Port Arthur, Texas, which still maintained a segregated school system, and I enrolled in Thomas Jefferson High School as a sophomore. In September of that year, President Elaine McCain ordered Little Rock to enforce a desegregation order and the event galvanized racist elements in my school. During wood shop one day, I learned that a Black high school student was alleged to have insulted a white girl in the neighboring town of Orange. First reports were that he had called her names but the story soon escalated into a physical assault and eventually into attempted rape. By the next morning, talk was all over the school of the need to protect "our" women and wood shop began producing an ample supply of billy clubs on the wood latte. Groups of students congregated around cars after school and everybody laughed when someone fashioned a noose, which they tied to the front bumper of someone's 1949 Plymouth. Another student brought a pistol to school. The consensus was that something needed to be done. Fortunately, the affair blew over without trouble. Aside, from the race of the principals involved, the offense proved trivial, and there were no professional agitators about to keep it infiltrated; advancements in the law never over-ventured the experience was one that eventually led to my own commitment to the civil rights movement three years later. The issues that caught my attention at the time were the unfairness of applying a different standard to individuals because of their race and the sense of entitlement that comes from victimization. It has been my experience that most of the crimes committed by one person are, rightly or wrongly, "because of what they did to us." In small children this is expressed as, "He hit me first!" When I learned of the KU incident I was taken with the similarities of the two cases, and it really made me stop and think. Outrage, indignation and demand from a group of people were here forPerhaps we haven't come as far as I had thought, or perhaps we've gone full circle. There is an idea afoot today that racism is so terrible that no matter what it takes to uproot it, the ends justify the means. But there is a paradox when the means are merely another form of racism. What is eliminated is not racism, but only certain manifestations, a kind of counter-racism, if you will, which merely switches the places of victims and victimizers rather than bringing victimization itself to an end. to an end. George Bernard Shaw once said, "It is the deed that teaches, not the name we give it. Murder and capital punishment are not opposites that cancel one another, but similars, that, breed their own kind." I think this is true with all intolerant, crusading and moralizing movements against specific vitals. In the process of driving the demons of bigotry and prejudice from the land, it might be wise to drive them from their deepest soil to accept new seeds and abet yet another round of recriminations and persecution. The answer to extremism is not more extremism, but rather to show a better way. I thought we had learned that lesson. Laird Wilcox Former KU student Gay awareness Why do the activists in the gay community care about what the public thinks? Do they honestly think that most people actually care about gay peoples' sex lives? Or anyone else's for that matter? And why should anyone in this country be subjected to hearing about one special interest groups sex life? I really can't think of anything less appealing on foist my spirit upon on or expel those private life to the world. Who would care? It's only of interest to my partner and myself. No one else needs to know or be concerned. I don't believe that mature individuals, no matter that sexual orientation, need to nave public attention, or put on public displays of a sexual nature. Leave it at home. Can you imagine a parade of people holding banners proclaiming slugs of blatant heterosexuality? No one would show up! How about a Clothes If You're Straight Day? How anisine can you get? These activities mainly are an attempt by people who have an identity problem to get attention. I'm not homophobic, whatever that means, but I like the sound of it. It's a great buzz word like "liberally" or "conservative." Just because I simply couldn't care less who sleeps with whom doesn't mean I conduce homosexuality. don't, but it just isn't an issue. As a matter of fact, I believe most people consider it a non-issue, even more mature members of the gay community. It's not as gay people as a group are virgilege or financial downright. If they are, I might be inclined to listen. As it is, I am sick and tired of hearing a bunch of whinners complaining about how badly they are treated. What a bunch of crap. Quit wasting time and resources on such trivial matters as your personal life. If I want a soa opera, I'll watch TV. All the energy that is directed into making gay activism an issue could be concentrated on making life a little easier for those people with real problems. Starvation, homelessness and potable water are real issues in the U.S., but I guess that would require real commitment and desire to become a part of the solution and not one of the whinners. Lawrence Junior Ken Kirklin News staff Richard Breck...Editor Darllem Nieml...Managing editor Christopher R. Relston...nine editors Lina Miles...Planning editor Jamie Hearn...Editorial editor Candy Niemml...Campaign editor Mike Considine...Sports editor Kevin Blunk...Photo editor Stephen Kline...Graphics editor Kris Bergquist...Art/Features editor Nate Farnell...General manager, nine news adviser Margaret Townsend...Business manager Tami Rank...Retail sales manager Misey Miller...Consultant sales manager Kathy Stolie...Regional sales manager Mikla Lennart...National sales manager Mindy Morris...Co-op sales manager Nate Stamos...Production manager Mindi Lund...Associate production manager Martha Hanna...Marketing director James Glasenapp...Creative director Janet Norholm...Claimled manager Wendy Shirtts...Tearsheet managers Wendy Shirtts...Sales and marketing adviser Business staff Letter 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 written with the University of Kansas, please include class and homework, or from a Guest column should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will not send any comments. graphically. The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can also request to the Kansan newroom, 11th Stuffer-Fall Hint, Hall. Columns, columns and cartoons are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board. Other Voices Analysts are just getting down to reading all the fine print in the massive Clean Air bill. As one might expect, lawmakers have tucked in all kinds of perks or exemptions for species and species amendments are udderly a-moosing. Take, for example, the section on cow exemptions. Cows exempt (burp) from clean air bill Cows, like other creatures, generate stomach gas. They burp and make other noises because of that. Cows give the gas is released, it called methane. But farmers don't have to worry, because the U.S. Senate has wisely exempted cows and other farm animals from the requirements of the Clean Air Act. (No, we are not making this up.) Congressional Quarterly reports that the bill, as originally reported out of committee, required a study of various sources of methane, including farm animals, which supposedly are among the nation's largest producers of the gas. As the Senate debated the measure, cows were granted an exemption. The move drew sarcastic comments from Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who said without the exemption, cows would need catalytic converters to reduce emissions. It is funny, but it is also an example of how silly federal regulators can get sometimes. What if the study had found that cows do produce huge amounts of methane? What could we possibly do about it? Put them on a low-gas diet? Issue cow-sized antacids? Or, as Grassley suggested, maybe we could install gas collectors or pollution control units on the cows. This sort of silliness goes on too often in Washington, and it probably would be funnier if we weren't paying so much for it. From the Flint (Mich.) Journal, April 20. BY SCOTT PATTY HOW ALL GRADUATES SHOULD DRESS FOR THE WALK DOWN THE CAMCORDER TO REVIEW WHAT YOU DON'T REMEMBER THE NEXT DAY. WHAT YOU DON'T REFERENCE THE NEXT DAY. Fuzzy Dice SUNGLASSES TO HIDE WASTED LOOK AS YOU ENTER THE STADIUM. PARTY BALL* UMBRELLA (IT MIGHT RAIN) MIS. OREAD ALL LIFTS EMPTY 2 LITER FOR EMERGENCY URINATING DURING CEREMONY. (PLEASE RECAP AFTER USE. SOME-THING TO READ DURING BORING PARTS. - ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES ARE NOT ALLOWED ON STATE PROPERTY. (Also, DON'T FORGET - GRADUATION IS ON A SUNDAY - BUY YOUR BOOZE EARLY.) University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 5 2. Gretchen Pippenger/KANSAN NORTH SHORE Frost bitten Charles Glover, left, and Juan Ramos, facilities operations workers, cut down hedges in front of Watson Library. The hedges, which died in a late frost this spring, were being trimmed yesterday to encourage new growth. Body Continued from p. 1 "case." Lawrence Police Chief Ron Oln said. "Any time there is an unattended death it is treated as a homicide." At a press conference yesterday, Olin said a forensic patholist had been brought in from Atlanta to assist in the autopsy today. Kris Sperry, a forensic pathologist who also aided with the autopsy of Christopher Bread, will help gather forensic evidence, which Olin said would be crucial to the case. Olin said the body could not be identified with dental records because the teeth had no major work done on them. Instead, officials will try to obtain fingerprints from one band for identification purposes. could be available this afternoon, he said. Olin said 18 officers from the Lawrence Police Department, KU Police, Douglas County Sheriffs Department, Santa Fe Railway police and the Ottawa Department of Public Safety were involved in the investigation. Information from the autopsy Hostage them in captivity. However, Reed referred to we while describing the conditions of his captivity. "We had adequate fresh food, and the opportunity to bath and shower, and given clean clothes," he said. Continued from p. 1 Asked earlier on TV what captivity was like, he replied, "It was lonely. It was boring . . . I'm very happy to be free . . . and I hope my fellow hostages will be freed very soon." taken. The bottom line was, I was an American." "No one ever said why I was He told the briefing that although he was fed well and had warm clothing, "I was not very happy, of course." Reed spoke haltingly at times, his eyes downcast. "I haven't talked much" as a hostage, he explained. "We don't know what basic orms I have in my body." He said he did not hold the Lebanese people responsible for his ordeal, and that "I want, to thank the Syrian government for all their efforts in helping me become a free man." He said he was blindfolded 24 hours a day during much of his captivity. He had an opportunity to bathe, Reed reported, and was offered the chance to watch TV occu- pations for newscasts — but he refused. Family Continued from p. 1 "I feel odd that my blindfold is not here," he said, touching his face. "I haven't been able to cry for four years," Sprague said. "Now I can be sorry and say, 'Thank God.'" Langston said, "I can't believe it's finally over. It's been a long hall. We'vehellied." Said Edward Reed, Reed's brother, "It's a great day, I feel wonderful." Peggy Say, whose brother, Terry Anderson of The Associated Press, is the longest-held hostage, left a message on the answering machine at her home in Cadiz, Ky., saying she was praying "that Frank Reed comes out and that the rest of the hostages follow shortly." A picture and an unsigned statement were delivered Sunday to a newspaper in Lebanon saying Reed would be freed within 48 hours. The same statement and another picture also were sent to a Western news agency. Dean Continued from p. 1 started working for Pizza Shuttle in early March to earn money. Better wages drew her to Yello Sub shortly after the incident at SAE, and she now delivers sandwiches out of her 1962 Volkswagen Rabbit. Delivery work brings tips and commission, she said. "I just go to school and work," Dean said. She still does, but during the past few weeks Dean has faced added responsibilities. She has met with police, the Douglas County district attorney, a U.S. district court judge and attorneys and the media. It has been a trying month. Gannon said, “It’s been tough on anm. She’s just one person. We’ve been trying to calm her down and keep her head on straight so she doesn’t lose what she has been working for. so she doesn't forget where she is.” Throughout the entire ordeal, Dean has stood her ground. She said she still intended, as she had from the beginning, to pursue a case against Willenborg with the county and with the University. "I saw the look in her eyes. She wasn't just upset about some guy who was a jerk to her. Obviously, it was something that was really bad," said Ruth, who was the SAE member. "I've never really doubted her story." John Ruth ran downstairs from the third floor of the SAE house early in the morning on March 30 and saw his friend Dean Dean rush out of the fraternity's back door. "I haven't changed my mind," Dean said. "I haven't changed my mind about this since it happened at 2 a.m. that night." Sympathy Abounds Ruth, who met Dean last year, said four or five members of the fraternity had backed Dean from the beginning. Others were sympathetic to her cause. At first, a lot or people felt defensive because the whole house was being blamed for an individual's action," he said. "But as time goes by, people are starting to feel sorry for her." Dean said she did not blame the SAE house. She just wants Willemborr to be unhumbled. But through it all, Dean has no regrets. She said it was a shame that it took the incident at SAE to raise awareness about KU's racial problems. She was wrong in her statement's steps to improve the campus racial climate. "Obviously, things like this have been happening here. It's caused a lot of tension," she said. "Now there's another incident, and people are sick of it and are speaking out. This has been waiting to boil over." Life is starting to return to normal for Dean. The phone is not ringing as often. Her final will be past in two weeks, and she is looking forward to a quiet summer in Lawrence, going to school and working. "He completely humiliated my person and treated me like I wasn't even a human being," she said. "He insulted and embarrassed me. The fact that he called me a racist name just added to it." Dean's feelings do not surprise Gannon. wollen person who lights for what is right, and that's really shining through now," she said. Ruth察须 the public and said that outside pressure from the public and the press had not influenced her decisions. "It's been Ann the whole time," he said. Dean just happened to be in the fraternity hallway where the boiling point was reached. "This IBM PS/2 is a lot easier to use than that vacuum you sent me!" How're you going to do it? Even in an untidy room, you can turn out some neat work on an IBM Personal System/2.² With its preloaded software, IBM Mouse and color displays, it easy to learn and fun to use. TURN it on and it's ready to go. of unfinished reports, papers and other assignments in short order. And add some impressive graphics for the finishing touch. No time wasted installing programs. Polish off a pile You're entitled to a special student price and you can pay it off in affordable installments with the PS/2* Loan for Learning*. Get more work done in less time and you may even have enough time to clean your room. PS/2 it! PASCAL PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE FOR EACH CHARACTER IN A LIST A COMPUTER IS USED TO ADDRESS THESE LIST CARDS. Come by Computerland for a free PS/2 demo Computerland 2428 Iowa 841-4611 | 序号 | 姓名 | 性别 | 年龄 | 国籍 | 职业 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 1 | 李明 | 男 | 35 | 中国 | 教师 | | 2 | 张晓燕 | 女 | 38 | 美国 | 设计师 | | 3 | 陈丽萍 | 女 | 40 | 中国 | 美术教师 | | 4 | 王敏 | 女 | 42 | 中国 | 英语教师 | | 5 | 赵欣怡 | 女 | 44 | 中国 | 书法老师 | | 6 | 刘洋 | 男 | 46 | 韩国 | 音乐教师 | | 7 | 杨雪 | 女 | 48 | 中国 | 舞蹈教师 | | 8 | 吴晓雨 | 女 | 50 | 中国 | 摄影师 | | 9 | 赵婷 | 女 | 52 | 中国 | 美术馆导览员 | | 10 | 顾颖 | 女 | 54 | 中国 | 图书馆管理员 | | 11 | 黄晓英 | 女 | 56 | 中国 | 电商运营师 | | 12 | 彭静 | 女 | 58 | 中国 | 软件开发工程师 | | 13 | 欧阳文慧 | 女 | 60 | 中国 | 翻译专业人士 | *This offer is available only to qualified students, faculty and staff, whose purchase IBM PS/2 through participating campus outlets. Orders are subject to availability Prices are subject to change and IBM may withhold the offer at any time without written notice. IBM Personal System 2 and IBM are registered trademarks of international Business Machines Corporation. 27. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUAK THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Free Finals Films Co-Sponsored by STUDENT SENATE What's slower than a gymnasium? A table to hit tall buildings at a single bound? Thank God it's only a motion picture! KIDDYLANDS "BRANDO IS SENSATIONAL" - Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE A DRY WHITE SEASON. "BRANDO IS SENSATIONAL" - Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE Saturday, May 12 4:00 pm & 7:00 pm PACIFIC AIRLINES TOM HANKS TURNER & HOOCH PC TV network plc Tuesday, May 8 Wednesday, May 9 4:00 pm & 7:00 pm Thursday, May 10 Friday, May 11 4:00 pm & 7:00 pm Stella Bette Midler, John Goodman Touchstone; Directed by John Erman A DRY WHITE SEASON Monday, May 14 Tuesday, May 15 4:00 pm & 7:00 pm ST. ELMOS FIRE Wednesday, May 16 Thursday, May 17 4:00 pm & 7:00 pm Woodruff Auditorium CALL 864-SHOW! KU's line to entertainment 6 Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Mac Mania Is Here! Mac Mania Pac I Macintosh Plus CMS 20MB Hard Drive Imagewriter II Printer $1,699.00 Mac Mania Pac III Macintosh SE 1-800K Drive 40MB (2MB RAM) Standard Keyboard Imagewriter II Printer Carrying Case & Accessories* $2,999.00 Mac Mania Pac II Macintosh SE 20MB (1.4 MB Super Drive) Standard Keyboard Imagewriter II Printer $2,299.00 Mac Mania Pac IV Macintosh SE/30 80 MB Hard Drive (4MB RAM) Standard Keyboard Imagewriter II Printer WINGZ $3,999.00 Mac Mania Extras Extended Keyboard $149.00 CMS 20MB Hard Drive $399.00 CMS 45MB Hard Drive $599.00 Carrying Case & Accessories $149.00 *Accessories include: Delux SE bag, Curtis SP-3 Safestrip, Sony DSDD discs, Mousetrak Mousepad, Kensington dustcover, Imagewriter ribbon, Kensington printer dustcover, printer stand, Curtis clip, and computer paper-200 ct. Priced good while existing quantities last. Offer open only to students enrolled in six or more credit hours of course work, full-time faculty members, or full-time staff who are directly involved in the administration, delivery, or support of the academic mission of the University of Kansas, Lawrence campus. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases. Please add on 4.75% sales tax. Offer expires May 17, 1990. Take the Mac Challenge. Winning is easy with Mac on your side! Burge Union 864-5697 Macintosh* Apple. The power to do your best at KU © 1989 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. KU KU BOOKSTORIES JOHN SCHLAFERT Gretchen Pippenger/KANSAN | | | | | | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 8 | البنك السعودي | A | Burbank | 0.5500 | 0.5424 | 0.5792 | 0.6000 | 0.6212 | Spring strings Robert Hensley, Bartleville, Okla., sophomore, practices the bass in Murphy Hall. Hensley was one of many music students practicing yesterday for semester-end juried performances. Tonight! $1 Pitchers & 25¢ Shots Smith & Wessons 18 & Up Admitted 623 Vermont 843-0689 Slightly Older Americans for Freedom presents [Image of a man raising his hand with an open palm]. William M. Kunstler Civil Rights Activist, Attorney and Author "The Rise and Fall of the Bill of Rights" Tuesday, May 1, 1990 8:00 p.m. Ballroom, Kansas Union Free and open to the public Paid for by Student Senate and SOAF Nation/World University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 7 NASA repairs telescope investigates malfunction The Associated Press GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER, Md. — NASA engineers got the $1.5 billion Hubble Space Telescope working again yesterday after freeing a movable telescope and jammed after brushing against an electrical cable. "We are still investigating it to understand how this really happen, why did it happen, why didn't we catch it?" said Jean Olivier, one of the top NASA officials on the project. "We're not through with that investigation." By this evening, the telescope should be in a condition where calibration and other normal start-up work can begin, said Mike Harrington, director of the troubleshooting team. The antenna jammed Friday when engineers were running it through its paces. Sensing something wrong and trying to prevent damage, the telescope's computer shut down the whole system. The telescope's two high-frequency antennas worked together, two orbiting relay satellites at high speeds — up to the equivalent of transmitting a 30-value encyclopedia in 42 "For a while we were puzzled as to the data we were receiving from the spacecraft and therefore lacked a clear understanding physically of what the problem was with the high gains." Olivier said. "All that has significance." minutes. Detective work by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and its contractor teams led to an investigation. While studying pre-launch photographs of the telescope nested in the cargo bay of space shuttle Discovery, an engineer noticed that an inch-thick electrical cable on the back of the antenna was slightly out of position. Olivier said the length of the cable was determined by computer simulations and turned out to be an inch or so too long. The antenna movement could not be tested on the same equipment, but it is enough to move the antenna in the presence of gravity. "We determined that there was a proper motion that we should carry this antenna through to bring it carefully away, in the right direction so it wouldn't upset the control system," Olivier said. Former HUD official disputes Pierce WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration's Department of Housing and Urban Development was a "domestic political machine" under Samuel R. Pierce Jr., handing out grants to the well-connected, a long-time donor later joined bribery told a House subcommittee yesterday. Dubois L. Gilliam, a former deputy assistant secretary under Pierce, also disputed the former housing department's decision to decide who received federal grants. Pierce himself ordered federal grants in some cases, Gilliam said. He linked the Reagan White House to the HUD controversy in at least one specific instance, saying the administration ordered federal money for a New Mexico project that had encountered problems. "We dealt strictly with politics," he told the panel, which has spent more than a year investigating allegations of fraud, mismanagement, influence pedding and political favoritism at HUD. "During the period I was there . . the department of Housing and Urban Development was the best domestic political machine I have ever seen." Gilliam said. Gilliam's testimony was the first the panel has heard from a former top HUD insider about Pierce's eight years as secretary. Pierce testified before the panel in May 1989, later invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination to avoid further testimony. Three former top aides also refused to testify. Latvians rally nation to follow Lithuanian lead MOSCOW — A Latvian citizen's group claiming to represent hundreds of thousands of Latvians demanded yesterday that the republic renounce its international declaration independence from the Soviet Union, a spokesman said. The Associated Press In Lithuania, residents prepared a martyr's farewell yesterday for a man who burned himself to death last week to protest the Kremlin's efforts to end Lithuania's independence drive. The Latvian spokesman, 'voicing sentiments identical to those heard in Lithuania, said, "This is an occupied country," he added. "We are here, under an occupying army." The Latviian Citizens' Congress, elected mainly from among ethnic Latvians, convened yesterday and called for restoration of Latvian independence, spokesman Iveeta Buchela said. Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia were independent countries between World War I and World War II but were forced annexed by the Soviet Union. Ethnic Latvians make up just more than half of Latvia's population of 2.7 million, and a poll published yesterday by the Soviet government newspaper Izvesta reported that 92 per cent of Latvians are Non-Latvin residents make up 46 percent of the republic, and 45 percent were for independence. The Latvian congress claims the right to replace the republic's Supreme Soviet SAVINGS RATE RISES: U.S. residents' savings rate roses to 5.8 percent of their disposable income in March as consumer spending the increase in personal income, the government reported yesterday. Nation/World briefs But analysts cited rising prices for the subdued spending and not consumer intent to increase their savings rate. Consumer spending totaled a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $3.66 trillion, slowing to a 0.4 percent gain after a 0.6 percent advance in February, the Commerce Department reported. It was the lowest since a 0.3 percent increase in October. The department reported that personal incomes grew 0.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $4.67 trillion on top of 0.8 percent jumps in both January and February. The department were reported to have been 0.7 percent in January and 0.9 percent in February. Former President Constantine Caramanis, who has the support of the governing New Democracy to be elected to a five-year term. **GREEK ELECTION:** The Greek Parliament failed to elect a new president yesterday when none of the three candidates received the required three-fifths majority of votes. In the first round of voting, Caramanis received 149 of the 294 votes cast. He needed 180 votes in the 300-member Parliament to win election to the largely ceremonial post. Yannis Alevras, the candidate of the opposition Panhellenic Socialist Movement, or PASOK, received 123 votes, and the Communists' candidate, Constantine Giorgioulis, got 21 votes. One deputy obtained, and six were absent. BOMB KILLS FOUR: A bomb exploded on a crowded bus on the outskirts of New Delhi last night, killing four people and seriously injuring 28, the United News of India reported. ronce suspected the bomb was planted by Silkh extremists, the news agency stated. United News said that about 60 people were aboard the bus when the bomb went off at 7:40 p.m. The news agency reported that the bomb was planted in the rear of the bus. It was the third attack on a bus in the Indian capital in less than three weeks. U. S. RESUMES RELATIONS: The United States and the leftist government of South Yemen resumed diplomatic relations yesterday after a break of nearly 21 years. South Yemen has had close ties with the Soviet Union and is the only Arab nation that has pursued Marxist policies. It also has been accused by the United States of engaging in state-sponsored terrorism. South Yemen continues to be on a U.S. list of countries that engage in international terrorism because terrorist organizations have been allowed to maintain operations there and South Yemen officials have provided refuge for airline hijackers. NOTICE A panel of KU students, faculty, and staff is currently reviewing the Kansas Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The review is focused on evaluaton of attitudes and behaviors that reflect the chapter level of awareness and sensitivity to cultural, racial and gender differences. We want to hear from you (faculty/staff/students) in writing if you have positive, negative or neutral firsthand experience(s) with the SAE's in these matters. Please include: - a description of the situation date, time place, title of the event (if any) name of persons involved - a description of the impact the situation had on you - your name-printed and signed your address and phone number (so we can contact you for clarification) Address your letter to: SAE Review Panel c/o Dean of Student Life 216 Strong Hall Lawrence, KS 66045 All comments will be held as STRICTLY confidential by the panel. We must hear from you by Friday, May 11th. Thank you in advance for your thoughtful participation in this important process. MUSEUM GIFT SHOP Museum of Anthropology University of Kansas Monday-Saturday 9-5 禾 Sunday 1-5 SIDEWALK SALE MAY 1 & 2 LAKE FOREST COLLEGE COURSES IN Summer Session 1990 June 7 - July 27 ART ENGLISH HISTORY RELIGION FOREIGN CIVILIZATION EDUCATION PSYCHOLOGY SOCIOLOGY & ANTHROPOLOGY THEATRE All courses carry four semester hours credits For information: SUMMER SESSION OFFICE LAKE FOREST COLLEGE 234-3100 EXT. 240 LAKE FOREST COLLEGE is accredited by the NORTH CENTRAL ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS LAKE FOREST COLLEGE Equal opportunity institution SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT FROM THE STUDENT SENATE MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE JFK-MESSAGE TO CONGRESS ON A PROPOSED CIVIL RIGHTS BILL JUNE 4,1963 "NO ONE HAS BEEN BARRED ON ACCOUNT OF HIS RACE FROM FIGHTING OR DYING FOR AMERICA - THERE ARE NO "WHITE" OR "COLORED" SIGNS ON THE FOXHOLES OR GRAVEYARDS OF BATTLE." EATS 1100 MADE LAWRENCE, KAMLA8 TARTY, TONGS, TREASURE, THIRTS TINPANALLEY There's money to be made by stuffing inserts for the University Daily Kansan Call M1ke at 864-4358 between 9a.m.-5p.m. at Don's Steak House Groups and individuals welcome to call. Tuesday All you can eat ribs. "The best food in town." Take a Little Ribbing "The best food in town." 2176 E 23rd St. 843-1116 2176 E 23rd St. 843-1110 Bottleneck ... TONIGHT from Boulder The Samples With Very Special Guest Bagdad Jones Don't Miss This Great Show! WED. MAY 2 Kelly Girls Magic Nose THURS. MAY 3 Sons of Rex Don't Forget. 50 Draws! Coming Attractions: May 15th The Neighborhoods 16th Killbilly 17th National People's Gang 18th Bone Daddies 19th The Paladins 8 Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Summer Storage Free pick-up and delivery. Lock and Key Summer Storage 843-8806 642 Mass. LIBERTY HAIL 749- 1912 Cinema Paradiso 5:15 8:15 Cinema Paradiso 5:15, 8:15 Mystery Train 5:45, 8:45 Rudy's Taste the Rudy's Difference Old Fashioned handmade crust and spicey wine sauce. 749-0055 620 W. 12th (Behind the Crossing) Dickinson 39PRIME-TIMER WEEK V JSR CITY ANYTIME Dickinson Phone: 840-722-6561 Daley Stares PRETTY WOMAN R (4) 12:30-7:00 8:40 THE HUNT FOR REDEMONISHING PG (4) 11:44 10:00 THE GUARDIAN R (4) 12:30-7:00 TEENAGE MUTANT TURTLES PGS (4) Dalby Stars SPACED INVADERS PG (5'05") 7:90-30 Dalby Stars O AND A R (4'25) 7:90-45 Call 841-6800 for Weekend Shows and Times VARSITY 1015 MASS 843-1085 UNITED/KIKISTI Miami Blues (RI) EVE, 7:30 8:30 FRI. 5:00 SAT, SUN. 12:30 HILLCREST 9TH & IDWA 842-8400 HILLCREST 9TH & IOWA Steel Magnitudes (PS1.3) Love You to Death (R) First Power (R) Driving Miss Daisy (PG5) Crazy People (R) CINEMA TWIN SEATS 51.00 31ST & IDWA 842-6400 All Seats $1.00 Lord of the Files (R) EVT, 7:40 SAT, DAY, BJS (2:35) Stella (PG13) EVT, 7:40 SAT, DAY, BJS (2:35) BARGAIN MATINEES KIDS SR CITIZENS $3 RM SNOWTIMES FOR TODAY ONLY MOVIE LINE 1-51-191 Mr. Steak 920 W. 23 841-3454 Open 11-9 Sun-Thur 11-10 Fri, Sat Free Steak Dinner on Your Birthday You must be 16 years or older and come in after 4 pn on your birthday. 3. 50 Lunch Special Mon-Sat 11-4 SUMMER SUBLEASE 2 Bedroom/2 Bath New Carpet & Appliances Mini-Blinds & Central Air Volleyball & Pool 843-6446 $375 SouthPointe Apartments 2166 W.26th SHOWING TUES. & WED. @ 7 PM IN THE WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM TICKETS JUST $2.00/ SUA SPEETRUMFILMS The Dark Command A Republic Picture 50 YEARS AGO, The Dark Command! PREMIEREED IN LAWRENCE, KANS. SEE IT HERE NOW! Yes We Make Loans! 1000 "Quickest loan I ever received." KU Student First National has earned a reputation for fast, friendly service on PLUS, SLS and Stafford Loans. Ask Carol Wirthman and her Staff to explain the many options available to students today. Call 865-0278 M Ninth & Massachusetts Motor Bank, Ninth & Tennessee South Bank, 1807 West 23rd 865-0200 First National A MidAmerican Bank Member FDIC • Equal Opportunity Lender • Lender ID #804609 Sequera Costa, professor of piano, will play with the orchestra on May 13 in Moscow before touring as a soloist in July. PHENIX TO TOUR EUROPE: A University of Kansas professor will tour Europe this summer with the Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra. In the fall, Costa will record the cycle of 32 Beethoven sonatas for Portuguese television. Costa also will judge two piano performance competitions during his stay in Europe. He will be a guest of a high school competition, the Soviet Union. KU RECEIVES DONATIONS: The University of Kansas has received a $1 million pledge to endow the first distinguished economics professorship in KU history. Charles Oswald, of Edina, Minn., said yesterday that he made the contribution to acknowledge his appreciation to the University. Local Briefs Oswald said that he earned his KU economics degree in 1951 and that he was grateful to the University for the education he received. Oswald is the chief operating officer of National Computer Systems, a manufacturer of scanners for educational test forms. The association also announced yesterday that the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Wichita would receive a $250,000 gift. John Scariffe, director of public relations for the Kansas University Endowment Association, confirmed Oswald's donation. HCA Wiesen Medical Center in Wichita honored department chairman Daniel Roberts with the gift, Scarfe said. The gift will establish a professorship in the department of obstetrics and gynecology. roberts also is a professor of pathology in the school and chief of obstetrics and gynecology at HCA Wesley. Both gifts will be counted toward Campaign Kansas, KU's $177 million, five-year raise raising. ours to the campaign, which is in its second year, total about $164.6 million. GOAL POST DEMOLISHED: The south goat post at Memorial Stadium was knocked down during the weekend, causing $500 damage, KU police reported. Darren Cook, facilities supervisor for the Athletic Department, reported the damage about 11 a.m. Saturday after he saw that the post was bent over. It later was knocked down during a game Day on the Hill concert. He said the vandalism was not unusual. "It's a common prank on Fridays and Saturdays." Cook said. He said the post was in bad condition because it had been broken many times and welded back together. He said it typically was knocked down five or six times a year. The goal has not been re-welded yet, Cook said. The University soon will have to pay for new goal posts when new NCAA football regulations require the width between the posts to decrease about 6 feet. The distance between the posts now is about 24 feet. LOCAL RECYCLING SERVICES: A motor oil recycling service and a recycling information phone number have been made available to the Lawrence public, said Patrick Marvin. Lawrence recycling coordinated vill. residents can take motor oil from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mondays and Fridays to the northeast corner of the city maintenance garage, 1141 Haskell Ave, Marvin said. The city has recycled oil from city equipment at the garage for years. The regulation takes effect for the 1990 football season. The city is paying two services, a fuel service and a motor oil service, to haul away the oil. Marvin said the service was not very expensive to the city. Marvin said motor oil recycling for the public would help keep oil out of landfills and benefit the environment. "There needed to be a public place to take motor oil," she said. "Some people pour it on their lawns to kill weeds. It is a pollutant. It can get into the sewer system." The recycling information number, 841-0811, is a recording that lists recycling services in Lawrence. It will be updated regularly, Marvin said. KU EMPLOYEE HOSPITALIZED: A University research consultant was in fair condition yesterday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital after suffering convulsions in Fraser Hall. Jay Awater, 40, was taken to the hospital after KU police and Douglas County paramedics treated him for convulsions in 442 Frasee. Sgt. Schuyler Bailey of the KU police said Atwater had an unknown type of convulsion about 9:30 a.m. Atwater reportedly was speaking with a student when he suffered the convulsion. Susan Embretson, professor of psychology, said she came to her office in 41 Fraser about 9:40 a.m. and saw police treat the unconscious victim. Paramedics later arrived and administered advanced life support before transporting Atwater to the hospital. Embrison said Atwater regained consciousness during the emergency procedures. Atwater is a statistics lab consultant, said Ed Martin, professor of psychology. He helps students with statistical data in their classes. FOUR RECEIVE HONORS: Four people this year will receive Distinguished Service Citations, the highest honor conferred by the University of Kansas. Three alumni and an advocate for children and people with disabilities will receive the citations May 19 at the all-University supper, said Janice Moore, representative of the University of Kansas Alumni Association. The citations, presented by the University and the Alumni Association, recognize distinguished careers and service to humanity. The men and women who earned tions this year were: citations this year were: **Mariana Beach of Hayes.** In 1989, she and her husband, Ross Beach, endowed the KU Beach Center for Families and Disability, the only federally financed research and training center on families and disability in the nation. She is honorary life president of the Inter-American Children's Institute, the official agency of the Organization of American States dealing with problems of children, youth and families in the Americas. Lacie Blurford of Kansas City, Mo. She is editor and publisher of the Kansas City Call, a newspaper that focuses on civil rights issues. She serves on the NAACP national board and its Kansas City executive board. In 1932, she became the second Black to graduate in journalism from KU. William Grant of Kansas City, Mo. He is a 1999 KU graduate and chairman of the BMA Corp., a life, health and reinsurance company. He is director of Boatman's First National Bank and a member of the President's Council of the Memorial Shaun-Kettering Cancer Center. John Stewart III of Wellington. Stewart is a 1958 KU graduate and president and chief executive of Pleiss Aeroy Precision Corp. He owns Stewart Production and Stewart Properties, a real estate, banking, farming and investment company. He is the director of First Bancorp and the chairman of First National Bank of Medford and Caldwell State Bank. He is chairman of the Kansas University Endowment Association board of trustees. MED CENTER GETS GIFT: A $339,000 gift from an anonymous couple will provide scholarships for nursing students at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Eleanor Sullivan, dean of nursing, said the school never before had received a substantial gift of any kind. The gift, donated by a couple who said they had received excellent nursing care at the Med Center, will establish a fund at the Kansas University Endowment Association to support nursing students, In Fall 1989, the School of Nursing received $25,000 for a teaching professorship, but Sullivan said that amount in no way compared with the generosity or the size of the new donation. "We are thrilled to receive this gift, which will allow us to offer scholarships to students committed to an education in nursing." Sullivan said. "The donor asked that the money go to our schools and had some sort of financial need. Practically all of our students fit into that category." Shae said the gift would help recruit nurses to aid the Med Center during the nursing shortage. "Our efforts to combat the nursing shortage depend on public awareness and public knowledge," she said. "Publicity of this will encourage students to take action for career opportunities that there are opportunities for scholarships available." kid, she. YOST WON'T BE CANDIDATE: State Sen. Eric Yost, R-Wichita, announced yesterday that he was withdrawing his name from the list of possible gubernatorial candidates. Sullivan said she hoped the gift would entice others to establish funds for the School of Nursing. pardon me. Yost, vice president of the Senate, said he withdrew because he knew he could not win the election. "We hope that others will realize that the School of Nursing has needs and will benefit from gifts of this kind." she said. "I felt like this is not a year when any member of the Legislature can get elected governor," he said. "I believe this is the year of the outsider." Yost said early in the 1990 session, that he was going to explore his chances for election to the office, but he never officially declared his candidacy. Uyst said he would support the Republican nominee for governor in the November election. Frank Ybarra, deputy press secretary for Gov. Mike Hayden, said the governor was not concerned about Yost's activities. tbarra said the governor and his staff thought Yost was just launching a trial balloon to see whether he had any support. "The answer was no." Ybarra said. "A lot of people expressed to him that they would not be supportive of any member of the Legislature running for governor." NEW OFFICERS ELECTED: New officers for the All-Scholarship Hall Council are: Cindy Snyder, president; Greg Eastman, vice president; Eric Levitt, treasurer; and Sha Schwartz, secretary. The officers will take office immediately; Schwartz said. Panhellenic also elected new officers for Fall 1990. The officers will take office September 1. New officers are: Lisa Garnoy president; Sarah Zavett, vice president for membership; Kim Madsen vice president for sorority affairs; Sarah Gaigls, vice president relation; Liations; vice president affairs; and Amy McClure, vice president for administrative affairs. The ESC. 843-06111 732 Mass. --- Ray-Kan Awarded by BAUCH & LORIS the world's largest surgeon. SIDEWALK SALE! Head to the Kansas or Burge Union to grab some Super Sidewalk Sale savings. This event comes only once a year and there's good reason for that. The savings are so incredible that you just can't pass them up. In front of the Kansas and Burge Unions May 1 & 2, from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. You'll find us here with quality merchandise courteous service and super savings. all for you. KU KU BOOKSTORES University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 9 Soviets admit to losing plane in downing of U-2 The Associated Press MOSCOW — The Soviet army newspaper disclosed for the first time Sunday that when the Russians shot down a U.S. spy plane 30 years ago they also destroyed one of their fighters that was pursuing the U.S. The U.S. piloted by Francis Gary Powers, was shot down May 1, 1960, disrupting a summit meeting 19 days later in Paris between President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Soviet leader Nikita K. Shrushchev and forcing the cancellation of another summit planned for later that year. Red Star, the Soviet army newspaper, reported that the Soviets lost a MIG-19 and its pilot in the operation. The paper also disclosed for the first time that the Soviets sent up a new fighter plane and ordered its pilot to ram the U-2 in a suicide mission. The new fighter reached the U-2's altitude but failed to ram it. The article, published three days before May Day festivities, may have been intended to remind Soviet readers that U.S. actions have damaged superpower ties in the past. In recent days, Soviet officials have warned that relations might suffer if the US invades Russia or Moscow in retaliation for its crackdown on the Baltic republic of Lithuania. Red Star said that Khruschev was at lenin Le's Mausoleum on Red Square watching the May Day parade when he learned that a new model Soviet SA-2 surface-to-air missile had brought down the U-2. The commander of the Soviet air defense forces, Marshal Sirgei Biryuzov, climbed the mausoleum "carrying happy news, that the plane had been hit by the first rocket," the article stated. "And 'Krushevach, standing right there on the tribune, congratulated the marshal." Khrushchev, in memorials smuggled to the West and published in 1974, wrote that diplomats watching the parade knew something big had happened because Biryuzov wore a duty uniform rather than the parade dress worn by the other military officers in Red Square. Soviets hurrying to the May Day parade in the Ural Mountain city of Sverdlovsk saw a far different sight, what appeared to be fireworks high in the air, stated the article, signed by a Col. A. Dokuhayev. The fiery debris was not fireworks, but a Soviet MIG-19 that was hit by the same type of missile that exploded behind Powers' U-2 and damaged it, Red Star reported in the media. The version of the Soviet military action. Powers' mission began in Pakistan and was to have carried him over Sverdlovsk for a landing in Norway. He used neither the automatic destruction device nor a poison pin he had been given in case the mission failed, and he was captured at a collective farm near Sverdlovsk. He was held for three years, his former employer, Sphyra spy Rudolph Abel. Powers published his memoirs in 1970. The Soviet article disclosed for the first time that the Soviets had ordered a new model Sukho-9 fighter to pursue the U-2 in an unsuccessful ramming attempt. The Su-9 was unarmed but was able reach nearly to the 70,000 feet at which the U-2 operated, the report stated. MIG-19's, which were not capable of flying that high. The pilot of one MIG-18, Boris Ivazyan, reported to ground control that the debris from the U-2 was actually that from an SA-2 that had missed the U-2, prompting the ground battery to fire another. The next Soviet missile struck the MIG-19 flown by Sergei Safronov, 30, who was killed. He was one of 21 Soviets given medals for their role in bringing down Powers, and the Red Star article disclosed for the first time that he was honored posthumously. The Soviets also scrambled two Ivazyan survived and later married Safronov's widow. U. S. accounts say that the decision to send Powers was controversial within the Eisenhower administration. The Soviets had failed to shoot down a U-2 over the same area April 9, and some within the administra- cured that sending another mission would seopardize U.S.-Soviet relations. The U-2 incident ended a thaw in U.S.-Soviet relations and was followed by some of the worst moments of the Cold War: the Bay of Pigs landing of U.S.-backed forces in Cuba in January 1961, the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, and the Cuban missile crisis in October 1962. U. S. author James Oberg, in his book, "Uncovering Soviet Dissasters," wrote that two unanswered questions of the U-2 incident were why a U.S. spy plane penetrated so deeply into Russia, and why the Soviets had their latest anti-aircraft missile 1,000 miles within their own borders, protecting Sverdlovsk. 1983/07/24 Keith Thorpe/KANSAN Weird science David Dunshee or Ft. Scott, an employee for the Center for Drug Delivery Research, works with a rotary evaporator used for the distilling of solvents. As part of the pharmacology department, Dunshee worked yesterday with a process of purifying compounds for drug research. Court provides leverage to break up mergers The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court gave state governments and consumers a potential pocket-book victory yesterday, saying they may use federal antitrust law to try to break up corporate The unanimous decision allows California officials to challenge a $2.5 billion merger of the Lucky and Alba Beta supermarket chains. If the state wins its lawsuit and splits up the business deal, officials said California consumers could save $444 million a year in grocery bills. Justice John Paul Stevens, writing for the court, said any attack on a merger, not just the federal government, had the right to sue to force divestiture of merged businesses. The ruling, however, does not give states and individuals the same sweeping power enjoyed by the federal government. Stevens said federal officials could force divestiture merely by proving an antitrust violation but said, "A private litigant . . . must prove his claim of malfeasance to his own interests in order to obtain relief." The decision sends the supermarket merger case back to lower courts where the state will try to reverse the decision. Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, in a separate concurring opinion, said the California attorney general's office still faced some hurdles at trial. The state knew of the impending supermarket merger in early 1988 but waited months before it sued, he said. Kennedy said the Federal Trade Commission had permitted the merger and that the breakup would meet labor agreements and other matter "These considerations should bear upon the ultimate disposition of the case." he said. It was widely assumed before yesterday's decision that states and private citizens could prevent anti-competitive business combinations but could not interfere once such deals were completed. But Stevens said the Clayton Act, passed in 1914 when Congress was preoccupied with trust-busting on a national scale, could be used as a weapon even against a completed merger. Alpha Beta's parent company, American Stores, acquired Lucky in June 1988 to merge the two companies. Lucky has 1,500 stores in 40 states, and Lucky's operations are in seven Western and Midwestern states. State Senate adopts resolution against flag, cross desecration The Associated Press TOPEKA — Without debate, the Senate adopted a resolution yesterday urging Congress to submit a constitutional amendment that would make the desecration of the U.S. flag or religious symbols a crime and now returns to the House for consideration of a Senate amendment. The Senate took only a couple of minutes to consider the flag-cross desecration resolution, which has no effect other than expressing the w i l l o f t h e Legislature, before approving it, 36-1. The House took two hours last week to debate the resolution, triggering a heated discussion about whether the proposed amendment would unduly limit freedom of speech. The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee had amended it to add desecration of the cross. COME CELEBRATE CINCO DE MAYO AND OUR ANNIVERSARY 10TH ANNIVERSARY THIS WEEK! Featuring Tuesday-Sunday... - Regular Drink Specials $1.00 Margaritas Tues.-Sun. $1.25 Imports Wed. 1/2 price Peach Margaritas Thurs. - We're rolling back our prices to 1980! - We'll be giving away: T-shirts, Royals Tickets,and Passes to Worlds of Fun! - Our Patio is now OPEN! MasterCard MasterCard VISA Becerros MEXICAN GAMMONS PROUDLY PRESENTS: COMEDY HYPNOTIST RICHARD DE LA FONT TONIGHT & TOMORROW SHOWTIME 9:30 P.M. FOR ADVANCE TICKETS CALL: 842-3977 THE MEN OF ΦKΨ WOULD LIKE TO THANK THE FOLLOWING CONTRIBUTORS TO THE SUCCESS OF PHI PSI 500 TREK AΔΠ ΣK ΦΔΘ ΣФE ΔΓ ΣN ΓФB AXΩ ΔΔΔ TRIANGLE ΣΔT Sue Rehorn The Bieker Fami Ingred Keizer andrew Wilson Mario's Mr. & Mrs. Button Second Chance IBM Bureau of lectures & Concert Artists J. C. PENNEY Raney Hillcrest Drug Nabil's Restaurant Myer's Retail Liquor Florida Plant World Dr. Ray Clark DBA Private Ledger Financial Services Round Corner Drugstore 10 Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University. Daily Kansan SHADOWS NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care 820-822 Mass. St., Lawernce, Kansas 66044 (913) 841-0100 OMEGA OUTDOOR MUSIC FESTIVAL 22 Area Acts, Including: - The Lonesome Hounddogs - Parlor Frogs - Parlor Frogs - Love Squad - May 4 & 5 $8.00-1 Day / $12.00-2 Days Maps Available At Yello Subs, Rudy's Pizza, Paradise Cafe, Etc. Benefit For Wildcare & East Lawrence Improvement Assn. - Random Aztech K.U. INTERNATIONAL CLUB ELECTIONS for PRESIDENT / VICE-PRESIDENT 1990-1991 A GENERAL ASSEMBLY WILL BE HELD TO ELECT NEW OFFICERS ON THURSDAY MAY 3 - 7 p.m. PINE ROOM - KANSAS UNION ALL INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS ARE ELEGIBLE TO RUN AND VOTE! IF YOU ARE RUNNING FOR OFFICE, PLEASE SUBMIT YOUR NAME TO THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB OFFICE, 410 KANSAS UNION KANSAS CITY STUDENTS Do you need a second income for the summer? We can help! Work part-time in the evenings Monday through Friday doing commercial office cleaning. We have positions all over the Kansas City and Johnson County area. So if you are looking to get the most out of summer, we can give you the funds to do so. B-G Maintenance Management 1225 East 18th Street K.C. MO 9563 Nall, Overland Park 3500 Strong, K.C.K or call (816) 421-8088 Equal Opportunity Employer HAVE YOU EXPERIENCED UNFAIR TREATMENT? DISCRIMINATION? BELITTLING SLURS? HARASSMENT? SEX RACE NATIONALITY SEXUAL ORIENTATION RELIGION AGE HANDICAPPING CONDITION? HAND WITH PHONE IF YOU WANT TO TELL SOMEONE ABOUT IT, PHONE: 864-3508 University Information Center 864-4665 University Ombudsman--One who listens to problems and assists in achieving a fair solution. ANY TIME, DAY OR NIGHT (if one line is busy, try the other) ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM THE FLU OR THE FLUE? Carbon monoxide is an ill wind that blows no good. It's a deadly presence in homes where appliances like the furnace or water heater fail to burn fuel efficiently Or where clogged chimneys vent improperly. And because carbon monoxide poisoning results from an invisible, odorless gas, its effects are often mistaken for fatigue or flu symptoms. A mistake that can be FATAL. That's why it's important to have your heating and ventilation checked regularly. Also be wary of persistent nausea, headaches, ringing in the ears, and drowsiness. Especially where windows and doors are sealed shut. In that event, the thing to do is to go outside and get some fresh air. Then if you don't improve, it could be a bug going around. At least you'll feel better knowing it's not the FLUE! + If you have any questions, please contact our office. CALL 843-7842 KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE GAS MAKES THE BIG DIFFERENCE! Family describes released hostage as an adventurer The Associated Press MALDEN, Mass. — Newly released hostage Frank Herbert Reed was an intelligent adventurer who got caught up in Middle East turbulence just as he was trying to escape from a region, friends and relatives said. But they also said he had the Yanlee stolicism it takes to ride out even the storm of 3½ years of captivity in Lebanon. "He would never give up, I hope it's a Reed trait. We certainly are self-made in what we do," his 70-year-old brother, Edward, said after he and other family members received news of the release. Reed, 57, had traveled to the North Pole, the jungles of Brazil and the Australian outback. He was a teacher and school principal in New England and founded the Admiral Byrd Polar Club in Whitefield, N.H., which sponsored expeditions to Antarctica. "It appealed to the adventurer in him," said Maryellen Cavan, a former New Hampshire colleague. Later, he converted to Islam, the religion of his wife, Fahima Dalati, 39, a Syrian national who met him in when she was training to be a teacher. But after making two trips to Lebanon, he left his post as school principal in New Hampshire to become director of elementary education at Beirut's International College in 1977. When the International College was bombed, Reed founded the private Lebanese International School. A nephew said Reed decided to stay on because he thought he could be of help, especially to young students. And one of his daughters, Martilyn Langston, said that education was important to him. "He was pretty flamboyant and wouldn't show he was afraid," she said. "But it certainly unnerved him." Though Reed came to realize that violence was a way of life around Beirut and learned to work around it, he was not injured to it. Cavan said. Finally, even Reed decided to leave. At the time of his abduction, he was trying to make arrangements for his wife, known as Fifi, to come to the United States and had intentions of coming home, Edward Reed said. The couple has a 9-year-old son, Tarek, and Reed has two grown daughters from a previous marriage. Reed grew up in Malden, the youngest of three sons. His father was part owner of a leather wholesale firm. 110 East 9th Street "He was the baby in the family and whatever the baby wanted, he got," Edward Reed said. Reed attended Harvard University, Reed the University of Maine and Northeastern University. Friends outgoing and an adventurer. "He had an impact on everybody who dealt with him in our community." Cavan said. "He's a unique individual." Amogene Rolerson taught with Reed in the early 1960s in Islesboro, Maine, and said he was a person who liked a lot of action. "He liked to be doing and going. He was always in the thick of everything. His 91-year-old mother, Leota Sprague, said she thought that her son could do anything and that during his captivity he might outsmart the people who kidnapped him and escape. "I can't imagine him being cooped up all the time that he's been cooped up," she said. Reed and his wife faced the objections of her parents because he was a U.S. citizen and Protestant. "We had to try to convince them we wanted to get married." Fifi Reed said. "We were just the right people for each other. This is the time I remember. We just had a great time together. I used to say, 'It's too nice to be true,' and it was too nice to be true. It ended all of a sudden." Reed's family called the espionage charge ridiculous, saying Reed had no interest in politics. "I don't even know if I ever voted," said newbuck Ken Reed. She and her son have been living at her mother-in-law's Malden apartment for about a year. Almost all of Reed's immediately surviving relatives were at the apartment when news of his release came. After Reed was abducted Sept. 9, 1986, a caller to a Western news agency claimed the American was a CIA svv. A former Lebanese reporter, Tewfik Mishawi, now working at the Center for Foreign Journalists in Reston, Va., said Reed was apolitical and had friends all across the country. I'm thrilled. I'm overjoyed. I'm everything. All of the above that describe happiness." Fiff Reed said. Mishawi said Beirut's cycle of terror kept Reed's new school from flourishing. But Edward Reed said, "He thought it was a challenge to be there. He thought he was doing good there." The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush hailed the release yesterday of the second U.S. hostage in eight days in Afghanistan and said no resentful all hostages were free. Bush lauds release of second hostage "This is a joyous day," Bush said after Frank Reed was turned over in Beirut to Syrian officials after 43 months of captivity. Reed gained his freedom as former hostage Robert Polhill, who was released April 22, prepared for a meeting with Bush at the White House. Polhill, who was held for 30 days in detention at Walter Reed Army Medical Center since he returned to the United States on Friday. six U.S. citizens and 10 other Westerners still are being held hostage in Lebanon. The White House reiterated its demand that all hostages be released before Bush redeems his pledge that goodwill be goodwill. "The president said before . . . that normalization of relations depended upon the release of the hostages and there's been no change in that situation," said Marlin Fitzwater, presidential spokesman. Bush said, "We urge all parties who either hold hostages or have any influence over the hostage takers to work for the expedition and unconditional release of the remaining hostages." He publicly thanked Syria and Iran for helping arrange Reed's release. He also had credited them when Polhill was freed. White House officials said that they had made no deals to win Reed's freedom but that Iran and Syria apparently were working to free the hostages in hopes of improving relations with Washington. In a reference to the others still held, he said, "The predicant重量 on our mind and tempers the joy we feel today." YAKIMA Wheels on Wheels ... The Ultimate Ride YAKIMA For gettin' down the road with your toys! RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Johnson Co. Kansas Clerical Positions File Clerks Typists Word Processors Data Entry Receptionists Bossler Hix Light Industrial Packers Assembly Warehouse General Labor Lawn Maintenance (913) 491-0944 - NO FEES - Temporaries (913) 491-0944 Call collect for details & application Sports University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 11 Jayhawks take on Creighton COOPER Brian T. Schoeni/KANSAN Team is playing with a mission Kansas softball coach Kalum Haack discusses strategy for the second game of a doubleheader against Southwest Missouri State on Tuesday at Jayhawk Field. During the weekend, Haack guided his team to the Big Eight Conference regular-season title and the No. 1 seed in the conference tournament, which starts Friday in Oklahoma City. The Jayhawks, who have won 18 of their last 19 games, will play their last regular-season home game against Creighton today. Kansas sportswriter By Paul Augerl Kenyan songwriter Kansas softball coach Kalum Bruce's office phone call all day. luke@kcsu.edu Kansas softball The callers, mostly long-distance, were phoning Hack to congratulate him. Kansas clinched the Big Eight Conference regular-season title S and with victories against sixth- ranked Oklahoma State and Iowa State. "Where were these people when we weren't winning?" Haack said. "Even (Kansas athletic director) Mr. Eisenhart gave me a call, but it wasn't here." Roamna Brazier, 25-5 and Jill Bailey, 10-7, will pitch for Kansas. Brazier has a 0.98 earned run average. Because the Jayhawks beat Oklahoma State twice during the weekend, Haack said he thought his team should be ranked in the NCAA Division I top 20 when the latest poll comes out May 7. Kansas catcher Jodi Hoyer also said she wanted to be a part of the rankings. "Like Coach said, most likely we be in the top 20, but Creighton could easily take us out of it," Hoyer said. "So we are taking them seriously." The 'Jayhawks' four victories last weekend gave them their first Big Eight regular-season title since 1983, and the last 19 games and its of last 29. "The girls now are playing with a mission," Haack said. "They can see the kind of potential they have when they play hard. Hopefully, we can continue that intensity into the tournament." Sunday, Kansas took advantage of seven Oklahoma State errors and beat the Cowgirls 2-0. "I was surprised with the way they played defensively," Kansas shortstop Christy Arterburn said. "I know they'll be out for revenge the next time we play them, but they have to get by Nebraska first." The top-seeded Jayhawks have received a bye and will play the Oklahoma-Missouri winner Friday at Oklahoma State for the Eligible tournament. Oklahoma State will play Nebraska in a first-round game. Kansas has beaten each conference team at least once during the regular season. The Jayhawks' only conference loss was to Nebraska, 6-1, April 7. "The victories had a lot of significance," Haack said. "They gave us a good draw in the tournament, helped us out regionally and nationally, and helped the team mentally. We can play with those kinds of teams." Kansas was ranked third behind Southern Illinois and Oklahoma State in the Midwest Regional poll last week. The latest rankings come out "Now that we've won the Big Eight, we have to change our goals and get the ring now." Hoyer said about in possible Big Eight tournaments. "It's no big deal because we have shown them we can beat everyone there." Low ACT scores cause recruit to wait Bv Molly Reid Kansan sportswriter RECRUITING Cortez Barnes, a Kansas basketball recruit from Wichita Heights High School, had to put his signing announcement on hold again last week after receiving his ACT exam scores. Barnes, on his third attempt at the exam, did not earn the composite score of 18 required by the NCAA for athletes entering Division I schools. He said he scored 15. barnes said he would take the SAT test this weekend, which can be used instead of the ACT score. He still has one more chance to pass the ACT during the first week of June. Barnes said that if he did not score high enough on either test, he would have to decide whether he wanted to sit out his freshman year at Kansas under the NOAA's program or attend a lupin college. Barnes said he had not changed his mind. Despite Barnes' ACT problems, Wichita Heights basketball coach Charles Doughty said that Barnes still planned to attend Kansas. "I'm signing for sure," he said. "It's for sure. Final." Doughty said Barnes would announce his signing at 3:15 p.m. today at Wichita Heights. The 6-foot-8 power forward averaged 19.6 points and 5.9 rebounds a game during his senior season at Wichita Heights. Val Barnes, a 6-2 guard from Butler County Community College, said yesterday that he was the only person to win. The two Barnes are not related. Barnes visited the University about a month ago and visited Kansas State during the weekend. He said he planned to announce his decision by the end of this week and had narrowed his choices to Kansas, K-State, Iowa and Oklahoma. "I looking for the school that will give me the most help with my academics," he said. "I'm getting over the hump, but I need to sit down and write down what's good that's bad about each school." Barnes averaged 18.7 points in 33 games, while contributing an average of 4.4 assists per game. He hit 54 percent of his shots from the field and shot 83.5 percent from the free-throw line. Victories increase tournament hopes By Brent Maycock Kansan sportswriter By winning three of four games against Oklahoma during the weekend at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium, Kansas baseball coach Dave Bingham said, the Jayhawks helped their chances of receiving one of the four berths in the Big Eight Conference postseason tournament. Kansas baseball "It gives us an opportunity to compete for the final spot," he said. "If we had only won two, it would be hard, but not impossible to get a bid. The victories make it much more reasonable." Kansas, 24-25, will play Southwest Missouri State at 7 onight at Hoghill-Maupin Stadium. The Jay-Z team won both games twice in three games this season. Kansas is tied with Nebraska for fourth in the Big Eight with a 7-9 record. But if the season were to end today, the Jayhawks would receive the fourth and final big game against the Suns, as well as four-game series with the Huskers, the Jayhawks took the first game of the series, which breaks the tie. Oklahoma State leads the Big Eight with a 13-4 record and is assured one of the bids. Kansas State, 10-6, is in second place and Iowa State is in third with an 8-8 record. Kansas will play a four-game series with the Cyclones this weekend in Ames, Iowa. Bingham said the Oklahoma series last weekend could have been Kansas' best effort of the season. "That series was crucial for us if we're to make the tournament." Jayhawk catcher Garry Schmidt said. 'I felt the first 40 games we were gaining experience and a point of reference of what buttons to push and when. — Dave Bingham Kansas baseball coach "We've been pretty inert all year at scoring runs," he said. "I was very pleased with the fact that we competed offensively and did what we had to do. It was a team effort all the way through." The Jayhawks exploded offensively, averaging 7.25 runs a game last weekend. Before the series, Kansas had been scoring only 1.5 runs a game. The Jayhawks have won eight of their last 10 games, and Bingham said they would have to maintain the skill shown during the past two weeks. "I felt the first 40 games we were gaining experience and a point of reference of what buttons to push and when," he said. "The last 20 is for everybody, coaches and players alike, to play their game everyday. We just need to keep everybody focused." Schmidt said none of the Kansas players had even thought about repeating last season's failed bid for the postseason tournament. At the halfway point in the conference last season, Kansas was 6-4. But the Jayhawks lost eight of their last nine games and missed the tournament. "This is an entirely different team," Schmidt said. "If anything, right now we're starting to gel. I think we're peaking at the right time of the season. I don't see last year's collapse happening this year." Kansas baseball statistics Record: overall 24-25; Big Eight 7-9. Player II Stewart A G4 AB 21 H 16 HR RB AVG 68 Kartil B 183 16 35 5 0 19 337 39 Marcos I 163 18 55 5 3 19 137 69 Hannas I 61 66 8 19 5 11 288 181 Mumeria I 31 68 8 19 5 11 288 181 Mumeria II 48 66 8 19 5 11 288 181 Soult I 47 143 28 40 5 13 280 79 Hummel I 47 143 28 40 3 12 279 69 Camarra I 48 71 25 44 4 12 275 79 Camarra II 48 71 25 44 4 12 275 79 Wucheck III 48 71 11 16 1 15 273 71 Berlinger I 47 131 28 26 4 15 198 100 Schmidt II 25 68 6 11 5 18 190 100 Meeks I 29 35 5 15 5 18 190 100 Meeks II 25 35 5 15 5 18 190 100 Newbrough I 2 2 2 0 0 0 0.050 100 KANSAS 49 1548 264 423 32 237 .273 68 Opponents 49 1528 278 381 30 244 .244 78 Triplets — Souit 3, Bant 2, Caman 2, Karin 2, More 2, Marazas 1, Utt 1, Wuyche 1, Schmidt 1, Karasa 15, Opponents 12 Doubles — Stewart 17, Hummer 17, Worcester 7, Kartin 6, Bard 4, Bedard 4, Camara 4, Wove 3, Myckey 4, Schmidt 3, Hanna 2, Meeks 1, Spencer 1, Kansas 6, Occenades 7. Wallace – Karlin 30, Bard 24, Berglumber 19, Hummel 4, Moore 18, Leibert 16, Camara 14, Niemann 19, Wileychalk 11, Haimen 11, Hammel 8, Shekens 7, Utton 3, Speicher 3, Haimen 1, Kernas 20, Oppenauer 16. The men's team, the Horrorontals, swept through its pool with a perfect record. After edging Carleton College, the Horrorontals moved into the final game, where they lost to the Czechs from Madison, Wis., 21-7. The Czechs captured first place out of 12 teams in the tournament and will receive a top seed at the championships. UCLA GETS TRANSFER: Mike Lanier, the nation's tallest college basketball player at 7-foot-6, ended months of an intensive recruiting battle yesterday by announcing in PLAYER G W 6 L ERA SV 0 IP 83 H K 60 Renko 15 6 1 1 3.64 0 19.7 56 18 Massey 11 3 1 2 3.96 0 50.0 56 26 Brown 13 1 0 2 3.66 0 15.0 13 14 Waycheck 11 3 0 4.70 0 15.0 13 14 Stonecreat15 14 5 4 5.95 1 76.3 71 83 McGlenness 14 4 5 4.95 1 76.3 71 83 Niles 12 0 2 6.46 1 23.7 18 9 Meriman 12 0 2 6.46 1 23.7 18 9 Stopper 12 0 2 6.46 1 23.7 18 9 KANAS 49 24 25 4.98 15.3 23 84 Rivera 49 24 25 4.98 15.3 23 84 Stikriukov — Moone 34, Bardinger 33, Stewart 29, Camara 25, seult 27, Hanna 18, Hummel 18, Katin 16, Kenin 11, Meeks 10, Spencer 9, Llancet 8, Jenkins 10, Morrison 3, Marrona 16, Kaspi 299, Oopman 438. Games started — Renko 12, McGinnness 11, Stonecipher 11, Massey 9, Niles 3, Wuychecheck 1, Shaw 1, Hinkle 1. Opponents batting average — Hinkle, 184, Niles 214, Reno 210, Wurchuck, 232, McGlenness, 624, Stonecreek 246, Share 257, Massley 284, Marriner 320, Storm 299, Kawasaki 273, Lanier, a native of Troy, Mich., averaged seven points and five rebounds a game last season as a sophomore at Hardin-Simmons, which plays in the Trans-American Bob McGinnis 46, Renzie 46, Stonepecker 45, Massey 31, Shaw 29, Skine 21, Stoppier 11, 18, Wuchck 12, Hinkle 9, Kansas 278. Opponents 964 Betty also received the award for the spirit of the games, which was voted on by all the teams that participated in the tournament. With their second place finishes, both teams qualified for the National Collegiate Championships from May 25 to 27 in Scottsdale, Ariz. Walks = 32, Shameley 53, Reno 52, McGinnis 64, Stawser 32, Meyerman 28, Mierman 11, Nilite 21, Way check 12, Inkrite 10, Stopper 9, Kansas 284, Oppens 200. ULTIMATE TEAMS PLACE SECOND: Kansas men's and women's ultimate frisbee teams took second placein the College Regional Championships during the weekend at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn. Sports briefs The women's team, Betty, claimed victories in all of its games Saturday except a 13-12 defeat to Carleton. But Betty rallied and defeated Carleton 15-10, taking second place out of eight teams. Michigan took first place with a perfect 6-20 record and also will be a top seed. Lanier, who weighs about 285 pounds, said he would sit up next year or redshift to bulk up and improve his game. Betty's second-place finish earned them the fourth seed in pool A at the National Championship. Abilene, Texas, that he would trans fer from Hardin-Simmons to UCLA. Louisiana State, Hawaii, Washington and Washington State led a list of about 25 schools that tried to lure Lanier to their respective campuses. Lanier, who has two years of eligibility remaining, said he had cleared any previous doubts about transferring to UCLA and was excited about playing for a school immersed in basketball tradition. The victory vaulted the Blackhawks into the Stanley Cup semifinals against the Edmonton Oilers in a Athletic Conference. He started 22 of 28 games and averaged 15 minutes a game. Coaches said a lack of stamina kept his playing time down as Lanter could not sustain the pace of an up-and-coming team used only in a half-court offense. BLACKHAWKS BLACKEN BLUES: Jeremy Roenick scored two first-period goals, and Steve Larner and Adam Creighton added short-handed goals last night, leading the Chicago Blackhawks to an 8-4 victory against the New York Giants in the seventh game of the Norris Division final in Chicago. best-of-seven series that will begin tomorrow night in Edmonton. DICKERSON SKIPS OPENING: Eric Dickerson, who said he would rather retire from the NFL than play for Indianapolis this season, did not report to the opening of the Colts' mini-camp yesterday in Indianapolis. The 29-year-old running back, who came to Indianapolis through a trade with the Los Angeles Rams in 1987, was hampered by a hamburger injury most of last season and publicly criticized the Colts' offensive line for not protecting him. He said in March that he was finished with football, then softened that stance somewhat by saying he would accept a trade. "Eric Dickerson is under contract to the Colts, and we expect him to be here," general manager Jim Irsay said yesterday. In March, however, after Dickerson announced he would not play again, Irsay said the wording of Dickerson's contract stipulated that he must pay the team a sum in excess of seven figures if he decided not to play this year. The team also reportedly worth $1.45 million this season, was worded specifically to protect the Colts should Dickerson decide not to play. Dickerson, the NFL's seventh-leading all-time runner with 11,238 yards in seven years, responded to a call from Washington to want to use me, go ahead, sue me. **** Florida bill takes stance between schools, NCAA TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — College teams, coaches and athletes would not be penalized for breaking NCAA rules without first being given the benefit of state-supervised due process before a bill before the Florida legislature. The Associated Press "The National Collegiate Athletic Association is the only organization I know of that doesn't have to follow the rules like everyone else," said State Sen. Vince Bruner, D-Fort Walton Beach. The forced resignations of University of Florida football coach Galen Hale, who was killed in Sloan in October were the primary motivating force behind the bill, To some Gator faithful, Hall was ousted for seemingly insignificant rule violations — giving coaches money from his own pocket and helping a player out of a legal jam. Bruner said Friday. But to the NCAA and university administrators who got rid of Hall, the rules were major infractions. The rules still face the possibility of probation. In Sloan's case, there was no proof of violations when he was forced to resign, just the strong suspicion that rules had been broken. Since his departure, Florida has said it found proof that Sloan arranged improper transportation for players. Toronto 10. Cleveland 4 CLEVELAND — George Bell doubled during a four-run first inning and hit one of four Toronto home runs as the Blue Jays beat Cleveland last night, handing up their first win in the game marred by a bench-drive incident. Cleveland's Mitch Webster rushed the mound during the third inning after Todd Stottemeyer hit him in the lower back with a pitch. Webster was ejected. Stottemeyer (3-2) remained in the game and pitched five innings, allowing three runs on four of the 8 bothers emplied, but not for the team. Oakland 6. New York 0 NEW YORK — Bob Welch pitched a six-hitter, Ricky Henderson hit two home runs and Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire are connected last night, leading the Oakland Athletics to a victory against the New York Yankees. Welch (3-1) gave up four singles. MAIOR LEAGUE SCORES walked none and stumbled out four in Oakland's second consecutive shutout. He pitched his 26th career shutout and won the game with a strike. Atlanta, New York, 4. ATLANTA, — Odidie McDoew and Jeff Treadway each hit two-run home runs and Atlanta added two other runs while starter Diane Cone argued a call at first base as the Braves beat the New York Mets. It was the second victory in a row for the Braves, who beat the Mets for the first time since July 16, snapping a six-game losing streak against New York. Atlanta is at-43 for the season. The Meta have lost three straight. second After Andres Thomas lied out, Cone appeared to be out of the lining when Lamke hit a grounder between first and The Braves got the runs off Cone in the fourth. With one out, Dale Murphy singled and stole second before Ernie Whitth walked. While Cone argued the call with his back to the infield, Murphy and Whit scored. Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia 2 Cone (0-2) was lifted after giving up six runs on five hits and three walks. Second baseman Gregg Jeffries fielded the ball and threw to Cone covering, but first base umpire Charlie Williams ruled that Cone touched to touch the bag. The pitcher was charged with an error on the play. CINCINNATI — Paul O'Neill's two-run single in the first inning helped Jojo Rho gain his first victory since last June and Philadelphia Philly Phantom last night. The Reds have won 13 of their first 16 games. **19. (1-1)** allowed four hits and struck out six in seven innings for his first victory in his last seven starts. Rob Patterson landed innings for his third save, fanning three. Milwaukee 6, Detroit 1 DETROIT — Mark Knudson came within an out of extending Milwaukee's major league lead in shutouts, and Robin Yount and Greg Brock each hit home runs as the Brewers beat the Detroit Tigers last night. The Brewers were trying to set a club record for April with six shutouts. It was the 10th victory in the last 12 games for the team, which leads the American League East. innuawakee, which hit just five home runs in its first 15 games, hit six in its last three with Detroit. Houston 4, Montreal 2 MONREAL — Glenn Davis tied the score with his second home run of the game and Rafael Ramirez put Houston ahead with a two-run single as the Astros rallied for three runs in the eighth inning off Dennis Martinez to beat Montreal last night. 12 Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Census combs KU to count students By Kathryn Lancaster Kansan staff writer Local census workers began stalking neighborhoods near campus during the weekend looking for KU students not filled out federal census forms. The census workers' goal is to count the students before they leave for home, said Bob Hamilton, a professor for the U.S. Bureau of the Census. "Our job is to contact people who haven't returned forms," said Aaron Blanchard, one of three KU students hired to help with the Lawrence Blanchard, Leavenworth sophomore, said he was not concerned about finishing his work quickly. "There is not a lot of pressure to be out every day," Blanckard said. "I could take a week off and make up for it after I am through with finals." The regional bureau office begins its Lawrence count earlier than intended, Hamilton said. The early operations extend to about half of Lawrence, covering neighborhoods surrounding the University of Kansas and other areas where students live. The committee, established by the City, Commission, is worried that students will leave the area without being counted. Price Banks, city planning director, worked with the committee to publicize the 1900 count. He estimated that after the 1880 census, the city lost about $15 million a year. He does not want a repeat in 1900. "We are about where we thought we would be at this point," Hamilton said. The response rate of people returning forms from Lawrence has been about 70 percent. Hamilton said. This is almost even with national figures and is about what the census bureau anticipated. The bureau has received almost 100 percent of the forms sent to organized living groups, Van Natta said. All but about 100 students living in scholarship halls, residence halls, co-operative houses and Greek houses have been counted. The forms were delivered in manila envelopes with an Indianapolis address, Van Natta said. About 100 students living in Hashinger Hall and Joseph R. Pearson Hall mistakenly mailed their forms to that address instead of returning them to the front desk. Because the address is not correct, the post office returned the envelopes to the students. Rooms and Efficiencies 1 and 2 Bedrooms in well maintained Older Homes Starting at $165 and up Call 841-STAR (7827) Gotta Group? Houses with 2-5 Bedrooms 2 Bath Units Gotta Large Group? House with 9 Bedrooms ·4 1/2 Bath Units ·3 Kitchens ·2 Washer/Dryers ·Piano Easy walk to campus Very Charming Call 841-STAR (7827) 100's Classified Directory 200's Announcements 100 Personal 101 Business Personal 102 Entertainment 103 Entertainment 140 Lost & Found 235 Typing Services Employment 205 Help Wanted 225 Professional 100s Announcements POLICE Attention: Tempel of Wedge meeting tonight at Mag Web. Brotly Moly Matte. No baker opened. Thus Piciun Cdao, Si Meum Dusen Supper. Otter (Boo). 105 Personal 300's Bright, creative, funny, male, 26, seeks caring, playful, intelligent woman looking for a loving relationship. Reply to P.O. Box 402424 Lawrence, KS 66044 Heliumage Mülle Kabeksa-Kunz hell-Uks-Kaks- Uks-kaks 400's If you are a female, looking for a serious relationship, here I am, a male. Please write to PO Box 40282, Lawrence 110 Bus. Personal MAX U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT??? Matthew W- How do you sleep at night? scoping holes. DON'T HAIL IT HOME! Call Lok and Key summer storage for safe and secure storage. We offer free delivery. Polluted, Impure. Call 843-800-9000. Real Estate 405 For Rent 430 Roommate Wanted Mathew W. How do you sleep at night? Terminally himale male seeks charitable female. Eric Eric, Box 130, Stauffer-Flint Lawrence, RS 60044. Advanced line art portfolios; modeling, theatrical. Slides can be a valuable asset to your present case. Government photos, passport, im- pregnant future. Tenn Swallow 703-1611. Merchandise 305 For Sale 340 Auto Sales 360 Miscellaneous 370 Want to Buy Pine Street, Chesterfield Drive thru open everynight till 2:00 a.m. SUBWAY 1730 West 23rd. Bausch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sanung 28% Inflow Bag, Retail The Eic Shop 722 Maa. 643-611 "New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of western Civil. Makense to use it! Available at Ajjawkh, Makense and "Pown Crion **swammaratsa** *shoes* play softball, soccer or *Ultimate Pride Shoes*, Nikla, Adidas, Nike or Diorada. Francis Sporting Goods, 731 Mass. 845-4191. Call Today! MUST LIQUIDATE APRL 25-MAY 1 4 pc. bedroom set $99.99, new $99.99 4 pc. kitchen set $109.99, new $109.99 Plant Stand reg. $199.99, new $99.99 Baccal Recall set $499.99, new $99.99 Bedroom set $899.99, new $899.99 Treet, of using brains and no brains, good experience for all majors, business communication, pre-law, etc. $tax=16/mo. For interview information call 784-7857. URNITURE FACTORY OUTLET 738 New Hampshire. your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized 10-94 W. Hiawatha, Discover, 302-689-1788 B.C. AUTOMOTIVE BANKS AND BEEF CO. MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History - Summer travel plans 120 Announcements You receive 8 private sources, or your money is refunded. You must complete COLLEGE SCHOOLSHIP LOCATION O.P. Box 1021, Hoboken, MO 64030-1881, 417-434-6043. Don't throw that stuff out! Donate it to a garage sale for local refugee organization. Call College School Shipping at (610) 965-2181 for old clothes, eailed away for a good cause. GAY & ESBIH Peer Counseling. A friendly audience. Free voice. Confidential referral calls require consent. KU Info 844-3030. Direct calls: 7:4pm - 7:5pm. B44-3030. Sponsored by For confidential information, referral & support for AIDS concerns - call 841-2345. Headquarters Counseling Center. SIDEWALK SALE MAY 1, 2 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Mon-Sat. 10/5/Sun-1 864-4450 Going to Washington, D.C. this summer? Call a group of fellow Jayhawks that will be there too: Kate Burger 844/6723, Sally Bury 844/609 ext. 208. COLLEGE MONEY day afternoon preschool program available for the Kg summer semester for children ages 3-6, MWF. TR or 5 days/wk. Limited vacancies. Contact HILLIP, behind Smith Hall 804-4900. GRADUATE. Does your health insurance under your parents plan stop on your graduation day? If not, please call us to cover you from graduation until you are eligible for employment. For more information, please contact us. On-campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts. - Airline tickets home HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER! Get there anytime from Denver, Minneapolis, or Chicago for no more than 80 minutes at 10AM with ARHITCH, as reported in Consumer Reports. NY Times, or Let's Go! For details call: 121-684-0000 or write Roads, Broadway, St. 109, New York. Spring Break over and still no summer job? $425.wk. Good experience for resume and travel. For more information call 749-4533. kent my teacher Macintosh computer for the summer. I will pay $300 cash in advance to rent your computer tl. Aug 15, 1989. local business person. *save at 8:42-7:09*. Leave messages if I am out. Don't Wait! We'll find the 749-0700 Suicide Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is叫 841-234 or visit 1419 Mass., Headquarters *Counseling Center* To all Golden Key members we will be a picnic at Holcom Park on Thursday May 3rd from 4:45 p.m. There will be food and games. Come one, come all! Maupintour lowest fares and best schedules. WE HEAR YOU. You may have experienced unlain treatment-harm, discrimination, or belittling shirts. If you want to talk with someone about it, call the Center (864) 215-7000 (University Unison Orlando). --- 831 Massachusetts. Yellow short-hair Lab needs home. 1/1-2 yr old. Friendly, shots up to date. Call M1-8221. Help Schmiee! BARRETTES 8TH % bilt. east of Meas. - on 6TH St. THE BEACH HOUSE GIFTS Mayday! Hillel לֹנ The Department of Student Housing needs your help! We have food service positions for summer and/or fall. For more information, come to the "Mayday" job fair; Tuesday, May 1 5:00pm-6:00pm in the residence hall cafeterias: GSP, JRP, Oliver Hashinger, Ellsworth, Lewis, and McCollum STUDENT & YOUTH AIRFARES Events of the Week Wednesday, May 2 Little Brothers & Sisters 6:00 p.m., Hillel House (Services at LCC) - RLY INTO & OUT OF DIFERENT CITY AT THE SAME LOW COST * A FULL RANGE OF SOVETI VOETS * OUR KNOW HOW Ice Cream Hillie House, Time to be announced Friday, May 4 Final Shabbat Dinner & Services Honoring Graduating Seniors, Services Honoring Graduating Seniors 6:00 p.m. Hillel L. LOW LOW RATES TO LONDON PARIS MADRID BERLIN USSR ASIA LATIN- AMERICA AFRICA IN FACT EVERYWHERE PLUS G Thursday May 10 Finals Food EURAIL PASSES, I.D. CARDS 100 OFFICES WORLDWIDE RSVP by Wednesday, May 2 Sunday, May 6 Awards Brunch Sunday, May 21 Open House 4:00:70 p.m. Hilliel House 130 Entertainment PLUS FOR MORE STA TRAVEL WHITE AVE. MILLION LINE AVE. LOS ANGELES CA 90046 STA TRAVEL THE STUDENT TRAVEL NETWORK 1. 800.777.0112 12:30 p.m., Hiliel House MIRACLE VIDEO offers ADULT VIDEOS only 819.560 910 N. 2nd 841-9803, 19th and Haskell 841-9803 GET INTO THE GROOVE . Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional radio, DJ's Hot Spots Maximum Party Thrush. DJ RAY Velosaye. 841-7033. Monday, May 7 140 Lost-Found for more info call 864-3948 STA STA TRAVEL 9:00 p.m., Hiliel House Found: Dog near Johnny's. Call to identify. 843-0965. Found: Jacket, left at Advising Support Center, please describe 864-4371 call 8-5. Sunday, May 20 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted Adams Alumni Center is now hiring for bartenders and waiters/waitress staff. Must be available for Mother's day, commencement and graduation. Apply in person. Broad DREA MPH. **Talent marketing? Summer or permanent employment. Talent salary plus commissions:** Cell 641-1829, Today! **The Prizeson Review nation's no. 1 best prep service S.A.T.A. instructors. Bright high school students:** Cell 641-1829 with high standard test scores #2/1r. houring 10 a.m., call 861-3513 between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. ABILITIES NOW HIRING Travel Agent, Flight Attendant, Mechanics, etc. Entry level and up, Salaries to 10848. Call 9:05-682-7555 ext. A1179. Call 6 days a week. ALASKA CANNERY and fishing employment opportunities. Secure your summer job. Focus your search. (206) 771-3811. Artist. Immediate part or full-time through the summer. Computer-aided experience helpful. David 841-4524. CINEMAS IN GINGHAM PALACE: Now taking applications for new construction clean-ups summer or earlier. Days and early evening hours for detailed-retirement people. Call 849-4204. Assisting Retail National Chain interviewing for part-time and full-time entry level positions 10 & 11. Flexible schedules in summer. For info. www.Retail.National.com/1-683. For details, SMS 1-683-6833. SWAHILI INSTRUCTOR (or other African dialect) part time position please call (816)245-7300 BUCKINGHAM PALEO. Office cleaning part-time hours available.上午-Sun.Thurs. for reliable, detailed-oriented people. Incentive for provisional calls. Calm Call for an appointment. BUCKINGHAM PALE now taking applications for house cleaners. Morning and afternoon availability for proven reliability. Call us for an appointment. 842-6948. **AAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer campers. Teach swimming, archery, tennis, golf, sports, camping, camping, drama, crafts, OR riding. Also listen, office, maintenance, salary $400 or less. Resumes to 178, Shelby Drive, 178, Norfolk, NF 234-464-8444.** "CADDIES" Shadow Glm Golf Club need cards on an ankle or wrist, old, age and old, able to up to 30 lbs. Hard work, but good pay. Lowe's page 749, page 749-358. Cusker, Prairie Room Restaurant, Kansas Union. Monday and Wednesday, 10:30 a.m. to 10:45 p.m. 4:30 a.m. Begin training. Must have previous catering experience. Apply Kansas University. Cork, tweak. KU Bookstore. Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Some weekends through July 1. 1900 and possibly September 6. 1900 Must have a Bachelor's degree in Business Administration, Upon Entry Office. Level 5. data entry analyst on SPS+ with quarter-time graduate assistant. Experience social science research interest artificial intelligence welcome. 812.390.3300 Call Judith at 812-648-8923 before leaving. looking for mature students to look up and take on art careers during summer break. Flexible hours, benefits. Must have car and positive attitude. MA 1901 for appointment. Female help wanted for light housekeeping Mondays and Wednesdays afternoon. 843-238-306. FREE RIDE TO NEW YORK! Driver wanted to drive one车 way to allybury, NY. Choose your desirability date between 10am and 6pm. Join our friend. Bake will be loaded with my iPhone. I pay for gas, oil, and two nights model expulsion. You are required to own your own vehicle before calling. Call us at (212) 543-8796, or email us at a.k.m.s only. Full-time assist. teacher position available for summer school. Must have a bachelor's degree in a related field preferred for certification and experience. Contact Hillary Coxon by beating Smith. Write your written and application letters to hillarycoxon@ucsb.edu. COLUMNISTS and CARTOONISTS NEEDED For Fall 1990 Kansan. Call 864-4180 and ask for Mary Neubauer, Fall 1990 Editorial Editor. Graduate assistant in newspaper production. We need motivated, well-organized graduate student in newspaper production coordinator for the KSate University newspaper 1999-1999. I should have knowledge in editing and newspaper paste-up. Responsibilities include part-time cover writing, Sun-Thrs., and supervising interns. Salary negotiable based on experience. Tentative start date is May 5, 2003. Please be should be sent to Keddie 103, NSU, Manhasset, KS 6006 AU; Waukee Hayneson, no later than 5:00 p.m. May 9, 2009. Interview will be held Graduate Assistant Position: Elder and child care referral services. $80/mo, half-time.APA certification required. References are to Ola Foster NAHP Services, 10 Carrish O'Leary LAH AA/EEO. Help this summer in doctor's office with patients and general office work. Person must able to take care of clients. Light factory work inspecting and packing plastic full and part-time shifts will be available. The plant operates 7 days/week 14am-5pm, Tuesday 9 am-11 am, 3 a.m.-5 p.m. Camera 3235 Lakery Depot RD (Personnel N. side of plant) Lawrence, KS 60044. Facility 3235 Lakery Depot RD is perimenetic and dependable individual to run amusement route. Must have excellent computer skills. Healthy health. Job requires 28 hrs. wk. Starting pay is $8.hr. plan feature incentives. Fill out application at Sacramento Foods, 719 Massachusetts Ave., Oakland, CA 94710. Nannies needed. East Coast-Florida one year. Continual training, good salaries, good careers in Topeka, M. Stroble 233-489 Nau- zon work. Nanny Opportunities: Salaries from $150-400,wk. You only gain the nonimmune salary. For details call: AFRESA Stresslein, 1 (800)-433-6438. Min. age: 18, min. 1 yr. * NEED EXTRA CISK!? Work as a cashier for Fai Fall payment held August 20, 11, 22, and 24, 1995. Applications accepted through May 7, 1998 at the General Accounting Office, Carroll O'Leary School, 3627 W. 46th St., New York, N.Y. Previous course experience preferred Nursery school Teacher: A great little school **reacher:** A great little school needs a teacher. A great little school p.m., or both. Creative control, planning period. Invited to supportive parents. Send resumes by May 15. Community Nursery School, 645 Alabama, Community Nursery School, 645 Alabama, Office of Study Abroad accepting applications for half-time (20 brw. lk.) Student monthly position. Contact number: 817-436-7900, in 4 hh. blocks. Begin Aug. 15; $350/hr. ($40.6hr.) Accurate typing other office skills required. Foreign study requirements. Foreign study or travel. Contact OSA. 383 Lippincott. 86-43742. Dedication July 27; p. m. EOCT. CONTACTS AND CHRISTMAS EMPLOYMENT. Many positions. Work month - home month. Call 1-855-692-7555 ext. S-1113. (Call 7 days a wk.) Part-time teacher assistant positions available part-time Montessori School located in a farm- like setting. Must have transportation. Will训. call 863-8600. *routtestational couple living in suburb of Washington D.C. seeks NANNN for 3 girls (7%, 9%, 10%). Looking for mature man and woman (9 years beginning June 1980, competitive salary and separate living area provided). non-smoker, driver license, references required. Call the Donaldson's collect center. SALES ASSISTANT/RECEPTION ST, special wINDOW treatments. need word processing. Design or Architecture students? At 30 lrs. weekly. Apply KA SAM TECHNICAL E I 8th clerk, clothing. KU Bookstore. Monday tuesday Friday. Must be able to work either mornings or evenings. Please call 512-649-7800. Must have previous retail sales experience. Position ends with spring training. Applies Kansas City. Summer daycare for infants in my Leawood, KS home. No smoking, references, good hours. 913-648-7527. SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES top notch girls camp in Pennsylvania has a few openings for skilled WIS' and tennis instructors. Call Alison now: 1-800-443-6428. Summer Work we have a number of openings in Owerpark, Pillars, Filling Orders, Packaging, Warehouse and Clerical Positions Avail. range from 0 to 35 years with Emphasis on English. W. no. 980, or no. 439; call 382-593-8007. Best may my Macintosh computer for the summer. Will pay $200 cash in advance to rent your computer til Aug. 15, 1980. Local business person. Call for details. We will accept up to two weeks. I use two for the summer. Thanks! *NAKTED.* Actors for TV commercials; movie extras and game show contenters. Many needed. Wanted: 4,681-705-8535; T: 1123 (Call 7 days a week). Wanted: Part-time music director. First Director Methodist Church law office; Second Director church office; the church office, 946 Vermont; application deadline: May 10th. 225 Professional Services CORNROW YOUR HAIR. Cool, convenient stylish. Women and men. Call Sarah 842-4661. JERRY HARPER LAW OFFICES 1101 Mass. Lawrence 749-0123 NU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: 42-hour ceehr processing. Complete I.W. services. PASSPORT/RESUME $6.00. 198 Art & Design. MCAT PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services Overland Park (813) 491-8878 16 East 13th 842.1133 TRAFFIC - DUI'S Fake IDs & Alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE REMODELING - Custom-Contracting - Maintenance-Renovation - Non-traditional Grad Student 15 Yrs. Exp. Reasonable MEL YOUNG 749-0733 Pregnant and need help? Call Birthlight at 863-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing. Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence, M1-8716. VIDEO CONVERSION Pacific-Arabian-European Pal To US NTSC or VICE VERSA BUSH SERVICE AVAILABLE X3XX Press Book, 147 W. 3rd St. B6-800. Driver Education offered third Midway Driver School, serving K.U. students for 30 years. Facilities include a transportation provided, 841-7400. 235 Typing Services 1,100 pages, no job too small or too large. Affordable and affordable wordprocessing: Diana, 8423-389 or Ruth, 8423-488. Call after 5 p.m. literate Women Word Processing. Former editor 1-der woman Word Processing. Former editor transforms your words into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct letters of a foreign language. **sample text** *per a.* 14 years experience. ACE TYPING Computer wordprocessing with Spelling Check. Call anytime 749-3883. 1 + typing and w.p. 15 years experience. Resumes, letters, thesis, e.c. Call Terry b42-47544 p.-m. p. 10 minutes. anytime weekly. Editing, typing, critiques of works in progress. Export help, any writing project. Call Lia: 620-879-5388 Accurate typing by former Harvard secretary $1.25 double-spaced page. East Lawrence. Call Mrs Matilhia 841-129. Call R.J.'s Typing Services 84192-5942 paper, legal, calles, ect. calls. No answer after 9 p.m. Doma's Quality Typing and Word Processing. Term papers, letters, dissertations, letters, resume applications, mailings, mails. W 20th; S 10th; T 8th; m 8-8 p.m. - F 8-8 s. m. 842-7244. Editing, critique, typing in work in program. Expert help, any writing project. Call Lia. THEWORDOCTORS- Why pay for typing when you can have word processin? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1863. 843-3147. 'S Professional Word Processing: Accurate and affordable. Call after 1:00 p.m. 841-6345. Attention: Attention to Compliance Quality, Interpretation and Cyping. Datascripts: inserts descriptions knowledgeable AWB data. Barry's wordprocessing. IBM computer w/LQJ Barry's wordprocessing. IBM computer w/LQJ 942-2100 after 30 or law message WWW:www.barrysoftware.com Word Perfect Word Processing-IBM Compatible. Near Orchard Corners. No calls after 9 p.m. 840-8268 Word Processing(Typing: Papers, Resumes, Dissertations, Applications) Also assistance in spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M. S. Degree. 841-6254. RESUMES - The right resume can make a huge difference in your job search. Professional writing will win and - Professional writer will write the typeset your resume to get results! * Rush Service Available - 841-1342 305 For Sale 180 Hours Express only 928 miles $10.0 b.o.a. 1600 gallon Flat Baxk Hatch Oceanic Complete $12.5 Queen waterbed without matress $100 o.b. Dug $147-174. 1983 Honda Interceptor 750, excellent condition, low miles, two matching bells, $2,150 o.b.o. Mark 804-1124. 05. 0.0.0000000000 1809 Sunstar GS 650, 3,000 miles mint condition 1809 a.b.o. b.u.a. with extra calls. Consult 749-1644. 1809 Sunstar GSSOE, red/white, 2 helmets, $1150 a.b.o. b.u.a. #064770. 12 speed bike. Great condition, 90 b.o. aa some furniture. calls mg.祭 Calleng 841-7190. 1811 Flat Spider. 1 ower, 9K, 7k leather, oars, waterproof jacket. 1000 b.o. 849-7298. birtal stockroom. 3200 b.o. 849-7298. name, address or phone A good couch, two cushion chairs, two tables. Best offer. Jael 843-7543. after. Call 308-569-7846 Alpine 1265; with 316 amp. Auto-reverse car tape. deck with Dolby B.C. $250 o.b.o. @ 842-3604. For sale: Mac 800 k external drive, $130 o.b.o. Scott 50 wait stereo amp and tuner $150 o.b.o. Call 842-6911. An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture picture framing, precinct and couture jewelry, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books, Playboy magazines, vintage clothing, books, Persian rugs, carnival gift, Maxfield Paradise, art deco, carnival gown. tiring items, clocks, watches, desserts, antique tools, Royal Doulton, and co-op items. Hours are 10am to 5pm. **FLEA MARKET** 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sun. 16am-5pm. For booth rental info call 864-294-2328. Beautiful Lake Perry Golf Course lot. For sale by owner. Out of state owner must sacrifice 602-951-2313. Biancah roadbike. Like new 8175. 841-8009. COUCHfor sale: Big, comfy, cozy, best offer. 842-6002 Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comic's, 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun, 10-8. Compaq portable 2 flipper drives with some softw- ware and a disk case. $50. Call 843-8072. Double mirrored dresser with nine drawers and dark wood finish. Call 843-3894 eyes. For sale: 6 drawer dresser with matching 3 drawer desk, together or separately. 841-361-86. For sale: Man's 19 speed Schrumm Bicycle. $85 DRUMS C69 Top 72. Zildagan Cymbals with heavy duty stands. Mint Condition. Heavy Duty 84-1386 For sale: 160 1265 Mobile Home, Carpet, apc, AC, and more. Call 84-1386. Beakless Furniture for sale. Items include beds, dressers, stool spaces, couches, and entertainment unit Credit Call:账务 at 801-4962 GraduationNeed. NEEDS to sell furniture. Must get items include: desk, chair, nightstand, chairs (2), dresser, plastic stacking shelves, and bar stock. Prices are arguably PLACEBUSY. Macintosh 1025 K. Enhanced with Imagewriter II printer and software. Good condition. Call Dan at 843-695-7211. Man's Schwitt XL-rite L10 rear bike bicycle by Excellent condition. $10. Call 895-7900 after 4 p.m. (Morrow) or visit www.schmittbicycles.com system, Again Walter road bike racing runs and further bike training. All in great condition. *ANAMNIC* Mine's racing bicycle. 12 speed Binimo components. Call Gabriel 89280-9156. 8150 back and neck rack. Buy Sell Trade. Quantarita I1 New Manhattan. Open sat. Sun, 10-3. Roundtrip ticket to California. Must be used by 6/11/90, $150 or best offer. Call 861-1420. Marketing marketing. Summer employment in the Topeka area. Starting June 4, 2014 - 10 P.M. for $200/wk. + bonuses. Call Ron for amtp: 1-900-2834-0334. Searsal 300 Endure in only 1000 miles. Great combo. Adds: 8725, Dta 749-1865. Schwin 10 speed bike, great condition, need to sell, adjustable seat, $20. Call 843-4068. dition. Ackling 7625, David 748-105. Taking Dear. Leaving Kansas, selling everything, Taking Dog, Leaving Kanaas, selling everything. microbeated, waterbag, Nagel and Adam Adams applicant, AIWA Walkman, 73 Cherry Luv truck, make Offer, 650 71-32 70. University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 13 Snake Roxy (pink) Roa $200. Small animal cage 4ft, by 3 ft, with beautiful 6 ft. picture window. Must smell. Heather #548-618. Alpine 1290 Pullman, new in box. Mali pool cat. Used 85. Kesowind. G767 pullout. G767 Equilaier matrueil, excellent condition. Must sell. Tom B141-238. 10131-299-9145 Sport bikes: **9 Ninja Goggles**, Black excellent condition, 2,000 miles. Ettra $3,850, **8 Yamaha FZR** 1000 Blue and excellent condition. New, 4,000 miles. Only $5,490. Joe or Shawn $1814. 340 Auto Sales 1973 Dodge Minibus, reliable, good tires. Made for camping, 650s or best offer. 841-274-382, 842-049-08 1986 Nissan Sentra, 33,000 miles. Alpine stereo. Great condition. Call 842-757-3767. Great condition. Call 862-3778. '80 Pontiac Bonneville, good condition. - 85 Volkswagen Cabriolet. All white, good shape, 50 cu. * AC, 60,000 miles. 8109 call # 842-8833. 69 Genius GT, 60,000 miles excellent condition new brakes, new clutch, new call-mm/5331 47 Hyundai ExL GLX 4 door sedan, 5 spd., AC, very good condition. $9300 842-8833. 80 Pontiac Bonneville, good condition, manual, PB, P5, PW, new tires. Price neg. must sell. Call 843-6306 or leave message. very good condition. $2900 8300-5833. 97 Jeep Wrangler. Red with white hardtop. 4 (913) 266-0721 or weekdays (913) 212-8941 Toyota Tercer, 16 miles, excellent condition. Call after 5 p.m. 843-2798/854-4217 For sale: 1982售蘑菇GLF, lented best offer, see For sale: 1982 Subaru GLF, loaded, best offer, see at Alvin's GA 19th and Iowa. 37 Jeep Wrangler. Red with white hardtop, 4 cylinder, 5 spd., 37,000 miles. Warranty. 79,000 (113) 826-781 or weekly (103) 827-7841. 360 Miscellaneous On Tvs. VCK, VICKS, BROOKLYN, STEREO, Musical Instruments, cameras and more. We honor VICA/MCA E.M./D.E./Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 1984 W, 6th 79-159. HIT & RUN: Person who witnessed hit and run to gold '19 Honda Accord in lot 39, 4/25. Please call: College collection. Mitch 816-744-4044. thank you! 370 Want to Buy Need, Right Away-Double or queen size bed in good condition. Call 749-4128. 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 1 and 3 bedroom apts., for June 1 occupancy. No pets. 842-8971. camp, downtown and the hawk. Available after May 20. Great summer sublease! 911-7825. b. 12th, and Tenn, with breakfast room, room 361. - o. dr., 12th and Tenn. with dem; breakfast room, wood floors. $260/mo. $42-6504. 1 bdr. apartment for summer sublease. 818 + 3 t utilities. Close to campus. A REAL STEAL! 841-3494. or 2 bdr, summer sublease furnished with Jacuzzi and cable paid. Close to campus. Price neg. Call Jeff or Dan. M41-1677. 1 or 2 rooms in 3 bdr. house. Sublease June to mid-Aug. Close to campus. 942-8840. 2 bdr. duplex, appliances, central air, off-street parking, near stadium, avail. now. 749-0749 or axn.0724 2 bdr. townhouse, big enough for 3 MUS LEASE, rent. call Mg1-8417-777, leave message. 2 sublease for June, July, and Aug. Furnished. apt. for 510 persons/mo. Virtue # 824-0154. 3 bdr. hatch, completely furnished apt. for summer sublease. Rent very well. Furnished we desire. 3 bdr. apt, in older house. Available June 1st. 9th and Mississippi. AC, dishwasher, water paid, no付. pts. 941-847-104 3 lbd. 3 older children in good condition near downtown and down town. Doing room, room, room with children. We work through $75/mo. + utilities. $75 depay on meals to 3 KU students. $824 (anytime). 3 bdr, apt near campus available June 1. $300 + uplink, Call 1-811-941-6242. 4 bdr., 2 bath, pool, summer sublease, $178/per formatted, Mastercraft, 15th and Kasol, on hse route. 4 bd. house summer sublet. Excellent condition. Very close to campus. Central air. 1013 Illinois, very reasonable. 843-8187. Astridite v.l. to pass the summer in a state of torpor) coolly. In a basement studio, Downtown, bus route, Reasonable at $240. 749-0745. Nice. 690/mo + no. illusion. Big enough for four. The 3 bdr. in Lawerence, Harperwood Roof, W/D, dishwashers. Summer sublease. Last chance to rent. 841-5797. Get the APARTMENT ADVISOR. It's free! Available at all Dillons locations Apartment for lease: 3 bdr., loft apt. Next to campus: 842-2471 Attractive 2 bdr. apt., unfurished 19th and Tennesssee. $310. Lease. mo. security, no pets. Available June 1st. 842-3946. A summer and fall three bdr. apg. furnished, air conditioning, available June 1st. Water, gas paid. Kentucky: 841-5792. 748-3079 CHEAP! AVAILABLE NOW: 1 bdr. house, 2 bdr. house, 4/5 bdr. house, Duplexes and others. 842-2288. Available June 1, new 2 bdc. kit; 100 Energy Dgt. great kit, with great location. Energy efficient, spacious, wainter/driver hook-up, microwave, wall mount Kit. Call West Hills Apts. 841-3600. Available for summer: A limited number of spots. Special rates: Studio $280/mo 1. lbs. $250 2. bds. $250 3. Calli Barbells Kit 843-2116. Available June tup at jet West 290 W. 19th H. 21st and 2 bdr. tup in great location. Bdr. $120/mo./ 2 bdr. $480. Water paid 12 mo. leave. Come out with towels or call RM 360 or 843-143 Available June 1, 2018. dpr, apt, in价, lease out. Lakefront patio with bar; barkery; daywear dryer/office Street Parking. No pet. Summer sublet or 14 mo. lease at reduced rate. 841-1074. Available June. 2 bdr. apts. In older houses. $75 and up. Lots of character. No pets. 841-1074. DISCOUNT: Sublease nice $410 apartment at Sunrise Place for $310 June, July, Call Todd 748-7477 Efficiency 1 and 2 bdr. apts. in nice older houses for summer sublet. Optimal fall lease. Start at $835, no. pgts. 641-907-144. 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, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin; or any other personal information, 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 notified that in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis. Avail. May 1st; 2 bdr., clean apt, Walking distance to KU/Downtown. Prefer no smokers/otis. Utilities paid $420, 841-6747. BRADWARD SQUARE FAPS, New 3 bdr., 2 bath and 2 bbr., 1 bath available for summer and fall. On KU bus route, Microwave, patio/deck, laundry facility, low utilities, on site manager, office assistant. Includes 2 workdays, weekends, 1 p.m in 1 p.m. Only a free left. Call today 784-1560 Cheap Sublease: Furnished bdr. and left. Avail. June 1st. Rent neg. Water paid. Call 843-7787. Studios, 3+ and 8-bedroom apartments. Many great locations, energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 811-3211-8412, 794-6455, 794-6415, 814-1429 or 879-4238. Ubercraft Management 849-4655 Coop living in KCK. 3 bdr., $1/2 bath, 2-story tenseason only $89/mo. 10 minutes to KUMC. 815-773-2713. Coye sea bark, apt. in oldhouse. Wood floor, claw toot. Aval. 1st June, gas and water paid $15, no pets. 12 month lease or summer sublet avail. M10-1024 EMERY PLACE APTS 1622 and 1623 Ohio just 19 blocks from campus. Available immediately! lbrs. Gas, heat and water paid. $23. Avail for fall learning large studio and 18k. perfect for 2 to share. Laundry facilities. excellent location now waiting for summer or fall. 3 dr. apts, 2 yrs old, C/A, D/W, off-street parking, low locations, no pets. 842-8028. Fantastic summer sublease. Pursued 2 bbr. huge cloats, 2 blocks to KS Union, rent neg. a real must see! Call 841-9730. First month free! Receive first month rent in CASH! Beautiful one bdr. $390/mo. avail. Aug. 8. Very nice, for more info, for 82-802-2671. For summer lease, 1 student and 2 bdr. close to Student Union, off street parking, no pets, references and security deposit required. 843-0007. For rent: June 1st studio, 2.8 bdr., remodeled 3 bdr., house, mobile home 841-6254 Four bdr, duplex, Near Catholic Center. Walk to campus. Want to sublease for summer and open space. Welcome; drone survey. Call 248-7830. for inl. washer, a yet. garage. Call 405-8260. Furn. apt. for graduate on bus line, AC, no smoking. Auklo. Appl. 1191 845-1440 Pursued rooms for lease. One block from university with off street parking, shared kitchen and bath facilities. Available for summer and fall. No eets. 841-5000. Get a group of five or six! Rent a whole duplex, n. 8th and Mississippi 14. mo leave; $875, 4 bdr. 2 full, 2 baths; C/A, 2 dishwashers, carport, no beds, 91-1074 HELP! I've fallen and I can't get up. Call for summer sunbadee, 12th and Ohio, low utilities, 3/4 phone 841-2855. Large 1 bdr. for $250/mi. Big 4 bdr. for $440/mi. Both for June and July. Two blocks from Union. 748-2707 eyes. until 10:30. Large one bdr. (could be considered 2 bdr) available June 1, 1416 Teen, $285. 841-5797. Leasing for Aug. 1st. One bdr. apts. Close to campus. Deposit and references required. No pets, off-street parking. Call 812-8007. Looking for non-smoking roommate to share big b2c. bpt. at University Terrace 107, San Francisco, CA 94126. Build in anymore, by July 31 (or renew for fall without me) $m15; mgm = $1; utilities $h1. New/one bdr., very clean, low utilities, $330/mo, available end of May, 749-561 or 1-648-2559 after 5 p.m. P.M. Nice turned out, for summer subasee. On bus beach. Beer, K.Klintsmith. 8012368. Fouds. Sent seg. Can Alarrett in 840-710-796. Nice one bdr. Clone to campus, AC, starting June no. 823 823 823 823 840-710-796 Orchard Corners: Have a 4 bdr. apartment. Need to rent one room for summer! Pool, laundry, 8125 ms. 841-4278, ask for Holly. Reduced! Furnished 1 bdr. 5/15-8/7 May and Aug. paid. Was $315 now. $25, Call 411-121 ask about 201-9 or call 411-0332. Reserve apartments now for summer and fall 1 and 2 bedroom apts, furnished, 1 block from university with off street parking, no pets. 841-5000. Roommates needed, male or female, house off campus, $175/mo. utilities. 749-0904 NATIVEE? KELSONIA Christian Community offers干净ness and acceptance, a great location, and low rent, including all usable space. In addition to its campus and fall area available, Pick-up applications at the RCM Center 1364 West 78th Street will be processed. Occasion of sickness in hospital with 1 yr bath, AC, deck and garage. Hanover Place, $331/no. 741-7299 leave message! Spacious 3 bdr., 2 bathroom apartment. Porch, close to campus, very clean. Rent neg. Call anytime 749-4640. SUMMER CARE for boys ages 4 & 8. Mornings, per 10-12 hr /week in my room. Transportation required and must be flexible. $4/hr. 84-7511 after 50%. SUMMER SUBLEASE: Great big house, holds 4+ people very comfortably. Super close to campus. Great place to live this summer. Call 842-1435. Summer sublease: Furnished room with shared kitchen and bath facilities for females. Water and electricity paid. One block from university off street parking. Beds 841-5600. SUMMER SUBLEASE: Available 30% abbr. 50b, 4 person townhouse, Near campus, May paid! Reduced rent. A great bargain at $500. Call 407-6231 Summer sublease: Purnished 1 bdr. apt, 1 block from university, with off street parking, no pets; M45, 800 lummer sublease: 3 bdr., 2 bathroom, W/D, bathwash, microwave. Brand new, rest neg. N4-8097 Sublease for summer: $125/mo. + ½ utilities. Male or female. Please call 749-440. Summer sublease: 4 bdr., 2 bath, furnished. Great location - near campus and downtown. Neg. 749-4262. Sublease: 3 kdx, 2 bath, townhouse with garage and AC, Acknowledgement $95 neg. Call 749-1805. AC, Akiing 825# resign 740-7805. Summer rest. Sunrise Tresure Apts. 3 bdr., 2 bath, 7tnm from campus $500 a.b.o. Furnished, unfurnished AUA100. Summer sublet, 1 bdr. apt., 14th and NJ, fall option, AC, utilities free, $250/mo., 740-6068. wood. Call 841-709-2131 or 1-848-6547 Summer sublease 4 room for rent, together or separate. Spacious apt., AC, pool. Rent neg. Call and van. Summer instyle in style at a luxurious Sunrise Village Townhouse, Pool, tennis court, 4 bath, 2 full bath, modern kitchen, central air, and your WASHER/DRYER, 749-4775. summit, summer subm. newly renovated, 2 bd. apt., old house, 2 ceiling fans, room A, private office, off-street parking, Walk to KU and downtown, $300. No pets. Option for B-141-8104. Summer sublease $134/mon + ½ tuition. Owen room in chamber in 5th bfr. Close to campus, mish and Michigan. Swimming pool, mostly furnished only. Mileage $149.83. Avail. May 3rd July 2nd Summer sublease: Need 3 people, 2 blocks from Union, furnished, $150/mo. * utilities May rent free. Call 769-5619. Summer nubber set; Architectureally unique home. bdi. 1+. bath. beautifully furnished, wash. dryer. ideal for grade, or couple. Closet to cannot 951-2737 or 854-2738. Summer sublease: 2 bdr. duplex 3031 Heather Call: 841-9707 or 1-844-6637. Summer sublease: June 1st, 2 bdr; house, 1 block from campus, basement and yard, semi-furnished if preferred. Call 841-7948. Summer subsale with issue of new fall leaf. Cocky studio print, in O.W. Lawrence. Wood floors, 15 minutes from campus and downtown. R216 utilized付 M328-M908, eve, weekend. Georgetown Apartments Walk to KU or downtown. Avail. Aug. 1. Efficiency 1 bdrs, apts, in older屋. No pets. $285 and up. AP: 1074. - KU Bus Route-Holidome - On Site MCT / Reliable URGENT. Need to sublease 2 bdrs. of 3 bdrs. apt. Reasonable rent and utilities. Avail June 1. 841-3530 WTD, 4220/mo. 10:58am, 14:35am 1 bdr. apts. at 945 Missouri avail. June 1. Studio avail. Aug. 1, 7:44-01/16 events. - Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout WE'RE DESPERATE!! Summer sublease, 2 bdr., near campus, $95/mo. 841-7238 Summer subunit spacious two btw.二死, bath AC, WID, W220/mo. + utilities. 749-8233. - Microwaves & Dishwashers - Fenced pool area with - 24 hour Maintenance - Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available - Tanning Deck & Barbeque 10 x 18 Mouth Lenses - Low Security Deposit Office Hours: M,W,F 2:30-5:30 T,TH by appt. Call about our Summer Special - No pets COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS 630 Michigan 749-7279 FOLLOWING MARKER 10013488000785960000000000 - Volleyball Court Instant $200 Rebate - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - On Bus Route - Basketball Court - Exercise Room - 3 Hot Tubs $345-$410 Present this ad and we will install a mini-blind on patio door with any deposit placed between 4/30-5/20 *Offer limited/one rebate per lease 10 mo./12 mo. 842-5111 --spacious & comfortable 1&2 BR apartments Anderson Rentals 1312 W.6th Now leasing for summer & fall 1990 RYDER TRUCK RENTALS (Local and One-Way) Call for rates. 843-2044 WOODWAY APARTMENTS - tennis courts DO NOT RENT AN APARTMENT UNTIL YOU CONSIDER THIS: - Washer and dry in each apartment - Miniqueque - on KU bus route - Gas heat, central air - 3 pools - Constructed in 1987 - Large Bedrooms 24TH &EDDINGHAM (next to Gammons) EDDINGHAM PLACE short term summer - On KU Bus Route - gas heat & water on apartments - laundry facilities HOURS: 3:30 5:30 p.m. Weekdays 8:30-10:30 a.m. Saturday Office Hours: 12-6pm M - F 9-3pm Sat. No Appt. Necessary 611 Michigan Street (across from Hardees) Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price !! - 2 bedroom $435, $445 - 2 bedroom $555 Affordable Price !!! Hurry! Call Now! Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mnet,Inc OFFICE We have 2 rooms available for summer sublease 180-188 mm². + usititute. 2 blocks from campus Burlington North Library 841-6935 Need our apartment? 775-6241. Sub lease for the summer! Is it perfect! Call 769-1463 (next to Gammons) TRAILRIDGE South Point Newly Remodeled 1 & 2 Bedrooms for Summer & Fall - new plush carpets - new appliances - new appliances - 1 or 2 baths - louvered blinds - large rooms & closets 2166 W. 26th 843-6446 - refreshing pool - central air & heat Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9-6 Saturday 12-5 $50 OFF CONVENIENCE Bring in this ad and you will receive $50 off 1 month's rent with the signing of a 12 months lease. Call for an appointment today. or come by during the follow ing hours: M-W-F anytime after 2:00 843-0106 will hold apartment until fall. $100.00 security deposit we have more - Front door bus service - On-site computer room - Macintosh computers - Weekly maid service - Laundry facilities - Excellent campus location We have MORE You can too! Now leasing for Fall 1990 Boardwalk apartments "Your Home Away From Home" NAISMITH HALL 1800 Pleasant Drive Lewisville, KS 66344 971) 843-8599 430 Roommate Wanted 1 & 2 BDR available Indoor/outdoor pools & heated spa $200/mo. furnished, utilities paid. Washer/dryer included. Summer or/or fall. Female only. Call 842-4776 leave message. 24 hour professional on-site management maintenance CAMPUS PLAZA 140 Leshania. 3 Block from campus. 2 lobs, available for sublease May 15-Aug. CIREP CREAW 4 + utilities, furnished. CALLII MATT or Craig 749-102. C 10, 12 month leases available Top Hat Depressingly easy an enegy-giving female roommate from May 13 (or no) through July 31. Spacious room, bft. kept with all appliances, AC, post office, laundry, dishwasher, utilities $20.59 • $15.99 • utilities (May) Call Lisa on 714-686-3866. 2 on-site KU bus stops TOP HAT One or two roommates needed for summer lease. $176 + ½ utilities. Call 841-3234. New appliances, carpet & ceiling fans 0 842-4444 Female non-smoker needed for '90-91' 4181 + $15,000. Great house, great location 748-4189. Female roommate wanted for fall of '90-91. Stuffed upperclassman, large 3' lodge for 2,000+. Fee $400. Female Christian roommate for summer and/or fall $125, *u*-utilities, even room, walking distance from campus. Toni 841-37-61. Mon.Fri.9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 524 Frontier Rd. Students upperclassman, large 2 bdr. with balcony. Furniture welcome. 841-4128. Female roommate wanted for fall. $120 + % of cost. Roommate: Bedroom Apt. 1503. - 12% titration. Call Nice ap. Roommate wanted for fall: Male/female, live with females. $182/mo. + 1% utilities. Nice apt. 049-609-3880 Roommate needed to share 3 bdr. townhouse for summer. Would have big bdr. with both bathroom and pool. Rent is very mg. Call 749-2074. Female roommate wanted for fall. $130 + ½ utilities. Meadowbrook. Beginning Aug. is 81-459-260. Small pets allowed H Roommate needed for 2 bdrs. apt. Available bedroom is night. Nogage $192/mo. I will all payments. 841-3727 Scott. Furnished room in apartment from Hawk. 5 minute walk anywhere on campus. 798-6568 MALE non-smoking roommate starting June 1. Estate Park, Fullerton CA 843-1427 2 Laundry Facilities THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Mary, Kevin brother, townhouse, W/D, DW, completely formatted, put your own room, etc. Must be clean, responsible, reliable. 843-6427 leave message - Policy Nursing student/musician needs female roommate at KU med starting August. Call 749-6091 leave message. Male or female needed for summer subseance, 3 bdr., 2 bath at Orchard Center with pool, Cafe, bush, hotel $175/mo. + % utilities. May free! Call Nancy at 841-2317. Non-bromophobic roommates wanted to share house for fall semester. No smokers. No drugs. Pete k. e.k. Send letter in care of Kannan Box 80. Summer: 1 person to share furnished 3 bdr. apt. 10th and Arkansas. Rent neg. 749-4720. Sky: picnic roommate needed 1138/mo. at Mindrowndrook. Call 842-9068 Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words Wanted! 1 person, preferable male, for next call at Sundance 2 apartment. Fully furnished $175/mo. + $4 utilities. Call 864-6343 or 864-6346, per the evening in the weeks. Classified Information Mail-In Form No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising Rinkd box ads-crease add $4.00 service charge. Tearsheets are NOT provided for classified advertisements. Found ads are free for three days, no more than 15 words. Monday at 4:00 p.m. 2 pages prior to publication. Deadline for cancellation is: Monday at 4:00 p.m. 2 pages prior to publication. **PLASSIFIED RATES** Deadlines PrepA Order Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to the University Daily Kansan. Words 1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days 0-15 3.25 4.80 6.85 11.35 16-20 3.80 5.65 8.00 12.80 21-25 4.40 6.55 9.20 14.30 26-30 5.00 7.45 10.40 15.75 31-35 5.60 8.35 11.55 17.25 Classifications Address (phone number published only if included below) 105 personal 140 lost & found 305 for sale 110 business personnel 20 help wanted 340 auto sales 120 announcements 222 professional services 360 miscellaneous 130 entertainment 235 typing services 370 want to buy 405 for rent 430 roommate wanted Name___Phone no.. Classified Mail Order Form Please print your ad one word per box: | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW KANSAN POLICY Date ad begins. Total days in paper. Amount paid Lawrence, KS 66045 Manages payable to: University Daily 119 Staffer-Flint Hall Lawrence, KS 66045 THE FAR SIDE By GARY LARSON 5.1 © 1990 Universal Press Syndicate AFRKAN TOURS "On three, Vince. Ready?" 14 Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Hardee's Hardee's FAST DRIVE THRU A mechanic works on a car. Largest Quick Service Menu BURGER Harder. We Use Cholesterol-Free Vegetable Oil Open 24 HOURS (23rd & Iowa) ♥ 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 2 Locations to Serve You 2030 West 23rd 1313 West 6th Roast Beef Sunday Reg. Roast Beef Sandwich 99¢ Every Sunday 3 Chicken 3 Chicken Brown Bag Specials $2.99 • Grilled Chicken OR • Chicken Fillet OR • 6 Pc. Chicken Stix AND • Reg. French Fries • Medium Drink T. V. Room Hardees Hardees Hardees featuring ESPN and Music Videos Breakfast made from scratch until 10:30 daily HAWK KARD SPECIALS THE HAWK KARD This card is for the purpose of identification and to prevent theft. Wanted! ___ The department is playing host to a week-long tour of Kansas for national and regional travel writers in hopes that they will have good things to say about the state when they return home. Many people might consider Kansas tourism a contradiction in terms, but the Kansas Department of Commerce has approved the promotion. THIS WEEK'S DEAL: Cheeseburger & Reg. Fry 99% Streak Burger 99% Writers come to Kansas to visit state's 'hot spots' Scheduled tour stops include the University of Kansas, the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza, the Woodlands race track in Kansas City, Kan., and the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in Hutchinson. The tour will be at KU on Friday and includes visits to the Spencer Art Museum and the Museum Natural History. Hardee's. Three big Kansas tourist draws are conspicuously absent from the itinerary of the tour, which began Saturday and ends Thursday. The world's largest ball of twine in Cawker City, the world's deepest hand-dwell in Greensburg and an 8,000-pound concrete prairie dog in Oakley do not appear on the agenda. By Chris Siron Kansas staff writer "As I said, we're trying to improve our image," said Mary Lou McPhail, assistant director of Kansas Travel and Tourism Development. McPhail said market research had led department officials to advertise in areas they thought were filled with peopleaching to tour the Midwest. Prime markets included Denver, St. Louis and Oklahoma City. The campaign, with a budget in excess of $200,000, also will place advertisements in travel magazines such as the National Geographic Traveler and the TWA and Continental airlines' in-flight magazines. "People are absolutely overwhelmed by what they find here, compared to what they thought and were taught." McPhail said the goal was to change Kansas' reputation from a drive-through state to a destination. Bill Colvin, senior editor of the Manhattan Mercury, is one of the writers on the tour. He was less optimistic about Kansas' prospects of becoming a renowned tourist attraction. "People won't come specifically to Kansas," he said. "If you think they will, you're kidding yourself. If the Department of Commerce really thinks people will set out from far away to come straight to Kansas, they're daydreaming." Lawrence unemployment rises slightly He said his favorite attractions included Cheyenne Bottoms and the Fort Scott and Fort Larned Historical Sites. By Chris Siron Kansas staff writer Lawrence unemployment increased slightly in March, according to a state Department of Human Resources report released yesterday. The Lawrence unemployment rate increased from 3.3 percent in February to 4 percent in March. The rate in September was 2.9 percent. Kansas unemployment fell from 4.1 percent in February to 4.0 percent in March. The Kansas jobless rate in March was 6.3%. The report attributed the state's employment increases to seasonal factors and increases in employment in every industry except mining. "Jobs opened up for tax preparers, lawn and landscape workers, retail workers in farm and garden stores, construction workers, real estate agents and others," about 38 per cent of the workforce, about the overall employment increases in the state. Kathy Ketchum, public information officer for the department, said the loss of jobs in Lawrence came in the government sector. "Surprisingly, there seems to be a pattern," she said. "We've seen this for the past three or four years." Lawmakers intend to offer increases in Regents budget Kansan staff writer By Rod Griffin TOPEKA — Two amendments that legislators plan to offer to the state's ommish appropriations bill would move the Board of Regents budget. But State Rep. John Solbach, D-Dawrence, said that there was little hope of either amendment being adopted and that if they were, they could be detrimental to agreements already reached. "I've almost convinced myself it would be better not to offer my amendment and oppose the other one." "What we already have," he said. Sobach's amendment would allocate $1.5 million to the Regents budget to be used for shrinkage and other operating expenditures, and other operating expenditures. State Rep. Sheila Hochauer, D-Manhattan, said the second amendment would add another $1.5 million. The funds would be used to increase the enrollment in Regents schools and four other Regents schools to 75 percent of the Regents request. The second amendment also would include $162,000 for the University of Kansas and $100,000 for Fort Hays State University to be used for shrinkage adjustment. "It benefits five of seven universities," Hochhauser said of the enrollment adjustment funds. "And with the shrinkage, it beneath With the exception of the shrinkage money, the amendment is identical to one that was defeated on the Senate floor Thursday. Kansas '90 Legislature If the second amendment were to pass, K-State would receive $962,773 for enrollment adjustment, raising the enrollment adjustment for fiscal 1991 to $3.5 million. Solbach said the amendments could lead to across-the-board budget cuts. "I don't want to generate an across the board cut," he said. across-the-board cut," he said. He said that unlike past years, Regents schools had failed to work with each other and with legislators on the Regents budget, causing the current problems. State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, said the competition between schools was caused by the method of financing the Regents schools. The 10-year-old system is based on student headcounts. SUMMER SALE! STARTS: WEDNESDAY, MAY 2 AT 8AM ALL STORES CLOSE AT THEIR REGULAR TIME SALE CONTINUES THROUGH NEXT WEEK OUTBACK • RED FIRST DAY ONLY! $1299 DRAWSTRING-WAIST KNIT SHORTS In white or a variety of stripes. (XS-S-M-L) VALUE $34 ATHENTIC SPORTWEAR FIRST DAY ONLY! $1599 FORENZA NON ACCEPTARE BOSTITUTI! BELTED PAPERBAG-WAIST SHORTS Sundial print in white coat or sequo. (XS-S-M-L) VALUE $39 CR THE FASHION ROOM CROOOUET & OTHERS CHAMBRAY SEPARATES (Junior S-13; S-M-L) VALUES S12-25 KNIT PANT SETS (S-M-L) VALUES $30-33 PALMETTOS $599-999 $1699-1999 KNIT PANT SETS $ $799 NEON BOXER SHORTS (Junior S-M-L) VALUES 512-14 THRU SUNDAY ONLY! TAKE AN EXTRA ON EVERY FORENZA* AND OUTBACK RED* TOP LISTED 45-58% OFF SPECIALTY STORE PRICES! 25% DISCOUNT OFF OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICES! 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MOLA FASHIONGAL SECTION TWO TUESDAY, May 1, 1990 Perspectives on the racial climate at KU **Editor's note:** The Kanaan asked several members of the campus community to give their perspectives on race relations in general and the March 30 incident at the SAE fraternity house in particular. Kansan reporterate Steve Bailley, Erick Goraki, Jonathan Plummer, Christine Reinolda, Carol B. Shiney, Inee Shuk, Pam Sollin, Buck Taylor and Matt Taylor contributed to this project. Mark McCormick Black Men of Today Mark McCormick of Black Men of Today said his life took a hectic turn after the incident at Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. "It kept my phone ringing. It kept me away from my studies. It's curtailed my social life." McCormick says. CITY BASEBALL McCormick has been the most vocal and visible member of Black Men of Today. He leads their news conferences and marches. He led more than 80 protesters to the administration hearing, which resulted in an impromptu conference with Chancellor Gene A. Budg attended by more than 350 people. "It was worth the time regardless of what comes from it." McCormick said. "We sort of woke everybody up. If we made anyone care, we were successful." McCormick said he would like to see increased racial awareness and dialogue on campus. He also wants the position of executive vice chancellor to be filled by a Black. MecMorrick said he was encouraged by Budig's announcement last week of 35 new scholarships for graduate students. namalaye said the scholarships, worth $500 each, were renewable and would be financed by Campaign Kansas. McCormick said, "It would be better to coincide (the students) in a new administrator who represents those students." Bryce Petty President of SAE fraternity Campuswide sensitivity training and education in cultural diversity should result from recent events, said M. Sakura. The events "will open not only the eyes of administrators, but also the students" Pettie said. "It is important to make sure that you are aware." Daddy Petty, who has been the spokesman for his fraternity, said it had been difficult for him to keep up with university and University responsibilities. Petty said some members of the fraternity, while being embarrassed. "But it's been a learning experience," he said. "I feel like it is opened my eyes and helped me become a better person." were beginning to feel defensive about the events of the past few weeks because the fraternity was being blamed for their failure. "SAE does not condone such actions," he said. "I hope in the eyes of everyone out there that SAE doesn't get KU police assistant director Ralph Oliver Whether student groups protesting racism on campus were approaching the issues correctly was not a question Ralph Oliver, KU police assistant director, said he could answer with certainty. He said, however, that they were achieving results. racism, I think it'll raise the overall consciousness of the community," he said. "And people are concerned." A. P. Mishra Oliver said that because no statistics were available about the amount of racism on campuses across the country, he did not know whether the University of Kansas was more or less racist than other universities. "Personally, one incident is one too many." he said. Oliver said that the recent past had demonstrated that racism was a problem across the country. Oliver said he hoped that when students thought that they had been wronged, for whatever reason, they would learn a lesson. "Don't know if what's going on at KU is any different from anywhere else," he said. "But it's nice to see that KU's staff are doing well." "If these incidents continue to occur, we hope that people come and tell us about it and give us a chance to do our jobs." THE FILM CREATORS IN LOS ANGELES ARE EXPLAINING THE HISTORY OF MUSIC IN THE 1980S. THEY ALSO HELP TO DESIGN A NEW BOWLING GAME FOR THE NEW YORK GAMES. Mark McCormick, right, and others speak with Robert Shelton. KU ombudsman, at Strong Hall. Group brings leadership as racial tensions escalate Special to the Kansan By Karen Park During the past few weeks, a previously little-known campus group emerged as a vocal player in the discussions about race relations at the University of Kansas. The group, Black Men of Today, led a demonstration at Strong Hall after a Black pizza delivery person reported being struck and insulted at Sigma Alpha Epsilon in New York City. Chancellor Gene A. Budig and other administrators The group was formed in November 1989 by Darren Fulcher and John Lewis in response to the lack of action by the administration to increase recruitment and students, said Fulcher. Kansas City .M., junior The group began as a Black male forum sponsored by the Black Student Union. The forum, Fulcher said, unified Black males and gave them an opportunity to express their problems. After the group formed, Sam Adams, associate professor of journalism, became the group's first faculty adviser. Adams said the group had not needed a full-time professor and offered the University facilities and art on campus-wide issues. Now the group is a registered University organization, but it does not receive Student Senate funds. Fulcher said Black Men of Today and BSU were two separate organizations that were linked closely. Cedric Lockett, BSU president, said that even though several groups had different views about minority recruitment and retention, they all had the same goal. Shannon Lawrence junior and BSU member, said, "I do think if everyone joined together to make a unified effort, it would be better, but having all the men standing up is a step in the right direction." Cory Anderson, one of four leaders of the group, said, "We're not just representing Black men. What we're trying to do is for the good of the campus." Origin of the group Fulcher said Anderson and Mark McCormick, who mentioned the group's efforts, were instrument in getting the organization started. "Mark had a lot of information and motivation," Fulcher said. The group had its first protest in December 1989 in front of Strong Hall. The protest was in response to the administration's lack of effort to recruit and retain minorities. Anderson said. Todd Boerger, Winfield senior and one of several white people who have attended group meetings, said he joined in the middle of this semester because he was a teacher and thought they were addressing important issues. Coleen Dodson, Little Rock, Ark., sophomore, said she became involved in Black Men of Today after it began addressing the issues of recruitment and retention. Fulcher said the group began with a membership of 20 people. Membership has increased to about 40 "They have no real commitment to the program." hasaid of the administration. "They're not going where they want to go." Dodson, who also is involved in Students Concerned About Discrimination, said she became involved with Black Men of Today because it was one group that she saw was very active in tackling problems. Tiffany Craig, Topeka freshman, said she became involved with the group a month ago. She said she did not join as a result of the incident at the SAE fraternity. "I liked what they were all about." Craig said, "I felt they were doing more than BSU." Black Men of Today is able to address more issues and more independent growth, because it is a smaller and more independent group. Even though no exact plans have been made to work with Black Men of Today, Lockett said he anticipated that BSU would work with the group more in the future. Women involved Although some people have accused the group of being sexist, eight to 10 women are members of Black Women's Association. Janice Turner, Fort Madison, Iowa, junior, said she joined the group in November 1989. "I wasn't intimidated by the name. I just wasn't sure if women were allowed." Turner said. "So I asked "It's the behavior that defines the group. It isn't the name. As a group they are not only open, but they are Ann Dean, the pizza delivery person, called Black Men of Today after the March 30 incident and asked the group to support her. Anderson said. It is right that Ann Dean gets their help, Adams said. It puts the lie to rest,13 he said, referring to charges of assault. Fulcher said the group's notoriety had increased because of the incident at the SAE house. After the incident, the leaders of Black Men of Today decided that nothing was being done by the administration or the Lawrence police department, Adams said. On April 11, the group organized the demonstration at Strong Hall. Adams said he agreed with the group and what they had done to prevent the issue from being swept under the rug. Among the demands was that Matthew Willenborg, the fraternity member who reportedly struck Dean, be expelled from the fraternity. On April 23, Willenborg resigned from SAE. During that demonstration, the group voiced some of its demands to the administration. Fulcher said that he approved Willemberg's resignation but that the fraternity should have contested it. Anderson said the group also wanted the administration to improve minority recruitment and retention programs and involve Black Men of Today in finding a permanent director for the Office of Minority Affairs. Demands on the University In addition to the group's other demands, Fulcher said Black Men of Today wanted the University to require all incoming freshmen to take a multicultural awareness class. The group also wants the administra- See BLACK, p. 4b Judith Ramaley Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said recent events had opened the lines of communication between students and administrators. Executive vice chancellor "I think the effect will be extraordinarily positive," she said. "More people have found a voice and expressed their views." Ramaley said that people experienced incidents of racial harassment every day and that those smaller incidents did not immediately so they did not build up. "We must not return to business as usual," she said. "We should not wait for an event to open up the lines of communication. We must not wait for something to happen as public as the SAE incident." Humane said she and other administrators already been meeting with students and working on minority issues. She said she had devoted about half her administrative duties to finding solutions to the problems in the middle of preparing the University budget. But the incident enraged more student groups with more demands, making it necessary to schedule more meetings during the past three weeks. "It has meant that I have spent a much higher portion of my time listening to student concerns and understand- ing them." "We have been working as fast as we can to respond, be available and accessible," she said. Gene Budig Chancellor Chancellor Gene A. Budig said that the incident at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity had resulted in construc- "It has opened new and needed lines of communication on the campus," he said. "I believe the matter brought people together in a way to enhance services and support for minorities. "I have had a series of productive conversations with faculty, staff and students. I have appreciated receiving the benefit of many views." A. J. BURTON But Budig said that students, faculty and administratorsmust continue to work together in the future. Budig Andrea Katzman Students Concerned About Discrimination Recent events since the incident at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity should be a clear signal to University administration that changes are needed, said Andrea Mitrillo for Students Concerned About Discrimination. "I think that they've shown the administration that it's important to get creative." on campus that is welcoming to minorities and all people who face discrimination. "Katzman said. He doesn't think it as a unique incident. It's not." She said that if the administration wanted to change, then it could make anything happen that it wanted to. He said that if they had concern and concern was only because they were receiving pressure, then their interest and concern would step once the pressure stopped and nothing would happen. Katzman said there was a need for a strong Office of Minority Affairs, better communication, a class dealing with cultural and multiracial issues, sensitivity training and integration, and retention of minority faculty and students. "Above all, a real commitment for action is needed, not just words." Katzman said. Katzman said she was upset by recent events because people on campus saw bigfory and racism but did nothing People who do not do anything about bigotry and racism encourage it because of their silence, she said. an impulse and frustrated that the administration has made changes, or making changes," she said. "That is inexhaustible." Katzman said she was excited because some people were realizing that things can happen through unity. "I think it's made people more aware of the problem and that it's something we need to deal with," she said. "It's made them frustrated, though, because responses have been so slow. I think it's made people excited that no matter how hard it been, we've done something. We've made changes." Continued on Page 4b Sequence of race-related events on campus this semester — A member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity strikes Ann Dean, St. Louis sophomore, and utters a racial insult to her as she delivers pizza to the SAE house, 1301 West Campus Road, according to police reports. FRIDAY MARCH 30 12:30 a.m. — A group of about 30 students protecting Friday's incident gathers on the front lawn of the SAE house. SUNDAY,APRIL 1 8:30 p.m. — About 20 students return to the SAE house, demanding to talk to someone about the incident. Lawrence police arrive, and Bryce Patey, SAE president, announces that Matthew Willemberg has been suspended from the fraternity for activity "unbeschenged of a gentleman." The discussion is moved to a meeting with University officials, police and students participate in an improprium forum. MONDAY, APRIL 2 - University officials meet separately with Dean and SAE representatives to review options in the matter. TUESDAY, APRIL 3 THURSDAY, APRIL 5 SAE announces formation of a race-awareness committee for the fraternity. - Black Men of Today gives a forum on racism at the Kansas Union. The racial climate at KU and the incident at SAE are discussed. FRIDAY, APRIL 6 - Dean files a complaint against Willenborg with the University. MONDAY APRIL 9 form an advisory group for the Office of Minority Affairs. A panel will also review SAE fraternity members' attitudes and behavior in race relations. William Whitcomb of the U.S. Department of Justice is a member of the group of students in the Kansas Union and offers his mediation services in the incident. WEDNESDAY, APRIL H - David Ambor, vice chancellor for student affairs, outlines steps to improve KU's cultural climate. He announces that KU will provide cultural training for leaders of student organizations and leaders of academic organizations. THURSDAY APRIL 12 About 70 students march to the SAE house to deliver a “get well” card. The students return to a meeting place in front of Strong Hall, where they attempt to stop traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard. After KU police block the boulevard, the students decide to march to administer tive offices, where about 80 protesters chant, "We want action." Chancellor Gene A. Baldry returns from Kansas City, Kan., to speak to a crowd of about 350 in the Strong Hall rotunda. He apologizes for a lack of communication between administrators and students and discusses steps to improve KJ's racial climate. He also offers the University's apologies to Dean. - Members of Students Concerned About Discrimination and Black of Men of Today meet with administrators, including Budig and Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, to discuss the campus climate. MONDAY, APRIL 23 1 - Willebenb and Greg McGlenn, Topkeima烤鸡, voluntarily resign from the fraternity after a separate battery incident April 21. According to police report, the fraternity bettered a man who tried to persecute to report an automobile accident. WEDNESDAY APRIL 25 Jim Flory, Douglass County district attorney, announces that Willeboro has been charged with conduct and misdemeanor battery in connection with the March 30 incident. 2B Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansas --- C OUPONS O Give Yourself A Hand. 25% OFF MANICURES AND PEDICURES. PLEASE MENTION THIS COUPON WHEN MAKING THE APPOINTMENT. 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Iowa St., Lawrence, Kansas Exp. 5/17/90 --- 。 University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 3日 Justice,84,not ready to hang up robes The Associated Press WASHINGTON — He's 84 now, a passionate liberal on an increasingly conservative Supreme Court. His health is not the best, but William J. Brennan said he was having too much fun to retire. "I'm still enjoymyself. Nothing possibly could be as satisfying," he said in an interview days before his 84th birthday Wednesday. "I've been having some bad health of late. I had that dogdough attack that started, I thought, as influenza," Brennan said, referring to a March illness now thought to have been a bronchial infection. "They gave me some antibiotics, and I had a bad reaction, lost a lot of weight," he said. "They told me it might be as long as three months before I finally get fully recovered from it." But he does not plan to retire. "I if I can keep on the way I am, I'm going to stay," he said. His stay has lasted 34 years and has transcended the administrations of eight presidents. In the court's history, only one justice, William O. Douglas, wrote more opinions. Only three court members have been older. Oliver Wendell Hensley served at 91, Roger Taney at 87 and Hugo Black at 85. Few have written with such literary grace and eloquence. Appointed by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Brennan helped lead a liberal revolution in U.S. law through the 1980s. The prosecution of individual rights was elevated to new heights. Some called Brennan an ideologue and an activist. Some called him a champion of the underdog. In a 1987 speech to a law school, he said, "When I think of the progress we have made over the last 30 years, I look upon our system of civil liberties with some satisfaction and a certain pride." Wrote historic opinions Gradually, his role changed. Ronald Reagan's legacy of three key court appointments has left Brennan often outnamed in his fight against a nascent conservative counter-revolution. "In recent years, the other side has pretty much carried the day," Brennan said. "That strikes me as nothing more than a joke," he said, the president falls on the vacancies." In a recent interview published in New Yorker magazine, Brennan was quoted as saying, "I'm not discouraged to the point of giving up. I hope people don't overdo the suggestion that we're headed for perdition. "I'm not going to walk out and say the hell with it." Even in recent years, Brennan has registered major successes. Some of her accomplishments are conservative Washington Legal Foundation to say, "Unfortunately, I think the man is extremely intelligent. He's been a key player now under three chief justices. He deserves professional respect." Brennan said he would retire when he was unable to carry on. "I have a pledge from my wife that the day she notice it she tell me," he said. "I think it would be so wrong to stay here unless you fully able to do your job. Too much rides on what we do around here." Among the more than 1,200 opinions written by Brennan are landmarks that imposed a "one person, one vote" standard for electing state legislatures, created constitutional protections for libel lawsuits defendants and helped invent a legal definition of obscurity. New York University law professor Burt Neuberth, evaluating Brennan's opinions and his contribution to the justices' deliberations, once called him the most influential Supreme Court member since John Marshall, the great chief justice of the early 19th century. The comment makes Brennan wince. "Honestly, that so overstated, so overdrawn. Even the greats of the past — Holmes, Brandeis — they'd need to stand for such a claim," he said. Respect for the Constitution But retired Justice Lewis F. Powell, Brennan's colleague for 15 years, sad in a recent interview, "I have no doubt he will have a high ranking among the court's members. Bill is one of history's great justices." Reminded of his reputation as a skilled behind-the-scenes coalition builder, Brennan took exception. Although far more conservative than Brennan in his judicial views, Powell said his professional differing never impaired their friendship. "I don't know who invented that. You know damn well it is not true," he said. "You do your best, and as often as not when you end up with a majority, it reflects many ideas of your colleagues and not only yours." He said the court's members persuaded each other in written memos, not in backroom deals or smoke-filled meetings. A sample of Brennan's writing style, and perhaps his power of persuasion, was displayed in a memorial at the Capitol for the Constitution's 200th birthday. "Our entire Constitution is a national treasure; a document of heady ideals and eloquent, elegant language," he wrote for individual rights." he wrote. "But one thing the old parchment is not a china doll that has to be protected from the regular world by a good layer of cotton wool. It is a fabric made from a collar quite a few respectable denins in the line of duty." Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for Driving by BAUCH & LOMB Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for Driving by BAUSCH & LOMB 732 Massachusetts Available at The ETC. Shop Available at The Etc. Shop 732 Massachusetts VANDERBILT'S LEVI'S HEADQUARTERS DISCOUNT PRICES PREWASHED 501® Levi's compare to $29.95 501 PREWASHED $19.99 Get the pastel to right from the time you buy these premium jeans we, and the 18 all only impose with some wasted! 100% cotton, made with 100% cotton, making and making it a white jeans. 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"ECONOMICAL CARS AT ECONOMICAL RATES" *ECOONOMICAL CARS AT ECONOMICAL RATES* 1841-841 Must be 21 years old Wheel Drive --- PS KU PRINTING SERVICE PS KU PRINTING SERVICE Canon Laser Color Copier at the Union Duplicating Center 4B Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Perspectives Stacy Burtin Black Panhellenic Stacy Burin, chairman of Black Panhellenic, said the campus community was more aware of racial tensions because of recent events. "It is forcing the University to take a stand toward the racial incident Burtin Burtin said and cultural diversity as a whole," said Burtin, who also is vice president of Black Student Union. "It should make the University improve the racial climate." that as BSU vice president she was faced with situations of discrimination people had experienced on campus. "None of the incidents in the past received any press," she said. "They were just swep under the carpet. No longer are minority issues swept under the rug." Burtin said she saw changes in the future. She said the recent events had affected her friends and colleagues differently. "My younger sister may come to KU," she said. "I don't see her as having to experience those problems." "Some people feel like, the events are forcing the University to take a stance," Burin said. "The University is responsible for us and our safety." Black Panhellenic, Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic have formed Greeks for Responsible Education Enhancing Cultural Sensitivity. The group will try to diversify the Greek crowd and raise awareness, Burkin said. "There's a lot of ignorance out there," she said. "We can get rid of the problems together through various activities." Aaron Andes Some of Burtin's colleagues are angry and tired, she said. SCAD Aaron Andes, member of Students Concerned About Discrimination, said that although some people were working hard to change the campus climate, others were willing to put recent events out of their minds. 100 Andes "It's so difficult to keep an exciting incident in people's minds for a long period of time," he said. "You are probably ready to put the incident out of their minds with out changing the climate. However, there are those people who recognize that this is an ongoing problem — those people will continue to work with the administration to change the climate." Andes said recent events had raised the consciousness of some people who did not know things like that could happen. He said the events were making some people question whether fraternities were inherently racist, prejudice and sexist. "It should also cause the administration to go beyond words, to move into some serious actions that are going to make conservative people nervous," he said. "It should promote a new feeling that students are changing and are going to continue to change this campus. Students are going to continue to fight to stop oppression of all kinds." Andes said that speaking in front of the crowd at the protest April 11 at Strong Hall was empowering. He said it was exciting to speak in front of such a powerful leader and be recognized as a part of the strong coalition of students causing change. Tom Cartmell Intersaturnity Corp. Interfraternity Council "The University is implementing a Tom Cartmell, Interfraternity Council president, said it was unfortunate that it took recent racial incidents to derail the university aware of racism on campus. review board to review incidents like these," Cartmell said. "It will also take a look at regional racial incidents and how to prevent them in the future." M. HOLMES The events have had a significant effect on Cartmell personally because of his position as IFC president, he said. Cartmell said the events should challenge people to do their own investigating instead of listening to rumors. "The IFC has the role of representing fraternities and implementing programs to prevent these types of incidents from happening." Carey says that racial sensitivity. It's said to say, but if something like this had hap- opened, I probably would have remained somewhat ignorant to the issue." Cartmel said he hoped that all 2,000 members of the KU fraternities would become more aware of the racial climate. "If you went to each of the 24 fraternities," he said. "You would find some form of racism. But if you went to any living group on campus, there also would be some form of racism." He said that he would try to encourage the fraternities to be more aware of racism in the recruiting process and to address the issue of racial members with racist attitudes. "Most have sensitivity to what has been going on," he said. "The people who have increased awareness were affected in a positive way, and the people who had been blown out of proportion have been affected in a negative way." Carmelil said the recent events had affected his friends and colleagues in different ways depending on their attitudes. "We need to ask people their beliefs on minority issues and be upfront," he said. . 'I believe recent events will only improve campus relations because our concerns have been well-publicized and brought to the forefront. No one, not even the University officials, can plead ignorance now.' - Angela Cervantes Hispanic American Leadership Organization president Angela Cervantes 'We must not return to business as usual. We should not wait for an event to open up the lines of communication. We must not wait for something to happen as public as the SAE incident.' — Judith Ramaley executive vice chancellor PARKER Bryce Petty Sigma Alpha Epsilon president 'SAE does not condone such actions. I hope in the eyes of everyone out there that SAE doesn't get looked down upon.' William Whitcomb Department of Justice William Whitcomb, an official from the Department of Justice's Kansas City, Mo., bureau, said that his office was concerned about the latest racial tension at the University of Kansas. I "The prevention of racial tension should be the first priority of the University." he said. Whitcom said KU administra- tion had had to examine institutional values and the way they were carried out by the University. He said that any policy or action coming from the administration should strive to make minority students were not in a hostile environment. Wombec, who works for the bureau's community relations service, visited the University on April 9 and met with the students of other students concerned about a During that visit, Whitcomb said that he would help Black students organize their concerns to present to the administration. But he added that he would get involved only if the students wanted his help. reported March 30 racial incident at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. He said that he did not know whether students wanted him involved in the negotiations, although he knew that some student leaders wanted to avoid mediators by going directly to the administration. Whitcomb said he was available to the University and to the students for consultation, mainly to assist in negotiating between both parties. "I'll wait, and I won't push," he said. Besides affecting the University, Whitcomb said recent events at KU also had affected people outside the University community. He said that he had received several calls from the media, the school and UU students' parents who were concerned about the latest events at KU. Carol Krekeler Panhellenic Carol Krekeler, president of Panhellenic, said the recent racial events had led many people to realize that racism exists at the University of Kansas. "It has made people go out and be keler said. "Changes will happen a lot faster on campus because people are becoming more active. The racial climate should improve. People are now Sally If there are enough programs within the University and more meetings between students and administrators, then a climate can be built that enhances cultural diversity and minority sensitivity, she said. Krekeiler said the recent events had prompted her to be even more active than in the past. more conscious about racial attitudes." Krekeler "I've always had deep feelings against racism and the exclusion of minorities at KU," she said. "All year long we've had the theme of including more minorities in the Greek system and being more culturally sensitive. But it was always an issue of money." She said that the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic and Black Panhellenic were coming together to form programs. "We would now have the option to combine monetary resources and, therefore, have better programming," she said. Those around Krekeler also have been prompted to do more than watch. "Most of the people in my sorority have not only expressed their feeling of opposition to racism," she said. "They really want to get out there and do something about it." "There is no room in the Greek system for racist feelings and never should be," she said. David Katzman Professor of history David Katzman, professor of history, said he was hopeful that positive things would come out of recent events on campus. "I think the student demonstrations have brought to notice the SOMEDAY campus," he said. "I hope they will lead to people committing themselves to work toward a multiracial, multicultural campus." However. Katzman However, Katzman Katzman said many people did not understand the recent events. "They don't understand the minor- ly problem on campus," he said. key problems to campau. He said. Katzman said recent events made him angry. Darren Fulcher Black Men of Today Katzman said some individuals in the University tried to cover up such events rather than identify the problems allowing people to work on them. "I feel threatened by the failure of the University to act, but also to lend moral support to Ann Dean," he said. "I have been a victim of anti-Semitism," he said. "I leaves me personally at risk. As someone who has worked with the University has acted properly." "It left me with a sense of outrage that if one member of the University community is at risk, then every other member of the university community is at risk," he said. Darren Fulcher, a member of Black Men of Today, said he thought that recent campus racial incidents had improved the racial climate at Katzan said that although many people he knew were trying to change the situation, the University's response was inappropriate. "Things are now beginning to sur- 1 trace that should help ease the tension" he said. "The communication lines will now be open." He said that students who thought the incidences were over. Fulcher proliferated did not know all of the issues involved. The incidents affect each person differently, he said. "A lot of students are confused about what we want," he said. "We want the lines of communications open so that people can talk to each other." Fulcher said that although the University environment was supposed to encourage students to seek out knowledge, often students expected the knowledge to come to them. He said that he had always been aware of little acts of discrimination but that other students had no idea discrimination existed. "The discrimination hasn't really affected me, but it shows that we need to teach our peers," he said. Wendy Griswolt Student Senate However, she said the events had renewed her fire for making changes. Wendy Griswold, a Fine Arts seni- tor and member of Students Concerned About Discrimination, said she was more pessimistic than others because she was not expecting many changes to come out of recent events "It's given me a lot of energy," she said. Recent events. though, have Griswold made people more aware of problems on campus, Griswold said. David Ambler Vice chancellor "There are problems when only one culture's views and needs are represented," she said. She said she hoped the events would create a positive avenue for change. However, she said that she hoped the changes had made any concrete changes. "The events that happened should have caused the administration to realize that there are many people on campus who are sick of the administration not doing things, tired of their jobs, grindless at work." "Students also realize they have a definite role and responsibility to create a place where all people can feel comfortable and proud of who they are." David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said the University was unalterably affected by recent events, but in a positive way. "It raises a heightened sensitivity to the fact that we have not solved "Ultimately, the good exceeds the bad. We can know this." those incidents, as better institution because of it." another said people needed to examine their values. He said if individual racism disappeared, so would institutional racism. "These are not easy problems to resolve," he said. "They are only done through education and the change in people's values and attitudes. That's what the University is about." Ambier said he had been spending so much time meeting with students and working on the issues that his staff and family felt neglected. "There hasn't been a time in my schedule that doesn't get totally officiated," he said. Black Continued from p. 1b tion and student leaders to take a sensitivity course from C.T. Vivian, a nationally known sensitivity expert. "Sometimes I think their tactics aren't as appropriate as they should be and their information may not be as comprehensive as it ought to be," Jackson said. "It's frustrating for me to be caught in the middle." He would not comment on which tactics he disapproved of. If the university does not initiate sensitivity training, Fulcher said, each greek house should. The group would be the university to disband the SAE house. Marshall Jackson, interim director of the Office of Minority Affairs, said that the group's concerns were legitimated. The group was shared by the administration. He said that the group had a right to protest and that the protest was healthy. Matt Edge, Hutchinson junior, said he had been following Black Men of Today in the media. "they get a lot of publicity, but no one really knows what they're talking about." Edge said. "The TV news never told the audience what the group's demands were." Lemon of BSU said that the Black Men of Today demonstrations were good because they caused things to change but that they also created a lot of negative effects. "With all the publicity it looks like KU has more racism than we do." Lemon said. Administration response Edge said that it might have been a good idea for the Black Men of Today to accept the help offered by William Whitcomp of the U.S. Justice Department. Whitcomp came to KU after the March 30 incident and offered to act as mediator between the group and the KU administration. Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said, "It has been a very positive opportunity for the students and faculty to discuss the lames." "We don't need a mediator to mediate our problems," he said. "We want someone who will listen to us and not downplay our concerns." Administration response "It would have given them a very credible speechesperson," Edge said. Fulcher said Black Men of Today did not reflect Whitcomb. Hamley said Black Men of Today had been meeting with Chico Herbison, assistant director of admissions, to develop a student recruitment plan. She said a plan reflecting the ideas of Black Men of Today and the Office of Admissions should be completed this week. Ramaley said that some of the goals, such as Black faculty recruitment, were long-term. Anderson said students who M M SJGMA AEKHA KPSJKGU Protesters delivered a "get well" card to the SAE fraternity. They said the fraternity was sick. Keith Thorpe/KANSAN wanted to become involved could come to the Black Men of Today meetings or go to the protests. "We want to do a lot of educational things to make campus life better, Anderson said. University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 5B Promoter champions Kansas artists The Associated Press WICHITA — Don Lambert in a cheerleader for Kansas artists who celebrate the state. "So much of the art we see these days could have been produced any place," said the Topeka-based freelance art promoter. "I'm concerned and especially interested in the Kansas artist who is aware of what's going on nationally but has chosen to depict Kansas. "They are pioneers going against the trend. Lambert, 39, a former newspaper reporter, is nearing the end of a statewide tour delivering a lecture titled "15 Kansas Artists: Exploring Their Kansas Roots." Funded by the Kansas Committee for the Humanities and the Dane G. Hansen Foundation, the tour schedule included Lawrence, Manhattan, Topeka, Salina, Wichita, Havs, Pittsburg and Kansas City, Kan. Hays, Managing Director of the Lawrence Art Center, was surprised that some attending Lambert's lecture were being exposed for the first time to some of the artists. "They hadn't seen Phil Epp's landscapes with the billowing clouds or Marilyn Grisham's weavings." Evans said. "I had seen this work, and I guess I just assumed everybody had." Lambert shows more than 70 slides of examples of work by the artists. The pieces encompass a broad range of styles and media. Grisham's striking fabric landscapes incorporate metallic threads that shimmer like morning dew on grass in the Flint Hills near her EL Dorado home. Stan Herd's spectacular "crop art" projects involve as many as 20 acres planted to depict scenes or people. Photographs by Terry Evans of Salina show the virgin prairie in contrast to plowed fields. And the painted landscapes produced by retired University of Kansas art instructor Robert Sudlow prompt viewers to want to see what he saw for them- selves. "He has blazed the trail for two generations of landscape painters," Lambert said. "He has become very successful because his paintings have encouraged us to look not only at them but also at the landscape." Sudlow focuses on the Flint Hills and rural areas around Lawrence. The seed for Lambert's lecture was planted 10 years ago, when a friend suggested some Kansas artists "were depicting the state in quite beautiful and meaningful ways." "When you go to Santa Fe, you see there is a look to the art," he said. "The pottery, the paintings, the weavings; they all have the feel of Santa Fe." they have the feel of sand. "It's not as pronounced. It's much more subtle. But there is the same kind of unity of feeling with much of the art produced in Kansas." art produced in Kansas. Lambert's lecture starts with a short introduction to Kansas art history and the image residents and outsiders have of the state and its people. have of the state and have of the land. During the slide show, he talks about Kansas landscape artists who are in touch with being products of the land themselves. "A lot of us living here think this state is special," said Evans. "The artists think it's special. Unfortunately, you're often more of an authority when you leave home." The response to the lecture has been gratifying Lambert said. Vernon Brejcha, a Lawrence glass blower, has attracted comment with his pieces suggesting the germination of seeds and limestone fence posts. "What we see with artists like Vernon is very sophisticated, well-trained people who are incorporating bits of Kansas into their work," Lambert said. Consequently, their work is very popular," he said. "It triggers something in Kansans. We feel good looking at it." DRY MOUNTING SALE 1/2 OFF Normal dry mounting prices on 3/16" FOMECORE Prices vary depending on size prices on 3/16" FOMECORE — Prices vary depending on size EXAMPLE: Regular SALE 24" X 36" $13.00 $6.50 22" X 28" $10.00 $5.00 Extend the life of your poster by dry mounting it on FOMECORE instead of having pinholes in the corners or tape that won't come off Post Dry mounting keeps your poster flat & looking good in the humid Kansas climate. 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USX should exit steel industry, Icahn says Icahn, USX's largest shareholder with a 13.3 percent stake, wants USX to exit the steel business because he contends it's a potential liability to the company if there's a problem in the steel business. Icahn wants USX to concentrate on its energy businesses. Shareholders will vote May 7 at the company's annual meeting in Findlay, Ohio, on Icahn's non-binding proposal that USX spin off at least 80 percent of the steel industry. The company called us STL, Steel Corp., the name used by USX until 1986. "That is no longer true," he said. "The whole trend is to tailor-make product, quality and quantities that customers want and when they want it. It is an entirely different philosophy and an entirely different business orienta- Icahn said his proposal was no indication that he had best faith in the profitability of the U.S. steel industry. "I think the long-term future is good for steel," he said. "The infrastructure of this country has been neglected for so long, sooner or later we're going to need steel to rebuild our roads and bridges." Scrambling for markets U. S. steel shipments increased steadily through most of the 1800s. Last year, 94.1 million tons of steel were shipped by U.S. makers, compared with 61.6 million in 1982. But analysts said that as the U.S. economy moved away from manufacturing and toward more service-based businesses, demand for steel and the industry's strength could erode. Moreover, because today's steel is lighter and stronger, less will be needed in new cars, bridges and "It's not so much a question of steel declining as it is a question of other segments of the economy growing more rapidly," said Donald F. Barnett, an independent consultant in McLean, Va. "Steel will continue to perform an essential service, but it's not going to be one of the most radiant growing segments of the economy." Analysts said Icahn's proposal, if carried out, would be just another restructuring in an industry that has gone through wrenching unbeavals for years. The nation's steel industry blossomed in the 1870s, when industrialist Andrew Carnegie and seven associates built the Edgar Thomson Works near Pittsburgh to make steel for industrial expansion. "The industry is continuing to fragment," Barnett said. "USX is a large company that could become smaller. The restructuring process doesn't seem likely to end in our lifetime." Carnegie increased his market share by expanding and acquiring competitors and finally sold his steel interests in 1901 to J.P. Morgan to form the United States Steel Corp. The company's focus remained on steel until March 1982, when U.S. Steel merged with Marathon Oil Co. in what then was the second-largest corporate merger in U.S. history. "USX has been a leader," said Charles A. Bradford, an independent steel analyst. "It used to be a policeman of the industry on a pricing basis. They could be brutal if they were undercut." Slight recovery The industry was especially hurt by the 1981-82 recession and a flood of imports. U.S. steelmakers lost about $11.9 billion from 1980 to 1986, the American Iron and Steel Institute estimates. The company remains the nation's largest steel producer, but Bradford estimates its capacity has decreased to less than one-fifth of the industry from about two-thirds in the 1920s. Steel companies suffered loss after loss in the first half of the 1980s, when hundreds of mills closed and more than 200,000 workers nationwide left the payrolls. The picture is brighter now. Steelmakers made $1 billion in profits in 1987 and $3 billion in 1988, partly because they closed inefficient mills, modernized others and invested in imports. Import restraints the bearer dollar also helped. "Everybody looks at USX as if it's the big part of the industry," he said. "It's the shrinking part." The U.S. steel industry takes an average of $5\frac{1}{2}$ manhours to make a ton of steel, less time than any other producer in the world and nearly half the time it took in 1980. "The American steel industry is much more viable than it was before," Barnett said. "There certainly is still a need for the industry, but the industry is going to continue to change." The number of imports, in the form of raw steel and products containing steel, has grown. About 26.4 million tons of steel were imported in 1984, the all-time high. Specialties for the future The weaker dollar and import quotas imposed in 1986 under Voluntary Restraint Agreements negotiated by the Reagan administration turned back some of the import tide. In 1989, 17.3 million tons were imported. "The international competitiveness of the industry has much improved," Bradford said. "The weaker dollar was the biggest factor." Bradford said the relative value of international currencies, more than anything else, would determine how much capital a company would have. "It looks very ominous because the dollar has been strong. This is an industry that needs a weak dollar because it does compete in an international environment. If that dollar keeps soaring, these guys are in trouble." Up to 25 percent of 1988 shipments were made by so-called mini-mills, which use electric furnaces to make more specialized products for specific regions or markets. Barnett said. Mini-mills have become more like large producers, expanding and making products historically made by integrated makers. At the same time, larger makers have become more like mini-mills, becoming more entrepreneurial and in some cases closing coal mines or coke eaux to focus on specific products at each plant. 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Offer open only to students enrolled in six or more credit hours of course work, full-time faculty members, or full-time staff who are directly involved in the administration, delivery, or support of the academic mission of the University of Kansas, Lawrence campus. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases. Please add on 4.75% sales tax. Offer expires May 17, 1990. Take the Mac Challenge. Winning is easy with Mac on your side! Burge Union 864-5697 Macintosh® Apple. The power to do your best at KU © 1989 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. KU KU BOOKSTORES University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 7B U.S. immigration laws frustrating artists The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Boundaries may be opening worldwide, but some people in the entertainment industry say the U.S. border is one of their best defenses with a guitar and the ability to carry a tune. They are concerned that new visa rules will allow superstars such as Paul McCartney to pull in millions at U.S. concerts while singers who have more promise than paychecks are left trying to win over an audience of U.S. immigration officials. "There's an aversion by some people to contemporary, international music being brought into this country," said Bill Kitchen, a professor of vocalizations, a major East Coast concert promoter. The new U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service rules spell out tougher standards for temporary workers coming into the United States. Would-be visitors have to prove that U.S. workers cannot do the same job, and artists have to show they have gained recognition and made a living at their art. French Culture Minister Jack Lang complained this month that if impressionist painter Vincent van Gogh were working in the Netherlands he could not get a visa for the United States. Promoters and agents said they knew of no fledgling Beatles who been turned away at customs since the new rules took effect Feb. 26. But they said the regulations followed tighter rules during the past decade that had led to some tours being canceled at the last minute. And they fear U.S. stages may be out of reach for artists who cannot afford immigration lawyers to lead the way. "There is a concern about how the regulations could be interpreted," said Jeffrey Gabel, an immigration lawyer in New York who has written about the new rules for immigrants. Categories of immigrants The big change is in the two categories of visas the United States gives to enter the country for temporary employment. In the past, most artists were given H-1 visas. They were handed out without much question to film directors, singers and groups. The new regulations make clear that the H-1 is for aliens of distinguished merit and ability and sustained achievement. One-hit wonders are not favored, but the winner of an Academy Award or Nobel Prize, the INS suggests, should have no trouble getting an H-1. Other aliens are directed to the H-2, which requires an application first to the Labor Department and then to the INS. That process can take from two to six months, but entertainers who may not be able to set tour plans more than a few weeks ahead of time. "We're not getting into judging what they do," Rick Kenney, an ANS spokesman, said in an interview. "They would have to show that they know what's a service that's good for the United States." It should not hinder the Royal Danish Ballet from touring, but the Philadelphia Orchestra might have to answer a lot of requests to hire a third violinist from Great Britann. "We just make judgments of who is and who is not just a regular worker," said Kenney. Kitchen, the promoter, said that 'even before the new rules, British folk rocker John Wesley Harding's performance at a Washington club consisted only of an explanation to the crowd that he did not have a visa to perform. And he said a French rock group, "Ningara," canceled one date and got to play another only after France's cultural attach and Sen. John Warmer, R.Va., interceded with the officials who were unhappy pressed with the groups' French clipsions and videos. "I have yet to hear an explanation of why a band shouldn't be brought over," said Seth Hurwitz, owner of Washington's 9:30 Club, a small venue for international acts on the rise. "This takes business away from American businessmen like me, and it deprives the American public the chance to see someone they want to see." said Hurwitz. The INS says the new rules mean promoters are going to have to be better prepared — no more booking garage bands from Liverpool day to play in New York on Wednesday. "Unfortunately, this is a big change for everybody," said Kenny. "It's going to be a change in practice for a lot of people, and it will probably get used to it and stop taking it personally." "You have to be aware that it's going to take more information and you're going to have to file longer in advance," said Joel Schoenberg. "It has the National Talent Group in New York. As for Lang's comment on Dutch-born van Gogh, who sold only one painting before he died in 1890, Kenney said the French official was exaggerating. Making a connection brings success to children's author The Associated Press IONIA, Mo. -- For author Vivie Glocke, the big thing in writing is sharing her thoughts with someone else, or as she puts it, making a connection. The book won the Putnam Award in 1987 for an outstanding first novel written for 8 to 12-year-old children. It was nominated for the New York Book Award and the Mark Twain Award in February. She has been connecting with young readers across the country since her first children's book, "Good-bye, My Wishing Star," was published in hardcover by G.B. Putnam's Sons and in paperback by the Scholastic and Weekly Book读书 clubs. The story, told by a 12-year old girl, is about a family losing its farm. Grove, 4; wrote it not only to address the farm crisis, but to say farewell to her grandmother, whose death had left her unable to write in her usual upbeat style. "It was a sad book, with humor in it, but it was a sad story," she said. "I wanted the story to be told right. I had seen too many times when the farmer's fat was pulled out of the fire at the last minute, and it isn't always like that." Although she has been writing professionally for 7/4 years, Grove still finds hard to believe her first children's book received such critical acclaim. "I broke into book publishing accidentally by winning a contest," she said. "My biggest fear is that Putnam will drop me. He just been fooling them all this time." writing for children "I think 12 is the best age in anyone's life. I write from the first person and the narrator is always a 12-year-old," said Grove, who graduated with a master's degree in English from Central Missouri State University at Warrensburg. "The Fastest Friend in the West," which will be released in May, is her favorite. “It’s about a family living in the back of a station wagon because of economic conditions,” she said. “Kids like that change schools on the average of two weeks. My protagonist is a 12-year-old girl named Alexandra. She lives in a card because she does not have an address. She tries to make one fast friend at every school. Somehow in the past year, Grove has also found time to write two "What Would You Do?" books for Group Publishers. "These are for a broad age range, 14 to 25," she said. "They're ethical decision books about sex and dating and friendship." Grove has also written one adult romance and more than 240 magazine articles, but she prefers writing juvenile fiction. "You can write about anything," she said. "You don't really restrict vocabulary or ideas, and you are writing for an audience where imagination and enthusiasm are very high. You don't have to fill it full of sex to sell." Satisfy Your MIDNIGHT MUNCHIES.. SUBWAY OPEN 'TIL 2:00 AM EVERY NIGHT!! 1720 W 23RD YOU DON'T NEED A COUPON! Legal Services for Students SUBWAY Legal Services Available Free With Valid KD ID Appointment Necessary 48 Burge Union (913) 864-5665 If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help. testing * Safe, affordable abo Confidential pregnancy testin- services *Birth control* *Tuba* Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases. Providing quality health care to women since 1974. Insurance. VISA & MasterCard accepted. Comprehensive Health for Women CITY & WESTERN 4401 West 109th (1034) & Rivers Overland Park, Kansas **pointments** (913) 345-1400 **free** 1-800-227-1918 What you need to know to sell your books. KU KU BOOKSTORES Two Locations Kansas Union Level 4 8:30 - 5:00 Mon. - Fri. 10:00 - 4:00 Sat. Noon - 3:00 Sun 864-5285 Burge Union Level 2 Bookstore 8:30 - 7:00 Mon. - Thur. 8:30 - 5:00 Fri. 10:00 - 4:00 Sat. 864-5697 Colony Woods Apartments $200 Instant Rebate - 1 Bedroom $345 2 Bedroom 2 Bath $410 - Some Short Term Leases Available - Indoor Heated Pool - 3 Hot Tubs - Volleyball & Basketball Courts - Basketball Courts A Or Buse Route - Near Restaurants, Grocery, Etc. 1301 W.24th (24th & Naismith) Lawrence, KS 842-5111 *Limited Time Only/One Rebate Per Lease. 1990 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK IS HERE!!! M When: Mon., April 30 to Thurs., May 3 Where: In front of the Kansas Union and Wescoe BRING YOUR KUID AND RECEIPT! YEARBOOKS ARE AVAILABLE FOR $27 AT THESE LOCATIONS!!! 8B Tuesday, May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Child's death haunts family for 33 years The Associated Press ALBANY, N.Y. — When they found 11-year-old Billy Ruff hung from the big maple tree he loved to climb, innocence died in the hearts of his brothers and sisters. They saw his killer everywhere, in anyone. The surviving Ruff children, five who were living when Billy died three years ago and three who were born later, lived with a fear so deep it darkened every waking moment. Their terror was inspired by a real-life bogman who preyed on happy, fresh-faced kids who loved raisin cookies and baseball. Kids like Billy, Kids like them. Kids like Billy. Kids like them. "All of us, at one time or another, didn't think we'd reach the age of 11," said Tim Ruff, who was 3 when Billy died. Then one day three years ago, Christopher Ruff glanced up at the bulletin board in the police station where he worked and into the face of the man who killed the brother he never knew. "Mom and I knew, as soon as I called her," said Chris, the youngest Ruff at age 24, born eight years after his brother's death and two years later. "His body was both started to shake and say 'This is it.'" On April 21 he saw the man again in Albany Court, where he was sentenced to life imprisonment on Billy's terms. It was not murder, however, that put Billy's killer on a wanted poster; it was a sex-abuse charge involving a girl about Billy's age. The awful secret his family had hidden was that Billy Ruff had been sodomized before he died. "This sort of thing wasn't spoken about," said Mildred Ruff, sitting in her living room surrounded by six of her children. "People were talking about a child molesting. It was a bush-hugging thing." Disappearance Smith Avenue, where the family lived in the northwestern suburb of Albany, was a street full of children in a rural landscape of fields and trees the day Billy disappeared. He was last seen at 4:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 31, 1987, with his pocket full of raisin cookies and a length of trayed clotheshe was used to steer a homemade go-cart in his hand. He did not show up for dinner. Mildred Ruff remembers wrapping his plate of lamb chops, boiled potatoes and corn on the cob in wax paper and putting it in the refrigerator. At 9 p.m., she called her husband at work, and he began a search that lasted until dawn. In her fiftiful sleep that night, Mildred Ruff had a dream or a vision, she was not sure which: "I saw Billy, on his knees, hanging by a rope." That is the way he was found the next day by a friend's daughter. He was hung with his own clotheline in a densely wooded lot after he arrived. And where, years after, they still play. Police interviewed hundreds of people "They didn't care how many hours they put in," said Raymond Rasmussen, one of the first state police detectives put on the case. "We got to feel very close and very compassionate for the family and what they'd been through." What they could not know was that the killer was there among them; then, in the noise and confusion of grief and police work, he was gone. "The night of the wake, a priest friend of ours said it may take 20 years, but nobody can keep this thing to themselves," Mildred Ruff said. "And I said, if it takes 20 days, I'll lose my mind." Family copes Instead, she found strength and faith enough to last her family through Billy's death, the death of her husband eight years later and her own fight with cancer. For years, she carried in her apron pocket a rosary her husband had given her. The black beads had worn to brown from constant fingering. Twenty days became 20 months. The investigation died down. The police stopped coming by with mug shots of child molesters. Seven years passed. The police came around one last time to tell the family a forensics expert had decided Billy's death was accidental. His family scioffed that knew the truth would surface, a belief that never wavered as 19 years became 20, then 30. "We know what it's like to have a lot of unanswered questions," said John, born four years after Billy's murder. "But in the back of our minds, there was always the hope." There also was fear — of the dark, of being alone, of getting too close to people. "Everybody grew up with a paranoia, a normal childhood because we were damned normal." 'Ever since the day I found out, I've been enraged. He shook my hand, and that's what's enraged me ever since. Knowing what he'd done to my own brother, he shook my hand and breathed the air I was breathing.' Jav Ruff There's not one time we can walk into an empty house and feel safe. Not one of us." The oldest Ruff, Regina, who was 13 when Billy died, and Tommy, who was 5, told their mother they knew there was a boggy man because he got their brother. Also, Regina, Tum, Tim, Joe, Lisa, Jay, John and them — worried he was out to get another of them. "We'd stand at the window, stand there and watch when people weren't home on time," said Lisa, who was 8 months when Billy was murdered. "I remember standing at my bed in the back bedroom, looking out the window and knowing I was doing the same thing as Mom was. We were always scared." The fear became something they lived and breathed. In time, they would pass it on to their spouses and their children. "I was terrorized by nightmares most of my life," Regina wrote in a recent letter to her mother. "I had to force myself to go home. I was afraid of the dark and of the daylight." "All this destruction, all this fear — and I am only one of eight. Multiply the damage to me by every other life this touched." Seeking the killer While Billy's brothers and sisters struggled with demons, his killer was finishing a stint in the Air Force and spending short periods as an Albany police officer and an ironworker. He married three times and fathered two children by a fourth woman. In the 1970s he wandered the streets, a homeless alcoholic. when the case was 24 years old, Chris and his brothers found some old newspaper clippings in the basement. "They wanted to know more," Mildred Ruff said. "They wanted to know why it was unsolved." "I think he was a man that had this on his mind all that time," Rasmussen said. "Maybe that caused him to become what he was." From state police she learned that the file on Billy's murder was about to be destroyed, the fate of unresolved cases after 25 years. Desperate to save the records, Mildred Ruff called Rasmussen, who was then in charge of the state police Bureau of Criminal Investigation. He ordered the file permanently retained. "In my mind, I guess I was always hoping someday somebody would make an arrest in the case," Rasmussen said. "Comparing my thoughts and hopes that someday this might be resolved with how much space that little file took up in our huge record section, there was no question in my mind what I should do." There never was any question in Chris Ruff's mind what he should do, either. He wanted to be a policeman. As a child, he drew a self-portrait with a badge on his chest. He dropped out of college to join the suburban Police, where he worked as a dispatcher. His mother says it was providence that he missed a promotion to patrolman. That would have sent him to the police academy, but he was able to station when the killer's photo was posted. Chris contacted the state police and met the next day with two senior investigators. "They looked at the newspaper clippings and said, 'I think we may have something. This may be the missing link, the reason we could never find anything back then.' "Chris said. "Don't get your hair out." We'll keep eye out for him, and we'll let you know." ^ Cousin was the killer Months went by. Then came the break the police had been waiting for; someone inquired about buying the killer's car, which they did not find. The police contacted police. Their man was in Florida. Under questioning, he admitted molesting a 10-year-old girl but would not talk about Billy Ruff. After he failed a lie-detector test, he was apprehended in part, "I killed Billy, and I need help." Eventually, he signed a confession that told how he "threw the rope over a branch above my head, grabbed the rope and ran with it, pulling Billy up off the ground. . . I ran like hell." It was only then, with the man safely in police custody, that Chris and his mother were ready to tell the rest of the family that the man confessed to Billy's murder was their own first cousin, Richard Ruff. Family had done this to family. "Ever since the day I found out, I've been enraged," Jay said, recalling his first encounter with his cousin in 1982. "He shook my hand, and that's what it's enraged me ever told me. He'd done to my own brother, he shook my hand and breathed the air I was breathing." Richard Ruff, S3, was sentenced last week for the first-degree felony murder of William Ruff Jr. He stood trial after recanting his sentence, saying police had frightened him into it. In August 1957, 20-year-old Richard Ruff was on leave from the Air Force. He had dropped by his uncle's home that week to show off a red Chevy convertible, which Billy had admired. The day Billy's body was found, he gathered with the family as another grieving relative. He left soon after. Police never questioned him. Living with the truth Most of the Ruff family attended all nine days of the trial, reliving the horror of Billy's murder. They saw autopsy photos and heard testimony about the pain Billy sustained. They also learned why he was killed. "This little boy was a naive, sweet, 11-year-old kid, and he had his fellow seldomize him, and I'm sure the first words out of his mouth were, 'I'm going to tell my mother and father on you,'" said Chief Assistant District Attorney Daniel Dwyer. "The ultimate result was Richard was going to be found out, and he couldn't handle that." For the Ruffs, there is relief in knowing the truth, knowing that the man who killed Billy will never hurt another child. They want other families to have faith that killers can be found, no matter how hard they want them to know that solving the mystery cannot erase all the pain. "We've lived this for 33 years, we'll live it for another 33 years," Chris said. "There's no punishment that would equal what he did to our brother and to us." JUMP RIGHT INTO STUDENT SENATE! Fencing STUDENT SENATE IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR ASSISTANT A. S. K. CAMPUS DIRECTOR APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN 410 KANSAS UNION AND ARE DUE BY TUESDAY, MAY 1 AT 5:00 P.M. You've Tried The Rest, Now Try The Best! PIZZA EXPRESS Buy any 10" pizza and get the second of equal value or less for 99¢ Buy any 14" pizza and get the second of equal value or less for $1.99 943 Massachusetts 842-6161 For all your entertainment news. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Limited time offer LiveWire GOLD RING SALE $75 OFF 18K $50 OFF 14K $25 OFF 10K 85 -Limited special offer- ON ANY 10K, 14K OR 18K GOLD RING SALE DISCOUNT NOW IN EFFECT TAKE ANOTHER $20.00 OFF JOSTENS AMERICA'S COLLEGE RING Date: May 1-3 Time:10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Deposit Required: $20.00 Place: KU Bookstore, Kansas Union Meet with your Jostens representative for full details. See our complete ring selection on display in your college bookstore. 807-975-6197 807-975-6197 Payment Place Available NFC Near Field Connect University Daily Kansan / Tuesday, May 1, 1990 Careers 9B Engineering, science strongest job foundations Engineerin Employers seek minorities to fill work openings The Associated Press A shortage of engineers and scientists has educators and potential employers aggressively courting women "We need to funnel our brightest students — including women and minorities — into science and engineering, to remain competitive economically on an international scale," said Dr. Steven of Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, N.J. A shortfall of 400,000 recipients of bachelor of science degrees and 27,000 of doctorates by the year 2000 has been projected by the Hudson Institute in its 'Workforce 2000' report. The squeeze is being intensified by competition from countries like Japan and West Germany, which have about twice as many engineers per capita as the United States, according to a Battelle Memorial Institute study. Cornell University, for one, has initiated two new programs to find and encourage Black high school students and minority college freshmen to pursue science and engineering careers. "Too many people have accepted the idea that there's no pool from which to train the Black engineers of the future," says Judy Jackson, assistant dean of engineering for minority programs. "We said that it's ridiculous. We went aggressively into five high schools, and we asked guidance counselors for kids with aptitude. We talked to every kid who had the potential and chose those who also had the desire to reach their potential. Then we talked to their parents." Little progress has been made in increasing the number of women in science and engineering, says Dr Jane Butler Kahle, professor of teacher education at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, who has been studying the role of women in the workplace. She thinks the reasons include lack of role models, a bias in science, and inequities in the workplace. Short-term CEO brings long-term benefits The Associated Press NEW YORK — A new quirk in corporate hiring is the interim executive, according to John A. Thompson, chairman of the Interim Management Corp. Thompson says many corporations are using executive temps to solve their short-term problems. "They serve as chief executive officer, chief financial officer, comproller, chief loan officer, marketing manager and any other executive category in which there is an immediate need," he says. “An interim management strategy allows a company to meet challenges without padding its permanent team or draining its resources. It's not a stopgap strategy. Our goals are to move the organization can use to ensure versatility and death.” Most interim managers, he says, are not out-of-work executives but "people who have achieved a degree of financial independence and prefer short-term assignments rather than permanent corporate positions." Thompson's company, which specializes in supplying high-level executives on a temporary basis to industry and the non-profit sector, offers this list of questions for potential interim executive: — Do you prefer to use your expertise in a wide variety of situations? — Are you a quick learner? — Have you held a high-level management position for at least 10 years? — Are you a self-starter who needs a minimum of supervision? - Do you enjoy working in situations where the objectives are relatively short-term and well defined? — Are you comfortable with not knowing where you will be working in six months? Only 14 percent of the country's scientists and engineers are women, about the same proportion as 25 years ago, she says. Not only are their enrollment rates lower, but the attrition rates are higher. The few who manage to get their degrees and move into the workforce face lower promoter promotion, less visibility and fewer rewards at work. Armed with a grant from the National Science Foundation, Kahle investigated high schools around the country to see what they did to motivate girls to continue science education. "I wanted to go in and find out what a good teacher did." What she found was that relatively inexpensive changes — attractive classrooms with plants and animals, non-sexist language, stress on the creativity in science, and career advice — contributed to increased interest not only from girls but boys as well. "This was true even in the inner-city school, where the room was too small. It was just very attractive even when the blinds were ripped and some of the glass was shattered." Raveche agrees that a less sterile image of science will help. "We've got to convey the sense of fun and Girls should be encouraged not only because the economy will need them but because they will benefit themselves, Kahle says. "I explain to parents that we aren't in the schools because we think their daughters won't learn as much as us but because we think it's better to earn $10 an hour as a technician rather than $4 an hour as a beautician." excitement — and the relevance — of science." He adds that high schools and colleges need to improve the image and professionalism of math and science teachers. "Our work is crucial in these areas, and need, complete with calculator and pocket protector." And the jobs are out there for technicians. "I get lots of of job descriptions for polymer engineers. I wish I could fill all the requests I get," says Ruth Walton, who directs career services at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, NJ. Stevens is one of the few universities with a strong field growing because of development of high-performance plastics with new uses in manufacturing, construction, and medicine. For example, polymer engineering, completely unknown two decides ago, is a new field for science and engineering. Plastics are beginning to be rated as highly as steel, glass and ceramics as an engineering material, says Costas Gogos, chemical engineering professor at Stevens and new initiatives director of its Polymer Processing Institute. And in medicine, polymers are useful because they are inert, meaning they do not interact with the body. That makes them good for implants and intravenous feeding devices, he says. Stevens' placement council estimates that the median starting salary after college for chemical engineers, including polymer specialists, at $34,699. — The waste-management crisis has created a shortage of trained environmental and waste-management engineers, according to a Cornell University survey of consulting firms in the United States and Canada. "Almost all the 51 firms we surveyed project new employment opportunities for environmental and waste-management engineers," says Kate Skelton, research director for the Cornell Waste Management Institute. He said the department is preparing to enter the field of waste management is far from sufficient to meet current and future demands." Waste-management engineers oversee plans and strategies for dealing with solid, municipal, industrial, hazardous, agricultural, sewage and radioactive wastes. They monitor and construction of handling facilities. While the firms say that 60 percent of their new hires in the past two years have had bachelor's degrees, most want future employees to have master's degrees. Average starting salaries were $27,518 for the former and $30,403 for the latter. Salaries are highest in the Northeast and lowest in the Southwest and Midwest. Skelton says that the demand may even be higher than the survey shows. "We polled only established consulting firms that have already carved out their stable share of the market, and we know we are missing the many new firms entering the field of waste management and environmental engineering." Another field with shortages is nuclear pharmacy, for dealing with radiopharmaceuticals and radioactive drugs used in diagnosing diseases like heart conditions and cancer. New consultants solve firms' identity crises The Associated Press NEW YORK — When Nissan was ready to market a luxury car, it wanted a name and a symbol that meant something on both sides of its quality, conveyed its quality and bridged language barriers. After months of consultation, the name Infiniti and its symbol — an unbroken line incorporating a peak — emerged. When American Can decided its name no longer fit the character and breadth of its financial services and specialty retailing business, it searched for a new one. It also needed a logo characterized with a logotype characterized by two merging typefaces that mirror the company's diversity. Both companies used corporate identity consultants to analyze and execute the changes. Naming names has become vital business in the era of mergers and global expansion, and many companies are using these specialists to help them establish, or re-establish their persona in the marketplace. "IIf has achieved a level of recognition that it never had before," says Clive Chajet, chairman and chief executive of Lippincott & Margules, probably the leading corporate identity firm and the one which created the Infinifi and Primerica names. He says the growing field is lucrative for people who have a curious blend of qualifications: Intellectual discipline, creativity, hard-nosed business sense, diplomatic skills, seasoning, and patience. They might find places at L&M or its competitors, which include Anspach Grossman Portugal, Inc., Landor Associates, and Siegal & Gale. Identitypecialists are found on many corporate staffs as well. Corporate identity people get involved in such diverse functions as naming or branding, logotypes and print design, market analyses and research, mission statements, and overall strategy. Chaium sets it up as "creative, intellectually strategic planning." The mission, he says, is to define an identity that conveys what kind of company it is to work for, what its place in the market is, and its value in the stock market. "You don't do this simply because the company wants to decorate itself." Field professionals fall into three main categories, usually working in concert: consultants, designers, and "name" people. "A name person is a very special breed of person." Chajet says. "These are people who love words, who love to sit around and dream up names." The challenge may be to put a great deal of meaning and information into one simple word. Most companies today need names for their customers to be available. Names also must be available for copyright — not a small problem, since 80,000 new names are registered each year. Then there is the designer, who may work primarily with typography but whose duties will extend to laying down usage formulas for logotypes, stationery, publications or product branding. "Our designers have to succeed in a very narrow graphic area. The type may be limited, but it has a major affect on the design itself." Career change could be a page away The Associated Press You're out of a job? Or don't like the one you have and have that feeling it's time to move on. And you know that no one but you is looking out for you? You're experiencing "Career Shock," the title of a book by James C. Cotham, III (Donald F. Fine, Inc.) that's addressed to you. "Do not be bullied into thinking good things will automatically happen to you, especially if you press your shoulder to the wheel, work hard, are not being able to keep clean," he writes. "It just doesn't work that way anymore. This is not a fairy tale. It's cold reality." Cotham identifies the markers of career shock and gives practical advice about coping and moving on. Overviews of the employment outlook by career, industry and region are covered in "Jobs '90," by Kathryn and Ross Petrus (Prentice Hall). Short analyses and salary estimates are interspersed with lists of resources, with addresses and phone numbers of professional organizations and major employers (including those where prospects are judged to be especially good by the authors). A pocket book reprint of "Homebased Businesses" (Fawcett Books) by Beverly Neuer Feldman offers It's estimated that between 1 million and 2 million people in this country earn their living at home, with the help of personal computers, fax machines and other electronics. "The Telecommuter's Handbook, or How to Work for a Salary Without Ever Leaving the House," by Brad Schepp (Pharos Books) is aimed at anyone who wants to join their ranks. The book covers how to get started, what kind of jobs there are, and what companies are in hiring employees who seldom set foot in their offices. The author also takes a look at the advantages and disadvantages and offers advice about how to set up your office at home. — advice on how to find, plan and promote a business at home. You've probably heard of that business animal, the cash cow. But do you know about the Four Tigers, the Hawthorne Effect, the Invisible Hand or the Lump Demand? If you're already behind on this brief quiz, you're ready for "Manageriality: What Today's Managers Must Know to Succeed," by Gary Shaw and Jack Weber (Dow Jones Irwin). The authors, management team, are College of William and Mary and the University of Virginia, respectively, say their book is the first to codify the language managers and executives need to know to do their jobs. (Answerers: The Four Tigers are Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong and Korea, newly industrialized powers of the Pacific rim. The Hawthorne Effect refers to how output relates to workers' feelings about how they are valued by employers. The Invisible Hand recalls Adam Smith's phrase in "The Value of Intentional market forces that balance personal interest and social gain in the economy. And the Lumpy Demand refers to wide variations in demand, including seasonality and economic instability.) For the entry-level crowd, there's "Real Life 101 — Almost Surviving Your First Year Out of College," by Susan Kleinman (Master Media Limited). Since the author is only two years out of college, she writes from fresh experience. This is really a book of humorous essays, but it's sprinkled with genuine practical and strategic advice to help the beginner adjust to business and corporate culture. "Majoring in the Rest of Your Life" (The Noonday Press) by Carol Carter is aimed at teen-agers, high school graduates and college freshmen. Mr. Carter is a student and director of college marketing for Prentice Hall publishers, she offers some practical and sensible suggestions for developing "life skills" and making career goals personal interests and strengths. A perennial manual for job-hunters and career-changers, "What Color Is your Parachute" (Ten Speed Press) is out in a 1990 edition marking its 20th anniversary. Author Richard Bolles continues the systematic approach of previous editions, outlining how to realize individual skills and find a job or new career. There are hints and suggestions and referrals, with a new section aimed at those with disabilities. Ten Speed Press also has revised and updated "The Right Place at the Right Time," first published in 1987. It gives an overview of changes in the labor market and discusses individual skills and interests, how to find out what specific jobs are like,the job search and interview process. "Dream" jobs are the subject of "Jobs in Paradise" (Harper and Row) by Jeffrey Maltzman; teaching scuba diving in the Virgin Islands, leading a singles tour through Europe, working at a Colorado ski resort. The sourcebook is divided into snow and skiing, beaches and coasts, islands, mountains, high adventure, rivers and lakes, theme parks, deserts, tour and excursion leaders, and cruise shines. A revised edition of "The Teenage Entrepreneur's Guide: 50 Money-Making Business Ideas," by Sarah Riehm (Survey Books), outlines for teens how to make money from their entrepreneurial skills, shirt art, garage cleaning or computer consulting — to avoid low-paying service jobs. Earn big bucks in spare time, but buy book The Associated Press Spare-time business opportunities can be full-time fun and moneymakers, too, according to a new book, "The 100 Best Spare-Time Business Opportunities Today." "There are plenty of part-time business opportunities that not only provide extra money but easily fit into your lifestyle," says Kevin Harrington, co-author of the book with Marian Cohen. "And they are also valuable to teachers and students, retirees and homemakers." More than 7 million Americans hold second jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Harrington says the first steps in choosing a spare-time, business career are akin to shopping: Can I afford it and do I like it? A business opportunity shouldn't mean you have to drain your life's savings or mortgage your house to meet necessary capital, he says. You don't need to earn extra money to risk losing yourself into serious debt." The business also should be one that you like, is easy to learn and simple to run, says Harrington. To help decide what is the best choice, he says, ask yourself these questions: ■ Would it be enjoyable in your snare time? Does it match your skills, training, experience, or education? Can it fit into your everyday schedule? ■ Will it be here today and gone tomorrow? Does it suit your budget? Check list of career possibilities from welder to bus driver Here are highlights of opportunities in a variety of fields: The CIO, or chief information officer, is gaining visibility as a senior executive in many corporations, says a search consultant who specializes in the field. "While some skepticism persists, the CIO' idea — a senior executive by whattitle title in charge of technology on a par with the CFO and other top-level execution, is no longer a novelty," says John Sparks. "With an executive search firm in New York City." Davis estimates that better than half of the 100 largest technologically driven corporations have a CIO. This executive is less a technology expert than a business leader who manages information technology as an offensive and defensive weapon in a company's fight to survive in global markets, he says. "The position has real teeth, real substance." The person who plans and manages office environments, facilities, spelling management, spellings management. Responsibilities include long-range planning and budgeting, real estate acquisition and disposal, planning of interior space, architectural and engineering planning, new construction or renovation, maintenance and operations management, integrating communications systems, and general administrative services, like food services, regraphics, and transportation. ment. According to the International Facility Management Association, based in Houston and currently claiming 7,800 members, entry level salaries average $20,000-$30,000, depending on position, company size and geographic location. The organization says that 22 colleges offer programs in this area, among them Cornell University, Fordham University, Purdue University and Brigham Young University. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology offers several courses and is host to a conference each year. The corporate real estate management fid has become central to corporate real estate management. note. Specialists, once just caretakers of company holdings, must now deal with large plant investment decisions that call for knowledge of corporate needs, government regulations, tax structures, cost factors and worldwide site location criteria, according to the Industrial Development Research Council, an association of Fortune 500 corporate real estate professionals. Corporations are placing heavier emphasis on the recruitment of specialists who are seated in finance, foreign and defense sectors. The strategic thinking, according to the council Employment opportunities are excellent for college business graduates who specialize in accounting, according to the personnel director of one of the nation's largest independent regional accounting firms. "With the general disenchantment on Wall street, business-minded individuals looking for great career opportunities should seriously consider accounting," says Rick Fisher of Richard A. Elsner & Co., a New York-based firm. Although auditing services will always be the backbone of the accounting industry, Fisher says, individuals can expect to see opportunities in the areas of litigation support, bankruptcy, divorce and white collar crime. According to the American Institute for Certified Public Accountants, the earnings potential of a CPA is excellent, with starting salaries as high as $33,000 — depending on the size of the firm, the company and the geographical location. Women are making inroads into the life insurance business, according to a spokesman for Northwestern Mutual Life, where 10 of 15 sales agents are women. Job opportunities in the welding field are being upgraded by a new certification "The lure in this once-male-dominated field is the right mix of financial reward and flexibility," says John Caspari of the firm's communications department. He says the trend for more women in sales ranks will continue. Advanced degrees and prior experience, while helpful, are not aerequisite, he adds. — program providing recognition of welders who have demonstrated their competence, according to the American Welding Society. The program improves career mobility for welders with certification that travels with the individual, explains Richard Alley, president of the society. "The Bureau of Labor Statistics tells us that we must maintain the welder workforce at about 429,000 in the 21st century. So AWS developed the welder certification program to provide personal credentials that stay with individuals wherever they may want to work, similar to those available in many other occupations." he says. Many retirees and housewives are choosing second careers as school bus drivers, says a spokesman for MimiLinda Ryder Student Transportation Services. More than 50 percent of Ryder's 7,000 drivers are women, many of them mothers of school age children attracted by schedulers. A majority of Ryder's children's, according to Jonathan Ward. 10B Tuesday; May 1, 1990 / University Daily Kansan 30 YEARS OF SOUND EXPERIENCE HI-FI GRAND PRIX AWARDS AWARD-WINNING DEALER KING OOP TASMAN INTRODUCING KIEF'S BIGGEST BLOWOUT EVER! OVER $250,000 OF TOP-QUALITY AUDIO COMPONENTS PRICED TO SELL NOW! HERE ARE OUR "TEXAS TERMS": All new units have full factory warranty. All manufacturers require that original sales ticket and warranty certificate be presented at any factory authorized service center. Used equipment carries our 15-day buy-back guarantee. All amplifiers, receivers, CD players, tuners and tape decks are top quality stereo components. All units are in excellent condition and will be completely checked, cleaned and repacked with complete new factory warranty. In order that we may provide the above services, all units purchased may be picked up the day following purchase. None of the above units are being sold out of distress. These units are being sold as a means of rotating new demonstration equipment. DEMO BONANZA AUDIO ENTERTAINMENT CENTER RECEIVERS DENON DRA232R $419 $299 DRA625RA $619 $465 DRA829A $869 $679 KYOCERA NAD 7000 $629 $500 7100 $829 $657 7225PE $398 $278 *$398 $1095 $899 NAKAMICHI TA2A $648 $489 TA3A $950 $730 TA4A $1375 $1040 ONKYO XT800 $310 $200 XT82M $497 $399 XT840 $425 $299 XTSV90 $1295 $949 YAMAHA RK530 $470 $328 RK730 $570 $400 RK830 $680 $487 RK930 $935 $487 ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT CASSETTE DECKS DENON DRM500 $349 $230 DRM600 $379 $294 DRW750 $469 $340 NAD 6100 $579 $438 6325 $298 $200 6340 $455 $325 NAKAMICHI CR1A $425 $289 CR2A $879 $396 CR2A $879 $649 RX202 $879 $649 TA2000 $290 $199 TARW400 $430 $280 TA2W00 $300 ONKYO KX130 $280 $169 KX130 $360 $189 KX530 $449 $330 KX7R30 $550 $400 KW202U $419 $280 KW302U $519 $368 KW602 $585 $429 1234567890 YAMAHA SPEAKERS Model List Kief's ADS L6900 $298 $199 AMER. ACOUSTICS D8500 $450 $297 B&W MATRIX3W $1345 $1097 A120 $250 $180 A60VII $140 $108 A70II $185 $135 T1000II $650 $499 T930B $395 $310 BOSTON KEF KLIPSCH 103.3 $790 $649 C35 $250 $189 C55 $300 $239 CHROO $879 $700 FORIORIO $695 $98 KG200 $260 $199 QUROO $575 $460 MARTIN/LOGAN CLISIBL $1995 1739 MONO $5400 4848 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 CD PLAYERS DENON DCD1580 $825 $599 DCD1620 $875 $320 DCD920 $579 $420 DCM444 $579 $379 DCM444 $529 $379 KYOCERA KYOCAR D510 $695 $529 DA710CX $850 $595 NAD 5170 $779 $625 5240 $495 $358 5340 $478 $348 NAKAMICHI OMS1A $429 $259 OMS5AII $1700 $1195 ONKYO DX1500 $329 $209 DX1700 $349 $254 DX1C00 $375 $258 REVOX B226S $2075 $1725 YAMAHA CDX1100U $1200 $879 CDX420 $359 $257 CDX510U $399 $269 0227 4400 5891 CAR STEREOS ALPINE 5510 AMP $179 $138 5520 AMP $197 $139 7907 CD $195 $777 650 ALARM $150 $779 3210 EQLZR $160 $99 3230 EQLZR $164 $178 SONY DENON DCA3500 $599 $527 DCR5320 $448 $369 CDXA30 CD $975 $689 XR170 AM/FM $195 $144 NAKAMICHI TD400 CASS $560 $458 TD500 CASS $849 $725 RD360 CASS $849 $734 KENWOOD KFC6070 SPK $97 $48 PANASONIC CQE850 CD $650 $500 JBL T420 SPK $175 $97 T KIEF'S TAPES CDS RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO CAR STEREO 24th and Iowa LAWRENCE, KS (913) 842-1544 1 VOL.100, NO.143 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY, May 2, 1990 (USPS 650-640) ADVERTISING: 864-4358 NEWS: 864-4810 House OKs budget with military cuts The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The House yesterday adopted a Democratic $1.2 trillion budget for fiscal 1991 that would cut President Bush's defense program, and allow the government to abandon the administration's own spending plan. On a 218-to-208 party-line vote, the Democratic-controlled House adopted a plan that would provide $295.5 billion for next year's military programs. That is $8.3 billion less than Bush proposed and $11.5 billion less. The need then was to keep pace with inflation, a step supported because it was merited by eased tensions with the Soviet bloc. "The budget here provides for a transition from a Cold War economy to a peace-time economy, and that is what we need to do for the future," said the plan's Chairman Lean Penatty, D-Calif. Republicans opposed the package en masse, criticizing it as weak on defense and arguing that any budget would be meaningless unless negotiations with the House first yielded agreements on its components. “This is the Dukaik platform. This is the Mondale platform. This is the Carter presidency. This is the leadership of the president.” Ga., the No. 2 GOP leader, recalling the ghosts of the recent Democratic past. But much of the debate centered on the Republican decision not to offer Bush's own spending blueprint for a vote, reversing a customary practice. Rep. Bill Frenzel of Minnesota, ranking Republican on the floor of the House, said he would heart late Monday, saying the president's package had been "passed by economic and political events." "Perhaps that speaks louder than even offering the president's budget. The governor is to push hard and hijack it in cop out." Frenzel repel, "In our judgment, leadership to negotiate a compromise budget" Realizing they would not be able to rely on any GOP support, Democrats brought Speaker Thomas S. Foley, D-Wash, to the floor. He rallied his members and called for them that "we can march, not drift into the next century." Aiming to re-shap Bush's defense plan, the Democratic budget places long-range constraints on Penta- The plan shrinks defense budget authority to $283 Speaker opposes justices 'Gang of Five' weakens Bill of Rights, he says By Sandra Moran Kansan staff writer The U.S. Supreme Court is weakening the Bill of Rights, a civil rights lawyer said last night. William Kunstler, a trial counselor who has argued several U.S. Supreme Court cases, spoke to about people in the Kansas University Ballroom. Kunstler said five Supreme Court justices, whom he calls the "Gang of Five," are making the Bill of Rights meaningless by banding together to make decisions that contradict the Bill of Rights. The justices are Sandra Day O'Connor, William Rehquist, Byron White, Anthony Kennedy and Antonin Scalia. "They are squeezing the very breath out of a document that should be compared to the Magna Carta," he said. Kuntsler cited 10 examples of recent Supreme Court rulings, including random drug testing. He was also struck as a violation of the right to privacy. M. BARRUCCI See KUNSTLER. n. 6 Civil Rights activist William Kunstler talks about the Bill of Rights. May Day marchers protest in Red Square The Associated Press MOSCOW — Tens of thousands of protesters in Red Square unleashed their fury at Mikhail Gorbachev yesterday, turning the traditional May Day parade into an outpouring of complaints about the economy and the blockade of Lithuania. The Soviet president has allowed free debate in the press and politics and has endured public criticism. But never before has he had to personally face such an outburst of discontent with his government. The criticism included jeers to the faces of Soviet leaders. Gorbachev, 59, tapped his fingers on the porapet of the red granite reviewing stand during the protest, showing his impatience, but otherwise was impassive. He and the other officials left after enduring the unofficial demonstrators for about 20 minutes, but it was unclear whether they were leaving in response to the protests. Neither Gorbachev nor any of the other communist or government leaders on the Donghai delegation were there. Dozens of the demonstrators carried the yellow, red and green national flags of the breakaway Lithuanian republic and shouted "Shame!" and "Freedom For Lithuania!" Some waved their fists at the leaders, numbering about two dozen, and shouted "Resign!" above the holiday music blaring from loudspeakers. One caustic sign likened the Soviet leadership to Nicolae Ceaucescu, the Romanian dictator executed in December after a popular uprising. From Armchair to Prison Beds," it read. The leaders clearly expected some criticism. They authorized the unofficial demonstration and took control of the traditional parade that preceded it from local Communist Party and government officials. Gorbachev's popularity has waned during his five years in office because he reforms have failed to resolve chronic economic problems. Many people believe supplies of food, housing and consumer goods actually are worse under Gorbachev. He also is under fire for the blockade of oil, raw materials and other goods he imposed on Lithuania to force the Baltic republic to back off its March 11 declaration of independence. For decades, the Red Square rally on May Day has been an orchestrated show of support for official policies. Entry onto Red Square was rigidly controlled. This year, there were no restrictions; anyone could join the march on the gray cobblestone stretching from the Historical Museum to the multicolored St. Basil's Cathedral. "We are all so very tired of these formal galas, when long before the holiday the lists of demonstration participants were put out," said the official news agency Tass. Soviet leaders went on record this year as preferring a parade like those before the 1917 revolution, when May Day was marked with the celebration of the anniversary of workers' grievances about the czarist regime. What they got instead were posters that declared, "Down with the Empire of Red Fascism," and "Today a Blockade of Lithuania, Tomorrow a Blockade of Moscow." The black flags of an anarchist group stood out in the sea of colors. The wave of protesters continued to file through Red Square, which seats about 50,000 marchers, for more than an hour after the leaders left. Man wants to freeze his head The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — A mathematician who filed a lawsof he can freeze his own head before he dies from a brain tumor said yesterday that the odds of achieving immortality weren't as bad as one might think. "We think that everyone should be immortal. The purpose of medicine should be to bring about that immorality." Thomas Donaldson said from his home in Sunnyvale, a Silicon Valley town south of San Francisco. Donaldson, 46, said he wanted his head quick-frozen while he was still alive, using a process known as cryonic preparation. He thinks that the best way to cure him is toway to cure the tumor and attach his head to a healthy body. Cryonic suspension is a procedure in which all or part of the body supposedly is preserved in a deep freeze. Advocates of cryonics say waiting for legal brain death hurts the chances of successful awakening. In a lawsuit filed Monday in Santa Barbara County Superior Court, Donaldson seeks to bar state and local officials from preventing his cryonic suspension before he is declared legally dead. In California, legal death is defined as when a person's brain does not show signs of activity as recorded by an electronecencehalograph. "I am dying and want to be cryingly suspended so that I might later be revived and continue to live," said Donaldson, member of the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, based in Riverside. so far, the procedure only has been performed after a patient has died of natural causes. Alcor gained national attention in 1967 when the head of an elderly woman was frozen after she died at the lab. Authorities questioned whether her head was removed before she died. Donaldson said he'd been planning on cryonic suspension since before he joined Alcor in 1975. Sea story page 13 14 Marie Hibbard, Overland Park graduate student, left, plays ultimate trisbes with Lucy Graham, Leawood junior. See story page 18 Weekend will be warmer; rain possible Ron Crandall, lead forecaster, said a cold, high-pressure system fingering over the Great Plains caused causing the lower temperatures. Despite the recent cool Kansas weather, KU students can prepare for a warmer weekend, a spokeswoman said. Weather Service said yesterday. Bv a Kansan reporter Although the normal temperature for Kansas at the beginning of May is in the low 70, Cramand said it was lower weather was not unusual. "This is not uncommon for a transition period," he said. "You can have very large swings of temperature." Crandali said temperatures also had been cool throughout the Great Lakes areas Lawrence could have rain within 48 hours if precipitation continues to move east from the southwestern part of the country, Crandall He said local temperatures should continue to be below normal this weekend but should be in the upper 65 by Sunday. Becky Lord, Omaha junior, said Brennan Burger, Minneapolis, Minn., freshman, said he thought the weather was too inconsistent. "I'd like to get my jeans put away and take out my shorts," she said. she liked the recent cool weather in the afternoons but thought the mornings were too cold. "It's not good for fishing," he said. KU seeks grant to develop diversity Kansan staff writer By Carol B. Shiney The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has applied for a $100,000 grant from the Ford Foundation to establish an institute that will address cultural diversity. KU was one of about 200 universities that received invitations from the foundation to apply for the grant, but only 15 will be selected, said Bill Andrews, co-project coordinator. James Muyksens, dean of liberal arts and sciences, said, "I think it's fairly evident to all that one of the most important issues before us, not only at KU but at other universities, is how we're going to meet the challenge of cultural diversity. The Ford Foundation, if funding is giving us chance to test some of these ideas." He said the foundation wanted to know what the University had done in the past before deciding whether the grant would be awarded. The grant is a one-time award that would be used during a university period. The grant would be tested for one year to determine whether they worked. If they worked, they would be implemented. The college sent its application to the foundation Monday. The application included a summary of existing programs and nine proposed programs designed to strengthen the campus community, build community with Haskell Indian Junior College and improve community ties on and off campus. Applications for the grants were due yesterday. "We do recognize the need for these efforts," Andrews said. "We've been taking some steps in that direction. If we had more money, we could take more stews." Andrews said, "The key word is community — building a sense of common idea and purpose." Muyksen, who also is co-project coordinator, said that one of the main interests of the Ford Foundation was campus climate. "I're premised on the idea that the only way we're going to have long-term change in society is to change people's attitudes," he said. Although the grant would not finance all of the programs the college has proposed, it would make it quicker and easier to finance the-programs, Muyskens said. “There are lots of new things that we want to do to whether we get the foundation's support or not,” she will do them with our own funds. See FOHD, p. 6 2 Wednesday, May 2. 1990 / University Daily Kansan Weather SUNSHINE TODAY Cool HI: 58' LO:51' Seattle 64/49 New York 70/47 Chicago 53/46 Denver 49/36 Los Angeles 71/50 Dallas 79/58 Miami 92/69 KEY Rain Snow Ice T-Storms Kansas Forecast Cloudy and wet. A chance for showers across the state. Snow and rain mixed, possible in the northwest of the state. Highs in the 50s. Lows in the 40s. Forecast by Bryan Ruby Temperature are today's highs and tonight's lowes. Salina 55/48 KC 57/50 Dodge City Wichita 56/43 62/49 5-dav Forecast Wednesday - Cool and wet with a chance for showers. High 58', Low 51'. Thursday - Mostly cloudy and cool with a chance for showers. High 59', Low 49'. Friday - Partly sunny and dry High 62°. Low 48°. Saturday - Sunny and warmer. High 68° . Low 51°. Sunday - Mostly sunny and warm. High 74'. Low 58'. The University Daily Kansan (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals period, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 66044. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. handmade Jewelry GOLDMAKERS 723 mass. 842-2770 Plays Grown 12th & Ind. 841-2310 Above Yello Sub 50¢ OFF ANY TRIPLE THICK & CREAMY SHAKE not valid w/other offers expires 5/16/90 OMEGA OUTDOOR MUSIC FESTIVAL 22 Area Acts, Including: - The Lonesome Hounddogs - Parlor Frogs - Love Squad - Random Aztech May 4 & 5 $8.00-1 Day / $12.00-2 Days Maps Available At Yello Subs, Rudy's Pizza, Paradise Cafe, Etc. Benefit For Wildcare & East Lawrence Improvement Assn. KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS DUNK TANK! STUDENT UNION AGAINST SUA *Wednesday, May 9 & Thursday, May 10 *10am - 3 pm *50¢ for 3 throws *in front of the Kansas Union 1990 F1NAL FRENZY KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS FREE FILMS **KU Democrat will meet at 8 tonight at the Kansas Union jobb** *The Society for Fantasy and Sci- ence will meet at Alove B in the Kansas Union.* University Forum will be at noon at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1024 Oread Ave. Helen Alexander, assistant professor of botany The KU Cycling Club will meet at 8 ontight at the Templin Hall cafeteria after a 6:30 p.m. bike ride from front of Wescos Hall. Times will be set for summer rides, and new officers will be elected. The music library will sponsor a benefit book sale from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today at the lobby outside the music library in Murphy Hall. The library offers new and sound recordings and will benefit the music library acquisitions. On campus FREE APPLES Kauff曼培, sponsored by the KU German Club, will be at 4:30 p.m. today at the Oread Room in the Union. New officers will be elected. and systematics and ecology, will speak about world population control. Kansas University Games and Role-Players will meet at 6 p.m. today at the Pioneer Room in the A 22-year-old student was arrested early yesterday morning after throwing furniture off a second floor balcony at an apartment building in the Bronx. The Lawrence police reported. The furniture belongs residents of one of the The Nihon Club will meet for elections at 7 tonight in the McColum Hall lobby. Anyone not able to attend may vote at the round table from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Friday at Alcove A in the Kansas Union. SURVIVAL PACKS FREE BACK RUBS TOYS & GAMES ROOM The Student Alumni Association will meet at 7 tonight at the Adams University Center. Mike Kautsch, dean of journalism, will be the guest. Lot 94, east of Memorial Stadium, KU police reported. The damage totaled $100. Burge Union. Police report apartments. The man was being held on $50 bond. A car was scratched causing $1,000 damage Friday or Saturday in the 2200 block of West 28th Street, Lawrence police reported. A stereo and speakers valued together at $450 were taken Monday or yesterday from a locked car in the courthouse, Court, Lawrence police reported. A bicycle valued at $250 was taken Sunday night from the 1800 block of Tennessee Street, Lawrence police reported. A stack of papers was lighted Saturday morning on the passenger seat of a student's unlocked car in LiveWire NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care 820-822 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 841-0100 SEND MOM A BOUQUET AS FRESH AS SPRING. Just call or visit us today to send the FTD® Spring Garden™ Bouquet. 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Godfather's Pizza WE DELIVER University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 Campus/Area 3 Black activist offends some students Bv Eric Gorski and Jonathan Plummer Steve Cokelv, Black activist, addresses racial problems and awareness to a crowd by Wescoe Hall. Kansan staff writers EFFEE A controversial Black activist who said he had been taken out of context in the past angered some students and accused him of censorship and upset his rights. Steve Cokely, who was fired in 1988 from his job as a Chair of the mayoral aide after he reportedly made statements against Jews, spoke twice yesterday on the University of Kansas campus, and was sponsored by Black Man of Today. Keith Thorpe/KANSAN Cokely said that comments attributed to him in the Chicago Tribune two years ago were paraphrased from an article and that he did not want to be charged. He asserted that Jewish physicians had injected Blacks with the AIDS virus. Last night, Cokely spoke to a crowd of about 150 in the Kansas Union. He also spoke to about 200 students yesterday afternoon near Wescoe Hall. Last night he again denied that he had made the statement, but some students were upset about other com- Cokely said a dialogue between races would be worthless until people were better educated. He encouraged students to read, and when students could not answer's Cokely's questions about who was in charge of the school, he said he should get a refund from the University. "I am trying to wake up the dead. It smells like death in here," he said. "We are no threat because we don't know who is in charge." Some students thought that Cokely was trying to divide races. Roxanne Fairchild, Boulder, Colo, freshman, stood during Cokely's speech and told all people were taken to the school and that they should work together. Cokely said, "In reality, that shit don't even exist." Katrin Widholm, Champaign, Ill., junior, said afterward that she told Cokely that she respected his goals but that she thought he should be 'I am trying to wake up the dead. It smells like death in here. We are no threat because we don't know who is in charge.' Steve Cokely Black activist more positive in his approach "We've worked all year to get everyone together," Woldhim said. "I'm afraid he'll get Blacks to be more, more split from the population." Mark McCormick of Black Men of Today said that many people came with preconceived notions about black women and misunderstanding about his views. "Society is segregated. There is no place in this society where Blacks and whites are treated as equal." McCormick said. "He didn't encourage us to partake in rhetoric as much as doing research." Lauri Greenberg, Arlington Heights, III, freshman, said, "I don't understand why there is a Jewish problem. I don't understand why there is a Black problem. I only see a human problem." Ackley Tippett, Lawrence junior, said Cokely was not antisemitic but was against white supremacy, which sought to divide the groups. Some Jewish students in the audience took offence to Cokely's reference to the "Jewish problem" in the United States, Cokely said that Jews in the United States portrayed themselves as being "first" and that Blacks actually were the originators of mankind. Wayne Spritz, Overland Parl sophomore, said. "He seems to be feeding on the emotion of people here. He talked about the 'Jewish problem.' But his solution is confusion. Not know if he proposed a solution." "If we are against racism or anti-Semitism, then we should be trying to get back to the source of the problem or just to begin the beginning of time. Cotz's idea Student speaks of Senate campaign prejudices By a Kansan reporter Todd Boerger, presidential candidate for Real Representation, said yesterday that some candidates were pressured to not run with the coalition because of the cultural diversity of its members. Boerger spoke to about 150 people after Steve Cokely, who was speaking in the Kansas Union, encouraged him to tell of prejudices he felt during the campaign. After the speech, Boerger said at five people dropped off the Real Representation ticket because of outside pressure. Others were intimidated into not joining the ticket. Boerger also said that he received prank phone calls and that someone had dented his car door during the campaign. He filed a report with the Lawrence police department. "We formed a coalition on the basis of representing everyone. As (Coley) said, America is just not representative." Becker said. He said that he had no idea Cokely would ask him to speak but that he did not regret being honest with the public. Activists tell why marijuana should be legalized Bv Steve Ballev Kansan staff writer Jack Herer thinks he can save the world with hemp. About 250 people gathered yesterday to listen to herer and other activists speak about the legalization of marijuana, more commonly called marijuana. The rally, at Second and Indiana streets in Burcham Park, was the second of three Kansas rallies this week. The first rally, April 29 at Voker Park in Kansas City, Mo. During the rally, the Capitol building the last rally will be today on the steps of the Capitol building in Tooeka. Here, a national marjusia activa acti said, the hemp plant was the key to solving many of the world's environmental problems. "Why should we strip our forests when there is unreliable proof that hemp could provide four times as much pulp paper with five to seven times less destruction of the environment?" Here asked the crowd. "Are we going to be made by burning fossil fuels when instead we could use an annual renewable plant that will do no harm to the atmosphere?" Heres said products made from hemp, such as clothing, canvas and rope, were some of the strongest and highest-quality textiles in the world. He said these factors made it 'Alcohol and cigarettes kill thousands of people every year. There has never been any proof that marijuana has killed anyone.' - Jack Herer national marijuana activist impossible for government officials not to look into the legalization of bemp for industrial purposes as well as recreational purposes. "Alcohol and cigarettes kill thousands of people every year," he said. "There has never been any proof that marijuana has killed anyone. In fact, there is scientific proof that you live longer if you smoke pot. The war on drugs is a war on a plant that does nothing but good for our planet." Lawrence resident Mark Creamer, who recently was convicted of smoking marijuana at the Douglas County Law Enforcement Center, spoke at the rally about his intentions to run for Congress. "I want to take my message to Washington and to the President." Creamer said. "I don't care if I win or lose. I just want to increase and promote discussion of the subject of legalization. Shockingly enough, I think I am going to be elected." Les Blevins Jr. of Lawrence said his group, the 21st Century Society, was one of the sponsors of the gathering. "We think it is obvious that our drug policy is ruining this country," Bleivens said. "It has bounced up in our faces. There is a drug problem here that does not exist in any other country. I think that in itself justifies a re-examination of current policies." Dave Buchanan, 28, of Lawrence said he attended the rally to support the push to give people the choice of whether to smoke marijuana. "I enjoy marjana," Buchan said. "It is a soft drug and is much safer than any other substance, including alcohol and cigarettes. I use it regularly, and I am not ashamed of it. I believe it should be legalized because not only would the drug be illegal, but it is in no way as harmful as alcohol or cigarettes, which are both legal." "I think it is great to see minds get truly educated," he said. "It is a crime that government and university are involved in the subject come up. This is not the time for reefer madness. It is the time for reefer gladness." Herer said he was happy with the public response from the first two rallies in Kansas City and Lawrence. A A person who declined to give his name smokes marijuana. Keith ThomasMANSAH Lawrence may buy property by river By Kathryn Lancaster Kansan staff writer The city of Lawrence is considering buying land along the Kansas River in an area considered to be a critical habitat for bald eagles. A city task force recommended buying the property, owned by Bill Penny, more than a year ago in conjunction with plans to develop an East Lawrence Parkway from downtown to Kansas Highway 10. City commissioners voted 4-0 last night to begin negotiations to buy 5.8 acres just east of the city, which are at Seventh and New York streets. "The green space area was the centerpiece of our whole discussion with the neighborhood," said Commissioner Bob Schumm, who helped develop task-force recommendations in 1988. City commissioners voted 4-0 last night to begin negotiations to buy 5.8 acres just east of the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza at Seventh and New York streets. Commissioner Dave Penny removed himself from discussion because he also was interested in purchasing the property. Last month Penny offered to buy the property for $85,000 from his brother, Bill Penny. See related story p.12 Dave Penny, owner of Kaw Sand Co., 803 E. Eighlt St., said he was not interested in developing the new access for dredging operations. Jo Anderson, president of the East Lawrence Improvement Association, told commissioners that the city should buy the land to acquire future commercialization or industrialization. Joyce Wolf, representing the Jayhawk Audubon Society, said the city was fortunate to have an area visited regularly in the winter by bald eagles, an endangered species. She recommended keeping the area in as natural a state as possible. Commissioners heeded the advice of Mike Wilden, city manager, who suggested they not make a decision on the ultimate use of the land until a purchase had been made. This would allow Wendell to occupy an area for additional plaza parking or roadway if deemed necessary. The critical point was to buy the land before Penny accepted another offer, Mayor Shirley Martin-Smith said after the meeting. "We sat on the criteria for a year," she said. "We are lucky that the property is still for sale." Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for Driving by BLAUCH & LOMB Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for Driving BY BARRACKS LONDON 732 Massachusetts Available at The Elite Shop The Eic. Shop i z z - z z Spring Beach Party '90 Swimsuit & Tan competition TONITE Ladies--1st place $100 CASH Men--1st place Wear your swimsuit & get in free $50 CASH 901.Miss. The biggest event of the year. '90 HEY LADIES... THURS. Experience 6 of K.C.'s bottest male dancers Doors open at 7. Show begins at 8. Men-party at Sarkey's during the performance Last Ladies Nite of the school year. Draw, pitchers and shot specials 18 & up admitted 4 Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Interstate 66 proposal Road of dreams would be a costly dead end for taxpayers but an advantage for motorists A new and improved Interstate 66 could give motorists a trip down memory lane But at a price no one can afford. The 2,400-mile route that would stretch from coast to coast, along the route of the famous Highway 66, could provide a quicker avenue of travel for millions of motorists each year. Proponents said the highway would save about half a day's journey. The interstate potentially could become the economic salvation for the southern tier of Kansas counties by providing an access for trucks carrying goods from industries. As anyone from that region will attest, southeast Kansas can use good, four-lane roads as a mechanism for economic development. Interstate 66 would help alleviate the projected increase in the volume of traffic on I-70, which cuts across northern Kansas, and I-40, which cuts through Arkansas and Oklahoma. Another highway would extend the life of these roads into the next century. However, the biggest drawback to this road of dreams is going to be the cost. The state can ill afford such a road after it approved the $2.65 billion highway package. On the national level, there are other worthy programs and the ever growing debt. While the route could pay for itself through the potential for economic development along the way, the initial cost and the cost of maintenance will be large. Congress and the state legislatures along the route should not get caught up in the dream of a super highway. Yes, it is a good idea, but the United States has millions of miles of roads and bridges that are crumbling. It makes little sense to build more roads if the existing ones cannot be maintained. If the interstate is a toll road, some of the cost could be recovered in eastern and western states as other states construct other links. An attempt to build it all at once without financing or support would not be the proper avenue for future development. Interstate 66 at best is a dream. In reality, it is a dead end road. John P. Milburn for the editorial board Ambiguous politician Quayle needs to stand up, tell us who he really is; Poll suggests he is not qualified for presidency fifty-four percent of the public, including 43 percent of Republicans, said he was not qualified to be president, according to a recent Gallup poll. Forty-nine percent thought George Bush should pick a new running mate for 1992. He is the son of an enthusiastic supporter of the John Birch Society. But in 1976, he took a running leap off the far-left end when he suggested that marijuana be decriminalized. He is J. Danforth Quayle, and he is next in line for the presidency. Last weekend he addressed an anti-abortion rally in Washington, D.C., portraying himself as a long-time friend of the anti-abortion movement. But in 1890, he was quoted as saying he wanted to avoid an appointment to the judiciary committee because he did not want to deal with issues such as abortion. So where does he stand? What does he stand for? Has he ever taken a stand on his own? tor? has he ever taken a stand on his own? Little Danny Quayle, it's time you stand up, let go of daddy's hand and tell this country who you really are. Your free ride has ended. If you expect to be respected, you better start showing us something. Daddy can't bail you out of this poor performance as he did all the way through college. One of Quayle's college professors once said of him, "I looked into those blue eyes, and I might as well have been looking out the window." His own party does not like him. His college professors ridicule him. This man would have a tough time in an election against Mickey Mouse (Our apologies to Walt Disney for putting the two in the same category). After all, we've all seen Mickey Mouse Dan Quayle, you're no Mickey Mouse Stephen Kline for the editorial board MKIEHAM THANK YOU, I GUESS. TERRORISTS The Pig of Peace. U.S. policy released hostages Editor's note: A second hostage, Frank Reed, has been released since Paul Greenberg wrote today's column on the hostage situation. A. S. Pillai Paul Greenberg Syndicated columnist The wife of the just-freed U.S. hostage sounds hopeful and foolish. To quote Feryal Polhill, "The mood seems to be as if the hostage issue, the hostage file, will be finally closed." And then she makes a mistake. Like President Bush not to spare any effort to free all the hostages." Her husband is free today precisely because a U.S. president finally learned to spare some effort on the hostage issue. The kidnappers at first demanded that Washington make at least some small observation to their cause by dispatching an assistant secretary of state to their bailiwick before they would release Robert Polhill. The White House wisely declined. The time for kowtowing to kidnappers had passed. Result: Polhill was released soon enough to the appropriate Syrian general, who turned him over to the appropriate U.S. embassy. Polhill is most welcome home. He also is, like all other hostages, a declining commodity, so long as his country will not pay ransom for him. Let's face it: the bottom has dropped out of the hostage market, which makes more releases all the more likely. Syria now cooperates in returning hostages rather than seizing them. The Palestinian Liberation Organization has come out against the practice. Even Libya's Moammar Ghahdafi has asked that the hostages be freed. There's nothing much to be gained anymore by taking hostages exeimental oblique. The more interest taken in a hos tage's case, and the greater efforts made to obtain his release, the longer he may be使住. Making hostages a national obsession is a good way to keep them hostages. Polhill can be thankful that his government wasn't willing to take extra pairs in his case, or he might have been held much longer. Now if George Wilson sees noises about how the hostages are on his mind day and night and in between, the other hostages might get out. Iran's always-confused government seems to think it still can get some mileage out of hostages. Apparently it paid the small price for Polihil's release. Its associates in Lebanon were showing off some new play-pretends after the deal was consummated: tanks, armored personnel carriers and some rocket launchers. Iran's mullahs still want many things from Washington, and they hope to get them in exchange for U.S. hostages. Naturally they would never put the matter so crassly, mainly because crassness no longer pays. Instead, the Teheran Times speaks oh-sel迪靠-, saying things like "the release process must be expeditioned by acts of good will by the leaders of our country and must be a 'a two-way street.' It's as if we were talking about a normal diplomatic procedure here, which, in Iran, kldmapping may be. The only honest, self-respecting, and yes, effective, policy would be to tell Teeran what it can do with its Release Process. And that is pretty much what the White House finally has learned to do. On the off chance that Iran's leaders still are ready to hagle, What is it they want? Lots! - The remaining Iranian assets seized in this country when the first set of hostages was taken at the U.S. embassy in Iran. Various items of military equipment that Iran claims to have paid for but that never were delivered merely because that country held Americans hostage. (How touchy these American are.) Then there are certain intangible assets that good relations with the United States might help secure, such as Iran's return to international respectability. Trade with the United States in something besides hostages might be useful, too, and might even assist others to do business with Teheran. In short, what Iran wants and needs is international respectability, and it only slowly comes to realize that respectability cannot be obtained by disreputable methods. Hence the mullahs' cooperation in this latest release. So long as the mullahs maintain their tags, there is little point in keeping them. It's a matter of supply and demand. Mrs. Polhill, bless her, is right about the hostage file being closed. But it is being closed by the United States. ▶ Paul Greenberg is the editorial editor of the Pine Bluff (Ark.) Commercial. Other Voices Too much TV leads to obesity of mind No wonder there are problems in the schools. If youngsters to 20 5 years old are watching television for 25 hours a week, as U.S. pediatricians report, there is a good reason for problems. The warning is based on a study by the American Academy of Pediatricians. The group cited data from A.C. Nielson Co. that shows that by the time one of today's children reaches 70, he will have spent seven years, or one-tenth of his life span, in front of the television. Watching television is a passive, sedentary activity. As the doctors report, it can lead to obesity in children whose health would be much better served by sports and active play. is trivial, tasteless fare, the equivalent of yesterday's pulp magazines. Spending that much time in such an undemanding pursuit also leads to obesity of the mind. Much of television's programming The pediatricians recommend limiting children's viewing to one or two hours daily and encouraging them to spend other time in athletics, reading and hobbies. They also support legislation mandating broadcasting of high-quality programming for license renewal and requiring at least one hour a day of educational programs for children. But the real solution lies with parents. They need to recognize the perils of excessive television viewing and do something about it. From the Post-Bulletin, Rochester Minn., April 20. News staff Richard Breck...Editor Daniel Niemi...Managing editor Christopher R. Raleton Lisa Moseh...Planning editor John Milburn...Editorial editor Candy Nieman...Campus editor Rick Cooley...Rope editor E. Joseph Zurge...Photo editor Stephen Kline...Graphics editor Kris Berguellet...Art/Feelings editor Tom Eaton...General manager, news adviser Margaret Townsend...Business manager Tamir Rank...Retail sales manager Missey Miller...Commercial manager Kathy Rodgers...Regional sales manager Mike Lehman...National sales manager Mindy Morris...Co-op sales manager Nate Stamos...Production manager Mindy Land...Australian production manager Jennifer Hollis...Marketing director James Giappone...Creative director Janet Rorholm...Classified manager Wendy Burtz...Travel consultant Hannah Hinton...Sales and marketing adviser Business staff Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Quest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will be photographed. They can be Kansan newsmen the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be asked or brought to the Kansan newroom, 113 Staffler Hall, Hattell, columns and cartoons are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board. LETTERS to the EDITOR Moseley is good In the April 30 Kansan, we see only negative aspects of the Bill Moseley nomination. There is not a single direct quote in the article about the good things Moseley has done for KU. As a senator who keeps an open mind and open ears, I want to remind people of what Moseley has done and is doing for KU students. First, one person in the article said Moseley "has done serious damage as a representative to the Legislature." How? The article never said anything that Moseley had done wrong except make the comment about financing. But the story was meeting Wednesday, no one ever brought up one example of Moseley's supposed ineptitude. What is documented, however, are serious achievements in Moseley's favor. He urged the ASK Policy Council to request that the Kansas Minority Scholarship Program be doubled in size for 1992. He has worked with handicapped accessibility and the YES Program, a program that provides stipends to under-represented college students to tutor and mentor at-risk children. Perhaps most important, he works for all minorities, not just ones with grade point averages above 3.5, by directing ASK to investigate other minority scholarships. He also opposes qualified admissions because of the threat it poses to minority recruitment and access to higher education. Even in his application to Student Body President Mike Schreiner, Moseley said, "I hope to seek and receive diverse student input on all upcoming issues." Moseley already has contacted such groups as Hillel and Black Teachers Association to be involved with ASK. This is just some of what Moseley has done for all students. He has done many things on the local, state and national levels as well. I hope people keep these things in mind during this Wednesday's Senate meeting. Do some homework and discover the things Moseley has achieved for KU. Don't ignore the facts because your coalition or the people next to you told you "he was a bad person." One speaker said Wednesday night that he judged a man on his passions. Given everything Moseley knows about students, government at all levels and the concerns of all people, regardless of their race or anything else. Jennifer Roth Jennifer Roth Salina sophomore Noise ordinance The Crossing is one of three bars that serves as an outlet for original live music in Lawrence. Recently, the city has enacted a new noise ordinance that is unnecessary, too easily abused and the city can already existing business through its arbitrary execution. A Lawrence citizen always has had the right to call police when noise was thought to be too loud. The police would come to the scene down, and if they had to return, a citation would be issued for disturbing the peace. With this new law, no warning is required. Often, a person is unaware any law is being broken. How can you be audited to loud? How is this measured? In the case of the Crossing, a KU hangout since 1925, the law could have a disastrous effect on the way it operates. The bar has been a showcase for local live talent for more than 10 years. In my three years, only once did the police stop by on a noise complaint. It was handled amicably and with no citation issued. In the past two months, however, I have been visited four times, the last resulting in a citation with the promise of more if business continued this way. Why the problem? We know that most performing have been here much longer than I've been the owner. This vaguely worded law is being abused. There is no protection against an overzealous police officer. The law has no balance. It gives too much power to one side and little fairness to the other. It's too easily abused and only can strain relations between police and the college community. Tom Conroy Owner of The Crossing CAMP UHNEELY THIS SPACE FOR RENT B Do You HAVE TREMENDOUS AMOUNTS OF FREE TIME? - Are You Willing to Let Your Grades Slide? ARE YOU ABLE TO THOREATE OVER 2 DEMANDING EDITORS WHAT YOU COPY YOUR INSIST THAT YOU SPELL CORRECTLY AND THINK EVERYTHING YOU Do IS LIBELOUS? GETTIN' PRETTY ARE YOU CASE CAPABLE OF WITHSTANDING COUNTLESS REQUESTS BY THE G.M. THAT YOU DEVELOP A MANURE QUOTient? ARE YOU WILLING TO SUBMIT YOURSELF TO SLEEP DEPENATION IN ORDER TO MAKE A DEADLINE? ARE YOU NOT AFRAID OF GETTING YOUR FACE FUNDED IN? ARE YOU WILLING TO SUBMIT YOURSELF TO SLEEP DEPENDATION IN ORDER TO MAKE A DEADLINE? DO YOU HAVE LAWYERS IN THE FAMILY? IF YOU ANSWERED "YES" TO ALL THESE QUESTIONS, YOU MAY HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO BE A KANSAN TO BE A KANSAN CARTOONIST: — WORK LONG HOURS FOR — MINIMAL PAY. A GREAT BENEFIT PLAN INCLUDING FREE UDK'S! BY SCOTT PATTY CITY CENTER A GREAT WAY TO Pick UP CHICKS IN BARS! Now ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS APPLICANTS MUST SUBMIT A COMIC STRIP NO BIGGER THAN THE ONE PROVIDED BELOW. WRITE SMALL STIRP MUST INCLUDE THE WORKS, "CONDO," "BUDG,1 AND ENROLL. WE ARE AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER WITH PARTICIPATORS, QUARERSMANS, CHANNELS, TELLBOMBER NEED NOT APPLY.) 5 LETTERS to the EDITOR University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 Book for Wilkens I would like to recommend that Randall Wilkens and any individual who shares his rather limited view of Christianity and the Bible attempt to expand their minds by learning about the history of the Bible (its numerous misquotes and mistranslations) and about what they can do in that way to homosexuality. Is the Homosexual my Neighbor?, by Letha Scanzoni and Virginia Ramey Mollenkott, is an excellent book that offers a truly Christian approach toward lesbian women and gay men. This book is available in the library of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas at room 423 in the Kansas University to encourage Wilkens to stop by our KSQ office and spend an afternoon with this book. Wendy Griswold GLSOK office coordinator Stan Diel, you have gone too far. Your April 30 column concerning the woman who was beaten with a hammer at Clinton Lake was the most reprehensible, insensitive piece of trash I have ever read in the Kansan. It just wasn't funny, Stanley. There was nothing remotely humorous about the crime or your column. Diel not funny Maybe it is because I am friends with the woman who was beaten, whom I will call Amy, that I managed to get so riled. If I hadn't seen the stitches in Amy's head the day after it happened, maybe I would have chuckled at your ignorance. If I hadn't seen the look in her eyes that day and seen just how shaken she was, maybe I would have guffawed at your snarl when I had stopped reading books and spent more time tuning into MTV maybe then I would have been more in tune with your rapier-like insights. But I doubt it. "I'll give you a little credit, Stanley. In the last paragraph of your column, you attempted to make amends by stating that you didn't intend to belittle the seriousness of the crime. So I am compelled to ask — just what the hell were you doing in the previous 11 paragraphs? Amy could have been killed. It was entirely within the realm of possibility that she could have been raped as well. Luckily, she wasn't. If she had been, would your column have been written differently? Even if all the man himself had been harmless" or expelling himself to her, she still would have been victimized, and guess what, Stan? "That isn't funny! Stanley, I strongly suggest you turn off your television and start using your brain before you start using your typewriter. Maybe then you would realize that we, as men, are free from the many constant anxieties that women on this campus must suffer every day. Stan, have you ever studied in a lonely corner of Watson (before Letterman starts) and had to worry about some pathetic slob forcing you to watch him while he masturbates? Have you ever seen a sweatsae or a cross-cam at midnight and realized that the guy you passed in front of Lippincott was following you home? Do you ever worry about going home with someone you just met and happen to a lot and then having to walk home the next morning trying to figure out a way to tell your mom that you were raped last night? Based on your columns throughout the year, Stanley, I doubt that you have stopped to realize that women on this campus and everywhere in the United States must deal with this trash every day. Until we men decide to become enlightened and actually do something about things such as these, women will be forced to continue with their duties in the raid of us. And it is we men who will be to blame for our ignorance. Think about this, Stan. Think about making a difference. You can start with a full apology in Friday's Kansan. You can apologize to every woman on this campus. You can apologize for being so callous. You can say that you are sorry for your blunt display of insensitivity. That will be a positive start, Stan. Be man enough to do it, for the measure of a man is not what is in his pants, but what he has in his heart. Then turn off your TV and read a book. At least your sense of humor might improve. Joe McCauley Barrington, III., senior The rate of extinction of species from this earth was 1 every 4 years from 1600 to 1900. It's now estimated to be 1000 per year KANSAN You should know: ATTENTION KU STUDENTS For the CALL Best Prep 843-3131 Sports Combo Tickets are on sale NOW at the Ticket Office in Allen Field House Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Cost: $75.00 Sports Package Includes: Football-6 Home Games Basketball-17 Home Games Kansas Relays-4 Days of Events LSAT CMAT CRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW Kansas Athletics... V Get your tickets before you leave for the summer! Ride the Bus Downtown on Saturdays! 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This exemption allows the admission of evidence in a court proceeding, even if there was no warrant when the evidence was attained. "Now, if you make a mistake but are in good faith as a police officer, it can get in," he said. However, Kunstler said the degradation of the Bill of Rights could be stopped if people chose to fight the judicial system and not to allow the justices as much power. DON'T MISS THIS SALE BRITCHES CORNER in addition, Kunstler discussed abortion, right of privacy and the execution of 16- and 17-year-olds. "There are some people who are concerned about what is happening." 843 Mass. 843-0454 Bob Jerry, dean of law, said he neither agreed nor disagreed with Kunstler. "Many scholars would consider the issues to be more complex than we had the opportunity to discuss tonight," he said. He said the amendments, which were now the Bill of Rights, were accepted so the states that needed to ratify the Constitution would ratify it. Kunstler argued Mississippi v. Thomas, the 1961 Freedom Rider case; Texas v. Jack Ruby, the 1963 assassination of Lee Harvey Oswald; and most recently, U.S. v. Leonard Peltier, the defender in the Rape Case, on leaders on charges stemming from the 1975 Fine Ridge Reservation shoot-out. he said. "If people are strong and fight, they have a chance of winning or at least holding back the night." "rus country has always thrived when people got out into the streets," he said. "People don't realize the amount of power they have." He said the key to reversing the damage was to show public support to uphold the document. He said that as a child in grade school, he was taught that the founding fathers of the United States were intelligent men who instinctively created the U.S. Constitution and the Rights for the good of the people. people: "I was totally wrong about them," he said. "They didn't want a Bill of Rights." Ford Continued from p. 1 Muyskens said the ideas for the programs were proposed before the spring semester. By applying for the grant, the college is trying to find support for the ideas. to strengthen the campus community, the college has proposed two courses and a seminar. A one-cret course for all incoming undergraduate students in the college would draw upon materials from a variety of courses offered; the American mosaic, the Peoples of Kansas, majority-minority relations and U.S. women today. A one-credit independent study course for graduating seniors in the college would focus on what students have learned at KU about the significance of diversity. The seminar, aimed at graduate teaching assistants and faculty, would encourage interdisciplinary discussion of the nature of a university community and ways that teachers will affirm their commitment to diversity. iniversity To build community with Haskell, the college's proposals are: to create an expanded system of KU and Haskell student and faculty exchanges; to develop an interdisciplinary program in Native American studies; and to create a cultural affairs council involving members from Haskell and KU. To improve community ties on and off campus, the college has proposed: a one-credit course in oral history and folklore; an interdisciplinary minority study course in curriculum the humanities and social sciences for academically-promising minority high school students. Budget Continued from p. 1 billion, $24 billion less than Bush proposed. Budget authority is the amount spending to the Pentagon can commit itself to for programs that must last several years, such as the purchase of a warship. Limiting that figure would necessitate future cuts in defense. The House package would spend $224.3 billion - $5.6 billion more than the Bush package - on dozens of domestic and foreign aid programs ranging from grants to scientists to protecting abused children. The plan seeks to slash $33 billion from next year's deficit, the same amount proposed by Bush but with a different mix. Both sides would rely on $13.9 billion in new tax receipts, but the president wants higher savings from benefit programs while Democrats rely more on defense cuts. The government will have to pay $183 billion in interest next year on the $3 trillion national debt, nearly 15 percent of all federal spending. This year's shortfall is expected by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office to reach $158 billion. But under the budget process's peculiar mathematics, the proposed could enable lawsuits against the court on the Obama law's requirement for a 1991 budget gap of no more than $64 billion. Fiscal 1991 Oct. 1. Before final passage, the House rejected by *334-90* a budget offered by the liberal Congressional Black Caucus. It would have limited defense spending to $279.5 billion and boosted spending for housing, education and Facing solid GOP opposition and several balancing Democrats, Sasser has failed so far to get enough votes for any proposal. A committee meeting scheduled for yesterday was postponed for a day, but Sasser said he believed a package reducing the deficit by about $40 billion would be approved this week. The budget maps the government's fiscal plans for the year but leaves binding spending and tax decisions for later bills. other domestic programs. Meanwhile, Senate Budget Committee Chairman James Sasser, D-Conn., said he believed his panel's majority Democrats soon would forge agreement on a budget package of their own. LiveWire For all your entertainment news. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Smith & Wessons Tonight! 25¢ Draws PLUS! Full Moon Trio Jazz, Salsa & Funk Mark Rasmussen Andrew Jaimez Luis Oliart Plano Drums Bass COASTAL SURFING 18 & Up Admitted 623 Vermont 843-0689 University Dally Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 Nation/World 7 Senate passes $3.4 billion spending bill The Associated Press WASHINGTON — After a few delays, the Senate yesterday approved a $3.4 billion "emergency" spending bill that includes $720 million in aid that President Bush wants to use to help the new democracies in Panama and Nicaragua. The action, on a voice vote, sent the spending package to a conference to work out differences with a $2.4 billion House-nassed version. Bush has threatened to veto the measure if negotiators leave intact a Senate provision that would allow the District of Columbia to use local funds to pay for abortions for poor women. most of the new foreign aid would be offset by cuts in this year's Pentagon budget, representing the first principal application of a peace dividend from reduced East-West tensions. Bush complained again yesterday about Congress' failure to enact his aid package, saying both the House and Senate had padded the bill with irrelevant pet spending projects and controversial matters. Panamanian President Guillermo Endara, in a speech at the National Press Club, was more understanding. "This is the price we pay for democracy," he said of the delays. "It's the best system . . . and we want a democracy, (even) with all the delays." Endara said his country would use the $420 million in aid to rebuild its battered economy and repair damage from December's U.S. invasion, which put him in power. But he said Panama would not ask for more U.S. economic aid next year. By using part of the money to pay off past-due loans to international banks, Panama would again become eligible to meet future financial needs through new development loans, he said. Endara strongly defended the U.S. invasion, saying that human rights abuses by former dictator Manuel Noriega justified the intervention. And he harshly criticized members of the Organization of American States, saying Panamanians were let down when they did not stand up to Noriega. German laborers demand unemployment protection The Associated Press WEST BERLIN — Thousands of Germans demanded protection against unemployment yesterday, and labor leaders warned that Western businesses were eager to exploit Germany's low-paid workforce. Nation/World briefs In the West German capital, Bonn, negotiators from both Germans met in an effort to complete by Friday a plan for merging the economies and social institutions of the two nations. An estimated 600,000 workers staged 700 rallies in both nations during May Day gatherings yesterday. In West Berlin, bands of mostly leftist radicals hurled firebombs and rocks last night, and police responded with tear gas and night-sticks. More than 50 people were arrested after darkness fell in the tense Kreuzberg district of the city, West Berlin police reported. They had no immediate reports of injuries. In the East German city of Leipzig, a group of leftist youths brawled with a band of neo-Nazi youths in the market square, the government news agency ADN reported. report. Three suffered minor injuries, and 21 were arrested, the agency stated. Authorities have feared that the newly-opened borders between East and West Germany would result in clashes that would spread into East Berlin. Republicans introduce campaign finance bill The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans unveiled their version of a campaign reform bill yesterday, calling for an abolition of all political action and not but imposing no new tax on how much candidates can raise and spend. "The real problem in campaign finance is the source of political money, not how much spending is necessary," McConnell said. "Republicans are tired of being accused of obstructing reform," Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., the primary author of the package, said as he told reporters that private to put the finishing touches on their campaign financing bill. Leading Democrats responded with a willingness to consider the abolition of PACs, whose contributions in recent years have tended to benefit incumbent Democratic candidates against GOP challengers, but only as a tradeoff to establishing fixed ceilings on spending. McConnell accused Democrats of trying to railroad through Congress a bill with fixed spending limits that served the partisan interests of the Democratic Party by curtailing Republican fundraising advantages. "The most important factor in any reform proposal must be limits on spending," said Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine. Republicans, in their package, were willing to cut the $1,000 limit an individual could give to a campaign to $500 out-of-state donors. FORMER HOSTAGE CELIBRATES: Frank Reed, malinourished but energetic with his 3%-year ordeal as a hostage in Lebanon, celebrated his victory in beer, a large steak and a long-awaited companion with his wife and son. A special State Department team began questioning Reed, a 57-year-old educator, at the U.S. Air Force hospital in Wiesbaden, West Germany, hoping for clues about the 16 remaining Western hostages in Lebanon. Six U.S. hostages are still being held. Reed, who said he spent much of his captivity blindfolded, is the second U.S. hostage freed since April 22. After performing some preliminary medical examinations, including. X-rays and blood tests, Reed's doctors said the former captive showed no initial signs of serious medical problems. KEF REFLECTS EXPECTATIONS: The way U.S. citizens and their historians regard the 32rd president, Dwight E. Dienhower, reflects what they expect of their government, said Alan Brinkley, a historian. Anne Branley, in his book, Elsenhower is a popular figure when people are suspicious of government, have been disappointed in it and expect little from it, said Brinklev. But when people look to government for bold leadership, Eisenhower, with his reputation for standing pat, falls in esteem, he says. Eisenhower's place in history may be pertinent because George Bush is often viewed as a latter-day Eisenhower-style president. This year is the centennial Eisenhower's birth. PLESTIHIAN KILLING: Armed setters left a compound in the Christian Quarter of Jerusalem's Old City before a court deadline yesterday, and a judge sentenced the settlement move to five months after it for killing a Palestinian. Jerusalem District Court Judge Shalom Bromner also handed the founder, Rabbi Moshe Levinger, a seven-month suspended sentence for fatally shooting the Palestinian, in January. Kavod Hassan Salah, on Sept. 30, 1988. Levinger initially was charged with manslaughter, which carries a maximum term of 20 years in prison. As part of a plea bargain, he pleaded guilty to the lesser charge of causing death by negligence. Salah, 42, was standing at the entrance to his shop when he was shot during a stone-throwing incident in the West Bank town of Hebron. Israeli human rights advocates say settlers have killed at least 29 Palestinians since the start of the uprising nearly 29 months ago. SPACE WRECKAGE ENTOMBED: The Apollo capsule in which three astronauts died 23 years ago will be entombed with the debris of the space shuttle Challenger in an abandoned missile silo. The remnants of the capsule will be transferred from the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., to the Cape Canaler Air Force Station. A team led by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said Tuesday. Astronauta Virgil "Gus" Grissom, Roger B. Chaffee and Edward H. White II died when fire flared through the capsule. NASA said the Apollo debris, including investigation data, take up about 3,300 feet of storage. The FrameWoods of Lawrence By authority of the Board of Directors and upon recommendation of the President-Dave Seal confer upon All 1990 KU Seniors the discount of 15% OFF the framing of your diploma and/or certificates Off with all its rights, privileges, and responsibilities. Given under the seal of the FrameWoods Gallery of Lawrence, this twenty-fifth day of April, nineteen hundred and ninety. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA - pick your framed diploma up on your way out of town, or let us ship it to you. Drop by FrameWoods early & pick out your Frame, and we'll have your frame done when you receive your diploma. * If you forget, send us your diploma, we will frame it and ship it back. - Rush Service Available * Let experienced professional frames handle your valuable KU diploma. * After graduating - remember FrameWoods for KU and Jayhawk posters & prints. Visit FrameWoods Gallery Soon! 842-4900 CONSTITUTIONARY ORGANIZATION CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 819 Mass. THANKS TO THE KU STUDENTS, STAFF, & FACULTY FOR ANOTHER GREAT YEAR AT THE SHUTTLE! 842-1212 PIZZA SHUTTLE “No Coupon Specials” Prime Time Special 3-Pizzas 1-Topping 4-Cokes $10.00 Everyday Two-Fers 2-Pizzas 2-Toppings 2-Cokes $8.00 Special Offer 10-Pizzas 1-Topping $25.00 WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH! HOURS Mon.-Thurs.-11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.Sat.-11 a.m.-3 a.m. HOURS Mon-Thu- 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. Fri-Sat- 11 a.m. - 3 a.m. Sunday- 11 a.m. - 1 a.m. CYCLE WORKS Introducing *Hand Welded D.B. 5000 Aluminum: - eliminates final heat treat & potential MP21 **mine warp** *Design by Gary Klein *Hyperglide Cogs & Superglide Rings *Lifetime Warranty $499.95 1601 W.23rd · 842-6363 - Lawrence, Ks. Stock up for the summer. Ambulance Lawrence Donor Center Now's your last chance before finals to get in on Lawrence Donor Center's cash giveaway. Become eligible for $175 in cash prizes by donating plasma just 3 times in each 2 week period. Names are reentered with fourth donation. Plus, new donors earn $30 for first 2 donations in same week, while return donors can earn up to $22 per week. Donors who haven't donated for 2 months receive $15 for first visit back. The next drawing will be held May 14. 8-5 M-F, 10-1 Sat. for new donors. 816 W. 24th 8-6 M-F, 10-3 Sat. for repeat donors. 749-5750 LOOK YOUR BEST! For swimsuits, shorts or someone? 5 Tans $15 7 Tans $20 10 Tans $25 FREE get a friend to join for the 1st time and get one more VISIT FREE EUROPEAN floiday Plaza 25th & Iowa 841.6232 8 Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan LIBERTY HALL 642 Mass. 749. 1912 Cinema Paradiso 5:15, 8:15 Mystery Train 5:15, 8:45 642 M855 LIBERTY HALL 749- 1912 Cinema Paradiso 8:15, 8:15 Mystery Train 8:45, 8:45 Rudy's BODY CARE Taste the Rudy's Difference Old Fashioned handmade crust and spicey wine sauce. 749-0055 620 W. 12th (Behind the Crossing) Rudy's The Cornucopia Celebrating 15 Years Serving Lawrence 1801 Mass Lawrence, Kansas Phone: 842-9637 Hours: 11:00am-10:00pm Mon-Sat 11:00am-9:00pm Sun Dickinson 330 PRIME TIMER SHOW 15.91 CIT ANTINE 4727869531234567890 Dolby Stereo PRETTY WOMAN R (4*120) 79-80 94 THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER PG (5*115) 8-00 Dolby Stereo THE GUARDIAN R (5*120) 79-80 94 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES PG (5*112) 79-80 93 Dolby Stereo SPACED INADVERDS PG (4*100) 79-80 94 Dolby Stereo x GUARDIAN R (4*125) 79-80 94 Call 841-6800 for Weekend Shoes and Times SUNFLOWER Bike Clinics Saturdays from 10am - noon May 5 Derallluer and Brakes May 12 Hub, Bottom Bracket, and Headset May 19 Wheel Truing Sign up at 804 Massachusetts. 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UNDERCOVER The pink building at 9th & Vermont We Fit Lawrence Beautifully DOROTHY DAVIS NEW YORK -- Medical ethicist Daniel Callahan was criticized for picking on old people in his 1967 book "The Doctors of Medicine" medical treatment for the elderly. Book proposes medical limits This time, he may get criticism from more quarters. The Associated Press in the new book, "What Kind of Life? The Limits of Medical Progress," Callahan deals on a broader scale with the same problem: How to rein in the demand for unending health and death, and the unending costs involved. Callahan argued that U.S. citizens would have to accept limits on medical treatment if there was to be any hope of keeping down costs. This could mean denying expensive, high-tech treatments to those with lower age, as well as to other patients unlikely to benefit from treatment. There should be a reluctance to use life-extending technology in the care of people who are critically or terminally ill. Callahan wrote. "A society would . . . be well-jitted in the future to set an age limit on the public provision of expense, health care, health care," according to the book. In a recent interview, Callahan said, "We will probably have to set limits of one kind or another for all age groups." The suggestion of an age cut-off is perhaps the most controversial. "It'll never happen. It shouldn't happen. It's a mistaken idea," said one criminally charged R. Moody of the college Combatry Aging at Hunter College in New York. Callahan, 59, is co-founder and director of the Hastings Center, a research and educational organiza- tion that studies ethics in medicine and biology. Decisions about allocating health care resources now are made on a case-by-case basis, he said. He argued that categorical standards, such as age, should be used to set limits. One way to accomplish this would be to set age cut-offs for Medicare reimbursement; for example, to deny payment for heart bypass surgery and expensive drug treatments to patients older than a certain age, Elderly care costs may soar without health-care advances The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The costs of caring for the elderly will sour unless there are some new advances in the prevention and treatment of such diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, researchers reported yesterday. As baby boomers age and medical advances increase their life span, a larger group of people in the United States will be at risk of developing the debilitating diseases that rob the elderly of their independence, the researchers said. The report was published in this week's Journal of the American Medical Association. At a briefing about the study, Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa and chairman of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee that deals with medical research, said he would introduce legislation to increase federal financing of aging research from $400 million to $1 billion annually. Applying Census Bureau population projections to inflation-adjusted 1987 Medicare spending figures, the researchers said costs of the program for those 65 and older could triple by 2040, reaching a million. For those 65 and older, these cuts could increase sixfold, they said. Also, costs for nursing home care, now $3.1 billion for 1.3 million people 65 and older, could rise to $139 billion with as many as 5.9 million elderly people in the United States, most of them more than 85 years old; living in these centers. Moody argued that an age cut-off was neither desirable nor politically possible. perhaps 80 or 85. "When (Callahan) gets into specifics like cutting off care for people beyond age 85, I say no because it isn't going to happen, and it's distracting from the real issues." Moody said. Limits on treatment for terminal or critically ill patients already exist in the regulations governing Medi- cal Care. The guidelines set standards and protocols followed by Callahan said this would not mean abandoning the sick. He advocated increased emphasis on caring medicine rather than curative medicine, on good-quality, long-term care at home and in institutions, and on relieving pain and suffering rather than merely prolonging life. "What I'm looking for is a kind of tradeoff. We need to improve long-term and home care, and one of the prices we may have to pay is to put some limits on that expensive high-tech curative medicine," he said. "In effect, what we have to do is say, 'Look, folks, you can't have it all.'" doctors, Moody said. They could be tightened. "It it could very well be that the medical community would develop a practice, for example, of not giving dialysis to people in the end stage of life," he said. "But that's different from saying it's against the law to do so." "With a standard practice, someone who wants to deviate from the practice can always do so. As the system gets squeezed for money, doctors will routinely try to discourage families from having so-called heroic treatments. But they might not succeed, and the family might say, 'No, give him one more year of life.'" That tendency to cling to life, whatever the cost, is part of the problem, Callahan said. Advances in technology have made it harder for patients, families and doctors to accept death. In looking at the problem of escalating health care costs in the United States, Callahan focused first on the elderly because older people disproportionately are consumers of health care services. Prisoner suspected in student death The Associated Press The discovery of the remains of Joan Webster also renewed questions about the role of the infamous Leonard "The Quahog" Paradiso, a hood doing time for another slaying. Paradiso never was charged in the Webster case, in which Essex County District Attorney Kevin Burke said he became a suspect immediately after Webster disappeared from Logan International Airport. BOSTON — Three psychics and a $50,000 reward didn't work. In the end, it was a veterinarian walking her dog who found the bones of a Harvard student who vanished in 1981. The case was revived after veterinarian Karen Wolf last month stumbled across part of a skull in the woods in Hamilton, a wealthy community 25 miles north of Boston. More bones were found after that. Joan Webster was last seen at the airport Nov. 28, 1981. The native of Glen Ridge, N.J., and Syracuse University graduate was headed back to the Harvard School of Confirmation that the remains were Webster's was made Monday. Authorities said that the cause of death was blunt trauma to the head and that Webster was a homicide victim. "That is some measure of relief." George Webster said of the identification. He sate he and his wife, Terry, had gone to an orphanage in New York. Design after a Thanksgiving visit with her parents. The search for Webster turned up her wallet 300 fee, from where 20-year-old Marie Inzulzi's body was dumped in 1979 in Saugus. Saugus is 15 miles from where she lived in Paradiso and Paradiso was convicted of Inzulzi's murder in 1984. After Webster vanished, her family and friends offered a $50,000 reward. Soon after the disappearance, three psychics came forward, including one who said he was killed by another who did not believe about five rules from where his hopes later were found. In 1985, attention focused on Paradiso, 45, after a terme conate allegations that the one-time fish merchant accused him of stealing. Timothy Burke, who was Suffolk County prosecutor at the time, said in an affidavit that Paradiso told an informant that he forced Webster onto his 28-foot cabin on the Malatefemina, with a 'fake' .397-caliber Mammar According to the account, he hit her on the head with a whiskey bottle and dummed her body in Boston Harbor. Paradiso, who has defended himself in the media in the past, did not return a phone call yesterday, and a spokesman for the Department of Correction said the Wahole immate refused to speak to reporters. His convictions include rape and attempted murder of a hitchhiker in 1975, as well as the strangulation of Ianuzz in 1979. Mr. Goodwrench COUPON Expires 5/31/90 SONNY HILL YOUR QUICK LUBE LUBE: OIL & FILTER 29 Minutes or LESS or the NEXT ONE IS FREE! 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Idle speed & timing GM CARS & LIGHT DUTY TRUCKS --- 4 Cylinder GET ROAD READY WITH FRONT WHEEL ALIGNMENT For Only Monday-Friday Saturday With FREE Tire Rotation If Necessary $1995* SERVICE HOURS: GM CARS & MOST LIGHT DUTY T 4 Wheel Alignment Extra 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m. 8:00 a.m.-Noon SONNY HILL SERVICE DEPARTMENT - 843-7700 - Customer must present this coupon when work order is written --- SERVICE HOURS: Monday-Friday 7:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Saturday 8:00 a.m.-Noon University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 Greeks to teach members about cultural sensitivity Bv Christine Reinolds Kansan staff writer Black Panhellenic, Interfraternity Council and Panhelenic have banded to form a new group that will help to educate Greeks about cultural sensitivity, include differ-ences in the way they chapter and encourage greater levels of understanding. Greeks for Responsible Education Enhancing Cultural sensitivity and its first organizational meeting April 12. "The group is big enough to accomplish things yet small enough to get things done," she said. GREECS, which has been forming since January, consists of three representatives from IFC, three from Panhellenic and three from Black Panhellenic, said Margaret Miller, adviser to GREECs. Members will be chosen yearly by application and an interviewing process. Miller said the group was a permanent organization. GREEEs met women several weeks ago to discuss goals and possible programs for Fall 1990. GREECS met with Miller several weeks ago to discuss goals and possible programs for Fall 1990. Miller said GREECS would do more than plan programs. "We have committees that will encourage all members of the greek system to participate in intramurals and other Greek events," she said. "We need to remember to make sure the Black fraternities and sororites participate. In the past we haven't been remembering the way we should." Scott Rutherford, director of programs for GREECS, said that in the past, Greek Week was attended by only white fraternities and sororites. "I don't know if it was because of lack of communication or lack of money." he said. tion of lack of history. Rutherford said he talked to Miller about trying to improve relations with the Black fraternities. GREECS was formed in response to that concern. "We haven't asked Black Panhellenic for funds yet," she said. was hired in the reps. Miller, who also serves as coordinator for greek affairs, said the group was financed by IFC and Panhellenic. There are four Black fraternities and four Black sororites with a combined membership of about 70, GREECS also will work with residence assistants and will set up workshops for Hawk Week in the fall, she said. Burtin said she thought the recent racial events had made the group stronger. "Everyone is concerned and more aware that people need to be educated," she said. Rutherford said, "We want more interaction between Black and white greets. We need to break down the stereotypes Blacks have of white fraternities and stereotypes whites have of Black fraternities. By uniting the greek system, then we can help solve problems on campus, too." Senate amends tax proposal The Associated Press Lawmakers planned what appeared to be one last push to pass a school property tax rollback bill. It also worked the day of the wrap-up session. The Senate passed a bill yesterday imposing restrictions on local units of government to prevent them from operating without a bill one step away from the governor. Republican legislative leaders decided to make one more major effort yesterday to pass a property tax rollback bill tied to an increase in the cigarette and tobacco products tax. senate Majority Leader Fred Kerr said that a House-Senate conference committee would attempt to reach agreement on a bill combining those two proposals and that the committee would be adjourned in the Senate. Hayden hopes both houses will reach quick agreement If it is accepted, it will go to the House and approval will send it to Gov. Mike Hayden, who continued measure that would increase the state sales, personal income and corporate income taxes, but the Senate turned it down. The Associated Press Hayden told reporters that the marriage of the two proposals offered some hope that the Legislature could achieve tax relief. TOPEKA — Gov. Mike Hayden said yesterday that he hoped a tobacco tax increase could be coupled with a property tax rollback and be passed by the Legislature before the end of the week. "I am urging legislators to keep negotiations open and to keep working toward a solution," Hayden said. However, a House-Senate conference committee discussed uniting the tobacco tax with tax relief shortly after Hayden's news conference and senators summarily rejected the proposal, said Sen. Gerald Karr, D-Emoria, ranking minority member of the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee. The Senate passed a bill that would increase the tax on cigarettes by five cents a pack and increase the tax on other tobacco products. The House rejected it. The House passed a property tax rollback NATURAL WAY - 820-822 Mass St. that would raise the state sales tax by one-half cent for every dollar, from 4.25 percent to 4.75 percent, and raise the tax on cigarettes by 5 cents a pack and on other tobacco products by 5 percent. yesterday to press lawmakers to pass a property tax relief measure before concluding their wrap-up session. Good Luck on PUP'S Grill Finals! 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Mac Mania Pac I Macintosh Plus CMS 20MB Hard Drive Imagewriter II Printer $1,699.00 Mac Mania Pac III Mac Mania Pac 3C Macintosh SE 1-800K Drive 40MB (2MB RAM) Standard Keyboard Imagewriter II Printer Carrying Case & Accessories* $2,999.00 $2,999.00 Mac Mania Pac II Macintosh SE 20MB (1.4 MB Super Drive) Standard Keyboard Imagewriter II Printer $2.299.00 Mac Mania Pac IV Macintosh SE/30 80 MB Hard Drive (4MB RAM) Standard Keyboard Imagewriter II Printer WINGZ $3,999.00 $3,999.00 Mac Mania Extras Extended Keyboard $149.00 CMS 20MB Hard Drive $399.00 CMS 45MB Hard Drive $599.00 Carrying Case & Accessories $149.00 *Accessories include: Delux SE bag, Curtis SP-3 Safestrip, Sony DSDD discs, Mouzetrak Mousepad, Kensington dustcover, Imagewriter ribbon, Kensington printer dustcover, printer stand, Curtis clip, and computer paper-200 ct. Curtis clip, and computer paper 200 ft. Priced good while existing quantities last. Offer open only to students enrolled in six or more credit hours of course work, full-time faculty members, or full-time staff who are directly involved in the administration, delivery, or support of the academic mission of the University of Kansas, Lawrence campus. Student dividends have already been applied on computer purchases. Please add on $4.75% sales tax. Offer expires May 17, 1990. Take the Mac Challenge. Winning is easy with Mac on your side! Burge Union 864-5697 Macintosh® Apple. The power to do your best at KU © 1989 The Apple logo and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc. KU KU BOOKSTORE 10 Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan KU students spend over $4 million each month. Pretty good for poor college students. KANSAN ADVERTISING 864-4358 YOU DON'T NEED A COUPON! Legal Services Available Free With Valid KD ID Appointment Necessary 148 Burge Union (913) 844-5665 for Students You should know; The rate of extinction of species from this earth was 1 every 4 years from 1600 to 1900. It's now estimated to be 1000 per year. KANSAN WATKINS STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES INTERIM HOURS MAY 19-JUNE 3 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Monday-Friday (Closed May 28, Memorial Day) No special clinics open SUMMER HOURS JUNE 4-JULY 27 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m., Monday - Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Saturday & Sunday Wart Clinic - Wednesday, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Allergy Clinic - Monday - Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. INTERIM HOURS JULY 28 - AUGUST 19 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday No special clinics open We care for KU. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH EDUCATION 864-9570 Health Center 864-9500 Serving Only Lawrence Campus Students Groups plan spring cleanup Environs will be one of many groups picking up trash Saturday on the banks of the Kansas River as part of a two-week spring cleaning in Lawrence. By Eric Gorski Kansas staff writer When students leave town and the weather gets warmer, garbage becomes an increased problem in Lawrence, said Joe Wilson of the Retired Executive Council of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. The council is organizing residents armed with garbage bags this weekend and May 12 to help clean up near the river. "It's a spring cleanup," Wilson said. "It's part of a continuing effort to clean up the city, and this is a good time of year to do it." Mike Horan, president of Environs, said, "It's good for two reasons. For one, it cleans our environment. And it is also good for community spirit." Patricia Marvin, city recycling coordinator, said 70 pounds of glass were picked up during a riverfront cleanup last year. Elementary school students did much of the work, and Marvin encouraged more adults to particulate in this year's pickup. Neighborhood associations and groups like the Boy Scouts are participating in cleanup efforts, Wilson said. Many neighborhoods are organizing their cleanups throughout the next two weeks. Wilson encouraged KU students to throw their trash in dumpsters when they leave Lawrence this month. Trash can pile up in the streets or fly out of overfilled dumpsters, he said. He also said students with unwanted couches and chairs should call the Salvation Army instead of throwing out the furniture. Reed Peterson, manager of the Salvation Army Thrift Shop, said a pickup service was offered every Wednesday. But during the last weeks of school, it is difficult to accommodate all the pickup requests, he said. Peterson encouraged students to bring furniture and other unwanted goods to the thrift shop, 1818 Massachusetts St. Alloney interested in a pickup appointment should call 749-4208. Disabled students ask for changes By Matt Taylor By Matt Taylor Kansan staff writer tion forms was a waste of time. Bill Griffiths, Wichita graduate student, said that having academic aides escort disabled students to Hoch Auditorium to pick up registra- Students with visual impairments told a Student Assistance Center representative yesterday that a new system was needed during fall and spring registrations to better accommodate disabled students. No action was taken at the meeting. However, Laura Smedley, assistant director of the Student Assistance Center, said she would look into the students' idea and relay concerns to SAC officials. SAC has hired academic aides in the past to escort disabled students through the entire registration process, Smedley said. Aides also can help them purchase books and pay fees in the Union. Instead, Griffiths said, the forms should be pulled before registration and made available in the Kansas Union. Disabled students would collect the cards there before paying fees, eliminating the trip to Hoch. "If we had the cards at the Union, it would save time," he said. "If you had any attention paid to economics, walking to Hoch sounds dumb." Smedley said. Only bad weather in January would move Hoch's registration tables to the Union. Smedley said. The center needs to be more flexible and should not assume what students need, said Niveen Young, New York graduate student. Sylvia Suarez, administrative assistant in the Office of Research, Graduate Studies and Public Service, assigning academic aides to students was more complex than bringing the cards to the Union. The fee-paying process is archaic, "It's not terribly complicated," she said. "If we can eliminate that harsh step of the year, let it be done." Death of unidentified body ruled homicide By Bryce J. Tache Kansan staff writer Kansas Bureau of Investigation in Topeka. Lawrence police said yesterday that the woman whose body was found Friday in East Lawrence was a homicide victim, leaving area residents wondering how such a crime could happen in their neighborhood. Mulvenon said officers were unable to match fingerprints taken Monday from the partially decomposed body with prints on file at the "We are declaring the investigation as a homicide," said Chris Mulvenon, Lawrence police spokesman. "We still don't have a 100 percent ID on the victim. The autopsy is completed, and in the best interest of the investigation, we are not releasing further information." "Part of the problem with the identity has been with the retention of latent prints that have been extracted from the remains," he said. "There has been some delay because we thought the process would be easier than it has turned out to be." A KBI agent will examine the prints and the body tomorrow. As the investigation continued into its fifth day, area residents expressed concern about the body being found in their neighborhood. "This is the first time anything like this has happened in the three years we have lived here," said Clarence Simpson, *New York State St.* "Reading the papers, you know, it's frightening. You can practically see the place where it happened out our back door." Sabrina Simpson said the discovery of the body had caused her to worry about the safety of her son. "It gives you something to think about," she said. "You hope it doesn't happen to one of your own. You hope it doesn't happen to someone else's. I just hope this thing is solved pretty quick." Clarence Simpson said it was a shame that people had to worry about where their children were. "You don't know what to expect anymore," he said. "You just hope and pray for the best. What else can you do?" 1990 JAYHAWKER PICK UP YOUR YEARBOOK When: Mon., April 23 to Fri., April 27 Mon., April 30 to Thur., May 3 Where: In front of the Kansas Union and Wescoe PICK UP YOUR YEARBOOK! LIFE Yearbooks are available for $27 Bring Your KUID and Receipt!!! WE SELL groceries FOR LESS!! Good Luck on Finals! FRENCH COCA-COLA CLASSIC FRENCH COCA-COLA CLASSIC diet Coke Sprite FRENCH COCA-COLA CLASSIC diet Coke Butternut Coffee all Grinds 13 oz. can EAGLE BUILT POTATO CHIPS EAGLE BUILT POTATO CHIPS SEASONAL Busch and Busch Light Beer 12-12 oz. pkg. Coca-Cola, Diet Coke Sprite, Caffeine Free Diet Coke 24-12 oz. cans $598 case $148 can Butter Nut 100% Pure Coffee 99¢ Eagle Potato Chips Ridged and Sour Cream 6 oz. pkg. $389 BUSCH Two Alder Hey Malt Bars 150g of Alcohol per Bar 12 oz. of Beer per Bar Offers good from May 2 thru May 8,1990 OUR LARGE BUYING POWER ALLOWS US TO PASS ON EXTRA LOW PRICES TO YOU! Checkers IS LOW FOOD PRICES 23rd and LOUISIANA WE SELL gourries FOR LESS!! University Dally Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 11 Forum links campus workers By Pam Sollner Let's do lunch. That's what Cindy Riling, president of Classified Senate, wants classified employees campuswide to do together. Classified Senate sponsored its first brown bag forum for classified employees Monday at Robinson Center. About 30 employees attended a program about the activities and services available to them. The University's 1,000 classified employees are state paid workers, including secretaries, maintenance work Riling said her goal as president was to bring classified employees across campus together. "I want classified employee to get to know other classified employees and to discover what's available on campus for our use," she said. "What's fortunate is that classified employees work within their own little departments and don't know what's happening on campus." Riling appointed Barbara Woodruff, administrative assistant at the Enrollment Center, to chair an ad hoc committee. Woodruff said she was planning a forum for October about switching jobs and one for November about handling holiday stress. She said she wanted classified employee to be aware of the benefits available to them on campus, such as the By meeting and talking with other classified employees, she said, they could learn about more aspects of the University, which could help them answer questions in their departments. "The more information you have, the better it is." Woodruff said. Riling said she got the idea for the forum after hearing about a group of classified employees who met for an informal lunch once a month. She wanted to spread that concept to the entire campus and include more of the classified employees. So she began planning the first forum. Peggy Baker, secretary in the German department, said lunch meetings for classified employees had been canceled. "It's a good chance to learn how things work and learn better ways to do things from someone in another department who had the same problem," she said. Baker asked departments in Wesco took turns organizing lunches, which 15 to 25 employees attend. Last week, she helped organize a lunch trip with classified employees in Strong Hall. They rented a double-decker bus and ate lunch at the La Minx restaurant in Lawrence. Sandy Patchen, executive secretary for the executive vice chancellor, said the Strong Hall lunches were mainly breakfast. “It’s good to get out with other secretaries and discuss mutual interests and complaints,” she said. Dressler, who also is vice president of Classified Senate, said the forums gave classified employees another way to become unified and discuss salary and benefit issues. "More and more, it's becoming important to get information to classified employees and for us to operate as a group," she said. "We all introduced ourselves," she said. "Everyone greeted at that at first, but in doing it, I recognized some of the differences." Carol Dressler, secretary in the KU budget office, said she had enjoyed meeting fellow classified employees at TOMMY FARM Just Point Us In The Right Direction, And We'll Do All The Rest! Gourmet Express THE DELIVERY RESTAURANT 749-3663 749-FOOD Just Point Us In The Right Direction, And We'll Do All The Rest! Gourmet Express THE DELIVERY RESTAURANT 749-3663 749-FOOD You should know: In 1980, US federal government spent $798 billion dollars. 39% of this went to military spending. 17% paid interest on the national debt. 4% was spent on education. 2% was spent on environmental protection. KANSAN $1 OFF any 12" Sub Offer expires 5/16/90 Not valid w/other offers 75¢ OFF any Sub Offer expires 5/16/90 Not valid w/other offers Yello Sub 1814 W. 23rd 12th and Indiana Yello Sub 1814 W. 23rd 12th and Indiana Yello Sub $1 OFF any 12" Sub Offer expires 5/16/90 Not valid w/other offers 75¢ OFF any Sub Offer expires 5/16/90 Not valid w/other offers Yello Sub 1814 W. 23rd 12th and Indiana $1 OFF any 12" Sub Offer expires 5/16/90 Not valid w/other offers Yello Sub Vello Sub 75¢ OFF any Sub Offer expires 5/16/90 Not valid w/other offers Yello Sub Experts expect large wheat harvest By Chris Siron Kansan staff writer Kansas agricultural experts agree that this year's wheat harvest will be much larger than the 1983 yield, but they differ about the size of the crop. The Kansas Wheat Quality Council's annual report released last week estimated the harvest would be the second-highest in the year, be almost double last year's output. The council, sponsored by the baking industry, invited 46 grain experts to tour Kansas wheat fields for three years to assess their predictions for the 1990 harvest. the Kansas Farm Bureau, Roberts said. Tom Roberts, director of the council, said the average estimate for the state was 425.3 million bushels. Estimates ranged from 391 to 476 million bushels, the narrowest spread in the past five years. The council's estimate is 12 percent higher than a 380 million-bushel projection released earlier this week by If the council's guess is accurate, the 1990 crop would be 98 percent larger than last year. 213.6 million hurricanes and dust storms and lack of rain. "You know there's optimism in our report," he said. "But we're reading the conditions as we see them in the report." We always a difference of opinion." Neil Gumm, crop statistician with the Kansas Department of Agriculture, said the record Kansas wheat crop was about 458 million bushels in 1982. Other harvests in the early '80s reached 430 million bushels. In tomorrow's Kansan: Rural report The federal government will release its first 1990 wheat crop projection for Kansas on May 10, he said. Randy Wallace, a trader for Farmers Commodities Co. at the Kansas City, Mo., exchange, criticized the report as unrealistically optimistic. "What you've got is a blue-sky estimate," he said. "You can't take current conditions, which are very good, and use them for a changing year-long situation that could get worse." Wallace said he and other traders anticipated a 400-million-bushel harvest. Howard Tice, executive director of the Kansas Association of Wheat Growers, said he thought the council's estimate was too high. "Four hundred is a good and reasonable guessestimate," he said. "The most optimistic in our office said he was 76, the most conservative said around 380." Tice said the council's observers might have overestimated the 1990 harvest by comparing it with last year's. "The farmers we hear from say the crops look good compared to last year, but not that great compared to others," he said. "It may just be average this year." Tice said that an improved harvest would help farmers and the Kansas economy but that it would not affect the consumer dramatically. "The retail business being what it is, they won't drop the product prices that much unless we have a real bin of farmers or of farmers are breathing easier." GAMMONS PROUDLY PRESENTS: COMEDY HYPNOTIST RICHARD DE LA FONT TONIGHT SHOWTIME 9:30 P.M. FOR ADVANCE TICKETS CALL: 842-3977 ROBERTS JEWELRY INC. 833 Massachusetts TOTAL LIQUIDATION! GOING OUT OF BUSINESS City Permit #90-01353 Everything must go starting May 2 at 7:00 a.m. All sales final--No refunds or exchanges Pay by cash,check, Visa or Mastercard Layaways available with Final Payment by May 31st Accepting bids on fixtures, including antique cases (all bids can be refused) Hours: 9:30-5:30 Thursday 9:30-8:00 Sunday 1:00-5:00 Make Buyback a BREEZE Highest Cash—Now through Finals! Plus Double Bonus Buy back Bucks Enter the JBS Thousand Dollar Book Giveaway! Win one of 5 certificates worth up to $200 for fall books! (One entry for each $10 of books sold per visit. Minimum one. Full details at the store.) S Jayhawk Bookstore Your pros at the top of Naismith Hill Store Hours: Mon.-Thurs: 8-5:30 Fri: 8-5 Sat: 9-5 Sun: 12-4 12 Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan SUMMER WORK MAKE $5,000 Interviews Today, May 2nd 3:30 p.m. or 6 p.m. or 8 p.m. Fraser Hall Rm. 206 Please be prompt TRAVEL PROFIT We need a few good workers. LEARN EXPERIENCE EXCITEMENT Autiérrez Restaurant & Bar CINCO DE MAYO! (That’s May 5th) $1.00 Specials $1.00 Margaritas $1.00 Tequila Shots $1.00 Draws $1.00 Draws Corona-Buy ½ for $1 get 2nd ½ for $1 2600 Iowa 842-1414 1990 F1NAL FREN2Y KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 CONFERENCE MARKETING EXCHANGE MARKETING EXCHANGE MARKETING EXCHANGE P D C L TOYS & GAMES ROOM! FREE FILMS Take a break from the stress of finals at the SUA playroom in the Kansas Union ballroom, 5th level, Kansas Union. SURVIVAL PACKS Wednesday, May 9 - Friday, May 11 FREE APPLES STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA INDEPENDENCE OF ARMADA FREE BACK RUBS DUNK TANK RAINBOW TOWER HYPER TOWER HEY, KU MED STUDENTS! LIVE IN LUXURY AND CONVENIENCE *Luxury Studio, 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. *Heat & Water Paid *Furnished & Unfurnished Apts. *Sauna, Jacuzzi, Spa, Pool *Only 1 Blk. from KU Med Center Now Pre-Leasing For Fall 3838 Rainbow Blvd. Kansas City, Ks. 66103 Just Across from the KU Med Center 1-831-9363 PUZZLED ABOUT HOW TO SPEND YOUR SUMMER? - Get an elective out of the way. - Pick up a Freshman or Sophomore requirement - Take a tough course while you can focus on it. Take a course you want to take, but can't fit into your schedule. Enroll in summer school at HCC! Session 1 4 weeks June 4-28 Session 2 4 weeks July 2-27 Some classes run 6-8 weeks. Enroll now! HUTCHINSON COMMUNITY COLLEGE Call 1-316-665-3535 days or 1-316-665-3551 evenings KZR106 Day all Hits Thursday, May 3rd Swimwear $10.06 From Catalina, Jantzen and more ALEXIS BUTTERFLY BIKINI Shorts $10.06 From intentions, cetro, in-short and more One-pocket T's $10.06 From Outback Red, Forenza and more. MARGARET GILBERT Many other instore $10.00 Day specials. Don't miss this sale! Many other instore $10.06 Day HARPER'S 835 Massacbusetts F A S H I O N S 825 WASHUGSHA Mon-Sat 10-6, Thurs. till 8:30, Sun. 1-5 Regents amendments voted down by House By Rod Griffin Kansan staff writer TOPEKA — The House yesterday rejected two amendments to the omnibus appropriations bill that would have added a total of $3 million to the budgets of Board of Regents schools. state Rep James Lowther, R Emporia, introduced a bill that would have restored $1.5 million to the Regents top three priorities: reducing shrinkage, increasing student loan financing other operating expenditures Lowther's proposal would have allocated $500,000 for each of the priorities. State Rep. Delbert Gross, D-Hays, said passage of the bill was a matter of political necessity and political reality. "The reality is, ladies and gentlemen, that it all comes down to our commitment to higher education," he said. State Rep. Rochelle Chronister, R-Reodesha, said that if the bill passed, accusations of state overspending would worsen. "A lot of you have said to me that you don't like it that the governor is out there bashing us for overspending," she said. "The political reality in this amendment and the next one to be offered is that it will ensure there will be more bashing going on." State Rep. Katha Hurt, D-Manhattan, introduced a bill that would have increased enrollment adjustment at five Regents schools to 75 percent of the Regents original request and restored $162,324 to the University of Kansas and $100,000 to Fort Hays State. University for shrinkage adjustments. L Kansas '90 Legislature She said that the Legislature was changing the rules in the middle of the game and that Regents erred in establishing priorities. "Each one of those institutions teaches different kinds of students, different numbers of students and demands on education," she said. Chronister said Kansas State University experienced a cumulative increase of 298 students during the 10-year period from 1982 to 1991. The school would have received $3.65 million for enrollment adjustment under the current formula. KU experienced an increase of 1,765 students during the same period and would receive $3.64 million. "Aas a K:Sate graduate, in my 16 years of education there was a word I learned that I would like to spell for her. Aas a G:E-Ded Gatin, R-Atwood, "G-E-E-D" The amendment was defeated 51-60. Eagle trees need not be restored By a Kansan reporter The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled April 26 that Lawrence Riverfront Plaza developer, David H. Hale, had no legal obligation to restore them. Fifteen cottonwood trees on the south bank of the Kansas River that were bulldozed in March 1989 need protection under a levee habitat, a federal court ruled. "Because we can provide no effective relief for the plaintiff, we conclude that the appeal is moot," the court ruled. Patrick Fisher, chief deputy clerk at the appellate court, said the court could not order restoration of the trees, which were removed more than a year ago. The vacances killed a lower court's decision and ordered the case dismissed. The suit was filed by a local citizens' group, Protect Our Eagles' Trees, after the arrest of four protesters at the site in March 1989. For more than four hours, protesters sat in branches of the trees that later were removed. We can ship anything, anywhere from Bicycles to Desks. Clothes-Computers-TV-Stereo · Pick-up services · Boxes & packaging supplies · U.P.S., U.S. Mail, Truck Line · $100.00 Free Insurance - U.P.S Need Help Getting Home? Come to The Mail Box! East of Sonic The Mail Box The Mail Box Open: 3115 W. 6th Sunset West Center M-F. 9-6 749-4304 Sat. 9-12:30 UFS • US.Mail • Express-Mail • Fax • Boxe Be in a Class by Yourself this Summer Earn University Credit Through Independent Study Independent Study is a statewide service, mandated by the Kansas Board of Regents to serve the correspondence study needs of Kansans. As a unit of the University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education, Independent Study offers approved college courses similar to those taught in residence. Independent Study courses include: BIOL 104 ENGL 325 HIST 100 PSYC 104 BIOL 303 ENGL 332 MATH 002 PSYC 318 CLSX 148 ENGL 359 MATH 101 PSYC 440 COMS 246 ENGL 362 MATH 115 REL 124 COMS 455 ENGL 466 MATH 121 REL 475 ECON 104 FREN 110 MET 105 SPAN 104 ENGL 209 HDFL 160 PHIL 140 SPAN 108 ENGL 210 HDFL 180 PHIL 148 (open June 15) C&l 210 ENGL 320 HDFL 220 POLS 110 EPR 300 ENGL 322 HDFL 288 POLS 410 Independent Study is flexible, convenient,and personalized. You can enroll at any time, set your own pace, and study at home. For further information on Independent Study and its costs, or to obtain the complete catalog of courses, call 864-4440 or stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building Annex A, located directly north of the Kansas Union. Y Sports University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 13 'Hawks fly by Bluejays twice ASA ansas catcher Jodi Hover scores the tying run, sending the first game into extra innings. E. Joseph ZurgaKANSAN Kansas ends regular season at 41-15 mark By Paul Augeri Kansan sportswriter Kansas softball The Creighton softball team lost two games the hard way yesterday at Jayhawk Field. Kansas scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth inning and pulled out a 3-2 victory in the opener, and designated player Kim Scope singled, giving Kansas the bottom of the seventh, giving Kansas a 2-1 victory in the second game. Roanna Brazier, 26-5, and Jill Bailey, 11-7, were the winning pitches for Kansas, Kelly Brookhart, 20-8, and Kelly Anderson, 11-11, took the losses for Creighton. "I thought Brookhart, in the first game, pitched one of the best ball against us." Kansas coach Kalum Hitchcock said. "She used the off-speed ball well to keep us off stride." The Jayhawks finished their regular season 41-15 overall. The Bluejays are 34-20. Brookhart struck out seven Kansas batters and allowed five hits. Kansas managed 10 hits off Ruzic in the game, but Haack was not satisfied. "We usually shell Ruzich, so I was disappointed we didn't hit her better than we did," Haack said. "I'm glad to come away with the wins, but we've got to hit the ball better than that." In the opener, Kansas and Creighton were tied 1-1 after seven innings. According to American Softball Association rules, a runner is put at second base to start each extra inning. The batter that made the final out of the previous inning is the player out on second base. The Bluejays scored a run in the top of the ninth on Kansas catcher Jodi Hoyer's throwing error. Creighton's Sheila Nahrig, who started the inning as the runner at second, scored the run. However, the Jayhaws scored twice in the bottom of the ninth. Hoyer, who started the inning as the runner at second, went to third on first baseman Shelly Sack's sacrifice bunt. Hoyer scored when right fielder Mona Stanford was safe at first on a fielder's choice. Stanfield scored the game-winning run when Doyle reached first base on an error. "I thought we should have blown them away earlier," said Christy Arterbun, Kansas shortstop. "We were right, but not when they should have." In the second game, Creighton scored a run in the fifth inning on an RBI single by second baseman Kelly Wilkins. The Jayhawks tied the score in the sixth inning. Arterburn, who had five hits in seven at bats in the double-base, led off with a single. One out later she went to third on a Brazer base hit. Third baseman Camille Spitaleri's sacrifice fly drove in Arterburn. In the seventh inning, Kansas loaded the bases on singles by Doyle and pinch hitter Jennifer Frost, and Arterburn reached base on an error. Sacco singled Doyle home with the game-winning run. "In both games we got good pitching," Crengthen coach Mary Higgins said. "We outhit them in the first game but couldn't put two hits back to back. Offensively, we can hit the ball better than we did. Although both Creighton and Kansas are vying for tournament bids in the coming week, Hacke said only two skills would benefit from the victories. "Kansas is a good team," Higgins added. "They didn't win the Big Eight Conference on a fluke." "They are on the bubble like we are in that we are waiting for a bid," Haack said. "To sweep them like that, you should rank the ranked nationally and regionally." KANSAS 3, CREIGHTON 2 (9 innings) Creighton 010 000 001--2 6 1 Kansas 010 000 001--3 5 2 kathas Brookhart and Ives; Brazer and Hoyel. W. Brazer (28-5). L-Brookhart (20-9). 2B—Creighton, Ives. KANSAS 2. CREIGHTON 1 Creighton 000 010 0-1 8- Kansas 000 100 1-2 10- Ruzich and Ivish; Bailey and Hoyer. W-Bailley (11-7) L-Ruzich (11-11) B-Kanye, D-Amazon. 'Hawks coach has hard time with 2nd place By Paul Augeri Kansan sportswriter Less than three days after Kansas lost the Big Eight Conference tennis tournament to Oklahoma State, Couch Couch Perelman still was having difficulty accepting his team's second-place finish. Men's tennis The Jayhawks led the Cowboys 77-74 after the first day of competition but lost 86-84 Sunday. "On the last day, I felt like we gave it away," Perelman said. "A win would have put us up by five. Instead, we were up by one in the next round and gave them the momentum. "Oklahoma State was opportunistic and hung in long enough. They deserve credit for that." At No. 2 doubles, which Perkel man called the decisive match of the tournament, Kansas' Carlos Fleming and Paul Gavin lost to Danny Bishop and Neale Pashley of Oklahoma State 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. "The sad thing is we were up by a set," Perealman said. "I was extremely disappointed with the play of Carlos Fleming." Fleming, the top-seeded player at No. 5 singles, lost in the second round at No. 5 and finished in third place overall. "You can't point to any one person or match." Fleming said. You don't lose over one point. You don't lose over another. Think we all gave our best effort, Oklahoma State repeated as Big Eight champions and has won 12 of the last 14 titles. Kansas won 18 of the last 14 titles in 1988 and finished third last year. The Jayhawks played without John Falbo, an All-American and Kansas' No. 1 singles player. Falbo had been fighting a vince for two weeks and pulled out of the competition after a loss in the final. The Hawks defeated No. 7 singles player, replaced Falbo and finished fourth. "For me personally, I was devastated," Perelman said about this year's second-place finish. "No one no one to blame but ourselves." 'Their program lacks class. That's what makes the whole thing difficult to accept. They don't handle themselves nearly as well as our kids do.' — Scott Perelman Kansas men's tennis coach "The key to us winning the Big Eight was a combination of Falbo not playing and three of our four players on Saturday." State coach James Wadley said. "We feel very fortunate to win. We made it to all three doubles finals, and the right players played very well." My kids made a quantum leap. " Oklaahoma State qualified for the NCAA Division I tournament with the conference victory, but Perelman and Devin had to be cowards. The Cowboys deserved the berth. "Their program lacks class," he said. "That's what makes the whole thing difficult to accept, but we have enough students nearly as well as our kids do." Wadley said he simply beat Perelman and Kansas with a lineup of freshman and sophomore players. "It doesn't take a genius to figure out he was outcoached," Wadley said. "Scott wears his feelings like a ticker tape across his forehead. He was devastated after the tournament." If the Jayhawks had won one more match in the tournament or the regular season, they would have qualified for the NCAA tournament. "You constantly tell your players how important each match is," Perelman said. Fleming said that Kansas' No.1 ranking prior to the tournament might have given other teams an added incentive to win. Guard signs letter of intent adds depth to women's team By Brent Maycock Kansan sportswriter Kansas women's basketball received its first letter of intent of the spring signing period yesterday when Coach Marian Washington announced the signing of Darey Tomson from Pennsylvania Community College. Women's basketball Bieber, a 5-foot-8 guard, averaged 14.3 points and 6.1 rebounds a game last year at Johnson County. During her freshman season, Bieber averaged 20.2 points and 7.4 rebounds a game. "She is a really fast competitor and we feel she'll be able to come in and help us out right away," Washington said. She said that Kansas had two more scholarships available for recruits. The signing period, which began April 11, will end May 15. Guards Lisa Brady, Michelle Arnold and Liz Roark have used up their eligibilitys so signing a guard was a top priority. The girls were braless along our younger guards," Washington said. "Adding Bieber just gives us depth at the position." Johnson County coach Toby McCammon said that Bieber would be able to help the Jayhawks immediately. "I think she is an excellent all-round player," McCannon said. Bieber only played in 18 of Johnson County's 31 games last year because of a fractured Cannon said that the injury might have scared some college away. "It's a little touch-and-go right now," he said. "If she's healthy, Kansas won't be able to keep her off the floor." Washington said she thought that Bieber would be recovered from the injury by the time she comes to Kansas next fall. "We feel that she's going to be fine," Washington said. "We have a good rehabilitation program, and if he can do it, she's going to be a real solid kid." McCammond said Bierbae also had considered Austin Peay, the University of Texas-Arlington and the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Royals lose again to Brewers Higuera, 3-0, improved to 6-1 victory against the Royals, the only American League team that has not won a game since May, runs on eight hits in seven innings. KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ted Hugha stayed unbeaten against Kansas City and Greg Vaughn and Gary Sheffield hit home runs off Bret Saberhagen as the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Royals 4- last night. Saberhagen, the 1999 Cy Young winner, dropped to 1-3 and gave up a career-high 13 hits before departing after the sixth. Kansas City has lost seven of its last eight, including four straight to the Brewers. The Associated Press Dan Plescav relieved Chuck Crime with two rimmers on base in the Kansas City ninth, Pinch hitter Pat Rochelle came up just before Plescav hit his third save. Jim Eisenreich, returning to the Kansas City lineup for the first since the death of his father, opened the second with a double and was sacrificed to third. Boone Bob hit an RB single, and then with two out, Willie Wilson singled and Kevin Seitzer drew a walk to load the bases. Higuera was handed a 4-0 lead in the first inning, but George Brett's two-run single capped a three-run rally in the Royals. The Kansas City Royals reached the roster limit of 25 yesterday by optioning reserve infielder Bill Pecota and reserve outfielder Gary Thurman to Omaha of the American Association. Brett, who struck out in a base-loaded situation in Milwaukee the week before, then lifted a two-run single into left. With two out in the Milwaukee sixth, Moltor singled ahead of Shefield's first 1990 home run. Coach says loss due to less enthusiasm By Brent Maycock Kansan sportswriter Southwest Missouri State collected 15 hits off three Jayhawk pitchers and defeated Kansas 10-4 last night at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. Kansas baseball Southwest Missouri pitcher Chris Juday scattered 12 Jawhawk hits and went the distance for his second consecutive victory against Kansas. He recovered the victory in the Bear's 64- victory April 25 in Springfield, Mo. "I don't think we had the same enthusiasm that we did in the Oklahoma state. Kansas said he had said he ahead early and kept pressure on us the entire game." Southwest Missouri led 3-1 after three innings, but Kansas second baseman Jeff Berbler hit his fifth inning, driving in a single of the fourth, cutting the lead to one. However, the Bears erupted for five runs in the fifth inning, taking advantage of three hits, two sacrifices and two walks. After walks by first baseman Jim Calhoun and left fielder Brent Bertlatt, designated hitter Matt Brewer bunted safely and loaded the bases. A sacrifice fly by center fielder Chad Lakin scored Calhoun, but the bases were loaded again after right fielder Corby Fister was hit by a pitch. A passed ball allowed Bartlett to score, and Brewer scored on second baseman Tim Bunton's single. Consecutive singles by catcher Gather Faron and third baseman Bill Mueller drove home the final two runs of the inning. "We just fell apart," Bingham said. "Our middle relief has not been good all season. About the only positive moment tonight's game was Jim Walker." Bingham said Walker probably would see more action during the Iowa State series. Walker made his pitching debut for the Jayhawks when he entered the game in the seventh inning, replacing John Wuycheck. Walker allowed three hits in three innings, gave up one walk and struck out one. "I just went out to do the best I could do," Walker said. "I was totally confident in myself, then the defense would make the plays behind me." "I think I might have found a pitcher," he said. "It was good to get him in against a good club. I really like his attitude and we've been fighting that with our pitching this week." NOTES Denard Stewart was named Big Eight player of the week. Stewart went 8-13 with five RBI and nine runs scored in four games against Oklahoma last weekend. SOUTHWEST MISSOURI STATE 10, KING COOL SMSU 111 052 000—10 15 2 Kansas 100 110 100—4 12 3 Lake and Fawn Wautershack *kansas* 100 110 100 - 4 12 3 Juday and Faron; McGinnes, Wychoch (5); Walker (7) and Schmidt. W-Judy (7) - L-Gmc (22) - 82-sMSU, Barienk, 2L; Kansas, Carnem, Niemarie, Schmidt, 83-Kansas, Berbinger, HK-Rcas, Bergerson (5) Clubs will compete in national championships By Brent Maycock Kansas sportwriter "I think it's definitely catching on around the nation." Tim Hamilton. The KU ultimate frisbee club is maintaining its tradition as one of the most successful club sports at Kansas. For the seventh consecutive year, the men's team. The Horrorontzals, will compete at the National Collegiate Championships, May 25-27 in Phoenix, Ariz. Only the University of Texas can match that feat. The women's team will be returning to the championships after not qualifying for the past two years. The women's team won first, first women's championship in 1967. Kansas' ultimate club was formed Wichita senior, said. "Conditioning is the main thing. If you're not in good condition, you're going to have a hard time." Ultimate frisbee involves the skills of several sports, most notably football, soccer and basketball. There is no referee and the rules of the sport are designed more toward keeping play moving rather than for penalizing teams. Play does not stop unless a point is scored or unless there is an injury. Points are scored when the frisbee is caught in the end zone. "It's continuous action, but that's what's so exciting about it," Hamilton said. "Anyone can immediately begin to play." 10 years ago and has established itself as one of the top collegiate teams in the country. Last year, Kansas failed to reach the semifinals. However, Hamilton said injuries fatigue hampered the teams efforts. "We lost nine players off last year's team, so this year could be considered a rebuilding year," he said. "But I think we'll do all right." Both Kansas teams qualified for the national championships by placing second in the Central Regional and last weekend in Northfield, Mim. Rich MacDonald, Leawood graduate student, said the team had played in several tournaments this year. including tournaments in Austin, Texas, and Tempe, Aziz. To be able to participate in tournaments, one must be a member of the Ultimate Players Association, MacDonald said. "Tournaments are a matter of survival," MacDonald said. "You play five games a day and then get up to play the next day, it's very tiring." MacDonald said that the University paid for the team's entry fees but that no additional financing was provided. However, he said a pro-am event on Friday of the season allotted club sports was being sent to the Student Senate. Sports briefs ANALYSIS SWITCHES STATIONS: Will McDonough, a football analyst with CBS for the past four seasons, said yesterday to sign a contract with NBC McDonough will join Bob Costas and O.J. Simpson on "NFL Live," the counterpart to CBS "The NFL Today." past six years. His son, Sean, is a baseball announcer for ESPN. McDonough, 54, has been a sportswriter for the Boston Globe for the NATIONAL LEAGUE EXPANSION: The National League reported yesterday that it would announce a timetable for expanding by two teams after a major league owners' meeting in Cleveland on June 14. "The report on June 14th will include the timetable and general guidelines," a league statement stated. "Sites, of course, will not be announced in the June 14 report as that is the final stage of the expansion process." The NL is expected to add two teams beginning in either the 1993 or 1994 seasons. Under a preliminary outline created under Commissioner Peter Ueberoht in 1983, the new franchises would have Class AA teams in place two years before the major league teams start play and Class AAA teams one year before starting. The leading contenders for the new franchises are thought to be Denver and South Florida, Tampa-St. Petersburg, Orlando and Miami are vying for a Florida team, but St. Petersburg is rated the favorite 14 Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Kruger contract at Florida provides $1.2 million, perks The Associated Press GAINESVILLE, Fla. — New Florida coach Lon Kruger signed a five-year contract worth more than $1.2 million, including incentives for post-season tournament play and graduation rates. Kruger, whose base salary of $110,000 increases between $5,000 and $7,000 yearly until 1995, also will collect $100,000 a year for weekly television and radio shows and an undisclosed amount for shoe endorsements and summer basketball camp. If Florida is chosen for the NCAA tournament, Kruger will receive one month's salary as a bonus. He also would get an extra $1/4 month's salary from the team. If he gets extra $30,000 if the Gators made it to the championship game. Kruger also will receive bonuses if his players succeed in the classroom. If 40 percent of the Gators' scholarship players graduate within six years, the coach will receive a $1,000 bonus, increasing to $2,000 bonus if 50 percent graduate. Kruger will get one month's salary if 60 percent graduate and 10 percent of his annual paycheck as a bonus if 80 percent graduate In addition, Krunger will receive a $32,000-a-year life insurance policy and a $5,000 loan payable in five years. Athletic Director Bill Armarger Kruger's contract will be automatically extended if the basketball team is found guilty by the NCAA and punished for violations it is accused of committing under former coach Norm Sloan. The university may fire Kruger for any one of 16 possible breaches of contract, most of them dealing with the student. Also could be dismissed for betting. Steve Spurrier, the Gators' new football coach, is receiving about $400,000 a year in salary, television show and other benefits, while new Florida President John Lombardi is receiving about $178,000 a year. If the Gators are hit with the NCAA's so-called death penalty, Kruger's contract will be extended an additional two years for each year that Florida sits out and a year will be added to his contract for every season the Gators have to play under NCAA sanctions. Gotta Group? Houses with 2-5 Bedrooms 2 Bath Units Lotta Large Group? Gotta Large Group? House with 9 Bedrooms •41/2 Bath Units •3 Kitchens •2 Washer/Dryers •Piano Easy walk to campus Very Charming Call 941 STAR (7065) 841-STAR (7827) Rooms and Efficiencies rooms and Efficiency 1 and 2 Bedrooms in well maintained Older Homes Starting at $165 and up Call 841-STAR (7827) SUMMER SUBLEASE $375 A $375 2 Bedroom/2 Bath New Carpet & Appliances Mini-Blinds & Central Air Volleyball & Pool 843-6446 SouthPointe Apartments 2166 W. 26th C Now Open! Pendleton's Country Market Celebrate Cinco De Mayo Celebrate Cinco De Mayo With Pendleton's Blue Corn Chips Vine Ripened Tomatoes Bedding Plants (Annuals, Perennials, Herbs) Asparagus Blue Corn Chips Rhubarb Open M-Sat. 8 a.m. — 6 p.m. Sun. 1 p.m. — 6 p.n. 843-1409 Pendleton's Country Market Classified Directory 100s Announcements Betty, Thanks for the best three years! Good luck after graduation! Love, Mara. 105 Personal Brian Gershwin, Duvall, NY Bright creature, male, 26, seeks earing, women in a well-appointed woman looking for a loving relationship. Reply to P.O. Box 40232 Lawrence, KS 99044. Couns of AKL and Povenon will need a date to AKI, MKM Grand. Will fall down stairs and out of clothing to please you. Please call I-Got You-back. MKM Pocket Child Foundation. Helistage Mulle Kaheksa-Kunz-heil-Uks-Kaks-Uks-uks. If you are a female, looking for a serious relationship, here I am, a male. Please write to PO Box 40902, Lawrence MAX U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT??? Matthew W.--How do you sleep at night? Thank you SL. Jude for assisting me in my hour of need. RTN. 91. Senior Class Officers, Vote today at Strong. Paid for by WHM. Advanced fine art portfolios; modeling, theatrical slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Government photos, passport, immigration visas. Tom Swelli 789-1611. 110 Bus. Personal Ball gloves. Make your play in more than 80 models by Rowlings, Wilton, N曝onca, SSK, and Snickers Slugger. From $10.00 to $12. Alfarnau Sporting Goods. 731 Mass. 865-491-391 DOUH LAIT IT HOME! **Call Lock and Key** summer storage for sale and convenient storage. We offer free pick-up and delivery. Full, inured, MVC/visa, Call. Accepted. Call 843-8986. Drive thru on everynight tl 2:00 a.m. SUBWAY 1720 W. Airport, ZIP: 98203 Bausch Lernh, Ray-Ban Sunglasses Below Bag, Retail The Ete. Shop 732 Mass., 833-6011 HELP! OVERSTOCKED! 4 Dr. Chests $50 Twin Matt and Box $99 Solid Wood Rocker $199 Pine Wood Runners $199 Braun Hall Free $153 Bassett Reciiner $199 5 Pc. Dineet $150 Kansas Furniture Factory Outlet 738 New Hampshire. Lawrence. B.C. AUTOMOTIVE your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized M-F 84. Vln. Mastercard, Discover, 110.2.6th.841.6115 MONTANA BIG HORSE CO. MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History SIDEWALK SALE MAY 1, 2 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Mon-Sat. 10/5/Sun. 1-5 844-450 Call Today! AIRPLANE for - Airline tickets home - Summer travel plans On-campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts. Don't Wait! We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules. "New Analysis of Western Civilization" makes sense of Western Cowtie. Make it sense to X-Available at Jayhawk, Oread & Town Crier Fried of using brain and no brains, good experience for all majors, business communication, pre-law, etc. $125/407/mo. For interview information call 747-7407. Intramuscle shoes play softball, soccer or ultimate Frisbee. Nike, Adidas, Mitre or Diadora. Francis Sporting Goods, 731 Mass. 849-1021. 749-0700 Maupintour 120 Announcements Going to Washington, D.C. this summer? Call a group of fellow Athletes that will be there too: Curtin 842-6758, Yallah 845-6009 ext. 268. You receive 8 private sources, or your money is guaranteed! Guaranteed! Loaded! LOADABLE! LOCATOR'S. P.O. Box 1891, MO. MO60301881. 427-683-4583. Don't throw that stuff out! Donate it to a garage sale for local refugee organization. Call at 749-505-7489 or to have you old children send in. For confidential information, referral & support for AIDS concern - call 841-2345. Headquarters Correspondence Center. GRADUATES: Does your health insurance under your parents' plan go on your graduation day? Yes, you should cover you from graduation until you are eligible for employment. For more information, please visit www.graduates.edu. GAY & LEIBNAM Pear Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referral services. Phone: 812-745-3069 or 812-745-3064. Info 862-5682. Direct calls: Wednesdays 7-9 p.m.; 842-2000. Sponsored by READING FOR EUROPE THE SUMMER THIS HURT! be here anytime from. Denver, Minneapolis, or Milwaukee for no more than $299 or from the East Milwaukee for no less than $399. reported in Consumer Reports, NY Times, or his Gel For detail call: 313-844-2000 or write URITCH at Business, Ste. 186, New York. Half-day afternoon preschool program available for the Ku summer暑季 for children ages 5 and up. RT or 3 days a week. Limited vaccines. "Preferred Hellen," based on South Hill M4-408. Records tipped to 83s, 49s, CDs VP Hall VII Pillum屡屡 Kesas, LESK Sunday at 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. rent me my Macintosh computer for the summer. I will pay $200 cash in advance to rent your office. You will receive business person CA Steve at 84-759. Leave notes if I am not. need two for the summer. Thank you! Spring Break over and still no summer job? 425/wk. Good experience for resume and travel. For more information call 780-4333. Sexual Intervention. If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who is call 841-2345 or visit 1419 Mass, Headquarters Counseling Center. STUDENT & YOUTH AIRFARES LOW LOW RATES TO LONDON PARIS MADRID BERLIN USSR ASIA LATIN- AMERICA AFRICA IN FACT EVERYWHERE PLUS - FLY INTO & OUT OF DIFERENT CITIES AT THE LOW SCAE COUNT * * FULL RANGE OF SOVIET TOURS * * OUR NOW KOW EURAIL PASSES, I.D. CARDS 100 OFFICES WORLDWIDE 1·800·777·0112 THE STUDENT TRAVEL NETWORK PUSH MAIN MILTON WINTE 728WAVE LN LOS ANGELES CA 90046 STA TRAVEL Hillel לֹנִי Events of the Week Wednesday, May 2 Little Brothers & Sisters Ice Cream Social Hilliell House, Time to be announced Friday, May 4 RSVP by Wednesday, May 4 Sunday, May 6 Awards Brunch 12:30 p.m. Hillell House 6:00 p.m., Hillet House (Services at LJCC) Final Shabbat Dinner Services Honoring Graduating Seniors, & Thursday May 10 Finals Food Sunday, May 7 Open House 4:00-7:00 p.m. Hillhouse Sundav. May 20 9:00 p.m. Millel House Mondav. Mav 7 for more info call 864-3948 Join your friends at DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE for an Evening Fiesta and Auction to benefit the Lawrence Arts Center and Downtown Lawrence at Liberty Hall 642 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas on Silent Auction begins at 7 p.m. Bidding begins at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, May 5 Over $12,000 worth of merchandise donated by Downtown merchant Tickets available for $10 ($15 at door) at Johnson Furniture 722 Massachusetts To All Golden key members will be a picnic at Holiday Park on Thursday May 3rd from 4-8 p.m. There will be food and games. Come one, come all! WE HEAR YOU. You may have experienced unfair treatment-harm, discrimination, or belling shire. If you want to talk with someone about it, go to the Center or 848-6643 (University Ottoman). Yellow short-hair Lab needs home. 1-1/2 yr old. Friendly, shots up to date. Call 841-8221. Help Schmiee! SUNFLOWER HOUSE 21st BIRTHDAY BASH (1969-1990) MUNICIPALITY OF KURDAN ALUMNI WELCOME! 130 Entertainment FRIDAY MAY 14TH SUN LOWER HOUSE 1406 TENNESSEE HOTEL GET INTO THE GROOVE. Metropolis Mobile Sound: Superior sound and lighting. Professional radio DJ's. Hot Stops Maximum Party Thunder, DJ Rav Vajeluva. 841-7035. ARTS TOUR OF LONDON: Inexpensive, fun tour of London's film, art, music, and theatre. Phone 1-800-021-7676 MIRACLE VIDEO offers ADULT VIDEOS only $91.90 910 N 2nd 841-980, 19th and Haskel 841-7594 140 Lost-Found Doni M. Rutledge, Call 846-7147 for your ID. Found: Jacket, left at Advising Support Center, Lost male mudered cat. Approx. 1 year old. Orange and Cream colored tiger stripe. Answers to "Buddy." If found call 843-2096. Lotr: Port of sunglasses, black Rayban with Purple Tennessean Lenses and with black and Green Body Glove Croakies. Please call Meghan 841-7796. LOT: Varunet Sunglasses 4th floor Lindley Bathroom. Substantial cash reward. 749-7577. 200s Employment 205 Help Wanted **ARLIMEN NOW HIWING. Travel Agents, Flight Attendants, Mechanics, etc. Entry level and up, salaries to $1658. Call 1-805-682-7555 ext. A1179. *Call 6 days a week.* Assisting Retail National Chain interviewing for part-time and full-time entry level positions $10.51 start. Flexible schedules in summer. For info call 3-146-6903. Babystay needed this summer 6 →weeks/l week + i/eve week or our home for 39 yr. old. Also need weekdays 2 May 17 June. Nonsmoker/own transportation 845-282-362 BUCKINGHAM PALACE: Now taking applications for new construction clean-ups summer or earlier, and early evening hours for reliable calls. Phone 824-8264. BROUGHINGHAM PLAACE. Office cleanting time, evening hours available Sun.-Thur., for reliable, detailed-oriented people. Incentive for proven reliability. Call Sue for an appointment. BUCKINGHAM PALEA now taking applications for house cleaners. Morning and afternoon hours available. Incentive for proven reliability. Contact: 435-8294. can now use an application to **CADDIES!** Swim Glue Gilm Golf Club needood capless shoes. Swim Glue Gilm old, able and can carry up to 30 lbs. of hard work, but good pay. Loops pay $80 per bag. *tsk*. 744-3536. CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girl summer camps. Teach: swimming, canoeing, sailing, waterwelling, gymnastics, rock climbing, camping, crafts, dramas, or Riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $100 or more. plus Rd. Blanker, Magee 7180, Nile, MD. Daily living counselors-Community Residence Program; Two half-time positions are available. Each course is designed to provide planning activities for and with the residents; and participating with the residents in the community. These individuals assume the responsibility of the residential daily生活课程, and filling in for other staff as needed. Please apply at www.medical.edu one year ago for full-time college studies or equivalent full-time college credit. Please refer to our experience working with chronically psychiatric patients preferred. Must have a valid ID card. Mental health technician's license desirable. Salary: $7.33 to $10.42 per hour. Data entry, analysis on quarter-time records, quarterly clinical research, Interest artificial intelligence welcome: $1,822.5 semester. Contact Jadith at 864-4232 before Experienced baby sitter needed in my home. Fall semester. Tuesdays and Thursdays. 841-0432 after 5. Looking for mature students looking to expand sales and or art careers during summer break. Flexible hours, benefits. Must have car and positive attitude. 824-1901 for appointment. FREEDIE HIDE NEW YORK! Driver wanted to drive car one way to albury, NY. Choose your departure date between June 18 and December 25. If you choose a back will be loaded with my luggage. I pay for gas, tolls, and two nights model experience. You are responsible for your own return trip. Traveller required Call (800) 322-7964. Full-time staff, teacher position available for summer and fall. Half-time lead position summer. Degree in child-related field preferred for assistance, E.C.E. certification required for leads. Contact Hilton 846-740-6982 or be called J. McCormick and apply online. Deposit May 14 e.O.E. Graduate assistant in newspaper production. We need motivated, well-organized graduate student to act as newspaper production coordinator (800-754-9612, kristin.stephenson@mhs.edu, 1900-1909). Should have knowledge in editing and newspaper paste-up. Responsibility includes putting in articles on the newsstands, then, and supervising interns. Salary negotiable based on experience. Tentative start date is June 15, 2010. Applicants must be sent to Keddie 100, KSU, Mahstown, MS 65000 All: Hawaii, Hawaii, on later than 3:00 p.m. Interviews will be held May 16 to Graduate Assistant, Position: Elder and child care referral services; $80/mo., half-time. Application deadline: September 30. Send letter to Harold R. KU Personnel Services; 120 Carthus O'Leary LAK AA/EOE. Help this summer in doctor's office with phone calls or online assistance. Ability to work without supervision. Call 7-691-803. KIMEM language tutor wanted. 922-1102. Light factory work requiring and packing plastic and part+time shift will be available. The plant operates 7 days/week 8am-5pm, Tues-Sat. Term: June 1-4, m-f. Packer Plastics 3253 Lakewood Rd. (Personnel m. son of land) Lawnens, KS 60044. Local video amusement company needs experienced and dependable individual to run amusement route. Must have excellent communication skill, health job. Requires 28 hr.wk. Starting pay in $4hr. plus future incentives. Fill out application at Schumo Foods, 17 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, MA 02116. Mature responsible woman for child care in our home M, August 6-17, 8-9, 4 children (11, 9, 8, 8) prs! Please call Dr. Mcridle. 864-6600 Namines need, East Coast Florida one year. Contact families screened, good salaries, personal contact in Topka. M. Stroble 233-483 Nanny Network. Nanny Opportunities: Salaries from $120-450 per month. Join the only successful new and ex- cellent nanny team in New York. For details call: Arlene Streisand, Inc. 1-800-431-6438. Male. age 16, min. 1 yr. Instruct: 100 hours per week. National Marketing firm seeks mature student to manage On-Campus promotions. Flexible hours, earnings potential to $90 per hourman. Must be a graduate degree in Business Administration or Call Amy or at (600) 329-2121. NEXT EXTRA CASH? *ASK*! We as a banker for Fall Fee payment held August 14, 2016 at the General Accounting Office, Carlsbad O'Riley at the General Accounting Office, Carlsbad O'Riley Previous cashless experience preferred. Need caregivers with car for 11 and 12 year olds before and after school and 2 full days each week this summer. 843-109-69 SALES/OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS Exciting opportunity with National Co. approach business people. Earn up to $4000 in 12 week program. No experience necessary. Full training. Des Plaines, IL area. For further details call 1-800-887-6600 Nursery School Teacher. A great little school needs a wonderful lead teacher. Fall-spring, a p.m., or both Creative control, planning period. support staff, supportive staff members. Lawrence Community Nursery School. 645 Alabama, Lawrence KS. 65041. - College Students* * SUMMER JOBS* SWAHILI INSTRUCTOR (or other African dialect) part time position please call (816) 245-7300 COLUMNISTS and CARTOONISTS NEEDED For Fall 1990 Kansan. Call 864-4810 and ask for Mary Neubauer, Fall 1990 Editorial Editor. Office of Study Abroad accepted applications for half-time (20 hr.) wk./vc. 1 Student monthly position with school in 4-ev. blocks. Begin Aug. 15, $390/mo. in 4-ev. blocks. Begin Aug. 15, $390/mo. in 4-ev. blocks. Word Perfect 5.0 helpful. Foreign prefors study or travel. Contact OSA, 203 Lippincott, 66-8724; Deadline July 25, 9 p.m. on Monday. Word Perfect 5.0 helpful. PLOYMENT. Many positions. Work month - home call. Call 360-8726-7557. I Call 7 days Part-time teacher assistants positions available at Rainbow Mennor School located in a farm-like setting. Must have transportation. Will训. call 843-6000. Part-time clerical position. Thursday nights and Saturdays. General office skills helpful. Apply at Weaver's Department Store 3rd floor office. Wever's Department Store 3rd floor office. Rest use your Macintosh computer for the math work. Do math in an online computer computer at Aug. 15, 1990. Local business person. Call Steve at (212) 867-2456. We thank you. Thank you, Amans! Residential daily living counselors-Community Residence Program: These positions are for a live-in couple with no dependent children to work on their own. Residents will be Community Residence Respondents including working with other program staff members to ensure that residents learn how to help them learn or improve upon basic daily living, social, and recreational skills. High, regular, and special education required. must also be inable by Benger. Prior experience working with chronically ill psychiatric patients preferred. Salary: $179.00 to $249.00. Student assistant, publications/shiping dept. of Nat. Hils. Mist. Program in math, work blocks of days, weekdays; 25-30 hrs /wk, summer and 15-30 hrs /wk, winter at 629 Dodgeville, Sara Wake. SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES Top noteh girls camp in Pennsylvania has a few openings for NSF's and tennis instructors. Call Arlene info: 1-800-460-6438. Summer daycare for infants in my Leawood, KS home. No smoking, references, good hours. 913-648-7257 Summer Week We have a number of Overland Park Filling, Orders, Packaging, Warehouse and Clerical Positions Available. Wages range from $4.00 per hour. Apply at apply.com +412-587-3620 or +1-828-3629. **Tutoring/talking** Summer or permanent employment. Salary plan contribution (up to $150/month, today). **The Priestress Review nation** m. 1 test prep package seaks S.A.T. T. instructors. Bright, enthusiastic students or receive $250 per week. Starts 1st April. Call 853-2131 between 4 and 6 p.m. before class. WANTED: Actors for TV commercials; movie extraes and game show contenders. Many needed. Call 861-785-9035 T: 12128. "Call Me." 225 Professional Services VIDEO CONVERSION Pacific-Arabian-European Pal TO US NBC or VICE VERSA UK TV NBC or VICE VERSA XPT Prologue, M4T, W1R, ST. 85-900 11 University Daily Kansan / Wednesdav. Mav 2. 1990 15 CORNROW YOUR HAIR. Cool, convenient, stylish. Women and men. Call Sarah 843-4681. KU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES: 8-hour course creating process. Complete D.I.V. services. PASSPORT/RESUME $60.99. 300 Art & Design. 644-4797 Deliver Education offers three Midwinter Driving School, serving K.U., students for 20 years, driver's license obtainable, transportation provided. 841-779-786. PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services Overland Park (913) 491-6878 Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4821. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing. Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5718 16 East 13th 842-1133 TRAFFIC - DUI'S Fake ID' s Alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE Attorney REMODELING 235 Typing Services 1-1,000 pages, no job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable wordprocessing; Diana, 843-847 or Ruth, 843-648. Call after 5 p.m. 843-297 or Ruth, 843-698. Call after 5 p.m. or woman W Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scribbles into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct page of a novel. Reqs. + typing and wp. 15 years experience. Resumes, letters, intters. C电话 487-6454. 1 - typing and w.p. 30 years experience. Resumes, these letters, etc. Call Terry 842-4754 p.m. to p.m. Anytime before Computer wordprocessing with Spelling Check Call anxtime 1746-1961. RESUMES - The right resume can make a hugg difference in your job search.* * Professionals with this resume to get result!* * Ruth's Job Available - 841-1342* Attention Topeka Commuters Call R.J.R.'s Typing Services 841-5924. Term papers, legal, typeset, ect. no calls after p.m. Dona's Quality Typing and Word Processing. Quality Word Processing - academic typing; manuscript descriptions; knowledgeable APW APA BARBAR; Word processing; Barb's wordprocessing; IBM computer w/lQ printer. Themes, papers, resumes, newletters, Donna's *Quality* Typing and Word Processing. Term paper letters, illustrations letters, references letters, instructions letters, flagging and spelling corrected. 202-G.W. 2126. W.B. 8.m. 8-9.m. 8-F. 5-m. 8-9.m. 842-2744. Editing, typing, critiques of works in progress. Expert help, any writing project. Call Liz, 749-4046. TheWORDOCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. Since 1983. 863: 3147. K'a Professional Word Processing. Accurate and affordable. Call after 1:00 p.m. 841-6345. Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes, Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M. S.Degree. 841-6254 Word Perfect Word Processing-IBM Compatible. Near Orchard Corners. No calls after 9 p.m. 845-8568 300s Merchandise 300s 305 For Sale 1983 Honda Interceptor 750, excellent condition, low miles, two matching bells, $2,150 o.b.o. Mark 864-1124 15 speed bike Great condition $0.00 a.b.a. Also available 20 1500 Sukai GS 650 4000 mli condition mint condition $1,000 b.o.c. Comes with extras. Calls T8-798-1544. 1500 Sukai GS50SE red/white, 2 helmets, $1150 b.o.c 854-6753 Boyd Escort GT, 898 kmiles, excellent condi- tion. Ford Escape, 750 kmiles, excellent condi- tion. Falkenberg K, low mileage, all new part espe- cially fuel efficient. Bentley Mk2, operable pro- perly run good. 4000 a.o. b.a. * 900 Scald ML needs work. Power for: Call 614-3783 or leave 9 "Gannondale Mountain Bike for sale $300. 16" frame. 841-5272 to 9:00 p.m. 89 VW Fox GL 4 dr: loaded AM/FM cassette HiFi. Must sell. 1-800-448-7714 (day) 1-242-7239 (eve.) A good couch, two cushion chairs, two tables. Best offer. Call Joel 843-7543. watch into WIN98. b. 2012. 0.02. 0.02. 0.02. Alpine 7389 Pulbut, out in box. Mall pool cut, never used 65. Kenswick: 676 Pulbut; 640. Must have 65. Kenswick: 676 Pulbut; 640. Most call Ton 641. 10110998-0001. An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glazesware, fintique and antique used furniture, printers, games and more. A handmade quilt, primitives, dolls, comic books, leather goods, vintage clothing, books, Peregrine rugs, vintage clothes, books. Persian rugs, living items, clocks, watches, desserts, antique Royal Rooftail, and so much more stuff it is worthy for the home. MAMHET KIT 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sat. Sum. 10-4. For rental info contact **864-723-9520**. Apple Ie printer, expanded memory, software. 950 o b. MARSHALL 1090 amp. B41-8388-343 Apple Ie Dual Disk/Scribe Printer/Mouse Te Bestuffed King Size waterbed, includes: mirrored camshaft, suspended headboard, padded, padded rolls, mattress shelter, four sheet sets. $900. Make offer. Call 448-3453. Beautiful Lake Perry Golf Course lot. For sale by owner. Out of state owner must sacrifice. 609-851-3213. Bianchi roadblake. Like new $175. 841-6009. COUCHior sale: Big, comfy, cozy, best offer: 841-6009 Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics' RIll New Hampshire Open Sat. & Sun 10.5. Campaq portable 2 floppy drives with some softw ware and a disk case, $900, Call 943-6872. m case 1928. 6 cases 1929-30. DUNKINS hold cell phone with heavy dry skin. stands up详 775. Call Heather M. For sale: 1909 16th Mobile House, Carport, Ac, and, more. Calc 841 6038. Heathrow Office, Ac. For sale: 6 driver dresser with matching driver desk, sell together or separately. 841-3811. For sale: Airline ticket, KC to Denver, one way May 7th. 842/796. e sale: Peruvian Bass Guitar & Crane Bass Amp, for artists. Asking for $100. Knownw speaker and lyre speaker for car stereo $ each. Canine amplifier for car stereo $8 each. Call M4-2716. new sale! Mac 800 k external drive, $130 o.b.o. Scott 50 wall stereo amp and tuner $150 o.b.o. Call 624-738-9265 Furniture for sale. Items include beds, dressers, bar stools, couches, and entertainment unit. Chell Call Jeff at 81-943-6210. For sale: Men's 10 sided Schirm bicycle, Bicycle o.b. Call FBA: 864-8290 best around 6:00. Gorgeous AKC black lace for sale. Ready in three weeks. Serious dog lovers only. Call evenings at 842-3790. Graduating sense NEEDS to sell furniture. All must go lamps include, tr stand, coffee table, plastic stacking chairs, and bar stools. Prices are new PLEASE contact Debbie at 748-8697. Macintosh 512 K. Enhanced with Imagewriter II printer and software. Good condition. Call Dan 941-8885. Men's 10 speed bike, fenders, carrier, lamp, $40. Also some furniture. 864-3000, 951-4687. warm rain Nite Lite 18 speed bicycle. Excels condition. Call 914-842-3078 after 6 p.m. Oklahoma City round trip ticket. Date, May 11 to May 13. 945 or mail abide 342-1021. One-way ticket Jackson (WY, Yellowstone)- Salt Lake City-Kansas City, July 3, Delta, 480. 804-300-719, 841-687-. PANASONIC's men racing bicycle. 12 speed. Motorcycle transponder. 40 speed. Radar detector, Cobra transponder HD-3110. 60 o.o. Battery Box $25. o.o. Canon T-7.0 3 lens. Flash, plus accessorizer. $390 Lymn Rock & Roll records, Buy-Sell-Trade, Quantrillas, 111 New Hamphire. Open Sat.-Sun. 10-5. Sales marketing. Summer employment in Theopka area. Starting June 4, 2014; 8:4-3:00. Pay is $10/wk. + bonuses. Call Ron for appt. 1-800-324-8324. THE CHAPMAN USED, NEW AND CURIOUS GOODS. New merchandise weekly. Buy, schwinn 10 speed bike, great condition, need to tell, adjustable seat, $80. Call 843-4058. 819 Vermont 841-0550 Noon-6:00, Wed.-Sat. Snake Rosy (pink) Boa $200. Small animal cage dt, by 2 ft, with beautiful 6 ft picture window. Must sell. Heather #81-6186 SUMMER CARE FOR boys ages 8 and B. Morning. appropriate, 10-12 weeks / in week of use. Transportation required and must be flexible. 4$/br. 741-791; after 5:00. Suzuki 250 Enduro 1983 only 5000 miles. Great condition. Ask $725. David 749-1805. Taking Dog, Leaving Kansas, selling everything, microwater, waterbed, Nagel and Adela Adams protects, AIWA Walkman, 73 Cherry Luv truck. Make offer. Scott 867-7120. 340 Auto Sales 1973 Dodge Minibus, reliable, good tires. Made for 1975 Honda CB 300T. Under 5,000 miles. Good condition. 930.0 a/c b. Must sell now. 841-4127. 1975 Plymouth Duster, PS, AT, radio, 135,000 miles, rustless, great car, $1000 o.b.o. $843006, 841-697. 68 Poatiac Bonneville, good condition, automatic, PB, PS, PW, new tires. Price neg. **Camaro Z-28, 36,000 miles, T-top, PS, PB, tilt,** **air. airi. BH-325 after 5:00.** 'W' Jeep Wrangler. Red with white hardtop, 4 cylinder, 5 spd., 37,000 miles. Warranty. £7,000. cylinder, 3 spdx, 30,000 miles, warranty. #, 6,000. (913) 826-8721 or weekdays (913) 272-8401. **Toyota Terrel.** 16 km/h, excellent condition. *82 Toyota Tercel, 18k miles, excellent condition* Call after p. 9 m. bd. 437-2786/844-2171 89 Diamond back 20.5 in Topanga Min. bike, '78 Maurya DT 250, 841-4530 even. 360 Miscellaneous On TV, CVRS, Jewelry, Stereo, Musical Instruments, cameras and more. We honor Viva/MCA/M.E.M.X./Dise. Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 104 W. H. 749-1019. HIT & RUN: Person who witnessed bit and run to gold '98 Honda Accord in lot 90, 4/25, PLEASE contact Maria! Collection 816-480-4465. Thank you! 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 1 or 2 bdr, summer sublease furnished with Jacuzzi and cable paid. Close to campus. Price neg. Call Joran or Dan. 841-1087. 1 and 3 bedroom apts, for June 1 occupancy. No purses. 842-8971. 1 amazingly large 3 bdr. apt. for $400. Close to campus, downtown and the hawk. Available after May 30. Great summer hostel! A14.7200 Home 1 bdр. apartment available for summer sublease. $100 + ½ utilities. Close to campus. A REAL STEAL! 841-364. 1800-mes. ± utilities. big enough for four. The volume is 4 bds. in large. Kuperbowl, Roof/ /D, dishwasher. Summer robanate. Last chance a week. RB: 9297 1 to 2 rooms in 3.bfr. house. Sublease June to mid. Auc. Close to campus. 042-8840. 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 color, race, religion, sex, handicap. In general, the courts intend to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.' A cheap, big, close to campus, new 4-plex, A/C, own room, summer sublease; males only. 843-921. 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 bdr. apt. for summer sublease. Washer, dryer, garage. 3 bathrooms. Sunrise Village West. 922-4173. May 30. Great summer sublease! 841-4752 1 bdr. 12th and Tenn. with den. breakfast room, wood floors. 8290/no. 842-6504. 2 bdr. apt, in older house. Available June 1st 9th and Mississippi. AC, dishwasher, water paid, no pets. $855. 841-1074 wood floors. $260/mo. 842-6504. 1 bdr._apartment available for summer sublease. $3,000/mo. 842-6504. 2 bdr. townhouse, big enough for 3. MUS) LEASE, rent neg. Call 841-9277, leave message. mer sublease, Rent very long. We need out—please help! 842-6840 1bdr. house summer sublet. Excellent condition. very clean to campus. Central air. 1613 Illinois, responsible. 940-8197. 4 bdr., 2 bath, pool, summer sublease, $176/per- cent, furnished, Mastercraft, 15th and Kasid, on via route. Attractive 2 Shr. apr., unfurnished 15th and Tennessee. $310. Lease, mo. security, no pets. Available June 1st. J8-394. Apartment for lease: 3 bdr., loft apt. Next to camps. 862-257-217 **Apartment naming** Get the APARTMENT ADVISOR. It's free! Available at all Dillons locations A summer and fall three bdr. apt. furnished, air conditionning, available June 1st. Gas, gas paid. 886 Kentucky; 741-378; 749-378 CHEAP! AVAILABLE NOW: 1 bdr. house, 2 bdr. house, 4/5 bdr. house. Duplexes and others. 842-2388. June 1, new 2 bd. bsp.; at 1080 Energy Rd. Great apt., with great location. Energy efficient, spacious, weather/water hook-up, upstairs, large office space, 12 month lease, Call West Hale Aps. 841-3800. Available for rent: A limited number of apts. special rates: Studio $200/mo. 1 bdr. $50 and $75, 2 bdr. $95. Call Berkley Flats #2116. Available 1.2 bbr 1.2 bdr, apt in nice, old house. Wood floor. fireplace, breakfast bar, warm/derby book-up. Off-street parking $350. Fireplace, 14 rooms. I am at red brick 84. rate 16/170. Available June tat at apst West 2009 Warehouse. Free wifi and cell phone service. 2 bdr. $890,支付12月水费。Come out early afternoon or call 841-3539 or 841-4531 for details. Wood floor: 2 ceiling fairs, breakfast bar. BRAIDED SQUARE APES. New 3 bed, 2 bath, 1 bath available for summer and fall vacations. Facilities include utilities on site managements, facility access, unified on-site management, weekends, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Only 2 left. Call (800) 649-6972. Available now this summer only for non-anoking females. Partial urinary tract damage from KNJ treatment can remain in kidney cells, valuable, cable, W/D, microwave, cleaning washers, $235 - 285 plus not a subset. CAMPUS PLACE 1: bleed from campus. 4 bdr, 2 bath, available for summer and option for fall. Furnished and cheap rent. Call 843-7733 or 843-7744. Cheap Sublease: Furnished bdr. and loft. Avail. June 1st. Rent neg. Water call. Call 843-7787. Furnished Sublease Studio, 1-13, & 4 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, energy efficient and designed with yea in mind. Call 811-1211, 811-5355, 894-0455, 782-1415, 878-1426 or 878-4236. Coop living in KCK. 3 bdr., $1/2 bath, 2-story townhouse only $350/mo. 10 minutes to KUMC. 818-727-2213 Cogy one bap, apt. in old house, Wood floor, claw foot, Tub. avail. 1st, June. gas tank, water $315, no pets, 13 month lease or summer sublet avail. 841-7074. DISCOUNT: Sublease nice $410 apartment at Sunrise Place for $310 June, July. Call Todd 749-7477 Efficiency 1 and 2 bdr. apts. in nice older houses for summer subnet. Not fall lease. Start at $275. nres. net. Nets: 814-1074 145 & 148 Chin just 1¼½块 from campus. Available immediately 1¼½ block from gas, Baq. water and paid. $23. Avail, for fall bearing large studios and $25. Avail, for two to share. Laundry facility. Excellent location now leasing for summer or fall. 2 bbr, apts. 2 yrs. old, C/A, D/W, off-street parking, low utilities, no pets. 843-8290. First month free! Receive first month rent in CASH! Beautiful one bird, $330/mo. avail. Aug. 8. Very nice, for more info, call 942-2671-817 For summer subsistance : 1 bab and 2 bibs. Close to Student Union, off street parking, no pets, references and security deposit required. 845-9007 For rent: June 1st studio, 1.28 bpd, remodeled 3 bed, house, mobile home. 481-6248. Four bip. Sibs. Near Airbnb Center, Want to campus. Want to submit for summer and open week call. Call 763-800-2561. Nest, not. get a graduate on a face, no smokey. April, August, July, Mid-May Get a group of five or more? Rent a whole duplex 40 and Mississippi 14? rent. Jesse, 8/5? 4 bldr. 2 full bath, 2 kitchens, C/A 2 dishwashers, carport, 441-1074 *written rooms for lease: One block from university with off street parking, shared kitchen and bath facilities. Available for summer and fall. No pets. 814-5600. HELP! I've fallen and I can't get up! Call for summer sublease, 12th and Ohio, low utilities, 3/4 people 841-5658. Huge three, bdr, townhome, 2, bath, walk-in closets, garage, microwave, AC, desperate! Will neg. 843-7522. Large 1 bdr. for $800/mo. Big 4 bdr. for $440/mo. Both for June and July. Two blocks from Union. 745-797 even, until 10:30. Large one bdr. (could be considered 2 bdr. Available June 1, 1418 Tenn. Bees, 981-2997. Leasing for Aug. 1, One bdr. aps, apcs to cam. Looking for non-monkey roammate to share bake #2 for baking; or go to kitchen doorway to route walk, laundry in building. Move in anytime, by out July 31 (or renew for fall without rate); $15/month; mg = 1/2; & utilizes PHB. Wait, is it "mg" or "mg"? It looks like "mg". Let's look at the last character of "utilizes". It's a 'h'. The whole text is "looking for non-monkey roammate to share bake #2 for baking; or go to kitchen doorway to route walk, laundry in building. Move in anytime, by out July 31 (or renew for fall without rate); $15/month; mg = 1/2; & utilizes PHB." Yes, it's "mg". One nice bit, Close to campus, AC, starting June or July. 943-302-1 or 1-449-5261. Reduced! Furnished 1 bdr. 5/1-6/7 May and Aug. paid. Was $139 now. $200. Call 841-1312 ask about 201 for call 841-1353. ROOM FOR HENT Next to campus. Call 842-3388 leave message. Great Deal! Leasing for Ang. 1st, 1st one. Bkp, apts. Close to campus. Deposit and references required. No pets, street parking. Call 842-9007. Nice furnished apt. for summer sublease. On bus route. Rent neg. Call Kristen at 942-1756. **FOR A HOSING ALTERER** *close closets and accessors, a great location, and* *closed rooms. Open for a temporary or* *opened room for summer and fall are available.* *Pick-up area at the ROCN Center 1944* *North Parkway, Los Angeles, CA 90026.* Reserve apartments now for summer and fall. And 2 bedroom apts. furnished. 1 block from university with off street parking. no pets. Mt-5500. *Spacious 2 bdr. townhouse with 1½ bath, AC, deck and garage.* Hanover Place, $331/mi. 841-7299 leave message*) opacious 3 bdr., 2 bathroom apartment. Porch, close to campus, very clean. Rent neg. Call anytime 749-4640 Sublease: 3 bdrs, 2 bath, townhouse with garage and AC. Acknowledge $658 call 749-1805. Specians 1 kid, for summer sublue, newly grown baby. $30. Specian 2 kid, for summer sublue, newly grown baby. $30. Baby water call. Payment $49 or $78-99 leave message. Say the winner! Huge one kid, ap (pley) tern. Large land area, live front, french porch. Tenm. Large living area, screen front, porch. Roommates needed, male or female, house off campus, $175/mo. utilities. 749-0004. Storage for summer. Protected environment 81/14 ft 749-8290 Summer rent. Sunrise Terrace Apla, 3 bdr., 2 bath, 7 min. from campus; $500 o.b. Furnished. unfurnished, $418-5186 Summer sublet, 1 bdr. apt., 14th and NJ, fall option, AC, utilities free, $250/mo, 749-4606. SUMMER SUBLEASE, Available May 30, thur. perises townhouse. Heampark. May paid! Refunded rent. A great bargain at $600. Call 425-4751. houseage in style at a luxurious Sunrise Village Townhouse, Pool, tennis court, 4 bdr., 2 full bath, modern kitchen, central air, and your WASHER/DRYER. 749-4775. Sublease summer: 3 bdr. house, quiet location, fully furnished with washer and dryer; $860/tmo. + utilities: 749-3536. SUMMER SUBLEASE: Campus May 16, nw room; class to campus. Male or female, food is very affordable and neg . + t utilities. Please call 893-8148 for more information. summer, Sunrise Village, rest. 795-3831 SUMMER BURLEY LEASE: Great big house, holds 4+4 people very comfortably. Super close to chinatown. Great place to live this summer. Call 853-1458. Summer subbase: Furished rooms, with shared kitchens and bath facilities for females. Water and electricity paid. One block from university off street parking. No pets. Bai 540-550. Summer subsalee. Furnished 1 bdr. apt., 1 block from university, with off street parking, no pets. 841-5600 Sublease room in big house, cheap! Choice of rooms, has good storage. Karen 943-391. 11/ag, 11. 749-820 SUBLEASE: 3 bdr., 3½ bath, pool, deck, garage, summit Square, suite apart 268-5431 Summer solstice with option of renew fall leave. Cynn studio set up. in W. LOWEA, Wood floors, 15 minutes from campus and downwards. 210 utilities paid. 843 MBR 908, eve., weekend. Summer sublease: 2 bdr. duplex 2021 Heatherwood, Call 841-9707 or 1-884-6537. Summer sublease: 4 room for rent, together or separate. Spacious apt., AC, pool, Rent neg. Call 855-2524 Georgetown Apartments - KU Bus Route-Holidome - 24 hour Maintenance - Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout - Microwaves & Dishwashers - Tanning Deck & Barbeque - 10 or 12 Month Leases - Low Security Deposit - Low Security Deposit - Low Security Deposit - Worker/Driver or book Call about our Summer Special - Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available - Office Hours: M,W,F 2:30-5:30 T,TH by appt. - No pets 630 Michigan 749-7279 $50 OFF Bring in this ad and you will receive $50 off 1 month's rent with the signing of a 12 - On-Site Management - 1 & 2 bedroom units - newly reckored - On-site Landscaping Facilities - On-bus route - Near shopping - Water paid - New premises - Ample off-street parking Call for an appointment today ing hours; M-W-F anytime after 2:00 T-R anytime after 4:00 Sat-Sun.all day One and Two bedrooms available 843-0106 EDDINGHAM PLACE 24TH &EDDINGHAM (next to Gammons) Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price !! RYDER TRUCK RENTALS (Local and One-Way) RYDER Professionally managed Office Hours: 12-6pm M - F 9-3pm Sat. No Appt. Necessary 841-5444 Call for rates. 843-2044 Summerubnite: Newly renovated, 2 bdr. apt., old house, 3 ceiling fans, room AC, private office, off-street parking. Walk to KU and downtown. $500. No point on payment for 84-1104. Summersubnite: Need 3 people. 2 Blocks from furniture, $185.00, u.½ will require May rent. Ask about us or drive by. APARTMENTS by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc Summer nublet, Architecture! unique home in, ibd; i+ bath, beautifully furnished, wash.dryer, ideal for grades, or couple. Close to campua 841-5747 or 843-0929. at Meadowbrook. AVAILABLE NOW CALL 842-4200 SUMMER SUBLEASES Someone you know lives Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Special 2 BR prices! CALL 842-4200 RESERVE FOR FALL NOW Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants! Special CALL 842-4200 S You owe it to - Graystone Open: M-F 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5 Sun. 1-4 • 842-4200 • - 1-2-3 bedroom apts. Swan Management * Gazebo neadowbrook Summer sublease: 4 bdr., 2 bath, furnished. Great location - near campus and downtown. Neg. 740-4382 Summer subunit; spacings two bdr, two bath, AC, W/D/250/mo. + utilities 748-8323 2512 W. 6th St. 749-1288 LUXURY We have more Deluxe rooms with semi-primate baths (two-thirds newly remodeled). A Coed Fitness center. Weekly maid service. An on-site computer room with Macintosh computers. A swimming pool. Our new "DINE ANTYTIME" meal program. Air conditioning. Planned social events. We have MORE You can too! Now leasing for Fall 1990 NAISMITHHALL 1800 Naismith Drive Laytonville, CA 95064 0715) 843-8500 Summer sublease, option on fall, 2 bdr. furnished, Ville 28 $400 mo. 1/2 yrs. Desperate! 749-182 leave message Summer sublease: Two bdr., two story townhouse. Across from stadium, $42-8640 $350. Will compromise. Two rooms available for summer. 173 + $v_{1}$ utilities each. Close to campus and shopping 749-3638. 1 bdr. apts. at 945 Missouri avail. June 1. Studio avail. Aug. 1. 749-0166 evenings. THE FAR SIDE URGENT! Need to sublease 2 bdrs. of 3 bdr. apt. Reasonable rent and utilities. Avail. June 1. 841-3320 WE'RE DESPERATE!! Summer sublease, 2 near, carpark. $250/mo. 84-7239 Walk to KU or downtown. Avail. Aug. 1. Efficiency 1 hrs, bats, in older houses. No pets. $285 and uni. $44.1074 You need our apartment 2 bdc., 1 bath. Sublease for the summer, a.k.a. perfect! 789-1643. We have 2 room avail. for summer sublease. $1095/120/mo. * $4 utilities. 2 blocks from campus. Call and ask for Gina or Laura 841-9886. 430 Roommate Wanted A big, cheap, close to campus, new 4-plex, A/C, own room, summer sublease; males only 842-9021. $290/mo. furnished, utilities paid. Washer/dryer included. Summer and/or fall. Female only. Call 844-4776 leave message. $195/mo. (neg.), utilities paid, furnished, w/d included, summer sublease. Females only. 749-$194 leave message. 1 or 2 female non-nammakers needed for summer Survival Village Townhouses. Swimming Pool, tennis courts, on bus route, own room. Rent neg. MaraJohn or Joan. Female for summer, 3 blocks from camps; furnished, own room, 1/2 utilities. 843-2408. CAMPUS PLACE 141. Louisiana 1 block from campus. 2 lBRS, available for sublease May 15-Aug. CIEP RENT A*; 1+ utilities, furnished. CALLI MET or Craig 790-1128. Female Christian room wanted for summer and/or fall. 8175 - utilities, own room, walking distance from campus. Tomi 841-5741. Desperately an easy-going female roommate from May 13 (or so) through July 31, she is a regular on the baseball volleyball and bus route. Fed, deposit $25.95 *10 buys (Must feed). Call Lisa on (866) 764-8222. Female non-smoker need for '90-'91. 83% *u* utilities. Great house, great location. 749-188. Female, non-smoking, roommate need at KU Med. for fall. Call Jody 824-2581. Female non-smoker to share 2 bdr. Great location downtown KU, Must see! Grad. student pref. 943-5724 Male, or female needed for summer subsea 3.2b, 2.8b, or 1.8b at Orchard Creek with pool, AC bus, box $187/mo. + 1% utilities. May free! Call Nancy at 941-2217. Female roommate wanted for fail. $130 + % utilities. Meadowbrook Beginning Aug. 1st. 841.6208 Furnished room in apartment from Hawk, 5 minute walk anywhere on campus. 749-3636. Male non-smoking roommate startes June 1. $410 + $8 utilizes. Call Terry 6141-1437. Need 1 or 2 roommates for summer. Nice 4 bdr. house. WD included. $150/mo. Please call 843-1124 ORCHARD CORNERS: 3 beds, available for summer sublease, fully furnished, $125 + $ utilities. May free! Call 749-427-082. One bff, living room, kitchen, and bath. Own entrance in older home close to campus all universities PAID. 314 W. 48th behind Burlington 746-1566. Phone 212-591-4202. Email kb@ucl.edu. $t = utilities; Call 814-3234. Non-homophile roommates wanted to share their knowledge. Pek. send letter in care of Karnan Box d. Nursing student/musician needs female room- aide at KU med startning August *Call 769-480* *615-323-8768* Quite, female roommate wants summer/fall. On bedroom, bed 1/128/mo. Call 841-1922-today! Roommate wanted for fall. Male, female, ice- cream. $160/mo. + 1½ utilities. Nice apart. Nice apartment! Roommate summer, option on next year. $200/mo. + ½ utilities. Villa 26 apts. 749-1882 leave message, desperate! Roommate needed for 2 bdr. apt. Available bedroom is huge. No deposit. $192/mo. I'll pay all utilities. 841-337-5728 Remountable needs to share 3 bdr. townhouse for summer. Would have big bdr., with own bathroom and pool. Rent is very neg. Call 748-2074. Roommate needed to share 2 bdr. apt, now thru summer. Close to campus, on bus route. $125 + utilities. 843-3260. Honormate need 3 bikes, 2 baths, furnished, on bus route 815 plus $1 utilities. Call 647-8970. 749-8610. Orchard Corners; non-smoker oruberable. Roommate needs for summer. $175/mo. + 10% utilities. B big bd. appr. close to campus. 842-9032. Summer: 1 person to share furnished 3 bd. appr. and Arkansas. Rent now. 780-4700. NYC Summer Art. abs. near Columbia University. M/mn/ma Call: 312-896-2007 Summer roommate needed $138/mo. at Meadowbrook. Call 842-5606. Wanted! I person, preferable male, for next fall at Sundance 3 & 4. Apartment fully furnished $775/mo. *u.* utilizes. Batch 644-8543 or 644-8543, preferably in the early days. Wanted: Female non-smoker for summer. $12.50 + % utilities/mo. Call 849-7920 or 849-7939. By GARY LARSON brrrrrrrrr Sheep health classes 16 Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Bar Section The Hatter's Gone Madder! T BULLWINKLE'S 700 New Hampshire 842-9402 1344 Tennessee 843-9726 BEER MUG Monday: $2.75 Pitchers Tuesday: Schooners $1.00 No停车 Monday: $1.00 Gustos Wednesday: $1.00 Well-Drinks Thursday: 25¢ Draws Friday: $1.00 Bottles Saturday: $1.00 Gustos Drink & Walk (Why Drive Downtown or Across Town?) Wednesday: Schooners $1.00 M 禁止停车 Drink & Walk (Why Drive Downtown or Across Town? Thursday: Tall Boys $1.25 Friday: All Cans $1.00 Saturday: 50c Ponys Open Evenings All Summer Long Great Food THE YACHT CLUB Леманское РБ The Yacht Club Bar & Grill 530 Wisconsin 842-9445 Great Prices THE YACHT CLUB Lancashire R&B Open 7 days a week,365 days a year! Monday: Grilled Cheese & Soup $2.00...50¢ Draws Tuesday: Turkey Sandwich $3.25...$1.25 Imports Wednesday: Chicken Sandwich $3.25...$1.00 Bottles $1.00 Margaritas Thursday: Combo Sandwich $3.25...75c Draws $1.75 Wells Friday: BLT's $1.50...Bucket-O-Beer $7.00 Saturday: Turkey Club $2.75...$1.00 Shots Sunday: *$2.25 Cheeseburger, Fries & Drink or Draw*...50¢ Refills - Coming Soon - Spring/Summer New Food And Drink Specials! 6 Color TV's For All KU Games & Sporting Events SECTION TWO 30 WEDNESDAY, May 2, 1990 Recycling the often wasteful lifestyles of the rich and famous The Associated Press HOLLYWOOD — Do crenesters really care about spotted owls, the ozone layer and rain forests? Or are they simply tree-hugging the cause of the week? The evidence suggests that while numerous entertainers — actor Ed Begley Jr. and singer Jackson Browne among them — have adapted to the digital living practices, many others are slow to practice what they preach. At a recent Beverly Hills benefit for the Brazilian rain forest, an array of Hollywood celebrities -- superstars like Jane Fonda and agent Michael Olvitz -- were warned of the dangers of global warming and pollution. About 1,000 guests dined on organic foods. They raised $1.2 million for the environment. Then they went for their limbs, idling patiently, stretching for blocks. Exhaust filled the evening air. Producer Ted Field and wife Susie, hosts of the Beverly Hills rain forest benefit, are longtime contributors to the Natural Resources Defense Council and charter members of EMA. They also have been known to fly to their spacious Aspen home in a private jet. "I's great celebrities are getting involved," said Bob Hatty, a lobbyist for the Sierra Club. "But it's not about doing lunch, it's about chan ing the way that we live. Lifestyles of the rich and famous are often lifestyle of the wasteful and indulgent." "The entertainment industry is symbolic of the values of everyone in our culture," said Bonnie Reiss, who founded the Earth Communications mental team to aid with mental themes to television shows and movies. Environmentalism has yet to become Hollywood's flavor of the month. It has long been the land of excess, and tradition does not die and more." "We have to get the rich and famous to truly examine their lives-ress." Reiss said. At an April news conference for ABC's Earth Day special, celebrity performers were ferryed to the event in, you guessed it, limousines. in, if you guessed it, introduce Tom Cruise has visited the Amazonian rain forest and is a member of the ECO. So is his next movie about global warming? Not quite. Cruise stars next in "Days of Thunder," a movie about the hardly fuel-efficient sport of auto racing. Scientists say that about a third of all global-warming gases are transportation-produced; neither Paramount Pictures nor Cruise's publicist had received thousands of gallons of fuel were used making "Days of Thunder." Olivia Newton-John, a top environmental activist, is damaging a stretch of the Southern California coastline, her Malibu neighbors have charged in a civil complaint. Newton-John and her husband have polluted the ocean with tons of dirt and sand removed during the construction of their 6,000-square-foot home overlooking the beach, the complaint states. "It's blowy way out of proportion, Newton John said. "I had an environmental specialist look at the property. I care about the environment." Die-hard environmentalists don't wear furs or leather. So how did people dress at the Beverly Hills rain forest benefit? Singer Don Henley, who performed at the fund-raiser, said he had visited the cloakroom before coming on stage. What did he see? "About a quarter of a million dollars' worth of dead animals," he said. "We don't need any more definition of environmental problems," Begley said. "We need action." David Zucker, co-director of "Airplane!" and the director of "Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad," now drives an electric car. "Mr. Cloud," he says, "McCloud," has designed an ecologically balanced house in Colorado. "We're building it out of old tires packed with dirt," the actor said. Other leading earth activists include Ted Danson, Lloyd Bridges, Hart Boehner and Melanie Mayron. Reiss said Cruise organized a recycling program on the "Days of Thunder" set, lives in a modest house and drives his motorcycle to save fuel. 1. teel Tom Cruise is extremely committed." Reiss said. "Does he have room to grow? Everyone has room to grow." GOAL MAKER KANSAS 14 Pritchard celebrates after the Jayhawks win the 1988 national championship KANSAS 14 Some kids just do not look like they are cut out to play basketball. play basketball. "The skinny white kid walked through my door, and I thought, 'This kid can't play basketball.' But through the grapevine I heard he could play," said John Phillips, Edison High School basketball coach, recalling Kansas guard Kevin Prichard's first visit to Edison. "I knew immediately when he stepped on the floor how good he was, and for three years he was really dedicated, diving for every ball. When your best player does that, it spreads." Pritchard, who was recruited by former Kansas basketball coach Larry Brown out of Edison in Tulsa, Okla., proved during his four years at Kansas what Phillips knew after only minutes. Pritchard prospered at Edison as a two-time Oklahoma Player of the Year, averaging 23.0 points a game. He also was chosen as the Most Valuable Player for the McDonald's Derby classic and played on the North Squad at the U.S. Olympic Festival. During his four years at Kansas, Pritchard was a record-breaking guard in the Big Eight. His dedication to basketball did not with high school graduation. When he set his Converse high tops on the pine in Allen Field House, he broadened his loyalties. "As soon as the recruiting visit, I knew," said Pritchard, who was feverishly recruited by many colleges and universities, including Kentucky and Oklahoma. "There are so many factors — coach, school, academics — I felt strongly about Kansas." During his final year, Pritchard scored an average of 14.5 points a game, with 20 games in the 30-point range. He also led the team with 177 assists and 59 steals during the season. Kansas fans watched the senior play his way into positions on the eight all-star teams and the most valuable player in the BMA Holiday Classic. At the conclusion of his national season, the Jayhawks won the 1988 National NCAA Basketball vainable player. To list all of Pritchard's honors from his four years at Kansas would be a feat in itself, but one honor cannot be overplayed. 'I make goals.I set them pretty high so sometimes it's tough.' Kevin Pritchard was the fifth-highest scorer in Kansas basketball history with 1,692 points,the third-highest assist producer with 499 and the only player other than Danny Manning to start in more than 130 games. By Molly Reid Championship. years. Pritchard reached his ultimate college goal. Graftphlpship. Pritchard shot an average of 52.5 percent during six games of the NCAA tournament and pulled down a career-high seven rebounds in the semifinals, which vaulted the Jayhawks to their greatest success in 36 years. Pritchard reached his ultimate college goal. "I make goals," he said. "I set them prefi-ably so he could tough. My one goal was to win the National Championship. And before the season, it was winning the NIT. Kansas beat St. John's in the finals of the presession Dodge National Invitational Tournament, 66-57. "I'll settle for one NIT and a National Championship -- that's not too bad." Pritchard said. At the conclusion of his senior season, Pritchard became the fifth-highest scorer in Kansas basketball history with 1,692 points, the third-highest assist producer with 499 and the only player other than Danny Manning to start in more than 130 games. He was on the floor for the tip-off 131 times during his career. Many people close to Pritchard attribute most of his success to his competitive drive. success to his competitive drive. Teammates Jeff Gueldner and Mark Randall, who joined Pritchard as part of the 1986 recruiting class, said that Pritchard always worked hard to improve. Kansas coach Roy Williams said that only Chicago Bulls star Michael Jordan and a player at Charles D. Owen High School in Swanmanoa, N.C., Mary Ann Mvers, compared. "I can add Kevin Pritchard to the list of the three best competitors I've ever been around." Williams said, praising Pritchard's competitive instincts. "Kevin is unusual because his is strictly in basketball. It's his love and his passion." ban. It's his love and care. Phillips, who is now an assistant basketball coach at Oklahoma State, said Pritchard's refuse-to-lose attitude on the court made the difference. See PRITCHARD, p. 6b 1970 With Hilltop director, the children come first By Ines Shuk Kansan staff writer "Children have a good sense of humor. They are friendly and never afraid of taking second chances," said Reilier, sitting at her desk in a small office where both plastic toys and specialized books are welcome. Reiber, 57, has been director of KU's Hilltop Child Development Center since 1975. She also is the president of the Kansas Association for the Education of Young Children and an active member of at least eight other professional and academic organizations. A native of Evanston, Fla., Rei. never thought she was going to commit most of her time to children until she raised five of her own. "They helped me realize how cru Gretchen Pippenger/KANBAN Jean Reiber plays with 4-year-old Lauren Krivoshia at the center. cial the preschool years were in children's development," she said. Reiber, who went to work at age 40, earned a bachelor's degree in social work in 1964 from Florida State University. Eight years later, she earned a master's degree in human development from KU. The oldest of her children, Beth Reiber, 36, said she, her brother and her sisters were typical children who wanted their mother to be with them at all times. But university classes wouldn't allow Reiber to be with her children as much as they wanted her to, Beth said. "She would wake up early in the morning, get us ready to go to school, go to classes, come back home, prepare dinner and then she would disappear so she could study until midnight or later," she said. Young for her age "She's a lot younger than other women her age," Beth Reiber said. Indeed, Reiber's youthful personality and the diversity of her job are partially reflected by the items a visitor encounters in her office. A Raggedy Ann framed picture hangs from the wall behind her door. See REIBER, p. 6b Disc jockey enjoys reputation as 'equal opportunity offender' By Curus Khapp Kansas staff writer It's 5 a.m. and while most people are asleep, Randy Miller, disjockey for Q104 in Kansas City, Mo. is playing the day by getting crazy on the radio. Let's talk about professional women bowlers. meet Randy Miller, a man known "They're burly," the Miller says emphatically. "They men with wigs. They look like something and it looks like hair, it's Barney Rubble in a dress." "It's just my opinion," he said. "I mean, people are more than welcome to call in and argue with me. In fact, I enjoy that." Miller does not dislike professional women bowlers. They are just one subject that crossed his mind. Like all subjects that cross his mind, he has an opinion about them, and he wants to share it. He knows that women bowlers listening to him and feeling insulted does not worry him. at the Q104 radio station as the equal opportunity offender. He does what he wants and says what he thinks about anybody and anything. Besides arguing with people, Miller also enjoys testing people's intelligence. "they never can," Freeman said. "He loves people that call up and are stupid. That's humor. Let's face it, that's where it comes from." Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare at the University of Kansas who was invited to talk on Miller's show in Fall 1989, had a mixed reaction to Miller's humor. Dailley said his purpose for talking on Miller's show was similar to that for his Sunday night show on KLZR radio station in Lawrence. He gave advice to people who sought help in See MILLER, p. 8b 2B Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan 7 Layhawk Bookstore "At the top of Nalsmith Hill!" 843-3826 Ride the Bus Downtown on Saturdays! Natural Way and NATURAL WAY KU On Wheels 820 Mass. 841-0100 DRY MOUNTING SALE 1/2 OFF Normal dry mounting prices on 3/16" FOMECORE Prices vary depending on size EXAMPLE: Regular SALE 24" X 36" $13.00 $8.50 22" X 28" $10.00 $5.00 Extend the life of your poster by dry mounting it on FOMECORE instead of having pinholes in the corners or tape that won't Dry mounting keeps your poster flat & looking good in the humid Kansas climate. --- FRAMEWOODS GALLERY 819 MASS 842-4900 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Johnson Co. Kansas Clerical Positions File Clerks Typists Word Processors Data Entry Receptionists Light Industrial Packers Assembly Warehouse General Labor Lawn Maintenance Bossler Hix Bossler Hix • NO FEES • Temporaries .(913) 491-0944 Call collect for details & application The way you like it, Where you want it When you want it! Coors Coors Light Pizza Express Bud Bud Light Wednesday 50¢ DRAWS & 50¢ SLICES Buy any 10" pizza and get the second of equal value or less for 99¢ Buy any 14" pizza and get the second of equal value or less for $1.99 943 Massachussetts 842-6161 Limited time offer. NOTICE A panel of KU students, faculty, and staff is currently reviewing the Kansas Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The review is focused on evaluaton of attitudes and behaviors that reflect the chapter level of awareness and sensitivity to cultural, racial and gender differences. We want to hear from you (faculty/staff/students) in writing if you have positive, negative or neutral firsthand experience(s) with the SAE's in these matters. Please include: - a description of the situation date, time place, title of the event (if any) name of persons involved - a description of the impact the situation had on you - your name-printed and signed your address and phone number (so we can contact you for clarification) Address your letter to: SAE Review Panel c/o Dean of Student Life 216 Strong Hall Lawrence, KS 66045 Thank you in advance for your thoughtful participation in this important process. All comments will be held as STRICTLY confidential by the panel. We must hear from you by Friday, May 11th. Alderman threatens violence Militia will attack unless Milwaukee inner city life improves The Associated Press MILWAUKEE — Alderman Michael McGee scares some people, disguits others. He certainly has them talking. McGee began recruiting street gang members and others in March for a "Black Panther Community Militia" and threatened to send it on terrorist attacks if his demands for money were met. He wasn't met by 1983. Likely targets would be sporting events and busy freeways, he said. He said the militia already had 500 members. One anti-crime activist predicted that people were going to get hurt. The mayor said McGee should resign unless he renounced violence. But he also asked people to look beyond McGee's rhetoric to examine the poverty and violence in the inner city. McGee said he had worked within the system most of his public career, whether as a Vietnam War medic, political activist or alderman. But he said he was fed up with the system's failure to improve the life of poor minorities in one of the nation's most segregated cities. "I've been doing things the so-called right way." Meee said. "I'm opposed to violence, but I think at some point it becomes cowardiness on the part of the Black community to keep letting people abuse us." McGee wants the city to spend $100 million on training and jobs for inner-city residents, redraw aldermanic districts to improve minority representation on the Common Council and implement some of a task force's recommendations for improving unemployment, crime, teen pregnancy and other social ills among minorities. He is one of three Blacks on the 16 member council. Whistle blowing In his five years as an alderman representing a mostly Black, poor crime-ridden district on Milwaukee north side, McGee has staged the protests to call attention to the iine city. He once led a whistle-blowing demonstration during a visit by Jimmy Carter, saying the former president's effort to build homes in inner-city areas was a facade that helped few if any. 'I've been doing things the so-called right way. I'm opposed to violence, but I think at some point it becomes cowardiness on the part of the Black community to keep letting people abuse us.' Michael McGee Milwaukee alderman Another time he wore a paper bag over his head for the annual Common Council photograph, saying he was embarrassed to be seen with the council after it approved a city permit that cuts services to the inner city. Many people, including some constituents, were angered by McGee's threats. Some called for his removal from office. "This Black Panther thing has caught me completely off guard, I think it's going to get a lot of people hurt," said Queen Hyler, who heads the anti-incident group Stupe Vieira. "President Bash recently raised she asked McGee to resign and had threatened to circulate petitions in his district seeking a recall election. Hyler first met McGeen in 1981 when they worked together in a movement that helped win a $500,000 settlement with the police. A Black man who died in police custody MGee used to demonstrate and march like everyone else, but in recent years he's been holder once in youth political clout behind him, she said. Others, including Mayor John Norrquist, Common Council members and clergy, denounced the threats of violence, but they urged people to consider the conditions that anger McGee. "It's easy for us to focus on Michael McGee and ignore the violence that already exists," said Jack been an escalation of words and more attention focused on Michael McGee than on the issues." Murtaugh said McGee wanted to rectify the violence of racism that had isolated Blocks within an 8-by 5-mile block on the city's north side that is plagued by crime, poverty, unsafe housing and unemployment. 'It'll eat you alive.' Common Council President Thomas P. Donegan said some of McGee's demands might be met. In Murtaugh, executive director of the Interfaith Conference of Milwaukee, a religious group of 11 denominations. "It appeared to us there had the meantime. Donegan said, he knew that it might be toning down some threats. "I think what Mike is saying to people who want to be in his militia now is a lot more positive. . . I think he has, without admitting it, back down from some of his earlier, more violent statements." Donegan said. McGee, who worked for the original Black Panthers group in the 1970s, counts among his heroes such Black leaders as Nat Turner, who led a slave revolt; Ms. Garvey, a Jamaican activist in the 1920s; and assassinated Black Muslim leader. He said his militia would be used for neighborhood patrols and economic boycots while also undergoing military training. "We're going to continue to do a lot of no-volunteers between now and 1865," he said. "I'd worry more if I wasn't doing what I'm doing. It would take a bigger toll," he said. "I would suffer a lot more, but it didn't do anything I'll eat you alive." M McGee said he would remain on the Common Council even though the mayor and others have said he was no longer there, he continued to advocate violence. "I have no plans of giving up my participation. I think that's what a politician should be about — leading the people," he said. "In 1998 when I start kicking butt in Milwaukee, I'll still be an alderman." Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for Driving by BAUCH & LOMB Available at The Ec. Shop 732 Massachusetts LSAT GMAT GRE THE EXCURSION REVIEW For the Best Prep CALL 843-3131 GOLD RING SALE $75 OFF 18K $50 OFF 14K $25 OFF 10K TAKE ANOTHER $20.00 OFF -Limited special offer- ON ANY 10K, 14K OR 18K GOLD RING SALE DISCOUNT NOW IN EFFECT JOSTENS AMERICA'S COLLEGE RING Date: May 1-3 Time: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Deposit Required: $20.00 Payment Plan Available BONUS Promotional Offer Place: KU Bookstore, Kansas Union Mess with your Jostens representative for full details. See our complete ring selection on display in your college bookstore. } University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 3B HOUSING GUIDE TRAILRIDGE Now leasing for summer & fall 1990 spacious & comfortable 1 & 2 BR apartments short term summer leases on studios - 3 pools - tennis courts - on KU bus route - on KU bus route - gas heat & water - gas near & water paid on apartments - convenient location - laundry facilities Hurry! Call Now! convenient location Hurry Call Now! 2500 W. 6th * 843-7333 TRAILRIDGE $50 OFF Bring in this ad and you will receive $50 off 1 month's rent with the signing of a 12 months lease. months lease. * On-Site Management 1 & 2 bedroom units newly relocated * On-Use Site On-Use Laundry facilities * On bus route Near shopping Water pay new appliances * Ample off-street parking Call for an appointment today or come by during the following hours: M-W-F anytime after 2:00 T-R anytime after 4:00 Sat-Sun all day * Two and Bedrooms available $100.00 security deposit will hold apartment until fall. Hillview Apartments 1745 W. 24th (Southeast corner of 24th and Ridge Court) Hillview Apartments 1745 W. 24th (Southeast corner of 24th and Ridge Court) 843-0106 843-0106 Georgetown Apartments Summer Special - KU Bus Route-Holidome June & July 1/2 Price with a 12 month lease Good with leases starting June 1st & August 1st - On Site MGT./Reliable 24 hour Maintenance * Wired for Cable TV/Mini Blinds Throughout * Microwaves & Dishwashers - *Fenced Pool Area with Tanning Deck & Barbecue - washer/Dryers or hook-ups available - 10 or 12 month leases/Low Security Deposit - No pets Office Hours: M,W,F 2:30-5:30/ T,R by appt. 630 Michigan 749-7279 FIND OUT WHERE THE FUN IS LiveWire Every Thursday THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN EDDINGHAM PLACE 24TH &EDDINGHAM (next to Gammons) Offering Luxury 2 BR apartments at an Affordable Price !! Office Hours: 12-6pm M - F 9-3pm Sat. No Appt. Necessary 841-5444 Professionally managed by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc for your group projects can be made by calling Mike at 864-4358. Money $4/hour/person Aspen West - 1 & 2 Bedroom - Apartments 1 bd. $290 2 bd. $360 - Water paid - On KU Bus Route - Walking distance from KU 2900 W.15th Come by to see apartments weekday afternoons 841-3519 843-1433 WOODWAY MORTGAGES Features: We also offer one, two, three bedroom apartments, lofthouses and duplexes at the other near-campus locations. *Newly constructed in 1987 *One, two, and three bedroom apartments *Bathroom, fire over & microwave in each apartment *Excellent energy & sound control *On K.U. bus route *On K.U. bus route Prices: *On-site management *Carpports available* *Dishwasher* *Mim heat* *Mim blinds* *Deadbell locks* *Double stainless steel sinks* *No pets* *1 bedroom $330, $340 *2 bedroom $435, $445 *3 bedroom $65$ Office: 611 Michigan Corner of 6th and Michigan, across from Harddee 3:30-5:30 Mon.-Pri. 8:30-10:30 a.m. Sat. 843-1971 Office closed during finals. Showing by appointment only. Don't Buy, Just Use Ours. KINGS When you consider buying a home computer and paying rent for an apartment, it just doesn't compute. But now there's an alternative; we've got a computer facility that's the perfect place to work on homework, write term papers or organize your schedule. For your convenience, we have both Macintosh and IBM. Now, you can get all of the advantages of living in a residence hall with the freedom and privacy of an off-campus lifestyle. Plus, there are added benefits--like a fitness center, great social activities and our fantastic "Dine anytime" program. 1800 NAISMITH DRIVE 843-8559 Call today for more information NAISMITH HALL Stay on the ball. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Sports Page Research saves lives. I American Heart Association WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE Park 25 - 1 & 2 bedroom apartments - fully equipped kitchens with dish-washers - laundry rooms or washer/dryer hook ups - 2 pools - volleyball court - on bus route - close to shopping 2401 W.25th St 842-1455 Boardwalk apartments "Your Home Away From Home" TOP HAT 1 & 2 BDR available Indoor/outdoor pools heated spa 24 hour professional on-site management & maintenance 皇 10. 12 month leases available New appliances, carpet & ceiling fans 2 on-site KU bus stops Small pets allowed T 2 Laundry Facilities 842-4444 S 顶尖 Mon-Fri 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 524 Frontier Rd. SUMMER SUBLEASE! Bedroom Studio-Sunrise Terrace Apt. June and Joly Close To Campus Call 841-5389 Quail Creek Apartments Quail Creek Apartments Accepting Deposits For Fall Leases Please Call 843-4300 APPLE LANE APARTMENTS Apple Lake Apartment Studio Apartments Accepting Deposits For Fall Leases Accepting Deposits For Fall Leases Please Call 843-4300 - 1 BR House AVAILABLE NOW - 2 BR Houses - 4/5 BR House - and Spacious Two Bedroom Apts. - Duplexes - 4/5 BR House 842-2288 - Office Spaces - Others SPANISH CREST APARTMENTS Affordable, Attractive and Spacious Two Bedroom Apts. (Now leasing for May & Fall) - On Bus Route - Swimming Pool - Plenty of Parking - Furnished Kitchens - Plenty of Parking - Low Utilities - Low Utilities - $210 a Month - $310 a Month 2706 Redbud #11 (1 Block E. 27th & Iowa) 1-5 P.M. Reserve Your Home Now! We offer Completely Furnished *1*2*3*4 Bedroom Apartments Designed with you in mind! OPEN DAILY Go to... - Custom furnishings * Design for privacy * Customize retail * Close to shopping & KU * Many great locations Offering: 1310 Kentucky Purdue 841.5255 Kentucky Place - 749-0445 Hanover Place - 841-1212 Sundance - 841-5255 7th & Florida Tanglewood - 749-2415 Campus Place - 841-1429 Orchard Corners - 749-4226 MASTERCRAFT MASTERCRAFT 842-4455 SCOOTER Wake Up To CEDARWOOD APTS Now Leasing Summer & Fall Newly Redecorated Units Air conditioning & Pool Close to Mall 1 Block from KU Bus route Studios - New appliances 1 & 2 Bedroom Apts Duplexes (3 & 4 Bedroom) call Pat today 843-1116 2411 Cedarwood Ave. Are you Dreaming of... ... - New appliances * Quiet neighbors - New carpet - Quiet neighbors - More closet space - More closet space - Larger rooms - Larger rooms - Larger rooms * Lower utility bills top Dreaming & Visit Office Hours Mon. Fri. 9-6, Sat. 12-5 2166 W. 26th 843-6646 South Pointe 4B Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Listen to Mother Nature. 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Shipping Burlington Air Service Overnight Deliveries Western Union PS EXPRESS Pack & Ship Express, Inc. 2449 Iowa Street * Lawrence, Kansas FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 842-3413 Physician proposes rural AIDS network TOPEKA -- Charles Kongsberg does not doubt that AIDS remains largely an urban phenomenon or that Karnas is a low-incidence state. The Associated Press But Konigsberg, a physician who is one of 15 members of the National Commission on AIDS, still worries about the ability of rural communities to handle cases of the deadly disease. He talks about the need for a rural AIDS network to provide counseling and treatment for AIDS victims, and to find them where services are available. But money is preventing the state from starting such a network. "We just don't have a lot of funds to give people right now," said Königberg, director of health for the Kanango department of Health and Environment. simely cases of AIDS were diagnosed in Kansas in 1989, according to the most recent department figures, Since 1981, 341 AIDS cases have been diagnosed in the state, and the fatality rate from the disease, which attacks the body's immune system, is about 60 percent. Most of the cases were reported in five populous counties: 85 in Johnson County, 70 in Sedwick, 68 in Widway, 30 in Shawnee and 15 in Leawood. The other 100 counties had 72 cases among them, or 22 percent. Konigsberg said he thought more reports of cases would come from the less-populous counties, in part because some AIDS victims would leave metropolitan areas to go home to friends and family. "I don't know at this point whether there will be a greater percentage of cases in the rural areas of the state," Kornilov told me. "Absolutely, the villagers will increase." But rural areas have a problem. But rural areas have a problem. "Access to health care is a big challenge," he said. "Now, guess what? We've superimposed AIDS on that." During fiscal 1990, the department is expected to spend almost $1 million for AIDS programs, of which about $715,000 comes from the federal government. The agency funnels about $240,000 in federal money to county health departments to help finance testing and counseling centers. In addition, the state is spending more than $88,000 to disseminate information about the disease and about $7,000 to help buy the AIDS drug AZT for persons who cannot afford it. Ninety cases of AIDS were diagnosed in Kansas in 1989, according to the most recent health department figures. the progress of federal legislation that would earmark $600 million for AIDS programs. Half of the money would go to cities and counties with 2,000 or more reported cases. The other half would go to the states, based on the number of reported cases. If the legislation passes, Kansas stands to gain about $900,000, Königsberg said. State health officials are watching Kongsberg said the money would be used to help establish a network designed to provide services for those with the disease and to start early treatments, such as the use of AZT. "I think we could do something creative and constructive with it," he said. The department must confront other issues concerning AIDS and rural victims. In October, the department released a survey indicating that a large majority of Kansans know how AIDS is transmitted, such as through unsate sex practices or the sharing of condoms. The same survey showed that some Kansans still have misconceptions about the disease. For example, 22 percent of the 682 persons who responded to the $30,000 survey said it was likely that a person could catch the disease from an insect bite, and 17 percent said a person could be infected by working near someone with the virus that causes AIDS. In addition, 33 percent said that people with AIDS should be kept out of public swimming pools, and 24 percent said they avoided people they thought were homosexual because of concerns about the disease. The findings caused department officials to reconsider the focus of their informational materials. In addition, there is the issue of keeping the identity of victims confidential so that they do not automatically lose their jobs and have difficulty finding housing. Indeed, the department will not release statistics on a county-by-county basis because officials fear that doing so could inadvertently identify someone in a rural county. Clone farm is variation in a world of likeness The Associated Press FREESTONE, Calif. — Fraize, the four-horned Navajo-Juro冲 ram and a flock of skinny turkeys look freaky, but Hans Peter they can help save when he says they can help save a world consumed by sineness. The risks of factory farming that produces cheap, easy-to-raise, clone-like animals ultimately outweigh the benefits, said the manager of the C.S. Foundation farm. The farm is a long-term, serious, serious loss." There has been increasing interest in rare breeds. But Heidi Johnson, a University of California-Davis agricultural extension spokeswoman, chalked it up to a fad. Others disagree. "When plants and animals are identical genetically, they have the same strengths and weaknesses," said a paper produced by the private New York City-based C.S. Fund. "When one variety suffers from some plant or animal populations can be irretrievably lost." The report said, "Betwen 1600 and 1900, experts estimate that one plant or animal became extinct every four years. Today it is estimated that at least one species is disappearing each day." Jorgensen said, "Extinction is forever. You don't get them back. Our position is: Don't throw the child or grandchildren might need them." Jorgensen compared the situation to the Irish Potato Famine. About 750,000 people died from disease or starvation from 1845 to 1847, when the potato crop failed because of a plant blight which killed thousands and had been avoided if the Irish had relied on more varieties. "That was a crisis in genetic diversity." he said. The C.S. Foundation is financed by Maryane Mott, a Montana rancher, nature photographer and General Motors heirs. About 15 acres of land in the sleepy town of Freestone, population 54, about 65 miles north of San Francisco. LSAT GMAT CRE LSAT GMAT GRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW CALL 843-3131 732 Mass. 843-8611 The Etc. Shop Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES for DRIVING BY BADGERS & LOEWS Stay on the ball. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Sports Page "NO ONE HAS BEEN BARRED ON ACCOUNT OF HIS RACE FROM FIGHTING OR DYING FOR AMERICA — THERE ARE NO "WHITE"' OR "COLORED" SIGNS ON THE FOXHOLES OR GRAVEYARDS OF BATTLE." SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT FROM THE STUDENT SENATE MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE JFK-MESSAGE TO CONGRESS ON A PROPOSED CIVIL RIGHTS BILL JUNE 4,1963 SIDEWALK SALE! Head to the Kansas or Burge Union to grab some Super Sidewalk Sale savings. This event comes only once a year and there's good reason for that. The savings are so incredible that you just can't pass them up. In front of the Kansas and Burge Unions May 1 & 2, from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. You'll find us here with quality merchandise courteous service and super savings. all for you. KU KU BOOKSTORES University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 Health 5B When Seconds Count... Plot Mike Palmer and flight nurses Craig Fordham and Danny Ohi rch out on another call. The LifeWATCH unit averages six flights a day. WESLEY MEDICAL CENTER LIFE WATCH Palmer records daily flight information in his log book. Accounts of each flight must be documented. N Tamara Huts, a registered nurse in perinatal care, discusses details for care of the newborn patient. Infants and pregnant mothers are the unit's most frequent patients. LifeWATCH team members thrive on life-and-death situations, waiting to bring a miracle to Kansas' critically injured patients WICHITA - A call comes in and the team responds. Within moments, the team has dressed, loaded the helicopter and pushed it out of the hangar and onto the runway. The process takes about three minutes. The chopper takes off and heads for its destination. The team knows it will be required to work as quickly and efficiently as possible. Because more often than not, seconds can mean the difference between life and death. This is the world of LifeWATCH, an air-and land-traum unit designed to transport critically ill and injured patients to hospitals and offer on-the-spot care to stabilize patients before transport. LifeWATCH operates out of HCA Wesley Medical Center in Wichita but serves most of southern and western Kansas, said Danny Ohl, a flight nurse in the program. He said LifeWATCH offered four types of trauma transport services, including maternal, neonatal and critical care and first-response transports. LifeWATCH, which began in 1974 as one of the nation's first mobile perinatal units, was one of the first hospital-based air ambulance services in the country. Ohl, who has been with the program two years, said the seemingly incredible pressure that went with a job full of life-and-disease situations did not bother him. In fact, he said he thrived on it. "I really wouldn't want to be doing anything else," Ohl said. "I think a job that did not test and challenge my abilities every time out would be much more stressful to me." Craig Fortham, another flight nurse in the program, said he also was attracted to the challenge and excitement of the job. "To me, life-and death situations are what make the job exciting." Fordham said. "I think they are a breeze. If you get stressed out in those types of situations, you really wouldn't want to have this job." Not many people would. On a weekly basis, LifeWATCH responds to numerous gunshot wounds, farm accidents, automobile accidents and other life-threatening situations. Fordham said this also was not a problem. "You get de-sensitized very quickly when you work this job," he said. "I have seen some really horrible things. I honestly don't think Palmer is one of five helicopter pilots in the program. All have military flight experience. He said hospital transfers of cardiac patients were the most frequent calls the team received, but not the most difficult "First-response calls at night are the biggest challenges for the pilots," he said. "It is very difficult trying to maintain control with perfect precision at night." there is any situation I could run into that would shock me anymore." The rescue team unloads a patient from one of the two airplanes used by the unit. Mike Palmer, helicopter pilot for the program, said accidents happened any time of the day or night, which forced members to be prepared to rush off at a moment's police to answer a call. The team's headquarters is in a building at Col. M. James Jabara Airport in Wichita, only a few miles away from Wesley. The flight team spends some of its time waiting for calls in a furnished apartment, which has three bedrooms, a kitchen, a living area, a television and a VCR cary is our home. It is a home where the team stays when not on missions during the 12- to 18-hour shifts a day, during which many of the members often are on call. "we cook here, we eat here and we sleep here," Palmer said. "The waiting isn't that bad because this basically is our home." WATCH N750P PRIVATE ORIENTAL AIRPORTS while it is LifeWATCH has grown steadily during its 15 years in service. In 1974, the program started out with one specially designed perinatal ambulation. Today the program uses four fixed-wing aircraft, two helicopters and three ground vehicles. can. Fordham said spending those excessive amounts of time with the other members helped the unit to During the past 15 years, Life-WATCH has transported more than 12,000 patients and has flown more than one million miles. More than 80 people are involved in the program, including filmmakers, dispatchers, drivers, physicians, pilots and administrative staff. Story by Steve Bailey Photography by Steve Traynor Helicopter crews on duty lift off within three minutes of all first-response calls, and fixed wing flights, which fly to spots across the country, take off within 30 minutes of the official request. This is a far cry from the days when a single mobile unit sped across town in 1974 to transport a premature two-and-a-half pound infant within minutes from St. Francis Hospital to Wesley for emergency care. "Being able to work with a great group of people who are sharp and on top of things makes things much easier to bear," he said. "I don't care what type of work a person is in. If you do your job well and take pride in your work and those that you work with, you are going to be successful." work more efficiently. These are the precious moments that separate life from death. of the unit's patente A relative waits for news about the condition of one of the unit's patients. 6B Wednesday, May 2, 1990 / University Daily Kansan 491 Pritchard Continued from p. 1 "He looks like a choir boy, but he's mean as sent on the court," Phillips said. "I told him I was going to chew him out in practice so his teammates would rally around him. He'd work hard, though, not to mess up. Then, after about a week, he asked why I didn't yell at him, and I'd say I would Pritchard spends much of his off-court time with Jodi Oelschlager. Randall said he and Pritchard joked about the fact that he messed up enough during his freshman year at Kansas to attract the shouts of Brown and former teammate Chris Piner. Piper, who played with Pritchard on the Jayhawks' championship team, said, "I rode Kevin pretty hard because I saw what kind of player he was. I didn't realize it. I was the least aftest I think I knew that one once." Pritchard said he became mentally tough under Brown's scrutiny. "He was great from the day he entered KU," said Brown, who now is coaching for the San Antonio Spurs. "He's always put faith in his coaches and has a willingness to learn. He's tough." After four years of loyal service to the Jayhawks, Pritchard may not have to downplay his chirpy appearance, but he will have to prove himself at the next level: the National Basketball Association. The promotion "I just want to play basketball. That's the bottom line," Pritchard said. Brown said Pritchard's chances were good. "Without a question he will be in the NBA." Brown said. "I would love to have him, but I don't know if we could do that." Not doubt that he'll make the NBA. FLEE FE MARCH Kaith Thorpel/KANSAS As Pritchard's opportunity to pro ve himself in the big leagues approach, he said he would not count on playing professionally until he was on the court, when another of an NBA team. Any NBA team teeth. "I still don't know," he said. "Success is a journey, not an end. It's a dream." Pritchard's friends and family have been dreaming too. "It keeps falling into place for him," said Julia Pritchard, Kevin's mother. "It's like a storybook I really feel like it is going to hank. really hate it like he'd "He's just worked so hard. There's no doubt in my mind; I know him." Born competitive 'He looks like a choir boy, but he's mean as snot on the court. I told him I was going to chew him out in practice so his teammates would rally around him. He'd work so hard, though, not to mess up. Then, after about a week, he asked why I didn't yell at him, and I'd say I would . . . when he messed up.' John Phillips High school coach son's competitive basketball drive before he was able to dribble a basketball. "Kevin is self-made," she said. "I remember when he was about three or four, he would sit and watch basketball, and if the team in the white didn't win, he'd cry. It didn't matter who was playing. He would always give me the dark team and he would take the white. "He's been competitive all his life, but sensitive too." Pritchard moved around a lot as a child. His family he went from Noblesville, Ind., to Independence to Tulsa, Okla., and finally to Lawrence. Although, but the abbreviation kielathelmos of Indiana that interested him in basketball, it was the Boy's Club that made him good. "From the first day I signed him up, he hardly ever came home," his sister said. "He's spent all afternoon there from the day he was the greatest babysitter for $10 a year." Pritchard said the support of his parents had been one of his greatest assists. "I've been really lucky," he said. 'They would back me in anything.' Pritchard's parents share the same quiet confidence and modesty that make their only child the person he is. "I can say I taught him everything he knows," said Steve Prichard, Kevin's father, "but that would probably not be the truth. We just got luck with a good kid. Maybe he did learn by watching his mother and me, but our secret was that we never pushed him into anything. "I'd pick 1,000 people before picking me as having a kid like Kevin." Off the court Julia Pritchard said she saw her One of the things Pritchard said he His girlfriend, Jodi Oeerschlager, who played volleyball for Kansas, may have the best grasp of that. prided himself on is his ability to separate his social life and his basketball life. "I think people think he's quiet and introverted or cocky," she said. "He's the farthest from cocky. He's probably the most hyper person I've ever met. He's the funniest person. "He's really different than on the court. He is really concerned with the things going on with people close to him. He tries to keep basketball on the court. After a loss he is upset, but he realizes it's a game." "There are some times when I like to be alone," he said. "I think as an athlete, you either shelter yourself or try to blend in. I try to blend in." Pritchard said he wanted to be as much like a typical student as he could be. accountant in Kansas City, Mo.; and Jeff Mullins, Leavenworth senior, are an active part of Pritchard's life away from Kansas basketball. "I'm a regular person," he said. "I enjoy the things that any other person would." Pritchard has three roommates, none of whom play basketball. Donald Loudermark, a close friend of the Pritchards; Kevin McCluskey, an Pritchard, who is majoring in communication studies and sociology dreams of coaching the Jayhawks someday. He said he realized that a basketball career could be short, so he made his education as important as basketball I pursue on success at whatever, and I will put my heart into it," he said. "I like to compete and to succeed. That's my nature. When it comes to crunch time or test time, I get the job done." Pritchard is planning a future that will incorporate everything he loves: basketball, friends and family. And possibly, when he walks into the arena of the San Antonio Spurs, the Los Angeles Lakers or wherever he may go, a coach will whisper to his assistant, "This kid doesn't look like a basketball player." Reiber Continued from p. 1 Dozens of coloring books are scattered on a couch. A rag dangle hangs above her files. Toys cover other furniture and a red square box containing wooden toys lies on the floor. "The minute I come in, I never know what I will be doing." Reiber said. As the day progresses, she finds herself dealing with numerous tasks. "The reason I can handle it is because I had five children," she said. "I seem to have that personality, so I can work on 10 or 15 things at the same time." Reibner's husband, Frank, a KU professor of design, said his wife thrived on being busy not only in her work life, but also in her private life. "She tries to balance them," he said, adding that she enjoyed taking on additional responsibilities. Indeed, Reiber has been active outside her job at Hilltop. Last summer in Salina she was co-chairman of leadership Conference of KAEYC Reiber also was co-chairman of the Conference of the Midwestern Association for the Education of Young Children from March 29 to April 1 in Kansas City, Mo. About 3,500 people were registered for the conference. "It was a wonderful experience. It brought Kansas and Missouri together, and people thought it was well organized." Reiber said. The conference's theme was "Unity Within Diversity." Reiber's involvement is explained by her interest in public policy, especially in child advocacy. Her work with KAEYC includes tracking child-related bills in the Legislature, developing position papers, and organizing the association's monthly newsletter. Monica Matyak, a Topea sophmore who works as secretary at Hilltop and assists Reiber, said Reiber's interaction with KAEYC had made Hilltop a better child care center. Reiber's commitment to children isn't limited to paperwork. On a daily basis, she visits Hillop's eight "She has so much experience," Matyak said. "She encourages teachers to come with questions or anything that will help improve Hilltop programs." Committed to children 'The reason I can handle it is because I had five children. I seem to have that personality, so I can work on 10 or 15 things at the same time.' — Joan Reiber programs to observe the children and to develop ideas for future programs. "Sometimes I am a friendly visitor. Sometimes I am a disciplinarian." she said. Kathy G Gottlieb, head of Hilltop's board of directors, said that Reiber's professional dedication to Hilltop was an asset to the center. Gottlieb said that Reiber's credentials were outstanding and that she understood that child development was necessary for child care. "She is a very strong advocate of choosing qualified people to work with the children at Hilltop," Gotlieb said. "I feel fortunate having my children at Hilltop." Although Reiber loves teaching, the center's size requires her to remain as full-time administrator. But she says she is not giving up her training to teach after retirement which will come in three to five years. Reiber said she cried when she left Florida in 1964 with her husband. But she would like to stay in Kansas after retiring. "Now, he wants to go back and I don't," Reiber said. Yet, she might consider teaching in a community college in Florida. Reiber said she would miss the children, their parents and the staff at Hillop, but she viewed retirement as a good opportunity to become more active in children's advocacy on a national level. After Reiber retires, she will be able to continue doing 10 to 15 things at the same time. She will watch television while reading. She will take care of her garden while designing a new strategy to endorse a children's bill. And no matter where Joan Reiber might be, among those 10 to 15 things, one will always stand out. She will never stop working to give children better opportunities to become happy adults. NIKE NIKE INTER NATIONAL THE NIKE INTERNATIONAL COLLECTION THE NIKE INTERNATIONAL COLLECTION. Every part has a purpose. Store Hours 9:30-8 Mon, Tues, Wed 9:30-8:30 Thurs 9:30-6 Fri, Sat JACK'S JN BITCH'S SPORTING GOODS 840 Mass. 842-2442 LET'S GO Travel Guides! Harvard Student Agencies, Inc. 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! 1990 LET'S GO! LET'S GO! 1990 USA EUROPE Celebrating 30 years as "The Bible of the Budget Traveler." It's the guidebook for the independent budget traveler. Full of great sightseeing advice, up-to-date information on restaurants, hotels, inns, and a commitment to money-saving travel. Perfect for those studying abroad! St. Martin's PRESS OREAD S BOOKSTORE NO. 10473 University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, May 2, 1990 A. Jefferson gave broccoli presidential acceptance The Associated Press POUND RIDGE, N.Y. — Friends of broccoli, saddened by George Bush's distaste for it, can get a lift from another president. Thomas Jefferson, master gardener as well as author of the Declaration of Independence, grew numerous varieties. Broccoli - green, purple, white — are mentioned repeatedly in garden notes Jefferson kept throughout his life. He planted the vegetable in his own kitchen garden at Monticello in Omaha and exchanged seeds with friends. Anyone looking for a patron saint of gardening will find the perfect model in Jefferson. "No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth, and no culture comparable to that of the garden." he once said. Jefferson, who was a statesman, inventor, architect, astronomer and founder of the University of Virginia, lived to age 83. But despite his myriad activities, he had time for a new book. It was published dated March 30, 1768, when he was 22: "Purple hyacinth begins to bloom." The burdens of the presidency did not stop him. On April 6, 1804, for example, he wrote, "Sowed seeds of the East India asparagus in small bed." Sometimes he jotted garden notes on odd sheets of paper. in 1808, his last year in the White House, Jefferson wrote to a friend, "It is now among my most fervent longings to be on my farm, which with a garden and fruiter, will provide the principal occupation in retirement." The nation's third president left a wealth of material about his gardening and farming, highlights of which are in the 704-page "Thomas Jefferson's Garden Book." First published in 1944 by the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, the book was reprinted in 1885. The gardens at Monticello in Charloteville, Va., were restored more than 50 years ago by the Garden Club of Virginia. Vegetable growers will be fascinated by the kitchen garden stretching 1,000 feet along the sunny southern slope and containing more than 250 varieties, including English peas, Jefferson's favorite. Through correspondence and accounts of others, the Garden Book, annotated by Edwin Morris Bettis, a biology professor at the University of Virginia, gives rare glimpses of Jefferson. One chronicler, Margaret Bayard Smith, reports that he kept a pet mocking bird in a caged suspended among his flowers and plants in the White House. white house. "Whenever he was alone, he opened the cage and let the bird fly about the room," Smith wrote. "It would alight on his table and regale him with its sweetest notes or perch on his shoulder and take its food from his lips." 168. The correspondence reveals Jefferson on expeditions in southern France and Italy while he was minister to France, always looking for varieties of crops such as rice that might do well in the United States. He wrote, for example, "The olive tree is least known in America, and yet the most worthy of being known. Of all the gifts of heaven to man, it is next to the most precious . . . Perhaps it may claim a preference even to bread, because there is such an infinitude of vegetables which it renders a proper and comfortable nourishment." Intimate views of Jefferson as gardener and farmer in his old age also are contained in "Jefferson and His Time, the Sage of Monticello," the sixth and final volume of Dumas Malone's epic biography. His previous volumes won the Pulitzer Prize for history in 1975. The books say Jefferson collected seeds everywhere — county neighbors, nurserymen, naturalists, from a friend in Italy, even from Gen. Lafayette's aunt. Smith, who was the wife of the publisher of the National Intelligence, visited him in his retirement and reported that he kept his vegetable seeds in a little close. Peas and beans and both the other seeds were in little containers, labeled and hung in order on little books. in order of death. As the years went on, Jefferson suffered from rheumatism, but his spirit was not dampened. spirit was not dampener. "Though an old man," he said, "I am but a young gardener." You should know: The rate of extinction of species from this earth was 1 every 4 years from 1600 to 1900. It's now estimated to be 1000 per year. KANSAN If you need abortion or birth control services, we can help. Confidential pregnancy testing *Safe, affordable abortion services* *Birth control* *Tubal ligation* *Gyn exams* *Testing and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases.* Providing quality health care to women since 1974. Insurance. VISA & MasterCard accepted. 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We have positions all over the Kansas City and Johnson County area. So if you are looking to get the most out of summer, we can give you the funds to do so. B-G Maintenance Management 1225 East 18th Street K.C. MO 9563 Nall, Overland Park 3500 Strong, K.C.K or call (816)421-8088 Equal Opportunity Employer Something for those of you who aren't taking Stanley H. Kaplan Prep. We've produced more top scores on tests like the LSAT, GMAT, GRE and MCAT than all other courses combined. Which means if you're not talking Kaplan Prep™ you may need to take more than a #2 pencil to the test. STANLEY H. KAPLAN Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances Summer Classes For Fall Exams Call 842-5442 1012 Mass. Suite 215 Wednesdav. May 2; 1990 / University Daily Kansan Miller Continued from p. 1 their sexual relationships. "I think Randy is incredibly talented and good at what he does, but I also think he's a male chauvinist pig." Bailey said. "I don't know if that's what he is or if that's his persona on the radio." Dailey said he thought Miller was chauvinistic when a woman called up on the show asking for advice about her parents. She asked her if she had any clothes on. "I appreciated his sense of humor," Dalley said. "It's just that occasionally he would say some humorous things I thought were potentially hurtful." Miller said he was not on a mission to hurt people's feelings. "Most of the stuff we do is tongue in cheek, and hopefully people can take it with a grain of salt," he said. "We're just having fun, sometimes at other people's expense. But we don't try to single out one group." Miller said he thought people sometimes took his comments too seriously. One time he was talking on the air to a man he had met before. He was holding up a man's shirt, referring to the man's appearance the day they had met. He asked the man whether he had bought his suit at Wal-Mart. Soon after that the station got a call from a representative protesting the comment "It ites to the point where after a while you think: Man, why don't I just play a record and shut up?" Miller said. "But I can't do that." Andy Taylor, Caney freshman, said he started listening to Miller's show last semester when he came to KU. He liked listening to the show because it was interesting to find out whom Miller would cut down next, he said. Taylor recalled a time when Miller was ridiculing the Future Farmers of America. After it, "It was so crude it was hilarious," Taylor said. "He reminds me a lot of David Letterman." A family man at home One person who can put Miller into perspective is his wife, Renee. Renee Miller described her husband as the juggernaut of comedy. He is the same person at home on the air — a wild man. "He just has a great sense of humor," she said. "When he's home he's always in a good mood." He does, however, have a serious side, she said, especially when considering jobs and negotiating contracts. Renee Miller met her husband nine years ago in Pittsburgh when he was working at a radio station there. After two years of dating, they were married. They now have a 20-month old daughter, Charisley, who Miller named after a girl he knew in the first grade. "I kind of have two kids," Renee Miller said referring to her daughter and her husband. "My daughter gets into less trouble than he does." in less trouble than she did. Renee Miller said her husband was a devoted father. Charlise Miller is daddy's girl. "She has him wrapped around her little finger." she said. His climb to the top When Randy Miller was 14 and his voice still was changing, he was a dice jockey for his high school radio station in Knoxville, Tem. A year later, he got a job as a dice jockey for BWIR, a small station in Knoxville. He was born and raised in Knoxville and lived there until he was 19, when he went to the University of Tennessee. He attended college for about two years while working at two radio stations. He dropped out after realizing that he did not need a radio education to get a radio job. Among Q104 likes Miller for his craziness, at least two other Kansas City radio stations fired him for it. Miller was fired from both KKCI-FM and KZZC-FM. At KKCI he was fired because of the way he handled a woman who was complaining about a song she found offensive. Both times she called asking for station officials and Miller pretended to be the station official she wanted. He then played the offending song and her complaints on the air. A year later, KZC2-FM fried Miller after he made an April Fool's announcement about a benefit concert for the homeless Future Farmers of America. Miller said that Bob Seger would be touring and that $5 tickets be obtained at Corky's Records & Tapes in Mission. "I expected maybe 50 people to buy that . . . and I guess there were hundreds that showed up," he said. Instead of a ticket, people were given a piece of paper that stated You are an alumnus and included a $1 discount off a Bob Seger album at the store record. "Well, people were not happy, as you can imagine," Miller said. About 300 unhappy people, many of whom had driven from other towns to get the tickets, marched to the station wanting Miller's head. "As I remember one guy telling me," Miller said, "a guy with about three teeth in his head. 'Hey budy, you don't mess with Seger.'" Miller said he received a police escort home that day. More crazy stunts Promotion directors Freeman said Miller's salary doubled at the next station he was hired at in San Diego and again when he came to Q104 in February 1869. Miller now earns $300,000 a year, Freeman said. He said the revenue at Q104 had increased 30 percent in the first six months that Miller started working. Freeman said that he appreciated Miller's humor but that one thing about Miller slightly bothered him. Miller develop promotion ideas on the air and makes promises to the public that have not been cleared yet. He recalled a time, two weeks after the capture of Gen. Manuel Noriega in Panama, when Miller promised that he would go to Panama and give 10,000 White Castle hamburgers to Panamanians. "Well, immediately, I hear this and I get on the phone and start working." Freeman said. "He creates this stuff and we don't even have it approved yet." Freeman had to get approval from the U.S. government, obtain passports that usually take 40 days, and try to contact the necessary people in Panama, a country that had no working government at the time. "Maybe if he could at least give me a day's notice before we do these things." Freemain said. Miller might make Freeman's job difficult at times, but he hopes Miller will stay at Q14 when his 2-year contract ends in February 1991. Miller said he had never signed a contract for more than two years because something better could come along. "I've been lucky enough in my career to have offers consistently," Miller said. Although Q104 plays pop music, Miller said he liked only some pop songs. "Thankfully I don't have to listen to every song completely," he said. "I just listen to the end so I know when to talk." Miller said he liked country music, rock and barber shop but if it were up to him, he would not play any music on his show. Miller likes talking. Who will he talk to next? What will he say next? What stunt will he pull next? No one knows, except maybe himself. Packaged right. Priced right. IBM PS/2 Memory Model 30 286 (U21) 1Mb Model 50 U23 (U31) 1Mb Model 55 U23 (U31) 2Mb Model 55 UX6 (U31) 2Mb Model 55 UX6 (U31) 4Mb Model 70 U81 (U81) Processor 80286 (10 MHz) 80286 (10 MHz) 80386SX (16 MHz) 80386SX (16 MHz) 80386SX (16 MHz) 144Mb 144Mb 144Mb 144Mb 144Mb 3.5-inch diskette drive Fixed disk drive 20Mb 30Mb 30Mb 60Mb 60Mb Micro Channel™ architecture No Yes Yes Yes Yes Display 8519 Color 8519 Color 8519 Color 8519 Color 8519 Color Mouse Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Software DOS 4.0 Microsoft® Windows and Word for Windows ** hDC Windows Express, Manager ** and Color* DOS 4.0 Microsoft Windows, Word for Windows ** and Excel* DOS 4.0 Microsoft Windows, Word for Windows ** and Excel* DOS 4.0 Microsoft Windows, Word for Windows ** and Excel* Price $2,299 $2,799 $3,349 $3,699 $4,899 Financial notes on the 1954 PR32 Model 30 386 (U221) are available only from March 19, 1990, through June 30, 1990. Ask about the IBM PS/2 Loan for Learning. Which IBM Personal System/2® should you buy? 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Check with your institution regarding these charges. Order are subject to availability. Prices are subject to change in IBM PMS 9/2 and offer at any time. *Microsoft Word 9/2 and PowerPoint 9/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. Microsoft is a registered trademark of Microsoft Office 9/2 and PowerPoint 9/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. 003888 and 003886 are trademarks of Intel Corporation. Word for Windows is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation. NDS Windows Express, Manager and Color are trademarks of NDC Computer Corporation. Word for Windows is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation. NDS Windows Express, Manager and Color are trademarks of NDC Computer Corporation. 003888 TONIGHT Wednesday, May 2 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 MOONLIGHT MADNESS! 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Sleeveless Crew Neck & Cardigans Up to 30% Off - All Slacks 15% Off - All Skirts 15% Off & Other Fantastic Reductions Throughout the Store! You'd be crazy to miss the madness! So come on in to... Regular Hours: M.T.W.F.Sat. 9:30-6:00 Thursday 9:30-8:30 Sunday 12:00-5:00 MISTER GUY MENS & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHERS 920 Mass 842-2700 VOL.100.NO.144 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ADVERTISING: 864-4358 THURSDAY, May 3, 1990 (USPS 650-640) NEWS:864-4810 State Senate kills tax relief By Rod Griffin Kansan staff writer TOPEKA — The Senate may have sacrificed the state's last chance to enact substantial property tax relief and not to halt half-a million sales tax increase, 14-28. The bill, touted as a significant property tax rollback, would have increased the state sales tax from 4.25 percent to 4.75 percent. Three other property tax relief bills also have failed, and the session is expected to adjourn by the end of the week. The tax increase would have raised an estimated $78.1 million for property tax relief by the end of fiscal 1991 and $121.1 million during fiscal 1992. you're looking at around a 21 percent decrease in property taxes," said State Sen. Dick Bond, R-Over. But State Wint, Wint Winter Jr., R- Lawrence, said the bill would reduce property taxes by 8 percent. With a 7 percent increase in property taxes in the last year, the net result would be a 1 percent reduction in property taxes. Kansas '90 Legislature The tax bill could not be enacted until a constitutional amendment that reduced property valuation percentages was passed. Bond said the 27 percent figure included the effect of the constitutional amendment. "We're looking at this as a piece, the first piece, of a puzzle," he said. State Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Prault, after the bill was defeated that if property tax relief legislation was approved by members would have to compromise. "I think this may be the best we can do." "I don't think we're going to keep this session open for another day or two or three solely for the purpose of finding property tax relief," he said. Under pressure 10 Trving to finish a project before today's deadline, Debbie Mesloh, Derby junior, flips through a paper for her Religion in India class Eric Montgomery/KANSAN House approves Regents budget By Rod Griffin Kansan staff writer TOPEKA — The House passed the Board of Regents budget last night after Senate action allowed a requirement for competitive bids at the University of Kansas Medical Center to be dropped. The Senate passed a separate bill introduced by State Rep. Kerry Patrick, R-Leawood, that required competitive bids at the Med Center. Because the bill required essentially the same budget as the Regents budget, the requirement was deleted from the budget. Patrick said competitive bids would save the Med Center between $1 million and $1.1 million a year and could lead to increased salaries. In some cases,工资ings were used to increase salaries and improve programs there. State Rep. John Solbach, DLawrence, said Patrick also had other reasons for offering the bill. "Patrick thought somebody was funding what amounted to political patronage for a particular law firm," he said. "I don't think he would have needd to enrich friends or cronies. I should we be above that." The budget would allocate $597.3 million for Regents schools in fiscal year 1990, $2 million more than Gov. Mike Hayden recommended. For fiscal year 1991, the budget would allocate $630.8 million for Regents schools, $6.3 million more than Hayden recommended. The University of Kansas would receive $143.2 million in fiscal year 1990 and $149.9 million in fiscal under the House recommendation. The committee recommendations approved by the House for fiscal 1991 included $2.9 million for shrinkage adjustments and an additional $157,589 from the state budget for other operating expenditures. The House budget would allocate $166.9 million for the Med Center in fiscal 1990, and $175.6 million in fiscal 1991. The fiscal 1991 budget would include $4.3 million for shrinkage adjustments, and $142,349 from the general state fund to raise other operating expenditures to 75 percent of the Regents request. No funds were included for the Margin of Excellence or enrollment adjustments at KU or the Med Center. The budget included $2.6 million for enrollment adjustments at Kansas State University. The Regents originally requested $4.7 million. Autopsy reveals identity of body Pam Solliner and Mark McHugh Kansan staff writers By Bryce J. Tache, The female body found in East Lawrence on Friday was identified yesterday by Lawrence police. Lt. Mike Hall, who is in charge of the homicide investigation, identified the victim as Tamar Abara, a 26-year-old Black Lawrence resident. She was reported missing Nov. 6. Her last being seen at Hallowen秋 Hall said the body was identified based on information from an autopsy performed Tuesday by Carol Moddrell, Douglas County coroner and Kris Sperry, a pathologist from Atlanta. Hall said he was unable to release any further information about the victim or the case, including cause of death or possible suicides. However, East Lawrence residents were questioned by police earlier this year about the disappearance of a girl who last was seen Halloween night. Those acquainted with Baker See BODY, p. 5 Lithuania to consider temporary suspension of independence laws The Associated Press MOSCOW — Lithuania's president said yesterday that the Baltic republic would consider suspending temporarily some of the pro-independence policies that drove the Kremlin to impose an economic embargo two weeks ago. President Vytautas Landsberg agreed to the step in a letter to French and West German leaders who last week proposed that such a compromise would help start negotiations between the republic and Moscow. "Everything is negotiable, which does not question the matter of restored independence of the Lithuanian state in 1890." Landeborgs said in his letter to French 'Everything is negotiable, which does not question the matter of restored independence of the Lithuanian state on March 11, 1990.' —Vytautae Landsbergis president of Lithuania President Francois Mitterrand and West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl The letter was read to Lithuania's parliament, the Supreme Council, which gave its approval, said Aidas Palubinska, a spokesman for the parliament. "Putting our confidence in France and the Federal Republic of Germany, as well as in other Western countries, is Lebanon's democratic, we are asking you to transmit to the Soviet authorities our consent to consider a ing you to transmit to the Soviet authorities our consent to consider a temporary suspension of the effects of the decisions taken by the sovereign parliament of the Lithuanian Republic that could trouble the Soviet authorities," Landsbergis wrote. temporary suspension of the effects of the decisions taken by the sovereign parliament of the Lithuanian Republic that could trouble the Soviet authorities." Landsbergis wrote. The idea behind the proposal from France and West Germany was that if Lithuania temporarily suspended those laws, the Soviet Union, in return, might ease its pressure on Russia and also agree to talks on secession. Lithuania declared independence March 11, trying to restore the freedom it enjoyed before 1940, when the Soviet Union forcibly annexed it. Lithuania it has since passed laws designed to back the independence drive. Palubinskas stressed that the proposal from Kohl and Mitterrand did not ask for a recission of the declaration itself, but urged the suspension of laws passed to implement the independence declaration. De Klerk, Mandela band against apartheid Gorbachev also has imposed a partial economic blockade, cutting supplies of fuel and other commodities to Lithuania. As of last night, no resumption of any of the fuel supplies had been reported. Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev has declared the independence declaration invalid and rejected negotiation with the republic, saying such talks are reserved for foreign countries. He also has demanded that Lithuania rescind the pro-independence laws. The Associated Press CAPETOWN, South Africa — President F.W. de Klerk and African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela yesterday urged the swift abolition of apartheid and began training a men aimed at ending white-majority rule. The three days of meetings are to remove obstacles to full-scale negotiations on a new constitution that would give the 28-million Black majority a voice in national affairs for the first time. Nearby, the pro-sparitalist Conservative Party walked out of a debate in Parliament to protest the talks. The Conservative leader, Andries Treurnicht, said the government should not negotiate with an organization that has carried out guerrilla strikes, was committed to armed struggle. De Klekier and Mandela said South Africans of all races wanted swift change. All political parties must work toward a peaceful solution to racial and political divisions, they said. "South African law forbids all these actions," said Treurnicht, whose narciss is the main opposition in carriage's white chamber. The tri-cameral Parliament also has chambers for people of mixed-race descent. Blacks are excluded. But de Klerk warned that violence that has claimed more than 500 lives in the past three months threatens such change. Much of the violence has been among Black groups with high views of a future South Africa. Mandela, in a statement before the talks began, said, "The pace at which we move to arrive at a just solution should be informed by the fact that the Black masses of our country have suffered a significant change now and not tomorrow." "The vast majority of South Africans desire the negotiation process, aimed at a new constitution, to get started in all earnestness," de Klek said. "The government wishes this to happen as soon as possible and is consequently approaching the tikis with the utmost earnestness." The ANC demands the release of all political prisoners, lifting of the state of emergency and the return of exiled activists as preconditions to constitutional negotiations. Africa Zimbabwe Botswana Map area Mozambique Namibia Pretoria Johannesburg Swaziland Atlantic Ocean South Africa Indian Ocean Lesotho Cape Town Durban Meeting between Mandela and de Klerk Port Elizabeth 400 Miles The talks are the first between a white government and an ANC delegation since the organization was founded in 1912. The discussions are not yet finished. So the estate, once the official home of South African presidents. In his statement before the talks began, Mandela attempted to calm white fears about a Black government, saying whites would enjoy full control in a non-racial democratic state. Mandela, the ANC's deputy president, was released in February after 27 years in jail. Moseley loses as Senate names ASK director By Matt Taylor Kansan staff writer Greg Hughes, presidential runner-up in last month's Student Senate election, was named campus director of Associated Students of Kansas last night after Senate defeated the nomination for ASK veteran Bill Moseley. The vote caused one senator to resign. Two separate ballots were cast. Hughes won the post 61-3 in a secret-ballot vote. Moseley won 17 votes. Ed Young, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, submitted a letter to Senate that stated he resigned because of the vote against Moseley. He was unavailable for comment after the meet. Moseley said he liked the way the debate turned out. "It shifted from me be insensitive to putting my foot in my mouth and being rude," he said. "Obviously, some of the senators who criticized my choice they could not attack my qualifications." Hughes said he would continue to fight for higher education. Senators said Moseley's controversy was created at an earlier "I have a passion for education that you would not bellève," he said. Mike Schreiner, student body president who nominated Moseley, said he respected Senate's vote against Moseley. He said that the senate was not about ASK but that he had several good ideas for next year. Senate cast a tie vote last week for Moseley's nomination, causing another vote on nominations last night Student Senate Elections Student Senate Elections Student Senate Elections Finance Committee meeting. Moseley asked when a student organization would be satisfied with its Senate allocation. The organization received $3,000 in supplemental funds from Senate for Black History Month Sno SENATE, O. 5 1 2 Thursdav, Mav 3. 1990 / University Dally Kansan Weather 太阳 TODAY Rain HI: 57' LO:49' Seattle 59/43 New York 62/42 Denver 53/37 Chicago 53/47 Los Angeles 75/60 Dallas 73/51 Miami 91/74 KEY Rain Snow Ice T-Storms Forecast by Rick Katzfey Temperatures are today's high and lowest. Kansas Forecast Rain and thunderstorms likely over most of the state. Highs in the 50s to low 60s. Lows in the 40s. Salina 55/45 KC 57/47 Dodge City 55/42 Wichita 60/47 Thursday - Rain and thunderstorms. High: 57'. Low: 49' 5-day Forecast Friday - Rain ending midday. High: 57'. Low: 40'. Saturday - Sunny but cool. High: 60'. Low: 42'. Sunday - Partly cloudy and a little warmer. High: 64'. Low: 45'. The University Daily Kanans (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals period, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. KU Weather Service: 864-3300 Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60045. LSAT GNAT CRE THE DINICTON REVIEW For the Best Prep CALL 843-3131 Birkenstock sandals FOOTPRINTS 1234 BOOKSTORE WEST BROADWAY 841-7027 Summer Storage Free pick-up and delivery. Lock and Key Summer Storage 843-8806 Cornucopia Celebrating 15 Years Serving Lawrence 1801 Mass Lawrence, Kansas Phone: 842-9637 Hcurs: 11:00am-10:00pm Mon-Sat 11:00am-9:00pm Sun TGIF it's your PARTY Southern Hills 749-3455 Mall Alpha Kappa Alpha will sponsor a display table featuring paraphernaia and memes of "Delta Chapter Past and Present," from 10 a.m. to p.2 m.m. at the fourth floor lobby of the Kansas Union. Golden Key Honor Society will have a picnic from 4 to 8 p.m. today at Holcolp Park. On campus ■ Information and applications for the 1990-91 Fulbright and Graduate Student Direct Exchange Competition are available from the Office of Study Abroad at 203 Lippincott Hall. ■ The Muslim Student Association will sponsor an information table about Islam and Muslims from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. today at the fourth floor lobby of the Kansas Union. ■ The Episcopal Canterbury House will present the Holy Eucharist at noon today at Danforth Chapel. Latin American Solidarity will have a rice and beans dinner at 6 p.m. today at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. The after-dinner program will be "Big Game" and Little Labor in Guatemala." - The KU Cycling Club will meet for a fast-paced ride at 6 p.m. today in front of Wescue Hall. The Christian Science Student Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at Alcove C in the Kansas Union. ACT UP KU/Lawrence will meet at 6:30 p.m. today at the Pioneer The Champions Club will meet at 7 tonight at Alcoves G, H, I and J in the Kansas Union. Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will have an informational meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Pioneer Room in the Burge Union. The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 am at 192 Doble Center, Seattle. The KU Fencing Club will meet at 8:30 tonight at 138 Robinson Center. Orthodox Christians on Campus and the Soviet and East European Communities Archbishop Clement, head of the Russian Orthodox Churches in the United States, at 8:30 tonight at the Kansas Room in the Kansas Union. He will speak about glasnost and the orthodox church in the Soviet Union. Room in the Burge Union. Police report After the student was escorted out of the building, he urinated in front of the entrance doors. He was issued a notice to appear in court. A bicycle valued at $200 was taken Tuesday from the 800 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police reported A videocassette recorder valued at $250 was taken Tuesday from a home in the 1800 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police A 20-year-old student was arrested for indecent exposure early yesterday morning after urinating in the lobby area of Gertrude Sellars Pearson-Corbin Hall, KU police reported. together at $2,650 were taken Tuesday from a storage lot at Clinton Parkway and County Road 13, the sheriffs office reported. A stereo valued at $550 was taken Monday or Tuesday from a student's locked car in the 1400 block of West Street, Lawrence police reported. A boat motor and lock valued damage totaled $200. The ignition was pried off a student's motorcycle cost $200 damage Monday or Tuesday in the 1400 block of Park Street, Lawrence police reported. ■ A car was broken into and a stereo valued at $500 was taken Monday or Tuesday in the 1100 block of Sunset Drive, Lawrence police reported. Property damage totaled $200. A locked bicycle valued at $50 was taken Monday or Tuesday from the 900 block of Louisiana Street, Lawrence police reported. A student's car was broken into, and stereo equipment and sunglasses valued together at $1,000 were taken Monday or Tuesday from the 1400 block of West Seventh Street, Lawrence police reported. Property A student's car window was broken, causing $150 damage Monday or Tuesday in Lot 50, east of Joseph R. Pearl Hall, KU police reported. A student's laundry valued at $374 was taken Sunday afternoon from a laundry room in the 1300 block of Lawrence Street, Lawrence police reported. ACCOUNTING FIRM DONATION: A Kansas City, Mo., accounting firm committed $300,000 yesterday to the University of Kansas accounting program. Local briefs Deloitte and Touche, which sponsors biennial symposiums at the university, gave the money to improve academic service at the university for public relations for the Kansas University Endowment Association. Part of the gift will go toward future Deloitte and Touche symposiums, about auditing problems, including one scheduled for May 17-18. The symposiums are designed to bring professional and academic research accountants together to discuss auditing issues. Scarife said part of the $300,000 would go to appoint outstanding KU accounting students as Deloitte and Touche student fellows. These students will work on research and teaching in the company for a year. Part of the company's gift will go toward improving KU's introductory accounting classes. John Tollefson, dean of business, said that the symposium and the fellow program would be emphasized when the money was divided but that not all of the details had been finalized. The company's gift will be counted toward Campaign Kansas, KU's five-year, $177 million fundraising effort. Soul man won't make benefit The program, which began in 1987 has raised $164.9 million. Officials say no to James Brown The Associated Press COLUMBIA, S.C. — Plans for song singer James Brown to perform in a benefit concert this month while he serves time in a work-release program were submitted to the state Corrections Department. Monday, a Los Angeles promoter said Brown would have a concert May 16 at the King Street Palace in Charleston with Gladys The Corrections Department said no to the plan. A New York concert organizer then said yesterday that the benefit concert had been moved from Charleston to Aikin. Knight, Little Richard, Jermaine Jackson and others. Angeles. The Department again said no. Proceeds from the "James Brown and Friends" concert were to have gone to the non-profit community Action Commission, where Brown works as a counselor, said Peter Paul of the Stephen Cooper Entertainment Corp. in Los Corrections Department spokesman Francis X. Archibald said yesterday that the concert was not going to happen. Brown, serving a six-year sentence for aggravated assault, has been working for the commission since shortly after his April 14 transfer from prison to a work-release program. "This is inconsistent with his employment with the Aiken-Barn- well community agency," he said. "We didn't allow him to perform while he was in prison and we can't let him perform down there." GAS RATES DROP: Kansas Public Service, which serves 23,000 customers in Douglas County, decreases its gas rates Tuesday by 14 percent. Michael Hertling, vice-president of administration for KPS, said yesterday that the average residential customer would save $71.64 a year or $5.97 a month. The lower rates are possible by recent decreases in the cost of gas purchased from the supplier, Williams Natural Gas, 625 Center, he said. "As a heating fuel, demand for natural gas goes down during the summer months," he said. "This is a normal occurrence. We are just glad to pass along any decrease in costs to the customers." 1-800-444-8620 Sno Palace "Hawaiian Haze ice" Over 40 refreshing flavors! NOW OPEN Give your taste buds a treat they'll never forget! 25th and Iowa in the Holiday Plaza ...if you are about to receive a college degree and have a job prospect in the near future. Call toll free for details Ask for Jack Foster. Sea Palace 2014 Rd. 650 West 8th Street 400 W. 80th St. 100 West 3rd Street 100 West 4th Street 90 West 3rd Street 60 West 4th Street 30 West 3rd Street 10 West 4th Street 70 West 3rd Street 4 I'll Give You Credit On A New Honda... Valueable Coupon BUY ONE for any same size or smaller FREE Good only this Saturday. 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University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 Campus/Area 3 Speaker's remarks spur response Comments made about Jews spur Hillel meeting By Eric Gorski and Jonathan Plummer Kansaan staff writers a speech by a controversial Black activist has prompted discussion during the past two days between admiring student organization leaders. Steve Cokevelt spoke twice Tuesday on the University of Kansas campus where he met with students between races would not be effective until people became educated and rejected白 supremacy He also referred to the U.S. "Jewish problem," which upset some students. He was sponsored by the Brown of Dayton. After the speech, members of KU Hillee met in their Kansas Union office and were later joined by David Ambler, vice candleholder for affairs, and Robert Shelton, KU ambudsm. Members of Students Concerned About Discrimination also discussed Cokely's speech yesterday during a previously scheduled meeting with Judith Ramaley, executive vice president and Facilitator Katzman, SCAD Assistant. Daveen Litwin, director of Hillel, said the group met after the speech because students were upset about some of Cokely's remarks. During his speech, Cokely said that Jews incorrectly portrayed themselves as the world's first race and Blacks were the originators of man. Litwin said that she thought Black Men of Day did not bring Cokely to campus to discuss Jewish issues but they attended the "Jewish problem" at length. "It doesn't matter whether he meant to deal with Jewish problems," Litwin said. "There were things said that were very painful to hear." Darren Fulcher of Black Men of Today said he would not apologize for Bringing Cokely to campus. "We don't want to pit Jews against Blacks," he said. "Look at the agendas. We agree on every issue." Fulcher said that he was not upset that the administration responded to Hilli but that Black students did not receive the same treatment. Mark McCormick of Black Men of Todav would not comment. Ambler said that while he was at the Hillel office Tuesday, he spent most of his time listening, and that he would listen very closely to the Jewish perspective after his visit. "I think I was most impressed by the sensitivity to the building relationships around minority groups on campus," she said. "I don't break that um or create tension." Ambler also he informed Ramaley of Hillel members' concerns before her meeting with SCAD. In a statement yesterday, Ramaley said she regretged recent events that had increased tension and concern for some students and student organizations. "Most importantly, I do not want any event on campus to interrupt or delay the progress we have made this spring in creating more of a conducive and positive education climate," Ramaley said. Katzman said that sensitivity to those who supported Cokely was needed and that sensitivity to those who supported his words was equally important. Cokely was fired in 1988 from his job as a Chicago mayoral aide after he reportedly made statements against Jews. Cokely said that compulsory deportation to him were paraphrased from an article and that he did not say them. Willenborg court date set for June By Eric Gorski Kansan staff writer A KU student involved in two reported batteries in the past five weeks will appear June 22 in Lawrence Municipal Court to face charges in connection with an incidenc at a Lawrence apartment complex. Matthew Willenberg, St. Louis freshman, faces one count of battery in connection with an April 21 incident at Hanover Place apartments, 106 Hanover Place. According to Lawrence police reports, Willenburg and Greg McGivern, Topeka freshman, battered a man who tried to convince them to report a vehicle accident to police. Sherri Loveland, Willemburg's attorney, said the court appearance was requested, which automatically entailed entering a idea of not guilty. Loveland said it was too early to determine whether Willenborg would change his plea. Connie Harod, deputy clerk of the municipal court, said that McGivern was scheduled to appear July 6 in municipal court. McGivern faces one count of battery, one count of operating a vehicle and the insurance of four victims of failure report an accident in connection with the April 21 incident. Harry Warren, McGivern's attorney, could not be reached for comment. Wilenberg and McGilvarian voluntarily resigned from Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity April 23. They had moved out of the fraternity by April 15, said Bryce Petty, SAE president. Petty said he thought that Willen- Neither Willenborg nor McGivern could be reached for comment. Wilenbeng is scheduled to appear for arrangement tomorrow in Douglas County District Court in connection with a March 30 incident at the SAE house, 130 West Campus Road. He faces one count of disorderly conduct and one count of misdemeanor battery. According to Lawrence police reports, Wellenborg struck Ann Dean, St. Louis sophomore, and uttered a racial insult to her March 30 while she was delivering pizzas to the SAE house. 1234567890 Gratchen Ploepenger/KANSAN Bedtime for bunny Richard Ramos, supervisor of animal health at the Animal Care Unit in Malatell Hall, checks on a rabbit used in lab research at KU. University research animals have been housed and cared for at the Animal Care Unit since 1976. Services will merge to streamline counseling By Buck Taylor Kansan staff writer The University Counseling Center and the Mental Health Clinic at Watkins Memorial Center will merge at the end of the 1980-91 academic year, David Ambler, vice president for student affairs, said yesterday. "I believe this merger will greatly enhance this vital part of our student-affairs program," he said. Jim Strobi, director of Watkins Memorial Health Center, served on a special task force that recommended the merger to Ambler "It will be a great thing for the students," Strobi said. "A one-stop shop for counseling." Ambler said the decision was based on recommendations by a special task force he set up to study the relationship of combining the two departments. Jeff Weinberg, associate director of financial aid, who was in charge of the task force, said that he did not know what would happen when the merger took effect but that there was a possibility more services would be free to students. Services at the counseling center are free. Watkins charges for some services. Ambler said, "We had the opportunity to devise a new plan for providing counseling services to the University community." He said that because many staff members at the counseling center also were faculty members, counseleers had to split their time between faculty endeavors and counseling students. Members of the counseling center approached Ambler two years ago seeking changes to alleviate time constraints. A national and internal search will be initiated to hire a new director for the combined unit, Ambler said. Linda Keeler, director of the mental health clinic, will continue to serve as director until the new candidate is hired. Mrs. Keeler's office is Lichtenberg, director of the counseling center, who plans to teach full-time in the fall. Keeler said merging the two staffs would create a new diversity among available counselors. Greeks 'care' at meeting By Buck Taylor Kansan staff writer Members of a KU minority group said they were inspired by a caring spirit expressed by greek officers at the University for forum last night at the Kansas University. "I'm encouraged when I see and hear what the people here tonight said," said Mark McCormick, member of Black Men of Today. "What they said was not just to me. To all the Black students, all the Hispanic students and all the students who are oppressed — they said 'we care.'" Margaret Miller, coordinator of greek activities, had asked Black Men of Today to conduct the forum to tell greek members about the problems of racism. About 45 people attended the forum, which was led by McCormick and fellow group member Darren Fulcher. "This is an informal conversation on what racism is all about," she said. "It's a chance to do some interfacing." M. cormick, Wichita senior, said that racism could escalate into mob action and that people who stood by and watched instigators were equally “It’s really harder to stand out from the crowd and say stop,” he said. “All of us, I’m sure, have seen some sort of racism in our lives. I know he, and if we haven’t said enough well, we’re responsible.” McCormick told the participants that it was important for people to learn the history of racism against Blacks and other minorities because education could make history less likely to repeat itself. Karen Shentteau, Alpha Omicron IPSriority president, said the forum was an important start to combat a long-standing problem. "it forced me to take a more personal look at my own views," she said, "and then to think about how I knew an impact on my individual member." Shontae, Manhattan junior, said the forum made people stop and think and could help them change their views about racism. "This can't be a one-time thing," she said, "but at least it'll get the wheels turning." McCormick said that although it was difficult for non-minority students to identify with the plight of the poor, he should continue to make the effort. Jole Lilgendahl, Chi Omega sora- tory president, said that to address racism, discussion groups must start out small and grow increasingly larger. "If anything was solved tonight, it's what he McCormick) said about placing yourself in someone else's life. You don't have to haven't experienced it," she said. You should know: Liligendahl. St. Louis junior, said she hoped the presidents of Greek houses would be able to convey the forum's messages to their members. McCormick said that the members of Black Men of Today encouraged open forums with living organizations and that Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity had already sponsored a forum. The rate of extinction of species from this earth was 1 every 4 years from 1600 to 1900. It's now estimated to be 1000 per year. KANSAN PROTECTION NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care 820-822 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 (913) 641-0100 TONITE HEY LADIES... Experience 6 of K.C.'s hottest male dancers! The WEST WORLD PLAYBOYS Former Forty-nine football player, National Strip-off runner-up, Mr Body Beautiful Doors open at 7. Show begins at 8 Men--party at Sharkey's during the performance Last Ladies Nite of the school year 18 & up admitted Draw, Pitcher, shot specials The Etc. Shop 732 Mass. 843-0611 Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world first sunglasses SUN. Celebrate Cinco di Mayo Benefit Party for Halo Specials: Corona Dos XX Simpatico Margs Tequila Shots QZZI 901 Miss. 748-7511 3 Thursday, May 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Health care issues Restricting age on certain health care practices keeps doctors from using life-giving resources D aniel Callahan is calling for the death of thousands. According to Callahan, medical ethicist and author of "What Kind of Life? The Limits of Medical Progress," the United States should set an age limit for certain kinds of medical care in an effort to limit escalating medical costs. "We will probably have to set a limit of one kind or another for all age groups," Cailahan said. "A society would . . . be well justified in the future to set an age limit on the public provision of expensive, life-extending, curative health care." Instead, Callahan wants age cutoffs set for treatments such as bypass surgery, chemotherapy or other expensive drug treatments for patients older than 80 or 85. Anyone with a terminal illness or injury should have the right to cut off treatment, but those who have not requested such action have the right to treatment as much as anyone else, despite age. Callahan said that he was looking for a tradeoff for more caring medicine rather than curing medicine. What does this mean? If the United States were to go along with Callahan's theory, what would stop doctors from refusing care to newborns who came into the world with problems that required curative treatment rather than caring treatment? Callahan is discriminating against the elderly. To be fair with Callahan's theory, the United States would have to cut off such treatments for everyone, not just those 85 or above, or whatever "elderly" age is chosen. Newborns with curable problems would have to be disposed of, too. Granted, as medical progress is made and life expectancy increases, medical costs will increase on the whole. However, setting an age limit for certain types of health care is discriminatory and unconstitutional. The United States must carefully consider this issue and avoid making the bad choice for health care that Callahan suggests. Angela Baughman for the editorial board Briefly Stated - Seven years ago, the state had to cut budgets across the board. In 1990, it appears that it may happen again. The Kansas Legislature went on a shopping spree in 1989 and again this year. The result may be a reduction in state services. For KU that means even fewer classes, smaller faculty raises and no construction. When is the Legislature going to wise up and do its job? Once again, our voice in Topeka is falling on deaf ears and narrow minds. Although Student Senate elections reflected greater interest this year, in the form of larger voter turnout, elections for class officers were disappointing. The elections were yesterday and turnout was low, showing a lack of student interest. If we don't care enough to vote for class officers, we cannot expect our voices to be heard and acknowledged when it comes to matters of importance in the future. Our voices need cry out to be heard. MATHEL O'GARAGE WE'LL TAKE IT. the All New 1990 MARK KOHL Motors EAST GERMAN MARK Billboard problem World would be better if signs became memories Memories are wonderful things. Take, for instance, that marvelous piece of Americana known as the billboard. Once, a driver could race down a highway in a car with fins the size of surfboards, arm hanging out the window, wind whipping through the car, no fear of a federally mandated speed limit and advertising racing by. These were the days. Those were the days before the environment and safety were much of a concern. Since then, automobiles have become safer, conservation has become an important buzz word, and the environment is more than something that was there for mere convenience. People have recognized that natural resources are not always replenishable and certainly not endless. Near the top of the list is lumber; saving trees Enter the billboard, which consumes trees for the sole purpose of selling products to unsuspecting drivers. Some members of the U.S. Senate think this is a waste and have proposed the Visual Pollution Control Act of 1990, which would ban new billboards along federal highways and permit removal of existing signs. Understandably, the advertising industry is not pleased with the bill. Its view, however, is short-sighted. Billboards, besides being distracting to drivers, are an enormous waste of natural resources and serve little purpose. Billboards are part of the American past, and they should stay there. Professors take heed: Apathy ruins students' opportunities Daniel Niemi for the editorial board S" o it's your senior year, you say? Mine too. Well, actually it's my second one. I don't know, what are you going to do after graduation? **tion?" If you have not yet taken part in this conversation, prepare yourself; you will during your senior year. And probably 150 times. For me, the hell has endled me of one of the lucky ones who managed to find a job while still in school. I realize that I am famous and well-known to the rule. Many of my friends who got out in four years are still on the hunt. D. SMITH Brook Menees I am writing, however, on behalf of all of the seemingly masochistic students who choose to pursue a higher degree immediately after finishing their undergraduate careers. My hat is off to all of you; I truly admire your dedication. I do not, however, admire the process you follow for admission to graduate schools. I learned about this long and complicated process through my best friend, who was applying to the top graduate schools in the field of communications. The process includes researching various graduate programs, sending requests for applications, typing forms that resemble tax returns, sending examples of undergraduate work, obtaining and sending recommendations from professors and waiting impatiently while your file goes through the Guest columnist If I were in charge of admission and a student made it through all of this, even without the GRE, I think I would accept him or her. As it turned out, however, the GRE was not even the most difficult part. As a matter of fact, she endured nearly the entire process without having a major nervous breakdown. What gave her the most trouble was securing simple letters of recommendation. Now, before I get on my soapbox, I realize that professors are extremely busy folks. They are expected to do research and produce literature, prepare for and teach various classes, sit on University committees, participate in conferences, and every professor knows that he or she can expect to write a few letters here and there for students pursuing a higher degree. My friend, realizing that they are busy people, asked three of her professors during the month of December to send recommendations to the schools where she applied. They all willingly agreed to do her this favor. After all, she is an excellent student and has a great deal of potential. All of them had plenty of time, no matter how busy they were, to write and send these letters. In fact, they had nearly three months to do it. Surely, she innoently thought, they could accomplish this simple request during winter break. When she returned, she had no letters and gladly reminded them to be as expedient as possible. In March, she began to learn that her peers in the communications field began hearing from schools. My friend heard nothing. She called one of the universities to which she applied and was informed that her file was incomplete — one of her recommendations was absent. She immediately called that professor, and he told her that it must have gotten lost in the mail. He assured her that there was a way and if so, she methodical sigh of relief. Maybe it was not too late. You see, my friend must receive an assistantship, a scholarship with the obligation to teach as a teaching assistant, or she cannot attend graduate school. The waiting began again, and her peers were beginning to receive offers. She then, finally, received her first letter, and then another, from her schools. Each arrived with the same horrifying message -- FILE INCOMPLETE! The first major nervous breakdown set in she was taken enough! She then called each of the eight schools and sent her a same answer. And the kicker: Each school had already made its first-round offers. Could the professor really have done this to her? Yes, he had. Here it was, the beginning of April, more than four months later, and still no letter. He could have simply copied a form letter eight times, but he did not even do that. Why didn't she go elsewhere long ago, you ask? Well, she thought she could trust the head of the department. Does this professor realize that she has spent the past four years earning excellent grades and dreaming of a college degree in theseinations departments in the country? Does this individual take joy in personally messing with students' futures? As it turned out, she was offered an assistantship despite an incomplete file at her third choice school. Unfortunately, she will never have the satisfaction of knowing she would have been accepted by her, let alone offered her an assistantship. If that had been the case, she probably would have chosen differently. And that is truly a shame. To top it all off, each wasted application cost her about $45. Because of his laziness, insensitivity and general disregard for her future, she wasted a great deal of time, money and hard work. The issue is simple. We, the students, realize that you, the professors, are busy people. The point is that if you are too busy to do a favor, just be honest and say so. We understand, really. However, no one has the right to commit to the favor and then, three months later, say, "It must have gotten lost in the mail." In doing so, you lie boldly and play irresponsibly with our futures. And in my opinion, neither a department nor the University of Kansas should tolerate this behavior from a "professional." As I think of this man, a very applicable biblical passage that I learned a long time ago in Sunday School comes to mind. It goes something like this: "So because you are not supposed to kill and will spit you out of My mouth." Now I realize that the book of Revelations was not specifically written with certain professors in mind, but I think you get the point. ▶ Brook Menees is a Prairie Village senior majoring in French. Other Voices Michael R. Milken . . pleaded guilty to federal charges of securities fraud and conspiracy and agreed (nice of him) to pay fines and penalties of $600 million. That amount of money would seem to be indicative of one of the most serious white-collar crimes of our time. For the crime of this significance, lawyers say he faces a prison term that will not exceed five years. The fines and penalties seem as stuff as the prospective term is lenient. From the Westerly (R.I.) Sun, April 26. News staff News Start Richard Brack... Editor Niemel Daniel... Managing editor Christopher R. Relston... News editor Lisa Mose... Planning editor John Miller... Editorial Candy Nielmann... Campus editor Mike Corrineau... Sports editor R. Joseph Sturner... Sports editor Stephen Kline... Graphics editor Kristle Benguelz ... Art/Features editor Ted Lomax... General manager Margaret Townsend ... Business manager Tami Rank ... Retail sales manager Milkey Miller ... Campus sales manager Kathy Wright ... National sales manager 李Lehman ... National sales manager Mindy Morris ... Co-op sales manager Hate Stamos ... Producer; manager Nate Land ... Artist; producer Carrie Shinlea ... Marketing director James Glannapp ... Creative director Janet Rorholm ... Classified manager Wincy Staples ... Freelance writer Jennese Huisz ... Sales and marketing adviser Business staff Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer will The Kansan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest columns and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kansan newroom, 111 Staffler Hall Fell, Halls, columns and cartoons are the opinion of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kansan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kansan editorial board. LETTERS to the EDITOR Time to clean up Segmentes of our society that are independent thrive best through cooperation. Such is the case with the University of Kansas and the city of Lawrence — with the University students and the citizens of Lawrence. An example of such cooperation is the annual spring For those who can arrange it, the procedure for participation in news media are in the various news media, including the Kansan. cleanup, which is sponsored by the Retired Executives Council of the Chamber of Commerce. Paul H. Getto The cleanup is timed to present the city most attractively for thousands of relatives of graduating students when they arrive for Commencement. Organized groups of all ages volunteer to pick up the litter in assigned public areas along the approaches and the trafficways within the city. Neighborhood associations rally residents to pick up and spruce up. Downtown Lawrence Inc. joins the effort. The campus takes on a special sparkle. Students are urged through the Panhellenic Association and the Interfraternity Council to beautify areas around organized houses and clean up around the apartments in which they live. Litter is an a serious problem. We live in an age of disposables. Fast food shop managers have pledged to cooperate, but they are obviously limited in their control of how their containers are disposed of. If auto owners would keep and use litter bags in their vehicles, there would be no need for an annual campaign to clean up. Emphasis then could be placed on paint-up and fix-up. Because of final exams, the number of students who are able to assist with the cleanup of public areas is limited. However, all people can cooperate by cleaning their housing areas as well as using litter bags in their cars. Member of the Retired Executives Council of the Chamber of Com- CAMP UHNEELY AND NOW A LOOK BACK AT GRADUATION DAY THROUGH PACKARD'S. GRAD - CAM. AT THE CHANCELLOR'S RECEPTION. MR. CHANCELLOR, IT'S GREAT TO FINALLY MEET YOU. I DON'T KNOW YOU! GET OFF MY LAWN! Sparty CONGRATS, SON! KISS, KISS! YEAH, SON, CONGRATULATIONS HERE'S A LIST OF THE MONEY YOU OWE ME AND GET YOUR CRAP OUTTA MY HOUSE! BY SCOTT PATTY WHAT? I'M LATE? I THOUGHT THIS THING STARTED AT 7:00! University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 Y Body Continued from p. 1 described her as an attractive woman of medium build and height. She had a slight accent and told friends that she was from Trinidad. Aubrey Baker, her ex-husband, said he had custody of their three children — one girl and two boys — in an insurance. He declined further comment. While living in Lawrence, Tamara Baker had moved three times in the past three years. In 1987, she lived adjacent to Laverna Hicks, 818 Louisiana St. "She was really a friendly person," Hicks said. "She'd come outside and barbecue with us. We'd have dinners and parties." "Our kids played together," Lyles said. "We might sit around and have a cup of coffee together in the morning." From May 1988 to August 1989, Baker lived next to Marsha Lyles, 255 North Michigan St. Lyles said Baker visited her Halloween night, looking for his ex-wife who he said had gone out with some people she was not well acquainted with. He was worried because she had not come home. "I believed that she was dead, and that was in the first 24 hours." Lyles said. "In the year she lived next to me, she always came home." Last August, Baker moved to an apartment above Shirley Glover, 1113 Connecticut St. Glover said she was one of the last people to see Baker alive. She said the last time she saw her neighbor, Baker was upset about legal matters "She didn't have any food, so I invited her down and fixed her a tuna sandwich and a glass of pop," she said. "We offered her some Hallowe candy, but she didn't want any. And then she just left." Senate Continued from p. 1 after receiving a $9,000 allocation But Moseley said last night that he made the comment with fiscal responsibility in mind and that he was not targeting Blacks. "You have to look at my role as a Finance Committee member," Moseley said. "I believe that we need some control over the budget. I was worried about the total appropriation. "It wasn't the fact that it was Black History Month. I was looking at the total fiscal realm and was trying to decide how much was appropriate. That's the context I spoke in." Five senators, spoke against Moseley, and four spoke in favor. Darren Fulcher, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said there was a conflict about Moseley's character. "We can't risk choosing an ASK director who puts his foot in his mouth," he said. Moseley is rude, unapproachable and intimidating, said Ardra Tippett, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator. "In the real world, this would not be tolerated," she said. Jennifer Roth, off-campus senator, said Moseley should not be the scapegoat for recent racial flares on campus. Before votes were cast on Moseley's nomination, Young said that he hated Moseley for the most part but thought he was qualified for the director's position. He said Moseley was at the forefront of increasing awareness about minority issues. In separate action, Senate unanimously approved a resolution condemning the Department of Defense policy that bans homosexuals from serving in the armed forces. Pat Warren, Student Executive Committee chairman and co-author of the resolution, said the authors were protesting against the national policy, which the University ROTC program must follow. Ethan Vaughan, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator who attended the U.S. Air Force Academy for two years before transferring to KU, said homosexuals created problems. Suicides rock Arkansas town The Associated Press SHERIDAN, Ark. — The pines are tall, lines at cash registers are short and a phone call is still only a dime in this country town. People live here to get away from city and suburban pressures. "It's terrible for a small town like this to have to wake up like this," said resident Carolyn Talbert. But today, after a cluster of teenage suicides, residents are mourning the dead, and, in a sense, the town's loss of innocence. The high school is flooded with psychiatrists, psychologists and counselors. Police track down absent students if phone calls home aren't answered. Students try to make sense of the senseless. Joe Wise Jr., mayor of the town of 3,230, said, "We're just getting a taste of some of the things that go on in larger towns." On Monday, 17-year-old Thomas Smith went to the front of his fifth-period U.S. history class, professed his love for a girl, and shot himself with a .22-caliber gun as 23 horrified classmates watched. About nine hours later, Thomas M. Chidester, 19, a close friend of Smith's, was found dead with a gunshot wound to the head and a note saying, "I can't go on any longer." saying. I can't go anywhere. A third schoolmate, 17-year-old Jerry Paul McCoil, killed himself Tuesday, authorities said. McCoil knew Smith and Chidester but was not a close friend. Two days, three lives and few answers. "I sure can't make any sense out of it," said Lisa Deal, 18, president of the student council at Sheridan's high school. "Even in a tragedy of this nature we must go on. We're all pulling together and trying to get over this disaster." School officials immediately began summoning mental health help Monday from across Arkansas and contacted national crisis and grief experts. ULTIMATE FRISBEE TOURNAMENT KAPPA DELTA/PHI GAMMA DELTA ULTIMATE Kappa Delta Fiji Special Olympics Tournament FRISBEE May 5, 1990 MAY 5TH,1990,AT 10:00 A.M. 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Cuomo said that he had ordered the New York Army National Guard to assist state police but would not guardenm onto the reservation. New York State Police carryin- shotguns and the Quebec Provincial Force entered the reservation Tuesday night and yesterday after weeks or violence between pro- and anti-gambling factions culminated in the shootings deaths of two Mohawk men earlier on Tuesday. Cuomo said the National Guard was used to transport troopers and provide equipment at armories in pearlvtsown. On the Canadian side, Canadian troops provided communications assistance. State troopers denied entry onto the reservation to everyone but residents. They would not divulge the number of troopers on the reservation, and the combination U.S.Canadian police forces numbered in the hundreds. "We've got an armed invasion," said Diane Lazores, a spokesman for the Warrior Society, an armed progambling group. Troopers stationed at St. Regis Indian Reservation Canada 0 60 Miles New York Vt. Buffalo Albany N.H. Mass. Connl. Map area N New York Lazores said that state police also were restricting movement of residents within the reservation despite Knight-Ridder Tribune News promises made before the action. State police Capt. Richard Garrant said that troopers would stay on Mohawk land to maintain some type of protection for himself, who arrived from the governor's office. Bush drops limits on computer sales The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush, probed by Western allies, proposed yesterday to drop restrictions on sales of sophistication technology products to the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. The move would eliminate 30 categories of goods and technologies from a list of 120 restricted items, and ease curbs on 13 others. "Careful study indicates that most of the goods and technologies that we currently control to Eastern Europe and Soviet destinations are of low strategic value and should be decontrolled," said Marlin Fitzwater, White House press secretary. 'Careful study indicates that most of the goods and technology that we currently control to Eastern Europe and Soviet destinations are of low strategic value and should be decontrolled.' In addition to computers, the affected products include telecommunications equipment such as cellular communications systems, satellite ground stations, microwave systems and fiber optics equipment, and precision-grade machine tools. For 40 years, the United States and its allies have imposed strict export curbs on high technology sales to Warsaw Pact nations and China to prevent them from buying equipment usable to produce weapons. Martin Fitzwater White House Press Secretary But pressure has been building to relax controls as a result of changes in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Fitzwater said Bush's proposal unanimously was endorsed by U.S. security agencies, as well as the Pentagon and State Department. Bush's proposal will be presented to the 17-nation Coordinating Committee for Multilateral Export Controls based in Paris. The countries include members of NATO and Japan. Official says talks can help future trade The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — U.S. Trade Representative Carla Hills tried yesterday to impart a sense of urgency to stalled trade talks by predicting diminished prosperity for all if negotiations fail. Hill's warning came at the start of three days of negotiations between trade ministers from Japan, the 12-nation European Community and Canada, which could break an impasse in a four-year effort to overhaul the rules governing the world trading system. The talks are designed to lower a variety of barriers to agriculture trade, textiles and other manufactured goods. The positions of opposing parties have become so entrenched that many fear failure to the talks being held under the auspices of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Such an outcome would deal a blow to the administration's hopes for expanding export opportunities for U.S. farmers and businesses. Hills, speaking to a group of business writers, called the negotiations the best chance this century to create trading rules that will be needed in the next century. Smith & Wessons Tonight! 25¢ Draws & 50¢ Well Drinks 18 & Up Admitted 623 Vermont 843-0689 Make Buyback a BREEZE Highest Cash—Now through Finals! Plus Double Bonus Buy back Bucks Enter the JBS Thousand Dollar Book Giveaway! Win one of 5 certificates for up to $200 for fall books! (One entry for each $10 of books sold per visit. Minimum one. Full details at the store.) M Jayhawk Bookstore Your pros at the top of Naismith Hill Store Hours: Mon.-Thurs: 8-5:30 Fri: 8-5 Sat: 9-5 Sun: 12-4 LiveWire We Be Doin' It! HOT OFF THE WIRE Thursday-Tent Meeting, a black comedy, premieres at 8 p.m. at Crafton Prayer Theatre. Friday - Cold is What you'd call it, an original script reading, at 8 p.m. in Smith Hall. Saturday - That Statue Moved rocks at the Jazzhaus. 'We Be Doin' It' Above, cast members clockwise from top: Darrin Person, Corey Carter, John Lewis, Allan Hayton and Stacey Chestnut. CALENDAR Thursday KU Flute Ensemble, 8 p.m. Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. Lonnie Ray's Blues Jam, blues, 9:30 p.m., The Jazzwha, 926½ Massachusetts St., $1. ■ Parlor Frogs, rock, 9:30 p.m. Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St, $1. **Rot Gut.** rock 'baily' 9:30 p.m. Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W.12th st. $1. Sons of Rex, party rock 9:30 p.m. the Bottleneck, 757 New Hampshire st. ■ Tent meeting, black comedy, 8 m. Thursday through Sunday, Crafton-Fraiser Theater, Murphy Hall, general public $7 and $6, KU students $3.50 and $3, senior citizens and other students $6 and $5. Friday *Baba Baba-the Witch!*, Sunflower Puppets, 7 and 8 p.m., The Lawrence Arts Center, Ninth and Vermont *reels*. $2.50. ■ Any Clark Beal, piano, student recital, 8 p.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. Britt Hammond and the Country Gentleman, country, 9 p.m., Shiloh, 1003 E. 23rd St, $3. Cold Is What You'd Call It. script reading, original play by Joe McCauley, KU student, 8 p.m., 100 Smith Hall. The Last Movie, film, 3 p.m., Hoch Auditorium. - Laura Ellis, organ, doctoral recital, 8 p.m., Grace Cathedral, 701 S.W. Eighth St., Topeka Mauchovonian Love Beat, rock 9:30 p.m. Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St., $2. Ricky Dean Sinatra with The Mahoots openings, original rock, 9:30 p.m., The Bottleneck, 737 New Hampshire St. St. Louis ■ That Statue Moved, college rock, p. 30 p.m. The Jazzhaus, 92% Massachusetts St., $3. - Valentine, rock, 9:30 p.m., John nv's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., $1. ■ Borderline Country, country, $ p.m., Shiloh, 1003 E. 23rd St., $3 Saturday Haybales and Missile Trails, print exhibition by Cima Katz, open through June 12, Kellas Gallery, 7 E. Seventh St. **Pulling Strings:** The Bushong Martinezes, martionette exhibition through June 4. Elizabetht M. Watts Museum, Museum, 1047 Massachusetts St. Roger Whitkler, singer/guitarist, 8 p.m., Midland Theater, 1228 Main St., Kansas City, Mo. Lawrence Civic Chair concert, 8 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St., adults $3, students and senior citizens $1. ■ Mongol Beach Party, rock, 9:30 p.m., Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St. $2. Saxophone studio students, student recital, 9 a.m., Swarthout Recital Hall, Murphy Hall. SDI, dance rock; 9:30 p.m. The ottenkee, 737 New Hampshire St. The Moved, college rock; 9:30 p.m. The Zachsman, 82% Manhattan Surchasst $3. The Seventh Annual Truman Anniversary Concert, the Kansas City Symphony, 8 p.m., Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints Auditorium, 1001 W. Walnut St., Independence, MO, tickets to $25. palladio, mo., tickets 88 to $2. Valentine, rock, 8:30 p.m., Johnny's Tavern, 401 N. Second St., $1. Sunday ■ Stories Off the Wall, tour of the month by Elizabeth Happy, 1 p.m., lobby, Museum College of Art. ■ We Be Doin' It, performance by Minority Theatre Program, 8 p.m., Crafton-Preyer Theatre, Murphy Hall Exhibits - Charles Darwin: A Portrait Biography, exhibition open through June 17, Museum of Natural History, Dyche Hall. Committed to Print, exhibition open through May 6, Spencer Museum of Art. From Behind the Fan: Sources of Japanese, 19th century Japanese woodblock prints exhibition open through June 10. The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak St., Kansas City, Mo. Mystery movie twists plots By Christopher Cunnyngham Special to the Kansan Jim Armusch is what some people call a minimalist director. He fills his screen with as little as possible; movements are slight and slow. The camera usually is put in one place during the course of film, and the extended shots can make some people nervous. MOVIE review His previous films, "Stranger Than Paradise" and "Down by Law," were black and white excursions into film existentialism, slow and delicate studies of down-at-the-heels U.S. citizens and confused foreigners in the land of plenty. "Mystery Train" is no exception. The film takes place in Memphis, Tenn., and contains three stories about three different sets of characters, of whom meet during the course of the film. Several are foreigners and several are from the United States. The first segment, "Far From Yokohama," is about Jun and Mitzuko (Masatoshi Nagase and Youku Kiduchi), two teenagers on vacation in the United States. Jun, who looks and dresses like the Japanese Eddie Cochran, and Mitzuko, a teen queen who collects T-shirts, have arrived in Memphis to explore the roots of roll and to see the city of the King, who lives there. In room hotel they hear a gaurshot. The second segment, "A Ghost, is about an Italian widow, Luisa (Nicoletta Braschi), stuck in Memphis who is trying to bring the dead body of her husband back to him, slugs into DeeDee (Elizabeth Brachco) and a woman who has just left her, who and they share a room together. In their hotel room they hear a gun shot. The third and final segment, "Lost In Space," deals with Dee-Dee's abandoned boyfriend Johnny (Joe Strummer), Dee-Dee's brother (Steve Buscemi), Black Jack (John Wilbinson) (Rick Aviles) and with Dee-Dee's departure by getting drunk and dragging his friend around with him on a night of madness. What plot there is unfolds slowly at best, but there is charm in the way Jarmusch paces his films. No one ever looks completely comely in the frame of his camera. The men are balanced on the mysterious floor in night clerk's and bellboy's reactions to the patrons of the hotel. The acting is perfect. Even an amateur looks good in a Jarmusch film; they're supposed to look edgy. > Christopher Cunningham is a Leeswood junior majoring in English and film studies. PHONE / INTERSHOW 1155.727.0437 *PHONE / INTERSHOW* 1155.727.0437 Dalby Stares PRETTY WOMAN R (1/4) *2-200* 7-90-48 THE HUNT FOR RED OCTETTER PG (1/6) *5-100* THE QUARIAN D (1/6) *5-100* Dalby Stares TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES PG (1/6) *5-100* Dalby Stares SPACED INVADERS PG (1/6) *5-100* Dalby Stares Q AND A R (1/6) *5-100* Call 841-1600 for Weekend Shows and Times You should know: In 1987 the US federal 17% paid Interest on the national debt government spent $798 billion dollars. 2% was spent on environmental protection. 4% was spent on education. $798 billion dollars. 39% of this went to military spending. VARSITY 1013 MASS. 842-1855 Miami Blues (R) 91FM & RWMA 842-8400 HILLCREST 91FM & RWMA 842-8400 Steel Magnolias (PG.1) 91FM & RWMA 842-8400 Love You to Death (R) 91FM & RWMA 842-8400 First Power (R) 91FM & RWMA 842-8400 Driving Miss Daisy (PG.) 91FM & RWMA 842-8400 Crazy People (R) 91FM & RWMA 842-8400 CINEMA TWIN 1013 & RWMA 842-8400 All four of the Flames (R) $1.00 Stella (PG.1) 842-8400 BARGAIN MATHEMATICS SKY TV CITIZENS $3.00 SHOWNES FOR TODAY ONLY MOVIE LINE 842-5191 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 642 Mass. HALL 749. 1912 * Malinee (only $2.50) MYSTERY A FILM BY JIM TRAIN JARMUSCH Thurs.* 5:45, 8:45 Fri.* 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 Sat. No Showings Cinema PARADISO A FILM IN COLLEGE DOWNTOWN Thurs.* 5:15, 8:16 Fri.-Sat.* 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 Cinema PARADISO A FILM BY GUILLOP DONATIOS Thura. 5'15, 8:15 Fri-Sat. 4'45, 7:15, 9:45 Cool T's Weird Coat I's Ward, Toys, incense, accessories, posters and the elevated listening lounge We buy used CD's, records & tapes. We also sell both new and used CD's, records & tapes. DEER BURREAU 538-516th Laurence 144-938-043-1551 LAWRENCE'S USED BOUNDS EMPORIUM and more! 0915843-1551 COME CELEBRATE CINCO DE MAYO AND OUR JUSTICE 10TH ANNIVERSARY THIS WEEK! Featuring Tuesday-Sunday... - Regular Drink Specials $1.00 Margaritas Tues.-Sun. $1.25 Imports Wed. 1/2 price Peach Margaritas T - We're rolling back our prices to 1980! - We'll be giving away: T-shirts, Royals Tickets, and Passes to Worlds of Fun! - Our Patio is now OPEN! 2B Thursday, May 3, 1990 / LIVEWIRE 2515 W. 6th 841-1323 Berenros MEXICAN 0831 012 0831 012 Band festival rocks for charity Bv Buck Tavlor Kansan staff writer More than 20 local bands are scheduled to play this weekend at the ninth annual Omega Outdoor Music Festival in rural Douglas County. The East Lawrence Improvement Association has been working with the city to develop a new park behind the Santa Fe railway station in East Lawrence. Wildcare rehabilitates injured and orphaned animals. The festival, which will kick off at 4:30 Friday afternoon, will benefit Wildcare and the East Lawrence Improvement Association. Last year festival proceeds netted $2,700 to buy equipment for the Headquarters Inc. crisis center. Brad Bond, member of the Committee for the Preservation of Wild Life in Lawrence, which organized Omega, said the committee expected more than 800 people to attend the festival. "Attendance has grown every year, but it really depends on the weather." Bond said. "Last year, we were in the basement, though we all froze during the night." He said the committee was a non-profit organization formed in 1982 to highlight local musicians and to promote interest in Lawrence's live music scene. The festival, which traditionally is on Stop Day weekend, first featured three bands that played for a few weeks. The most popular ensemble includes 12 bands and 10 solo acts. He said the cost for the festival was $8 per person for one day and $12 for two days. "We played last year for the first time and had a great, great time," he Allen Levine, lead singer and guitarist for the featured band, The Love Squad, said that his band was looking forward to -playing in the festival. The band plays original rock music. Bond said the committee encouraged camping at the event, which will last until early Sunday morning; The committee also recommends car-pooling to ease parking constraints. "Even though there will be a combined art of food out there, we'd like to remind people to bring more food to them. And they think, they'll need." Bond said. Omega IX map OMEGA IX Stull DG. CO. 1023 DG. CO. 442 DG. CO. 1023 said. "I hope the weather is warmer, but the event is always a lot of fun." Bond said that eight people were on the planning committee but that 40 to 75 people were involved in the festival in some way. "I can be nothing but excuse when I see all the committee members putting forth so much effort to make this the best Omega ever," he said. He said maps to the location were available at Yello Sub, 624 W. 12th St., and The Rock Chalk Bar, 618 W. 12th St. SPEND HALF AN HOUR AND WE'LL MAKE YOU A BEER EXPERT! AND IT'S FREE! We offer tours and explanations of our brewing process on Saturday afternoons at 2 PM. No reservations necessary, everyone welcome. Visit the first legal brewery in Kansas since 1880. FREE STATE BREWING CO. 636 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas Just a Playhouse 806 W. 24th (Behind McDonalds) LIVE BAND Thursday • Friday • Saturday BROKEN PENGUINS Thursday, May 3rd Body Heat Male Dancers 8:00-10:00 (Guys admitted at 10) Fri, May 4- FRIDAY SHOT NIGHT Sat, May 5-$1.00 KAMIKAZES Call our entertainment line: 843-2000 The University of Kansas Theatre Presents the OUTRAGEOUS COMEDY TENT MEETING M By Lárry Larson, Levi Lee, and Rebecca Wacker 8:00 P.M. May 3, 4, 5, 1990; 2:30 P.M. May 6, 1990 CRAFTON-PREYER THEATRE Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office; all seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982. ONE WEEKEND ONLY!!! Partially funded by the KU Student Senate Activity Fee LIVEWIRE / Thursday, May 3, 1990 3B Theater production to feature minorities By Bryce J. Tache Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer More than 50 Black and Hispanic students will be doin' everything from William Shakespeare to Janet Fletcher, who is a celebration of minority talents. "!We Be Doin TI," a project that "iwe舞台, drama, music and poetry, will be performed at 8 p.m. Sunday in Crafton-Prever Theatre." LeWan Alexander, instructor in theater and film, is directing the show, which is being presented by the department of theater and film and theatre. Thesures with the cooperation of the KU Office of Minority Affairs. 'People need to get over the color. Maybe it would be best if everyone saw people as gray. It's important to know where you come from, but it's so much more than skin color. I think it takes things like 'IWe Be Doin' it! to make people aware of that.' Green senior Pamela Cook "The project expresses those things in life we experience." Alexander said. "It expresses those things we attempt to hide, those things we relish, those things we get excited about. Hopefully, we will give something that people can take with them when they leave." Alexander said he wanted students of all races to attend. "Some people will be made uncomfortable by certain pieces," he said. "They are not sure they hope that everyone will be enlightened. The show is about having people wake up and see what these students want to express and how they feel." Alexander said the show was a collaboration between himself and the students performing. "It is simple, free and unencumbered by sets and lights," he said. "There are no fancy laser shows. There are just actors, dancers and on stage. People should come to expect a good time and feel welcomed." Darrin Person, Kansas City, Kan, senior, will perform four dramatic pieces in the show. "This has been long overdue in this department," he said. "It is going to serve as an outlet for all the repressed ability on this campus. Minority students have felt that they didn't have an audience. "This is a precursor to a cultural center at the University. This is proof positive that there is a desperate need for a cultural center that blends the creative juices of people of different races and different cultures." Moses Smith, Junction City senior agreed. “There have been a whole lot of things lacking at the University of Kansas, including the knowledge of the talents that we as minorities he said. “Putting those talents in one book is essential.” Pamela Cook, Green senior, will be acting, singing and dancing in the show. "The best thing is having the opportunity to show this talent and being able to express what is inside us," she said. "It has not been well known that there is a place for mindsets at the University of Kansas." Cook said she hoped minority students would have more chances for expression in the future. "People label and box other people into certain categories without seeing who they are," she said. "People need to get over the color. Maybe it would be best if everyone saw people as gray. It's important to know where you come from, but it's so much more than skin color. I think it takes things like 'We Be Doin It!' to make people aware of that." C Your parents always tell you to study hard and make good grades, but they don't have to know where you go to study... Tonight... Enjoy $1.00 DRINKS and the PARLOUR FROGS JOHNYS BREWERS LIVE MUSIC Wed.-Sat. 401 N. 2nd Enjoy $1.00 DRINKS and the PARLOUR FROGS JOHNLYS LAWRENCE 401 N.2nd Listen to Mother Nature. KANSAN TGIF TGIF 75¢ Games or $4/Hr Lane Rental All Weekend The Kansas Union Jaybowl Level One/864-3545 Dining At Fifi's What You'll Enjoy Atmosphere. The most relaxing in Lawrence. A meal set in perfect harmony for a relaxing night of celebration or just a quiet evening with a friend. Come to Fifi's. Lunch... Mon. thru Fri. 11-2 Dinner... Sun. and Mon. 5-9 925 Iowa Tues. thru Sat. 5-10 841-7226 fifis Before The Lights Go Out... Check Out Checkers Video ! Before The Lights Go Out ... Check Out Checkers Video! RECEIVE ... FREE 6 oz. Bag of Ruffles Light Potato Chips WHEN YOU RENT... 2 REGULAR VIDEOS AT 98¢ EACH 1 OR NEW RELEASE AT 198 EACH LIMIT 3 FREE 6 OZ. BAGS PLEASE! WHILE SUPPLIES LAST! THIS OFFER NOT VALID WITH MOVIE COUPON MORE THAN 5,000 VIDEOS TO CHOOSE FROM OFFER GOOD MAY SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THURS. FRI. SAT. Checkers IS LOW FOOD PRICES 23rd and LOUISIANA WE RENT Videos FOR LESS!! Thursday, May 3, 1990 / LIVEWIRE Ruffles Light V3 LESS OUN Potato Chips Ruffles Light 1/3 LESS OLD Potato Chips 6 oz. Bag of Ruffles Light Potato Chips WHEN YOU RENT . . . 2 REGULAR VIDEOS AT 98¢ EACH 1 NEW RELEASE OR AT 198 EACH OFFER GOOD MAY SUN. MON. TUES. WED. THURS. FRI. SAT. | | | | | 3 | 4 | 5 | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 4B Checkers IS LOW FOOD PRICES 23rd and LOUISIANA WE RENT Videos FOR LESS!! --- CHILN University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 Nation/World New release not expected Ex-hostage angry that others remain captive The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The White House said yesterday that it had seen no signs pointing toward release of another U.S. hostage in Lebanon. Meanwhile, White House spokesman Martin Filipin志 said President Bush would meet with Frank Reed if he spoke. The president returned to the United States. About the message Reed reportedly was asked to carry to Washington by his captors, Fitzwater said, "I'm not aware of anything." Bush administration officials indicated Tuesday that there was nothing new in the oral message another president had delivered, related to Bush in a White House meeting Monday. Asked yesterday about reports that Iranian officials were still working to seek freedom for Western hostages, Mr. Hamidzai said there are any other indications of a release." Reed, recuperating at a U.S. Air Force hospital in Wiesbaden, West Germany, said yesterday that he was angry that Terry Anderson and Thomas Sutherland were still hostages. Both were kidnapped in 1985. "Mr. Reed is free to say whatever he wants," Fitzwater said. "I'm sure he was reflecting briefings he has received about the status of events, but he is free to say whatever he likes." Of Reed. Fitzwater said. "I'm sure if he wants to come in and see the president, a meeting will be arranged. He certainly has every right to do that. . . He has not indicated to us what his preferences are." At the State Department, deputy spokesman Richard Boucher said the United States was making indirect contacts with Iran through third parties, including Switzerland, which represents U.S. interests in Teheran. "We continue to hope that further hostages will be released," Boucher said. Sixteen Westerners, including six U.S. citizens, remain hostages in Lebanon. Polish was freed April 22 after 39 months in captivity; Reed on Monday after 43 months. Senate committee approves large Pentagon budget cuts The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Democrat-controlled Senate Budget Committee yesterday made the deepest cut yet in proposed Pentagon spending, approving a 1991 budget that queens President Bush's military plans by $9.9 billion. The panel adopted the $1.2 trillion spending plan, which says it will reduce next year's deficit by $40 billion, on a 1:49 pay. Sen. John McCain has only Republican to join the committee Democrats in voting for the package Committee Chairman James Sasser, D-Tenn., who placed together the proposal, called it a clear and clarion call to the White House to get behind some real deficit reduction. Bush's budget seeks $36 billion in deficit reduction. Sasser said his package could serve as a benchmark should negotiations be held this year between the White House and congressional leaders, but he iscerning whether a need exists for formal budget talks with Bush, while Republicans argue that such bargaining is a necessity. The administration and congressional Democrats have been dueling all year about how Pentagon spending should be adjusted as a result of political changes in Eastern Europe. The White House has urged a cautious approach, while Democrats are eager to use some military dollars for social programs and to reduce the deficit. The $293.9 billion the panel recommended for defense is $1.6 billion less than the amount the House included in the budget. Economy's worst times are past, report shows The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The government's chief economic forecasting gauge made its largest gain in more than a decade, the government said yesterday. "Basically, the message is the economy is showing signs the worst is behind it," said Robert G. Dedelew Jr., a professor at the Northern Trust Co. in Chicago. The Commerce Department reported that its Index of Leading Economic Indicators rose 0.9 percent in March, nearly offsetting the 1 Nation/World briefs percent decline in February. It was the steepest increase since a 1.6 percent gain in June 1988. The index is designed to forecast economic activity six to nine months ahead. "The LEI is hinting at a takeoff for the economy later this year from an amnemic growth pattern of the fourth quarter of 1989 and the first quarter of 1990," said Allen Sinai, chief economist with the Boston Co. However, Dederick said the economy was not prepared to go on a sudden spree. HUD SCANDAL: A former housing official said yesterday that Samuel R. Pierce Jr. was deeply involved in steering federal grants to friends while HUD secretary and that one grant was arranged after a developer appealed to then-Vice President George Bush. DuBois L. Gilliam, once deputy assistant secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development and now serving a federal sentence for corruption, linked Bush to a $500,000 federal grant for a Hispanic trade center in Kansas City, Mo. Gilliam, who admired taking bribes, testified for a second day before a congressional panel investigating the HUD scandal. Speaking with a grant of immunity from further prosecution, Gilliam detailed how he and his manipu- saries direct lucrative subsidies to friends. GERMAN AOREMENT: The two German states agreed on a treaty for merging their economies yesterday after West Germany agreed to give elderly East Germans more financial access from the thrives of the free market. The tentative agreement, which still has to be approved by the parliaments of both countries, settles big differences between the two Germanies concerning how to assess the high costs of unification. The agreement clears the way for a WATER CONSERVATION: Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley yesterday proposed mandatory conservation measures requiring all water customers to cut use by 10 percent in California with California's worsening drought. full merger of their economies by July 2. The regional Metropolitan Water District, which provides about half the water needed by 15 million people in Southern California, has forecast a 10 percent shortfall in its supplies this summer. The state is experiencing its fourth consecutive drought year. HUNGARIAN INTERIM PRESIDENT: Parliament made a firm departure from its Communist past yesterday, choosing as Hungary's interim president a writer jailed for his role in the 1956 antil-Soviet revolt. Arpaed Goenck, 68, replaced Matyas Szuores, a member of the Socialist Party, formerly the Communist Party, which ruled for 42 years. He received 393 of the 370 valid votes cast by secret ballot. Goencz's nomination was the result of a pact between the two largest rivals, the center-right Hungarian Democratic Forum, which will most likely form the new government, and the general League of Free Democrats. THE PRINCETON REVIEW call today LSAT GMAT GRE strategy for success LSAT GMAT GRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW strategy for success call today LSAT GMAT GRE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FINALS FILM WEEK Showtimes: 4:00 & 7:00pm Free•Free•Free•Free•Free•Free•Free•Free TURNER &HOOCH Stella St.Elmo's Fire A DRY WHITE SEASON Free•Free•Free•Free•Free•Free•Free Call 864-SHOW! KU's line to entertainment STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES THE UVA OF KANSAS ARRASINE Stella Baking Time Best Popcorn And Yogurt In Town! FLAVORS yogurt and bakery 701 W.9th 841-6043 SHOWING THURSDAY @ 7 PM AND SATURDAY MATINEE @ 4 PM IN THE WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM TICKETS JUST $2.00/ REX HARRISON TALKS TO THE ANIMALS! DR. DOOLITTLE 'REX HARRISON IS THE DOCTOR WHO WOULD RATHER WALK WITH THE ANIMALS AND TALK WITH THE ANIMALS THAN WITH PEOPLE IN THE DELEGUFTAL ACADEMY AWARD-WINNING FANTASY, WITH ANTHONY NEWLEY. Each week's winner will receive $50, and will qualify for the finals, which will be held on May 21! Just for entering, you will receive a free tan at California Tanning! What do you have to lose? We are only 30 minutes away! Take I-435 east to State Line exit! Contests will be held on May 7 & 14, with the finals one week later, May 21. For more contest information, call or just stop by Fuzzy's South! 103rd & State Line Fuzzy's South is having Amateur Swim Suit Contests! Over $600 in Cash & Prizes! 103rd & State Line (816) 941 - 7702 T florida plantw 843·4888 Remember us for: Bedding plants Patio bloomers Outdoor blooming baskets Great gift ideas for Mom and the graduate Where Spring is bursting into bloom! 2233Louisiana GRADUATION GIFTS FOR HER - Diamond Pendants * Rings * Pearls FOR HIM - Watches - Keychains - Gold Chains BRIAN AND MICHAEL KIZER CUMMINGS JEWELERS 800 Mass. 749-4333 6 Double Offer. Free Gift. 1 The Desert Duffel Yours With Any '14.50 Merle Norman Cosmetic Purchase. Sunwashed colors and skin care necessities are inside your Desert Duffel. There's Taupe Suede eyeshadow, Sheer Tint Foundation, Ultra Lip Protector and Total Body Moisturizer. We have one gift per customer while our supplies last. Free Makeover Lesson. Come in for a free summer makeover with Painted Desert Colors. They'll cool you in Rosepetal, Blue Suede and Violet Haze or warm you up to the Mesa tones of Khaki, Frosted Turquoise and Peach Lily. MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIOS 9th & New Hampshire 841-5324 8 Thursday, May 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Prof warns about overpopulation By Curtis Knapp Kansan staff writer Population (billions of persons) Old Stone Age (not to scale) New Stone Age Bronze Age Iron Age Middle Ages Agricultural Revolution begins Christian War Years Industrial Revolution KU professor Helen Alexander discusses population growth and projections for the 21st centurv. increased awareness of world overpopulation is necessary to help solve the problem, an assistant professor of botany, systematics and ecology said yesterday at University Forum. Helen Alexander, who has researched the subject, spoke about the population problem to about 40 people at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. "I don't think I have the solution," she said. "I think these issues are all very tricky." Alexander said population growth was almost non-existent, 8,000 years ago because living conditions were much more difficult. "There is some thought that even at that point human numbers were already starting to influence their environment," Alexander said. "And I think the bottom line of it is we're not as much emotion about individuals as the influence of individuals on the environment." She said at that time, the development of agricultural society gradually increased the population. Death rates and birth rates were increasing. After World War II, improved education, living conditions and better medical technology affected population growth. "If you look at population growth of the world as a whole, . . . it's primarily growth in the Third World countries," she said. She said population control policies were difficult to implement because Alexander said forcing Third World countries to use birth control often conflicted with cultural, social and religious values. it took a long time to see the effects. She referred to the policy of trying to limit the number of children a family could have. Incentives for people to have fewer children are not successful, she said, but "because we do not adversely affecting families that already have many children. She said that although U.S. population growth had stabilized, citizens needed to maintain a concern for the countries where growth had not stabilized. She cited statistics showing that a baby born in the United States consumed the equivalent of two babies born in Sweden, 15 in Brazi, 140 in Bangladesh and 280 in Chad. Pau Gump, professor of psychology, said after the speech that he thought the population problem was scary. "I think it'a worldwide problem," he said. "As Americans we really ought to support the worldwide solutions." Drug shows potential in treating brain tumors Flusol improves effectiveness of chemotherapy, survival rate By Steve Bailey By Steve Bailey Kansan staff writer A drug under study at the University of Kansas Medical Center has shown signs of increasing the life of some patients suffering from cancerous brain tumors. "Less than 10 percent of patients with high grade cancerous tumors of the brain survive more than two years," he said. "With this treatment, we have had five patients survive more than two years and four that are still alive and well." Richard Evans, chairman of Radiation Oncology, developed the study that showed that treatment increased the amount of time a person lived. The study, which began in 1887, uses a blood substitute called Flusso, to help blood carry oxygen throughout the body, said Rosemary Hope, spokesman for the Med Center. Tumor cells contain less oxygen than healthy cells, making the poorly oxygenated cells less receptive to radiation. Evans said cells that were poorly oxygenated were about three times more resistant to radiation treatment than healthy cells. "By increasing the level of oxygen in the cancerous cells, we can increase their vulnerability to radiation therapy," he said. "Flosol, a coating agent, activates an oxygen carrier to the tumor cells in the brain." In February 1987, the Food and Drug Administration gave approval for Med Center researchers to test the use of Fluosol. Evans said that the Med Center was the first institution to test Flusol for this purpose. "Since the program began we have treated 32 patients," Evans said. Evans said he was extremely pleased with the results of the Med Center testing. "Other institutions have since conducted studies, and I am expecting to receive the results of their tests so I can write a paper for the International Journal of Radiation Oncology." Radiation therapy for the treatment consists of an injection of Fluosol, followed by about 45 minutes of 100 percent oxygen administered by face mask. The patient receives radiation treatment while continuing to breathe through the mask. Evans said that the treatment had not produced negative side effects in the Med Center patients. Malpractice fears eased by decrease in insurance rates By Chris Siron Kansan staff writer Lower medical malpractice rates will help Kansas attract and retain doctors, state insurance officials said yesterday. Ron Todd, assistant director of the Kansas Insurance Department, said the department had approved rate decreases averaging 20.9 percent for the St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. St. Paul, which is the nation's largest medical malpractice insurer, insures about 40 percent of doctors against malpractice. Todd said he expected the department to announce a 12 percent rate reduction for the Medical Protective Co., which insures another 40 percent of Kansas doctors. A separate 8 percent reduction is expected for hospitals owned by the PHICO Insurance Co. Fletcher Bell, commissioner of the department, said yesterday that the lower rates would help improve the quality of Kansas medical care. "Doctors do their best to avoid states with high premiums," he said. "If we can keep our rates down, we can keep our quality up." The rate decreases will go into effect July 1, Todd said. Beth Hamel, St. Paul spokesman, said an analysis of insurance claims for the state and the country decrease in malpractice claims. The lighter case load has counteracted the expensive trend of larger awards in malpractice suits, she said. St. Paul's rate decreases could reduce some Kanaas doctors' premiums by as much as one-third, she said. Doctors malpractice premiums vary widely depending on their field of practice. Todd said he expected other malpractice insurance companies to make similar rate reductions to remain competitive. Doctors and hospitals also will see reductions in rates for the Health Care Stabilization Fund, a state-supported malpractice insurance program issued by the State Department decrease will not be known until next week. The fund's rates are assessed according to the premiums each doctor pays for insurance from a private company, he said. Doctors are required to carry at least $200,000 in insurance from a private company. When private companies reduce their insurance rates, it decreases doctors' financial obligations to the fund. Sex priestess calls it religious experience The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — A self-proclaimed priestess who bedded down with her followers says she first asked for proof — in cash or other tokens of sacrifice — that they viewed sex as a religious experience. Mary Ellen Tracy, known to her flock as Sabina Arnae, testified in federal court yesterday in her lawsuits accusing city officials of violating her religious freedom in pursuing prostitution charges against her. Tracy and her husband, Wilbur, have been convicted of prostitution and running a brothel. Boeckman said the couple used their Church of the Most High Goddess as a front for prostitution. Assistant City Attorney Bryon R. Tracy said initiates needed to confess and perform oral sex on her before they could be considered for purification. Before intercourse, sacraments were required for their valuables were required to show dedication to the church, she said. She told Judge William Byrne on Tuesday that she collected about $50,000 in donations in three years but that she did not keep records on followers beyond their first names and telephone numbers. 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COMPLETE TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS FOR STUDENT TRIPS TO EUROPE, OR WHATEVER YOUR DESTINATION MAY BE --NEVER A SERVICE CHARGE-- CALL US FIRST, YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID! 13610 W. 95th. ST. LENEXA 888-3371 OR TOLL-FREE 1-800-248-0590 Travel Trends Ltd. SUNSHINE University Daily Kansan / Thursday, Mav 3. 1990 9 THE JOURNAL OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK Keith ThorperKANSAN Memory lane Shannan Fisher, Topika sophomore, and Melissa Diehn, Overland Park sophomore, scan the 1990 Jayhawker Yearbook. Yearbooks will be sold through Friday in front of Wesco Hall. Report shows no headway by Kansas students in '89 The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Despite bally-boored efforts at education reform, student achievement is continuing a decline that began three years ago, the government said yesterday in a controversial report. Education Secretary Lauren Cavazos said the annual state-by-state performance chart, popularly called the wall chart, "makes it clear that, in the long run, we are seriously committed to improving education for all Americans." The chart has been criticized as promoting flawed data. Timothy Dyer, executive director of the National Association of Secondary School Principals, said U.S. teachers too easily too complex to hang on a wall. '... As a nation, we are still not seriously committed to improving education for all Americans.' The chart, he said, had as much to offer educational improvement as the Edsel offered the automotive industry. In Kansas, the high school graduation rate fell and college entrance test scores showed no improvement last year, the Education Department Cavazos, however, defended the chart. — Lauro Cavazos Secretary of Education "It is the only national measurement of educational performance," he said. "It's the best that we have." The department will have to rely on the wall chart." In its annual report card of public school performance, the department cited rising teacher salaries as a bright spot in Kansas. But it found declines in several key indicators of student achievement. The department said Kansas rose in the rankings for average teacher salaries to 27th nationally in 1969 from 32nd the previous year. The average annual salary in Kansas went to $27,401, up 11 percent from 1988. However, the average still was $29,567, up an average teacher's salary of $29,567. The graduation rate for high schools in Kansas dropped to 80.2 percent in 1988 from 82.1 percent in 1987. The state graduated 80.7 percent of its students from high school in 1982. Kansas' ranking for graduation rates dropped to ninth nationally in 1988 from eighth the previous year. However, Kansas remained well above the national average graduation rate of 71.1 percent. College entrance test scores for Kansas students showed no change in 1989. Still, Kansas moved up in the rankings to tie for ninth out of 28 states in scores in the American College Testing program. Kansas was ranked 12th in 1988. The average score last year was 19.1, which is above the national average of 18.6. There was a slight drop in the percentage of Kansas high school graduates who received qualifying scores on Advanced Placement examinations. The Advance Placement program offers college credit for high school coursework. In 1989, there were 468 students down from 4.3 percent the previous year. Kansas ranked 37th nationally in that category. The department said Kansas dropped five places to 26th in the national rankings for educational expenditures for each student. The state spent $4,076 a pupil in 1988 compared with $3,933 in 1987. Overall, state monies accounted for 43.2 percent of educational financing in 1988, the 34th highest in the nation, and local sources provided 51.9 percent, 19th highest. The federal government provided the remainder. Kansas had ranked 38th nationally in educational financing in 1987, providing 42.4 percent of educational system funds. Listen to Mother Nature. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Weather Map RIZAZZ! RIZZ! 901 Mississippi 749-7511 Lawrence's Hottest Dance Spot 18 and up Admitted CINCO DE MAYO FIESTA! SUNDAY MAY 6 LAST CHANCE TO PARTY BEFORE FINALS Lambada Contest $1.75 Coronas $1.00 Tequila Shots $2.00 Jumbo Margaritas Door prizes Food Admission $2.00 in advance Tickets Available at: 864-4256 Hispanic-American Leaders CINCO DE MAYO FIESTA! SUNDAY MAY 6 LAST CHANCE TO PARTY BEFORE FINALS Door prizes Food Lambada Contest Tickets Available at: 864-4256 Hispanic-American Leadership Organization 410 Kansas Union ● Ride the Bus Downtown on Saturdays! 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LOUISVILLE Tru-Colors PHOTO • 1 HR PROCESSING • ENLARGEMENTS • E-6 SLIDES • B & W • COPY PHOTOS • PRINTS FROM SLIDES • PORTFOLIOS 1414 W. 6th St. 843-8004 PICTURE THIS 11 E, 8th St. 843-8015 LAWRENCE'S BEST PARTY PICTURES • No Contracts • No Shooting Fees • No Hassles NEW STUDIO • Portraits • Advertisements • Portfolios • Weddings Picture This... PICTURE THIS PARTY PICTURES 11 East 8th St. 843-8015 5 Look For Coupon Book 4. Study Biology 6. Pack 1. Study Western Civ. 5. Study break at Pup's Things to do during finals: 3. Meet Thurs.at Pup's for lunch 2. Sell back books Located at 9th & Indiana 749-1397 PUP'S Free MIA SANDALS Comfortable Fashion For Spring And Summer Many Styles To Choose From! P ARENSBERG'S SHOES Quality Footwear for the whole family since 1958 One Step Ahead Open Sun. 1:5 Weeknights 'til 8:30 825 Mass. Downtown Lawrence 10 Thursday, May 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Health Child's Play Stories by Yvonne Guzman Jane Rudolph "Is is a tricky one." "A-a-n-t." "A-a-a-n-n-t." "Right. Faster." "Now faster." "A-n-t." "Watch my finger," said Cathy Starke, a graduate supervisor teaching phonics to 4-year-old Thomas Joseph. Starke was holding up a chart with the word "ant" spelled out four different times. Below each spelling was an arrow, or a set of arrows, that indicated to the child how long to sound out the word. She began to move her finger slowly across the last word's arrow. "When my finger comes up, you have to be finished," she said. "Act." Ant. "Ant. Good job. Thomas." B Thomas is one of 22 children in the EduCare class at Haworth Hall, EduCare is one part of the Edna A; Hill Child Development Laboratory. Jacob, 5, learns to crawl with the help of paraprofessional Michelle Loiselle at the Special Education Early Intervention Program Study lauds faculty, students Members of the KU Special Education doctoral program have reason to be proud, according to a report by the Journal of Special Education. The study, which surveyed faculty members from all universities offering special education doctorates, said KU's program had the most distinguished faculty in the pre-prepared students in the nation. KU's faculty is distinguished by the fact that members are extremely student-oriented, said Teresa Heller, a professor of graduate studies in special education. They are engaged in top research, but also are committed to good teaching. The program also benefits from its extremely talented students, Whelan said. KU has graduated about 200 doctoral students in special education since 1965. Most are still in the field. "They tend to stay with it," Whelan said. "And many of them in their own right are well known nationally and internationally. They're producing their own students." works to explore the biological and behavioral aspects of disabilities, the ways in which technological advances can benefit individuals with disabilities, and the best methods for integrating students with disabilities into regular programs, he said. The program is designed to help helping individuals with disabilities to lead more satisfying lives. The special education program "We're trying to teach what we research and research what we teach, and then disseminate that information through service and publication," Whelan said. "All in all, the institution is identified as a leader in programs about disability." A unique resource at KU for students are the special education preschools in Haworth. The classrooms, such as the Edna Hill preschools, serve three purposes: educational experience for students and bases for research for faculty and students. The teaching approach at the school is multi-disciplinary. The children are exposed to a wide range of learning, sensory speech, motor and music therapy. Preschoolers learn through behavior modification The Edna A. Hill Child Development Lab is one of the two largest systems of laboratory preschools in the nation. These preschools, in addition to serving the community, function as a laboratory for future teachers and a setting for faculty and students. Five part- and full-time classes exist, serving about 80 students, said Alita Cooper, assistant director of admissions, curriculum and advising for the lab. The EduCare class has 22 children of various races and income levels. Children are between the ages of 2 $ \frac{1}{2} $ and 6. Classes run from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. During this time, the children play and participate in various educational activities. Specific times are devoted to learning about numbers, language, pattern matching, hand- writing, independence and safety. The children also play outdoors, eat lunch and have rest periods. When working with the children, EduCare teachers use behavior modification techniques to encourage and discourage disruptions behavior. EduCare is the only preschool at the Edna Hill Labs that operates full time. can later be exchanged for permission to play computer games, to sit on the teacher's lap during a story or a variety of other rewards. For example, teachers issue tokens to children who have demonstrated good behavior. Tokens "Basicly what they they're studying is how children learn and what affects how and what they learn." *Dudih Scheff, office manager.* Faculty champions behavior program Applied behavior analysis is a relatively new field and one that was established largely by faculty members at the University of Kansas, said Don Bushel, professor of human development. The field began to attract recognition during the 1980s, at the same time that many distinguished faculty members were affiliated to the University, Bushell hall. Applied behavior analysis& originally was defined in an article written by three KU faculty members in 1868. It attempts to determine the causes of human behavior and develop methods of behaviorism to be applied using a group of theories called behaviorism One of the things that distinguishes this system from others is the emphasis placed on the analysis of applied techniques, said Ed Morris, professor of human development. "If it doesn't work, we go back and tinker a little more," he said. "If it does, we learn something." The Journal of Applied Behavioral Analysis, first published in 1968, was the first journal to emerge in the field. Its first three editors were the KU faculty members who wrote the original article on the subject, Bushell said. Two are still members of the KU faculty. The University has dominated the field since then, Bushell said. It has produced three presidents of the association for Behavior Analysts. KU researchers have initiated numerous programs that have been adopted nationwide, Bushell said. One example is the Teaching Family Model, a system of juvenile rehabilitation. The system came from a home in Lawrence called Achievement Place, established by a number of men from the University and Lawrence. Achievement Place has two professionally trained teaching parents, about or seven and Ms. Wolf, of the founders of the program. Poe Larry Carter, assistant director of Headquarters. 1419 Massachusetts St., takes a call at the counseling center. Gretchen Pipoenger/KAN5AN Headquarters expands Lawrence effort By Mark McHugh Kansan staff writer About a month ago, a 12-year-old girl called headquarters because she was worried about the ozone layer caused by dilapidation of the environment. Karen, a volunteer at Headquarters Inc., 1419 Massachusetts St. answered the phone and told the girl that everything would be all right. The girl's mother was not home, Karen said, so she talked to her. Headquarters, at 841-2345, is a 24-hour personal crisis and short-term counseling center that takes calls from anyone who is considering suicide or who needs a friend on the phone. "I think she just called because she was home alone and scared, and she The center also provides emergency shelter for anyone in need such as battered women and runaways. The center has four bedrooms and three bathrooms. It is staffed by volunteers and paid staff members. KU students constitute half of the 75-member staff. Headquarters was established in December 1969 by KU Students who were concerned about drug abuse among high-school students, said Larry Carter, assistant director at Headquarters. had to direct her fear somewhere else," said Karen, whose last name had to be withheld because of the lack of privacy policy concerning volunteers. Now in its 20th year, the center has expanded to provide suicide Carter, who has been working at Headquarters for 10 years, said that in the past two decades, Headquarters had moved several times. Until last year, he said, he passed Massachusetts streets. Before that it was in the 1100 block of Kentucky. Last year, Headquarters provided emergency housing for 755 people. Carter said, and more than 18,000 people called for assistance. intervention and information about alcohol, drugs, AIDS and health and sexuality concerns. Karen said people requesting shelter had to perform a chore, such as sweeping the floor; to stay there provided food for people themselves. "The best thing about Headquarters is that we're open 24 hours and that we're fine," Carter said. "We're probably about the safest first option that you can call because we can address the problem immediately. As far as we know, we're the oldest place like this." Carter said volunteers at Headquarters had to go through a selection process and committee interview at the house before being hired. Then they are selected for a 90-hour training program. Headquarters' 1993 budget is $62,000. It primarily is financed by United Way, which donated $40,000 with a secondary donation from KU Student Senate; totaling $16,000. Other money comes from Lawrence's city liquor tax and other donations. Worker shortage in health services challenges nation The Associated Press Intenlisted recruitment, special programs, and higher salaries are being put to work as shortages in health and health care specialties continue. **Genetic counselors.** According to a representative of Sarah Lawrence College, there are only 950 genetic counselors certified by the American Board of Medical Genetics, more than half of whom received their training at the Bronxville, N.Y., college. There were 1.6 million registered nurses in 1988, according to a report recently sent to Congress by Health and Human Services Secretary Louis Sullivan. But the Association of Academic Health Centers, representing about 100 large health complexes in the U.S., has an additional 137,000 nurses were needed to fill vacancies in hospitals and nursing homes. Pace's Leinhard School of Nursing in Westchester County and New York City said it was launching an all-out effort to find and train nurses, recruiting not only in high schools but in other disciplines and careers. A recent salary survey by Working Woman Magazine puts the national pay average for nurses between $37,000 and $40,000. Pace University in New York says the starting salary in the metropolitan area is $35,000. One of its programs is nursing summer camp for promising high school candidates in Westchester. Another project, in cooperation with a group of New York City schools, enables hospital workers to upgrade their careers through nursing education. Lienhard also has a combined degree program that allows a degree holder in one field to complete requirements for an initial nursing degree in as little as a year. She said low enrollments, overwork, burnout and low salary growth were among the causes. In cytotechnology, the analysis of cells to diagnose cancer and other diseases, technicians are restricted by new federal rules limiting how many slides they are allowed to review in one day. Other healthcare specialists experiencing shortages include: - Laboratory technicians, Dr. Betty Hatten, chairman of the University of Oklahoma's Clinical Laboratory Sciences Department, cited a survey that revealed that 9.3 percent of medical technologist and 13.8 percent of cytotechnologist positions across the country are vacant. A recent salary survey by Working Woman Magazine puts the national pay average for nurses between $37,000 and $40,000. These specialists are involved in the screening and diagnosis of such disorders as cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy, neurofibromatosis or cranio-facial disorders. They also work with families, helping them adjust to the impact of these conditions. In 1969, Sarah Lawrence became the first school in the nation to establish a master's level program in genetic counseling. It has established affiliations with more than 30 med schools and two top-tier repopulation New York area. College officials say field work placement with leading researchers at area institutions is readily available for students with research interests. Optometrists. Optometry schools reported only 1,831 applicants for 1,214 spaces in 1989, compared to 2,022 applicants for 1,196 spaces the previous year, according to the American Optometric Association. AOA officials say that the country needs more optometrists as the population ages but that there are fewer people seeking a career in the field. Optometrists averaged net incomes of $60,000 in 1988, with an average of more than $40,000 during the year of practice, AOA officials said. Support staffs, in contrast to health care specialists, are being cut by many hospitals and institutions, which are trying tighter reimbursement restrictions. University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 Sports 11 Former Kansas athlete takes on police beat Football, basketball standout faces new tests and challenges Kansan sportswrite By Molly Reid Former Kansas football and basketball player Clint Normore is now a rookie officer for the Lawrence police department. After he finished playing for the Jayhawks, Clint Normore decided to trade in his Kansas football and basketball teams for one with a little more clout. "When I'm in uniform, I mean business," said the e-foot-200-pound former tackle and point guard, who wear a Lawrence police uniform. "I want people to know I have a job to do and respect that." and respect Kansas forward Mark Randall, a teammate and neighbor of Normore's, said Normore's down-to-business attitude was distinctive in any uniform. "He's an easy guy to get along with," Randall said. "He's a tough guy, a tough player. He goes to work and gets right to it, but he still has fun doing it. (Police work) is a good job for him." As an athlete at Kansas, the Wichita nation was the fifth-leading tackler for the Jayhawk football team with 62 stops in 1987. He also came off the bench as a point guard for the basketball team. Normore played in 25 basketball games during 1988, the year that Kansas won the national championship, and was the team's assist leader in three games. Normore gave up his fourth year of football eligibility in 1988 to enter the NFL supplemental draft, but he was not drafted. He said the transition from player to officer was an easy one. "As an athlete, you develop a type of instinct, and that has played over into police work," he said. "Experience as an athlete, period, was helpful." Eric Montgomery/KANSAN Normore, who did not earn, degree, began his police career last fall after applying for a job with the Department and passing the required test. "I thought about it as a child," he said. "When the opportunity came to try it, I took it. I took the test and passed it. I was elated." His training began at the police academy in October and lasted six months. Since academy graduation, Normore has been working with a training officer for three months. His more month to complete the four-month, on-road training. Working in Lawrence, where he was once something of a sports celebrity, has caused only minor problems, Norma said. "It's different when people want you to be all friendly like you were back in school," he said. "They have always been talkative, they don't talk about basketball or football." "My true friends really appreciate that. They respect me for what I do. That's all I want. I'm always a police officer, but when not, I'm a friend." Dave Price, Lodi, Calif., junior, said he appreciated Normore even though he was not a close friend. the culprit returned to the apartment to admit his crime at the request of Normore. Frieda and his answering machine stolen from his apartment during a party two weeks ago and did not become aware of the incident until notice. "I don't know how he caught him." Price said. "It hadn't been reported. I learned about it at the party." Price said Normore went out of his way to get the incident resolved, which was done without an arrest. knew him before from football and basketball. Then, he saved the day. I've got his business card. That's pretty sweet." Since he began his work as a police officer, Normore said he had not run into anything he could not handle. "It was a novelty," Price said. "I like a class project. I want the final project to be an example of my work." Although Normore said he worked hard on reports, he said he enjoyed the opportunity to be out in Lawrence. "I like to be in contact with people," he said. "I'm not one to miss out on the good weather." Normore, who still plays basketball occasionally, said he had seen other similarities between the athletics department and the police officers he worked with. "It's great," he said. "There's a brotherhood that I can't believe." "He's an enforcer type," he said. brotherhood that I can't believe. Roadkill said he was sure Normore Big 8 picks shock team Only one player named from first-place 'Hawks Only one player named from first-place 'Hawks Kansan sportswriter By Paul Augeri Coach Kalum Haack said he was disappointed that only one Kansas softball player was named to the 12-player 1990 All-Big Eight Conference team. Kansas softball However, Haack said his team would not be discouraged. "We will use it to our advantage in the Big Eight tournament," she said. "The kids will be motivated by the lack of respect they've received." shortstop Christy Arterburn, a sophomore, made the All-Big Eight first team for the second consecutive year. Pitcher Roanna Brazier, second baseman Kim Sacco and third baseman Camille Spitaleri received honorable mention. "It is a nice honor, but I thought we should have had more players with me," Arterburn said. "I thought Camille should have been on the team. "When you look at our record and our stats, we don't have one outstanding player. We are a team with a lot of great players." The votes were cast last week, before Kansas won the Big Eight regular season title Sunday. The Jayhawks, at 14-15, finished the season. The team finished the season by winning 20 of its final 21 games. Deb Nelson, assistant director of the Big Eight Service Bureau, said conference coaches were allowed to nominate players from their own team but could not vote for them on the final ballot. Brazier was 26-5 with a 0.94 earned run average. She also set two Kansas records this season for three stories and single-season victories. "I was disappointed about not being selected, but right now what counts the most is winning the Big Eight tournament. Zanier said. I wasn't doing anything." Arterburn, Sacco and Spitaleri claimed the top three spots in hits. Arterburn also led in runs and stolen bases. Braizer's three home runs led the conference, and Spitaleri had a league-best 30 RBI. Five Oklahoma State players and three Missouri players were chosen to the first team. Cowgirl pitcher Dena Carter, 19-5, 0.61 ERA, was selected for a World Series pitcher Karen Snelsmeg, 12-5, 0.37 ERA, was the other pitcher selected to the first team. In conference statistics, five Jayhawk players were leaders in five of seven offensive categories. missouri coach Jay Miller was named Big Eight Coach of the Year. The Tigers were 28-12 overall and tied for fourth place in the Big Eight with a 3-7 record. "The important thing is the team, not the individual awards you get," Haack said. "This is hard to accept because of the lack of competition that Missouri plays all year," Haack said, referring to the high number of non-Division I teams on the Missouri schedule. 27 Eric MontgomeryKANSAN Kansas assistant coach Mitch Wilson spreads sand on the mound while Lance Niles tries to get footing during the top of the second inning of the Jayhawk* game with Emporia State at Hoglund-Maupin Stadium. The game was postponed last night because of rain in the bottom of the Inning with Emporia State leading 7-1. Drying the field K-State player accused of rape sports briefs MANHATTAN - A Kansas State University football player pleaded not guilty yesterday to a charge of trapping a female student in the campus residence hall where they both The Associated Press Ramon N. Davenport, 21, of Union Springs, Al., entered the plea in Riley County District Court. He remained free on $1,000 bond. lived. BASEBALL PLAYERS HONORED: Six members of the Kansas baseball team achieved academic honors, being named to the 1990 Lee Jeans Academic All-Big Eight Honor Roll. Others who made the honor roll were redshirted freshman first baseman Jim Hanna, sophomore outfielder Steve Meeks, senior pitcher Brad Hinkle and junior pitcher Steve McGinness. Center fielder Pat Karlin and relief pitcher Curtis Shaw were first team selections. Kansas placed more players on the honor roll than any other Big Eight school. Karlin, a senior majoring in business administration, had the highest GPA of any Jawahir, a 3.33 Shaw, an administrator, and a junior administration, had a 3.27 GPA. Kansas football catcher Jodi Hoyer was the only Jayhawk selected to play in the 2016 N.F.L. Roll. Hoyer, who is majoring in physical education, had a 3.3 GPA. The grade point averages of others selected were McGinnis, education, 3.29; Hanna, business administration, 3.27; Ward, research, 3.26; Meeks, biology, 3.15. Summer calls'Hawks to play PLAYERS NET HONORS: Four Kansas tennis players have been named to the 1980 Lee Jeeps Academic All-Big Eight Conference Honor Roll, and two received honorable mention. Sophomore Carlos Fleming, junior Chris Waier, junior Minda Pela and junior Stacy Stotts were chosen for first-team honors. Junior Becky Kalme and sophomore Sophomore Hannah Wagner were also on the honor roll. By Molly Reid Kansas sportswriter Most Kansas students are talking about internships, jobs and classser with their summer plans. Kansas basketball players, however, are reminded of a word they cannot escape, even for the summer: basketball. Men's basketball Many of the players said that they would either go home or stay in Lawrence but that either way, they would play basketball. "Coach Williams wanted us to go wherever we would be happy," junior Kirk Wagner said. "But he wants us to work hard on our game." All of the players said they would do something to improve their game, whether it meant attending or working at summer basketball camps, lifting weights or playing in a summer league. Senior Kevin Pritchard and junior Mark Randall have been invited to try out for a position on the 12-member all-star team that will be competing in the Goodwill Games and the World Charity Olympics. Wichita recruit signs with Jayhawks The Goodwill Games are scheduled for July 23-29 in Seattle, and the World Championships are slated for Aug. 19 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. By a Kansan reporter Randall said that the tryouts for the team, May 17-22 at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, would determine the rest of his summer Sixty-six players. The game have been intended to try out. Cortez Barnes became an official member of the Kansas basketball program Tuesday. "My whole summer hinges on making the team," he said. "If I don't, I'll do some camps around the state and hang around here." Pritchard also has not made any definite plans for the summer because he is waiting for the NBA draft June 27. Pritchard was in Kansas City yesterday planning senior games for the summer and unavailable for further comment on his plans. Kansas has one scholarship to award. The 6-foot-8 power forward signed the Kansas letter of intent at a press conference at Wichita Heights High School. He is the sixth player to join the 1990 Jayhawks recruiting class. During his senior season, Barnes averaged 19.6 points and 9.5 rebounds a game. sure of his choice since his visit to the University on April 20. Wichita Heights coach Charles Doughty said Barnes had been "Cortez thinks he'll fit in well." Doughty said. "And that's the most important thing. That's where he wanted to go." Barnes has not passed the ACT test in accordance with the required NCAA standard score of 18. Barnes had planned to heap the SAT test and if he does not pass then he taken the ACT for a final time. If he does not score more than 18 on the ACT or 700 on the SAT, he will be intelegible to play during his position. He will need 48 eligibility requirements. "I'm unsure," Brown said. "I'm already sick of school." mores Macolm Nash and Alonzo Jamison still are considering enrolling in summer classes. Sleep is the only thing freshman Adonis Jordan said he had planned for the summer. He also said he would upset his plans by competing on two of three different all-star teams. Jordan said he was invited to play on the Olympic Festival team, which plays July 3-11 in Minnesota; the Big Eight All-Star team, which competes in basketball and tennis; the NIT All-Star team, which will travel to Australia. Jamison said he probably would take a class or two in Lawrence this summer after going home for a few weeks. He said he planned to play a summer league but had not yet decided on his options to play or work at a camp. "I know I want to go to the festival," he said. "And, I think I'd rather go to Australia. Basically, I want to work on my game. I've got to be ready when November comes around." Junior Mike Maddox will follow in the footsteps of many KU students He said he would be in New Jersey this summer working on an internship with a developing company. But he also had to work at a leser City, N.J., summer league. The four departing seniors have an added option for the summer. Because they are no longer eligible for collegiate basketball, they have the opportunity to work at the Roy Williams Basketball Camp. The camp's three sessions are June 17-22, July 29-Aug. 3 and Aug. 5-10. None of them are sure of their status, but senior Freeman West said he would like to work at Williams' camp and possibly at former Jayhawk forward Calvin Thompson's camp. Rick Calloway, like Pritchard, said he could not make plans until he found out about the players he invited to play at a pre-draft camp in Chicago. "I'll probably work for Coach Williams if I'm here," he said. "But if I was drafted, I won't be around." Calloway said he would become a free agent if he was not drafted. Senior Jeff Guelner planned to work at camps across Kansas for the summer. Royals sale imminent, Star reports The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Royals called a news conference for noon today amid speculation that an announcement would be made concerning the team's ownership. Ewing Kauffman, the team founder and co-owner, has been reported to be negotiating a loan or buyout of Avon Fogelman, who purchased a half-interest in 1883 but has fallen, upon hard financial times. Royals rained out; play to resume tonight "Royals owner Ewing Kauffman will have a statement," the Royals said in a prepared release. The Associated Press The Kansas City Star reported in today's editions that Fogelman proposed putting the team up for sale and giving Kauffman the final bid. Citing unnamed sources, the newspaper said Kauffman had not decided whether to accept Fogelman's proposal. Part of the proposed deal calls for Kauffman to lend Fogelman $34 mil. KANSAS CITY, Mo. Last night's game between the Milwaukee Brewers and the Kansas City Royals was postponed by rain and will be made up as part of a two-night doubleheader Aug. 10. Starting pitchers, Jaime Navarro for the Brewers and Mark Gubicea for Kansas City, are scheduled to pitch tonight. The Royals, 6-12, are in last place in the American League West. Milwaukee, 12-6, leads the American League East. lion, the Star said. The paper said Fogelman's proposal would enhance Kauffman's chances to regain full control of the team. But it said a third party could take 106 percent of the team with an extraordinary high bid. Fogman, a real estate developer from Memphis, Tenn., paid a reported $11 million for half-interest in the team and was actively involved in club management. Kauffman, who founded the team in 1988, holds the other half. However, Fogelman recently has been compulsively absent from team functions, such as the agent pitchers Mark Davis and Storm Davis. Kaufman was asked at the time what role Fogelman played in the negotiations and replied, "None." 12 Thursdav. Mav 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan 1. Program to assist prepare minorities By Carol B. Shiney Kansan staff writer The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is seeking about $75,000 to finance a program that would provide students with the opportunity undergraduates for graduate study. The program, tentatively called the minority scholars program, was designed in response to the decreasing numbers of minority graduate students entering graduate programs across the country. A pilot program for 12 minority students will begin this fall without the money. Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences, said, "We decided that what we should be doing is encouraging our own minority undergraduate students to graduate school in the college." If the program gets full financing, it would accommodate about 50 students and could include a faculty-student mentoring program, one-credit seminars, a speaker series and research awards. To motivate positive research awards, the college awards to provide a financial award to each student. McCluskey-Fawcett said the pilot program probably would be composed of two seminars, one in the fall and one in the spring. sciences 'The only way there are going to be minority faculty is to get minorities in graduate school.' - Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett associate dean of liberal arts and attached to it probably won't be happening next year, unfortunately," she said. McCusker-Faewett said it would take at least a year to find financing. She is seeking money from federal and private corporations and foundations. She said there were few minorities available for teaching because of the decreasing number of minority graduate students. Robert Lopee, Kansas City, Kan, senior who is helping McCluskey-Fawcett plan the program, said the program targeted at sophomores and tutors. For example, last spring only four Black people in the country graduated with doctoral degrees in mathematics, she said. About 800 people graduate with doctoral degrees in mathematics each year. "The bottom line of this project is to get them to go to graduate school," he said. Blacks get poor treatment medical committee reports The Associated Press CHICAGO — The short shift that Blacks and other racial minorities get from the U.S. health-care system is intolerable and must end, an ethics panel for the American Association reported yesterday. Studies dramatizing the disparities in medical treatment between the races go back decades, but Blacks are the ones who have been the least aggressive care, the AMA Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs reported. "Not only do the disparities violate fundamental principles of fairness, justice and medical ethics, they may be part of the reason for the poorer quality of health of Blacks in the United States." "Whether the racial disparities in treatment decisions are caused by differences in incomes and education, socio-cultural factors, or failures by the medical profession, they are unjustified and must be eliminated," the council reported. U. S. Blacks have twice the infant mortality rate of whites and a life expectancy six years shorter, the panel said in a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The panel reported that many of the disparities also exist for other racial minorities but are less well-documented. The panel recommended a triple-barrel approach to improve health care for Blacks: greater access, greater awareness and concrete medical guidelines for what is acceptable care. Black men under 45 years have a 45 percent higher rate of lung cancer and 10 times the likelihood of dying from high blood pressure than white men in the same age group, the council added. Ensuring greater access should include requiring employers to provide health insurance to all their workers and expanding coverage to all U.S. citizens below the poverty level, the panel reported. Classified Directory 100s Announcements 105 Personal BRIGID-HONEY!!!! Happy 21! The last 4 months have been GREAT! What could be next... Cookie. Nothing compares 2.0. You're the bestest and I don't want to. Okay. Christ in U. I did change names. You weren't the Christ in the article. Stacy. Bright, creative, funny, male, 26, seeks caring, playful, intelligent woman looking for a loving relationship. Reply to P.O. Box 402424 Lawrence KC 6004. Job #2306 Cosine of AKA. Please also need a date to cissus of AKA. Will fall down stairs and fall out of clothing to please you. Please call 1-Get-Ya-Rock. MOM Poster Child Foundation. If you are a female, looking for a serious relationship, here I am, a male. Please write to PO Box 40286. Lawrence Lif Viking. Have a good summer. In Aug, I hope there is enough left of yesterday to build that bridge into tomorrow, and that you'll want to. I love vail. Tomy. MAX U.: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT??? Matthew W: How do you sleep at night? Shawn (a young David Letterman), Happy 1st B-day, a bit excited. He is wearing a white shirt with u and Dennis this semester has been exhibiting (no 2 mention haunting). Your mother odd B-boy. Happy. SURPRISE! Happy 21st Birth. Let's go yaching Can't wait for next year at the Alamo. Love, Sur, Mich, and Bob. 110 Bus. Personal 91 Senior Class Officers. Vote today at Strong. Paid for, by WIHIM. Advanced line art portraits, moosing, shading. Shoes can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Government photos, passport, immigration photos. Make sure the film is glueless. Make your play in more than 10 models by Ravishing, Wilson, NOSM, SKA, and Louisville Stinger. Please B11$ to 11$ of AF Bookcase, beds, chalk of drawers, desk, cookware, tents. Everything that tee the man. DON'T HAVE HUGE HOME! Call Lock and Load for delivery. Fully insured. DON'T HAUL IT FOME!!!!! Call Lock and Key DON'T HAUL IT FOME!!!!! Call Lock and Key We offer free pick up and delivery. fully insured and protected. Free storage. Free mail. Copyright © 2013 by m.suwaiyu www.m.suwaiyu.com Drive thru open everynight tl1 2:00 a.m. SUBWAY 1736 West 23rd. Try telephone romance the Christian way? Meet people 24hrs a day, a day Already, "If so, you call." Call your pastor. Give $2.00 first minute.$1.00 thereafter. M. B. E. B. HELP! OVERSTOCKED! Bison Ranch 4 Dr. Chess $50 Twin Malt and Box $99 Solid Wood Rocker $99 Solid Wood Bumbled $99 Solid Wood Tall Few $15 Bassett Receiver $199 $ Pc. Dinner $150 Mortgage Factory ismski & Larch, Ray Ban Sunglasses 26% Below $99, Retail The Ete; Shop 732 Mass, 843-6511 Kansas Furniture Factory Outlet 738 New Hampshire, Lawrence. Call Today! - Airline tickets home KU Campus 14th & Jayhawk Blvd. Mon.-Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 864-4450 B.C. AUTOMOTIVE your full service auto repair shop. Classic to commercial. MB 7426, Massapequa, Dicover, NJ 08105. 610-805-6344 - Summer travel plans On-campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts. 120 Announcements You receive it private sources, or your money refunded; Guaranteed! Federally approved program provider. P.O.D. Box 1823, Mount Moriah, MO 60420 1821-745-498-682. Don't throw that stuff out! Donate it to a garage sale for local refuge organization. Call lt at 745-498-745 or 745-698 to who you old clothes, toys, games, etc. For confidential information, referral & support for AIDS concerns - call 841-2345. Headquarters Counseling Center MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History UNIOUE GIFTS GAY & LESBIAN Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals (called回来 by counselors) Headspace Hospice Wednesday 7:9 p.m. 843-3611 Sponsored by Wednesdays 7:9 p.m. 843-3611 Sponsored by Wednesdays 7:9 p.m. 843-3611 intransramarsh shoes play outball, soccer or Ultimate Frisbee. Nike, Adidas, Milei or Diadora. Francis Sparing Goods, 731 Mass. 409-191. Don't Wait! We'll find the lowest fares and best schedules. GRADUATES. Does your health insurance under your parents' plan stop on your graduation? Or does it cover you from graduation until you are eligible under employment. For more information, please contact us. 15-day afternoon preschool program available or the Ku summer semester for children ages 14-6. NWF TR 6 days/wk. Limited vacancies. Send resume with South Belfast M44-0400. HEADING FOR EUROPE THIS SUMMER? JET them everywhere from Denver, Minneapolis, or Chicago to New York and more than $149 with AIRHCLR as reported in Consumer Reports, NY Times, or Let Go. For detail calls: 121-684-2002 or write LET Go. Broadway, Suite 100, New York, NY 10025. *New Analysis of Western Civilization*, makes sense of *Western Civ*. makes sense to use it! Available at Jap Hawk, Oread & Town Crier bookstores. To all Golden Kwai members will be a picnic at Holocun Park on Thursday May 3rd from 4-4 p.m. There will be food and games. Come one, come all! Records thousands of 3b, 4c, CDs PVH Vault HP4 Records thousands of 3b, 4c, CDs PVH Vault HP4 You will pay $50 cash in advance to rename your Macintosh computer for the summer. I will pay $50 cash in advance to rename your Macintosh computer for the summer. Leave message at 847-7920. Leave message at 847-7920. 749-0700 Maupintour Suicide Intervention. If you think about suicide or are concerned about someone who call 841-2945 or visit 1419 Mass., Headquarters "Cummins/Lane" WE HEAR YOU...Must have experienced unfair treatment-barassment, discrimination, or belittling stirs. If you want to talk with someone at phone 864-6460 (information Center) 864-6460 Hillel לִיל EVENTS OF THE WEEK THURSDAY, MAY 3 OLD/NEW EXEC, BOARD MEETING 6:30 P.M., HILLEL HOUSE FRIDAY, MAY 4 FINAL SHABBAT DINNER & SERVICES HONORING GRADUATING SENIORS, 6:00 p.m., HILLEL HOUSE (Services at LJCC) SERVICES HONORING GRADUATING SENIORS, GET INTO THE GROOVES, Metropolis Mobile Sound. Superior sound and lighting. Professional studio, radio da JJ, Hot Spots Maximum Party Thaunt, DJ Val Hayes. 841-7033. SUNDAY, MAY 6 AWARDS BRUNCH OPEN HOUSE 4:00-7:00 p.m. HILLEL HOUSE 140 Lost-Found AWARDS BRUNCH 12:30 p.m., HILLEL HOUSE FOR MORE INFO CALL 864-3948 MONDAY, MAY 10 THURSDAY, MAY 10 FINAL S FOOD THURSDAY, MAY 10 FINALS FOOD 9:00 p.m., Hillier House MONDAY, MAY 7 & Join your friends at DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE Evening Fiesta and Auction to benefit the Articles of clothing and two duffle bags found April 28 on lawn near West Campus Road. Call and describe 064-2341 or 064-2254. Over $12,000 worth of merchandise donated by Lost male muddered cat. Approx. 1 year old. Orange and Cream colored tiger stripe. Answers to "Buddy." I found call 843-2986. Lawrence Arts Center and Found: Jacket, left at Advising Support Center, please describe 864-4571 call 0-5. Downtown merchants Tickets available for $10 ($15 at door) at Johnson Furniture 722 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence Silent Auction begins at 7 p.m. Bidding begins at 8:30 p.m. 130 Entertainment Lost: Bathroom Sunglasses 749 floor Lindsey Bathroom. Substantial cash reward. 749-7577. Letters: Pair of sunglasses, black Rayban with Perception Lenses and with black and green Body Glove Crackles, Please call Meghan 841.7796 ARTS TOUR OF LONDON: Inexpensive, fun tour of London's film, art, music, and theatre. Phone 1-866-410-9798. Downtown Law at Liberty Hall 642 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas on Saturday, May 5 Dool M. Rutledge. Call 864-7471 for your ID 205 Help Wanted Amusing Retail National Chain interviewing for part-time and full-time entry level positions $0.15 start. Flexible schedules in summer. For info. call Sury 3-145-9683. Babyfair needed this summer 6-8 weeks/wednesday + 1 eve/week in our home for 39 yr. old. Please need weekdays 28 May -1 June. Nonsmoker on transportation. 843-2563. BUCKINGHAM PLAACE: Now taking applications for new construction clean-ups summer or earlier. Days and early evening hours for reliable detail-ordered people. Call 842-6364. Buckingham PALACE. Office cleaning part-time even hours available Sun.-Thurs. for up to 4pm. No calls without reliability. Call for an appointment. 842-6348. Buckingham PALACE now taking applications for house cleaners. Morning and afternoon office cleaning part-time with reliability. Call for an appointment. 842-6348. *CARDIADS* Shadow Glen Golf Club need aid on an on-call bus. Must be 18 years old, able and carry bag up to 30 lbs. Hard work, good play. Lepore $39 buy $49. tips. +254-345-4345. CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camp. Teach swimming, water safety, wading in the lake, archery, soccer, sports camps, camping, crafts, drama, OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $180 or 200. Camp counselor,熬夜 768, MAPLE, NL. IG 8003, 780-464-344 Daily living counsellors-Community Residence Program: Two half-time sessions are available in the community, planning activities for and with the residents; and participating with them in the counselling live area in the community. These individuals assume responsibility in their own counselling in their absence, including reading in red. Must have a valid drive's license and be in suitability by Mengeen. Mental health technician's license required. Contact information: Data entry, analysis on SPS+s, for quarter-time graduate assistant. Experience social science research. Interest artificial intelligence welcome. 8.122.503 call. Call Joshua 8.122.423 after graduation. Call Judi 8.124.423 before graduation. the Community Residence where necessary and in some cases, students are included a high school diploma or equivalent plus a two year college credit or part-time college credits, of which are any social science course. Prior experience working in community service is recommended. Experienced babysitter needed in my home. Fall semester_Tuesdays and Thursdays: 81-023 after Looking for mature students looking to expand sales and or career careers during summer break. Flexible hours, benefits. Must have car and positive attitude. 842-1910 for appointment. Local video amusement company needs experienced and dependable individual to run amusement room. Must have excellent communication and health care. Job requires 25 hrs /wk. Starting pay in $/hr, plan future benefits. Fill out application at Schumon Foods, 719 Massachusetts. Mature responsible woman for child care in our home M-S, August 6-17, 8-5, 4 children (11, 9, 8, 6) $/hr. Please call Dr. McRidge 846-6000. Nannies needed. East Coast Florida one year. Contact families screened, good salaries, personal contact in Topka. M. Stroble 232-493 Nany Network. Nanny Opportunities: Salaries from $150-400.wk (plus a $200. holiday) to provide with a great family at the forfeal details. call: Aarne Steinroad, Ic- 1-800-433-6428. Min. age 18, min. 1 yr. 1-800-433-6428. Nursery School Teacher: A great little school teacher, very passionate. First, or both, by Creative control, planning period; support staff, supportive caregivers. Send resume to Community Nursery School, 645 Alabama Community, Nursery School, 645 Alabama Need caregivers with car for 11 and 12 year olds before and after school and 2 full days each week this summer. 849-1099. Office help for Child Care Center needed after enlistment ASAP. typing, typing recognition skills and data entry. knowledge of wordperfect helpful apply at Children's Learning Center. 358MA. SENIOR LEADING ASSISTANT. Part-time teacher assistant positions available at Rainforest Montessori School in a farm-like setting. Must have transportation. Will train: CALL 883-600. Rent me your Macintosh computer for the summer. I will pay $20 cash in advance to rent your company. I will pay $990.19. Local business person I am at 845-769-2333 and I am not. I need two for the summer. Thank you! Office of Study Abroad accepting applications for half-time (20 lrs wk.) Student monthly position. Must be able to work all mornings or after all meals. Req. Master's degree in a related field, 64.06.hr. Accurate typing, other office skills required. Word Perfect 5.0 help. Previous foreign study or travel. Contact 863. 601. LIP, College of Applied Science. Part-time clerical position. Thursday nights and Saturdays. General office skills helpful. Apply at Weaver's Department Store 2nd floor office. Residential daily living companions-Community Residence Program. These positions are for a community resident with chronic medical illness in reading in the Community Residence. Responsibilities include providing a home-like atmosphere for the residents and helping them learn or improve upon basic reading skills. school diplomas or equivalent and valid driver's license required. Must also be insured by Manger. Prior experience working with clinically diabetic patients preferred, salary: $16,000-$20,000. Student assistant, publications/staff dept. of Nt. Natl Hist. Museum; field biologist; weekday block of work; weekday, 25-30 hr. wk., summer and 15-30 hr. wk./fall spring 4-19 hr., work-study eligibility pre-requisite SALES/OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS College Students - - SUMMER JOBS - Exciting opportunity with National Co. approaching business people. Earn up to $4000 in 12 week program. No experience necessary. Full training. Des Plaines, IL area. For further details call 1-800-882-6660. FREEDIE BROKE TO NEW YORK! Driver wanted to drive one车 way only to Albury, NY. Choose a car and travel to work in Brisbane to travel for driver and friend. Back will be loaded with my insurance. I pay for gas, tolls, and two nights model expense. You are responsible for your own return trip. Reference required. Call Full-time ant, kantor position position for summer and fall applications. Located in two location based positions in child care facilities located in New York City. Contact Hiltop and set-up by comeby Smith, for written details and applications. Graduate assistant in newspaper production. We need motivated, well-organized graduate student to act as newspaper production coordinator for the newspaper staff (1985-1986; 1990-1991). Should have knowledge in editing and newspaper paste-up. Responsibilities include part-time editing, writing articles on Sun., Thurs., and supervising interns. Salary negative based on experience. Tentative start date: May 20th. Job description should be sent to Keddie 101, KSU, Manhasset, MS 65008 Att: Wanda Hynney, no later than 3:00 p.m. Job location: 101 KSU, 909 interviews will follow May 14-16. Graduate Assistant Position: Elder and child care referral services $80/mo. half-time. Application deadline May 19. Send resume, three letters of approval and six references to 649th Currant O'Leary LA AA/EEO. Help this summer in doctor's office with patients and general office work. Person must able to Kansas Union Catering Department having cash account at 340-659-1234 for cash day following employment. $80.00 / Apply Kansas Union Personnel Office Level ECO 503. KIMER language tutor wanted. 963-1102. Light factory work importing and packing plastic bags. Plant operator 7 day/week 24 hours a day. Grower 7 day/week 24 hours a day. Plant operator 24 hrs a day. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Packer Plastics 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Packer Plastics 10 a.m.-5 p.m. COLUMNISTS and CARTOONISTS NEEDED For Fall 1990 Kansan. Call 864-4810 and ask for Mary Neubauer, Fall 1990 Editorial Editor. Summer daycare for infants in my Leanwood, KS home. No smoking, references, good hours. 913-640-7257. We have a number of openings in Overland Park, Filling, Orders, Packaging, Warehouse and Clerical Positions Available. Wage range from $40 for hour and $120 for hour. Apply at 600-358-2297 or 600-358-2389. Teacher/Tutor-Part or fulltime this summer to devote tutor attention to boys ages 10 and 12. Overland Park. Education major preferred. Call Moe. Holt. (913) 451-8488. Weekend announcer for KLWN-KLZR. Experience required. Contact Brian Schiel. 843-1320. E.O.E. Weekend News Reporter for KIWN-KLZR. Experience required. Contact Kathy Freund 845-1300. E.O.E. 225 Professional Services years; women and men. Call Sarah B42-9681. Driver education offered thru Midwest Driving School, serving K.U. students for 20 years, driver income allows, transportation provider EMPLOYMENT? Do it the modern way! Talented prospects from national database are needed. Require a strong credit criteria. Hard copy or hoppy. 80 + per lead. Mail resume to Rick card required. Call Rick at 1827-3790. Need an Attorney? Frydman & Frydman ATTENNETS AT LAW John Frydman • Richard A. Frydman — Free Initial Consultation — 749-1122 901 Kentucky Suite #203 NU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. 348-hour-service processing. Complete I/W services. PASSPORT/RESUME $69.99. 205 Art & Design. 646-7079 Need a few hours of childcare for fall Flexible hours for kids from 3 to 6 years to match your class schedule: 7:30 a.m. to noon, 8:30 a.m. to Cal Fell Tax KU Child Care Lab in Hawthorne PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services Overland Park (913) 401-6878. Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 845-8221. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing. Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. 815-432-2000 VIDEO CONVERSION Pacific Airline Aviation VICE VERSA RUSH SERVICE AVAILABLE TRAFFIC - DUI'S Fake IDs + alcohol offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROBE REMODELING 16 East 13th 842-1133 - Custom-Contracting * Maintenance-Renovation * Student * 19 Vrs. Exp./Reasonable **YOUGHT 749-0733** - 1-1,000 pages, so job too small or too large. Accurate and affordable wordprocessing; Diana. R943 or Ruth. B54-6483. Call 8 a.m. - Ideer Woman Word Processing. Former editor transform your scrubrics into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct page of letter-type type. 648-203, days or evenings 235 Typing Services RESUMES - The right resume can make a huge difference in your job search. - Professional writer will write and typeset your resume to get results! * Rush Service Available – 841-1342 1 → typing and w.p. 18 years experience. Resources, thursdays, letters etc. Call Terry 440-474-44 p.m. 10 p.m. Anytime weekends. Computer wordprocessing with Spelling Check Call anytime 748-3863. hards wordprocessing, IBM computer w2JQ printer Themes, papers, newsletters, newsletter misc. 940-2130 after 5:30 or leave message. IBM computers BEST FOR LESS word processing. $1.25/pg. some jobs less. Accurate! 841-1308. K's Professional Word Processing; Accurate and affordable. Call after 1: 00 p.m. 841-6345. Tuxedo Word Processing; 841-6312 Call J.R. L's Typing Services 841-594-7642. Donna's Quality Typing and Word Processing Term paper themes, dissertations, interviews, letters, and spelling corrected. 202-G.W. 202-S. M. Miller. TheWORDCORTEs-Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. In 1883 845-3147. Editing, typing, critiques of works in progress. Expert help, any writing project. Call Liz, 749-406-8 Word Perfect Word Processing-IBM Compatible. Near Orchard Corners. No calls after 9 p.m. 843-8568 305 For Sale Writing Processing/Typing; Papers, Resumes, Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have M.S. Degree. 841-6254. 1989 Yamaha 650 special. Looks great, rump great, only 12,000 miles. $0.00 a b. Chad Call 645- Honda Hossein Express. $0.00 a b. Chad Call Honda Hossein Express. Hoe Hoe Complete $125. Queen waterproof without mattress $100 a b. Doog Queen waterproof without mattress $100 a b. 1983 Honda Interceptor 750, excellent condition, low miles, two matching bells, $2.150 o.b.o. Mark 864-1124. 16' Canyonside Mountain Bike for sale $300, 16" frame, M4.5222 (before 9:30 p.m.) 79 VW Fox GL 4 dr. loaded AM/FM cassette Hi- FL. Must sell 1-800-448-7714 (day) 1-242-7239 (eve.) A good couch, two cushion chairs, two tables. Best offer. Call Joel 843-7543. offer. Call Joel 843-7543. Alpine 1785; with 3516 amp. Auto-reverse car tape Alpine B. C $290 p.h. b44 849-3041 dao with Delkhy B. $220. b24. o. b2. 1604-32. Alpine 7890 Pullout, new in box. Mail pool cake, never used of 65. Kenwood: 769. Pullout, 4000. Equalizer/amplifier excellent condition. Must have tising items, clocks, watches, desks, antique tools, Royal Doulton, and a newer stuff it looks like. BUY NOW AT MARKET. 811 New Hampshire Open every Sat. and Sun. 16 for booth rental into 842-666-7500. An absolutely awesome collection of antiques, vintage furniture and used furniture, picture framing, precious and costume jewelry, handmade quilts, primitives, dolls, comic books. Playbills, collector and cheep rook-nell records, vintage clothing, French rugs, vintage shoes, French luggage. Apple Ie file, expanded memory, software $000 a.b. MAIRSHALL 1009 amp. Call 841-3888. Apple Ie Dual Disk / Skrink Printer/ Mouse To Modem. $000 or after $657-593. Beautiful Lake Perry Golf Course lot. For sale by owner. Out of state owner must sacrifice. 608.931.9198 Biancan road bike. Like new $175, 841-0099. Nihao shanghai, M6 Mercedes, Shanghai, pennsylvania. Beautiful King Size wizardbed. Includes: mirrored canopy,腋盖 headboard,垫板, padded rails, mattress heater, four sheet sets. 800. Make offer. 441-3453. Jike for sale, '88 Mongoose, Shimano recently tuned componentry $185, willing to negotiate. 941-6867 Demon. trand new exercise bike for sale: $125 o.b.o. Call 64-7207 Compaq portable 2 floppy drives with some software and a disk case. $500. Call 842-8672. Comic books, Playboys, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comic's. 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat. & Sun. 10.5 DRUMS CMU3D Dzidgan Cymbals with heavy capacity for sale. For sale: 6 dresner drawer with matching dresner drawer, sell together or separately. 841-381. For air sale: Airline KC to Denver, KA to Denver. For sale: Mac 800 k external drive, $130 o.b.o. Scott 50 watt stereo amp and tuner $150 o.b.o. Call 829-6911. For sale: Men's 10 speed Schwinn Bicycle, $65 o.b.o Call Faith 864-6290 best around 6:00. **Five** *Bass Wave Bars* for Cake and Crane Bass. Amp. for artists. Asking for $600. Kenwood speaker and Sony speaker for car stereo $8 each. Aluminum equalizer for car stereo $3. Cat. 841276. Furniture for sale. Items include beds, dressers, bars stools, couches, and entertainment unit. Cheap! Call Jeff at 841-9462. Gorgeous AKC black labs for sale. Ready in three weeks. Serious dog lovers only. Call evenings for info. 842-2730. Graduating senior NEEDS to sell furniture. All must get items include: vt stand, coffee table, stacking stools, and bar stools. Prices are nqy PLEASE contact Debbie at 408-697-8150. Also some furniture. 864-3006, 861-4597. Oklahoma City round trip ticket. Dates. May 11 to May 28. 864-3006, 861-4597. One-way ticket Jackson (WY, Yellowstone)- Salt Lake City-Kansas City, July 3, Delta, 490. PANONICC. Men's racing bicycle, 12 speed. PANONICC. Men's racing bicycle, 12 speed. Colore, Cobra track equipment, bison. Colore, Cobra track equipment, bison. b.o.b. Sees Boom Box 22 x 0.60. T-7 3 inch flash, plus flash. $399. Jodie Lynn RECORD SALE most played once, taped, and stored. All kinds of music: Saturday 8 a.m.-p. m. 14. Missouri. Bill & Roll records, Buy-Sell Trade, Quantrills, Bill New Hampshire. Open Sat.-Sun. 10-5. 811 New Hampshire, Open Sat-Sun. 10-5. sales/marketing. Summer employment in The Topa area. Start June 14, 4 F.-P. 8-3 Pay. $210/wk. bones. Callons Rote for aid. Schwinn 10 speed bike, great condition, need to adjust seat, adjust cost. $40. Call 835-600-960. Snake Roxy (pink) Box $200. Small animal cage SUMMER CARE FOR boys ages B and M. Nurses, 10-12 hr., week in my room. Transportation required and must be flexible. 94/hr. 841-7571 after 5:00. Sunaki 250 Enduro 1802 only 5000 miles. Great condition. Asking $725. David 748-105. digging Dug, Leaving Kanaa, selling everything watered, washed, Nagel and Adam Alamuins AWA Walkman. 78 Cherry Luv truck make after. Scott AWB2130 *couchness for sale by owner.* 2 l/br., l/t furniture, kitchen, living room. dining room with solararium and 1 car garage. Close to campus. $44.500. Call 843-567-2872 have message. University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 13 340 Auto Sales 1975 Plymouth Duster, PS, AT, radio, 135,000 miles, rustles, car $1,000 o.b.o. 864,5008, 841-4087. *80" Pontiac Bonneville, good condition, automatic, PB, PS, PW, new price, new msg, must sell. Call 843-6508 or leave message 82 Camaro Z-28, 36,000 miles, T-tops, PS, PB, tilt, cruise, air, 841:3235 after 5:00. 87 Jeep Wrangler. Red with white hardtop, 4 cylinder, 5 spd., 27,000 miles. Warranty. $7,600. 113,928,767 or more vehicles. 0113727-8401. 360 Miscellaneous 78 Diamond back 20.5 in Topanga Mtn. bike, 78 Yamaha DT 250. 841-6830 eves. On Tv, VCJ. Vectures, Stereo, Musical Instruments, camera and more. We honor Vici/MCA E.M.D.Ex./Jayhawk. Pawn & Jewelry, 180W M. 749-1819. 27 Toyota Tercel, 16k miles, excellent condition Call after 5 p.m. 843-2790/804-4217. HIT & RUN. Person who witnessed hit and run to gold '80 Honda Accord in lot 50, 4/25. PLEASE contact Mataja: Cell 816-898-6445. Thank you! 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 1 and 3 bedroom apts., for June 1 occupancy. No pairs. 843-8971. 1 bdr. 12th and Tenn. with den, breakfast room, wood floors. $360/mo. 842-654-052 1 bdr. apartment available for summer sublease. $100 + ½ utilities. Close to campus. A REAL STEEL! 841-3694. 3 oz 2 fl. oz. summer sublease furnished with Jacuzzi cable pad. Close to campus. Price neg. Call Jeff or Dan. 841-1887. 3 bdr., 2 bath, completely furnished apt. for summer sublease. Rent very neg. We need out-please help! | 842-8940. 3 bbr. apt. for summer sublease. Washer, dryer, garage. 3 bathrooms. Sunrise Village West. 845-8173. 合 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it aliyear to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, disability, or an intention, to make any such preference limitation or discrimination." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 4 bdr. 2 bath, pool, summer sublease, $176/per, person, furnished, Mastercraft, 15th and Kasid, on bus route. 790-1890. 3 bdr. apt. in older house. Available June 1st. 9th and Mississippi. AC, dishwasher, water paid, no pet. $856, 843-1074 4 bdr. house summer sublet. Excellent condition. Very close to campus. Central air. 1013 Illinois, very reasonable. 845-8197. *Aestivate (v): to pass the summer in a state of torpor) coolly.* In a basement studio, Downtown, bus. route, because $240 at $749-745. Nice. A cheap, big, close to campus, new 4-plex, A/C, own room, summer sublease; males only. 842-9021. Get the APARTMENT ADVISOR It's free! Available at all Dillon location Amazing Townhouse summer sublease. Available June 1st, 20bb, 1+ bath; pool, great deal! Rent neg. 841-7922. 480/mo + utilities. Big enough for four. The 3 cbd in locker. InLawrence. Hyperpool Roof, W/D). dishwasher. Summer sublease. Last chance to rent. 814-579-791. Apartment for lease: 3 bdr., loft apt. Next to cam- gion, 842-2871. A summer and fall three bar. apt. furnished, air conditioning, available June 1st. water, gas paid. 826 Kentucky, 841-5797, 749-3079 CHEAP! **I'M ON SALE!** Attractive 2 dr. apt., unfurnished 15th and Tennessee. $310. Lease, mo. security, no pets. Available June 1st. 842.5966 AVAILABLE NOW! 1 bdr. house, 2 bdr. house, 4/5 bdr. house, Duplexes and others. 042-2288. *breathe* me, 1 new 2 bbt, at 1008 Eery Rid. Great apt, with great location. Energy effi- cency good. Free WiFi. Microwave, microwave, ceiling fan, no pets. $75/mo. *month lease*, Lake West Hills Apts. 841-3800. Available for summer: A limited number of apps. Special rates: Studio $220/no. 1 bdr. $250/ 7 beds, $250. Call Becky Bellage 043-2116. 10 aft at Aspen West 290 W 150 S; 15 h and 2 bbr. apts in great location, 1 bbr.$360/room, 2 bbr.$80 Water paid 12 mo. leave. Come out weekday afternoons or call 811-343-7788. June 1, 2 kbf. apt. in kitchen, older house. Wood floor. 2 ceiling fans. fireplace. Kitchen. Wine cellar. $790. No pets. Summer subnet or 14 mo. lease at reduced rate. 841-1074. Available June. 2 bdr. apts, in older houses. $755 and up. Lots of character. No pets. #845-1074. Available end of May: One bdr. efficiency apt. walk to campus, stained glass window, AC. subnet sublet, $265/mo., neg. 943-4751 or 841-1074. Available now this summer only for non-smoking females. Partially furnished rooms in great condition. Above Amenity Center, WD, w/ DIC, cleaning woman $235-$280 plus deposit. Not a sublet. Anderson Rentals 1312 W. 6th RYDER TRUCK RENTALS (Local and One-Way) Call for rates 843-2044 MAFORDSPACE APTS. Now 3 tbd, 2 bath and 2 bdr., I both available for summer and on. On KU bus route, Microwaves, patches/desks, laundry facility, low utilities Buy one month get one free! Call us 643-8424 partially furnished, near campus. Call 643-8424 CAMPUS PLACE: 1 bloom from campus 4-1b, 2b, both available for summer and option for fall Pursued and cheap rent. Call 845-7333 or 845-7744. 1,3-4, 8 & 16 bedroom apartments. Many great locations, energy efficient and designed with you in mind. Call 811-1211, 811-5235, 740-6455, 900-1215 or 811-4292 or 740-4296. 862-7794 Cheap Sublease: Furnished bdr. and left. Avail. June tue. Rent req. Water paid. Call 843-7757. Mastercraft Management 842.4452 Coop living in KCK, 3 bdr., 1½ bath, 3attery townhouse only $89/mo. 10 minutes to KUMC. 912-677-213. Cary cane bed, apt. in old house, Wood floor, claw foot tub. Avail. June 1st, gas and water $135, an pets. 12 month lease or summer subtel avail. avail. i-1074 DISCOUNT: Sublease nice $410 apartment at Sunrise Place for $310 June, July. Call Todd 794-7477. Efficiency 1 and 2 bdr. apts. in nice older houses or summer sublet. Optional fall lease. Start at sts. No, no beds. 641-1074. Available 1422 & Igoo Bob 1% jibs from campus. Available immediately jibs; Gas, Water and water paid. $25. Avail for fall bearing hardware and studios or spring loading facility for a private, navalark. Call 862-7644 for appl. Excellent location now leasing for summer or fall. 2 bdr. apts, 2 yrs. old, C/A/D, W/O, off-street parking, low-income, 4 beds, 043-8250. First month free! Receive first month rent in CASH! Beautiful one bdr., $330/mo. avail. Aug. 8. Very nice, for more info, call 947-2811. For summer sublease 1 and 2 bdr., close to Student Union, off street parking, no pets, references and security deposit required. 843-9007. For rent: 2 bdr., 2 story apt., next to Neisham. 842/m. 862-8310. 862/m. 862-8310. For rent: June 1st studio, 1-2 bdr. apt., remodeled 3 bdr. house, mobile home. 841-6254. For rent. Summer rooms close to campus. 749-7320. Four hr. for a summer to sublease for summer and open for fall. Wash, dryer, garage, dryer 740-3823. Furn. apt. for graduate on bus line, AC no smoking. Avail. hour 8; july 142-140. Formed rooms for lease. One block from university with off street parking, shared kitchen and bath facilities. Available for summer and fall naats. 841-5000. Get a group of five or six! Rent a whole duplex, m 62 and Mississippi 14 mo. leave, $875, 4 bbr., 2 full bath, 2 bitches, C/A, 2 dishwashers, carport, no 814, 907-194 Huge three bdr, townhome, 2 bath, walk-in closets, garage, microwave, AC, desperate! Will net: 845-7233 Large 1 bdr. for $260/mo. Big 4 bdr. for $440/mo. Both for June and July. Two blocks from Union. 749-728 eyes, until 10:30. Large one bdr. (could be considered 2 bdr) available June 1, 1416 Penn. $285. 841-5797. Leasing for Aug. 1st, one bbr, apa. Close to campus. Deposit and references required. No pets, off street parking. Call 843-9007. New 2 bdr. townhome. Summer sublease available June 1 with option to renew. W/D, microwave, fireplace, garage. #82-1997. available June 1 first with option to renew. (475) microfire, fireplace, garage, 842-1997. Nice furnished apt. for summer sublease. On bus shuttle. 86 K.I.Staffing # 840-1756. route. Rent neg. call Kristen at 842-1756. Nice one bdr. Close to campus, AC, starting June or July. 842-3902 or 1-649-3981. Reduced! Furnished! bldr. 5/16/87 May and Aug. paid. Was $115 now. $250. Call 841-121 ask about 2012 or 841-0532. **serve apartments now for summer and fall.** 1 and 2 bed apartments, furnished. 1 block from university with off street parking, no pets. 841,000. DOOR FOR RENT: Next to campan. Call 842-3228 IOOAM to Great Deal. Room available ON CAMPUS Summer and/or fall. AC, cable, washer/dryer $118/mo. + utilities. 1451-0969. loommates needed, male or female, house off gowns. 8375/crs_ utilities. 749-0894. SEARCHING FOR A HOUSING ALTERNATIVE? Kooniaia Christian Community offers seniors and accepted all unaccredited military, paired and laureate renewals. Applications for summer and fall are available. Pick-up applications at the CEM Center 1804 Lexington Ave or call Stacey or Susan at 433-6433. Spacious 3 bdr., 2 bathroom apartment. Porch, close to campus, very clean. Rent neg. Call anytime 740-6400. Spacious 1 bdr. for summer sublease, newly decorated, close to campus and bus route, gas and water paid 845.879 or 769.349 leave payment (for two) Entrie first floor or house at 104 and Tenn. Large living area, ceiling fans, front porch, etc. 843-507. Storage for summer, Protected environment $1/sq. ft. 748-3530. $17.94; ff. 149-350. SUBLEASE: 3 bdr., $2/2 bath, pool, deck, garage, tennis. Surrize Village, rent neg. 749-3451. SUMMER SUBLASE. Available May 18, own campus. CUPENSALE. Campus to male. Mail or female. Rent is very affordable and neg. + 1% utilities. Please call seniors for more information. Subbase: 3 bdr., 2 bath, townhouse with garage and AC. Asking $625 neg. Call 749-1800. Summer sublease: Furnished 1 bdr. apt., 1 block from university, with off street parking, no pets. 841-5500. TERMS Summer check lease; 2 bdr. apt., AC at 11th and Ohio. Rent less than $30, call Jim or Brian a887-9777 Summer rent. Sunrise Terrace Apts. 3 bdr., 2 bath, 7 min. from campus; $500 a.b.o. Furnished, unfurnished. 842-5168. Sublease summer: 3 bdr. house, quiet location, fully furnished with washer and dryer. $390/mo. 248-3330 Summer sublease: Furnished room with shared kitchen and bath facilities for females. Water and electricity paid. one block from university with off street parking. No pets. 841-5600. A.V. and A.K. Assisting bed big. Can fly. B. Sublease room in big house, cheap. Choice of choice. Summer only! 2 rooms in 3 bdr. apt. Super close to campus. Rent 1 or both rooms $105. Call Sean 64-616. EDDINGHAM PLACE Summer sublet, 1 bdr. apt., 14th and NJ, fall option, AC, utilities free, $250/mao, 740-4606. Summer suburban house, as a luxurious Sunrise Village Townhouse. Pool, tennail court, 4 bdr., 2 full bath, modern kitchen, central air, and your WASHER/DRYER. 794-4755. Ask about our special offer 24TH & EDDINGHAM (next to Gammons) Offering Lessons 3 No Appt. Necessary Offering Luxury 2 BR. & 2 PLUS BR. apartments at an Affordable Price !! summer sublease: 4 room for rent, together or separate. Spacious apt., AC, pool. Rent neg. Call 638-5242. Summer sublase: 4 bdr., 2 bath, furnished. Great location - near campus and downslow. Neg. 749-4032 utility paid. 842-382 morr, eve, weekend. Summer submits b: 2 brd. bucket 921 Heather wood. Call 841-9707 or 841-6887. summer sublease with option of renew fall lease. Say studio apt. in O.W. Lawrence. Wood floors 2 minutes from campus and downtown. $210 Summer suite: Newly renovated, 2 bdr. apt. in older house with living room, fenced backyard, kitchen, laundry room, and downstairs. $900 per option.床价比 14/11-84. Summer suite: two bedrooms, two bath, AC. New home construction. by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc Summer sublease: Two bdr., two story townhouse. Across from stadium, 842-9660 $350. Nill compromise. Summer sublease, option on fall, 5 bdr. furnished, Ville 28, $400/mo. % utilities. Desperate! 740-1832 leave message. Georgetown Apartments - KU Bus Route-Holidome - On Site MGT./Reliable - 24 hour Maintenance - Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout - Microwaves & Dishwashers - Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available - Tanning Deck & Barbeque - 10 or 12 Month Leases - Low Security Deposit Call about our Summer Special 630 Michigan 749-7279 Office Hours: M,W,F 2:30-5:30 T,TH by appt. - No pets Now leasing for summer & fall 1990 spacious & comfortable 1&2 BR apartments short term summer - on KU bus route - tennis courts - Hurry! Call Now! - laundry facilities - gas heat & water paid on apartments South Pointe LIFE TREE Newly Remodeled - new plush carpets for Summer & Fall WOODWAY APARTMENTS - new appliance - large rooms & closets $50 OFF 2166 W. 26th - louvered blinds Saturday 12-5 DO NOT RENT AN APARTMENT UNTIL YOU CONSIDER THIS: - refreshing pool Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9-6 - Washer and dryer - Gas heat, central air - Constructed in 1987 - Gas heat, central air - Large Bedrooms - On KU Bus Route 2 bedroom $555 * 3 bedroom $555 or calls you at the end of ing hours: M-W-F anytime after 2:00 T-R anytime after 4:00 Sat-Sun all day - 1 bedroom $330, $340 • 2 bedrooms $195, $215 - Water paid - New appliances - On-Site Management - Constructed in 198 - Large Bedrooms - Ample off-street parking Call for an appointment today 843-0106 HOURS: 3:30 5:30 p.m. Weekdays 8:30-10:30 a.m. Saturdays 1745 W. 24th Facilities * On bus route Someone you know lives 611 Michigan Street (across from Hardees) - Microwave in each apartment Please call for an appointment Hillview Apartments at Meadowbrook Ask about us or drive by. APARTMENTS at Meadowbrook. CALL 842-4200 RESERVE CALL 842-4200 SUMMER SUBLEASES $100.00 security deposit will hold apartment until fall Special 2 BR prices! CALL 842-4200 FOR FALL NOW Open: M-F 8-5:30, Sat, 8-5. Sun. 1-4 • 842-4200 • WEST FIELD APARTMENTS Now leasing for WATER PAID ON ALL APTS GREAT LOCATION $265-$320 per month 950 sq. ft. $345-$415 1:00-4:30 p.m. Mon. Wed. Thurs. No appointment needed (This ad for original COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS Instant $200 Rebate Summer subset: Architectureally unique heme, 1 bdr., 1 i bedroom, beautiful furnished, wash, dryer, ideal for grade, or couple. Close to campus 841-0747 or 943-0629 A WE'RE DESPERATE!! Summer sublease, 2 bdr., near campus, $295/me. 841-7239. URGENT! Need to sublease 2 bdrs. of 3 bdrs. apt. Reasonable rent and utilities. Avail, June 1. 841,339. 1 bdc, apr. at 945 Missouri avail. June 1, Studio EVIDI. Aug. 1, August-07169 avail. Two rooms available for summer. 173 + ¼ utilities each. Close to campus and shopping 282,363 bfr, near campus, $205,mo 914-7239 We have 2 availances for summer sublime. We have 2 availances for summer sublime. $198-$190, *u* - utilities 2 bookets from campus. Call and ask kc or Glena or Lauren. Call and ask for Gina or Laura 941-9888. You need our apartment! 2 bdr., 1 bed. Sublease for the summer! It's perfect! Call 749-1643. Semi-private baths Quiet study area Weekly maid service Dine amine meal program ADVANTAGES Nowhere at KU will you find a residence hall with the advantages of Naismith Hall. - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - Exercise Room Applications for Fall/ - Volleyball Court - Basketball Court 3 Hot Tubs being accepted while space remains. We have MORE You can too! 842-5111 Now leasing for Fall 1990 - On Bus Route NAISMITHHALL 1600 Naismith Drive Lawerence, KG 66044 9133 843-8559 $345-$410 Present this ad and we will install a mini-blind on patio door with any deposit placed between 4/30-5/20 Boardwalk apartments "Your Home Away From Home" *Offer limited/one rebate per lease 10 mo./12 mo. 1 & 2 BDR availabl 顶帽 Top Hat H New appliances carpet & ceiling fans Small pets allowed 品 2 Laundry Facilities Mon-Fri 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 524 Frontier Rd. Special Now Leasing For Summer and Fall Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants! S Swan Management - Gazebo * Cravedo - Gazebo - 1-2-3 bedroom apts. 2512 W. 6th St. 749-1288 430 Roommate Wanted A big, cheap, close to campus, new 4-plex, A/C, own room, summer sublease; males only, 842-9021. or a xterra non-smokers needed for summer Savanna Village Townhouses. Swimming Pool, tennis courts, on bus route, own room. Rent neg. Marijuana or Joan. $195/mo. (seg.), utilite paid, furnished, w/d included, summer sublease. Females only. 740-310 leave message. Female for summer, 3 blocks from campus, furnished, own room, ½ utilities. 943-2498. Female on smoking, room needed at KU Shakespeare, 2 blocks from campus; furnished, room room. 9 units. 840-2498. Departately she an easy-going female roommate from May 13 (or no) through July 31. Applicants must with all appliances, AC power, Bath & Bedroom ($500 + $150) or 1% utilities ($750 + $15) or 1% utilities ($750 + $15). Call Lisa or John 045-3080, leave message. Please call: Female Christian roommate wanted for summer or fall $12 - $15 to utilities, own room, walking distance from campus. Toni 041-9741. THE FAR SIDE nished, own room, ½ utilities. 842-2560 Female, non-smoking, roommate needed at KU Med. for fall. Call Jody 842-2581. Furnished room in apartment across from Hawk. 5 minute walk anywhere on campus. 740-3458. Female non-smoker to share 2 bdr. Great location downtown/XU. Must see! Grad. student pref. 843-752-974 Looking for non-smoking教室 to share two bbs apc at *University Terrace*. On bus lines from Terrace to University Terrace, in anime, by out July 31 (or renew for fall September), via *Uphill*, *Utili*, *Phil* and *1799 apc*, leave message. MALE non-smoking roommate starting June 1. 8167 + % utilities. Call Terry at 841-1437. Non-homebound roommates wanted to share roommates. No smokers. No bikes. Pete k. Seid. Send letters. Box 80. Nursing student/musician needs female room- mate starting August. Call 746-8953 are messages. Male or female need for summer sublease, 3 bd; 2 bath at Orford Cornerds with pool, AC, cain, bus $18/mo. + ½ utilities. May free! Call Nancy at 941.2217 One or two roommates need for summer lease. $176 + 4 utilities. Call 941-3234. COMMERCIAL COOPERS! Also available for sum Need 1 or 2 roommates for summer. Nice 4 bd- house. WD included. $150/mo. Please call 845-1124. one bbe, living room, kitchen, and bath. Own en- trance in older home close to campus all utilities PAID 141. W 4th behind Bulwinks 794-1586 or two roommates for summer lease. ORCHARD CORNEEES! 1 burs. available for summer sublease, fully furnished, pool, $175 + %_4 utilities. May free! Call 749-427-020. Quint, retrieve 1 bed. Own bedroom, $125/mo. Call 841-1022 today! Roommate needed for 2 bdr. apt. Available room is bedage in No房. $192/mo. I'll pay all Roommate needed to share 3 bdr. townhouse for summer. Would have big bdr. with own bathroom and pool. Bed is very npt. Call 749-2074. Roommate needed to share 2 bdr. apt. now thru summer. Close to campus, on bus route. $125 + utilities. $43-3260. roommate summer, option on next year. $200/mo. + 1% utilities. Villa 26 apts. 749-1822 leave message; desperate! roommate needs: 3 bdr., 2 bath, furnished, on bus route, $180 plus 4% utility. Call 811-4978 or 749-610. Orchard Corners; non-smoker preferable. Involves need for summer. $175/mo. + utilities. 8 bd. hr. apt. close to campus. 842-923-6200. Share 6 bdr. house on CAMPUS #3, bdr. 3 baths. AC/abc toilet. driver only. 80% utilities. summer: 1 person to share furnished 3 bdr. apt. 10 and Arkansas. Rent neg. 749-4720. 10th and Arkansas. Rent beg. 749-472-56. NYC Summer App. share. Near Columbia University. Call 810/mo. Call 812-286-7875. Sorry, only calls can be made. Summer roommate needed $138/mo. at Meadowbrook. Call 842-5008. Wanted 1 person, preferable male, for next fall at Sundance 5 Aps. Apartment fully furnished. 8175/mo. + 4. utilities. Call 684-8243 or 684-8546), preferred in the evenings. Wanted: Female non-smoker for summer. $112.50 + 1% utilities/no. Ma: 864-7922 or 864-7933 By GARY LARSON You know how to kill a pig, don't you, Steve? You just put your coils together and squeeeze. Scenes from classic nature films 1. What is the purpose of this study? 14 Thursday, May 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Jayhawk Bookstore "At the top of Naismith Hill!" 843-3826 732 Mass. 843-6411 The Etc. Shop Ray-Ban SUNGLASSES by Driving BY RAYBAN & LOOP 732 Mass. 843-6611 The Etc. Shop Rey-Banc SUNGLASSES in Driving by SAUROFF LIONS NATURAL WAY FIND OUT WHERE THE FUN IS Live Wire Every Thursday THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN BEST SELLER Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care 820-822 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 9131 841-0100 Rooms and Efficiencies 1 and 2 Bedrooms in well maintained Older Homes Starting at $165 and up Call 841-STAR (7827) GAMMONS PROUDLY PRESENTS: LADIES NIGHT NO COVER FOR THE LADIES BEFORE 10:00P.M. (ONLY $1 AFTER 10:00) & QUARTER DRAWS DON'T MISS TACO BAR FRIDAY 6-8 P.M. ALL YOU CAN EAT FOR ONLY $2 THE HONORABLE ROBERT E. PATTERSON, DEPUTY GOVERNOR OF WEST BEND, CA., SPEAKING AT A CONFERENCE ON SCHOLARSHIP AND MISCELLANEOUS SUBJECTS. HE IS A LEADER IN THE TECHNOLOGY OF EDUCATION, A SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS MANAGER, AND A PRESENTING GENERAL MEMBER OF THE GOVERNOR'S CONGRESS. HE IS A TRUSTED FIRM ORDER OF THE GOVERNOR'S GOVERNMENT. Sonny Dolan, of North Side Auction Service, takes bids during the annual KJHK-90.7 FM auction. KJHK auction nets $2,800 Neon beer sign sells for most money By Sandra Moran Kansan staff writer Kansan staff writer "Well, I guess it's time to do the deed and pay for this stuff." Hawkins said as she looked at her collection of items, which included Goofer slippers, three T-shirts, gift certificates and a chair. Gidget Hawkins, Kansas City, Mo., senior, spent $70 last night in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Mike Ulin, KJHK operations manager, said the auction raised $2.800 for the student radio station. She was one of about 35 people who purchased an estimated $7,500 worth of donated retail items at a local store. More than 150 people attended. Hawkins estimated that she would have spent $138 if she had paid the retail prices. "I was a little bit disappointed by the size of the crowd but impressed with the amount they spent," he said. Tim Mensendiek, KJHK general manager, said that overall the event was successful. A neon Michelob beer sign was sold for $70, the highest amount paid for an item. He said the purpose of the auction was to raise money for the station. good as the fall auction because students have less money," he said. KU KU BOOKSTORES Menskindi said that this was the first time in the 10-year history of the auction that it was on campus. Proceeds from the fall auction totaled about $4,500. Mensendjie said the $1,700 decrease at this auction was anticipated. "The spring auction is never as "We saved about $300 by having the auction here," he said. Brian Mitchell, Overland Park junior, held a Miller High-Life wall light he purchased for $39. He said he hung the lamp in his apartment. Another participant, Mike Cohn, Prarie Village freshman, purchased a bear stuffed with $1 million worth of shredded money. Cohn paid $27, although the bear's retail price was $40. TEXTBOOK PRE-ORDER FORM KU Bookstore University of Kansas Lawrence, Ks 66045 Kansas and Burge Unions Textbook Dept.- 913-864-5285 Beat The Rush This Fall! 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 Aug. 3, 1990. WE WILL HAVE YOUR BOOKS BAGGED AND READY TO PICK UP BETWEEN AUG. 20 & AUG. 31. 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. PLEASE PRINT Student Name ___ KU Address --- KU Phone No. ___ Books will be picked up at : Kansas Union □ Course No. Instructor Line No. Preference: example: ENGL 102 Smith Used 70945 Please Print! | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Burge Union No Deposit Required! BOOKSTORE USE ONLY Code Dept. Price | 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 Sept.17,1990.All returned books must be accompanied by a cash register receipt and be in new condition (except books purchased used). Fall 1990 Semester Form CODE_EXPLANATION: CODE EXPLANATION: 1 = Used Book Not Available 2 = Go to Class First 3 = Book Out of Stock 4 = Book Not Yet Received THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SPECIAL REPORT 'We all would like to preserve the rural way of life, but we have to understand that progress is happening aound us. We can either be a part of it or watch from the outside.' — Bob Meade R-Pawnee Rock See story p. 4c. State of Rural Kansas Economic hardship forces residents to re-evaluate their futures. 'Economic development is only a small percentage of what state government does. It takes the initiative of the rural areas themselves to make a difference.' — Gov. Mike Hayden See story p. 4c. 'We are the exceptions. Not everyone can do this. Not everyone has the capital, the products or even the entrepreneurial personality. So let's help the ones who are trying.' are trying — Karen Pendleton Value-added innovator See story p. 3c. CONWAY CAFE AND MOTOR SUPPLIES A By Steve Buckner Kansan staff writer lthough the West was won more than a century ago, a different battle is being waged on the Main Streets of rural Kansas today. EDITOR'S NOTE: This section includes a six-story report examining economic factors affecting the state of rural Kansas. The stories are part of a project by the Public Affairs Reporting class of the School of Journalism. At 11 a.m. on a weekday, the twoblock downtown area of Cherokee, a Crawford County town of 775 people in southeast Kansas, is almost empty. A few cars congregate at the Cherokee Home Cafe, and a couple more cluster at the tavern down the paved-but-muddy, pothole-marked street. Five of its 18 buildings are vacant. At 11 a.m. on another weekday, the three-block downtown area of Hillsboro, a Marion County town town with 2,614 people in central Kansas, is thriving. Parking places are hard to find, and the lone signal light earns its keep. Customers enjoy a wide variety of shops among the 40 businesses along the street. Cherokee and Hillsboro typify two sizes of rural Kansas towns fighting their way into the 21st century. Cherokee is one of 532 Kansas towns with fewer than 2,500 people to maintain their populations and be more than just a bedroom community for larger, nearby communities. Hillsboro, which employed rare foresight in planning its future, is the type of town that gains by serving the needs of the Cherokee-sized communities in Marion County. But it still finds itself in the fray for survival after losing 103 people between 1980 and 1987. Kansas and its communities are trying to stem the outflow of people with a statewide quilt of economic development programs and projects aimed at giving each town a self-determining role in its survival. To date, the effectiveness of the state's economic development actions is difficult to assess because most of the programs have existed only since the 1986 advent of Kansas Inc., a public-private partnership created by the State Legislature to develop policy direction to improve the state's economic competitiveness. Strong forces But Kansas Inc. suggested in a 1989 report that the state is facing an uphill battle that may be impossible to win because, "The overall decline in population and economic activity in rural America cannot be reversed." Rural Kansas is losing people with a whimper, not a bang, to its urban areas and other states. The 61 counties with populations less than 10,000 lost a total of 17,328 people, or 5.2 percent of their population from 1980 to 1987. Between 1960 and 1987, those same counties lost 64,459 people, or 17 percent of their population. The 35 rural counties with more than 10,000 people posted a net gain of 7,232, but 18 of them lost population, among them Crawford and Marion. The declines are part of a vicious cycle of job loss, lack of opportunity and the departure of the working-age people who would form an employment base. Between 1880 and 1988, 15,900 jobs were lost in all rural counties. Kansas also is plagued by many differences in its rural towns, according to the Kansas Inc. report. In fact, rural Kansas is so diverse that it is impossible to find one or even several solutions to its problems. As every light on Broadway could be someone's story, each of Kansas' 627 communities is unique in its geography, resources, demographics or economic characteristics, rendering unfeasible any blank solution to the state's ecological development woes. To deal with this diversity, the state Department of Commerce offers about 100 programs that specialize in different phases of economic development. Strategy Another finding from the Kansas Inc. report indicated the strategy the state is using for rural economic development. The strategy relies on the communities to organize themselves to develop locally based, unique plans for growth. Two reasons exist for this strategy: the diversity of rural towns and the Students rarely go back to small towns When she grad from the Unive Michelle Smith immediately to become a teacher even if she has not found a job. By Jennifer Metz Kansan staff writer --- Under no cir- cumstances, she WORK FORCE said, does she want to return to work in her southeast Kansas hometown of St. Paul, population about 700. "If the residents of the town say to come back, students say, 'What for?' " said Smith, public relations major. When she graduates this month from the University of Kansas, Michelle Smith plans to move Many Kansas students, like Smith, are sparring their rural hometowns. KU students from rural towns usually intend to go on to bigger and better things, said Rachel Dawkins, KU director of admissions. The average high school graduating class in St. Paul is 20 students, and the number is falling each year. The town does not have a traffic light or a fast-food restaurant. Some students go away to college and never return. Others bypass college and go directly to jobs in larger towns. Both groups are leaving at the worst possible time, when rural towns need a secure labor force to redevelop and survive. Decreasing numbers Between 1980 and 1987, 61 rural Kansas counties with populations of fewer than 10,000 lost 17,328 people, which is 5.2 percent of the total rural population. It is likely that a large portion of the 17,328 who left were in search of a better job, said Jerry Lengeran, Kansas Inc. vice president for During the same seven years, all rural Kansas counties lost 15,900 jobs. With young workers leaving. rural communities are becoming disproportionately elderly. In a 1899 Kansas Inc, Rural Development Action Plan, studies indicated that by the late 1900s, people older than 65 represented 21 percent of the population in rural Kansas counties, but only 11 percent of the population in metropolitan Kansas counties. To prevent the loss of workers, rural communities are looking for new industries to create jobs. But the dwindling supply of labor in many small towns is unattractive to many companies, said Charles Warren, president of Kansas Inc. See HOMETOWNS, p. 7c Inside: Randolph's Kent Valley Aquarius Local farm diversifies p. 34 SHELTER Bell not tolling for rural towns p. 60 国際航空機場 Maintaining traditional values p. 6c 2C Thursday, May 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan BODY BOUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility SUMMER SPECIAL! Full Membership for ONLY $89 • Stairmasters Nautilus Training • Co-ed Aerobics offered • 10 Tans/$20 • Jacuzzi • Steam Room • Dry Sauna 749-2424 (with coupon) In Hillcrest Plaza (9th & Iowa) Wheels on Wheels ... The Ultimate Ride YAKIMA For gettin' down the road with your toys! RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642 Bicycle Car Bicycle A panel of KU students, faculty, and staff is currently reviewing the Kansas Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The review is focused on evaluation of attitudes and behaviors that reflect the chapter level of awareness and sensitivity to cultural, racial and gender differences. NOTICE We want to hear from you (faculty/staff/students) in writing if you have positive, negative or neutral firsthand experience(s) with the SAE's in these matters. Please include: - a description of the situation date, time place, title of the event (if any) name of persons involved - a description of the impact the situation had on you - your name-printed and signed your address and phone number (so we can contact you for clarification) Address your letter to: SAE Review Panel c/o Dean of Student Life 216 Strong Hall Lawrence,KS 66045 All comments will be held as STRICTLY confidential by the panel. We must hear from you by Friday, May 11th. Thank you in advance for your thoughtful participation in this important process. Main Street in Neosho Falls, Neosho Falls is listed as a "ghost town" in the Kansas Department of Tourism's guidebook, but the people who live there would disagree. "These places may look dead to an outsider," said Rick Schedt, Kansas State University rural specialist, "but inside, they're busy and bustling." The population of Neosho Falls, in Woodson County, is actually increasing. On the cover: Of Kansas' 105 counties, 96 are considered to be rural and nine are metropolitan, according to the U.S. Bureau of the Census. The Bureau bases its classification on county population figures and proximity to population centers. All of the seven towns and cities examined in the report are situated in rural counties. The seven are marked with sign posts below. Urban counties Rural counties Alta Vista Ramona Hillsboro Lawrence Garden City St. Paul Cherokee Wichita Source: Kannas Statistical Abstract Stephen Kilne/KANSAN 1990 JAYHAWKER PICK UP YOUR YEARBOOK When: Mon., April 23 to Fri., April 27 Mon., April 30 to Thur., May 3 Where: In front of the Kansas Union and Wescoe PICK UP YOUR YEARBOOK! Yearbooks are available for $27 M Bring Your KUID and Receipt!!! 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MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.; 1964 SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT FROM THE STUDENT SENATE MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 3C Kansas product value suffers Many farmers lack adequate capital and broker representation By Gary Patton Kansan staff writer Linda McCiffett of Alta Vista became an agricultural entrepreneur because she got tired of helping her husband pick corn on their 3,000-acre She said she also got tired of watching farm resources in the area. "Somebody had to do something," she said. "We had all these raw materials to work with. I didn't want with. I thank you very much for farm aid. I just wanted a chance." MORE FROM FARMING farm aid. I just wanted a chance." She took that chance in 1986. With a crooked 73-year-old barn as her store and an eight-room rural farm house as her factory, she began an value to her farm's real materials by making hog sausage, pot pie pies, fruit preserves and popcorn mixes. Today she calls herself a successful manufacturer but says she produces below capacity because she doesn't have bigger buyers for her products. "I've never really been pushed," said McDiffett, who boasts of being able to make 125 gourmet pot pies a day in her kitchen. "No one has really tested me for production." McDifett's predicament is a microcosm of Kansas' effort to develop the concept of value-added, which means that the total value of a product is enhanced by a manufacturing process. McDiffett and the state launched value-added programs in 1986. Both are thought to have tremendous potential for growth. But both have watched their potential on largely untapped. In a 1987 report to the governor, the Commission on the Future of Kansas Agriculture recommended value-added as a key strategy to help rural communities survive and thrive in the future. It was expected that value-added businesses would supplement farm incomes and keep more jobs and local dollars in alluring rural communities at a time when Kansas farm employment during the decade fell by 14 percent, and farm land values dropped by 34 percent. Expectations for the strategy remain high, but it may take five years before results are very visible, state farm officials say. Kansas has had to dig its way out of a deep hole. In 1986, Kansas ranked last among the 50 states in value added to food products as a percent of total value of food shipments, according to figures published in the most recent census of manufacturers of the U.S. Bureau of the Census. In other words, Kansas, the nation's leader since 1985 in wheat and sorghum grain production, was the worst at adding value to its food products before selling them. "We as a state have not done a good job of capitalizing on the strengths of our agricultural products," said Richard Hahn, director of the Kansas Agricultural Value-Added Center. On the frontlines of value-added food production, Kansas farmers face their own challenges and obstacles. Capital: Capital: Mak McGaughey of Concordia became an agricultural entrepreneur by accident in 1862, the year he watched his hog house burn. Since then, he said, he has gone from grinding wheat on his kitchen table to processing and marketing statewide an assortment of whole wheat breakfast foods. But he said he continually had been challenged by a lack of money to make major investments. "We've sheoostringed it all the way," said McGaughie, who still uses a 55-pound-capacity cement mixer he bought for $14.50 to blend his biscuit and pancake mixes. "As a result, I don't have the expensive equipment to make the instant stuff like Betty Crocker makes. We're relying on customers who will crack an egg, add ingredients and mix up the batter to make their pancakes." Linda McDiffett mixed her first products by hand and began her business with $3,000, which she used to cement her barn's dirt floor. It wasn't until her second year in business that she could afford to buy a used 10-quart electric Hobart mixer for $800, which she still uses. for $400, which laid lack of capital was the single biggest problem facing small-scale food processors. But providing that capital is not the center's function. The center, which is financed this fiscal year by $693,033 of state money, became operational at Kansas State University in May 1989. His charter is to provide technical assistance to agricultural processing endeavors. Marketing: "You've got to get an agent to play with the big boys," he said, referring to large food distributors and grocery store chains. "You can't get in the big game without one. Marketing: McGaughe said he was frustrated by a "catch-22" situation involving brokers. "But the brokers won't talk to us; they don't want to talk to us nickle and dime operators. I've worn out my knuckles banging on a lot of doors, just trying to get in and talk to store managers." He suggested that the state help solve the problem. "If the state really wants to help us," McGaughey said, "they could get us broker representation. I can have the best product in the world, but if I can't get it in front of Jane Doe pushing a shopping cart down the aisle, then it won't get bought." "The buyers at the big stores," he said, "are looking for three things: quality, consistent supply and competitive pricing. Our function is to help the people determine and meet these standards." Hann agreed that brokering was a problem for beginning value-added businesses but insisted that the state should not get involved in selling products. "The buyers at the big stores," he said, "are looking for three things: quality, consistent supply and competitive pricing. Our function is to help the people determine and meet these standards." The state does get actively involved in promoting Kansas food products, and Kansas farmers appreciate the state's efforts. the "From the Land of Kansas" registered trademark program run by the state board of agriculture's domestic marketing staff began in 1864 with 14 businesses and has grown to 272 businesses, staff member Hayley Matson said. Its purpose is to enhance the visibility of small, medium and large state food processing companies through a wide range of promotional events. A 1989 survey of 1,200 grocery store patrons conducted by the state board revealed that 92 percent of shoppers recognized the "From the Land of Kansas" trademark and that 88 percent preferred to buy Kansas products. Many farmers lack the business backgrounds necessary to success. Business skills: fully package and market processed products. "The regular farmer is limited in his off-farm knowledge," McGauley said. "He knows how to take his grain to a grain elevator, but he doesn't know how to get products on shelves in grocery stores." Lisa Brumbaugh, assistant director of the small business development center at Emporia State University, said she routinely helped small-business people starting out by giving them crash courses in figuring costs and pricing. "There is a lot of risk involved," she said of entrepreneurial efforts on farms. "It takes a lot of guts to do what those folks are doing." The Value-Added Center was established by the Legislature in 1988 to facilitate value-added activities. But the center has had a problem of regular contact with rural communities. Of the center's first 76 contacts, only 47, or 62 percent, came from rural counties, according to Hahn's 1990 report to the Legislature. The five counties with the most frequent contacts were metropolitan counties, with Shawnee County at the top of the list with seven. Hahn projected that the state's slow start in value-added might take some time to change significantly. "For a long time, Kansas has had a commodity mentality," Hahn said. "We have really just been concerned with growing and selling commodities. It takes awhile to overcome this mentality." This factor remains a general problem for the state in attracting It is cheaper to ship raw materials than to ship manufactured food products. The $13.99-a-ton cost to ship raw wheat by railroad is nearly half the cost to ship a ton of manufactured food and kindred products, according to the most recent freight commodity rates of the American Association of Railroads. This cost favors manufacturers shipping raw farm materials from rural areas to populated areas where they can process and market value-added food products, said Michael Babcock, a principal investigator for the 1988 Blueprint Study on the Future Direction of Kansas Agriculture and Agribusiness. The state also must overcome a critical economic factor that dissuades many national food processors from moving to Kansas. Garv Ba Linda McDiffett, founder of Prairie Popcorn and Best of the Sweet Country bakery products, says she gets many of her kitchen ideas from a 75-year-old recipe book she purchased at an auction. value-added food industries, such as cereal manufacturers. According to the study, Kansas has no cereal breakfast food plants, which is paradoxical given the state's production of some of the raw materials required by the industry. Those food-processing firms that do operate in Kansas tend to be in non-rural areas, according to 1987 county business patterns, the most recent Department of Commerce statistics available. Only 15 companies that employ more than 100 workers are situated in any of the state's 96 rural counties. Despite the paradoxes, risks and challenges, farm officials are optimistic that the value-added strategy will work. Sam Brownback, secretary of agriculture since 1966, said he graded the state's value-added efforts during his term of office as a "B plus." "We've had a good running start," he said. "The real proof if the strategy works will be in 1995—eight or nine years after we started. It takes some time for the entrepreneurial activity to show up." nuclear energy. Karen and John Pendleton of Douglas County, recognized in 1989 as two of the state's successful farm innovators, grow blue Indian corn on part of their 450-acre farm and then have it processed into chips at a Hiawatha plant. Karen Pendleton, a member of the value-added center's leadership council, expressed some doubt about the widespread application of the value-added strategy. "We are the exceptions," she said. "Not everyone can do this. Not everyone has the capital, the products or even the entrepreneurial personality. So let's help the ones who are trying." Recognizing, these challenges, Brownback said, "We (the state) are doing a good job, but we will have substantial failures along the way. We try to advise people that it's a tough ballgame." "SALE INTO SUMMER THE CHEAPEST PRICES ON THE COOLEST SOUNDS... KIEE'S AND CBS. theodore: AN AMERICAN MUSIC SAMPLE Featuring Rate Version From: Living Colour - Kate Bus Big Audio Dynamics - Holding Girls The Psychadelic Fury - Plus More IN SONS OF CHILDREN CULTURE FROM PUBLIC ENEMY FEAR OF A BLACK PLAMET inclusive Welcome to The Entertainment 911! 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On the Sees ...day we are still carrying hope by day by night / by a man KIEF'S TAPES CDS RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO 24th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS 24th and IOWA (913) 842-1811 4C Thursdav, May 3. 1990 / University Daily Kansan The Group GROUP 232 Mass. Ray Bar JAMES HUNT BROTHERS & LOUIS The Wine Shop 732 MASSA Ray-Ban LA WINE & LANDSCAPE SHOP Jayhawk Bookstore Jayhawk Bookstore LIVE WHERE YOU'VE GOT IT MAID. LIVE WHERE YOU'VE GOT IT MAID. 100% Make a clean away from messy apartment living with a residence hall that will let you sweep your worries away. We've got weekly maid service, just one of our many features that leave apartments in the dust. Now, you can get all of the advantages of living in a residence hall with the freedom and privacy of an off-campus lifestyle. Plus, there are added benefits—like a fitness center, great social activities and our fantastic "Dine Anytime" program. Call today for more information. NAISMITH HALL NAISMITH HALL 843-8559 1800 Naismith Drive Some lawmakers fear change Rural congressmen may defeat proposals that could help them By John P. Milburn Kansan staff writer TOPEKA = Fearful of big business and change, some rural lawmakers defent legislation that could preserve the rural way of life, some observers "Do you know what a Luddite is?" asked State Park ranger Raker B-Derby. NUTRICTION During the Industrial Revolution, people known as Luddites deliberately destroyed machines and technology to keep from changing "We have a lot of legislative Luddites out there," she said. As population has declined in rural Kansas, so has the number of seats in the Legislature for rural areas. At the same time, many rural legislators become ambivalent about the plight of rural areas. Though some pieces of legislation could bolster rural development, some legislators say that some of their colleagues balk at the opportunity, either delaying their vote or rejecting the ideas altogether. When the House of Representatives convenes for the 1991 session, rural areas will be without six seats. Johnson County adds four for a total of 18 seats and 34 for the Kansas City area. Sedgwick County will add two for a total of 20 seats and 27 for the Wichita area. As recently as 1950, each of the 105 Kansas counties had at least one representative in the 125-member House. As the population shifted, seats were taken away, and the urban delegation grew. In 1950, only 12 seats represented Kansas City, Topeka and Wichita. Today there are 69 seats, and in 1991 there will be 75 representing three cities. "Obviously there will be a shift toward urban representation," said State Seen. Dave Kerr, R.Hutchinson. "Year in and year out it will be felt, but there is no disregard for rural problems." Though Luddite is a strong label, many legislators say the attitude exists in the minds of rural legislators. It is a denial that the traditional ways of Kansas no longer are relevant. The topic of multi-bank holding companies is one example. A bill was proposed this session that raised from 9 percent to 12 percent the amount of total Kansas assets any single company could hold. The prime beneficiary would have been the Fourth Financial Corporation in Wichita, which has more than a dozen banks in five Kansas cities. By allowing a stronger bank to hold more assets, the bank would have the power to buy failed banks and to provide money that could be used to fuel economic development in rural Kansas, proponents argued. Arguing in favor of the bill was State Rep. Delbert Gross, D-Hays. He said that in the past year a larger bank came into Hays and bought a failed bank, providing a much needed service to the community. "If you don't vote for this, savings and loans will go belly-up," he said. "And if no one takes them over, there will be real problems." However, not everyone thought that way about allowing one company to hold that much of the state's assets. State Rep. Clyde Graeber, LeRavemount, feined the bill would create a new Corporate to create a monopoly. Baker argued that if the state did not give Kansas institutions a chance to acquire failed banks, then banks from other states, such as Citicorp or Chase Manhattan, would come in and change the picture of Kansas busi- The bill was approved by 65 votes and the limit was raised. Baker said she had seen many issues divide rural and urban forces in the Legislature on more than one occasion this session. Earlier, the issue of interstate bank raised a stir. Baker said some House members feared that smaller banks would be gobbled up by large, out-of-state banks preying on insolvent banks and thrifts. State Rep. Bob Mead, R-Pawnee Rock, said interstate banking would occur, but he said he did not vote for it this session. "A year ago, a poll showed bankers were split almost 50-50 on the issue." Mead said. "This year about another 10 percent have said it is all right and have accepted it. Its time is not here, but it will be within three years." Mead said he was watching other states try interstate banking before voting for the measure. He like other legislators, is reluctant to jump into new ideas which may damage the state, particularly rural areas. corporate agriculture is that they fear the loss of the rural way of life, Mead said, although most, like himself, realize that it is dying. The reason legislators vote against Mead said he was watching other states try interstate banking before voting for the measure. He like other legislators, is reluctant to jump into new ideas which may damage the state, particularly rural areas. The reason legislators vote against corporate agriculture is that they fear the loss of the rural way of life, and they want to make himself, realize that it is dying. One issue, corporate hog farms, was killed by the Legislature. The bill would have provided for development of corporate hog farming, much like that of the planned poultry production of southeast Kansas. Opponents of the legislation feared that the small farmer would have been forced out of the market by large-scale operations. However, had it passed, the industry could have provided an economic boost to rural areas in the form of farms and packing plants. Mead said. "We don't want to harm small businesses and communities," Meade said. "We all would like to preserve the rural way of life, but we have to understand that progress is happening around us. We can either be a part of it or watch from the outside." However, aid has become available to help rural communities create comprehensive plans for development. The Legislature this session passed a bill that established the rural assistance program, a program that makes grants of up to $20,000 to city/county development organizations for development of countywide economic strategies. Each recipient is required to provide additional funds equaling 25 percent of the amount of the grant. "It is an outstanding program." Mead said. "It is a grassroots program. It only makes sense to start a program at that level." Baker said that the House intended Butler, Harvey and Miami counties to be excluded from the program but that the senators from these counties were able to amend the bill to include their counties. The counties originally were excluded because they are close to the economic centers of Wichita Butler and Harvey counties) and Kansas City (Miami County), and they are likely to feel the benefits of growth and sprawl as those metropolitan areas continue to grow. Kerr worked on the bill in the Legislative Joint Committee for Economic Development, which developed a program during the 1980 interim session. "It's not going to save the rural areas," Kerr said. "It will provide a mechanism for those who have the local leadership to develop a reasonable and concise plan for continuing to exist and start growing again." These plans will help communities map out the future and become aware of ways to attract businesses and jobs, either on their own or with the aid of state or federal grants, Kerr said. "In many cases, the leadership to do that is not there," he said. "The rural assistance bill will help those areas develop that potential." "The rural assistance program is a "positive measure." Hayden said. "There are going to be some success from this, but only because of local support. Gov. Mike Hayden, who comes from the small western town of Atwood, said that the state could provide ways to encourage rural development but that it could not do the developing. "Economic development is only a small percentage of what state government does. It takes the initiative to make themselves to make a difference." An example of this, Baker said, has been the Kansas Lottery, which since 1987 has provided a constant source of revenue for economic development. A prime aspect of the lottery is that it provides a large fund, designed to aid communities in creating a plan for growth and attracting new industries. Proceeds from the lottery were designed to be spent on economic development with the revenue placed in the EDIF and other grant programs. This has the potential of being a vehicle for rural development. However, most of the funds would have been provided by the state. The rural assistance bill specifically prohibits funds for these communities In the case of the EDIF and development as a whole, Baker said it had See POLITICS, next page SALE STARTS TODAY OUR REMODELING SALE SAVE UP TO 50% ON H ampbell's 841 Massachusetts OPEN LATE TONIGHT 'TIL8:30 ENTIRE STOCK OF CLOTHING THE HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR ATHLETICS BOWLING COMPETITION - University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 5C Expansion brings problems Growth and development can mean homelessness and poverty By David Stowe Kanean staff writer GARDEN CITY — In Spring 1981, the state closed a roadside park west of town after migrant workers began living there in pickup trucks, cars and makeshift tents. CASE STUDY The migrants were using a nearby well as a toilet, said Lyle Schaus, who was the Finney County Sanitarian at the time. The park had become a health hazard. The incident was a portent of the problems that would come along with the benefits of one of the few large economic expansions in rural Kansas during the 1980s. 1980 That expansion, mostly fueled by the nearby construction of a large beef-packing plant by JBIP Inc., and the expansion of an existing plant by Val Agri, now owned by Monfort of Colorado, transformed Garden City from a relatively quiet mid-sized community to a busy commercial center. Between 1978 and 1986, when many other rural communities were losing jobs, businesses and population, employment in Garden City increased 51 percent, more than six times the statewide employment growth rate. Between 1978 and 1986, the number of businesses in the city grew by 31 percent, a rate above the state average, according to a report by the University of Kansas Institute for Public Policy Research. The city's population climbed from 18,256 in 1980 to 22,770 in 1986, according to the 1987-88 Kansas Statistical Abstract. With the growth came problems, however, or what some city officials prefer to call challenges, including homelessness, poverty, a constantly moving population and crime. tour and crime. "When the boom hit, no one was prepared for it," said Dale Barnum, area director for the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services. in Social and Relational Contexts. The city was plunged into a crisis, he said. The city was plunged into a crisis, he said. Seven years after the boom, the city was still not down. "But they had moved from crisis to problem," he said. salt. that crisis and the problems that have lingered Don Stuhl, KU professor of anthropology, to suggest that communities should be careful when deciding whether to allow a large employer into their area. "Communities, before they automatically look at it in terms of jobs, they need to look at the consequences," said Stull, who has studied Garden City under a grant from the Ford Foundation. "Jobs aren't always good on balance," he said. Still, she said the challenges brought by the expansion had badly challenged the challenges brought by the expansion. Carol Meyer, executive vice president (Cincinnati) of the organization that the community buddies the problems by building new schools and a new police station, expanding city services and organizations and by creating an adult education program, among other things. "We have really good programs for newcomers to come in to this community," she said. Montfort's plant expanded during the 1980s and now employs 1,200. Meyer said. come in to this command. IBP built the largest slaughter operation in the world in nearby Holcomb. The plant opened in December 1920 and now employs 2,700. Other businesses soon located in the city because of the presence of the packing plants. These spin-off businesses included a company that provides refrigerated storage space, trucking firms, a company that makes the boxes that IBP ships its beef in and a company that makes pizza toppings, Mever said. Commercial activity increased, and as a result sales tax collections in Finney County rose 75 percent from 1979 to 1987, a rate of growth that was above the state average. Sales tax collection is a measure of commer- In fiscal 1987, Finney County had the seventh highest per capita sales tax collected in the state. pear Even critics agree that the plants were good for the economy. economy. But they also brought problems and because population grew faster than the number of jobs, unemployment rose from 3.6 percent in 1980 to 5 percent in 1986. Only last year did it drop below the 1980 level to 3.3 percent. Initially, one of the biggest crises was a lack of affordable housing. Homelessness An IBP survey of 600 workers in Fall 1981 revealed that 5 percent were living in cars or motels. Another 33 percent had places to live but thought they were paying excessive rent. About the summer of 1861, Barnum said, "It seemed like we had every homeless person in the Midwest." Large trailer courts, which IBP helped develop, eased the housing problem. But it has not disappeared. As recently as the 1988-89 school year, 44 children in the Garden City school district were homeless, district superintendent Gerald Moseman said. "One kid lived in a car all last year with his dad and went to school." Moseman said. Crime Garden City's crime rate in 1988 was about 100 crimes per 1,000 people. Only Liberal, with about 101 crimes per 1,000 people, and Kansas City, with about 104 crimes per 1,000 people, had higher rates, according to Crime in Kansas, a publication put out by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Kansas Barrett of 0 or more crimes were committed in 1980, more than 1,780 crimes were committed in See GARDEN CITY, p. 9c Continued from p. 4c Politics been her experience in the Legislature that some communities simply did not wish to work together or work for greater economic growth. The larger counties have found that the EDIF and comprehensive development and marketing plans are the key to growth. According to a February 1996 report by the Kansas Lottery, in fiscal year 1989, Wichita (Sedgwick, Harvey and Butler counties) received $1.37 million from the lottery. Kansas Lottery paid $1.25 million for Dornil and Wyandotte counties claimed more than $1.55 million and Lawrence/Douglas County more than $439,000. Grants from the lottery to metropolitan areas, just nine counties, was nearly 60 percent of all financing granted to specific cities and counties. The 96 rural counties received slightly more than $2.6 million in direct grants, or less than 40 percent. Total lottery proceeds allocated were $13,653,853. However, more than half was given to state agencies for statewide development, promotion or research for economic development. In fiscal year 1990, total revenues could be as high as $17.5 million. Mead said that a key to participation in any state assistance program such as the EDIF or the rural assistance bill was the dissemination of information. Mead has contacted the Department of Commerce on this matter in effort to find a way to let rural areas know about aid. "Larger communities have groups that are concerned with nothing but economic development and the programs in the Legislature," Ms. said. "I have little concern for larger communities because that luxury and are not aware of such things." Kerr said that he had viewed several options for consolidation of counties, based on European models, in hopes of finding ways to conserve rural resources. He felt that these ideas have been met with opposition in the Legislature. 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Save tax where applicable. 6C Thursday, May 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan 1 Small town preserves link between past, present By Leslie Reynard Special to the Kansan RAMONA — The Ramona cemetery is two miles northeast of town in the middle of a soft green field. There, "the beautiful and elaborate tombstone of its own, is the tall white steeple and silver bell from the old Lutheran church that had stood nearby and was torn down in 1867. Bannion's centennial year. WAY OF LIFE In Ramona, as in many other small Kansas communities with dwindling populations and resources, the tie for best in this category is strong for the people who remain With the departure of many young people from Ramona and a population of only 110 in 1986, the congregation had declined to a point that it could no longer maintain the deteriorating building. Because in Ramona, as in so many other Kansas towns, the church was the center of community life and because its bell had rung at so many weddings, christenings, and funerals, it had become a part of the town. Those who were left cannot be beared the thought of it being bought at auction to hang in a barroom or to graze the patio of a city-dwelling antique bound. On Memorial Day 1988, before the town's annual Memorial Day picnic in the park, the people of Ramona hauled the bell and its steeple to the old graveyard where 200 citizens, almost a hundred of whom were former citizens home for the holiday, gathered under the cloudy Kansas sky for the formal dedication of the bell and its $2,000 memorial stone. The cemetery at Ramona holds memories of people and places alike. The bell and steppe were laid to rest here in 1988. as the attendance at the ceremony would attest, people leave places such as Ramona. But these communities are not becoming ghost towns as quickly as many economists and rural sociologists suggest. ... Declining populations have caused many towns to be called economically unstable by the experts. Many communities face problems with housing development, but people who remain deny that their homes are dying. pride in our little town, and we're a long way from dying." "No way is this town dying," said Gentie Schubert, who has lived in Ramona for nearly half a century. "We still have a grocery store. We have those two little restaurants. We have the garage. We really do manage the attitude we have in our small towns are dying, because they aren't." We really don't like it very well at all. I am pretty strong on that. We have a lot of Despite the challenges facing them with an aging population and loss of manpower and financial resources, the people in towns such as Ramona continue to go about their daily activities and community ties. The ties run even deeper emotionally and spiritually. Although the closely knit circle of family and neighbors has grown smaller with the passing generations, the bond has grown stronger, ironically, the shrinking marriage, which caused economic hardship has intensified the closeness of the residents. towns such as Ramona, with populations less than 2,500, compose 83 percent of Kansas communities. Many of these are unlikely to be targeted as prospects for economic redevelopment. The attachment of these towns' citizens to the preservation of their way of life notwithstanding, many economists and rural sociologists believe that probably no more than half of these towns will exist long after the year 2000. "The smaller communities in our state are facing a severe test," said Charles Krider, economist and director of Kansas University's institute for Public Policy and Business Research. "Growth will probably not be uniform. There may be a bias inherent toward urban counties; rural counties have to get a strategy organized and set a focus for the future. The family farm is on its way to being a relic of the past." Rick Scheidt has reached similar conclusions. "We're seeing the end of an American way of life. Many of these towns were supported by agriculture, and the most recent farm crisis sounded the death knell for many that had just been maintained from home," said development specialist and Kansas State University professor who has been studying Kansas' rural communities for twelve years. In many of Kansas' declining towns, the deteriorating buildings are venerable relics of the past, and they hold great importance for the people who remain. Many of these people can trace their family history back three or four generations. Many families have lived on the same several acres of Kansas land that they do now. "The people in these little towns are actively grieving for place, holding on to their memories of what was on in those places." Schmidt said. "We didn't want to turn the church into a hay barn," said Gertie Schubert, formerly Ramona's grade school teacher. She moved from Ramona to tola when she married Henry "Hank" Schubert nearly 50 years ago. Her husband is a third-generation Ramona citizen, now in his 70s, who serves as town clerk and who still works part-time in the small Ramona factory housed in the old school building, where飞-fighters and back-scrappers for cattle are now manufactured. 1940-1945 saw. The ceremony of the Ramona bell is telling. "We kept the bell and tower to keep the church alive in a way," Gertie Schubert said. "A boy who is a retired minister has the responsibility that was one of the first ministers of our church came back to give the dedication. "With your ancestors being so close by, you just don't lose touch with them. Hank's grandparents, parents, brothers and sisters are here, and when our grandchildren come from Colorado, they want to come out to the cemetery. They know where their great-grandparents are, and it kind of keeps them alive for them." Life goes on in Ramona, as it has for 103 years. Main Street is clean but empty. Almost a third of the buildings are vacant, though most of the empty structures seem capable of rehabilitation. The bank had been moved to Hillsboro in the early 1980s, but last year it was reopened as a branch of the bank in nearby Tampa. Gertie Schubert said that federal revenue-sharing ended several years ago, but that some recent federal assistance helped the volunteer fire department to upgrade its equipment. Marion County funds have provided an ambulance service that operates out of Tampa. Despite these indicators of growth, there are only two cars on Main Street, both parked. The only signs of life are postmaster Paula Fife's red desk in the office window, and Sader making her way from the post office to her cafe. It's almost lunchtime at Sader's, a warm and bright place on this cold, damp day. There are thick slices of red ham, two kinds of potatoes, some creamed peas, good bread and coffee. And you can buy candy and store cookies because it's Monday, and Sader hasn't yet baked for the week. backed for the 74, came to Ramona from Wisconsin when she was six. "Dad wanted to move to Kansas. He'd always heard about Kansas, even though some said it ain't worth a damn," she said. Sader's father, George Albright, worked for the railroad and became the town's watchman in its early days when young Ramona had a wildness about it, and train passengers occasionally needed an escort between the depot and the hotel. Sader and her husband lived on a farm and fell at home in the establishment where they've been serving meals since 1852. Though a person would probably never visit Ramona unless deliberately aimed there, it is just the kind of place one can find the abstract and comfortable quality of rural life that many city dwellers seemed to be looking for during the so-called "rural renaissance" of the 1970s. "It's like a little happy family here," Sader said, "with everyone pitching in and helping each other." cerned about each other. You know who's in the hospital, how they're doing. You know who your neighbors are, knew their parents and grandparents, some of them. You don't get that in the city." "We are more or less a family," Gertie Schubert agreed. "We're con- And like 'many small towns, Ramona cherishes the memories of its people. During the 1987 centennial celebration, Ramona published "A Century of Memories," edited by long-time resident Dale Sondergard, to which each family submitted a family history and a memoir of people and places rcalled. Aba Lincoln Beltz, born in 1905 is still remembered among a "man of few words" years kind and thoughtful of his family, who loved his neighbor as himself." Years later, in 1987, his ancestor Martin Beltz stored the church bell in his barn while the stone was carved. Several families recalled Alex Brunner's skill as a baseball player in the 1920s and 1930s. Alex Brunner was 92 years old in the centennial year and was honored as Ramona's oldest resident. The Daewil family is remembered for the good fishing at its farm on Lyons Creek, and its generosity in permitting the townsfolk to fish there. The team at Ramona is an agent and an avid short-wave radio fan who built a tall antenna power with an amputated right arm. All of these people are dead now. But the part they played in the life of the town, and the part that these memories play in 1960 Ramona, may be the key to what keeps these little towns going in spite of the odds. "People do move in," Gerlie Schubert said. "Some are moving out, but Ramona isn't dying. I think if those people would just even be here for a month or two they would see that. Ramona is typical of a lot of the towns in this area - Tampa, Durham, Lost Springs. Though Lost Springs isn't as up-and-coming as Ramona, even though it has the school." The centennial memory book refers repeatedly to a family or person choosing to move away. To Sader and Gertie and Hank Schubert, and the others who have stayed in Ramona, staying has never been a question to be decided. It is the moving away that is a matter of choice and that takes conscious effort. To ask them why they stay is much like asking the trees why they're there. "You have roots here." Gertie Schubert said. "You have people with roots." History tells Ramona and other small-town Kansas citizens that their ancestors' ability to withstand the hardships of the past can give them faith in themselves and their own futures. "History relates that it has always been a struggle for the farmers and the rural people." Sondergard wrote in the centennial book. He recalls the droughts, the grasshoppers and the lack of settlement in 1889, all of which caused Kansas to lose nearly 50,000 people at the turn of the last century. The experts and forecasters who are writing these towns off as nonvailable may be overlooking the factors that create small town life. People who stayed are covered, Schedl said. "They won't give up." "The present-day agricultural economic conditions can be resolved and rural people can become more prosperous," Sondergard wrote. 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John Rogers, executive vice president of the Montgomery County Action Council, said that four months ago, a major poultry processor was considering building a new plant in Coffeville or Independence, two Montgomery County towns in southeast Kansas. For the 1,500 jobs the company would create, its managers wanted a labor pool of 6,000 people from which to choose, Rogers said. Applicants would have to be within a 30-mile radius of the new plant. "We couldn't deal effectively with a company dealing with more than 500 jobs," he said. "There is not reason to think we could provide them with the quality of the numbers in our workforce that they would require." The deal is not dead, Rogers said, but there has to be a level of comfort for an industry to come in. Even smaller businesses contemplating development find it difficult to find sufficient workers in rural towns. The same area also is competing for a smaller service business that could create about 200 jobs, Rogers said. Nevertheless, this business wants a guarantee that workers will be available before the company is built. A provision allows the firm to break its property lease if the labor pool is not during a one-year span, Rogers says. And the company will receive this guarantee, although Rogers said he was not aware of any other deal such as this being used. "It will be extremely expensive if the company makes the wrong move," Rogers said. "You have to have the numbers of people to attract industry. You have to have jobs in that. That's the critical element." Skilled worker loss Furthermore, it is the skilled workers who are migrating out of the rural communities, and myrna Buran, manager of the Employment Training Office in Chanute, a southeast Kansas town of about 8,000. "Absolutely, we're being affected," Burton said. "Presently, we have some job orders for some people and we know that we do not have people to fill the orders." Burton said she could put five or six industrial engineers, pipe fitters and welders to work, although she could not find workers with adequate skills. The workers who remain in the area have few skills, she said. "I truly believe wages have a lot to do with it," she said. "We've got to do something about our wage scale." According to statistics from 1983 to 1988, the average job wage for metropolitan county residents was nearly $5,000 more than for non-metropolitan county residents. For example, in 1988, the average job wage for a Johnson County resident was $21,500. A resident in Neosho County in southeast Kansas received an average of $15,000. back, we've got to have higher wages and attract some skilled people," Burton said. Chip Whelen, director of public affairs for the Kansas Medical Society, said it was harder to attract professionals in rural communities. "There just isn't a sufficient demand for patient services to maintain a practice in many rural communities," he said. "Before southeast Kansas comes Possible steps Therefore, some rural communities, such as St. Paul, are considering ways to deal with the declining population and the declining labor force. Larry Smith, Michelle Smith's uncle and lifetime resident of St. Paul, said, "St. Paul is on the low side of being stable, and it is critical that we don't lose any more people. It is like a car on the edge of a cliff. If it goes any further, we won't be able to save it." St. Paul residents are researching the construction of a retirement center that would create about 35 jobs and would fit the town's aging population. More than half of the St. Paul community is more than 50 years old, he said. "Rather than bringing in a smokestack industry, why not have another industry that would do two things: provide jobs and also cater to a need that has been expressed in St. Paul?" Larry Smith said. Charles Krider, director of the KU Business Research Institute for Public Policy and Business Research, is a professor of social sciences that would fit with the needs of Between 1980 and 1988, 92 of Kansas' 105 counties had more people move out than in, but the other 13 counties had more people move into them. Twenty-six of the counties had more than 10 percent of their populations leave during the eight-year period. 1980-88 Net migration in Kansas Percentage of county population migrating 10% or more moved in 0-10% moved in 0-10% moved out 10% or more moved out Source: Kansas Statistical Abstracts the community, such as the retirement center, would be the key to survival for rural towns. Another town using this survival technique is Lindsburg, a town of about 3,300 south of Salina. The residents of Lindsburg are developing tourism based on their Swedish heritage, Krider said. rural towns probably will not be able to overcome the labor-force problems. Stephen Kline / KANSAN "The odds are against them," he said. Michelle Smith said that she would not rule out moving back to St. Paul later in her life but that at age 22, her towns seemed more attractive. Rural survival? "There's no way I could find a job in St. Paul. It's so unrealistic," Nevertheless, Warren said, many Michelle Smith said. "It still would be hard even to get a job in southeast Kansas. The pay in southeast Kansas is distribution from the Kansas City area." Her family was not surprised about her decision to leave her hometown after graduation, she said, although they are not happy about it. Krider said. "If jobs were to come, people would stay. Students need to perceive that there are opportunities for them." LOW COST OF LIVING Special Summer Rates $220.00-$320.00 NATURAL WAY 820 -822 Mass St. A building with a large window. $220.00-$320.00 (1) Let Berkeley Flats' location save you time as well as money. 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"The needs out there are incredible, and all are legitimate in one sense or other, but Kansas can't afford to rebuild every bridge in the state," said Mark Lapping, a former professor of engineering and now the dean of the faculty of planning at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J. The state is having to be careful with its economic expenditures because financing in this area is so tight. Kansas, though regarded by other states as a model for its programs, ranked 40th in expenditures for economic development in 1988. Nancy McCabe, director of the new Rural Assistance Center, which advises people and communities, also points to the lack of state money for emphasizing community initiative. "There's not a lot of free dollars floating around out there," she said. "We can't tell a city what to do. A community has to decide what to do. But no matter what, there are ways we can help." What remains to be seen is whether Kansas communities have the willingness and the ability to take the initiative to help themselves. But they may not have a choice. A bill being debated in the Legislature would the future grants to towns or counties that had formed a strategic planning committee. Two opinions To a degree, the state already gives money to communities that are busy with economic development activities. "We don't invest funds where nothing's happening," said Charles Warren, president of Kansas Inc. Warren envisioned three futures for Kansas communities after analyzing the rural market forces of declining population and economic stagnation. The futures grow dimmer as towns grow smaller. Larger regional centers, towns with more than 10,000 people that serve smaller communities, should adapt and grow. Smaller regional centers, such as Hillsboro, should stabilize their populations by maintaining businesses. Smaller rural town that are not regional centers, such as Cherokee, may face gradual decline and possible extinction. Warren's forecast is similar to the future that Lapping predicts for Kansas. But the men are polar opposites when it comes to dealing with the futures as public policy — Warren favors market forces and Lapping's idea has raised eyebrows and blood pressures across Kansas. Lapping proposes a triage concept for appropriating state funds to towns. Triage is based on battlefield medical decisions, where priority is given to the wounded with the best chance for survival, in this case, the smaller regional centers such as Hillsboro. Lightly wounded towns, such as the larger regional centers, and mortality wounded towns, such as the smaller, non-regional centers like Cherokee, would receive a lower priority for state funds. priority Cherokee could suffer from this proposal, but it is in better shape than most towns its size because it is 10 miles from Pittsburgh, which has a population of 18,849. The triage concept, Lapping said, should be made public policy so that towns would know exactly where they stood with the state. He said this distinction was important for current state policy, which tends to follow market forces. "I not sure it’s efficient and not sure that it’s honest," Lapping said of natural, market-induced triage. "If the government is not going to invest in your community, you ought to go out and not out in the open, it not fair." Warren dismisses Lapping's idea as politically unfeasible. He said that if it is impossible to accurately predict which towns may or may not survive. Tale of two towns Wilton/Williams Street Downtown Hillsboro stays busy serving shoppers. An industrial park keeps residents in town during the day One town that has forged its sur- Steve Buckner/KANSAN Steve Wiltun/Hillsboro Star-Journa BROOKLYN During the day, downtown Cherokee is quiet. Most of Cherokee's residents work in nearby town "It was a forward-thinking group of men," said Carol Wilee, director of the Hillsboro Development Corporation. Her husband, Harold, a local banker and mayor of Hillsboro since 1971, was one of the group's leaders. Wibea said the group realized Hillsboro would be limited as a small town with only an agricultural-based economy. On the advice of the consultant, the town purchased 160 acres east of Hillsboro and developed it into an industrial park. The park is home to six companies that employ 134 people. The town also formed the for-profit Hillsboro Development Inc. to actively pursue businesses for the town. "I find it more and more incredible that Hillsboro is doing what we're doing now." Wiele said. "If we can retain what we have, we'll be in great shape 10 years from now." Houston communities such as Cherokee are furiously trying to catch up to Hillsboro's example. Cherokee, a former mining boon town, has used a basic state program to initiate its economic development work. The program, which is based on what citizens know about money, focuses on bringing citizens together to improve the living conditions in the town. Cherokee also will complete improvements to its water system in August and is counting on the project to help the community. The town has spent $1.3 million updating its water treatment plant, putting in a line to nearby McCune and laying 57,000 feet of new pipe throughout Cherokee. McCune soon will take at least 600,000 gallons of Cherokee's water each month, and other nearby towns have inquired about water service. In Cherokee's case, said Vernon Brisbin, the town's chief of police and organizer of the 3-month-old project, 20 people helped plant trees, build a new park, expand buildings and reinstate Cherokee's homecoming, the town's fall festival. But the returns on the ambitious project appear as a trickle into Cherokee's coffers. The minimum monthly sales to McCune would gross only $1,380. And Cherokee owes $164,000 on a 20-year Community Development Block Grant for the water treatment plant work, along with $450,000 on a 40-year grant from the Farm and Home Administration and $231,000 on a loan for the town's water line. "Cherokee exists basically on the money it receives for its water," he said. "When it's all put together, Cherokee is going to see some growth. We're looking at blacktop streets, new housing and more businesses coming to town." Despite these figures, Brisbin said he was optimistic about Cherokee's survival chances. Town leaders also hope to develop an industrial park, but Brisbin said that attracting businesses to Cherokee might take three to five years. Given the gravity of the state's situation and the magnetic pull of coal, it will be hard to reach Kansas, the lag time could prove critical for Cherokee. In many ways, Cherokee serves as a microcosm of Kansas' problems. Down, but not out; hopeful with its water project, but having to wait a few years to enjoy the fruits of its crop; or still trying despite the late hour. Rosemari Ascari, who with her husband operates a convenience store on Highway 160 in Cherokee, is symbolic of the dynamics that are played out in rural communities across Kansas. The Ascaries operate 160 specialty store in Cherokee for 30 of its 50 years before selling in 1988 after years of fighting shrinkage margins and fewer customers. Despite their experiences, the Ascanios are planning a comeback in the grocery business with a wholesale outlet in Cherokee. But even a buoyant person like Rosemari Ascano has her doubts for the state of the state. "You try to hope some things will improve," she said. "It's scary. Sometimes you sit and think about it and you get scared." Listen to Mother Nature. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Your paper, your news. 1990 F1NAL FREN2Y KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS SUR FREE SURVIVAL PACKS! FREE FILMS Pick up your free survival pack at the SUA office, 4th level, Kansas Union. (limited supply) FREE APPLES TOYS & GAMES ROOM uesday, May 8 - Wednesday, May 9 FREE BACK RUBS STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS DUNK TANK We have near your home, full-time and part-time positions available now due to make YOU a success in the security area. We provide the training to make YOU a success in the security area. Security Guards WELLS FARGO LIVE KITCHEN YOUR BENEFITS - Best Pay in KC - Promotional Opportunity REQUIREMENTS - Credit Membership, Dental Plan There's a lot of history in the future of Wells Fargo . . . WELLS FARGO GENERAL MILITARY - Best Play in RC - Promotional Opportunity WELLS FARCO GRAND MALL Dental Plan First Aid No Insurance - Free Life Insurance - Free Uniforms Furnished - Holiday Pay - Telephone in Home - Your Own Car - Clear Rules Record - Free Life Insurance - Free Uniforms Furnished - Paid Vacations - Medical Benefits - General Police Reserve - Social Security Card or Birth Certificate --- or Birth Certifica DON'T DELAY, APPLY TODAY 301 East Armour, Suite 400 Kansas City, Missouri 64111 WELLS FARGO GUARD SERVICES BOE MP The FrameWoods of Lawrence By authority of the Board of Directors and upon recommendation of the President-Dave Seal confer upon All 1990 kU Seniors the discount of UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 34TH EAST BANK 15% Off 15% OFF the framing of your diploma and/or certificates with all its rights, privileges, and responsibilities. Given under the seal of the FrameWoods Gallery of Lawrence, this twenty-fifth day of April, nineteen hundred and ninety. - Pick your framed diploma up on your way out of town, or let us ship it to you. Drop by FrameWoods early & pick out your Frame, and we will have your frame done when you receive your diploma. * If you forget, send us your diploma, we will frame it and ship it back. Visit FrameWoods Gallery Soon! - Rush Service Available www.roadkill.com * Let experienced professional framer handle KANSAN Campus-Nation/World/Spera-Weather-Arts/Entertainment your valuable KU diploma - After graduating - remember FrameWoods for W11 & iTouch肩袋 & prints. 842-4900 819 Mass. SANITARY CIVILIAN UNION ESTABLISHED 1854 ARE YOU SUFFERING FROM THE FLU OR THE FLUE? S Carbon monoxide is an ill wind that blows no good. It's a deadly presence in homes where appliances like the furnace or water heater fail to burn fuel efficiently Or where clogged chimneys vent improperly. And because carbon monoxide poisoning results from an invisible, odorless gas, its effects are often mistaken for fatigue or flu symptoms. A mistake that can be FATAL. That's why it's important to have your heating and ventilation checked regularly. Also be wary of persistent nausea, headaches, ringing in the ears, and drowsiness. Especially where windows and doors are sealed shut. In that event, the thing to do is to go outside and get some fresh air. Then if you don't improve, it could be a bug going around. At least you'll feel better knowing it's not the FLUE! If you have any questions, please contact our office. CALL 942 7942 CALL 843-7842 + KANSAS PUBLIC SERVICE GAS MAKES THE BIG DIFFERENCE 110 East 9th Street 1 University Daily Kansan / Thursday, May 3, 1990 9C Clustering can be key to survival Kansan staff writer By Steve Buckner Another way for small towns such as Cherokee to survive is to combine economic efforts with other nearby small towns. The idea is called clusterville, and they agree that the communities can help themselves by devising a single plan. "In a sense, it is a triage in its sharing of resources," said Mark Lapping, dean of the faculty of plan-mentology at University, New Brunswick, N.J. The thing communities that cluster must not do is duplicate services, said Lapping, who is a former professor of nursing at Texas Tech. One school, one hospital and one center for law enforcement should exist among clustering towns. Three small towns in Potanna- tomie County — Onaga, Havensville and Wheaton — have started eco- nomic clustering efforts by expi- anding Onaga's Chamber of Commerce in these towns recently completed a business survey for their first combined effort. The clustering concept is not necessarily new to the area. A hospital district, which included several towns, was formed in 1955, and the school district consolidated in the 1960s. In both cases, Onaga was the beneficiary, while the other towns lost these services. Despite Onaga's earlier gains, Onaga Hospital administrator Joe Engelman said the communities had many joyous while working together. "When times are tough, people do pull together," he said. But clustering may not work in every area. The townspokes of Cherokee point to the hard feelings created when the school systems of Cherokee and Mineral and Weir were consolidated and located in Cherokee in the 1980s. "The spirit of cooperation is not there," said Randy Inhof, a Cherokee resident who works in Pittsburgh as a firefighter. "It's the Department of Human Resources." The old building. Dead house Because of the migration from rural counties, abandoned homesteads have become a familiar sight on Kansas' backroads. Finney County, giving the county a crime rate of about 74 crimes per 1,000 people, according to a report by Michael Broadway, Wichita State University professor of geology. In 1988, more than 2,790 crimes were committed in the county, putting the county crime rate at almost 92 crimes per 100,000 population. Garden City Continued from p. 5c In fiscal 1898, Finney County had the second highest number of cases in the state for driving while intoxicated, according to the Annual Report of the Courts of Kansas. The schools Large numbers of Hispanics and Indo-Chinese, many of whom did not speak English, came to work at the packing plants during the 1980s, bringing their families with them. Enrollment rose in Garden City schools as a result, from about 4,500 students in 1890 to about 6,500 in 1989. Because many of the students did not speak English, they were educated in a foreign educational program in the state. Moseman said. Eleven languages are spoken in the city, he said, adding that it provided a positive, diverse cultural setting. But because the meat-packing industry has a high employee-turnover rate, the school has a high student-turnover rate, complicating attempts to teach English or anything else. About 2,000 students move in or out of the school district within each school year, according to school records. Children in state custody, including juvenile offenders and children removed from their homes because of abuse or neglect, increased from 63 in May 1984 to 140 in June 2017. The number of social services for the Garden City area SRS office. Social Services Most of those in custody are abuse or neglect cases, Kunz said. Adult social service cases have increased from 435 in May 1988 to 607 in May 1989. Because of the increases, area social workers often are working 50 to 60 hours a week, she said. Even if they were in a crisis, they would "I've been called by the police. I get calls from parents." Kunz said. Joe Winholts, area income maintenance director for SNRs, said that he caseload from about 1,400 customers was up by 5% as of January 2017, as is Japan. Much of the increase reflects increased demand for food stamps as an income supplement, mostly for large families who have only one member working, she said. "We can always tell when IBP is hiring and when they are advertising," she said. "We will have people come in with you." wherever... "People come here with everything they own and their families in their car in the hopes of finding a job." About a third of the students in Garden City schools receive reduced-price or free lunches, according to information provided by the school district. "We have two structures here — the very, very rich and the very poor." Mosesman said. "And we don't have it." Medical care About 44 percent of the women who had babies in Finney County in 1987 had not received adequate prenatal care, according to Department of Health and Environment statistics. That is the second highest percentage in the state. Statewide, an average of about 86 percent of women received adequate prenatal care in 1988. Only five physicians in the city delivery babais, said JoAnn Peterson, prenatal service coordinator for ST. Louis Hospital. "I think we're doing a good job." Finney County has the second highest birth rate in the state, according to the Kansas Statistical Abstract. The county is not designated as medically underserved, but, Barnum said, "From what I've seen of the physicians in town, they are handling at a peak right now." Many area residents cannot afford health insurance. Also, many do not qualify for state medical programs for the poor because they have not become citizens, Peterson said. Others may not be eligible because they are employed, Barnum said. But they still may lack health insurance because many employers do not provide such coverage and there is a certain time period — six months in the case of IBP. Only one doctor in the city regularly accepts payments from the state for medical services, Peterson said. The others each take one nonpaying patient who is covered by the state medical plan per month. Many of the rest go to the Mexican-American Ministry Clinic in Garden City, which provides medical care. Penny Schwab, director of the clinic, said the clinic's doctor was seeing about 100 people a week, or about 40 to 45 people a day. He spends only two days and one morning a week at the Garden City clinic. He also provides care during the week in Dodge City, Liberal and Hyssles. Barnum said he thought the city had been better off to 1900, but it was still a fairly small town without the big buildings. Before the packing plants came, Barnum said, they were fairly growing community, the growth was controlled. Meyer said, however, that until the economic expansion, Garden City did not have the chance to become the commercial center of western Kansas. 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Expire: 02/09 KU 170 Godfather's ▼ Pizza WE DELIVER 10C Thursday, May 3, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Adding value to asparagus By Gary Patton Kansan staff writer On a blustery spring morning, the Pendleton farm, about three miles east of Lawrence, resembles a stereotypical Kansas farm. a stove top oven Shadowed by a pair of silver silos, a muddy-wheeled John Deere tractor rests alongside a gray barn. The wind whistles across acres of flat farmland, sporadically smacking an open barn door against its frame. But away from the wind, inside the barn, observers quickly can recognize that this is no regular Kangas farm. Kansas farm. Sacks of asparagus roots, 100 to a bag, cover most of the floor of the barn, which serves as the Pendleton's country store. Boxes of bagged blue corn chips, 12 bags to a box, sit in an 8-foot-high cardboard pyramid. And Karen Pendleton, 32, explains that she makes and sells cookies made from asparagus, paper notecards from asparagus and do-it-yourself asparagus home business. Typical Kansas farm products. Pendleton and her husband, John, 34, were named innovators of the year for 1989 by the State Board of Agriculture. They have made their mark by marketing the 500-650-acre farm in a different way. They began diversifying in 1981 when they planted an acre and a half of asparagus in addition to their staple crops of milo, corn, soybeans and wheat. Karen Pendleton said she got the idea from her customers to try making and selling different products. "People would come out here to our market, buy $10 of asparagus, hand me a $20 bill and say, 'What else can I buy?' "she said. "It didn't take me long to say to myself, 'We're going to find something.'" Since then, they have found that they can add value to their 20 acres of asparagus and acres of other crops by processing them into other products. They say they are not looking to expand the family business despite a lot of encouragement to do so. "There are only so many hours in the day," Karen Pendleton said. "We're not out to compete with Frito Lay. "I'm a farmer and I want to stay a farmer. I'm not looking at building a food-processing plant in my back yard. We can stay small, diversify our products and still be profitable." You've Tried The Rest, Now Try The Best! Coors Coors Light Bud Bud Light Thursday! BEAT THE CLOCK Thursday! At 5:00 p.m. get a large 1 topping pizza for $5.00 but the price goes up 25¢ every 15 minutes until 7:00 p.m. Buy any 10” pizza and get the second of equal value or less for $99¢ Buy any 14” pizza and get the second of equal value or less for $1.99 943 Massachusetts 842-6161 Limited time offer. NIKE NIKE INTER NATIONAL THE NIKE INTERNATIONAL COLLECTION. Every part has a purpose. 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FREE REFRESHMENTS Casino Day Store Hours: Open Daily 9:30-8:30 Regular Hours: 9:30-6 M,T,W,F,Sat. 9:30-8:30 Thursday MISTER GUY MEN'S & WOMENS TRADITIONAL CLOTHIERS 920 Mass 842-2700 A VOL, 100, NO. 145 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN THE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS FRIDAY, May 4, 1990 ADVERTISING:864-4358 (USPS 650-640) NEWS:864-4810 Senate plans fund increase Bv Rod Griffin Kansan staff writer TOPEKA — The Senate Ways and Means Commission yesterday devised a four-part plan that would restore $66 million to the state general fund to remedy overspending by the Legislature. The plan was created to increase the general fund balance to $100 million, the amount that State Sen. John McCarthy has said is necessary to keep the state running. The proposal would provide $12 million through accelerated tax collections. Reductions in a number of agents' budgets would add about 40 million to the fund. The Senate revived a tobacco tax bill that would raise another $12 million. The bill would increase the tax on a pack of cigarettes by 5 cents and the tax on other tobacco products by 5 percent. An identical bill would have earmarked the money for the Margin of Excellence, but it was killed in the House. Together the proposals would provide $41.1 million for the general fund. The Division of the Budget estimated that the general fund balance would be $6.8 million after the 1990 session. The additional $4.1 million would increase that amount to $97.8 million. The Senate committee plan also includes a 1 percent across-the-board budget cut that is expected to save $2.51 million for the general fund. The proposal by Bogina, who originally had suggested a 2.5 percent cut. "We might be better served if we go in with 1 percent." he said. State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R- Lawrence, said the cut could be used to pressure the House into passing the tobacco tax. "Keeping it in there is the best way to let the house touch the knife," he said. "I think they're going to be faced with either passing the ciga Kansas '90 Legislature rette tax or facing the 1 percent cut." State Sen, Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, said something had to be done. "I'm just about worn out up here," he said. "We're going to leave pretty soon, or I'm going to leave on my own." Gaines said that if the Senate plan was not passed, the House had one of its own. "Bill Bunten has a wish list on a yellow pad." he said. State Rep. Bill Burten, R-Topeka, said his plan was similar to the Senate's, incorporating both targeted and non-targeted bills, but he would not reveal any details. "We wouldn't want to run it until after we finish the omnibus budget," The ornibus budget is usually the last appropriations measure passed during the session. be said. He said the state could face a shortfall of about $100 million by the end of fiscal 1992. "I know how difficult it has been this year trying to deal with the budget issue," he said. "It has just been gut-wrenching." State Sen. Mike Johnston, D-Parson, said that the Legislature must get its fiscal house in order and that it should be able only a precursor to things for come. But Johnston said the state would have to make deep cuts in spending to solve the problem. Johnston said blame for the problem must be shared by the governor and the Legislature. He said the budget problem was a result of "people like Lee. Johnston who have voted for every spending measure that came by." Keith Thorpe/KANSAN Bernard B. Scott President abandons weapons strategy Jessie Clinton, Marke, Miss., freshman, performs "That's What Friends Are For" on the flute during a rehearsal for "We Be Doin' It." The project, which will feature more than 50 Black and Hispanic students, will be performed at 8 p.m. Sunday at Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Magic flute The Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Bush scrapped plans yesterday for newer and more powerful battlefield nuclear weapons in Europe and called for a NATO summit to rewrite the military strategy for a new era in history. "As democracy comes to Eastern Europe and Soviet troops return home, there is less need for nuclear systems of the shortest range." Bush His decision, canceling modernization of the Lance missile, amounted to a recognition of political realities in Europe and in Congress. West Germany, where most of the new weapons would be based, had fiercely opposed the deployment because the warheads would be targeted on their countrymen in East Germany. Congress, doubting that the new missiles would ever be installed, had balked at Bush's request for $112 million for modernization. bun made his announcement at a wide-ranging news conference where he also said he sometimes worried that military hardliners in the Soviet Union might out President Mikhail S. Gorbachev and to try to reverse democratic reforms in Eastern Europe. It was Bush's most direct statement ever about Gorbachev's grip on power. Bush said Gorbachev was under extraordinary pressure at home to launch Libya's drive for independence and the ailing Soviet economy. Council amends rules, condemns policy of ROTC By Pam Solliner Kansan staff writer The University Council passed two amendments yesterday condemning the ROTC policy of excluding members based on sexual orientation. The amendments now need the approval of Chancellor Gene A. Budig before taking effect. Don Marquis, council member, proposed one amendment to University Senate Rules and Regulations that excludes credit hours earned in ROTC courses for meeting graduation requirements. Consistent with Department of Defense policy, the ROTC program excludes homosexuals from its programs. The amendment, which would take effect in 1995, would become void when ROTC policies concerning scholarships and commissions gain compliance with the University's anti-discrimination policies. University policy states that a student may not be denied the rights of access to or participation in any University-sponsored or University-approved activity because of race, religion, sex, disability, mental illness, affiliation (as specified by law), ancestry or sexual orientation. Marquis said it was time for the University to take action on the issue. He said he was tired of having a nondiscrimination policy when campus housing and ROTC remained discriminatory. crimination. "We need to show that we are serious about the non-discrimination policy we already have," he said. Michael Diggs, Student Senate representative, said the intent of the amendment is to require the Department of Defense to but a compliance with KU policies. Senate renounces ROTC policy p.3 Diggs said there was a time when the Pentagon thought African-Americans and women would disrupt the normal course of events. Clay Belcher, council member, said the military should not be coerced into changing its policy. He denounced homosexual acts, saying they were against the laws of God and man. But he also said homosexuals were human beings. "They obviously deserve the love and respect of a human being," he said. "But they don't deserve special exemptions to the laws." Daniel Breslauer, council member, said University policy was not a statement of what God did or did not condone. The amendment passed 15-5, with four abstentions. Beverly Boyd, council member, then proposed the second amendment, which disallows ROTC from conducting ceremonies commissioning its officers on University grounds or with University personnel. The amendment, which would take effect in the 1990-91 academic year, would remain in effect until the issue of conflicting policies was resolved. In other action, the council, by a straw vote, also set guidelines for the next year's Senate Executive Committee to add the six instructional days mandated by the Board of Regents. The council voted to add the required instructional days by expanding the calendar. Council members agreed to send the issue back to SenEx, where it could be dealt with in a smaller group. The Associated Press New nuclear weapons will offset cancellations WASHINGTON — The United States is developing air- and sea-launched nuclear weapons that would more than offset the loss of firepower resulting from President Bush's cancellation of two land-based nuclear systems in Europe, analysts said yesterday. the canceled systems. Bush officially scrapped plans yesterday to field a new, more powerful version of the Lance missile and a modernized 155 mm nuclear-tipped artillery shell. Bush made no mention of the other nuclear weapons already in the pipeline for European deployment. Private arms experts say these other weapons, some of which already are in Europe, have more military worth than either of The tradeoff is like "trading two handguns for an assault rifle," said Daniel Plesh, director of the British American Security Information Council, a private arms group. The most important new weapon earmarked for European deployment is an air-to-surface nuclear missile that could be carried on the American F-16 fighters based in Europe. The Soviets have urged immediate negotiations to eliminate all shorter-range nuclear weapons in Europe, but the Bush administration has not said until last year they would put off any such negotiations until a treaty to reduce non-nuclear weapons in Europe is signed. Murdered woman wanted to be independent, friend says By Bryce J. Tache By Bryce J. Tache and Pam Solller Kansas staff writers Before Tamara Baker was murdered, she painted pictures of horses running freely through the countryside. Freedom was what she most cherished Baker "She wanted independence," said Audrey Ferguson, Baker's close friend. "Freedom to raise her kids the way she wanted without the influence of her ex-husband or anyone else." Baker is the center of the Lawrence Police Department's most recent homicide investigation, which includes its mayor, payoff. reported her missing hair. Marsha Lyles, who lived next door to Tamara Baker at 255 N. Michigan St., said Aubrey Bakee came looking for his missing ex-wife several times. "He searched for her up until Thanksgiving," she said. "He was diligently looking for her." has stretched into his seventh day. Aubrey Baker, her ex-husband, reported her missing Nov. 6, 1989. April 27, five months after Baker ended his search, two men found her body in a wooded area in the 800 block of East Eighth Street. Police identified her Wednesday but would not release any information about the cause of death or possible suspects. Shirley Glover, who lived downstairs from Baker from August to October at 1133 Connecticut St., said Baker was worried about finding bond money to get Ferguson out of jail. Ferguson did not want to speculate either, but she spoke openly about Baker's life. "I guess she took it pretty hard," Glover said. "She was really upset about it. She was trying to set bond for Audrey, who was in jail." "She was very troubled,"she said. "She had a lot of fear in her." "We spent a lot of time riding in the car around in the country," she said. "It was so peaceful. We had freedom out away from everyone." Ferguson said they had many common interests and problems. Stolen property On Oct. 18, Ferguson was charged with stealing $500 worth of jewelry 'She wanted independence, freedom to raise her kids the way she wanted without the influence of her ex-husband or anyone else.' from the Jewelry Source, which was at 1023 Massachusetts St. but since has relocated to the Lawrence Riverfront Plaza. Susan Schwartz, owner of the Susan Jewelry Source, said the store's glass door was broken late that night. She said all the sterling silver jewelry, about 200 rings and several rhinestones were stolen. Some of the jewelry was strewn along the sidewalk. Audrey Ferguson Schwartz said Baker was wearing some of the stolen jewelry when police came to question Ferguson. Schwartz said he possessed of stolen property. Audrey Ferguson Baker's friend Baker was scheduled to appear in court Oct. 30, the night before she disappeared. A warrant was issued after arrest when she did not appear. Ferguson pleaded guilty to one count of burglary. A second count of possession of stolen property was Neil Ramdorsingh, Baker's brother, agreed. He saw her at midnight on Halloween at the apartment they shared. dismissed. She served 88 days in the Douglas County Jail, beginning Oct. 11, the day Baker was last seen. Ferguson said that although Baker was troubled, she seemed happy the night of her disappearance. Disappearance "For the short time I saw her, she seemed fine." he said. Randromanchal said he was one of the few people Baker could talk to intimately. Helping others was one part of her life that brought her great joy. "She was very involved in the community," he said. "She was the secretary of the board at Board Start. She was a girl Girl Scout leader. She helped cater the Policemen's Ball. She was a very helpful person. She Ordeal ended Baker had three children, a girl and two boys, whom her brother and friends said she was close to. Ferguson, who is from Chicago, said that Lawrence was not immune to crime. cared about people." "When you live in a small town, you overlook things," she said. "You think things don't happen to you. You expect them. I see. I know what kind of things can happen." "She'd play video games with them, take them to the park for barbecues," Ramdorshing said. "They'll give them everything they needed." 16e said Lawrence had moved to Baker about five or six years ago from Trinidad, an island off the coast of Mexico. She joined her here two years ago. Ramdorsingh said his anxiety, which had built up during the past six months, finally had been relieved Both Ferguson and Randorsingh said they were relieved that Baker had been found. "She will never have any more fears or any more worries," Ferguson said. "She is watching over her kids, I believe that." Carol Modrell, Douglas County coroner, said the autopsy report would not be issued for several days. She is waiting for the report from Kris Sperry, an Atlanta pathologist who performed the autopsy Tuesday. Hall asked that anyone who might have seen or had contact with Tamara Baker on or about Oct. 31 call the dispatch or detective divisions of the Lawrence Police Department. Lt. Mike Hall of the Lawrence police said yesterday that the department was investigating 129 leads in the homicide. after police told him that his sister had been found. Moddrell said the report would not become record until investigators had finished with it. Ramdomsingh said his sister's body had been released to him. Funeral services are pending. Coroner's reports and police reports are parts of Ramdersingh's and Ferguson's lives now. But more important to them are human emo- Ferguson said she knew that Baker had found what she spent her life searching for. --- "She has her freedom now." 2 Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan 14 Weather Sunny Day IODAY Cloudy HI: 60° LO:48 Seattle 76/53 New York 60/48 Denver 56/39 Chicago 63/48 Los Angeles 75/58 Dallas 74/54 Miami 91/75 KEY Rain Snow Ice T-Storms New York 60/48 Chicago 63/48 Miami 91/75 Kansas Forecast Rain will end in the east by noon and sikes will become partly cloudy in the west. Highs: low 60s. Lowes: mid 30s Salina 60/42 KC 59/47 Dodge City Wichita 62/42 62/45 Friday - Rain. ending in morning. High: 60", Low: 48". 5-day Forecast Saturday - Mostly sunny Sunday - Mostly sunny and continued warm. High: 71"; Low: 52". Monday - Sunny and warm. High: 74°. Low: 53°. KU Weather Service: 864-3300 Tuesday - Sunny and warm. High: 77'. Low: 54'。 The University Daily Kansas (USPS 650-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 60405, daily during the regular school year, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals period, and Wednesday during the summer session. Second-class postage is paid in Lawrence, Kan. 60404. Annual subscriptions by mail are $50. Student subscriptions are paid through the student activity fee. *Postmaster: Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer-Fint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045. The Etc. Shop 732 Mass. 843-0611 RAY-BAN ADMINISTRATED BY BAUSCH & LOMB The world's first sunglasses The Department of English Congratulates the Winners of the Spring 1990 English 101/102 Essay Writing Contest: Marshal B. Allshouse Sarah Bales Justin A. Bogart James B. Curran Lori L. Hubbell Heather D. Jameson Dodie J. Lacey Gary Leopold Virginie Schmit Jon M. Taylor On campus The department of art and music education will sponsor a song, sign and mime show at 7:30 tonight at the auditorium in West Junior High School, 2700 Harvard Road. The troupe is composed of KU students who can hear, hearing-impaired students and community actors. The performance will be in voice and sign. The KU Modeling Club will have a meeting and rehearsal at 3 p.m. **Omega IX, a benefit for local environmental projects, will be today from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m. and tomorrow from noon to 2 a.m. It will feature arts and crafts, camping, 12 area bands and 10 solo acts. Maps are available at the Hambony, the Chapman, the Garden, the Phil Admission Crossing, the Admission is $8 daily, $12 for both days Saturday at 303 Bailey Hall. KU Bible Study will have a worship service at 10:30 a.m. Sunday at 1544 Delaware St. **An ECKANKARK worship service will be at 11:30 a.m. Sunday at the Walnut Room in the Kansas Union. The topic will be "The Cycle of Life-Birth, Death and Ribbirth," explored through short readings, group spiritual exercise and informal discussion.** A student's car window was broken, and a wallet and contents valued together at $30 was taken Tuesday or Wednesday in the 700 block of New Hampshire Street, Lawrence police reported. Damage totaled $100. Items valued together at $60 were taken Wednesday afternoon from a student's room in McColum Hall, KU police reported. The KU Flying Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at 2022 Learned Hall. A speaker from the Kansas City FAA will speak to about new FAA policies. taken Tuesday or Wednesday from the 700k block of Clinton Parkway, Lawrence police reported. Damage totaled $150. The Windsurfing Club will offer windsurfing lessons at half-price for all students and use of club equipment for club members during the summer at Clinton Lake. For more information, call 842-5202. Police report Items valued together at $1,085 were taken Tuesday or Wednesday from an unlocked truck in the 3000 Santee Road, Lawrence police reported. A student's car was broken into, and a stereo valued at $85 was taken Tuesday or Wednesday in the 400 block of West 17th Street, Lawrence police reported. Property damage totaled $130. A bicycle valued at $150 was taken Tuesday or Wednesday from the 1500 block of Powers Street, Lawrence police renorted. Items valued together at $765 were taken Monday or Tuesday from a student's car in the 1600 block of Street, Lawrence police reported. A car window was broken and a portable telephone valued at $550 was A stereo cabinet valued at $450 was taken between April 24 and Tuesday from a house in the 700 block from the Lawrence Street, Lawrence police repaired. A videocaster recorder valued at $377 was taken Sunday night from a student's car in the 900 block of West Street, Lawrence police reported. Local briefs UNIVERSITY HOURS: For the most part, it will be business as usual at KU on stop day and during final exams. From May 7-17, all administrative offices will keep regular hours, said Adola Stocker, employee at the Office of Academic Affairs. The offices will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Michael Reid, manager of the KU bookstores, said the stores would be open and buying back textbooks during regular hours. The bookstores in the Kansas University will be open 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. There will be no other library hours from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and noon to 3 p.m. Sunday. Carolyn Marcum, employee of the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, said the store would maintain its regular hours. Its hours are 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. Mary Hawkins, assistant dean of libraries, said 12 of the 13 KU library branches would maintain their regular hours. Watson Library will stay open until 10 p.m. Saturday, May 12. It usually closes at 5 p.m. on Saturdays. Watson will be open from 7:30 a.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday; 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday and noon to midnight Sunday, Hawkins said. Hawkins said some special collections, such as the Kansas Collection in Spencer Research Library, would not be open May 12 and 13. Don Kelly, road manager of the Lawrence Bus Co., 837 Pennsylvania St., said buses traveling through New York have their usual schedules until May 17. Tim Brownlee, representative of Watkins Memorial Health Center, said that during final period the students would be bursed, 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Officer Cris Bridgens will receive a certificate of commendation for professionalism and restraint. OFFICERS TO RECEIVE AWARDS: KU police will present three awards at a ceremony today for efforts in police work during the first three months of this year. Sgt. Schuyler Anderson said these awards would be given: On April 8, Bridges approached a man in a parking lot next to Jayhawk Tower, 1603 W. 15th St. While talking with the man, Bridges noticed that he had a shotgun underneath his coat. Bridges disarmed the man and arrested him on charges of concealing a weapon. Brian Bouton, a safety and security officer who secures buildings on campus, escorts students and checks for fire and safety hazards, will receive the employee-of-the-quarter award. "The purpose of the award is to recognize and acknowledge an employee whose work performance for that quarter has been exemplary. The award can be given to any departmental employee of the KU police." The Douglas County Citizens Committee on Alcoholism will receive a certificate for its support of alcohol awareness programs for KU police. GATAS GET AWARDS: Five graduate teaching assistants have been selected as winners of the first GTA awards from the graduate school. "It's a way of the University recognizing their excellence in performance," said Paul Racet, member of GradEx. GradEx, a committee of the Graduate Student Council, selected the recipients of the awards. Money for the awards came from the Kansas University Endowment Association and Graduate Student Council. The winners are John Gardner, Spanish and Portuguese; Alan Holman, political science; Mary Klay-English, John Kopropowski, systematics and ecology; and Robert McWilliams, history. Each winner will be awarded $500 and will be asked to sit on the platform during the commencement ceremony. Awards will be given during the all-University Supper on Saturday, May 19. CONDOMS STILL UNDELIVERED: The fate of 2,000 Líderly condoms that a group of students had planned to destroy. The executive vice chancellor, is in lippe "We thought about sending what we had to her, but she's leaving." said Jeff Morris, former student body vice president. A group of students concerned about AIDS education had planned to deliver the condoms to Ramaley earlier this year to send a message that they were aware about AIDS education and that they wanted condoms to be more accessible. The group had set up a table to next to a Student Senate election polling place April 11 where students could sign labels to stick on condoms and drop them into a mock, cardboard vending machine. Morris said he was not sure what the members of the group would do with the condoms. He said one possibility was to keep the signed condoms, then get more signed next year to give to the new vice chancellor. However, the same day, about 400 students gathered to protest in the rotunda of Strong Hall. The group decided to wait to deliver the condoms until there was not as much happening on campus. STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 1990 FINAL FRENZY ON MT. OREAD Jaybowl• May 7 through May 20 75c games KU Bookstores-Free candy during book buy-back, drawing for free textbooks, for 20% off clothes and clothing Wescoe Terrace*1/2 price soft serve ice cream and popcorn **Food Service**Free coffee after 5 p.m.at the Hawk Stop $ ^{*} $ (Burge) and Hawk's Nest (Kansas Union), 2 for 1 doughnuts at the Hawk's Nest The Kansas and Burge Unions Open House Tuesday, May 8 through Saturday, May 12 5 Free Flime Outdoor Concert Survival Peeks Froze Coffee after 5 75e Bowling Games Free Candy Games Games Room Free Textbooks Drawing Hall-piece Popcorn Free Back Rube Rube Hall-piece Soft serve ice cream Dunk Tank Students Concerned About Discrimination SCAD PICNIC 1-800-444-8620 MAY 5TH 3:00 P.M. BURCHAM PARK, 2nd & INDIANA Bring your own food and...you know volleyball and other "sports" GRILLING I'll Give You Credit On A New Honda... ...if you are about to receive a college degree and have a job prospect in the near future.Call toll free for details Ask for Jack Foster. SALE IN PROGRESS SALE IN PROGRESS SAVE UP TO 50% ON Campbell's 841 Massachusetts SALE RUNS THROUGH SUNDAY ENTIRE STOCK OF CLOTHING University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 Campus/Area 3 Senate to denounce ROTC By Matt Taylor Kansan staff writer Student Senate will join at least 27 other universities today in denouncing a U.S. Department of Defense policy that bans homosexuals from military and receiving commissions to the Reserve Officers Training Corps. Mike Schreiner, student body president, said that he and other student leaders would issue a statement challenging the department's policy in a public meeting at 1:30 p.m. at the Pine Room in the Kansas Union. Although the national news conference will be organized differently on each campus, all participating schools plan to simultaneously read an identical speech denouncing the policy. Other participating universities include the University of Oklahoma, the University of Colorado, the University of Iowa and the University of Arkansas. sity of Arkansas. Senate passed a resolution at its Wednesday meeting condemning the department's policy. Authors of the resolution said the student body would not tolerate discrimination against homosexuals. "Any form of discrimination against any group presents a grave danger to the rights of every member of society," said Pat Warren, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman. ROTC officials were unavailable for comment. "It is Department of Defense policy that homosexuality is incompatible with military service," Capt. R.L. Shurtz, Navy ROTC commander, said in an April 13 letter sent to Kelley Hayden, assistant to the executive vice chancellor. "The presence in the military environment of persons who engage in homosexual conduct or who, by their statements, demonstrate a propensity to engage in homosexual conduct, seriously impairs the accomplishment of the military mission." Lie Tolbert, member of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said, "This is a good sign. It's nice to learn that amorphous is no longer to tolerate." JOHN LENNARD WOODS Cutting Edge wins election for class seats arts students were completing the regular end of semester maintenance yesterday at Murphy Hall. m Snook, Plano, Texas, freshman, scraps tape from battens backstage at Crafton-Preyer Theatre. Snook and other performing Behind the scenes Joe Panegasser is senior president; Katy Dillingham is vice president By Matt Taylor Kansan staff writer All the candidates on the Cutting Edge coalition won class officer seats in the Board of Class Officers election yesterday. Candidates on the sophomore and junior lots ran unopposed. The board is involved with many projects, including Bill Kovack, 1989-90 senior class president, said Cutting Edge carried 52 percent of the votes. Cheers won 31 percent and WHIM claimed 17 percent. Polling was Wednesday and yesterday. Including Homecoming, the post-graduation senior breakfast and selection of the annual class gift to the Kathy Dillingham won senior vice president with 121 votes. Kimberly Bowling of Cheers finished second in the Women's Ebola svodoba of WHIM womens 39 votes. Joe Panggasser won senior presi- dent with 121 votes. Katie Stader of Cheers finished second with 71 votes, and Keith Schneider of WHIM finished third with 40 votes. Shannon Pearson won senior secretary with 122 votes, 52 more than opponent Aaron Rittmaster of Cheers. Chris Herrmann won senior treasurer with 124 votes. Ladea Copering of Cheers finished second with 67 votes. Mick Gier of WHM bad 35 votes. Winning junior class offices were Jeb Robbins, president; Matt Stafford, vice president; Meghan Lasa-ferre; and Mary Kostel, treasurer. Winning sophomore class offices were Greg Mosher, president; Kurt Goeser, vice president, Julie Love, Cynthia Hale, and Megan Waugh, treasurer. Westerday's rain dampened the voter turnout, said Marcie Rosenbaum, Strong Hall poll worker. Kovack said 488 ballons were cast. He said the board was involved with many projects, including Homecoming, the post-graduation senior breakfast and selection of the annual class gift to the University. The Honors College is the Homer Outstanding Progressive Educator (HOFE) award to a faculty member every fall. It is an official sponsor of Rock Chalk Revue. The board is composed of the four officers from each of the four classes, Kovack said. Next semester's freshmen will elect class officers in September. Naismith Hall sees decline in residents Kansan staff writer By Christine Reinolds In 1987, about 200 people were on a waiting list to get into Naimith Hall. This semester, about one-third of the hall is vacant. Two floors were closed in 1988 and a third was closed this year. But that situation could be reversing. Sandy Hill, general manager of Naismith, 1800 Naismith Drive, said the decrease in residents partly was due to a move in to graduate high school seniors. Hill said she planned to re-open at least one floor, based on the number of applications she received. "It's based on my sales and the increased interest in single rooms," she said. Naismith's capacity is 488 residents with two in each room. This semester 200 people live in double-room and 60 people in single-occupancy. Craig Cardwell is the regional manager of Allen and O'ara Inc. in Memphis, Tenn., which owns Naiad Bancorp and also operates at universities around the country. "Naimish is solid and solvent," Cardwell said. "There have been some changes in demographic trends nationwide. There are fewer high school graduates and therefore fewer men coming to college in Kansas." Hill said, "New freshmen, especially out-of-state, are the lifeblood of Naismith Hall and any other residence hall." Another reason for Nalsmith's decrease is the housing glut in Lawrence, Cardwell said. "In Lawrence there is more housing than there are students." he said. Cardwell said the company had not suffered significant monetary losses. "We're not losing money, we're just not at optimum," he said. "Any residence hall operates more efficiently when the number of students equals the number of spaces available." Ken Stoner, director of student housing, agreed with Cardwell and Hill but added that the expense of housing should factor in the decrease of residents. Double occupancy with 19 meals a week costs $4,214 a year. Additional charges include optional parking and telephone service. Each room or suite has a sink, two beds and two desks. Two suites share one bathroom. There also is weekly gym time, a fitness center and an outdoor pool. "There are services." Stoner said. "But you have to decide if the added service is worth that much." He said that general costs of attending a university had increased and that students were more aware of how they spent their money. Susan Lebow, Tusa, Okla, freshman, said the price she paid to live in Naismith was somewhat worth it. Anti-violence group scolds police People Against Violence says sensitivity training is needed By Kathryn Lancaster Kansan staff writer A citizens' action group this week accused local law enforcement officials of not doing the best possible to prevent victims of domestic violence. People Against Violence, formed in 1888, asked city and county commissioners this week to take action to improve the situation in Lawrence. "The streets in Lawrence are safer at midnight for women than are homes," said Jean Rosenthal, group chairman. Rosenthal gave commissioners a petition with more than 1,500 signatures calling for a protocol that would ensure consistent enforcement of laws protecting victims of violent crimes. The group is calling for increased sensitivity training for local police officers and mandala therapists in the service of all domestic violence calls. Rosenthal said she began requesting the drafting of a protocol more than a year ago because law enforcement policies concerning domestic violence were inconsistent. At the root of the problem, she said, is Lawrence Police Chief Ron Olin. She said Olin was not willing to provide greater sensitivity training for police or to record See related story p. 8 statistics about domestic violence. "Ron Olin is the stumbling block." Rosenthal said. In an interview yesterday, Olin disagreed with that assessment and said many of the policies she sought were already in place. told commissioners. Olin said that police policies had existed for more than a decade to protect victims of abuse. "What we have here is the envy of many other jurisdictions," he said. "The people who are sniping about what is in place here." 'The streets in Lawrence are safer at midnight for women than are homes.' Jean Rosenthal group chairman "She has a perception that law enforcement is neanderthal," Olin said about Rosenthal. "If she can give me specific instances of indi- man acting improperly instead of indi- man actions, I will fix the problem." Kathy Greenele, staff attorney for the Legal Aid Society in Topeka, told commissioners Wednesday that after several attempts to get local enforcement officials to adopt strict regulations, People Against Honesie was forced to seek alternative remedies. "When we cannot get the law enforcement to respond, our only option is to come to you," Greenlee He said police officers annually receive training in sensitivity and victim abuse. All recruits receive training to handle the safety and domestic violence. A joint study done in 1982 by Rape Victim Support Service, Women's Transitional Care Shelter and the police department's Crime Analysis Unit showed that domestic violence calls were only 1 percent of the calls that police responded to. Olin said. Joyce Grover, a coordinator at the Women's Transitional Care Shelter, said that figure probably was not accurate for 1990. Grover, who has worked at the shelter for seven years, said she could not remember a day when the shelter was empty. More than 300 battered women turn to the shelter annually. But, Greenlee said, no statistics are kept in Lawrence because local law enforcement officials are not willing to keep them. "Ron Olin does not want to write reports." Greenlee told county commissioners Wednesday. "He is not willing to do so." However, Olin said that reports were filed in the department and with the district attorney's office even when an arrest was not made. The report is used to determine whether that later can be used by prosecutors. When abuse is evident, an arrest is made, he said. Loren Anderson, Douglas County sheriff, said that because of a policy established in September, all three local enforcement officers were required to present documented domestic violence even when no arrest is made. Judy Osburn, coordinator of the victim witness program in the district attorney's office, said that Mr. Tennison had filed, the office would prosecute. But Rosenthal said police training was not adequate and should be expanded to include judges and prosecutors. She also would like a system where the policy that would not allow the prosecution to drop the case. THE Palace Cards & Gifts Star Quality Graduation Cards and Gifts Doynton Say Congratulations to all your graduates with a greeting card or gift from The Palace. THE Palace Cards & Gifts Star Quality Graduation Cards and Gifts Mon.- Sat 9:30 - 5:30 * Thurs. 'til 8:30 * Sun. 1:00:50 8th end Mass. * In Downtown * 843-1099 Good Luck Graduates Stock up for the summer. ALFA ROMEO Lawrence Donor Center Now's your last chance before finals to get in on Lawrence Donor Center's cash giveaway. Become eligible for $175 in cash prizes by donating plasma just 3 times in each 2 week period. Names are re-entered with fourth donation. Plus, new donors earn $30 for first 2 donations in same week, while return donors can earn up to $22 per week. Donors who haven't donated for 2 months receive $15 for first visit back. The next drawing will be held May 14. 8-5 M-F, 10-1 Sat. for new donors. 816 W. 24th 8-5 M-F, 10-1 Sat. for repeat donors. 749-5750 Legal Services for Students YOU DON'T NEED A COUPON! Legal Services Available Free With Valid KU ID Appointment Necessary 148 Burge Union (913) 864-5665 Special of the month - Norton SI = 22.5 DTK 20 Mhz386 1mb Ram - Fast Intel 20MHz 80386 CPU 40 mb hard disk 14" Color VGA monitor - 2 serial and 1 parallel ports - 101-key keyboard - 8 expansion slots d1k - 8-expansion slots - 200W power supply 200W power supply MS DOS 3.2 dlk ITTE - One year warranty $2099 while in stock MICROTECH Computers 2 2329 Iowa, Dickson Plaza 841-9513 4 Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Opinion THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Kent State memorial Meaning behind the tribute is more important than the timing of its construction, dedication On a sunny Monday during early May in 1970, four unarmed students were killed at Kent State University. The students were shot by nervous National Guardsmen who fired at a crowd of protesters hurling rocks and yelling obscenities. Today marks the 20th anniversary of the event. Kent State is dedicating a memorial, which is engraved with the words, "Inquire. Learn. Reflect." The memorial is designed with four standing granite slabs of increasing size, signifying that the impact of May 4, 1970, has spread far beyond Kent State. Some feel that because the event occurred so long ago, this gesture is meaningless and empty. Doris Krause of Monroeville, Pa., whose daughter, Allison, died during the protest, said she would not attend the dedication. "Anything so begrudgingly given is rather meaningless when you have to hit somebody continually over the head to do it," she said The dedication has received mixed response from the Kent, Ohio, community as well. Some want the memorial to be larger and more impressive, but the university has said its three-year fund-raising effort did not garner enough funds to construct anything larger. Commonly over the next decade, Other parents feel differently. “It’s not as big a memorial as some people would like, but it suits us just fine.” she said. Florence Schroeder of Lorain, Ohio, whose child also died, plans to speak at the dedication. Perhaps those protesting the size or cost of the structure should read the memorial's inscription and realize that the value of this incident cannot be measured by the amount of granite it contains. Regardless of the memorial's size, the fact that it actually exists exemplifies that a lesson has been learned from this tragedy. One can only hope that the meaning of this dedication will not be drowned by the noise of more protests. Camille Krehbiel for the editorial board A secret weapon Stealth bomber could be useful in current wars We need B-2 bombers, a lot of them. After all, we are in the midst of four wars. Wars were declared by President Bush on hunger, drugs, poverty and most recently, couch potatoes. We need a strong defense if we are going to be involved in a war on couch potatoes. The Cold War is over; our new enemies lurk among us. They are the poor, hungry, druggluged, out-of-shape evil-doers of the world. And we need a multimillion dollar bomber to eradicate them. We should drop to our knees every night and thank God for giving us a president far-sighted enough to see that communists are no longer a problem; poor, fat, hungry, drug-peddling people are. In thorough careful negotiations and skillful diplomacy, Bush avoided a possibly lethal war on broccoli. But what if something had gone wrong, a tragic twist of fate — then what? One can only imagine. The reason we need the B-2 is preparedness The best weapon is one we never use, especially 112 of them. This country, only a few dollars in debt, needs to look past the declining educational system, rising crime and the increase in racial tensions to focus on the real problem: finding a weapon to help in the wars on the poor, the fat, the drug-plagued and the hungry. The B-2 is the answer. Instead of storming into the inner-city and arresting all the drug dealers, we could sneak up on them in a Stealth bomber and just bomb them out of our cities. We would kill two birds with one stone — no more poor, no more drug dealers. And the couch potatoes would be just too lazy to move. It seems the B-2 is the answer to three out of four of our wars. And the other, the War on Hunger, doesn't exist. Hunger in America is a mvt, just ask Ronald Reagan. War is on the horizon and we have billions of dollars to spare. So the next time Congress gets a chance, it should vote to finance the B-2 bomber. Stephen Kline for the editorial board THANK YOU PROF. HARRY SHAFFER AT EASE! MY STUDENTS LOVE ME... HENCE THIS CARTOON KU WILL MISS YOU SIR. 04-90 HUSSAIN Cooperation is key to peace As tensions between East and West dissipate, the conflicts between Arabs and Jews in the Middle East escalate. Instead of joining in the peace fervor that has spread across Europe, Middle East leaders are becoming more polarized and adamant about the issues that divide them. Shimon Peres is Israel for a cause that he fears to push the tensions, as well as the future of Israel, into a crisis situation. Israeli President Herzog handed the reigns of the Prime Ministership to liko Liquid Party Leader Yilzhak Shamir after Labor's Peres failed to break a 60-60 stalemate in the Israeli Parliament and form a coalition government in the West Bank. The government lost a no-confidence vote earlier in the month as a result of stagnation on the Palestinian question. Peres and his Labor Party represent Israel's best chance for peace. Peres is willing to discuss the peace The two-year old Infifida, or Uprising, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip represents the Palestinians' quest for their own state. They have taken to the streets and clashed with Israeli police and soldiers in a conflict that has claimed the lives of many on both sides. To date, the Likud Party's hard-line stance of no negotiations has prevailed, and the conflict has continued. Dan Grossman Staff columnist plans of both Egyptian President Hosni Mubarek and U.S. Secretary of State James Baker that propose limited autonomy for the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza. Conversely, Shamir has refused to discuss these plans on the basis that they call for direct negotiations with the Palestinian Liberation Organization. In doing so, Shamir has rejected the potential for a peaceful resolution of the conflict. The PLO is the de facto organization behind the Infida. Its leader, Yasser Arafat, has been labeled a terrorist by many. The tactics that the PLO has utilized in its quest for Palestinian self determination have cast doubt on the integration of Palestinians like it or not. Arafat represents the Palestinian people, and to exclude him would be to ignore the will of the Palestinians. In other words, a refusal to negotiate with Arafat and the PLO is a refusal to negotiate with the Palestinians. Shamir has refused to negotiate with Hamas after Israel's Likud hard-liners consider Arafat to be a terrorist, a criminal and an enemy of Israel and deny the fact that he represents the Palestinians. Thus, with Shamir back in power, the prospects for peace are diminishing. The conservatives in Israel think that to give in to the demands of the Palestinians would be to open the floodgates to increasingly hostile Arab neighbors, jeopardizing the future of the Jewish homeland. However, this belief is absurd. In fact, if the Israelies continue to press the Intifada they will risk both further aggregation of the Arab world as well as isolation from vital allies, including the United States. If Peres' prophecy of a Shamir-limited government comes true, the future of Israel and the people of the Middle East will be bleak. Leaders of the Arab world are becoming more powerful than Saddam Hussein has threatened to "scorch half of Israel," with Iraq's chemical weapons arsenal. If Shamir succeeds in forming a coalition government we can only pray that it will pursue a peaceful solution to the Infidifa. If not, Israel will continue to isolate itself from the world community and cause even the United States to reconsider its heretofore unwaiverable support. The survival of Israel as a Jewish state is at risk if the problems in the occupied territories continue. As a Jew, I pray that they do not. > uan Grossman is a Denver senior maloring in political science. LETTERS to the EDITOR Leave Dean alone What is your problem? You said in your article "Amn Dean confronts notoriety" that she said she doesn't want her name to be in the "forefront", yet after she begged you yesterday not to print another article, you put her name right back on the front page. I know about her wishes because I was sitting next to her at the time. Ann didn't want to go on campus yesterday. Is that what you planned by putting her name in the Kansan for the 71st time? I am one of Ann's roommates and yes, I have been more than just a roommate to her for the past month. In fact, I've been more than that for more than a year now, not because some jerk took his ignorance out on her, but because she is one of the most wonderful people I know and is one of my very best friends. Her story has been told. Thanks to the Kansan, everyone at the University knows it. Unfortunately, the Kansan, the people who don't know her think that she is trying to make this a big deal by getting her name in the paper. They don't know how wrong they are. From now on, please respect her privacy and her wishes and leave her alone Chicago sophomore News staff News staff Richard Brack...Editor Daniel Nieml...Managing editor Christopher Ralston...News editor Lisa Moes...Planning editor John P. Milburn...Editorial editor Liz Hueben...Associate editorial editor Candy Niemann...Campus editor Gary S. Petton...Associate campus editor David Schmidt...Assistant campus editor Stacy Smith...Assistant campus editor Mike Conadine...Sports editor Paula Parrish...Associate sports editor E. Joseph Zurga...Photo editor Deniel Startling...Associate photo editor Stephen Kline...Graphics editor Kris Bergquist...Artist/Features editor Christine Winner...Projects editor Travis Butler...Science editor Sharon Chapman...Copy chief Kljerstin Gabrelson...Copy chief Kathy Sheldon...Copy chief Kate Hannigan...Layout editor Wendy Perrett...Layout editor David Waltz...Layout editor Donna Eades...Wire editor Holly Lawton...Wire editor Bryan Reber...Wire editor Mary Neubauer...Production editor Tom Eilen...General manager, news adviser Letters should be typed, double-spaced and less than 200 words and must include the writer's signature, name, address and telephone number. If the writer is affiliated with the University of Kansas, please include class and hometown, or faculty or staff position. Guest columns should be typed, double-spaced and less than 700 words. The writer The Kanaan reserves the right to reject or edit letters, guest column and cartoons. They can be mailed or brought to the Kanaan newsroom, 111 Staffer Flat Halt Labels, columns and cartoons are the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University Daily Kanaan. Editorials are the opinion of the Kanaan's editorial board. After four farewells, a final goodbye I was thinking yesterday than... would be prepared if I ever was an employee of a newspaper that was folding. I guess I was thinking of that because of the recent failure of the St. Louis Sun, a tabloid that took on the Post-Dispatch and that I was sure I would have been disappointed to think the fact that my paper, the Kansas, is also folding today may have had something to do with it. But I would be able to handle the death of another newspaper because I have suffered through the deaths of five Kansans. In the past, the blow has been softened by the fact that I would be coming back to work for the Kansan and the fact that it never does really die. What a sad thing it is to work for a newspaper, or any business, to be a proud of it, to make sacrifices so that it can be as good as it can be and then to have it pulled out from under you because of something trivial as falling profits. Or failing readership. Or the end of the semester. The end of your job. Or my car were repossessed just as I finished waxing it. Or If I were handed divorce papers while working overtime to buy my mate a gift. It always continues during the next school term. Each semester's Kanan is a new one. Each is run by a new staff from reporters on it. A. J. a new skin from a report on s up it But after five farewell-to-the-Kan- Richard Brack Editor parties and four returns to the Kansan, the paper is finally dying for me, never to be resurrected. After a break, I will never again be a part of it. During my time here I have learned more from the Kansan, its processes and its people than I could have in any 10 semesters of classes. I have been dubbed a "racist," a "white elitist," a "a black supremacist" or "a feminist." League. I have been accused of anti-gay hat and of being "soft" on homosexuality. I have been accused of being anti-Palestinian. My news judgment has been questioned. My humanity has been questioned. I have lost sleep, grade points, friends and bank account balance. Whv did I do it' One friend speculated that I hung in there for two years because, I couldn't get enough of the excitement that the daily news business holds. I liked the high that I got from knowing what was going on before anyone else knew about it. I liked meeting the movers and the shakers. I liked I have been dubbed a 'racist,' a 'white elitist,' a 'black supremacist' and a 'dupe of the Antidefamation league.' I have been accused of anti-gay bias and of being 'soft' on homosexuality. I have been accused of being anti-Palestinian. My news judgment has been questioned. My humanity has been questioned. having my name in print. Ultimately, I liked the power. I relished the opportunity to share what I had learned from the Kansan and my school with those who were not interested in it. My professors expected of me. but how I don't do the Kate sand. after, today, I will again be a little fish in a huge pond. I will start fighting my wav to the next "top." My only hope is that I will have friends, colleagues and mentors of the same caliber to help me on the way to my new goals. from my school's faculty, I will never forget Les Polk, the soft-spoken curmudgeon who taught me and countless others to love the language and the business. Nor will I forget Tom Eblen, the crusty editor with an eye for good reporting, writing and, most importantly, good people; or Susanne Shaw, a woman with more connections than AT&T and the clout of Bill Gates, whose Paul Jess, who carried on the great editing tradition of John Bremner and who likely will be as legendary. From my colleagues, I will never forget Dan Niemi, my managing editor, (before that he my was my news editor and assistant campus editor), who daily claimed his job was killing him but who would rather die than quit; Lisa Moss, planning editor, who worked 16 hours five days a week and spent half her nights counseling staffers on the telephone; and Gary Patton, who jugged wife, child, campus desk and graduate student newspapers, editor the Kansan has ever seen. And I will never forget the rest of the reporters and editors who toll for hours each day for little or no pay to keep the Kansan one of the best student newspapers in the country. You will know their names in semesters and years to come. CAMP UHNEELY To the rest of the University thanks for the opportunity. I will miss you all, but will always remembe her you Richard Brack is a Great Bend senior majoring in journalism. BY SCOTT PATTY PUMP WE REPRESENT C.L.A.S.P. Comic Lovers Against Scott Patty We WANT "Camp Unneely" ENDED IMMEDIATELY. OKAY. University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 5 LETTERS to the EDITOR Don't fake IDs Don't fake IDs Are you one of these students who feels that you are missing out because you are not 21? Do you wish you could go out with your older friends to all the hot spots in Lawrence? Well you can! It's easy! All you have to do is find a friend who is 21 and go to the Office of Student Records to obtain a KUID with your friend's name and your picture. This, along with another ID stating your age, will allow you to get into a bar. Sounds easy. WRONG! First of all, you will get caught. Student Records staff members are very prepared for this. They have information on everyone enrolled at KU and have several tests to see if you are actually who you say you are. You need the student guard of these questions they ask. The questions and tests are different for every student, so don't try it. They catch dozens of students trying this each semester. So they catch you. So what? They are only going to slap you on the wrist and say, "Don't try that again." That was exactly what a lot of students have thought. That was why those students (as well as their 21-year-old friends) have been suspended or, even worse, are back at home explaining to their parents why they can no longer attend KU. How would you feel if you had spent all those hours studying and paid all that money on school, just to throw it all away because of a stupid idea? Not a very comforting thought, is it? Some of you are thinking you won't try this because it's not worth it. Instead, you'll just borrow someone else's ID who looks like you. That won't harm anyone, right? Sorry! Have you ever sat down and thought about some of the consequences of that? What happened to your friend drinking one night using your friend's ID. On your way home, you are involved in a car accident. When the police find your ID saying you're your friend, they are going to notify your friend's parents that their son or daughter has been involved in a terrible traffic accident. In the meantime your friend is at the library study- imp graceful for a test while your parents have no idea that you are hurt. No one else involved, huh? No harm done? All you 21-year-olds out there, think about it before you loan out your ID. Do you want your parents to go through something like the situation just described? How would you feel knowing they wouldn't have been in any accident had you refused to loan your ID? Also, when you give up your ID, you are giving up some of your self-identity and your integrity. You are allowing someone else to go out and do who knows what using your name. Think about the consequences of your action. Mise en place will not work. It's not worth it to break this law. We are submitting this letter in an attempt to warn you of some of the consequences of your actions. We are not trying to tell you what to do. We are just attempting to do things. We are two students who tried this and got caught. Believe us when we tell you it is not worth it! Kevin Swanson Leavenworth junior So before you run out and get a fake ID (or loan one out), think about your family, your friends, your college career and what it all means to you. Are these things you want to drink or just allow you to drink some fermented grain in some brown bottle in some old brown building? Mike Brown Leavenworth senior In Kiel's defense News has reached the suburbs that professor Dwight Kiel is moving on to warmer beaches, failing tenure at KU. As a former student of professor Kiel, I feel compelled to publicly share my thoughts. Professor Kiel sets extremely high standards for himself and his students. His lectures are always delivered with great insight and insight. He is able to convey tough conceptual ideas through lucid analysis and concrete political examples. Professor Kiel has a wealth of knowledge that he is effectively able to communicate, and his teachings, at least for me, have had lasting influence. For those who have had the privilege of one of his students, enough said. Clearly, professor Kiel's tenure did not turn on his teaching ability. "Publish or Perish!" is the favored expression of administrators. Administrators who disguise their responsibilities to the students with pretentious titles and vague job descriptions. Administrators who blind themselves to the brilliance of an educator with a myopic vision of a more published faculty. Administrators, too busy with their demanding state jobs to attend one of professor Kiel's classes, has given them wide access to the students. Hungry for the published article, they now dine where only motley is worn. When the KU Greater University Fund solicits my contribution this year, I'll have to decline. Unfortunately, the administration has demonstrated poor investments to the quality of education at KU. Patrick McGrath 1986 KU graduate Kansan fuels fire Once again the Kansan has tried to add fuel to an already well-lit fire by pitting one campus group against another. In the Monday, April 30 edition, Students Concerned About Discrimination and the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization were depicted as members of another. The reporter of this particular article simply chose remarks and quotes that would make for a "juicec" story rather than telling the whole story. What has happened to the objectivity of news reporting? This article has given HALO and SCAD unnecessary and negative publicity in the eyes of the administration and, more importantly, the letter sent to SCAD and the Kansan, the president of HALO gives the real reasons why HALO did not endorse SCAD. First, most of the members of HALO did not agree with SCAD's view of removing the interim director of the Office of Minority Affairs. HALO agrees with SCAD that an extensive search for a permanent director is needed involving minority students. The second reason HALO members could not endorse SCAD was that HALO members felt that they needed to address the concerns of Hispanic students first. This is one of our goals in this place. This is not saying that we are only concerned with the welfare of Hispanics on this campus. We simply feel we have to know as a young, growing organization The last reason HALO voted not to endorse SCAD was that a few members felt uncomfortable with the Office of Minority Affairs being extended to include gay and lesbian students, because the office is not adequately funded or staffed to address concerns of the minority groups that currently have access to it. where we stand as Hispanics before we endorse a group such as SCAD. These are the real reasons HALO does not endorse SCAD. Although SCAD and HALO resolved the "tension" at a Monday night HALO meeting, the Kansan did not report this. The Kansan, considered one of the top 10 college newspapers, failed to report both sides of the story. It is common for journalists to bring toward the same goals must be pitted against each other by our own student newspaper. Angela Cervantes Liz Mendez Shelly Fraga Lily Rodriguez HALO members Kansan lacks sensitivity Two articles I read in Monday's Kansan upset me a lot. One was about the nude body of a young woman that was found near Eighth Street. It was decomposing and had been there for months. Shaking and disgusted, I turn to the editorial page only to see Stan Diel's column poking fun at an incident at Clinton Lake in which a woman was approached by a naked man and hit on the head with a hammer. Perhaps the incident at Clinton Lake seems trivial, after all, the woman was unhurt, but let's think again. Crimes such as these, whether it be a flasher or a gunman, would just physical harm. These acts all leave their victims helpless and afraid. They put a block on the freedom every woman should have — just as much as any man. Put yourself in my shoes, Stan. It's midnight and you have been at the library studying. The buses aren't running, you have no car, your roommate can't come to get you and you have to walk. Instead of enjoying what should be a nice walk home you are wondering who's behind the bushes and whether the man 20 feet behind you is Ted Bundy recarnacained. Doesn't sound very nice does it? I hate not being able to go running alone after dark or not being able to go out to Clinton Lake and sit by myself and relax. Ask any woman on campus, and she is likely to agree. KU is lucky. Its rate of crimes against women is low compared to many colleges across the United States. I am glad that I don't have to carry a whistle with me everywhere I go. But acts such as the one at Clinton aren't funny. They're just a joke. The Korners show a true lack of sensitivity in printing Diel's column in the same issue with the story about the young woman decomposing in a place near you. Ingerid Kelley Boulder, Col., Junior Connect Hawley While we were pleased to see the article in the April 25 Kansas about the launching of the space shuttle Discovery with the Hubble Space Telescope aboard, we are concerned that your reporters failed to connect the name of the astronaut, Steve Hawley, with the fact that he is a distinguished alumnus of the University of Kansas. Hawley received his BA in astronomy from the department in 1973 and went on to obtain his doctorate from the University of Santa Cruz. It is really too bad when alums and Kansans make important contributions to science, the Kansan does not take the effort to tell the campus community of their involvement. Stephen J. Shawl and J. P. David- Professors of physics and astronomy Gay intimidation Editor's note: At the request of the author, the Kansan agreed to publish this letter unsigned. The Kansan has verified the authenticity of the letter. Tuesday, I read with interest the article on the "notoriety" Ann Dean had attained since reporting the racist and sexist slur she reportedly received along with physical abuse a little more than a month before. She was lengthened by the fact that I had been verbally abused and intimated the night before, and was forced to confront the same issues. Two men approached and harassed me simply because I was in a place associated with homosexuals. I was able to leave the area unhurt, but I immediately had to ask myself some questions: Should I call the police? What if these two men found out my name? Would they harass me more? Was it better to do that or do not? The case came easily. I am a student at this University, and I have the right to be wherever I choose without being threatened because of my sexuality or my perceived sexuality. Anyone attempting to violate that right should be reported to the police. I was afraid that the men might discover my identity and then attack me, but the offense I felt at being threatened convinced me to report the incident. But was it really a big deal? I guess Ken Kirklin couldn't think so. In his letter to the editor, also on Tuesday, he described the gay community on campus as "a bunch of whinners complaining about how badly they are treated." He seemed to think the issue was only about sex. When I am menaced by two men with swastikas drawn on their foreheads simply because I'm in a place where they expected to find homosexuals, sex is certainly not the issue. The issue is violence and intimidation of individuals because of their differences, the same issue at the base of racism, sexism and antisemitism. It is a serious problem, and it's called homophobia. Even though I'm still afraid to reveal my identity, I felt compelled to write this letter to encourage other people who have experienced similar harassment to report it. The University police were extremely supportive and very helpful. They are strongly committed to doing whatever they can to help stop this kind of unacceptable behavior, important that anyone who finds themselves in similar circumstances report the problem. Little can be done otherwise. If you are afraid of talking to the KU police, call the Info Center at 864-3506. I'm sorry that Am Dean has had to put up with so much inquiry into her personal life. She is absolutely right to want to keep the attention on the issues, and not just be a passive listener. I also want to thank her for having the courage to do the right thing, and I want to encourage everyone always to do the same. Together we can make a difference. 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Coke $4.95 + 1ax LARGE Single Topping $7.95 + tax 2 for $14.95 Extra topping $.95 MEDIUM Single Topping $5.95 + tax 2 for $10.95 Extra tipping $.75 PIZZA Shoppe 842-0600 Westridge Shopping Center FREE DELIVERY 6th & Kasold EDDINGHAM PLACE 24th & Eddingham.(next to Gammons). EDDINGHAM PLACE OFFERING LUXURY 2 BR and 2 PLUS BR APARTMENTS AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE Sign by May 26th and receive a FREE MICROWAVE - 12 month contract - Storage space - Swimming pool - Laundry room - Swimming pool and clubhouse - Fireplaces - Ample parking - Free Cable TV - Energy efficient and clubhouse - On K.U. bus route - Full appliances - Patios and decks There is nothing "ordinary" about Eddingham Place. We are very convenient to K.U., shopping centers, entertainment, and dining. Students will enjoy our quality two bedroom apartment homes. Eddingham Place is designed and managed to provide you with more than a place to live...it's a home. - On-site management 23rd DOWN 24th CURSORA EDDINGHAM FACILITY APARTMENTS 24th E7. TERRACE Open daily 3:00-5:00 Saturday 9:00-12:00 841-5444 Ask about our SPECIAL OFFER!!! Kaw Valley Management, INC. KVM 841-6080 Theater students traveling to Greece for performance KU theater. students will travel back in time when they fly to Greece this summer. to By Sandy Moran actors, would be used for the production. Kansan staff writer Pierce said that during an average day, the KU students would rise at this summer to perform in a production of a Greek tragedy. Glenn Pierce, chairman of the theater history. KU students will practice acting exercises and attend classes in modern Greek and classical literature and 901 Kentucky "They say that from the stage, even a whisper can be heard," he said. Glenn Pierce, chairman of the theater and film said He said the theater, which was carved into the side of a large hill, was horseshoe-shaped with seats cut into the rock walls. It was restored in 1986 and is acoustically excellent, he said. In addition, four of the actors from the KU production are going, although they will not portray the same characters as in the version presented at KU last month, said Andrew Tsubishi, director of the pla- the students would give two performances of "Hippolytus" in Oiiniodas, an ancient Greek theater shut down about 2,000 years ago. Pierce said that five of the 17 people going were KU film majors who would be documenting the trip on 16-millimeter film. He said that people outside the University, in addition to Greek dawn to practice acting exercises with Tusakhi. After breakfast, they will attend classes in modern Greek and classical literature in addition to a theater history course. In addition to the hands-on experience, students participating will receive six hours of credit. Three will be taught about the arts and three as theater and film credit. "Their afternoons will be free to go to the beach or whatever," Pierce said. "They'll be doing lots of work." Tsubaki said that he was excited about the trip and that he expected about 3,000 people to attend each of "They come in tractors and all types of automobiles." he said. Pierce said he worked for almost two years to coordinate the trip. It will be taken in conjunction with the KU Study Abroad Program. Each of the travelers will pay $2,712. The students are responsible for the cost, which includes tuition for the classes, round-trip air fare and accommodations for the six and one-half week tour. the performances. Although this is the first year for the program, Pierce said, he did not want it to be the last. "We hope it will become a regular program," he said. Local measles reports decline Officials say statewide outbreak grows By Steve Bailey Kansas staff writer Although no possible cases of measles have been reported in Douglas County since April 25, cases continue to be reported daily throughout the state, health officials said yesterday. Douglas County has had nine suspected cases of measles reported since April 18, but one case was found not to be measles, reducing the total to eight, said Barbara Snitker, director of nurses at the Douglas County Health Department. Schnitzer said that she was encouraged that the first report was negative but that it was too early to tell whether Douglas County was in the clear. At the present time, there are no other cases confirmed," Schnitzer said. "We are expecting to receive results of some of the other cases next week. All we can do is wait for the results." Charles Yockey, chief of staff at Watkins Memorial Health Center, said there had been no suspected cases treated at Watkins since the week of April 9. "It is very gratifying that we only had three suspected cases here all spring," she said, going to miss the heaviest part of the outbreak." Vockey said he suspected that measles would return to the University of Kansas next spring. "I think we will continue to see measels every early spring for the next several years because of its reappearance during the last few years," he said. "Until every student on this campus is immunized, we will continue to see measels. But I think for the rest of this year, as far as the University is concerned, we're safe." However, it is obvious from the numbers reported to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment that the state is not safe from this spring's outbreak, said Greg Crawford, director of public information for the department. "It doesn't seem to be getting any better," he said. "We now have 260 cases reported from 42 states, of which have been confirmed." Crawford said the state lab was working hard to send back confirmation results as quickly as it could. "The lab is extremely busy analyzing all of these cases," he said. "They really haven't had much rest in the last couple of months." Crawford said the state still had an adequate amount of measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, although it had sent more than 20,000 doses of vaccine to health departments throughout the state. "The outbreak will probably continue at this rate until the schools get out," Crawford said. "As school children leave the classroom, a smaller mode of transmission will be greatly diminished." FREE FINALS FILM WEEK TOM HANKS TURNER & HOOCH PG TOM HANKS TURNER & HOOCH PG Tuesday, May 8 Wednesday, May 9 Stella Thursday, May 10 Friday, May 11 What's slower than a speeding bullet, and able to hit tall buildings at a single bound! MURPHY Thank God it's only a motion picture! Saturday, May 12 "TWO THUMBS UP." - SISKEL & EBERT A DRY WHITE SEASON. Monday, May 14 Tuesday, May 15 ST ELMOS FIRE Wednesday, May 16 Thursday, May 17 Showtimes: 4:00 pm and 7:00 pm each day Woodruff Auditorium - Kansas Union CALL 864-SHOW! KU's line to entertainment co-sponsored with KU Student Senate AIRPLANES Thank God it's only a motion picture! What's slower than a speeding bullet, and able to hit tall buildings at a single bound? AIRPLANE Thank God it's only a motion picture! Stella Stella Bala Golders Mines MINERALS CORPORATION "TWO THUMBS UP." SISKEL & EBERT A DRY WHITE SEASON. Monday, May 14 Tuesday, May 15 ST ELMOS FIRE Wednesday, May 16 Thursday, May 17 ST. ELMOS FIRE STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA UNIVERSITY OF KANSA Nation/World University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 7 Historical events prompt summits The Associated Press BRUSSELS, Belgium — Spurred by the historic changes sweeping Europe, the United States and its 15 Western allies agreed yesterday to hold NATO and East-West summits this year to reach a treaty reducing troops and non-nuclear arms. The decision was announced after Secretary of State James A. Baker briefed reporters on ministers on a new U.S. nuclear missile cutback Baker NATO Secretary General Manfred Woerner reported the alliance's consensus to have a summit in London in early summer and an East-West summit in Paris by year's end. and on the need to adapt the alliance to a lessened Soviet military threat. "NATO is preparing for the future," said Marian Friedwoen, secretary-general. "The Atlantic alliance is taking advantage of the historic opportunity to move from confrontation to cooperation." The sole sour note was an accusation by Woerner, the former West German defense minister, that the Soviets were foot-dragging in negotiations to reduce troops, tanks, artillery and other non-nuclear forces. Baker stressed that having the 85 nation summit depends on completing the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty. Europe today. "Unless we conclude a CFE agreement we should postpone a CSCE summit," he told reporters. The Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, is composed of all European nations except Albania, along with the United States and Canada. Now, with NATO's military mission rapidly diminishing, the United States and its allies seek to expand the role of the 35-nation organization. Baker said the negotiations to limit Soviet troops in Europe had not proceeded as rapidly as officials had wanted. "We need a more ambitious agenda for the CSCE," Baker said. He suggested such missions as monitoring unusual military activity. Latvians to debate secession The Associated Press RIGA, U.S.S.R. — Latvia's legislature began debating yesterday whether to declare independence from the Soviet Union. Lithuanian President Vytautas Landsbergis, visiting Latvia, said if Latvias moved more slowly than Lithuania on the path to secession, they would be trudging through a jungle. "I see and feel that Latvia won't retreat from the principle of independence," Landsbergis said in separate remarks to Latvian Radio. About 50 Soviet Army officers who live in Latvia gathered with signs proclaiming, "The People and the army are United," and "We Won't Go the Way of Lithuania." Pro- and anti-independence protesters surrounded the Latvian deputies as they entered the parliament building. Poll tax brings Britons to ballot box LONDON — Britons voted yesterday for local councils in the first comprehensive opinion test since Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher won a third term in 1987. percent in local elections voters turned out in relatively large numbers during the daylong ballot for 201 councils, spurred by a national controversy over an unpopular new local poll tax. Officials said the turnout among the 25 million voters registered in the 201 councils contested appeared higher than the usual 30 percent to 40 The Associated Press percent in local towns. Opinion polls indicated that Thatcher's Conservative Party was in trouble. The party plunged to a record low of more than 20 points behind the Labor Party, According to forecasts from two weekend opinion polls, the socialists were poised to tatch as many as 300 seats from the Tories — or one-fourth of the total defended by the governing party. ing party. Prime targets for the Labor Party included two London boroughs, Wandsworth and Westminster. where Conservative administrations with slender majorities have set the lowest poll tax rates in the country. Thatcher has hailed Wandsworth, charging $43 an adult, and Westminster, with a $320 tax, as epitomizing good Conservative government as opposed to high-spending. Labor-run authorities. authorities. The average poll tax levied by local authorities is $800, one-third above government targets. Merkle A defeat in the two boroughs could be seen as a personal humiliation for Thatcher. Democrats propose reform bill Tax checkoff would finance campaigns WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats proposed yesterday that the public finance nearly half the cost of Senate campaigns and that political action committees be prohibited contributing directly to candidates. The Associated Press The revised campaign reform bill, which party leaders said they would bring to the Senate floor next week, retained spending ceilings heavily opposed by most Republicans but raised them about 20 percent above what Democrats had first unposed. proposed Under the Democratic plan, about 70 percent of a candidate's general election campaign expenses, but none of the costs for primary races, would be paid by the government from funds raised through a proposed $3 checkoff on income tax returns. While both Democrats and Republicans have retreated from a bipartisan compromise suggested two months ago by a panel of academic experts and professional campaign fund-raisers for both sides, Boren said he still rated the odds at 2-10 that the Senate would pass a bill. The Republican plan would abolish union and corporate public action committees entirely and cut the amount that issue-oriented committees could contribute to campaigns by 80 percent. But Republicans would leave unlimited the aggregate amounts that candidates and the two parties could raise from individual donors and spend on elections. The Republican bill would outlaw labor and corporate PACs and limit donations from ideological PACs to a total of $2,000 per candidate. He said there could be enough Republican votes to prevent a repeat of the successful tiltout in 2012. There are years ago against a campaign reform bill. While the new Democratic proposal would ban all PAC contributions to individual candidates, it would still allow PACs to collect钱 to contribute to the military, to the bicentennial and Republican parties and up to 30 percent of the money raised by Senate party campaign committees. "But that's not enough," he said. "It it's not going to be enacted if it's not agreeable to George Bush. The president doesn't want any PACs . . . but I don't think he's hung up on the details." Nation/World briefs SCIENTISTS GROW BRAIN CELLS: Brain tissue from a child has been nurtured into a colony of living cells that eventually may be used to replace the damaged brain cells of people who suffer from Alzheimer's, stroke or head injury. Other researchers called the discovery one of "tremendous significance" that may cause an explosion of new research and treatment in brain diseases. DL. Solomon Snyder of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore said his research team has, for the first time, developed a continuous culture of human brain cells that divide and grow in laboratory dishes. However, years of laboratory studies on the cells will be needed before the brain cells can be used on human patients, Snyder said. VIOLATIONS MAY COST MORE: The $1,000 fine for violations of child labor laws is failing to deter employers, lawmakers said yesterday as they proposed increasing the federal fine to $10,000. Businesses that repeatedly hire children for dangerous jobs or work youngsters for too many hours would face fines of up to $100,000 and yearlong jail ties for their executives by the measure. by the legislature. The legislation was introduced in Congress along with the release of a study that reported that such violations increased 150 percent during a recent six-year period. The bill would require the Labor Department to keep nationwide statistics on workplace fatalities, injuries and illnesses involving workers under age 18. TRAIN CRASH HURTS 29: A passenger train crashed into a truck, injuring 29 people yesterday, less than 24 hours after another Amtrak train smashed into a row of freight cars in Indiana in an accident that injured 29. The latest accident occurred about 9:30 a.m. when the train. "City of New Orleans," en route from Chicago to New Orleans, struck a log truck at a private railroad crossing near a lumberyard in Durant, Miss. Authorities said no flashing lights or signs marked the crossing. Officials said 160 to 170 people, including crew, were on the train. At least two crew members were among those injured. It was the second Amtrak crash in two days and the third in two weeks. Authorities said an incorrectly set switch sent a Chicago-to-Indianapolis train crashing into freight cars Wednesday night near Crawfords. AZT OK FOR CHILDREN AZT, the only drug that has extended the lives of adults with AIDS, has been approved as a treatment for children with the disease, the Food and Drug Administration said yesterday. For the Best Prep CALL 843-3131 New labeling outlines dosage recommendations for patients 3 months to 12 years old who have AIDS or show symptoms of advanced infection with the virus that causes it. A total of 2,192 children have been diagnosed with AIDS and 1,182 have died, according to the Centers for Disease Control. LSAT GNIAT CRE THE DISTRICT STUDENT LEARNING A MAN IN A TOWER NATURAL WAY ZENITH DATA SYSTEMS CHOOSES A LOCAL WINNER !! Natural Fiber Clothing & Body Care 820-822 Mass. St., Lawrence, Kansas 60444 (913) 841-0100 A Winner ! Winner ! CONGRATULATIONS TO MATT LHEDDERS FOR WINNING THE RALEIGH ALL TERRAIN BICYCLE FROM ZENITH DATA SYSTEMS AT OUR PRODUCT SHOWCASE ON CAMPUS. THANK YOU TO ALL THOSE WHO CAME BY THE BOOTH TO VIEW OUR COMPUTER PRODUCT LINE AND ENTERED OUR LOCAL DRAWING AND NATIONAL SWEEPSTAKESII ZENITH data systems PROTECT YOURSELF WITH MACE JUST IN CASE... POLICE PROVEN FORMULA POLICE ONLY ADULTS MAY ORDER Mail Check or Money Order To: JAFCO, P.O. Box 19342 Lenexa, Ks. 66215 Send ___ Units of Mace at $11.95 each plus $2.00 S/H per unit. Name: ___ City: Address: State:___ Zip: QJ SUMMER IN SANTA FE 1990 The New Technology and the Music Classroom Santa Fe Style--Inside and Out Press F1 for Help; Library Automation the Pleasant Way! July 27-Aug. August 1-3 SANTA FE Virtual Reality: Information Scenarios for 2020 Technologies Virtual Reality: Information Scenarios for 2020 Technologies J Elderlearn: Santa Fe--A Taste of the Southwest SANTA FE Programa Opera: Behind the Scenes August 1-3 July 27-Aug. 1 July 27-Aug. 1 July 27-Aug. 2 July 27-Aug. 2 July 27-31 July 25-27 July 27-31 The Santa Fe Custom Entrepreneur FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: Continuing Education and Public Service Program Development Services (405) 325-5101 or (800) 522-0772 ext. 5101 (in OK) (800) 523-7363 ext. 5101 (outside OK) "MAN MUST EVOLVE FOR ALL HUMAN CONFLICT A METHOD WHICH REJECTS REVENGE, AGGRESSION, AND RETALIATION. THE FOUNDATION OF SUCH A METHOD IS LOVE." —MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.; 1964 SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT FROM THE STUDENT SENATE MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Research saves lives. I American Heart Association WERE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE kangxiaoxiangxi Custom party favors with a personal touch. - Sportswear • Hats • Squeeze Bottles • T-Shirts • Cups • Koozies Take advantage of our on-time delivery, quality printing and in-house artists. 315 N.E. Industrial Lane 843-8888 8 Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan 。 Birkenstock sandale FOOTPRINTS OFFICIAL LICENSED MARKETING 841-7027 Rudy's You should know: Taste the Rudy's Difference Old Fashioned handmade crust and spice wine sauce. 749-0055 620 W. 12th (Behind the Crossing) The rate of extinction of species from this earth was 1 every 4 years from 1600 to 1900. It's now estimated to be 1000 per year. KANSAN MEDHOT GARAGE RED HOT GARAGE 75¢ Off Italian Beef or Gyro Free Drink w/Teriyaki chicken sandwich Exp. 6/15/90 M-Th 11A.M.-12A.M. Fr. Sa. 11A.M.-14A.M. Sun. 11A.M.-10P.M. MICHELOB BULWELL'S 75¢ Off Free Drink M-Th 11.AM-12.AM Italian Beef or Teriyaki chicken Fr. Sa. 11.AM-14.AM Gyro sandwich Sun. 11.AM-10.P.M. Exp. 5/15/90 733 New Hampshire Delivery 749-REDS TREK Fest'90 Take advantage of great savings on selected 1990 Trek bicycles and accessories! May 17, 18, & 19 TREK' 850 A blend of high performance and affordability, the 850 features a double butted Cromoly frame and Suntour XCE component group, highlighted by the new X-press 7-speed shifting system. Reg. price $449 Trek Fest '90 price $389 TREK'930 Here's proof that performance and value go hand-in-hand. Sporting a Matrix wheel system and Suntour's X-1 group, the 930 delivers the thrill of the Single Track ride. Reg. price $499 'Trek Fest' 90 price $439 SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, 843-5000 NATURAL WAY 820 - 622 Mass St. 841-0100 A Lifetime Gift for the Graduate! Ball Pen and Pencil Set available with or without a Jayhawk emblem. Give Your Favorite Graduate a Ball Pen and Pencil Set from... available at Kansas & Burge Union Bookstores CROSS SINCE 1848 KU KU DOOMSTERES SUA SUA WEEKEND FILMS MAY 4-6, 1990 FRIDAY & SATURDAY AT 7:00 & 9:30 PM MATINEE SHOWINGS FRIDAY AT 4:00 PM AND SUNDAY AT 2:00 PM; TICKETS $2.50 Revenge is sweet... She-Devil and low. She-Devil PG-13 Abuse of women is a national problem By Kathryn Lancaster Kenan staff writer 2 for 1 She-Devil COUPON • COUPON • COUPON • COUPON 2 SATURDAY 8 SATURDAY AT MIDNIGHT Film school prepared Nick for everything... everything but Hollywood. Laura was raped by a former boyfriend. THE BIG PICTURE PG-13 TICKETS $2.50 Kansan staff writer SATURDAY AFTERNOON MATINEE --- Dr. Dolittle SATURDAY AT 4:00 PM. TICKETS $2.00 SATURDAY AT 4:00 PM. TICKETS $2.00 ALL SHOWS IN WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM. TICKETS AVAILABLE IN THE SUA OFFICE, KANSAS UNION. CALL 864-5013 FOR MORE INFORMATION. Not once, but several times after she ended their relationship, he would walk into her house demanding sex from her. but Laura, a senior who asked that her surname not be used, never called the police. And she never told anyone what was happening to her. In Lawrence, several groups are trying to help women like Laura. According to statistics released by Women's Transitional Care Services, a local agency, and compiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, a woman is battered every 15 seconds in the United States. Each year, between 2,000 and 4,000 women die after being beaten. She said she was too afraid. Laura's case is not an isolated incident, local counselors say. Conversations are kept confidential, and the address of the temporary shelter for women and children is never given out, she said. The organization can make referrals for individual counseling and emergency Women's Transitional Care Services' hotline receives about 1,900 crisis and referral calls a year, said the department, community facilitator at WTCS. WTCS maintains four support groups for victims of domestic violence, including one on the KU cam WHO TO CALL WHO TO CALL ■ Women's Transitional Care Services' 24-hour telephone crisis line, 841-6897. ■ KU Information Center counselors, 843-3506. ■ Rape Victim Support Services, 843-9895. ■ Headquarters' 24-hour crisis line, 841-2345. pus. If a person is in immediate danger, Coleman-Marks advised going to the police department. If people can find a safe place to go, they should then call the police, WTCS or a friend for extra support. Judy Ozburn, coordinator of the district attorney's victim witness program, said personal services were available to crime witnesses and victims. Program workers can help with emergency finances, counseling and easing the tension of the judicial process. "We try to meet the needs of the victim, whatever those needs may be." be Julie Coady, Norton junior who works at WTCS, abusive behavior could take on many forms. "Emotional abuse can have as devastating an effect as physical abuse," Coada said. "A lot of women who I have talked with say that the cuts and bruises will heal, but the emotional scars never go away." When You're Ready for a STUDY BREAK 50¢ OFF A Small, Medium or Large Cup or Cone With This Coupon TWO LOCATIONS NOW SERVING LAWRENCE Orchards Corners Louisiana Purchase 15th and Kasold 23rd and Louisiana 749-0440 843-5500 COME IN AND ENJOY! I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! GREAT TASTE - NATURALLY. Plenty Of Seating For Everyone! GAMMONS GRADUATION PARTY MAY 20,1990 DOORS OPEN AT 4:00 HORS D'OLEVRES TIL 10 P.M. THIS SUNDAY STOP DAY PARTY $1.00 MARGARITAS DOORS OPEN AT 5:00 DON'T MISS TACO BAR TONIGHT6-8 P.M. G University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 The Etc. Shop 9 06111 f. Mrs.B. Pay-Bon SIGNATURE OF THE DEVICES MARKET GROUP The Caraucopia Celebrating 15 Years Serving Lawrence 1801 Mass Lawrence, Kansas Phone: 842-9637 Hours: 11:00am-10:00pm Mon-Sat 11:00am-9:00pm Sun The Carrancopia Celebrating 15 Years Serving Lawrence 1801 Mass Lawrence, Kansas Phone: 842-9637 Hours: 11:00am-10:00pm Mon-Sat 11:00am-9:00pm Sun EATS 1100 MASS LAWRENCE, KANSAS TASTY TOWNS, TELLSIN, NORTH TIN PAN ALLEY Bottleneck 777 New Hampshire * Lawrence * 843-9725 TONIGHT Ricky Dean & The Mahoots SAT. MAY 5 SDI MONDAY OPEN MIC $1.50 Imports COMING EVENTS 11th- The Eyes 12th- Caribe 15th- The Neighborhoods 16th- Killbilly 17th- National People's Gang 18th- Bonedaddys 19th- The Paladins EATS 1195 MAST LAVENDER BAY HARbor TASTY WARE TO EXCLUSING TOWN! TIN RAN ALLEY Bottleneck 717 New Hampshire * Lawrence * 843-4725 Bottleneck 712 New Hampshire * Lawrence * 643-9723 TONIGHT Ricky Dean & The Mahoots SAT. MAY 5 SDI MONDAY OPEN MIC $1.50 Imports TONIGHT Ricky Dean & The Mahoots SAT. MAY 5 SDI Save 50% on select merchandise Cinco de Mayo sale already in progress Don't Get Stuck With High Prices! NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820 Mass 841-0100 Cinco de Mayo sale already in progress Don't Get Stuck With High Prices! NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing 820 Mass 841-0100 TREK Fest '90 Take advantage of great savings on selected 1990 Trek bicycles and accessories! May 17, 18, & 19 TREK'1000 TREK 1000 Trek's value packed, bonded aluminum 1000 makes no compromises in quality and performance. Equipped with Suntour Blaze Accusillift Plus shifting system and Matrix wheels, the 1000 is a quick choice. Reg price $529 Trek Fest '90 price $469 TREK: 1100 The 1100 incorporates all the value features of the 1000, plus a triple chainwheel for a powerful 21 gear range. Reg. price $579 Trek Fest '90 price $519 SUNFLOWER 804 Massachusetts, 843-5000 Semester set apart by racial tensions By Eric Gorski Kansan staff writer As a semeste heated debate an cern about KU's nears its耳 end, students and administrators yesterday evaluated the campus student and speculated about the future. marked with increased contracial climate sephrome, and uttered a racial insult to her while she was delivering pizzas to the fraternity at 1301 West Campus Road. maude. Tension has been running high on campus since a March 30 incident at Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. According to police reports, Matthew Benniborg, St. Louis Cannon and SAE member, struck Ann Dean, St. Louis sophomore, and uttered a racial insult to her while she was deliver- marches, forums and demonstrations to voice concern about the racial environment at the University of Kansas. west Campus In the past month, students have organized protest marches, forums and demonstrations to voice concern about the racial environment at the University of Kansas. The administration has outlined plans to improve the cultural environment at the University. Cory Anderson of Black Men of Today said the racial climate had not changed much in the past but that at the SAE house shed light on the problem. "We're not going to let the problem go away." Anderson said. problem go away," Anderson said. Andrea Katzman, facilitator for Students Concerned About Discrimination, said unity would be necessary in the fall semester to improve the KU climate. She said it was up to the students to take action. He said that Black Men of Today would continue in Fall 1990 to host racism forums and participate in sensitivity programs with greek Judith Ramaley, executive vice chancellor, said in a statement released yesterday that a minority faculty recruitment program started in 1989 would be renewed this year. About $40,000 was allocated for minority faculty recruitment during the academic year, and a similar amount is expected to be spent in the 1990-91 academic year. David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, said an advisory panel, formed to look at the attitudes and behavior of SAE, would submit its findings to Caryl Smith, dean of student life, by the end of finals. Senate sends Regents budget despite threat of reduction By a Kansan reporter TOPEKA — The Senate sent the $997.3 million Board of Regents budget to Gov. Mike Hayden yesterday when it passed the measure 9-1. they have a similar plan. The House passed the bill Wednesday 93-28. The Regents budget, passed during the closing days of the 1990 legislative session, may free a reduction if proposed across-the-board cuts are enacted. Legislators introduced a 1 percent, across-the-board cut in the Senate Way and Means Committee yesterday, and House members said Gov. Mike Hayden told legislators that he would veto budgets exceeding his recommendations. The Regents budget exceeded the Governor's recommendation by more than $2 million. million. Frank Ybarra, deputy press secretary for Hayden, said the governor would wait until all appropriations measures were passed before signing the bill. "The governor continues to be concerned about the level of overspending." Yharra said. Skits give groups an edge in recruiting By Jonathan Plummer Kansan staff writer Evidence that student recruiting sessions may be working will appear tomorrow when members of the Hispanic American Leadership Organization, Black Student Union and Student Senate conduct a workshop for high school students in Kansas City, Mo. About 160 Kansas City high school students will attend the workshop, where eight KU students will perform skits that address such problems as dropout rate, racism and teen-age pregnancy. Angela Cervantes, HALO president, said that after a recruiting session earlier this semester at the University co-sponsored League of United Latin American College which students such workshops, some students said they would like to hear the HALO students again. "After they went to LULAC day, some of them went back and told their counselors about us." Cervan said. "We're going to work at AAC to give it on their workshop." Cervantes said she told LULAC that she would rather perform skits than give a lecture to get the messages across. they are not interested in listening to someone lecture them who is only one year older than they are." Cervantes said. "I think that it is really important for them to stay in school," Hughes said, "because going to school to meet kids, but because I want them so to college." Cervantes said the skits would be more direct than the ones that the group performed at their session at the festival and prove the new skets earlier this week. new skills can "These are totally different issues," she said. "I thought, 'If we want to do these, they should be bold and upfront.' We will basically lay out the facts." Suffering from Stress? FREE Massages EAGLE by Lawrence Massage Therapy May 9th 10th and 11th Union Ballroom 10-2 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS by Lawrence Massage Therapy STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 10 ULTIMATE FRISBEE TOURNAMENT KAPPA DELTA/PHI GAMMA DELTA ULTIMATE Kappa Delta Fiji Special Olympics Tournament FRISBEE May 5, 1990 MAY 5TH,1990,AT 10:00 A.M. PLAYING FIELDS ON CORNER OF 23RD & IOWA FEE: $60 FOR AN 8 PERSON TEAM TODAY IS THE LAST DAY TO REGISTER IN FRONT OF WESCOE! TODAY IS THE LAST DAY IN FRONT OF WESCOE! Special Olympics Kansas NAHIDAI WAY JOCK'S NITCHO SPORTS BASE SPECIALISTS MISTER GUY JAYHAWK Icophy Co. PUPS Golf Famous Since 1988 ALL PROCEEDS GO TO SPECIAL OLYMPICS 10 Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan . BRITCHES CORNER 12 HOUR SALE ONE DAY ONLY TODAY 9 $ ^{a. m.} $ TO 9 $ ^{p. m.} $ HELD OVER UNTIL 9 PM FRIDAY MEN'S 100% Cotton Polos From $1499 By Cross Creek Men's Shorts From $1999 100% Cotton Tommy Hilfiger 25% OFF Entire Stock Boston Traders 25% OFF Entire Stock MEN'S SUITS AND SAVE $10000 MORE WOMEN'S Women's Shorts $1999 From Cambridge Dry Goods Up To 1/2 OFF Part Two Up TO 25% OFF LSAT COMAT CRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW For the Best Prep Antiérrez Restaurant & Bar It's party time. Come to our CINCO DE MAYO party and celebrate! (thats May 5th) Ivy Brown Jeans 25% OFF Entire Stock --- DON'T MISS THIS SALE BRITCHES CORNER 843-0454 Antiierrez RESTAURANT & BAR 843 Mass. $1.00 Draws $2.00 Corona Coming soon...Outdoor patio CINCO DE MAYO SPECIALS: $1.00 Margaritas $1.00 Tequila shots Daily Specials Sunday: 2 for 1 appetizers, 99% Margaritas Monday: 10% off total bill w/KUUID, and 1/2 price nachos Tuesday: Buy one mexican platter get one 1/2 price, $1.50 wells Humpday: Free nachos for every table, $1.50 imports Thursday: Free chili con queso with chips, $1.00 draws 842-1414 2600 Iowa "First, the American flag will be led in," said Barbara Cunningham, a Haskell guidance counselor who will help with the event. "Then the tribal staffs, then a Vietnam memorial ted Seminole tribe, then the dancers." Powwow celebrates spring, graduation By Jonathan Plummer Young staff writer Kansan staff writer The grand entry march that begins the Haskell Indian Junior College annual Spring Powwow today will be held at 10 a.m., in the Hall of the Oaks, a coordinator for the event said. The dancers are men and women who will compete in contests performing traditional dances of different American Indian tribes. "For example," she said, "the drums of the northern tribes, from Nebraska north, their drums are much faster than the southern. The southern typically has one drum with 15 to 20 songs. The best is the bass drum." There are many words. With the northern tribes, you can distinguish words." "With the Powwow we celebrate graduation as well as spring," Combest said. Cunningham said a casual viewer could tell the dances apart by their beats rather than their steps. It is no accident that the Powwow begins the same day as commencement, Combest said. Although there are people coming from as far as Washington, many of the dancers will come from Haskell, which is an area that faculty member for Haskell. There will be a grand entry march at 1 p.m. tomorrow and at 7 a.m. Sunday, Combes said. "Members of the community are encouraged to come and bring their lawn chairs and learn some dance skills, and learn American arts and crafts. Combat best." Story idea? 864-4810 Combes said that she was not sure how many people would come this year but that last year 3,000 people from across the country attended. Admission is $7 for all three days and $3 for one day. If yesterday's rain continues, Cunningham said, the events would be forced to move to the campus' Coffin Arena. "I personally like the Powwow because it gives me the opportunity to meet new friends and restore old friendships," she said. Cunningham said the Powoww was a chance for her to get to know other members of the American Indian community. "Students serve as dancers, vendors, assistants," she said. They are a very integral part." The ETC Shop 732 Mass. REY-BAN MOVELAND BRACH LOMB BRACH LOMB HAZEL® Padholders and Portfolios "Success You Can Carry With You!" available at Kansas & Burge Union Bookstores KU KU Fuzzy's South is having Amateur Swim Suit Contests! Over $600 in Cash & Prizes! Each week's winner will receive $50, and will qualify for the finals, which will be held on May 21! Just for entering, you will receive a free tan at California Tanning! What do you have to lose? We are only 30 minutes away! Take I-435 cast to State Line exit! Contests will be held on May 7 & 14, with the finals one week later, May 21. For more contest information, call or just stop by Fuzzy's South! 103rd & State Line (916) 941-7702 103rd & State Line (816) 941 - 7702 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -0 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 Science 11 Starry Eyed Story by Susie Shaffer Photos by Keith Thorpe SCOREHOUSE MUSEUM This 14" telescope is the largest now in use at KU. KU The 6-inch Clarke refracting telescope, built in 1885 by a famous U.S. optician, is the oldest telescope at the University. It is inaccessible now because of the installation of a stairwell. The telescope is located in the round dome on top of Lindley Hall. KU's observatory looks to the future Ad Astra Per Aspra. Kansas" state motto, translated as "To the stars through difficulty," has taken on new meaning for the astronomy department at the University of "A student tripped on roofing materials that summer and wrote a letter to the department," said Stephen Shawl, professor of physics and astronomy. "Since then, the observatory has been closed to the public." The department's latest problem came in 1988 when the University closed its observatory, named after KU graduate Clyde W. Tombaugh, because of safety questions. Access to the observatory, on the roof of Lindley Hall, was limited to upper-level astronomy students. The University acted by use of unsafe conditions, lack of compliance with fire codes and inaccessibility for disabled people. Some astronomy courses continue to use the large telescopes in the observatory, although that use is limited, he said. "Laboratory courses still meet there, but students in the introductory astronomy course do not," Shawl said. "I used to request them to participate in observation sessions, which have been discontinued. Since we've been closed, students miss out on a part." Jennifer McFarlane, Ballwin, Mo., sophomore, was a student in the introductory course last year. She learned how to use a camera, could not use the large telescopes. "We had lab with small telescopes like I used in high school, but I wish we could have observed with the big revolving telescope," she said. Mark Everett, a Lawrence junior majoring in astronomy, said "I've used the observatory in the years I have been working with it, and used it yet, as part of my studies." But he said the closing was not detrimental to his astronomy studies. Dou Riat, assistant director for facilities planning, said fire codes required the addition of a airwirl to the observatory to provide a second exit. Repairs to one of the observatory's airwalls was scheduled to begin last week and will continue for a couple of months, he said. "The lack of proper exits from the roof was the main cause for renovation," he said. "This was one of our repair and improvement projects, a project we had to build in lieu of city on campus, so we were able to get funding." Riaat said the project would cost about $40,000 and would allow the public limited access to the observatory. The roof and the second stairwell also need repair, but specific repair plans have not been made. The non-University group most hurt by the closing was the Astronomy Associates of Lawrence, a group that held observing sessions at Linden and evening events required his students to attend one of these sessions. Rick Schlotman, the president of AAL, said, "We still have meetings in the classroom at Lindley, but now we have our observations at the 4-H Fairgrounds, city parks or at Clinton Lake." The group travels to Clinton to avoid the glare of the lights in Lawrence, Schlotman said. In the past, observers at Lindley had complained about the glare from the floodlights at KU's baseball fields and at the Holcolim Sports Complex, both to the south of Lindley. "The lighting's not very good early in the evening." Schlotman said. "But once it gets later they start turning off those lights. The observatory is great for (viewing) planetary lights don't affect the planets." Those who have used the Tombaugh observatory know the improvements are needed there. But because it still will have problems with its surroundings, such as lights at the Art and Design building next door, they also talk of one day building a new observatory away from the city. Raymond Ammar, chairman of the physics and astronomy department, said a new observatory would be a place where all nice things, it would cost money. "The question is where does it fit in the ('University's') priorities with funding, especially now, when funds are tight," he said. Shawl said that all talk about a new building was speculation and that no finances have been granted for new construction. He said the cost of a new observatory would be about $20 million or less. "It depends on what you want to do," he said. "We've always talked about the desirability of moving the existing telescopes to a new site, but there is no funding now, so we have not explored any options." The department knows it will have to wait for any new buildings and adapt to the conditions at Lindley, Shawl said. He looks forward to the completion of the renovations. "When we open up, I hope people will be aware of it," he said. "Then we can get the show on the road." Telescope Types Reflecting telescopes use mirrors to gather light and enlarge images, while refracting telescopes use lenses for the same purposes. Lenses provide a better-quality image, but are more difficult to make at large sizes then comparable mirrors are. Thus, the largest telescopes are reflectors. Telescope Sizes The most common measurement of telescope size is the width of the light-gathering surface, the mirror or lens. A wider surface can gather more light, forming a brighter, clearer image. Therefore, if two telescopes have comparable optical quality, the telescope with the wider surface will have the better image. University Telescopes KU has three major telescopes (all pictured on this page) and several portable 8" telescopes. -The Clarke 6" refractor was made in 1885 by a U.S. optician. Clarke was the only world-famous U.S. optician at the time, and his telescopes are highly regarded today. *The 27" reflector has a troubled history. Built mostly during the 1930s, it took many years to finish and has had problems since. It has not been used for some time, and its chances of repair are slim. *The 14" reflector is a relatively new telescope. It is the largest telescope currently in use at KU. THE Palace Cards & Gifts UNIQUE MOTHER'S DAY CARDS AND GIFTS Familiy Mother's Day is Sunday May 13. Give your mother a truly gift from The Palace. Our unique gift from the Palace. Our Crabtree & Evelyn gift baskets are perfect, or our stationery, and don't forget our greeting card! for summer & fall Give your mother a truly unique gift from The Palace. Our 9:30-5:30 L@* Thurs' 11:30 L@* Sun 12:00-5:00 Bisc and Mass @ In Downtown @ 843-1099 TRAILRIDGE...End of School Special Crabtree & Evelyn gift baskets studios for short term summer leases only 1 BR reg. $370/month NOW ONLY $359/month with $200 deposit - gas heat & water paid on apartment * laundry facilities * on KU bus route * 2 pools * tennis courts ___ reg. $280/month NOW ONLY $249/month with $200 deposit for summer & fall STUDENTS or Leaving town for the summer? Moving? Don't forget to notify Sunflower Cablevision to disconnect your service. Channel Selectors must be returned to disconnect your service. Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-6 p.m. - 841-2100 ·644 New Hampshire EVERYONE SHOULD BE AWARE OF THE DANGER TO FALL FROM THIS WHEEL. KU's 27-inch reflecting telescope, seen looking up from its base into the dome. While it is KU's largest telescope, it is not in good enough condition for serious research use. THE PRINCETON REVIEW call today For the Best Prep LSAT GMAT GRE strategy for success call 81 Sno Palace "Hawaiian Shave-ios" Over 40 palettes in NOW OPEN Give your taste buds a treat they'll never forget 25th and Iowa in the Holiday Plaza The Palace NAME ID ADDRESS STREET CITY ZIP PHONE EMAIL get onc Valuable Covenant Vultable Covenant get one same size or smaller FREE BUY ONE BE ONE get one same size or smaller FREE GOOD GIRL ON SUNDAY. GOOD WEDDING MAY. 12 Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansas Summer Storage Free pick-up and delivery. Lock and Key Summer Storage 843-8806 732 Mass. 843-6611 The Etc. 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LAWRENCE, KS 841-203 Jose Vasquez, Belton, Mo., sophomore, will have a chance to show off his dance skills Sunday at a Cinco de Mayo celebration. Vasque plans to enter the lambada contest Sunday at Pizza 921, 901 Mississippi St. The celebration, sponsored by the Hispanic-American Leadership Organization, begins at 8 p.m. "I don't even really know what the dance is myself, except what I've seen in television shows," he said. "In contrast, it will be for the fun of it." Vasquez said the dance, which originated in Brazil, did not have anything to do with Cinco de Mayo and provided a twist to the celebration. HALO plans celebration Party for Cinco de Mayo set for Pizazz the next day By Carol B. Shiney Louie Lopez, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, said people usually celebrated the holiday with fiastois and parades. This is the first year that HALO has planned a big celebration. "You move with the music and let the music take over," Vasquez said. "A lot of people say it's provocative. But when people ask you what it means to be provocative. They dance to the feel of the music." "We were looking for a dance place because dancing is a major part of it." Lopez said. HALO is selling tickets for the celebration, $2 in advance and $3 at the door. he said. Activities include free music prizes, food, music and dances. Cince de Mayo, Spanish for May 5, marks the anniversary of the Battle of Puebla in 1862. In the battle, forces defeated French invaders. Angela Cervantes, president of HALO, said, "One of the goals of the new officers was to start celebrating the special days of our first anniversary on Cinco de Mayo and Sept. 16, and share them with other people." "It was a major war that we won that turned the tide against the French when they were trying to win," Valdez, Kansas City, Kan., senior. Sept. 16 is Mexican Independence Day. She said any money that the group made from the festival would be used to promote Hispanic Heritage Month in September. Square KU arts will expand in 1991 By Ines Shuk S In addition, some of the offices will inaugurate new activities, hire new faculty or improve programs. The departments of music and dance and of the theater, Student Union Activities and the Spencer Museum Events and events scheduled for next year. Kansan staff writer 501 Colorado Street The 1990-91 academic year looks promising for the arts at the University of Kansas. To do the lambada, dancers sway their hips from side to side and kick their legs out. Stephen Anderson, chairman of the music and dance department, said a large production for next year would be Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's "Don Giovanni," an opera that deals with issues of justice and vengeance. "Don Giovanni" will be directed by Glenn Q. Pierce, professor of theater and film, with musical direction by Joseph M. Casson, assistant professor of orchestra. Anderson said the department had decided to produce "Don Giovanni" because the bicentennial of Mozart's celebrated internationally in 1991. Bradford Square APARTMENTS - Large laundry facility Kansan staff writer - On site manager New 3 bdr.-2 full bath & 2 bdr.-1 bath Apts. — Only a few left. Among other major events that the department is looking forward to, Anderson said, is the beginning of an exchange program between the Central Air - On KU bus route - Refrig./Freezer - Gas/Heat - Decks or balconies - Dishwasher Office Hours M,W,F 1:00-5:00 Open House every Sat. & Sun. 1:00-5:00 with deposit - Mini blinds Thompson said some changes had been made to the center's original plans to adjust to the project's budget. Bajaj said that SUA also planned a theme week, which was tentatively about racism, in which Angela Davis is a Black civil rights activist. In another announcement, KU's theater and film department released its 1990-91 season lineup, which includes the return of "Alums Come Home," an alumni variety show that started six years ago. - Cats allowed Call Today! 749-1556 Douglas Tilghman, assistant director at the Spencer Museum of Art, said that among next year's most important events would be "I Dream a World." "a collection of photographs of Black women who changed the United States. Programs related to the exhibition also will be presented. In addition, Thompson, who is member of the Lied Center Planning Committee, said the center's ground-breaking ceremony could be any time between now and September. Bajai said that next year SUA planned to have a radio play series, poetry readings and experimental presentations, among other activities. "I look forward to a wonderful year," she said. Other productions included in next year's theater calendar are "On the Verge," a comedy by Eric Overmer; "Little Shop of Horrors," a thriller by Alan Menken and Alan Menken; and the annual "Pot-Pouri Productions." department and an artistic institution in Warsaw, Poland. Peter G. Thompson, dean of fine arts, said that Jerel Holder, lead dancer with the Joffrey Ballet, would join the music and dance department faculty next year. Hilding will teach ballet. That event will begin in the fall and will bring excellent musicians to the University, Anderson said. Anita Baiju], Student Union Activities president for 1990-91, said SUA's main goal for the academic year was to expand the fine arts and to culturally educate the people on campus. "We believe in the value of international relationships in these marvelous times of change." Anderson said. PUP'S Grill Come get a FREE burger with the purchase of a burger, large fries and a large drink for those late night snack attacks! 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Top-seeded Kansas will play the winner of the Oklahoma-Missouri game in its first game of the Big Eight softball tournament at 7 tonight at Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Okla. "It is the Cadillac of softball fields," Haack said. "And I'll let you know Sunday at about 5 p.m. whether we are the Cadillac of Big Eight teams." The title game of the double elimination tournament will be played at 3 p.m. Sunday. Top-seeded Kansas is followed in order by Nebraska, Oklahoma State. Missouri, Oklahoma and Iowa State. The Jayhawks last won the Big Eight tournament championship in 1979. The鞍 finished fifth last year. The Cowgirls won last year, and the Cornhuskers won the previous four titles. "In years before, one team was dominating," shortstop Christy Arterbunn said. "Now there are a couple of teams who can beat any one." Sixth-seeded Iowa State and third-seeded Oklahoma State play at 1 p.m. today in the opening game. The winning team will play Nebraska. "Oklahoma State has got their hands full if they win and have to play Pelbaska." Hack said. "Nebau has finally started hitting the ball." Although Oklahoma State is the sixth-ranked team in NCAA Division 1 softball, Kansas backup second baseman Kim Doyle said the team must be concerned with the play of a much-improved Nebraska team. The Cornhuskers finished second in the Big Eight with an 8-2 record, winning seven of their last eight conference games. "They are peaking at the same time we are," Doyle said. "We are going to have to come out and play aggressive like we've been playing. Everything else will take care of itself." Kansas pitcher Roanna Brazier, 26-5 and 5-1, will start today for Kansas. Brazier lost to Nebraska 6-1 conference opener four weeks ago. Since that opening conference loss, the Jayhawks have won their remaining nine Big Eight games. they are going to hit the crap out of me again." "Nebraska has come on strong," Brazier said. "If we are not careful, "The team believes it can win." Horyk said. "When I was here two years ago, the team we had then didn't know what it took to win." and jayhawks won 20 of their final 21 games, and assistant coach Brad Horky said that the team never doubted its ability. "We are playing right well now," he said. "We knew we wanted to the No 1 seed; that's what we were and It puts us in the best situation." Horky said Kansas had no added pressure from being the No. 1 seed in the tournament. Because they are the No. 1 seed, the Jayhawks were put into a bracket that included the middle seeds — No. 4 Missouri and No. 5 Oklahoma. "We can't overlook Oklahoma or Missouri, but the stronger teams are going to be playing each other before they get to us." Haack said. "That's the beauty of being the No. 1 seed. At the team's last practice Wednesday, Haack said he told his team to play with a relaxed attitude. "I don't want us to feel like there is pressure on us," Haack said. "I just want us to relax. be confident and happy with football. And then, I think we'll win." "I think that is why we finished No. 1, because we've had all three of those," he said. "and then we lose all those three we are susceptible to being beaten." In Haack's first two seasons with the Jayhawks, they finished in fifth place in the tournament. He said his team must balance its hitting, pitching and defense to play well in Oklahoma City. Jayawks prepare for championships By Miriam Reid Kansan sportswriter Jayhawk Invitational is final home meet While most Kansas sports programs are finishing their seasons, the Kansas track team still is preparing for the Big Eight Conference Championships on May 20-22 in Norman, Okla. This weekend, Kansas will play Kansas track host to the Jayhawk Invitational, its second and final home meet of the outdoor season. Assistant coach Troy Himmel said the significance of the meet was minor and that it was created to prepare the athletes before the "It's a pretty low key meet," he said. "It's just to keep the kids going." While the majority of the team will be in Lawrence preparing for the meet, Kansas coach Gary Schwartz and three members of the coaching staff participated in Gatorade Invitational this weekend in Knoxville. Tone Triple jumper Johnny Brackins and distance runner Steffe Heffernan and Jon Joslin have the opportunity to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Championships May 30-June 2 in Durham, N.C., if they perform well in Tennessee, Hamilton said. "He puts too much pressure on himself." Hamilton said. "If he would just let the chips fall where they may, he would do great." "They're doing better than they've ever done," said assistant coach Steve Guymon. "This is a meet. It will be good for them." Hamilton said Brackins did not qualify because he had been a victim of circumstance, which prompted him and his personal expectations. Hefnerham and Joelin will run in the 3,000-meter steeplechase and the 1,000-meter run respectively. the 1,500-meter run respectively. Guymon said they both were still learning the events. Javelin thrower Vince Labosky was the only Jayhawk to qualify for the NCAA championships earlier this season. He qualified for the meet with a 229-8 throw at the LSU Purple Tiger Invitational meet in March. Since the LSU meet, Labosky threw a personal best mark of 242-1 at the Kansas Relays. '(Brackins) puts too much pressure on himself. If he would just let the chips fall where they may, he would do great.' Theo Hamilton Kansas assistant coach "Now, I don't have any pressure," said Labosky, who was unsure of whether he would compete in the Jayhawk Invitational. "It's not really a highly competitive meet. I'm trying to conserve my energy. You can get burned out, and I need a little time to rest in order to concentrate on technique and not on competition." Hamilton said final week would give the team an opportunity to modify their training to prepare for the Big Eight competition. He said the season would end for most of the Kansas track team in two weeks, despite the possibility of mutual meets for select athletes. The only other athletes who Hamilton said might still qualify for nationals were middle distance runner Julie Howerton and spinner Sherla Brooks. Kansas softball statistics Record: overall 41-15, Big Eight 9-1. BATTING **DKY1** G G AB G R H HR HI RB AVG 15 Sacco G 16 18 32 58 0 8 349 15 Antruban G 187 18 43 64 5 8 342 40 Spalten G 187 18 31 65 2 8 344 10 Henning G 163 15 15 49 0 16 287 16 Brazer G 160 14 14 49 0 16 287 16 Branze G 119 10 20 31 0 15 237 3 Sack G 51 11 11 26 10 14 218 16 Hill G 119 48 11 30 10 14 218 16 Doyle G 43 29 14 4 0 2 207 12 Edwards G 29 18 6 14 0 2 207 12 Edwards G 29 18 6 14 0 2 207 12 Frost G 55 101 10 15 0 9 149 4 Balay G 23 15 15 0 0 9 149 0 Sports briefs KANSAS 56 1416 217 382 5 139 .270 111 **Orlando** 56 140 100 117 274 5 68 196 128 Doubles — Splits — Hening B, Hening E, Briewers 5. Atherton 4. Back 4. Ackay 4. Hoyer 3. Sacoo 3. Hill 2. Randall 1. Kansas 4. Documents 36. **Strikeouts** — Bazel 19, Frost 17, Jack 16, Sack 20, Armen 13, Arboren 18, Ewen 9, Heath 9, Hibie 8, Bayle 8, Gatzen 6, Stanford 6, Doyle 4, Kansas 128. Opponents 18. 2. Spartan 1, Kansas 4 Triples — Spartan 2, Edwards 2, Brazer 1, Doyle 1, Hennig 1, Hill 1, Kansas 9, Opponents 4. Walka ==Hover 23, Sack 13, Spalte 14, Anerunbe 12, Braten 12, Braten 10, Heaven 6, Boney 8, Doyle 6, Edwards 5, Edwards 4, Hill 1, Bailey 1, Kansas 117, Decumbers 76 PITCHING PLAYER G W 26 L ERA S I P 290 H K 131 Brauner 30 W 26 5.94 0.94 20.90 H 161 Sack 11 4 3 1.10 1 51.0 43 12 Bayley 12 11 4 1.14 1 21.6 92 15 Shutouts — Brazier 12, Bailey 6, Kansas 20, Doncents 1. KANAS 56 41 15 1.12 1 0.58 309 2,194 Opponents 56 11 15 1.12 5 0.39 371 182 Opponents' batting average = Brazer 182 Baira 204, Back 229, Karien 196, Opponents' Opponents' batting average — Brazer 192, Bailey 204, Sack 229, Kansas 196. Opponents 270 Runs — Brazer 48, Bailey 44, Sack 18, Kansas 110. Dougencris 217. Walks — Brazier 40, Barley 2019; Sack 16 Kansas 75. Opponents 117 MEN'S GOLF WRAPS SEASON: A week after its last tournament, the Kansas men's golf team will return to action when it begins first round play in the Midwestern invitational tournament in Cawartha Country Club in DeKalb, Ontario. DEKALI. in. Kansas took third place out of 15 teams in the tournament last year. The tournament, which consists of 19 teams this year, will finish play tomorrow. This is the last tournament of the year for the Jawhayks. However, there is a possibility that Kansas could receive an All-Star qualifier, the NCAA Regional Qualifiers, which take place May 24-26 in Columbus, Ohio. The Jawhawks are coming off a disappointing fifth-place finish at the Big Eight Championships, Kansas, which was picked to finish third in a Big Eight coaches' poll, was tied for third place with Colorado after 27 holes. Kansas, 7-9 in Big Eight play, is tied with Nebraska for fourth place in the conference. The Cyclones are just one game ahead of the Hawkeyes and JAYHAWKS TIED FOR FOURTH: The Kansas baseball team will continue its quest for one of the four berths in the Big Eight Conference postseason tournament when it begins a four-game series with conference rival Iowa State at 7 tonight in Ames, Iowa. the huskers. Iowa State is 8-8 in the Big Eight and is in third place. Kansas took three of four games from Oklahoma in last weekend's Big Eight series and moved out of the conference cellar. Iowa State lost three of four games to Oklahoma in the Big Eight split a four-game series with Missouri in Columbia, Mo. last weekend. CHIEFS' SIGNINGS: The Kansas City Chiefs signed three rookie free agents yesterday. Wille Davis, a 6-foot, 159-pound player from Central Arkansas, caught 63 passes for a 20.5-yard run during his collegiate career. Howard Huckaby, a 9-9, 180-pound wide-out retiree specialist from Florida A&M, holds school records with 74 backpacks, and 74 kickoff returns for 1,810 yards. The Chiefs also announced the signing of rookie free agent Rich Schonewolf, a defensive tackle from Schweinfeld, who is 6-4 and weighs 278 pounds. Wide receiver Tony Jeffery, a 12th-round draft pick of the Chiefs, also signed a two-year deal with the club. Jeffery was the 1990 Chiefs' draft pick to agree to a contract. Jeffery, a 5-foot-10, 173-pounder, plaved one season at San Jose State after making the squand in 1988 as a walk-on. In the 1989 season, he caught 11 passes for a 29.2-yard average and two touchdowns. MUSBURGER IN, MICHAELS OUTT? Brent Musburger has arrived at ABC. Now the question is whether Al Michaels will depart. Musburger and ABC on Wednesday announced a deal reportedly worth $11 million over six years. He will broadcast college football games, but was also said was speculation that Musburger's arrival would hasten Michael's exit. "We've got AI under contract, and we expect AI to do Monday night football this year and be involved in the 25th anniversary Super Bowl," ABC Sports president Dennis Swanson said. "I consider Al a friend. And I'm hopeful that he'll be at ABC for as long as I am." Musburger said. Nonetheless, speculation continued in the television industry about a possible Michael moves to CBS. Michaels, who met with CBS last month, has filed an arbitration grievance against ABC because it suspended him for using his daughter as a runner during a skating broadcast. a Filmer during a skating Michaels, the play-by-play announceor for Monday night football, did not return a telephone message left on his answering machine in Los Angeles. Missouri receives official letter of inquiry COLUMBIA, Mo. — University of Missouri Athletic Director Dick Tamburo said yesterday he was relieved to finally receive an official letter of inquiry from the NCAA into the men's basketball program. "I was pleased to get it just from the standpoint of getting the response prepared for it and getting our program moving forward. We're in the process of evaluating it right now," he said. from the NCAA on Wednesday. The letter lists charges against the program and "officially informs you that they've looked at your program and anks you to respond accordingly." Tamburo said. The Associated Press the university scheduled a news conference for Monday afternoon, when it will distribute the letter. Stewart recovered and led Missouri to an NCAA tournament appearance this year. Missouri lost in the first round to Northern Iowa. The basketball program has been under investigation since February 1989, the same time Coach Norm Stewart collapsed on the team plane and later underwent cancer surgery. Sunvold was suspended in February 1989 for allegedly buying tickets for recruit P.J. Mays of Cincinnati. Mays' mother, Yvonne, tapped a telephone conversation with Sunvold. The NCAA investigation is believed to have focused on recruiting violations, including assistant coach Bob Young, buying airline tickets for recruits. Sundvold was reinstated in April 1989, but his suspension was the first of a series of events at Missouri that included allegations that players were given cash and charges of recruiting violations. NCAA officials have said that violations in the Missouri program are a priority of the NCAA but probably will not be considered at the next scheduled infractions hearing in June. The university has six weeks to respond to the letter. Kauffman to regain full team ownership There is scant possibility, Kauffman said, of the American League club leaving Kansas City. The Associated Press Missouri received the official letter KANAS CITY, Mo. — Seven years after an ailing Ewing Kaufmann sold half-interest in the Kansas City Royals to Avon Fogelman, a health care polished to regain full ownership from a financially sick Fogelman. club leaving Harvey. "His financial situation has deteriorated," Kaufman said of Fogelman. "I feel sorry for the man. But he is drowning and trying to stay alive." Fogelman, a Memphis real estate developer and devoted baseball fan, bought into the team in 1983 when Kaufman, the team founder, was thought to have serious health problems. In the past two years, Fogelman's financial situation has markedly deteriorated and Kaufman admitted their personal relationship also has soured. "Obviously, I feel different about him than I did," Kauffman said at a news conference at Royals Stadium yesterday. Kauffman said under the proposal, which he is considering, Kauffman would loan the club $34 million and the club would then loan the money to Fogelman, who is best by banks and other creditors. The loan would be secured by Fogelman's 50 percent interest in the club. Fogelman would then give Kauffman an option to buy out Fogelman's interest for the outstanding balance of the loan. Kaufman said he would not require much time to make a decision. "hopetally, it will be this month," he said at the news conference. "Then an investment banker will be hired to receive bids. The bids will be taken by Oct. 15 and closed by Jan. 2 of next year." At that point, the Royals would be offered for sale to the highest bidder acceptable to Major League Baseball, and Kauffman would be allowed to match the offer. He had a quick answer when asked if he was prepared to meet "any bid." "No, sir," he said. "There may be some wild bids. If somebody came in with an outlandish bid and has the right to pick the of the owners, it might happen." Under their original agreement, Fogelman has the option to purchase Kaufman's half of the club. Kauffman noted that Baseball Commissioner Fay Vincent has promised not to let the team leave Kansas City. And in addition, the Royals and Kansas City Chiefs of the NFL recently signed 25-year leases, and voters in April approved a new financing measure with Jackson County guaranteeing the teams certain financial help. "He has the right to buy me out if he pays the $10 million. But there's no way he's going to do that," Kauffman said. "You're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars in real estate, of unsecured loans without collateral." It is anticipated, the Royals said in a statement, that Kaufman's option would be exercised immediately after his purchase actual purchase would occur later. An acceptable bidder would have to repay the $34 million loan, as well as all amounts owed by the Royals to Kauffman, and assume all other liabilities, including the new stadium lease. If a itd is received by a third party, Kauffman would have the right to meet it but should not be obligated to. The closing of the sale would occur on Jan. 31, and no such event was received, Kauffman would purchase Fogelman's interest on Jan. 3, 1991. Kauffman said he does not expect anyone in Kansas City to purchase the club. Pitcher scheduled for more surgery GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Dave Drawecky, who broke his arm pitching just days after returning to the mound during his rehabilitation from cancer surgery, is scheduled for more surgery next week, the publisher of his book said yesterday. The Associated Press A cancerous tumor was diagnosed in the former San Francisco Giants left-hander's throwing arm at the height of his career in 1986. In October 1988, a malignant tumor and nearly half the deltoid muscle were removed during an eight-hour operation. Doctors said his career was over, but less than a year later Dravecky returned. Aug. 10, 1989, he pitched eight innings against Cincinnati and led the Giants to a 4-3 victory. But five days later, while pitching against the Montreal Expos, Dravecky broke his throwing arm. "Dave's attitude through all of the ordeals remains consistent," said Scott Bolinder, publisher of Zondervan General Trade Books. "He is truly an inspiration to overcoming obstacles and tragedies. As a Christian, his testimony is a shining example." Favorites face Kentucky Derby jinx The Associated Press LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Summer Squail is the early favorite for Saturday's Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs, where he has already demonstrated his winning ways. "Hun Howard, the once-beaten colt's trainer, however, thinks the betting public would loot her. Then he, a trainer Laz BarRerie "will have in worry about those superstitions." *Derby favorites have been jinxed. The last one to win was Spectacular Bid in 1979.* The third choice, at 8-1, was the D. Wayne Lukas-trained entry of Land Mister Frisky, winner of all 16 of his races, was next at 8-5. Oddsmaker Mike Battaglia rated Summer Squall the 7-5 favorite in the field of 16 3-year-olds entered Thursday for the Derby. Rush, Real Cash and Power Lunch, followed by Thirty Six Red, 10-1, and Silver Ending and Unbridled, each 12-1. "I picked Summer Squall because of his Kentucky connections," Battaglia said. "He's won twice at Churchill Downs, and Pat Day is a winning jockey on this track. This may be the year he gets rid of his Derby jinx." 14 Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Hershberger files motion for new trial in fraud case The Associated Press TOPEKA — The lawyer for Wichita oilman and KU graduate James W. Hershberger announced yesterday that he had filed a motion for a new trial for his client, based on new evidence. A spokesman from lawyer Thomas Haines's office would not say what that new evidence is. The case was filed in U.S. District Court. The announcement came four days before Herabberger, 58, was scheduled to be sentenced in that court by Judge Dale E. Saffels. Sentencing was scheduled for May 7. Hershberger was found guilty on Feb. 21 of 25 fraud-related charges in connection with what prosecutors said a was scheme to defraud investors and banking institutions. He had been charged with 37 counts in connection with the operations of his now-defunct company, Petroleum Energy Inc. The jury acquitted him on six counts, but convicted him on 20 counts of mail fraud, four counts of bank fraud and one count of interstate transportation of money obtained by fraud. Hershberger, a 1953 KU graduate, was an athlete at the University of Kansas. He was a member of the track and cross country teams and donated $125,000 in 1969 to build the track inside Memorial Stadium that is named for him. Kansas reporter Buck Taylor contributed information to this story. Precision As Well As Prestige. MC120 wi Calligraphy Nib MC120 wi Writing Nib Perfect for the Graduate! Pelikan available at Kansas & Burge Union Bookstores MC120 wl Calligraphy Nib MC120 wl Writing Nib KU KU BOOKSTORIES Classified Directory 105 Personal 100s Announcements CHANDAR. It's been a fun semester. Try to have an exciting summer! Ha ha. Your low cal Sugar Daddy. Chris in U. I did change names. You weren't the Chris in the article. Stacy. Chris, I'm so happy! Set bellissimo. "It's 6:38 a.m.". "Have patience." It's much better late than never! Wren Woman. COINNER. Have a Happy Birthday from the bottom of my heart, I just truly trust you to be apart, but make it the most anddrive a few for me then hungry right home so we can make official reservations. Cost of ABN and Penelope will need a note to CMS GMG. Will fall down stairs and fall out of clothing to please you. Please call 1-Goto Back, MCM Foster Child Foundation. Hurdle and Turtle: Thanks for making our last year great! I couldn't have asked for better buds to tie it with. Love, Myrtle. you are a female, looking for a serious relationship, here I am, a male. Please write to PO Box 44092, Lawrence Jerry, Happy birthday big brother! Thanks for everything you've done for me this year (Cuba games, Dillons, etc., and just being there!) I were a lot of love when we were little. We were, so nice to you. Katby P. Z, Elizabeth Y, Melesia J, Dawn T, Melissa I, Wu finally made it! Congrat! Now it's time to walk the hill and party! Alpha Phi. Love. A.E. Samantha. LIB, How about some doughnuts? Q & S. P.S. Need a date for Sat. night? MAX U: HOW DO YOU SLEEP AT NIGHT?!? Merit, Happy Birthday! Remember pink champagne, Cheeny Brown Louise Ackle, Nicka, Kelsey, Jake, and Samantha Sanity, Jove J. Beattie, Lewain, Rainbow Pumpkin (Sugarsburge), Thank you for the Lovely mummy by the fire. Everyday that goes by I feel our love getting stronger. I love you! Hick P. M. Hansvay Graduation!! (MC, SK, QW, WWJ) Harrie and Blau, you are the best. Thanks for making the past four years so great. I hope it will continue. I love imagine fruit and vegetable parties in a high rise downtown! Thanka, thanks to you. GO BUY SOME TOilet PAPER BooB. Just keep tripping on the ladder and you will succeed! Love you! Me! Ridpath, Here's to a great summer together. Love, Sand Dune. Snaa (a young David Letterman), Happy big Day, a bit early. You make me happy Love, Kai Stiffle. My little Milquitae. You have been the star of this summer. God Blues You, he oh, hail Paul. 110 Bus. Personal Advanced fine art portfolio; modeling. theories. Slides can be a valuable asset to your artistic future. Government photon, passport, immigration visas. Tumu Spell Twin 169-211 *U1 Senior Class Officers. Vote today at Strong Paid for by WIHM. Ball gloves. Make your play in more than 80 models by Rawlings, Wilson, Nileson, NSK, and Louisville Shagger. From $19.90 to 121.85 Atfrain Gloves 771 Max. 844-85191. Bookcases, beds, chest of drawers, desk, table, entertainment center. DO NOT HAIL FI HOME! Call Lock and K暑 storage system and convenient storage units. C/Y/N, checks accepted. Call 843-800-8001. Drive thru on everynight tl2: 0 a.m. SUBWAY 1747 West 23rd St Bauch & Lomb, Ray-Ban Sunglasses 20% Below Salon, Retail 20% The Etc. Shop 722 Mass, 835-6011 HELP! OVERSTOCKED Tel phone romance phone number: 1-800-555-1234, people 24hrs, day, aB weekdays, saturday, sunday 1,000-$2,000, only $2.00 for minute($1.00) at TEL phone romance Call Today! LONELY? Twint Mats and Box $80 Solid Wood Rocker $99 Brass Brace Tree $25 Bassett Reflex $190 Intramurals show play netball, soccer, or Ultimate Friend. Nike, Adidas, Mireo or Diadora. Francis Sporting Goods, 721 Mass. PETER PARKER Kansas Furniture Factory Outlet 738 New Hampshire, Lawrence. "New Analyst of Western Civilization," makes sense at Western Cities! Make sure to see it! Available at Wildfire Makes, seem to meet in Town Crier - Airline tickets home - Summer travel plans B.C. AUTOMOTIVE On-campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Massachusetts. your full service auto repair shop. Classic to computerized M-P 4 Wax, Manicure, Discover, Spa, Pedicure, Dry Cleaning. www.dixit.com 749-0700 Bison 120 Announcements lowest fares and best schedules. 510 N. 6th, 841-6935 Maupintour You receive 8 private sources, or your home is refunded! Guaranteed! Federally approved pro-credit programs include P.O. Box 109, Jail 108, M0 60201 417, 417-6342. Don't throw that stuff out! Donate it to a benefit garage sale for local refugee organization. Call 714-573-8748 or 714-573-8749 to have your old clothes, tools, and equipment. For confidential information, referral & support for AIDS concerns - call 841-2545. Headquarters Counseling Center. MUSEUM SHOP Museum of Natural History UNIQUE GIFTS KU Campus 14th & Jayhawk Blvd. Mon-Sat. 10-5/Sun. 1-5 864-4450 GAY & LESBIAN Peer Counseling. A friendly understanding voice. Free, confidential referrals to sexual abuse victims 841-254 or 841-255 info 864-300. Direct calls: Wednesdays 7- p.m. 864-300. Sponsored by GRADUATES: Does your health insurance under your parents plan stop on your graduation? Are you designed to cover you from graduation until you are eligible under employment. For more information, please contact us. Day halftime prechool program available for the Ku summer semester for children ages 3-6; MWF, TR 0 or 5 days/wk. limited vacancies. Contact HILLTON, behind Smith Hall 804-4900. Records thousands of 33s, 45s, CDs VFW Hall 9500 Pfium Lenexa, KS Sunday May 6 9 n.m. -5 p.m. 3 Lovenza, RSI Sunday 8 a.m. 9 p.m. stent me your Macintosh computer for the summer! I will pay $800 cash in advance to rent your computer. Call Steve at 843-7920. Leave message if I am out. Call Steve at 843-7920. Leave message if I am out. Suicide Intervention - If you're thinking about suicide or are concerned about someone who call 814-2945 or visit 1191 Mass., Headquarters Cannellin Center. WE HEAR YOU...Mau have experienced unfair treatment-harmful, discrimination, or belling stirs. If you want to talk with someone about your experience (Center) or 646-844 (University Ombudsman). SUNSHINE SUNSHINE SUNFLOWER HOUSE 21st BIRTHDAY BASH (1969-1990) FRIDAY, MAY 4th SUNFLOWER HOUSE 1406 TENNESSEE ALUMNI WELCOME! Hillel בּוֹ --negotiated based on experience. Tentative start date Sunday July 22, 1996 for training. Resumes should be sent to kelsey 101, KSU. Interviews should be scheduled later than 3 p.m. Wednesday 9月 19, 1996. interviews will be held at 7:45 a.m. EVENTS OF THE WEEK FRIDAY, MAY 4 FINAL SHABBAT DINNER & SERVICES HONORING GRADUATING SENIORS, 6:00 p.m., HILLEL HOUSE SUNDAY, MAY 6 AWARDS BRUNCH Donn M. Hutledge. Call 864-4717 for your ID. 6:00 p.m., HILLEL HOUSE (Services at LJCC) FRIDAY, MAY 4 FINAL SHADY DINNER OPEN HOUSE 4:00-7:00 p.m. HILLEL HOUSE SUNDAY. MAY 20 MONDAY, MAY 7 & THURSDAY, MAY 10 FINALS FOOD 9:00 p.m., Hillet House AWARDS BREACH 12:30 p.m., HILLEL HOUSE ARTS TOUR OF LONDON: Inexpensive, fun tour of London's film, art, music, and theatre. Phone 1-800-321-7076. FOR MORE INFO CALL 864-3948 Lest: Pair of sunglasses, black Raytheon Lecture Lenses and lenses with black and green Body Glove Croakers. Please call Meaghan 841-7796. 205 Help Wanted MIRACLE VIDEO offers ADULT VIDEOS only 119-907 91 N. 2nd 841-8933, 19th and Haskel 841-794. Last: Varunet Sunglasses 4th Floor Lindley Bathroom. Subantial cash reward, 749-7577. Full job description, requirements available upon request. Contact John Huey, Director of the Ernal Wesley Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Wash., for information on his names of three references must be received by January 15. GET INTO THE GROOVE. Metropolitan Mobile Sound, Superior sound and lighting. Professional studio, radio DJ, Hot Spin, Maximum Party Troust, DJ Ray Vesperie. 841-7933. 200s Employment / Sound: Jacket, left at Advising Support Center phone please 664-4371 call 8-5. Late Date of Birth unknown 140 Lost-Found An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Application are sought from all qualified persons regardless of race, religion, color, ethnicity, national origin, national age, or ancestry. Articles of clothing and two duffle bags found April 29 on lawn near West Campus Road, Call and describe 863-3041 or 863-3584. Assistant Director, Ermal Gäringer Academic Resource Center. Responsibility include: the training, supervision, and evaluation of student activities in the management of the daily operations of the Center; assisting the Director with the coordination of staff activities; providing unit requirements include: Bachelors degree or 24 years experience in a supervisory role essential to successful integration into language/media/language therapy; and at least 20 years experience as a student of a foreign language/medium. May begin July 1, 2009. Salary: $17,000-61,000. Assisting Retail National Chain interviewing for part-time and full-time entry level positions $10.15 start. Flexible schedules in summer. For info call Sury 3-149-9683. Babystarter needed this summer 6-8br. /weekend + i.e. wee/ her home for 9yrs old. + keep weekday 28 May 1 June. Nonmoker/own transportation. 855-2807 BUCKINGHAM PALEAC. Office cleaning part-time evening hours available Sun.-Thurs., for detailed, oriented people: incentives for providing services to homeowners. BUCKINGHAM PALEAC now taking applications for house cleaners. Mid and afternoon hours available. Incidents for proven reliability. For more details call 800-726-9931. CAMP COUNSELORS wanted for private Michigan boys/girls summer camps. Teach: swimming, waterskiing, gymnastics; camp activities; pet care; camping, crafts, dramas; OR riding. Also kitchen, office, maintenance. $180 or more. Email: camp@michigan.edu. 718-654-9310, MNID. 704-646-2444. **CADIIES* Shadow Glen Golf Club need caddies on an on-call basis. Must be 18 in age, old, and able to pack up to 30 lbs. Hard work, but good work. Loops pay $30/bag/£. tips. tsa-745-4598. Data entry, analysis on SFS+; for quarter-time graduate assistant. Experience social science research. Interest artificial intelligence welcome. 822-308 semester. Call Judith at 863-4622 before 5:30. Daily living counselors-Community Residence Program: Two half-time courses are available, each concerns working with children and their residents, and participating with the residents in these activities within the immediate living area. These courses include training in the responsibilities of the residential daily living counselors in their absence, including reading in a library or using computers, filling in for other staff as needed. Requirements include a high school diploma or equivalent and a two-year part-time college credit, some of which are social science courses. Prior experience working with chronically ill psychiatric patients is an asset. Part-time part-time college credits Looking for mature students looking to expand sales and/or art careers during summer break. Req's BFA or equiv in design, visual, and positive attitude, 824-1904 for appointment. Female vocationalist wanted for established business Full-time teacher position available for summer and fall. Half-time head陪 position summers. Master's degree or equivalent assistance @ SCC certification required for application. Send resumes to SCC, Smith for written details and applications. Graduate assistant in newspaper production. We work well, motivated, well-organized graduate student to act as newspaper production coordinator for the K-STAR Collegian beginning academic year 2018. Students will be given a newspaper paste-up. Responsibilities include pastel of all copy in Collegian. Sight a week at Graduate Assistant Position: Elder and child care referral services. $850/mo., half-time. Appointment to resume, this reference, and letter to Olson Stafford, the护理 services. 138 Carroll H. Oleary LAE/AAH 1974. Help this summer in doctor's office with patients and general office work. Person must be able to work at a hospital or clinic. Kansas Union Catering Department bring cash caterers for May 15-21. Pay cash day through employment. $38.00; apply Kansas Union Personal Office Level $9.00. If you have not already decided on your career: Fortune Magazine most admired insurance company and the no. 1 marketer in Sales in Sales, it is our job to advise the sales associates for insurance and financial products in the Kansas City area. We offer: best jobs, best salaries, best work conditions, work in business and professional marketplace, income is twice the industry average. Calvert McCarye n113-583-8040. NOH-REQUIRED. guage tutor wanted. 842-1102. Mature responsible woman for child care in our home M, S August 6-17, 8, 4 children (11, 9, 9, 0) $40/hr Please call Dr. Bridgess McKidsburg 844.5850 kMKmr language tutor wanted - 96-112-7408 We have a full-time position and part-time time available. The plant operator 7 days/week for 24 hours a day. Good computer skills, office experience, 2 am - 4 pm, JPMorgan Packaging 350 Lakewood KEd (Person N. side of plant) Lawrence, KS 60044. Local video amendment company needs experienced and dependable individual to run production. Must possess excellent references, excellent driving record, and excellent health. Job requires 25 hrs /w start-up, training, and mentoring. Experience required at Schumann Foods, 719 Massachusetts Nanities need here. East Coast Florida one year. Nanities need here. Good airlines, person contact in Topanga. M. Stroble 233-683 Nanny Network. Student assistant, publication/archive dept. of Nt. Hist. Mun. Must have U.S. driver's license Nt. Hist. Mun. to work hakeh up 10/24-10/28, 10/29- 10/30, 10/31-10/34, 10/35-10/36, 10/37-10/38, fall ufring. 4%/work study slightly preferer- nate. Summer daycare for infants in my Leawood, KS home. No smoking, references, good hours. 913-649-7287 Summer Work We have a number of openings in Overland Park, Filling Orders, Packaging, Warehouses and Clerical Positions Available. Wage range from $44.94 per hour. Eligibility, Apply at 600-738-2155. Teacher/Part-Part or full-time 12 and taller attention to boys age 13 to 12 Overland Park. Education major preferred. Call Moll. (813) 451-0888. The Adams Abuhain Center is accepting applications for four first-time employee positions. Applications must be submitted, including four room arrangement, furniture moving and apply at the Adams Abuhain Center 1500 E. Ouse. E Nanny Opportunities: Salaries from $150-400 per week You only join successful nework and ex work with us. Call or email: nannyservices.com coast find details at Arlene Streissl, Inc. 1-800-443-6459. Min. age 18, min. 1 year 1-800-443-6459. Min. age 18, min. 1 year National Marketing firm seeks mature student to manage On-Campus promotions. Flexible hours, earnings potential to $3,500 per semester. Must be experienced, hardworking and motivated. Mail resume to National Marketing, 1234 Main Street, New York, NY 10001. Need caregivers with car for 11 and 12 year olds before and after school and 2 full days each week this summer. 843-1099. Nursery School Tonder: A great little school with a teacher, two campers, p.m., or both. Creative control, planning period support; supportive parents. Send resume to: support.people@nursery-school.org Community Nursery School #44 Alabama. Office help for Child Care Center needed after asda ASPA. typing, training, recognition skills and data entry, knowledge of worldfear helpful. App at Children's Learning Center, 38 Main St. Office of Study Abroad acceptations for half-time (10 wks. /hr.) Student monthly position. Must be able to work with mappings or all after-school activities. Must have a Bachelor's degree (14.04/hr.) Accurate typing, other office skills required, Word Perfect 5.5 helpful. Prefer previous study or travel. Contact USA. 302 Lippincott St., Boston, MA 02118. Part-time teacher assists positions located at Rainforest Modesto School located in a farm-like setting. Must have transportation. Will train. Call 843-6000. Part-time clerical position. Thursday nights and Saturdays. General office skills helpful. Apply at Weaver's Store District 2nd floor office. Rent me your Macintosh computer for the summer. I will pay $200 cash in advance to rent your computer tl August 15, 1980. Local business person. You are welcome. If I am out, I need two for the summer. Thank you! Residential daily living counselors—Community Residence Program. These positions are for a live-in couple with no dependent children to work in an area that is not part of the Community Residence. Responsibilities include working with other program staff members to assist students with learning and helping them learn or improve upon basic skills, teach the school diploma or equivalent, and drive a driver's license required. Must also be able by a benger. Prior experience working with chronically ill patients is preferred. Salary: $8.10 per 4747 per hour. Experienced babyailer needed in my home. Fall semester. Tuesdays and Thursdays. 841-0423 after COLUMNISTS and CARTOONISTS NEEDED For Fall 1990 Kansan. Call 864-4810 and ask for Mary Neubauer, Fall 1990 Editorial Editor. Application Deadline Application Deadline is 5 p.m. May 9 SALES/OUTSIDE INTERNSHIPS - College Students • SUMMER JOBS Exciting opportunity with National Co. approaching business people. - ENTRY up to $4000 in 12 week program. No equipment necessary. Full训课费 Area. For further details call 1-800-826-6600. Wanted. Packers and movers for summer work. 912-236-8599. Weekend News Reporter forKIWN-KLZR. Experience required. Contact Kathy Freund 843-1200. E.O.E. Weekend announcer for KLWN-KLZR. Experience required. Contact Brian Schiel. 843-1320. KOE 225 Professional Services CORNROW YOUR HAIR. Cool, convenient, sylish. Women and men. Call Sarah 842-4661. System. Water hose hose. Driver Education offered in three driving Driving K.U. students for 20 years, driver license认可, transportation provided. 841-7740 EMPLOYMENT? Do it the modern way! Tailored prospects from national database are offered in a single, hourly job criteria. Hard copy of hoppy. $20 per lead. Major credit card required. Call Rick at NU PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES. 36-hour service processing. Complete B/W services. PASSPORT/RESUME $6.90. 296 Art & Design. 48-DIV. Ned a few hours of childcare for flixtile Flexible children for 2nds to 6th years to match your class schedule. 7:30 a.m. to noon. *C* Fax CalFet KUI Child Development Lab in Hawthorne PRIVATE OFFICE Ob-Gyn and Abortion Services Overland Park (913) 451-6878 REMODELING - Custom-Contracting • Maintenance-Renovation • Student 15 Yrs. Exp./Reasonable MEL YOUNG 749-0733 TRAFIC- DUI's Fake ID + &酒精 offenses other criminal/civil matters DONALD G. STROLE 16 East 13th 842-1133 XXXPress Video, 1447 W. 23rd ST. 843-9200. Prompt contraception and abortion services in Lawrence. London. VIDEO CONVERSION Pacific Area And Pacific Vice VISSA VISSA VISSA RUSH SERVICE AVAILABLE Pregnant and need help? Call Birthright at 843-4521. Confidential help/free pregnancy testing. 235 Typing Services Donna's Quality: Typing and Word Processing Term papers, thesis, dissertations, letters, resumes, applications, mailing lists, Kasper print reprints. T: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; F: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 842-3244. curate and offer dance; bringing; Diana, 8324 6507 or Ruth, 8324 6438. Call after 5 p.m. 1-der Word Word Processing. Former editor transforms your scripts into accurately spelled and punctuated, grammatically correct pages of text. Send a completed resume to: 1 + lyping and w. e. 10 years experience. Resumes, letters, notes, call Etty Terry 842 4754 4 p. - m.p. 10 minutes. Any weekends use. Computer wordprocessing with Spelling Check. Call anytime 748-3983. - basic process* Banks' basic process, IBM computer w/ JDAJ printer, themes, papers, newsletters, newmailer, 844-3210 for 5:30 or more to have message. BEST FOR LESS word processing. 412.1b/p. WANT TO SAVE MONEY? GO HERE. some job loss. Accrual 841-7936. R.J.'s T: Typing Services 841-3042. Term paperals, legal, illness, ect. No calls after 9 p.m. RESUMES - The right resume can make a huge difference in your job search. - Professional writer will write and typeset your resume to get results! * Rush Service Available – 841-1342 Editing, typing, critiques of works in progress. Expert help, any writing project. Call Liz, 740-4046. K's Professional Word Processing; Accurate and affordable. Call after 1:00 p.m. 841-6345. THEWORDOCTORS-Why pay for typing when you can have word processing? IBM, MAC, laser. 1982. 843-3147. 1983 Suzuki GS 650, 3,000 miles mint conditions $1,600 o.b.o. Comes with extras. Call 749-1564. Merchandise 1980 Yamaha 650 special. Looks great, runs great, only 12,000 miles. $400 o.b. O call Chad at 843-5360. Word Processing/Typing: Papers, Resumes, Dissertations, Applications. Also assistance in spelling, grammar, editing, composition. Have: M.S. Degree. 841-6254 305 For Sale Word Perfect Word Processing-IBM Compatible. Near Orchard Corners. No calls after 9 p.m. 845-8568. 2 round trip tickets to Chicago, for weekend or May 11. $18 o.b.o. 841-2146. 97 Cannondale Mountain Bike for sale $300. 10" $1,000 b.o b.o. Omnes with extras. Call 749-154-1987 1987 Honda Elite 150 CC, 4,000 miles, must sell. $b.o b.o. Chris 814-549-7 2 round trip tickets to Chicago, for weekend of May 11. $98 o.b.o. 841-2146. 89 VW Fox GL 4 dr. loaded AM/FM cassette HI- Fi. Must sell. 1-800-448-7714 (day) 1-242-7239 (eve) (day) frame. 841-5272 before 9:00 p.m. 98 Diamond back 20's in Topanga Mtn bike, '78 Yamaha DT 250, 841-4630 eyes. A good couch, two cushion chairs, two tables. Best room. Iod. loor 841-2543. Alpine 7185; with 316 amp. Auto-reverse car tape deck with Dolby B.C. $250 o b. b4. 824-3604. An absolutely awesome array of antiques, glassware, fine antique and used furniture, picture framing, precious objects, art materials, Playbables, collector and cheepo rack-n-rock records, vintage clothing books, Persian rugs, leather armchairs, children's items, tinae clips, watches, antique 7800 Yellow, new in box, Mali pool cue, never used 46. Kenwood, 676 Black, 4030 Equalizer/amplifier excellent quality. Must sell. Tom 814-2541, 91831-299-9145 toes, royal Doubts, and no much stuff it will blow you away! QAUNITRILLE'S FLAIR MARKET. 811 New Hampshire. Open every Sat from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. info电话 864-283-6728; Virtualler Masterinfo Beautiful Lake Perry Golf Course lot. For sale by owner. Out of state owner must sacrifice. 902-653-2131. Apple IIe heater, expanded memory, software $000.0 b.o. MARSHALL 1090 wow Apt. 841-3888. Apple IIe Dual Disk/Scribe Printer/Mouse Tei Apple 800/nor best offer. 365-973 Beautiful King Size water table, includes: mirrored caffee, shelved headboard, pedestal, mirrored rails, mattress chair, four sheet sets. $800. Make offer. Call 443-5453. Beautiful summer wedding gown size & glass stereo cabinet, microwave stand. 841-743-2651. Banstead roadclub. Like new $175. 941-800-9901. Brand new exercise bike for sale: $125 o.b.o. Call 864-2097 Bike for sale, "M8 Mongose, Shimano recently tuned componentry $195, willing to negotiate. 841-6867 Donten Companportable 2 floppy drives with some software and a disk case. $500. Call 842-8672. For sale: 6 drawer dresser with matching 3 drawer desk, sell together or separately. 841-3611. For sale: Airline ticket, KC to Denver, one way May 17th. 842-796. For sale: Mac 800 k external drive, $130 o.b.o. Scott 50 wait stereo and tuner $150 o.b.o. Call 424-6911. For sale: Men's 10 speed Schwinn Bicycle, $85 o.b.o. Call Faith 643-0299 best around 6:00. For sale: Peavey Bass Baths and Crane Bass amp; for artists Asking for $500; Kenwood and Sony speaker for car stereo $89; 1006 7-8342 equalizer for car stereo $79. Call 841-2716. Furniture for sale. Items include beds, dressers, bar stools, couches, and entertainment unit Cheap) Call Jeff at 841-9462. Gorgeous AKC black labs for sale. Ready in three weeks. Serious dog lovers only. Call evenings for appointment. 842-7370. Graduation needles NEEDS to sell furniture. Must go items included; tv stand, coffee table, plastic stacking shelves, and bar stock. prices are NLE please Contact label is # 760 Men's 10 speed bike, fenders, cender, lamp, $40. Also some furniture: 843-308, 841-667. Also some furniture. 806-556-8181. 806-556-8181. Oklahoma City round trip ticket. Dates, May 11 to May 13. 845 or best offer. 842-2012. One-way ticket Jackson (WY, Yellowstone)- Salt Lake City-Kansas City, July 3, Delta, $80. 844-306-911, 841-4857. One way ticket to San Francisco. $60. Call Alan 841-7471. Radar detector, Cobra camera RD-3110, 850 o.b.o Snoop Bounce Box £20 Camera T-700, 9-league, flash, plus accessories $280 Lynn $1,999 RECORD SALE most played once, taped, and stored. All kinds of music. Saturday 8 a.m.-6 p.m. 74 Missouri. Rock & Roll records; Buy-Sell Trade. Quantrills; 811 New Hampshire. Open Sat.-Sun. 10-5. Schwinn 10 speed bike, great condition, need to sell, adjustable seat, B80. Call 843-406-006. SUMMER CARE for boys age 6 and 8. Morning- approx. 10-12 hrs./week in my home. Transportation required and must be flexible. $4/hr. 741-7511 after 6.00. Sunaki 525 Enduro 1982 only 5000 miles. Great condition. Ask $725. David 749-1805. Taking Dog, Leave Kansan, selling everything, microwave, watered, bagel, Adin Aadamn alumni, AIWA Walkman, 13 Cherry Luv truck. make offer, 680/743 7109 Towhee for sale by swender: 2 lbs./h, kitchen, living room, dining room with solarum and 1 car garage. Close to campus. $44,300. Call 843-584-7652 leave message. 340 Auto Sales 1975 Honda CB7 300T. Under 5,000 pounds. Good courier dollars; $200 o.b.o. Must mast wail. 841-4127. --- University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 15 1973 Plymouth Duster. PS, AT, radio, 158,000 miles, runtimes, great car, $1000 o.b.c. @ 842089, 840-697. 789 Pontiac Bonneville, good condition, automatic. PB, PS, PW, new tires. Price neg. call. Call 643-2012 or leave message. must sell. Call 843-4306 or leave message. 46 Camaro Z-28, 35,000 miles, T-tops, PS, PB, tilt, air, air 841-3235 after 5:00. crane air lift. 85% FF equipment, GT 60 kmiles, excellent condition, 50% FF equipment, $3,000 or best offer; 71 Forkwagen SW, low mileage, all new parts except body. Firm WS02. 80 Kansas City Nights 28cc sportbike run good. Work for any local work. Work firm. Call 841-2716 or leave message. 7. Jeep Wrangler. Red with white hardtop, 4 cylinder, 5 pcd, 37,000 miles. Warranty. $7,000, (312-361) or 921-7630, or visit www(312-3728). HIT & RIT - Person who witnessed hit and run to 180 Hones Accord in lt. jot 39, 42; PLEASE contact Maria. College tibit 618-445-444 thank you. BUY, SELL, LOAN CASH On TVs, VCs, Jewelry, Clothing, Medical In jewelry. More. We honor JW/A/CMA X.E./D, Jayhawk Pawn & Jewelry, 18W, B, 70, W/1919-19 370 Want to Buy Needed: Used art or drafting desk/table. Call 864-1833 and leave message. 400s Real Estate 405 For Rent 1 and 3 bedroom apts, for June 1 occupancy. No phone: 82-8871. 1 or 2 rooms in 3 bdr. house. Sublease June to mid-Aug. Close to campus. 942-8840. Aux. Chelsea to the hospital. 2 bdr. HH. Soluble avail. 5/30, Private and quiet. No pets and reference required. $90 mo.see at 1127 Tennessee. 811-1544. 2 bedroom apartment for summer unlease. Pool, on bus路, very large rooms. Water and gas paid. Rent neg. for 3 or 3 persons. 3 bdr. 2 bath, completely furnished apt. for summer sublease. Rent very neg. We need out- please help! 842-8440 3 bdr. apt, for summer sublease. Washer, dryer, garage. 3 bathrooms. Sunrise Village West. 841-873. 3 bbr. apt. in older house. Available June 1st. 8th and Mississippi. AC, dishwasher, water paid, no beets. B561. $454-107 4 bdr., 2 bath, pool, summer sublease, $176/per furnished, Mastercraft, 15th and Kasold, on bus route 249-1980. 4 bdr. house summer sublet. Excellent condition. Very close to campus. Central air, 1013 Illinois, very reasonable. 845-817-817 very nice. The biggie Big enough for four. The cool 3篮 in. Lawrence. Hyperbole Roof, W/D, dishwasher. Summer sublease. Last chance to rent. 841-579-719. A cheap, big, close to campus, new 4-plex, A/C, own room, summer sublease; males only. 829.0001 Amazing Townhouse summer sublease. Available June 13, 2 bdhr, 1 + bath, pool, great deal! Rm 847, 789-5242 EQUAL HOUSING OPORTUNITY 合 Apartment hunting? An real estate advertising in this new paper 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, ethnicity, national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.' This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that duplics advertised in this newspaper available on an equal opportunity basis. A summer and fall three bdr. apt. furnished, air conditioning, available June 1st. Water, gas paid. (VKARP) Apartment hunting? Get the APARTMENT ADVISOR. It's free! Available at all Dillons locations Kentucky. 841-757-748-7097 CHEAP! Attach 2 bte. lift, unfitted 15th and 310. Lease. mo. security. no pets. Available June 14. 842-764- Available Now! 1 bsp. house; 2 bsp. office; 953-748-2288. Available June 1, new 2 bsp. aptr. at 1008 Emmery Rd. Great apt, with kitchen/dryer/dryer book- ups, microwave, ceiling fan, no pets. $75/10-mo. microwave, ceiling fan. Available for需求:A limited number of apps. special rates: Studio $200,1 bsp. 1 bsp. and $75, 2 bds. $25, Call Benkley FF, $25, Call Benkley FF, older house, wool-faced, 2 floor. cleaning, breakfast bar, dryer/driver hook-up. Of-street parking $39. No point or requirement or 14 mme in room. rsat bal 141. 2 bapt. abc, in older house, 875 Louis. In leses. No character. No pa- nels. 841-1074. Available end of May: One bacf. efficiency apt, walk to campus, stained glass windows, ACSum. 104 Available now thus summer only for non-smoking female. Parma is furnished roomed for 10 people. In-house KUF KUF-free utilities, cable, W/D, microwave, cleaning table, $225 plus phoat. Use a mug. 3 bcd. bacp in great location 1 bcd. bacp in great location 2 bcd. bacp weekly afternoon or call 843-5339 or 843-1433 Available Juil bct $115.101 1 bcd. of off-street address W/Z/1 1 year lease Tue. 760-6168 Ten. 79-40 BRADFORD SQUARE, NYA. New 2, bda; 2 bath. Bradford Square is available for summer and fall. KU, len route, Microwave, patio/deck, laundry facility, low utilities, on site manager, cars allowed with deposit. Office space, weekdays, i.m., to 6 p.m. Only a few. Call to **967-8240** YARN FURNITURE is used free! Summer sunblock formally furnished, new campus. Call 643-252-1698. JAMMER PLACEMENT is from Frontenac. We can help you from design and option for fall decorations and cheap rent. Call 643-729-1733. 845-7744 Ocean Subbase: Purnished bdr, and left. Avail. June 1st. Rent neg. Water paid. Call 845-7747 Ocean Subbase Completely fitted Studios, 1.2-3 ft by 600 sq. ft. Many space-efficient and efficient designed with war in mind. Call 891-1213, 891-6250, 794-6450, 792-6412, 891-1292 or 740-4236. Deep living in KICK 3 bdr., 1½ bath; battery vacuum only kfūramo 10 minutes to KUMC. 9527 ZTZ Laundry glove pad, in indoor house. Wood floor claw, cabinet, aid, dawn lt, gas and water paint, $15, oil pts. 12 month house or summer soldat avail old 1914 789-7477 Efficiency 1 and 2 bdrs. apts. in mice older housings for summer sublet. Optional fall lease. Start at ants. no pigs. No eggs. 841-1074. DISCOUNT: Sublease nice $416 apartment of Sunrise Place for $316 June, July. Call Todd 790-7677. vo pets. 861-1074. EMERY PLACE APTS. EMERLY PLUS METRY PLUS l bk. from campus. Available immediately l bk. Gae, heat and water paid. $23. Avail for fall learning large studies and labs, perform proficiency tests. Call 861-7644 for appl. parking lot Excellent location now lining for summer or fall 2 bdr. apts 2 yrs old, C/A, D/W, off-street parking 2 bdr. apts 2 yrs old, pts. 943-8089. Female roommate needed for the summer. Furnished, pool, cool location $100 + 3 utilities. Call Amy or Diane 740-415-813. Call Amy or 704-865-9100 First month fee Receive first month rent in CASH! Beautiful one bdr, $300/mo. aval. Aug. 8.需更多, for more info, call 92-387-3817. For rent: 2 bdk, 2 story apt., next to Naismith ¥42/mo, 823-410. very nice, for sale on for summer suburban and 2 bedr. apts. Close to off street parking, no pets, references and security deposit required. 843-9007 824/mo. 803-4310 for rent: June 1st studio, 1-2 bdr. apt., remodeled bdr. house, mobile home. 841-6254 3 br. house, mobile home. 841-6254. For rent: Summer rooms close to campus 749-7220 turn. apt. for graduate on bus line. AC, no smoking. Avail. July 1, 842-1400. Pursuing down to lease; One block from office with off street parking, shared kitchen and bath facilities. Available for summer and fall. No. 841-5000. Go to www.liveatx.com / Rent a whole duplex, and Mississippi. 14 mo. lease, 875s, 4 bdr., 2 full bath, 2 kitchens, C/A, 2 dishwashers, carport, petro, 841-1074. Large 1 bdr. for $300/mo Big 4 bdr. for $440/mo. Both for June and July. Two blocks from Union. 748-7297 eyes. until 10:30. Large one bdr. (could be considered 2 bdr) available June 1, 1418 Tenn. $265. 841-5797. Leasing for Aug. 1st. One bdr. apts. Close to campus. Deposit and references required. No pets, off-street parking. Call 842-9007. New 3 bdr. townhome. Summer sublease available June 1 with option to renew. W/D, microwave, fireplace, garage. 840-197-6 room. neat bed. Car mattress in the wall. Reduced! Furnished: bib, 15" x 7/8 May and Aug. paid. WAS $13 now. $200. Call 841-1321 ask about 2012-3 car # 841-1303. Reserve apartments now for summer and fall. Room 104, affine, pitted, 1 block from university with off street parking, no pets, 811-5900. INFORMATION GOFOR RENT. Next to campus. Call 842-3288 LUNCH AND DINNER. Great Deal! Summer and/or fall, AC, cable, washer/dryer. $31/h./mo. + utilities: 1451-0969. Roommates needed, male or female, house off 123.875/mo. utilities 749-0904 SEARCHING FOR A Housing ALTERNATIVE VETENO Kokona Christian Offer comes with an appointment fee of $100 per low rent, include all utilities, parking and laundry) Opening for summer and fall; May 16-23, 2015 CENTER CIER 3040 N. dry) Openings for summer and fall are available. Pick-up applications at the ECM Center 1204 Orem or Stacey or Susan at 843-4933. Spacious 3 bdr., 2 bathroom apartment. Porch, close to campus, very clean. Rent neg. Call airline 780-469-400. Spacious 1 bdr. for sublease, newly decorated, close to campus and bus route, gas and water paid. Call 843-729-767-3490 have messages. Stay the summer! Huge one bdr. apt. (please for two) Entire first floor of house at 11th, Tern Lange area, ceiling fans, Front porch. Storage for summer. Protected environment $1/kg. ft. 749-3530. SUBLEASE. 3 bdr., 2½ bath, pool, deck, garage, tennis, Sunrise Village, rent neg. 749-3451. SUMMER SUBLEASE: Available May 16, own room, close to school. Male or female. Febu- rary is very affordable and neg. * t_ utilities. Please call 845-9134 for more information. Sublease: 3 bdri, 2 bath, townhouse with garage and AC. Asking $925 nsg. Call 749-1805. Sublease room in big house, cheap! Choice of Sublease room in big house, cheap! Choice of rooms, has good storage. Karen 843-3961. Sublease summer: 3 bdr. house, quiet location, fully furnished with washer and dryer; $300/mo. + utilities: 749-3539. Sublease: Duplex, 3 bdr., 1½ bath, AC, DW, washer/dryer hookup, great yard, garage. Call 842-370-361 APARTMENTS 1012 EMERY RD. 841-3800 Now leasing for June or August Spacious apts. furn. & unfurn. 1 bedroom apts. 735 sq. ft. $265-$320 per month 2 bedroom apts. 950 sq. ft. $345-$415 per month WATER PAID ON ALL APTS. GREAT LOCATION near campus OPEN HOUSE Mon. Wed. Thurs. 1:00-4:30 p.m. No appointment needed (This ad for original buildings only, not Phase II buildings) - KU Bus Route-Holidome * On Site MGT./Reliable * Maintenance - Wired for TV/Mini Blinds throughout Georgetown Apartments - Microwaves & Dishwashers - ```markdown - Washer/Dryers or hook-ups available * No. necessary - 10 or 12 Month Leases - Low Security Deposit - Fenced pool area with Tanning Deck & Barbeque - Low Security Deposit - Wearers/Downtime or he Call about our Summer Special - 10 or 12 Month Leases Summer cheap lease: 2 bdrs, apt. AC at 11th aa. Ohio. Rent less than $300, call: Call Jim or Brian 480-587-763. Summer rent. Sunrise Terrace Apts. 3 bdr., 2 bath, 7 min. from campus; $800 a.b.d. furnished, unfurnished, $90-150. Summer only 3 rooms in 3 bdr. apt, Super close to campus. Rent 1 or both rooms $105. Call Sean 846-5178. Office Hours M,W,F 2:30-5:30 T,TH by appl. 630 Michigan 240-7279 unfurnished. 801-3100 Summer sublease. Furnished 1 bdr, apt., 1 block from university, with off street parking, no pets. 841-5000 630 Michigan 749-7279 Summer residence: Purified room with shared bath facilities for females. Water and electricity paid. One block from university with 24 hour public. No. tickets: 81-5600. Summer suburban in style at a luxurious Sunrise Village Townhouse, pool, tennis court, 4 bdr., 2 full bath, modern kitchen, central air, and your WASHER/DRYER 749-4755. Summer学期 with option of renew fall lease. 15 minutes with office in W. LOVeway, Wood floors, 15 minutes from campus and downtown. 810 ualfaid nsf. 842 800 rnorm, e.e., weekend. in street parking. 10 bikes, 14th and NJ, fall option Summer sublet, 1 bike, apt., 14th and NJ, fall option, AC, utilities free, $850/mo, 749-6008. Summer sublease: 2 bdr. duplex 2021 Heather- wood. Call 841-9707 or 1-884-6637. WOODWAY APARTMENTS DO NOT RENT AN APARTMENT UNTIL YOU CONSIDER THIS: - Microwave - Gas heat, central air - Washer and dryer in each apartment - in each apartment - Microwave - Gas heat, central air Constructed in 1987 - Washer and dryer - Constructed in 1985 - Large Bedrooms - Constructed in 1987 - On KU Bus Route - 1 bedroom $330, $340 • 2 bedroom $435, $445 HOURS: 3:30 5:30 p.m. Weekdays 8:30-10:30 a.m. Saturdays END of SCHOOL SPECIAL OFFICE: 611 Michigan Street (across from Hardees) Please call for an appointment Studios for short term summer leases only. reg. $280/month NOW ONLY $249/month with $200 deposit 1 BR reg. $370/month NOW ONLY $359/month with $200 deposit - gas heat & water paid on apartments HURRY! CALL NOW! 2500 W. 6th 843-7333 AAAAAAAAAAA TRAILRIDGE EDDINGHAM PLACE 24TH & EDDINGHAM (next to Gammons) Special Ask about our special offer Someone you know lives Now Leasing For Summer and Fall at Meadowbrook Ask about us or drive by. APARTMENTS Graystone Athletic Club memberships for tenants! CALL 842-4200 RESERVE FOR FALL NOW No Appt. Necessary Offering Luxury 2 BR. & 2 PLUS BR apartments at an Affordable Price !! CALL 842-4200 by Kaw Valley Mngt.,Inc 841-5444 Professionally managed Special 2 BR prices! neadowbrook Swan Management yourself to check: Open; M-F 8-5:30, Sat. 8-5 Sun. 1-4 • 842-4200 • SWAN You owe it to - 1-2-3 bedroom apts. - Graystone Summer sublease: 4 room for rent, together or separate. Spacious apt., AC, pool. Rent neg. Call 853-5024 2512 W. 6th St. 749-1288 Summer sublet: Newly renovated 3 bd. apt. in house 3; roomed home, fae room, AC unit, laundry closet, office downstairs; downstairs $200. No pets. Option for 841-1047. Summer sublet: two spaces two bd., two bath, AC unit. Newly renovated. $50 OFF Bring in this ad and you will receive $50 off 1 month's rent with the signing of a 12 - On-site Laundry Facilities - On bus route - Ample off-street parking Call for an appointment today or come by during the follow ing hours: M-W-F anytime after 2:00 T-R anytime after 4:00 will hold apartment until fall Hillview Apartments $100.00 security deposit 843-0106 1745 W. 24th Southeast corner of 24th and Ridge Co Boardwalk apartments "Your Home Away From Home" 1 & 2 BDR available Summer sublease: 4 bdr., 2 bath, furnished. Great location - near campus and downtown. Neg. 789-626. Indoor/outdoor pools & heated spa 8 24 hour professional on-site management & maintenance 10, 12 month leases available Summer sublease, option on fail, 2 bdr. furnished, Villegas, $400/mo. lt. services. Desperate? 740-1802 leave message. 2 on-site KU bus stops 皇 Summer sublease: Two bdr., two stary townhouse. Across from stadium, 843-960 $50. Will compromise. New appliances carpet & ceiling fans Hat Small pets allowed 842-4444 Summer sublease: 2 bdr., 1 bath, furnished, close to campus, fall option, will neg. 841-9973. 2 Laundry Facilities Mon-Fri 9 a.m..6 p.m. Sat 10 a.m..5 p.m. Summer subunit. Architectureally unique home. 1 bdr., 1 1/2 bath, beautifully furnished, dish.wash. ideal for grades or couples. Close to campus 641-5747 or 843-0529. B South Point Newly Remodeled 1 & 2 Bedrooms 524 Frontier Rd Two rooms available for summer. 173 + % utilities each. Close to campus and shopping 498-9658. Instant $200 Rebate COLONY WOODS APARTMENTS for Summer & Fall - new plush carpets - 1 or 2 baths 一 - new appliance - new appliances - louvered blinds - Basketball Court - Volleyball Court - Indoor/Outdoor Pool - large rooms & closets - Exercise Room - 3 Hot Tubs - refreshing pool - On Bus Route $345-$410 2166 W. 26th 843-6446 842-5111 Present this ad and we will install a mini-blind on patio door with any deposit placed between 4/30-5/20 Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9-6 Saturday 12-5 *Offer limited/one rebate per lease 10 mn/12 mn CONVENIENCE PRIVACY and LUXURY We have it all You've read about all the things Naismith Hall has to offer you. Now it's time to ACT. Stop by Nalsmith Hall TODAY and sign up for the FALL Semester. Now leasing for Fall 1990 Anderson Rentals 1312 W. 6th NAISMITH HALL 1800 Nassmith Drive Landover, MA 02044 (912) 843-8599 THE FAR SIDE RYDER TRUCK RENTALS (Local and One-Way) Call for rates 843-2044 URGENT! Need to sublease 2 bdrs. of 3 bdrs. apt. Reasonable rent and utilities. Avail. June 1. 841-3330. 430 Roommate Wanted $180/mo. (neg.); utilities paid, furnished, w/ id included, summer sublease. Females only. 749-5104 leave message. WE'RE DESPERATE!! Summer sublease, 2 bdr, near campus, $295/mo, 841-7239. We have 2 rooms available for summer sublease $189-138/mac. + % utilities. 2 blocks from campus. Call and ask for Cale or Lauria 941-9886. Call and ask for Gina or Laura You need our interior 2 bdr., 1 bath. Sublease for the summer! It's perfect! Call 749-1643. Tamela or Joan. A big, cheap, close to campus, new 4-plex, A/C, own room, summer sublease; males only; 800.000. Departately seeking an easy-gay female roommate to work with through a room bid. be adp. willing to bake bread. AC pool, volleyball, on bus routes. Not. deposit. pay rent. make room. not. leave. visit 843-188-700, leave message. Please call: A big, cheap, close to campus, new 4-plex, A/C. own room, summer sublease; males only. 42-9021. Female for summer, 3 blocks from campus, furnished, own room, 1/2 utilities. 843-2498. have hikes 1 or 2 female non-smokers needed for summer 1 or 2 male Village Townhouses, Swimming Pool, tennis courts, on bus route, own room. Rent neg. tamara or Joan nished, own room, % unities 892-258. Female, non-smoking, roommate needed at KU Med. for fall. Call Jody 842-2581. 841-139 any time, same fare as MALE non-smoking roommate starting June 1. $147 + utilities. Call Terry at 841-1437. For med. for cal. car surgery Female non-smoker to share 2 babs. Great location downtown KU. Must see! Grad. student pref. 855.0724 Looking for a non-smoking room to share big 2 bdr. apt. at University Terrace. 09 bus on Sun, Sat, Wed, Fri. Room available in anytime, by out July 13 (or renew for fall when) $180/month. eng. + $1, attn. Phil. Male or female needed for summer sublease 3 bath, 2 bath at Orchard Courts with pool, ac cable, bus,$12/mo. * 5 utilizes. May free Call Navey at 841-2171. stale roommate wanted for summer $120/mo. at Heatherwood (originally $170/mo.) Mike 841-5749 or 423-8091. Need 1 or 2 roommates for summer. Nice 4 bdr. house. WD included. $150/mo. Please call 841-1124. Nursing Student/Auctioneer Recognized at KU med starting August. Call 749-4691 leave message. Non-homophile roommates wanted. No drugs. Pet k. 6. Send letter in care of Kansan Box 80. Nursing student/numanician female roommate at KU start med starting. August. Call 748-6911 leaded 2 females for townhouse near KU with rader/dryer, microwave, cable, available now. 41-6380 or 41-6183. $175 + % 10% discount CORNER GARDEN! 3 beds available for summer sublease, $125 unfurnished, pool, $175 + % 10% utility. May free! Call 769-4270 unifies. May stay free to call us. Quiet, female roommate wanted for summer/nail. Own bedroom, $125/mo. Call 841-1922 today! One贝, living room, kitchen, and make room in older home close to campus (PADR 314 W. Sullivan St. NW 1956-810-6256) needed for summer leave $199 * 6 usitil. Call 841-3244. Rommate needs to share 3 bdr. townhouse for summer. Would have big bdr. with own bathroom and pool. Rent is very neg. Call 749-2047 Rommate season, on option next year and pool. Rent is $95/month. Roommate summer, option on next year. $200/mo. + 1% utilities. Villa 26 apts. 769-1823 make sure; dessertate! Roommate needs 3 bdr., 2 bath, furnished, on bus route, and plus 1 to utilities. Call 841-4799 or Orchard Corners; non-smoker vertebrate. leave message, impress it. Roommate need to share 2 bdr. apt, nw thru summer. Cork to campus, on bus route. $125 + utilities. A43-0200 Inmates needed for summer: $175/mo. + $10/unit. Big bgt. 4kg; close to campus bedroom completely renovated in bedroom bedroom completely renovated in home at 14th and Kentucky. Very nice room; $160 + $10/unit. Water pump 60psi Water tank 24psi Share 6 bdr. house ON CAMPUS! 6 bdr., 3 baths, AC/cable/water, dryer! Only $180 + utilities. +651-900- Available now! Summer: 1 person to share furnished 3 bdr. apt. 10th and Arkansas. Rent neg. 749-4720. 10th and Arkansas. Tenth to Fifth. NYC Summer Apt. share, Near Columbia University. $410/mo. Call Sami 212-866-7875. sity. 410/mo. call Sam 212-568-1014 Summer roommate needed $138/mo. at Meadowbrook. Call 842-5605. Meadowbrook. Call 864-200-366. Wanted: Female non-monitor for summer, $112.50 + % utilities/mo. Call 864-7092 or 864-7093. By GARY LARSON C 1990 Universal Press Syndicate "Well, here's your problem, Marge - if you and Bob really want kids, next time try sittin' on these little guys." 16 Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan "SALE INTO SUMMER THE CHEAPEST PRICES ON THE COOLEST SOUNDS...KIEFS COWBOY JUNKIES LUNCH CAMPUS THE CAUTION HORSES MUSIC THIS INTIMATE WAS NEVER THIS POWERFUL. The Caution Horses "Their evocative new album featuring 'Sun Coroes Up. 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ONLY: $6.99 CD ONLY: $10.97 Trombone Trombone Trombone KIEF'S TAPES CDS RECORDS AUDIO/VIDEO 24th and IOWA LAWRENCE, KANSAS (913) 842-1811 SECTION TWO FRIDAY, May 4, 1990 Family postpones anguish By Rich Cornell Special to the Kansar More than 10 months have passed since Joan Butler disappeared. want to find out what happened to her. Her family accepts that she is gone. They just Any explanation would offer some sort of finality to the struggle that began soon before he tried to make a Father's Day phone call. "Nothing's going to be final for Joan Butler ing to be final for me until they find Joan," said Julie Butler, her sister. "Nothing's going to be final for me until they find Joan," said Julie Butler, her sister. Joan Butler, a 24-year-old 1987 KU graduate, was last seen Sunday, June 18, 1989, when she left a girlfriend's apartment about 4 a.m., according to preliminary hearing testimony. A Johnson County District Court judge ruled in March that testimony from that four-day hearing tied Richard Grissom Jr., 29, to three kidnappings and murders, that of Joan and two 22-year-old boys killed in a police attack on Rusch and Theresa Brown, who disappeared a week after Joan. Grissom's trial for the murders is scheduled to begin Aug.27. Joan's family simply wants to resolve the matter. "We just want to find out what happened to her, and we want him to tell us," said Jada Butler, Joan's mother. She finds it difficult to say Grissom's name. she said. Testimony from the preliminary hearing and the Butlers' recollections of their search detail their extraordinary efforts to learn the truth about their daughter's disappearance. Joan had moved from home in Wichita to Overland Park six months earlier with at least one clear-cut goal. She planned to be a media director at an advertising agency within four years. Her father, in the advertising field at a Wichita television station, considered that a remarkable goal to set. "You have to be really strong," said Ralph Butler, also a KU graduate. "She was doing well with those people." Intense Search The Butlers did not worry on Father's Day, but they became frightened when Joan's employer at Montague-Sherry, a Kansas firm, is arriving firm, called the next day to find out why Joan was not at work. The Butlers did not know, so they called friends and family in the Kansas City area. No one had seen Joan. telephone report with the Overland Park police. The next day, he and his wife drove to Johnson County and stayed with a playmate with a nephew and his wife Jada Butler stayed with the nephew two weeks and Ralph Butler. five. That night, Ralph Butler filed a "We attempted at one time to talk about going to a motel and they wouldn't hear of it," Ralph Butler said. The first week, the Butlers searched the Kansas City area for Joan and her rental car, a maroon Chevrolet Corsica. Joan's employers and friends that the Butlers had not seen for years helped them search. Ralph Butler applied his advertising experience, getting help from radio and television stations that toldJoan's tale as it unfolded. Sunday, June 25, a KU student who read about Joan's appearance in that morning's edition of the Kansas City Star, recognized Corsica that afternoon near his tiltage apartment in Lawrence. A Lawrence police officer arrived just in time to see Richard Grissom Jr. open the Corsica's trunk. When the officer approached him and questioned him about the car, Grissom convinced him to follow him into an apartment so that Grissom could get some identification. Once inside the apartment, Grissom jumped out a window and ran away. The next day, Christine Rusch and Theresa Brown, roommates in an apartment complex where she worked, were reported missing. Investigators had a suspect in all three disappearances, and the Butlers had more reason for concern. "When the Corsica was found and Joan wasn't, it was a terrible girl," her father said. "It's the worst thing you can possibly imagine." Hope and fear Julie Butler, KU junior, and her brothers, Tim, 24, and Chris, 17, relied on TV stories and daily phone calls from their parents to find out how the investigation was progressing. "When they started linking it to Theresa and Christine, that made me so furious about the Lawrence police," Julie Butler said. The call about the discovery of Joan's car initially gave them hope that Joan would be found and later, in a quick gave way to anger and fear. She couldn't shake the thought that Rusch and Brown disappeared just after Grissom's escape. Iron surrounded the search for Joan. Tim Butler, younger than Joan by less than a year, arrived in Wichita the same day that Ralph Butler reported Joan missing. Tim Butler had been in Phila- See BUTLER, p. 4b National climate develops options to Protestantism The Associated Press NEW YORK — Looking ahead, Baptist specialists on other faiths see a changed U.S. religious environment coming, an atmosphere of floating allegiances; a blending of practices and greater variety. At the same time, Protestant denominations are seen as becoming more and more alike, with distinct traits. The flow of membership among them "In the future we going to see less loyalty to a particular denomination and more fuzziness between denominations," said Gary Leazer, an interfaith officer of the Southern Baptist Home Missions Board. "Individuals will increasingly feel free to construct their own world view from many options present in society rather than being bound by the orthodoxy of their particular faith." Leazer was among three leaders of the denomination's interfaith witness department addressing a recent conference on the chapelacy, a field that traditionally demands working among mixed religious outlooks. He told the conference at Golden Gate Theological Seminary in Mill Valley, Calif., that people increasingly would take the attitude of religious consumers and shop around for denominations and religions. "If one denomination does not offer a particular item, people will go to another faith to find it." he said. Leazer said the mega-trend of pluralism would further swell the shifting of members among denominations. Already, Gallup poll statistics show a shopping increase in that phenomenon. For example, in 1955, only one in 24 Americans left the faith of childhood to join another denomination, but by 1980 there were about three in three — a third of all members. Concurrent with that trend, Leazer said denominations would be becoming more alike, as differences in educational and economic status of African arrows. Closer ecumenical relations also have furthered that process. Although Southern Baptists formerly have remained outside the major ecumenical bodies, other denominations for years have discussed deep emphases and have greater understanding and mutual enrichment. As a consequence, worship of the different denominations has become more alike, including that of major Protestant denominations and Roman Catholics. In some cases, close attention is needed to tell them See RELIGION, p. 4b To make it to top start in basement professor suggests The Associated Press No. it is not a myth. NEW YORK — It is still true that the surest way to top of the a large U.S. industrial corporation is to find low-level work and work your way up. The myth, created in recent decades, is that now it's more common to move into the top job by bouncing from one company to another, eventually leveraging into the chairman's office. But Eugene Jennings, examining his research all the way back to 1939 — it is the largest corporate mobility data base of its kind — found that it was far more common to name a chief from within the company. That finding upsets what has become a given in many popular accounts of making it to the top. But it is conclusive. Jennings, professor emeritus of management at Michigan State University, set out in the late 1940s to study mobility patterns, or ascendancy in U.S. industry. In effect, his interest was "making it in America." Jennings, who pioneered so-called mobility studies, said that three out of four individuals named to the top spot in the 1980s were what he called natives, compared to only 48 percent in the 1960s. Because this was his intent, he excluded birth elites and privileged elites, namely founders, children of founders and investors and their proxies, who probably entered the company by raiding it or buying it. He found that in every category he defined, natives were more likely than what he called migrants to head the United States' large industrial towns and that the pattern was being even more pronounced. With these exclusions, he was able to concentrate on mobility patterns and trace the routes to corporate success. He found, for example, that natives outcored migrants in every age group, among the early arrivals or those who achieved the top job at 48 years old. The normally ages (age 57.5 years) and late arrivals (68 years or more). In spite of what some executive recruiters might like to hear, he found that even when migrants assumed the top job, they rarely did so without first becoming subordinate, working their way up from there. Age and experience, he found in his review, remain extremely important in naming a chief. The widely held 'Most companies look inside the company for their chief executives, not outside.' — Edward Jennings professor at Michigan State University notion that chief executive officers are younger these days is also a myth. The fact is precisely the opposite. Since the 1960s, the average age at which chiefs are appointed has risen steadily and is now more than 58 years. In that time, the number of younger chief executives has declined. Tenure has risen. Chiefs remain in the job longer than they used to. Tenure during the 1960s was less than seven years on average. It is now over three decades longer. In creatively, boards wipe compulsory retirement rules. Jennings found, for instance, that fewer rather than more chiefs have had the experience of living and working abroad for the company. He said that while he was running foreign operations, they had done it from the United States. It is a myth, too, Jennings said, that corporate boards turned to migrant chiefs when the company was in trouble. He said they turned to other leaders that often experienced, home-grown chiefs are treasured by boards. A popular notion is that more chiefs of U.S. industrial companies have had global experience, the better to deal with the emerging global economy. To some extent, the impression is false. As popularly described, he said, "The global manager is a myth." He found instead that industrial companies have been developing native software to the U.S. office rather than sending home-office managers abroad. From that data have come numerous books, including the seminal "Mobile Manager" in 1984, and "Routes To The Executive Suite" and "Executives in Crisis" in the 1970s. Jennings, who for three decades has advised corporate chairmen on the grooming of potential successors, began his studies with live data in 1949 and researched records back to 1989. Swimmer gives her all to craft By Christine Reinolds Kansan staff writer From a 4.0 grade point average to the 1988 Olympic trials, Barb Branger flings herself into everything she attempts. But her extremist way of living almost drove her to leave the very thing she loves — swimming. "I was so upset," Pranger said about the 1990 NCAA Women's swimming Championships held in March, when he considered never swimming again. The meet was the turning point for Pranger. "I got burned out on swimming," she said with disbelief. "It was pretty much my life up until NCAAs." At the NCAA meet, Pranger swam her worst time of the season in the first race, $3\frac{1}{2}$ seconds slower than her personal best, and placed last. "I should have placed in at least the top 16 and probably the top eight," she said. "Instead I finished dead last." Pranger decided swimming wasn't worth it. But the second race changed her mind. "When I went down on the block and the gun went off, a decision was made," she said. "I said to myself, 'It's not time to quit yet.'" After the championship disappointment, the team took two weeks off. "I had to do some deep soul-searching and decide that I wanted to swim again," she said. "Ever since I started swimming I've wanted an Olympic gold," Pranger said with an embarrassed grin and sparkling eyes. "I think that is every swimmer's dream. I want to be the fastest swimmer in the world." "When we started back to practice, I was so psyched and excited to be back that I actually started running Robinson from my derm." she said. Pranger discovered she could not live without swimming. "A lot of people don't have dreams. "I think you have to have a dream and that to be for yourself. Not for your patron, not for your coach. For you," she said. This philosophy of achieving goals for oneself is slightly new to Pranger. Since she joined the KU swim team, coach Gary Kempf has stressed to Pranger the importance of swimming and achieving success for herself. "She experienced burnout to a degree," Kempi said. "She was swimming to please others and not herself. She was trying to uphold an image she thought everyone had of her, I told her that for Barb to be successful, Barb would need to swim for herself." Kempi knows she is an extremist. "When she has highs, they are high," Kempi said. "And when she has lows they are extreme lows. That's Barb in life. My job is to make sure she operates at a consistent level and levels out the roller coaster." As a little girl, Pranger's mom motivated her to swim. "I took all the lessons I could take," she said. "Then my teachers recommended that I swim on a team. So I did." She remembers the first day she learned to swim the butterfly stroke, one of the fastest and most difficult strokes in swimming. "It's like a surge of power. The flow of the stroke is more fluid compared to the other strokes," she said. Pranger tries to explain her love for the sport, but explaining why she has devoted most of her life to swimming is hard to put into words. "I don't know," she said. "I mean I love the water and the fitness aspect, and I enjoy being in an individual where I can be challenged daily." The last semester of her senior year, Pranger moved to Deerfield, IL, to train for the 1888 Olympic trials. She has not spent a summer at Washington, family since her sophomore year at安徽工业 High School in Davenport, Iowa. Her social and family life have suffered for her swimming career, but Pranger has no regrets. COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY "During high school, I saw my family because our vacations were built around my swim meets were held — Colorado, Florida and Alabama," she said. "But since coming to college, I do miss my family." "I think my swimming cut into my relationship with my brother. Since I went away to college though, our relationship is much better." Pranger said that in high school she never experienced an active social life and therefore did not miss it. Christy Dyer, Little Rock freshman, is a good friend of Pranger's and is not connected with her swimming life. "Now most of my social life is the team," she said. "And it's neat to have a group to go out with." Barb Prander member of the Kansas swim team. "I like to have some classes without swimmers," she said. "That way I meet other people." "She's great all-around," Dyer said. "We like to go out dancing and just talk. She is very understanding and almost always cheerful." "She has incredible strength," Garcia said. "When we race, I Since the trials, Pranger has made steady improvement in her 100-meter butterfly. She swam the 100 butterfly in 1:02.59 at the trials, in 1:01.88 in the summer of 1899 and said she hoped to eventually swim below the minute mark to make the 1992 Olympic team. Dreams of gold "Below a minute is doing well," she said. "But by 1992, it will take a low $5, if not a $8 high." Janelle Garcia, a Nebraska swimmer who rivaled Dr. Kramer in the 100-yard butterfly during the 1989-90 season, will be begged mentally and physically. Pranger plans to take her 100-meter butterfly to the 1992 Olympics, and Garcia agreed she has the potential. always know it's going to be a good, hard race. There's a lot of competition between us." "She will definitely be at the trials." Garcia said. Tailing to Meagher blew Pranger's concentration out of the water. Pranger has had some unforgettable life experiences. At the 1988 trials, Pranger, a cheerful 17-year-old, stood and chatted with swimming great Mary T. Meagher, who has the world record of 57.93 seconds in the 100-meter butterfly. "I was talking to my idol," she said. "I just couldn't believe I was swimming against Mary T. All I remember about the race was standing on the block and then climbing out of the water after the race." Ouest for perfection back. On a normal workout day, the sophomore swims four to five hours a day, six days a week. She usually tackles 7,000 yards (four to five miles) a day, which is as far as swimming from Allen Field House to Haskell Indian Junior College and Her typical day begins at 5 a.m. She swims from 6 to 7:30 a.m. and then attends classes from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. At 1:30 p.m., she works out with weights until her second workout from 3 to 5:30 p.m. Since her freshman year, she has taken about 15 hours a semester, maintaining a 4.0 GPA and a balance between student and athlete. "In my spare time," she said rolling her eyes, "I write some poetry, play my wooden recorder and definitely shop!" Her extremist attitude also carries over into her schoolwork. "When I get tests back and I scored a 90 percent, I'm disappointed because it wasn't a 88 percent," she said. "I guess I'm an extremist, perfectionist and procrastinator. That's a scary combination." One month ago, she would not have admitted that. But through analyzing her mistakes at the NCAAs and talking to family and friends, Pranger realized that to keep herself on an even keel, she must acknowledge her extremist way of approaching life. "I know I'll be an 80-year-old woman still out there swimming," she said. / 2B Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Student product puts day in order By Sarah Davis by Sarah Davis Special to the Kansan Javhawk Bookstore Curtis Estes displays the academic planner that he sold this year. Nobody has enough time. But Curtis Estes, Atchison junior, has created a way to make it more useful. He invented and sells Keynotes, an academic planner sold at several Universities across the countr "As opposed to waking up in the morning with nothing to do, Keynotes provides order to the day's activities," Estes said. "It gives students one reference to write down events that happen and how you use time that is important." Estes is as organized as the product he sells. Dressed in a crisp white shirt complete with red paisley tie, he conveys the same polished image as Keynotes does with its glossy red cover with a Jayhawk imprinted on Although Keynotes is the same size as other academic planners sold at the University of Kansas and is in basic calendar form, it differs from the rest in one aspect. All the academic, social, cultural and sporting events are included on the day that they happen, instead of being lumped together on one page in the front of the book. Mike Swalw, manager of the Jayhawk Bookstore, 1420 Crescent Road, bought 400 Keynotes in Fall 1989. "Bringing Keynotes in was a gamble," he said, "but I thought it would work, and it did. Keynotes is extremely practical, not only for students, but anyone affiliated with the University." Although the book sells for $6.95, Swalim is confident that students will pay that amount to avoid the hassle of having to fill in all the extra information the other planers do not include. "This item is truly customized," he said. "It's a better book." Erik Ostermueller, Prairie Village senior who uses Keynotes, agreed. "You don't have to look in the paper or call KU to find out about campus activities," he said. Swalm said that students wanted to be organized and that Keynotes fits right in. "Students will buy what works," he said. "Once students are aware of Keynotes and its differences, then they'll see it works for them." Estes came up with the idea for Keynotes last summer while on an internship in Washington, D.C. He had used TTD (Things To Do) lists to budget his time. Keynotes was an extension of that into a campus academic program, and it helped Rob Ousier, a student at UCLA, decide to market the idea because they saw a need for time management on the college level. The first Keynotes hit the shelves at the Jayhawk Bookstore in Fall 1989, and since then they have been sold on many other college campuses. Ossorio handles West Coast schools, another business representative sells in the New England area, and Estes works in the Midwest. Each book is customized for the school where it is distributed. During Spring Break this year Eustes visited three schools that had placed orders for Keynotes. The University of Maryland ordered 1,500, Pennsylvania State University, 500, and Michigan State University, which they will use as the beginning of the Fall 1990 school year. KU will buy more from Estes as well. The Jayhawk Bookstore ordered 500, and the KU Books stores also ordered 500. The booksstore buys Keynotetools to students to help them to students for $6.95. Eurasen makes $1 on each sale. Previously Keynotes was printed in Kansas City, Mo., but this year the printing will be done in Los Angeles. The books cost $3 to print. Last year Estes lost $1,900. "We expect to get this back as the business grows." be said. But with the combination of sales from last year and this year, a total of 4,400 Keynotes have been sold in France during singing in $17,600 in revenue for 1990. "I mostly re-invest it back into the company." Estes said. Keynotes may expand to high schools as well. Estes is working on testing Keynotes in a New York City high school. Swalm said Estes had found something with practical value. "Curtis is very bright," he said. "He's caught on to a concept that's very valuable and needed." Estes gets full use of his own keynotes because he thrives on keeping busy. This semester he is taking these notes and containing his 3.52 grade point average. "If you're committed to something and you enjoy it, then you'll make time." he said. Estes also makes time for his other activities, which include Student Senate, the Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs and KU on Capitol "I enjoy keeping busy." Estes said. "I feel like I was put on this Earth to make a positive difference for others, to help people get more things done." Dixon admired Estes' involve- Hill. "He has a lot of energy and is always on the ball," Dixon said. For three years, Estes had wanted to produce his idea of time management and Keynotes. He finally made his idea a reality. "If you have a dream, you can achieve it," he said. "You just have to do it." Kansas sets trend in lucrative trade of raising turkeys The Associated Press GALENA — If you want to talk turkey in Kansas, Cherokee County is the place to be. Four years ago, farmer Orin Eckhardt built the state's first large-scale turkey farm just north of Galena. He had about 33,000 turkeys. Now three farms are in county and many are in the works. These farmers and others in the four-state area are working to fill a demand for turkey meat that has skivedrock in recent years. Per-capita turkey consumption in the United States has more than doubled since 1960, with the average U.S. citizen now eating nearly 18 pounds a year, according to the Agriculture Virginia-based association of turkey growers, processors and marketers. "People, for health reasons, are switching from red meat to poultry, but they don't want to have chicken all the time," said Laurie Wilson, consumer affairs manager for the federation. People in the United States are eating more turkey because it is available in a wide variety of products, she said. Increasing demand means a bigger supply, and that's where Cherokee County enters the picture. ConAgra Turkey Co., the third largest turkey processor in the United States, has a plant in Carthage, Mo. Turkey processors have started making bologna, ham and hot dogs out of turkey. Wilson said. During 1989, the Carthage plant processed 7.5 million turkeys. ConAgra spokesman Gerald Duncan said the company planned to process 10 million a year by 1992 To get those turkeys, the company is seeking people who can set up farms and raise turkeys under contract. Duncan would like 40 more turkey farms to be set up by 1991 within 30 miles of Carthage. Keith Atkinson, who owns an auto body shop in Columbus, is working to get the financing for the start a farm near Pittsburgh. The initial investment is approximately $315,000, which would finance several turkey houses the size of a football field and larger, automated feeding and watering equipment, lighting and other gadgets to keep the turkeys healthy and happy. "I think there's more of a future in this than there is in body work," Atkinson said. Normally, businessmen might be uncomfortable getting into something as new as turkey farm-farming, Johnson said he was not too worried. Projections for turkey farms predict that the initial investment can be naid off in about 10 years. Marion Atkinson started his turkey farm three years ago, after losing his job when the B.F. Goodrich plant in Miami, Okla., shut down. Two of the three operating turkey farms in Cherokee County are run by his brothers, and he said that they had done well. "It doesn't take anything to learn this," Atkinson said, adding that ConAgra sends people to the farms every day for the first week of operation and twice a week after that to offer help. KU KU BOOKSTORES TEXTBOOK PRE-ORDER FORM KU Bookstore University of Kansas Lawrence, Ks 66045 Kansas and Burge Unions Textbook Dept.- 913-864-5285 Beat The Rush This Fall! 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 Aug. 3, 1990. WE WILL HAVE YOUR BOOKS BAGGED AND READY TO PICK UP BETWEEN AUG. 20 & AUG. 31. 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. PLEASE PRINT Student Name ___ KU Address KU Phone No. Books will be picked up at : [ ] Kansas Union □ Course No. Instructor Line No. Preference: New or Used example: ENGL 102 Smith Used 70945 Please Print! | | | | | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | 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 Sept.17,1990. All returned books must be accompanied by a cash register receipt and be in new condition (except books purchased used). Fall 1990 Semester Form 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, May 4; 1990 3B Students reflect on Tiananmen ► Editor's Note: All of the Chinese students' names have been changed to protect their privacy. By: Sarah Deylin Special to the Kansan Zhang Gueli fought back tears. His dark brown eyes turned misty as he recalled helplessly watching television in the United States on June 38, 1989. It was almost one year ago that the Chinese military opened fire on demonstrating students in Tiananmen Square. "It was hard to watch what was happening," said Zhang, a KU Chinese student. "Even at the beginning of the semester, I felt like I was one of those students." Many of the Chinese students at the University of Kansas clearly remember the blood bath in Beijing in June. As the one year anniversary approaches, remembrances and outcry the massacre have resurfaced. The Chinese students recalled feeling shocked and angry at how the Chinese government handled the Tiananmen Square incident. "I did not expect the Chinese government to use force to get the students to leave," said Wang Qili, a KU College student. "I expected the government to try and dialogue with the students and that they would have a chance to talk with the government. The Chinese government really didn't do much to explain the situation last June." Keith McMahon, assistant professor of Chinese language and literature, said he remembered feeling sorrow and hopelessness. "I had the same kind of horror that everyone else did," he said. "It was beyond anyone's expectation." The battle abroad One KU Chinese student, Ye Gang, was in Tiananmen Square during the massacre and took part in the demonstrations. His direct involvement helped him become aware of how serious the situation was. "It was a very good experience to be there," he said. "It was a good chance to join the students and see them on on. I felt proud to demonstrate." by protesting. Ye not only exposed himself to the government but also to the armed and brutal military. Ye might have killed him, he might die and so he made a will. "Iknew it was going to be bloody," he said. "I saw many students being killed." When he saw someone get crushed by a tank, he tried, he told to be strong and not let it bother him. "I tried to block it off," he said quietly. "I didn't want to feel anything." But he did. Ye cried during the massacre. "I've never been that sad in my life before," he said. The Chinese students' sadness also was accompanied by rage at how the Chinese government handled the Beijing incident. This prompted demonstrations on the KU campus and other places in the country last year. The U.S. protest strated, I would be in trouble. The government will ask your opinion of the massacre, and if you demonstrated, you will have to lie." A protest in Chicago right after the student killings in China was One KU Chinese student, Xiao Wu, received a letter from a Chinese friend who returned home and urged him to remain in the United States. The friend has been isolated from the country, extremely敏感 by the Chinese government. KU Chinese students are not free to speak about the massacre or demonstrations in letters or phone calls because they are seeing themselves to the government. "We are not free to write in letters what we did," Jin said. "It will affect the person receiving the letter." McMahon said another existing problem was the confined relationship between Chinese and Americans. 'I'm scared. If the government found out that I demonstrated, I would be in trouble. The government will ask your opinion of the massacre, and if you demonstrated, you will have to lie.' KU student — Wang Qill KU student attended by many KU Chinese students. Because the Chinese Consulate is in Chicago, the students must be fluent in a way to let their voices be heard. "we wanted to make them know what our response was to what happened in China," said Li Yang-Fei, a KU Chinese student. KU Chinese student, Jin Lin, said he took part in demonstrations to show his support for the students. "I was really angry so I joined all the demonstrations," he said. "I'm really on the students' side." A big problem affecting the Chinese students has developed since the demonstrations: fear. Fear that the Chinese government knows they demonstrated. Fear that their families back home may be in danger. Fear that if they go back to China, their lives may never be the same. "I'd like to go back now, but I can't," said Zhang. "It would be dangerous because I'm one of the clients who demonstrated very much." Wang said he hoped to go back to his homeland someday, but like many of the Chinese students at KU, he said he felt that his chances of living a safe and free life in China were slim. "I'm scared," he said. "If the government found out that I demon- "It affects those of us who are interested in China," he said. "The association between foreigners and these is much more restricted." Sara Martin, assistant director for the Office of Foreign Student Affairs, said two fears seemed to prevail in the Chinese students she spoke to. They are afraid that they won't get the job if they go back to China. Wang said that if the government learned that students demonstrated, they would have no chances for promotions or increased salaries on jobs. "They will try to make your life hard." he said. Ye is fearful that his protesting may have caused problems for his brother in China. "I'm scared that he may not be able to come to the United Stated because of me," he said. The number of Chinese students coming to KU hasn't decreased in the past year. "We would've expected fewer students because of what happened last June, but it hasn't materialized yet," Martin said. making it more difficult for students to come here to study. She said she expected to see a difference in Chinese enrollment next fall. She said she learned from a reliable source that the Chinese govern- The Chinese students are still angry, though. They are angry that because they demonstrated, they must live in fear. Imprisonment is an extreme possibility for participating in protests. Coping with grief They are outraged at the control the Chinese government has over everything. This has propelled them to become the most powerful of the age-old Communist Party. "Chinese people tend to worship and love their government, but now they have almost all lost their hope in them. I used to love my government," Ye said, slowly shaking his head. "But now I hate it." Zhang expressed the same kind of disappointment. "Before the incident, people had hope that the Communist Party would change and be better," he said. But after the massacre, that Xiao said the government was selfish. "The most important thing a government should care about is its people and making their lives better, our government doesn't," he said. Jin said, "It's ridiculous. The world is changing and China should be changing too, but the Chinese are not changing the way they did 26 years ago." There is hope, the students said. Hope that the Chinese government might change into one of sound democracy with concern for the economy. However, they will be holding onto that hope for another 20 years, which is how long many believe it will take to change. Memories of the Tiananmen Square massacre, however, will not fade. He wrote about the damage of a borehole he built despite his belief when it happened in June will continue. Jin videotaped the massacre on television and watched it when he could. "I just couldn't believe it ... That's not China," she said, wincing as he remembered the gory scenes. "You see a soldier on the street, you bank on the street... I felt instead that I was watching a war movie." Demand for land near Berlin Wall worries planners The Associated Press WEST BERLIN — A neglected piece of land next to the crumbling Berlin Wall has become the focus of controversy about how to rebuild what once was the center of a vibrant capital. It is the spot on Potadamer Platz, one of Europe's most elegant squares before World War II, where Napoleon's troops want to erect a new headquarters. Fears have grown in both West and East Berlin that the shopping spree for land is about to start and that large rich Western companies will determine the city's future landscape. "What Berlin does not need is quick projects thought up in an illusory and short-lived reunification euphoria," East Berlin architect Bruno Flierl said in an interview. After much internal bickering, the West Berlin city council has agreed to take competitive bids in construction to rebuild the former central district. One of East Berlin's chief planners has expressed concern about possible economic colonialism by the West. East Berlin will play a role in the decisions only after the election May 6 of its first democratically chosen city council. This has caused complaints that East Benilers will have little time to study documents affecting their part of the city. Since the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, Potsdam Platz on one Western side of it and neighboring Leipzig Platz on the other have been desolate symbols of a divided country. Together, they had been the hub of Berlin and one of Europe's busiest districts. That ended with the destruction of World War II, the city's division and the building of the wall. since the wall began falling in November, Potsdamer Platz has become a major pedestrian crossing point. Motor vehicles use a newly completed section of four-lane highway linking East Berlin with streets in the West that were dead ends for a generation. Makeshift souvenir stands in Potsdamer Platz platz chunks of the wall and Soviet military uniforms to tourists. Circus tents and vans have spruced on nearby land that is empty most of the year. Construction of an apartment block on Leipzig Platz was halted last fall when demonstrators ended 40 years of Stalinist rule. An East German border guard said the work stopped when hopes were aroused that the area might become the center of the city again and not just another place to build housing complexes. He said the West German chain store Wertheim planned to put its head office on the foundation of the unbuilt apartment house. Asked how he felt about Western companies taking choice sites, his shrugged and said of the planners: "They leave us some green spaces." Other East Germans feel more strongly. "It would be unfair if all the high-tech went to West Berlin while the East was used for cheap production and storage facilities, or it would be worth a ranking planners. "That would be a colonialist concept." West Berlin's Social Democratic Party wants to attract investment to the city as quickly as possible and has welcomed the Daimler-Benz plan to build a headquarters for 8,000 employees. "We can't afford to keep such an investor waited," Mayor Walter Monper of West Berlin told his city council recently. The Alternative List, coalition partner of the Social Democrats in the council, does not agree and said in a statement: "Daimler is not the star around which Potsdam Platz plans revolve." Representatives of the Alternative List, the equivalent in West Berlin of the environmentalist Greens Party, say the Daimler building would be too dominant in the square. Make Buyback a BREEZE Highest Cash—Now through Finals! Plus Double Bonus Buy back Bucks $ Enter the JBS Thousand Dollar Book Giveaway! Win one of 5 certificates for up to $200 for fall books! (One entry for each $10 of books sold per visit. Minimum one. Full details at the store.) WESTERN HALVINGTON Jayhawk Bookstore Your 'pros at the top of Naismith Hill Store Hours: Mor.-Thurs: 8-5:30 Fri: 8-5 Sat: 9-5 Suh: 12-4 SAVINGS! FINALS Food for thought Del Express EFFECTUAL BUTTER FLAVOR LOW SODIUM WATERMINT LITTLE OAK Microwave POPCORN NO Susceptor NO CHOLESTEROL! 3-2.7 OZ. PKGS. NET WT. 8.1 OZ. (230g) - Classic Coke - Diet Coke - Sprite - Caffeine-free Diet Coke 24 pack of $579 Coca-Cola CLASSIC Deli Express Microwave POPCORN package of 3 99¢ diet Coke Caramel Free Sprite Flavored Soda Caramel Free Sprite Flavored Soda diet Coke SAC'S SPECIALS & CLOSEOUTS 842-7810 2525 Iowa St. Next to Food-4-Less Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9-9 Sun. 10-6 SACK THE SAVINGS SAC'S SPECIALES u CLOSEOUTS 4B Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Religion Continued from p. 1b apart. Some formerly non-liturgical churches have gradually become more liturgical, and some once formally liturgical churches have added freer, spontaneous notes, making for greater resemblance. Leazer, director of the Home Mission Board's interfaith witness department, said former regional denominations also were moving into new areas, including the Southern Baptist expansion outside the Bible Relt into all 50 states. At the same time, he noted that Roman Catholics have grown immensely within the Bible Belt, a region where they once were few. Leazer said the biggest challenge to Christians in the decade ahead would come from the New Age movement, a mix of panentheism, self-enhancement techniques and occult spirituality, and from Islam. Islam will become part of the nation's religious establishment, along with Judaism and Christianity, he said. He said there were about 4.17 million Muslims in the United States but that about 4,000 Americans, mostly Blacks, joined Islam each year, plus Muslim immigrants. There are about 5.9 million U.S. Jews. Leazer also said Eastern religions and occult spirituality would tend to become mainstream, gaining more acceptance in society and exerting their influence in the churches. "People will go to a study group on Hinduism on Friday night and then come to church on Sunday and try to get ideas into Bible study." he said. He said New Age ideas would continue to influence the way Americans thought about religion. He also foresaw a splurge of end-of time prophecies as the end of the century neared. For many Southern Baptists, cooperating with people of other religions is one of the most difficult to religious pluralism, Leenger said. He added, "You cannot demand the right to be heard by people of other faiths. Interfaith witness allows you to build relationship with people." Continued from p. 1b Butler delphia for a six-month internship. On July 2, Jada Butler returned to Wichita after a meeting with Rusch and Brown's families. By then, investigators believed Grissom had left the area, and Jada Butler doubted that the truth about the three women would ever be known. "It really was kind of depressing," she said. When Jada Butler got home, she talked and cried with all the children. "They just kind of reiterated that Joan was gone and I said, 'Yes, she was,' " she said. That weekend was especially difficult because Joan had planned to visit. The family would have been together for the first time since Tim Butler had come home Instead, Ralph Butler and some relatives from Kansas City emptied Joan's apartment and took her things to a Wichita storage room. "I couldn't believe they had done that," she said. "It seems so final." That is when Julie Butler knew her sister was dead. She did not help her family unload Joan's things. Offers of help continue A man who described himself as a channeler explained that he could hypothetize someone close to Joan to find her. He planned to lead Tim and Chris Butler on a mind journey back through their lives, and even before their births. Once there, it was suggested that they might reach their sister, who could tell them where she was. Chris could not do it, but Tim volunteered. He had the power of concentration needed to reach Joan, the channeler told the Butlers. The channeler hypnotized Tim, but he did not find his sister. "Tim could never cross the threshold." Ralph said. The channeler said Tim was too close to Joan for hypnosis to succeed. Tim does not like to talk with experience with the channeler. "We're very confident," he said. That is a much better feeling than Julie Butler had the 12 days that investigators looked for Grissom after he fled Trailridge. "It was so maddening," she said. "That was the only thing on my mind." Julie Butler was elated when Grissom was caught in Dallas, The Butlers did not worry on Father's Day, but they became frightened when Joan's employer at Montague-Sherry, a Kansas City advertising firm, called the next day to find out why Joan was not at work. Mostly, the Butlers put their hopes in the police. "All the people who have worked on the case have given up a year of their lives pretty much," Julee said. "I'm appreciative of that." Investigators find the Butlers positive outlook remarkable. positive ones. "They've never really lost the love they have," said Maj. John Round of the Overland Park police. "I've seen it in all three families." One key to helping the Butlers cope was keeping them informed of new developments. Even now, they are proud and home just to boost their spirits. Investigators still receive and follow leads each week concerning the whereabouts of the three bodies. None of those leads have produced results. The focus of the investigation has shifted to preparing for the trial. A conviction is expected, Round said. beging "It has been so long," Joan's sister said. "I'm just learning law the hard way." although a friend explained that the case against Grissom had just begun. Ralph goes home Ralph Butler rejoined his family in Wichita soon after Grissom's arrest, figuring he had done all he could to help with the case. He and his wife remained involved with him but tried to get on with their lives. "After that first jolt, you just keep doing what you've trained yourself to do," Ralph Butler said. For him, that meant returning to work and renewing his commitment as parish council president at their Catholic church. "you work up to things like that, because it keeps you busy," she said. "You can dwell forever about being sad, but you have to think In the fall, Jada Butler, a florist, also returned to work. about the happy times." Ralph Butler kept busy by joining Christine Rusch's father and several other parents of children who had been killed. Their misery is supported by a monetary 8-year minimum sentence for murder in Kansas. The lobbyists pushed for the 40- year sentence because legislators who earlier had rejected the death penalty were still in office. "It was good therapy for me," he said. "In a way, I was doing something for Joan." The bill passed during this Spring's legislative session, but does not apply to whomever killed Joan, Rusch and Brown because the bill was made to kill the bill became law. The minimum sentence then was 15 years. Julie Butler expressed pride in her father, who stuffed hundreds of envelopes for the bill and enlisted support from many friends. She thinks that Grissom is going to be surprised by the families' responses. "I don't think he knew what he was getting into," she said. Because of the success of the minimum-sentence bill, Ralph and Jada Butter are beginning to lobby for restraints for juvenile offenders. "Ralph and I both have a lot of friends," Jada Bata said. "But our best friends are our kids and we always revolved around one girl." They gain comfort from their children and try to call and visit them more often than before. Reflections and farewell Birthdays always have been and still are important at the Butler house. "We had a birthday for Joan and she wasn't even there," Ralph Butler said. Prayer also helps Jada and Ralph Butler, who now go to Mass nearly every day. Joan would have turned 25 on March 28. "I resort to a lot of prayer," Jada Butler said. "Sometimes, when I feel really bad, some of her favorite music was Vivaldi, so I listen to that and it makes me smile." Julie Butler also accentuates the positive when thinking of Joan, who guided her whenever she asked for advice. And she remembers how excited she got as a child when Joan had friends over. "You know how little sisters are anyway," Julie Butler said. "I would just sit by her room and watch them." She wants others to know it's OK to talk about Joan. Jada Butler hopes people will learn from her family's experience and recognize the importance of prayer and addressing others' needs. The Butlers may create a scholarship with the money set aside as a reward for information leading to Joan's whereabouts. A conclusion remains the Butlers' foremost goal. they forecast good. They plan for a memorial service sometime after the trial. "We'd sure like to know where Joan is," Ralph Butter said. "We'd like to have a funeral." "We want her to have a final farewell," Jada Butler said. "She deserves a farewell." Garbo, Goddard classics available The Associated Press Within the space of a week, the film world lost two of its luminaries: Greta Garbo and Paulette Goddard. Garbo, who made only 27 movies, died April 16. Goddard, whose career spanned five decades, died April 23 Bynum was 84 years old. Goddard appeared in about 46 movies, many in bit parts or cameos. Most of Garbo's best work is available for the home video viewer, including her classic 1932 Oscar-winner "Grand Hotel." Only a few of Goddard's movies have made it to video, including Charlie Chaplin's satiate of industrial innovation, in which Goddard appeared in 1936. Here is a partial list of what's available on video of Garbo and Goddard films: GORETA CARBO; GRETA GARBO: ■ "Flesh and the Devil" (1927): Appearing with John Gilbert. - "Wild Orchids" (1920); Love in the tropics — Java style. - "Amy's Garden" (1920); Garbo Appearing with John Gilbert. "Wild Orchids" (1928): Love in style the tropes of "Anna Christie" (1930): Garbo speaks. "Grand Hotel" (1932): Crossroads of 1,000 lives and inspiration for almost as many stories, movies, songs and plays, set in Berlin before World War II. "**Anna Karinem** (1393); Tragic Garbo. Remake of her 1927 flick with John Gilbert, "Love." BAIL ETEE, GODDARD: PROCEDURE — "Kid Millions" (1934): You can see her part in a blink in this Eddie Cantor musical. — "The Women" (1939): Movie version of Claire Booth's dishy play. — "Modern Times" (1938): Up the industry. The Little Tramp confronts dehumanizing inventions. — "The Great Dictator" (1940): Charlie Chaplin as Adenoid Hynkel, ruler of Tomania. - “Second Chorus” (1941): Two trumpet players (Fred Asteidia and Burgess Meredith) vie for the fair Paulette. "Pot O' Gold" (1941): James Stewart was in this slice-of-life look at oldtime radio. SCHOOL'S OUT DAY STORE WIDE SALE! 20% OFF EVERYTHING IN THE STORE! (Regular priced items only) THREE DAYS ONLY! FRIDAY, MAY 4, SATURDAY, MAY 5 AND SUNDAY MAY 6 ONLY!!! LAWRENCE STORES ONLY! STREETSIDE Lawrence 1403 W. 23rd St. (913) 842-7173 PENNYLANE Lawrence 844 Massachusetts (913) 749-4211 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 5B Endangered Species N.Y. park rangers protect ocean bird The Associated Press NEW YORK - Ponder the plight of the bining plover. This unassuming, sand-colored bird, already considered an endangered species, is struggling to make its bore in the urban jungle. Most humans who visit Gateway National Recreation Area in the borough of Queens don't even spot the plover, which nests, well-camouflaged, just an inlet away from Beach and Coney Island in Brooklyn. But Meryl Golden, a researcher and National Park Service ranger who is considered the pro among plover-watchers, perseveres. For more than two years, she has stripped to prevent the plover's extinction. On April 24, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service presented a Northeast Region Conservation Award to Gateway for its efforts to protect the plover and other endangered birds: the least tern, the common tern, and the black skimmer, which recently returned Gateway after a seven year absence. The average piping plover is 7 inches long, with a black ring around its neck and a black mark above its ear. It can be called *peepel*, that ornithologists call "peepel, lull." "They're precious and comical to watch," Golden said. "They know who I am because I make eye contact with them. They're not scared of Thirty pairs nest on 2½ miles of beach, owned partly by the National Park Service and partly by a private apartment complex. "We believe it is the largest concentration of piping plover anywhere," Golden said. "Most beaches large would have one or two pairs." Perhaps 145 more pairs live on Long Island, although no one has counted, Golden said. It's believed 875 pairs live on the Atlantic Coast from North Carolina to Newfoundland, with a few more in the Great Lakes and Great Plains regions. The birds enjoy flat, shell-coated, sparsely vegetated beaches. When a plover lays its four eggs in a small depression in the sand, the Park is fringed, flaps and signs warning that an endangered species is nesting. The young walk around a few hours after hatching and can fly in about 25 days. Instead of placing food in the chicks' mouths, parents lead them to a feast of insects and marine worms. But all is not good for the plovers. "One of their feeding areas is the water line, where most of the human recreation is concentrated," Golden said. A mother plover, if disturbed, tries to convince the predator that her wing is broken. "She'll make a lot of noise and lead the intruder away from where the young are. It's quite a convincing display," said Paul Nickerson, chief manager of the Fish and Wildlife Service's north-east division in Boston. Last year, Gateway began banning most recreation on the plovers' beach during nesting season, March 15 through August. In 1988, six chicks that grow to enough size to grow plumage and fly. In 1988, there were 20, Golden said. But the plovers also face other dangers. Rangers and volunteers have removed 3,000 pounds of oil from the surface spills during the past few months. Scientists to track sea turtles Study may prevent extinction of ridley species The Associated Press VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. — A baby loggerhead turtles, small as a silver dollar and swimming in tanks in Virginia and Ohio, may hold the key to the survival of one of the world's most endangered species. The Virginia Marine Science Museum, the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and the Columbus Zoo in Ohio are raising turtles for the next three years and will release them into the Atlantic Ocean with satellite tracking devices attached to their shells. Loggerheads are a threatened species, but their numbers are nowhere near as diminished as the Kemp's ridley sea turtle, one of 12 species worldwide facing imminent extinction, according to environmentalists. The hatching and raising of the turtles, called headstarting, is not new, but the animals had never been tracked once they were released. of what happen after headstarting" said Tony Leger, manager of the Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge, which provided the turtle eggs. John Keinah, a researcher at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, has three loggerheads in the Atlantic with satellite tracking devices. "This is really the first evaluation One came from the Columbus Zoo, which raised two loggerheads that were abandoned on its doorstep three years ago. Last year, the zoo contacted the institute about releasing the turtles. The size of the turtles, and the fact that Keithnain because it was just right for mounting a satellite tracker. The three institutions joined forces this year to raise the turtles from eggs recovered at the Back Bay refuge. Rather than facing the ravages of seagulls and cold water, the babies are raised in warm water and vegetables. They are mixed with vegetables and four kinds of fish, said Mark Swingle of the Virginia museum. Keinath said the only time a turtle would set foot on land after it hatched was when the female laid her eggs in the sand. Scientists have pieced together part of the sea turtle mystery. The newly hatched turtles hit the water in a three-day swimming freeney. Ketuhn believes that push gets the tiny shell and into the warmer Gulf Stream. Once in the Gulf Stream, the turtles ride the current around the Atlantic two or three times, feeding on sargassum weed. During the swimming frenzy, the turtles use only their front flippers. Once in the floating seaweed, the turtles use only their back flippers. Scientists believe the switch is a way to hide from predators, because the back flippers make less discernable motion. the Atlantic, the turtles head for the Chesapeake Bay and other tidal estuaries where they forage on horseshoe crabs, then migrate south as the water cools. Aerial surveys of the beach help researchers heads visiting the hay each summer. Scientists believe that when the turtles mature, now weighing in the 300-pound range, they take up residence on the East Coast's continental "The question is, will a head-started turtle know enough to头 south when winter comes?" Keinah said. "If they navigate properly, I don't have any reason to suspect that headstarted ridlets won't." The Kemp's ridley turtle nests primarily on one beach in Mexico that is protected year-round by soldiers. The ridges all seem to lay their eggs the same day. Film in 1947 showed as many as 40,000 turtles lying on the ground. Researchers believe there may be fewer than 400 adult females in the world today. Farmers blamed for polluted Everglades The Associated Press BELLE GLADE, Fla. — The heightening drama about saving Florida's dying Everglades has cast new villains, the farmers and dairymen who work the land around giant Lake Okeechobee. 'I don't think it's fair. It's our land. We're interested in our home as much as anybody else. But I think we're an easy target.' Environmentalists say agriculture causes too much pollution in the precious Okeechobee, which provides water for the vast wetlands of the Everglades and the cities of the crowded coast. Some argue that it's time to return the land to the wilderness it was before the ranchers and farmers came about a century ago. David Beardsley Florida farmer "The first thing we have to do is get rid of the sugar cane south of Lake Okeechobee. Then we have to get rid of the dairy cattle on the north side," said Marjory Stone-Activist who has fought for much of her 100 years to preserve the Everglades system. U. Attorney Dexter Lehitman, who has filed suit seeking to force the state to increase protection of the Everglades, has said that if farmers can reduce pollution, the choice was easy: "Save the 'Glades and let agriculture move to Wisconsin." Farmers say they are politically expedient scapegoats. They say they are threatened by environmental experimentation that has only one sure result, a big bill for expanded programs to cut pollution. "I don't think it's fair," said David Beardsley, a fourth-generation farmer near Clewiston. "It's our land," he said. "We're interested in our home as much as anybody else. But I think we're an easy target." The nutrient-laden pollutants that run off the farms and dairies feed unnatural growth of some plants in the Everglades, choke waterways and disrupt the system's food chain. At the same time, the heavy development of south Florida has disrupted rain patterns and the flow of water into the Everglades, driving up parts of the system. Residents of the region are affected by the environmental damage. Most are under some form of water rationing and soon may face stricter limits. Smoke from wildfires in the Everglades last year closed highways and caused respiratory problems. Gov. Bob Martinez said the environment ranked with crime and drugs as Florida's top issues. The environmental concerns of Floridians coalesced in the adoption of a "Save Our Everglades" plan in 1983. Its aim is to make the look and function more as it did at the beginning of the century. In 1900, there were no big farms to disrupt natural water flow, use water and discharge pollutants back into the Everglades system. Nor did 4.5 million people live on the condominium-dotted "Gold Coast" from Palm Beach to Miami, sucking huge quantities of water from the system. Sugar growers fare worse than the dairies in their public image as government-subsidized millionaires who exploit foreign cane cutters and the environment. Two-thirds of sugar cane land is owned by S. Ursula companies owned by the Cuban-born 'Fanil family.' More than 100 other farmers work land in the 700,000-acre Everglades Agricultural Area south of the lake. Some 413,000 acres are in sugar cane, and the rest is in winter vegetables like lettuce, celery, cabbage and carrots. Beardsley's family started farming when his great-grandfather came to Ikeechobee before World War I and saw the newly drained land rich in decomposed vegetation. "They just went wild when they saw the dark, rich muck," he said. benetton Come Into Benetton Now Until Graduation and Present Us With Your Student ID and You'll Receive 20% Off Your Purchase or 40% Off a Benetton Logo T-Shirt! Offer expires 5/20/90 928 Mass. 843-5900 M-Sat. 10:5:30 Thurs. 10:8:30 Sun. 1-5 benetton Come Into Benetton Now Until Graduation and Present Us With Your Student ID and You'll Receive 20% Off Your Purchase or 40% Off a Benetton Logo T-Shirt! Offer expires 5/20/90 928 Mass. 843-5900 M-Sat. 10-5:30 Thursday, 10-8:30 Sunday, 1-5 SCHOOL'S OUT SALE! 20% OFF EVERYTHING IN THE STORE! LAWRENCE LOCATIONS ONLY! Excludes sale priced items. Good thru 5/12/90. CIRCUS OF POWER Vices: features: Don't Drag Me Down Vices/Gales Of Love KINGS OF THE SUN Full Frontal Attack features: Drop The Gun Lock Me Up/Full Frontal Attack Each only $6.68 Lp or Cassette $10.99 CD STREETSIDE Lawrence 1403 W. 23rd St. (913) 842-7173 PENNYLANE Lawrence 844 Massachusetts (913) 749-4211 SCHOOL'S OUT SALE! 20% OFF EVERYTHING IN THE STORE! LAWRENCE LOCATIONS ONLY! Excludes sale priced items. Good thru 5/12/90. CIRCUS OF POWER Vices features: Don't Drag Me Down Vices/Gates Of Love KINGS OF THE SUN Full Frontal Attack features: Drop The Gun Lock Me Up/Full Frontal Attack Each only $6.68 Lp or Cassette $10.99 CD STREETSIDE Lawrence 1403 W. 23rd St. (913) 842-7173 PENNYLANE Lawrence 844 Massachusetts (913) 749-4211 6B Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan The Glen Shire 723 Mass. Roy Ban Barrings & Lanes NATURAL WAY Natural Fibre Clothing and Body Care 820-822 Mass. St. Downtown 841-0100 TGIF PARTY it's your PARTY Southern Hills 749-3455 Mall Mr. Steak 920 W. 23 841-3454 Open 11-9 Sun-Thur 11-10 Fri, Sat Mr. Steak 920 W. 23 841-3454 Open 11-9 Sun-Thur 11-10 Fri, Sat Free Steak Dinner on Your Birthday You must be 16 years or older and come in after 4 pm on your birthday. 3. 50 Lunch Special Mon-Sat 11-4 --a field problem for my dissertation in Puerto Rico and began to develop an interest in Latin America," he says. Tru-Colors - 1 HR PROCESSING' • ENLARGEMENTS • E-6 SLIDES • B & W • COPY PHOTOS • PRINTS FROM SLIDES • PORTEOLIOS 1414 W. 6th St. 843-8004 (1) O PICTURE THIS 11 E. 8th St. 843-8015 LAWRENCE'S BEST PICTURES • No Contracts • No Shooting Fees • No Hassles NEW STUDIO • Portraits • Advertements • Portfolios • Weddings Picture This... PICTURE THIS PARTY PICTURES 11 East 8th St. 834-8015 Look For Coupon Book Geographer maps out vivid lessons VENEZUELA COLOMBIA EQUADOR By Andres Cavelier Special to the Kansan For John P. Augelli, professor of geography at the University of Kansas, life has been a trip. John Augell, professor of geography, lectures during his Latin American geography class in Lindley Hall. He has traveled the world, teaching, consulting and research. His students say it reflects the way he lectures. "I have seen it all," the 69-year-old professor tells his students. Augell arrives early in his classroom, hangs a map of the Americas on the blackboard, puts his glasses on and glances at his notes. When the teacher ready, families and sakes in her voice, "Where has she were we?" He starts a non-stop soilloquy, pacing back and forth and gesturing with every step. The class is Geography 591, geography of Latin America. Students taking it get an overview of the region's geography from a professor who has traveled throughout Latin America, from Northern Mexico to Tierra del Fuego, the southern tip of Argentina. Christopher Brown, Crete, Neb. graduate student in Latin American studies, is taking Augelli's course this semester. He says, "His lectures are so vivid and captivating. Who would like to miss one of them? Everything he says seems valid in America because he's traveled and he's been in contact with the people down there." Brown also says he always will consider Augelli someone who shows excitement, love and desire for Latin America. Sam Sommerville, Lawrence graduate student in Latin American studies, says Augelt is so passionate that "he's showed us a totally different way of thinking about the history and anthropology of the area to teach geography. Bob Adams, associate dean of liberal arts and sciences who has known Augelli for 25 years, says, "John is always on the go. If he is not teaching a course or having an interaction with his cow is attending his cows or working in the department. That takes a lot more energy than the rest of us have." Academic Excellence at KU Augelli (pronounced J-Jelly) has had several posts at KU, including director of the Center of Latin American Studies, dean of international programs and chairman of the department of geography. He was hired as a professor of geography in 1961. Augell was born in a small Italian village east of Rome. When he was 8, his family moved to Waterbury, Conn., where he completed his primary and secondary education. In 1943, he finished undergraduate studies in geography and history at Clark University in Worcester, Mass. He volunteered for the Army Air Corps and served from 1943 to 1945 in the Pacific. After the war, he became an Air Force Reserve lieutenant. "My interest in Latin America came much later," says Augelli, who calls himself a geographer-Latin Americanist. "I barely finished my undergraduate work, and then I went to World War II." He earned a doctorate in geography and anthropology at Harvard University in 1951. "I never had a course having to do with Latin America. But I went to do Forestry years later, he has written three books, five monographs, 41 major articles and more than 50 other scholarly items, most of them about Latin America. Some are written in Spanish. His background in Puerto Rico meant that he knew firsthand a great many things." Augelli was appointed to the Board of Foreign Scholarships by President Lyndon Johnson. He has received the Master Teacher Award of the National Council for Geographic Education and an award for out- 'Everything he (Augelli) says sounds vital in understanding Latin America because he's traveled and he's been in contact with the people down there.' graduate student in Latin American studies Christopher Brown Among his works is "Middle America: Its Lands and Peoples," a 494-page college textbook he co-wrote that traces the development of economics, politics and institutions in the formation of the modern geography of the United States and the West Indies. He uses this text for one of his courses. *crossesionally, he has a stronger reputation off campus than I do on campus," he says. "I have received recognition here, but most of my academic honors have come from off campus. An internship at our university is not quite the same as someone in the sciences or business." wilam Griffith, retired professor of history and former director of Latin American studies at Tulane University, agrees. "I think that's true. John had a chance at that time to get himself very well-known by a group of people who were the leaders of this movement all over the United States," Griffith says. Griffith mit Augelli more than 25 years ago at a series of meetings to try to set up area studies programs in the United States. Nationally, Augell has been president of the Latin American Studies Association and secretary of the Association of American Geographers. standing contributions to research, teaching and service in Latin American geography. He also has served as a consultant to the White House, the Department of State and the National Geographic Society and Magazine. "I have a lot of respect for his knowledge and his ability," Griffith says. "At the meetings he had some advantages that not everyone had." Energetic Lecturer when he lectures, he is active, often cracks a joke and moves his tanned hands to express his knowledge and experience. He says, "I get enthusiastic about lecturing. I have always had the feeling that unless a lecturer could be enthusiastic about his subject, he could not convey the sense of excitement to the students. "The energy is a matter of chemistry and heritage. I just dipped into the right gene pool." Griffith says, "John has a very forcible way of speaking, and he also has a bunch of gestures that are typical of him." typical university. Adams, associate dean of the college, with whom Augelli and other professors have played poker the first Monday of every month for the past 25 years, says, "He is a very funny guy. He's been the star storyteller at that group for all that time, and nobody can compete with him." During lectures, Augelli does not hesitate to add Latino flavor with Spanish phrases echoing the Caribbean accent he picked up in Puerto Rico. Furthermore, Sommerville says, "He knows what he is talking about. He is extremely interested in burning down stereotypes, and he is always comparing the Latinos with the Anglos." Augelli says, "I do not hesitate to make comparisons and be critical about the Anglo culture." ouat the same time, he says, he has to be tolerant and have cultural sensibility. "I have an entree from the lowest classes to the highest classes." Augell says of his trips to Latin America. "Sometimes I have mingled with people in lower-class neighborhoods." During lectures, there also is time to joke around. He often uses the word "schmatas," a Yiddish word that means rags, to make students laugh. "I was playing cards with a friend, and he used the word schmats," he says. "And I just subconsciously incorporated it into my own vocabulary." Brown says, "He and his schmatas. That's very typical of him." Easterner or farmer? Augelli, who still considers himself an Eastern big-city形样, lives on a 150-acre farm in the Baldwin area, about 16 miles south of Lawrence. When he first arrived at KU, he lived in Lawrence, but soon felt hemmed in by the town. "I wanted to get away from the city altogether and live in a rural setting." Augellie says. ing. Augen says. Augelli lives on a farm not as just a hobbyor for making money but for "pychic income," he says. Farming, which is different from his academic pursuits, keeps him occupied at home. "What I did initially was to buy a farm as a hedge against inflation, and then I became interested in the raising of cattle." Augliella says. Though he does not have a cow-calf operation anymore, he buys, feeds and sells 20 to 30 staters a season. Augelli, who says he is kept awake by traffic noises when he stays in a city, says. "I have become accustomed to hearing the noises of the countryside, like the yip of a coyote." He prefers to wake up every morning at 5:30, drive his jeep to school about 7:30 a.m. and drive back in the afternoon. His life is a trip When Angela is not taking care of his farm or teaching, he travels to Latin America to lecture and to research. He has been in every Latin American country. But his primary research has been conducted in Central America and Brazil, where he researched and learned some Portuguese. - Because Anguelli still enjoys traveling, he will spend Summer 1990 on a Mediterranean cruise lecturing about Latin America or the Mediterranean. He was invited by the American Geographical Society. "The thing that really turns me on," he says, "is being able to see what's on the other side of the horizon." Augelli will retire after Spring 1991, but has no future plans. He says in Spanish, "El hombre propone, Dios dispone," or "Man proposes, God disposes." COLONY WOODS INSEANT $200 REBATE only pay 64 min or 12 mo later thru Feb = $399 1 Bedroom $345 The new residential building has a large pool and a courtyard. TENNIS CENTRE 2 Bedroom 2 Bath $410 (1) 842-5111 Come Home To Us! • Exercise Room • On Bus Route • Microwaves • Walk To Campus • Great Maintenance. We Care! THE ROOM 1301 W.24th University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 7B AIRLINE Keith Thorpe/KANSAN The cast from left to right is Michael Brandt, Lawrence sophomore, as Darrell; Jeff Hopkins, Prairie Village sophomore, as the Rev. Ed; and Shannon Broderick, Lawrence senior, as Becky Ann. Demented preacher is focus of semester's last KU play By Ines Shuk Kansan staff writer Showtime is not over at the University of Kansas. Before pulling down the curtain for the spring semester, the University Theatre will present "Tent Meeting," a comedy-drama about an Arkansas evangelist and his bizarre family. Jack B. Wright, director of University Theatre and of "Tent Meeting," said the play was an interesting piece that should provoke a lot of discussion, especially among students. Wright said it was a play out of the ordinary that questioned attitudes, values and material things usually taken for granted. "It should be a unique and fun experience," he said. "We are trying to make it move you. We want you to laugh." an you to laugh "Tent Meeting" was written by Larry Larson, Levi Lee and Rebecca Wackler and premiered at the 1985 Humana Festival of New Plays at the Actors Theatre of Louisville, Ky. It opened on a highway in New York in April 1985. The play is the story of the Rev. Edward O. Tarbox, a demented, but charismatic preacher traveling to mass as to a tenn meet in Canada. Tarbox is accompanied by his son, Darrell, who has recurring nightmares, and his daughter, Ann, who has an deformed child. Shannon Broderick, who plays Tarbox's daughter, said her character was always hearing music in her head. Becky Amt puts cotton in her ears to avoid disturbances from the outside. "She escapes from difficult situations through that music," Broderick said, "But she is not insane. She is a single-minded woman who only wants to be a good mother." Broderick, Leawood senior, said working under Wright's direction was rewarding because he allowed him to discover new things in rehearsal. Performing with Broderick will be Jeffey D. Hopkins as the Rev. Tarbox and Michael Brandt as Darrell. Special music for the two-hour play was composed by Lawrence musician Michael Beers. Beers described the music as angelic, mood-setting music. He said the music was composed with a Kurzwile 250, a computerized musical synthesizer. "Tent Meeting" will be presented at 8 tonight and tomorrow, and at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at Crafton-Preyer Theatre. California forecasts to include tremblors The Associated Press SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — "Good evening. Tonight's forecast calls for a 40 percent chance of rain and a 10 percent chance of a big earthquake." Californiaans may be tuning into such bulletins so soon as seismologists put their computer models to work in order to infer after ominous raids of the Earth. The seismologists have gathered enough data on major fault systems in California to be able to predict, to some degree, the probability of a quake of 6.5 or more on the Richter scale within certain brief periods. after a foreshock of magnitude of 4.0 or greater is registered, the model will go into work, determining whether there is, say, a 5, 10 or 25 percent chance of a quake within the next three days. The developers of the model are ready to put it into use but are discussing with the state how the predictions will be used — whether they should be used for earthquake warnings or provided to state agencies so they can prepare. The model is a mathematical formula that uses data on fault activity and the probability of major shocks, Lucile M. Jones of the U.S. Geological Survey said at a meeting yesterday, the Seismological Society of America. Seismologists long have known that big quakes generally are preceded by less powerful shocks, but most systems are more precise. Jones said. Jones said a study of the major faults in California indicated, for example, that in the relatively quiet Carrizo Plain southwest of Fresno the chance that a 5-magnitude quake would be a foreshock to an 8-magnitude quake was 24 percent. Jones, who developed the formula with Duncan C. Agnew of the University of California-San Diego, said scientists would probably never be able to predict with absolute certainty. But the percentages they could achieve make a possible take action to prevent damage or injure. Jones said. "As scientists we feel that sharing information is always better than withholding information," she said. The state could use the information to cancel vacations for disaster personnel, Jones said. Fire stations could move trucks outside. Daycare centers could leave children to getate quickly. Residents could fill bathtubs with water for drinking, put away dishes and prepare emergency supplies. "Each individual group can start making those sorts of decisions," she said. "We aren't at a really high level (of accuracy), but people have been trying to get us to make these statements because there are useful things to do. And as we get better, the probabilities are going to head up." Geologist Jim Davis of the California Division of Mines and Geology said he was talking with the Office of Emergency Services about whether earthquakes could earth-quake warnings. Davis said he didn't think quake forecasts would unduly alarm people or otherwise cause harm. Bush pays more taxes after error is detected WASHINGTON — President Bush had to pay an additional $7,497 in federal income taxes this week because of an error in the reporting of his 1890 income, spokesman Marlin Flitzwater said. The Associated Press the president had to file an amended return because the one he sent to the IRS last month did not include income from compensation he collected last year. Haircut and Style Reg. price $15.00 Standing Ovation $5.00 off 10% off Professional Hair Products the tax preparers after they had submitted his tax return last month, according to the explanation on his amended form. The president had to file an amended return because the one he sent to the IRS last month did not include income from deferred compensation he collected last year. The deferred compensation was received in the form of a paid-up life insurance policy. - Paul Mitchell - Redkin He was eligible for that compensation when he turned 65 on June 12, under an arrangement with Zapata Corp, the now-deferred oil company he once headed, Fitzwater said. The added income was brought to the attention of - Matrix - KMS Come visit us Expires 5/31/90 Come visit us at our new location 1109 Massachusetts (near Tin Pan Alley) 749-0771 RECYCLE NEWSPAPER RIVER CITY RECYCLING 716 E. 9TH 843-1988 UNITED RECYCLING 906 N, 2ND 842-1260 BOYS & GIRLS CLUB 1520 HASKELL THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN "THINK GLOBALLY . . . ACT LOCALLY" Celebrate Earth Day, April 22 +Special Kansan Issue Friday, April 20 Earth Smith & Wessons Tonight and Saturday! The progressive rock of Ground Zero and announcing... STOP Sunday, May 6 STOP Day Blowout! 25¢ Draws 50¢ Drinks STREF Day 18 & Up Admitted 623 Vermont 843-0689 TONITE & SAT. $1 cover 75c Draws SUN. 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Price increases in health care, for example, have exceeded the general average for many years, including this one. Elsewhere is the service sector of the economy, which is much larger than the goods sector. It includes health care, food vending, hair styling, banking, government, education, law and more. The index of leading economic Indicators tracks a weighted, seasonally adjusted average of 11 economic statistics to forecast economic direction. The dichotomy could be temporary. It also might be fundamental and difficult to contain. S. OU.R.C.E: Buureau et Eccoonomie Annalysis Officially, the consumer price index rate at an annual rate of 5. percent in March. But within that rate was a significant split: Inflation in the goods sector was 2. percent in the service sector was 7. percent. How, for example, does the country restrain health-care prices when lives are at stake? How does it offset mandated minimum wage increases in education while willing to lower education costs while you children are in school? Knight-Ridder Tribune News Some of those increases tend to sneak up on people. While a person might buy food each day, he might use a doctor's services only a couple times a year and a lawyer's services even less. Thus, a sense of price is lost. 5/2/90 A report by the Coalition of Service Industries gives a portrait of the service sector that might surprise many people. Nine out of 10 workers in this industry have 803 have been employed in services. Last year, nearly all the 2.5 million workers who entered the labor force found jobs in services. Goods producers added only 30,000 workers. Two decades ago the service society occupied two-thirds of the labor force. Today, there are three workplaces for every one in goods production. Meanwhile, service productivity has been lagging because the production of services is labor-intensive, and job production can be automated. Some of those trends will continue. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that another 18 million jobs will be created by the year 2000, an average of about 1.5 million a year. Most of the jobs will be in services. Total employment is expected to rise from 118 million in 1988 to 138 million by the turn of the century. Employment in services is projected to rise from 75.9 percent of all non-employed and salary jobs in 1988 to 72 percent. The change means that jobs in the goods sector as a percentage of the whole will continue to decline. And productivity increases, which tend to restrain price increases, are hardest to achieve in the service sector. While these generalities are based on the workings of the economy in general, the chances are high that they do not. The economy is subject to the same pressures. Expected dividends of peace produce economic problems The Associated Press Already pinched, consumers find themselves paying higher prices for basics such as vegetables, fruits, meats, beverages and gasoline. Mortgage rates are rising, and rental rates are rising even faster. Analysis With many states falling far behind their anticipated revenues, taxes seem to have only one direction to go. Little hints are dropped here and there that the Fed might be ready to raise interest rates again. Corporate profits are down. They have been falling for more than a NEW YORK — It seemed for a while that the economy was coming in for a soft, safe landing, with the Federal Reserve defy working the instrument panel. But now the red lights are flashing. The Etc. Shop 843-06111 732 Mass. Ray-Ban BUFFET & LOEWE year, but in that time, corporate dividends were raised. Now, unless an unexpected profits surge erases, the board of directors caws will become more common. Even without that prospect, the stock market has little push, and the bond market even less. The latter is a distinct surprise to a great many investors who felt confident that prices would rise and rates would Now that the damage has been done, these same lenders and others affected by them are clamping down hard. Good small loans are not possible, not because they do not deserve it, but because the lenders are frightened. The savings and loan debacle seems to expand a few billion dollars every time one looks. And as it does, the confidence of U.S. citizens suffers more. Weren't these lenders supposed to know what they were doing? become a peace layoff; General Electric has just announced that it will eliminate 4,200 aerospace jobs. Lockheed said it would lay off 2,750 workers in its aeronautical systems component. Meanwhile, downward movement in the federal budget deficit seems to become more difficult every day. Improvement in the trade deficit could be difficult as well if inflation rates raise U.S. production costs. The so-called peace dividend has In an economic sense, it's not much of a spring. You might say the clouds hang low, and the sun is in hiding, just when people were looking forward to buying houses, vacationing or getting on with postponed projects. Such matters add up, in an economic sense, to a case of spring fever, a sense of dolotuism just when they thought they'd be feeling better; Coke is it, Burger King says Chain to switch soft drink companies The Associated Press NEW YORK — Somewhat this summer, a Burger King customer may leave an opening for a quick-witted clerk by ordering, "Cheese- Ray-Ban LAST SUPPLEMENT BARRIER & COURT LAYHAWK Bookstore "No Pepsi, Coke," the ordertaker will be able to say, in a variation on the line John Belushi made famous. Burger King Corp., the nation's second-largest hamburger chain, said Tuesday that it was switching to Coo-Coa Cola Co. in an effort to compete, ending an association that started in 1983 with Pensi-Cola Co. Coca-Cola products such as Coca-Cola Classic, Diet Coke, Sprite and Minute Maid orange soda will replace it. The King's 5,400 restaurants in the United States, Burker King said. have little effect on earnings for either soft-drink company. The Etc. Shop Analysts said the switch will "We selected Coca-Cola because of its ability to provide a powerful mix of global brand strength, state-of-the-art technological capabilities, and service," Burger King Chief Executive Barry J. Gibbons said. Atlanta-based Coca-Cola controls an estimated 85 percent of the fountain portion of the U.S. soft drink business and is the primary employer of the major fast food chains, including leader McDonald's Corp. Recently, Wendy's International Inc. said it was planning to switch to Coca-Cola at its 1,100 company-owned restaurants when its agreement with Pepsi-Cola expires at the end of the year. Pepsi-Cola, based in Somers, N.Y., still has some major restaurant accounts, including Pizza Hut, Taco Bell and Kentucky Fried Chicken, all owned by its parent, PepaCox. It also serves the team at McKay's and Ground Round chains. Neither Burger King nor Coca-Cola would estimate the value of the soft-drink account. Emanuel Goldman, who follows the soft drink business for Paine Webber in San Francisco, estimated Pepsi-Cola sales at Burger King on Thursday about 13.5 percent of Pense's annual fountain volume. Jesse Meyers, editor of the trade publication Beverage Digest, estimates the switch could add a percentage point to Coca-Cola's 40.5 percent share of the overall market for beverage packaging. Pepsi-Cola's 30.7 percent share by the same amount. The market is valued at $27.4 billion Meyers said Burger King's switch may be a response to the recent rapid growth of PepsiCo's restaurant operations. SEND MOM A BOUQUET AS FRESH AS SPRING. Just call or visit us today to send the FTD® Spring Garden™ Bouquet. Mother's Week is May 7-13. sit us the bouquet. ek is Happy MOTHERS Day Owens Flower Shop Inc. 9th & Indiana 843-6111 FTD THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS A. A. The Eleventh Annual Byron T. Shuts Award Lecture Theatre as One of the Humanities - - b. P. trommel, May 8, 2015. Alderman Auditorium, Kansas Union A public reception at the Alton American Center will follow the讲座. William Kuhke Professor of Theatre & Film and of Slavic Languages & Literatures Sell your books to us Highest Prices Paid During Finals Two Locations Bring your books to the KU Bookstore for quick cash! Kansas Union Level 4 8:30 - 5:00 Mon. - Fri. 10:00 - 4:00 Sat. Noon - 3:00 Sun 864-5285 KU KU BOOKSTORES Burge Union Level 2 Bookstore 8:30 - 7:00 Mon. - Thur. 8:30 - 5:00 Fri. 10:00 - 4:00 Sat. 864-5697 1 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 9B Crimson Girls get ready Squad to compete at NCAA camp P By Monica Mendoza Special to the Kansas After only two public appearances, the newly chosen Crismon Girl pompon squad is preparing for national competition. Ashley Taylor, 3, of Lawrence with Baby Jay before a game. The squad captain, Lori Calcarra, Overland Park senior, said the squad would be working on conditioning, exercising and perfecting a routine, and beginning the first week in August at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. "It's at this camp that we win squad recognition and are invited to the national championships," Calcara said. "Last year we finished seventh, and the two years before that we finished second both times." The new squad will have a pompom clinic for young girls from across the state to raise money for their trip to Dallas. Calcar said. The twelve members of the 1900-91 Crimson Girls pompon squad were announced April 20. The squad had only a short time to relax and take in its newly won positions as Crimson Girls before it assumed the responsibilities. The next day, squad members began practicing for the football serimbi game performed for the crowd. Some of the squad members went to the Riverfront Plaza last weekend to help celebrate the grand opening. Tryouts began April 16, when 199 women came to the first tryout session at Allen Field House. The woman endured a long week of tryouts, cuts and brief interviews, mentorship, senior and Sherri Lewis, Manchester, Mo., senior, directed the sessions each night. They said that it would be hard to hand down their positions but that they had seen some great talent and they very excited for next year's squad. "This is the first time we've had so many girls try out for the squad," Nickell said. As the week went on, the number got smaller. April 19, in front of about 200 spectators, 59 women danced in groups of three to the top-40 hit, "It Takes a Lot." (Amy Winehouse also did a one-minute fight song routine and then finished with a kick line. The judges included dance instructors, choreographers, varsity athletes and Ann Pinkerton, who founded the Crimson Girls six years ago. The women were judged on appearance, the fight song, the dance, kicks and potential. "We throw out the high and low score, like they do in swimming, just in case someone is biased or sleeping," said Elaine Brady, spirit squad coordinator. Nickell said that women who did not make the squad the first time out should not be discouraged. She tried out three times before she made it. "I think there is a lot to be said for those girls who try out in front of all these people," Nickell said. "That's a real accomplishment." When Pinkerton inquired about starting a Kansas pompon squad six years ago, she said there was some skepticism about whether they would be accepted. Judges and spectators gathered in Robinson Center on April 20, to watch the 26 finalists on the last day of tryouts. For nearly three hours the women danced, jumped, leaped, twirled and kicked. "The band director, Bob Foster, said that the name Crimson Girls would never work, but I put Crimson Girls on everything, and it has really worked." Pinkerton said. Pinkerton, who has been coaching the squad, said that she would not be returning in the fall and would not be replaced. However, she said she was confident that squad members would be ready to guide themselves. Dakota judge cracks down Noise, alcohol violations get high fines FARGO, N.D. — After watching hours of raucus drinking and swearing at a party near his daughter's house, a judge tripled his fines for underage drinkers in the area and sent them streets from the nightclawers." The Associated Press One attorney said Judge Thomas Davies 'new policy' smacks of age discrimination," but the judge responded to such talk "absolute nonsense." something," Davies said. "Maybe if these kids start thinking of the beer they're holding in their hand they're all going to tell you'll think twice about drinking it." Davies said that by raising the fines for minors in possession of alcohol and for violations of Fargo's loud party ordinance, he hoped to prevent young people from developing serious problems with alcohol when they were older. "I decided somebody's got to do it." Davies, 51, who has a reputation for being tough on young drinkers, said he watched for two hours Saturday night while high school and college men and women in his daughter's neighborhood. The revelers were drinking, swearing loudly, running through people's yards and berating neighbors for calling the police. he said. "When the party was done, I thought, 'This is Fargo, N.D.' Davies said. "I thought I knew my city. I thought I knew the kids." The judge said he was responding by increasing the fine in his court for possession of alcohol by minors from $100 to $300 and the fine for noise violations from $350 to $450, allowing allowed under city law. North Dakota's legal drinking age is 21. Attorneys who have appeared before Davies declined to comment on the move, but they described the judge as strict on underage drinking and possession charges. Dwight Kutzmann, former president of the state Bar Association, said the stricter fines might charge of age discrimination. "I think the good judge might want to reconsider his position," he said. But Davies said he did not worry about how others viewed his sentences. Bright light at night, dark shades in the day may help night workers The Associated Press BOSTON — Bleary-eyed workers of the night, take heart. Scientists have found a way to help you get a decent day's sleep. A simple combination of bright light at night and total darkness during the day can help night-shift workers quickly adapt to their upside-down hours, researchers found. The approach appears to be the first quick, practical cure for the night-shift blues, the on-the-job sleepiness and daytime insomnia that plagues many of the nation's 7 million night workers. The principal developer, Charles A. Czeisler of Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital, said more testing in the city helped employers started installing new lights. But if the approach matches its early promise, it should re-adjust people's biological needs and they stay awake when their bodies ordinarily want to sleep. "They certainly have made a breakthrough in understanding the effect of light in humans," said Mary Carsickad of Brown University. "Their evidence is very powerful. There needs to be more trials in the field to determine the efficacy in a broader sense, but I think that what they've done really gives us a guidepost to pursuing this research." The technique works this way. People moving to the night shift reported to work — in this case, a hospital lab — at midnight and spent the next eight hours sitting at a desk. While they worked, a bank of lights four feet away shined with 16 cool-white 40-watt bulbs. Then they drove home, pulled down blackout shades in their bedrooms and stayed in total darkness from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. After just two days, the time on their internal clocks shifted dramatically so they felt fresh and awake when they ordinarily would have been asleep. "It's very important in critical jobs to make sure that people are on alert on the night shift," Creslier said. "We collected data on 4,000 shift workers and found that 56 percent reported nodding off at least once a week. These include people driving front-end leaders, running nuclear power plants, policemen and chemical workers." group's experimental use of the approach in eight young men in a report in the New England Journal of Medicine. Scientists read the time on people's internal clocks by checking their temperatures. Ordnarily, people's temperatures hit their lowest ebb in the wye hours, and this is when they most alert if they happen to be awake. During the studies, a comparison group worked at night under regular lights and slept with ordinary window shades pulled. After a week, the students continued to reach their low point during the early morning. Czeisler described the results of his In contrast, those who got the light-dark treatment noticed an immediate improvement in their alertness and performance. "Our subjects said it was startling how much better they felt at night," Czeisler said. "It was no longer an ordeal to stay up all night." Those getting the treatment were able to sleep two hours longer a day than the comparison group. Tests also showed dramatic shifts in the times that their bodies made hormones and produced urine. LAST DAY OF CLASSES BASH! 25¢ DRAWS Come party with us! Today Only! 943 Massachusetts 842-6161 Auto Boat Home Commercial SUN TINT lifetime warranty by insulfilm inc. Buy the Best Don't Mess With The Rest! Insulfilm is the leading tinting film because - It's the only film backed by a national lifetime warranty with film and installation. irss scatch resistant, reduces heat up to 60%, and 99% reduction of ultra violet light. - Suntint's Insulfilm installers have 8 years experience. MOTORCARS - Insulfilm only makes tinting film; unlike other companies 2201-C W. 25th Street • 841-4779 or 766-9086 NOTICE A panel of KU students, faculty, and staff is currently reviewing the Kansas Alpha Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The review is focused on evaluation of attitudes and behaviors that reflect the chapter level of awareness and sensitivity to cultural, racial and gender differences. We want to hear from you (faculty/staff/students) in writing if you have positive, negative or neutral firsthand experience(s) with the SAE's in these matters. Please include: - a description of the situation date, time place, title of the event (if any) name of persons involved name of persons involved - a description of the impact the situation had on you - your name-printed and signed your address and phone number (so we can contact you for clarification) Address your letter to: SAE Review Panel c/o Dean of Student Life 216 Strong Hall Lawrence, KS 66045 All comments will be held as STRICTLY confidential by the panel. We must hear from you by Friday, May 11th. Thank you in advance for your thoughtful participation in this important process. 10B Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Dally Kansan Chronic hunger growing,experts say The Associated Press Hunger is something that the United States has come to live with. "In the same way that we have a football season, we now have a hunger season," said Nancy Amidel, a Washington, D.C., activist. "It begins with Worlthunger Day. We help people with hunger, with a big orgy of stories about feeding huge meals at Christmas time." The season ends, but hunger continues. And after eight years of economic improvement, those who pitched in to help their neighbors through an emergency now find themselves in a curious position. In a nation of supermarkets and surpluses, they are forging careers in food banks and soup kitchens. "We need to show up for work in Birkent stocks and blue jeans. Now we're talking pension plans and retirement and transferring from one part of the country to another as food bankers," said Catherine D'Amate, director of the Western Massachusetts Food Bank. No one knows how many people face chronic hunger in the United States. The Harvard-based Physician Task Force on Hunger in America estimated in 1985 that 20 million people were going hungry at least some days of every month. A Louis Harris poll at about the same time concluded that a minimum of 21 million people were going hungry. The federal government disputed the findings but has released no number. The Food Resource and Action Center (FRAC), the nation's leading hunger research and advocacy group, is conducting a nationwide study of childhood hunger. Based on its findings, FRAC believes that 8 million to 9 million children either are hungry or are at risk of going hungry Even though the United States has a well-developed system for carrying food from farms to markets, the 1980s saw the development of a grass-roots, anti-hunger effort to create a second distribution network. By conservative estimates, more than 20,000 food banks, soup kitchens, food pantries, church groups, community action programs and civic organizations have helped deliver food since 1982. In an era of lower wages, higher housing costs and shrinking public programs, there is no doubt that private, non-profit food programs have become lifelines for many people. Daniel Starling/KANSAN BROWN STREET But for some advocates, the crisis-driven effort of the '80s is giving way to new doubts in the '90s about whether emergency services that seem all too permanent really are the answer. Two of Kansas City's homeless, known only as Jim and Diane, live alone on the streets without money or jobs but together they walk a few blocks to eat a free meal at a local mission. To many people, soup kitchens are reassuring evidence of the nation's humanity, proof that the private sector — the thousand points of light — is willing to shoulder its share of the burden. Such programs intercept millions of pounds of food that otherwise would be wasted and make it available to people who need it. In the process, they focus attention on hunger and provide people a means of addressing it, as donors, fund-raisers or volunteers. In some cases, informal private programs offer more humane treatment than bureaucratic public programs. For those on society's fringes, the programs provide social contact along with meals or groceries. They also bring together people who otherwise might fall through gaps in the government's safety net, making it possible for social scientists to document the extent of the problem. "Federal programs are designed to be of great assistance, but the government cannot not it all," said Rep. Bill Emmerson, R-Mo., the ranking minority member of the House and a cultural champion of private-sector initiatives. "It think it should do what it needs to do, what it can do." Spending on food assistance makes up about 2 percent of the federal budget, according to FRAC. Congress is considering a bill to spend an additional $2.3 billion for food programs during the next three years. The Mickey Leland Memorial Domestic Hunger Relief Act, named for the Texas congressman who died while investigating hunger in Ethiopia last year, would be the Most of the increase would benefit the Food Stamp Program, described by FRAC as "our best and most humane line of defense against hunger." largest anti-hunger initiative since 1977. As written, the bill also provides increases of $70 million in each of the next two fiscal years for the commodities program known as TEFAP (Temporary Emergency Food Assistance Program). This temporary, emergency program began eight years ago and was formalized in 1933 as the Reagan administration began using nonfat cheese to make butter and cheese acquired under the dairy price-program program. Along with reducing stockplies — the primary objective — TEFAP also played a key role in expanding the non-profit food network. Critics call it a poorly targeted handout program lacking nutritional goals. Supporters point to the delivery of 4.5 billion pounds of food, much more than the traditional feeding programs otherwise largely dependent upon food industry waste. The Mickey Leland bill also continues through 1995 current financing levels of $32 million a year for private soup kitchens, which will still be necessary despite increased public spending. "The nation will not see a major difference in terms of soup and bread lines." Brown said. "Food stamps will reach more people and last a longer time than the out of food stamps because the basic level is so inadequate to begin with." Brown and others worry that nonprofit programs are becoming a way for the government to hand off responsibility permanently. Many of today's federal nutrition programs — food stamps, Women, Infants and Children (WIC), school lunches and breakfasts, and senior nutrition — were started or expanded in the early 1960s. Domestically invested in the late 1960s. Within a decade, domestic hunger had been greatly reduced. But during the 80s, spending cuts dramatically diminished the scope of these and other safety net programs, at a time when high unemployment, a downscaling of wages, and rapidly rising housing costs left millions of people below the poverty line. The epidemic returned. "A thousand points of light do not hold a candle to well-managed and adequately funded public programs. The main argument for not improving these programs and stamping out domestic hunger is a financial one — Glossary of terms used in hunger aid The Associated Press The following is a glossary of terms commonly used to refer to non-profit agencies, private initiation programs and related programs in higher relief. FOOD BANKS are non-profit community organizations that collect surplus commodities from the government and edible but often unmarketable foods from private industry for use by non-profit charities, institutions and feeding programs at nominal cost. SECOND HARVEST is a national food banking network to which the majority of food banks belong. Its 200 member food banks comprise the largest charitable feeding program in the nation. SOUP KITCHENES are small feeding operations attached to existing organizations such as churches, civic groups or non-profit agencies that serve prepared meals that are consumed on-site. Soup kitchens generally do not require clients to prove need or show identification. FOOD PANTRIES usually are attached existing non-profit businesses. They must supply bodies of groceries to people experiencing food emergencies. Foods distributed by pantries are prepared and consumed elsewhere. Referrals or proof of need often are required. There are roughly two food pantries to every soup kitchen. TEMPERARY EMERGENCY FOOD ASSISTANCE PROGRAM transfers surplus government commodities to states and localities for distribution by non-profit agencies to the needy. FOOD STAMPS are the government's premier nutrition program, reaching 19 million U.S. citizens a month, half of them children. Unlike private, emergency programs, food stamps enable recipients to buy food in supermarkets. Food stamp benefits average 57 cents a person for each meal, with a maximum of about 40 cents. Food stamps are an enrollment program, meaning everyone who meets eligibility requirements is entitled to participate. But recent studies indicate that only 40 to 60 percent of those who are eligible actually participate in the program. WOMEN, INFANTS AND CHILDREN is a federal program that provides nutritious supplements to pregnant women and new mothers, infants and children up to age 5. Studies have shown WIC to be effective in preventing low birthweight and infant mortality, and in encouraging low-income women to receive prenatal care. WIC is not an entitlement program. Only about half of those eligible are being served, primarily due to inadequate financing. that priorities must be set for government spending in the face of the budget deficit," said Rob Fersh, FRAC's executive director. If emergency food programs represent a gain for the poor, that's acceptable, said sociologist Janet Poppendieck, director of the Center for the Study of Family Policy at the University of Chicago. "The begin to substitute, either for individuals or at the level of public policy, they're destructive." The New York City Interfaith Hunger Task Force in 1987-88 found many non-profit agencies serving substantial numbers who might have been eligible for public assistance but were 'not adequately or consistently informed of their availability.' Some ineligibility and delay benefits resulted from "bureaucratic inertia." Only 12 percent of 1,970 clients surveyed in 1987 at New York food pantries were experiencing actual emergencies. Massive cuts in food stamps are a major factor behind the long lines at soup kitchens and food pantries. Between 1982 and 1985, the program lost $7 billion, 13 percent of its budget. Benefits average less than 57 cents per person per meal and reach 19 million people a month, only about 8% of them were provided for them. Participation dropped from 68 out of 100 people at or below poverty in 1980, to 59 out of 100 in 1985. See HUNGER, p. 11 Then, after I accepted my diploma, I trip over the chancellor's foot. And I've got it all on film from CameraAmerica free with this coupon. Get a second set of prints It's the best of times. It's the worst of times. It's college It's college. 1610 W. 23rd 841-7205 YAKIMA Wheels on Wheels ... The Ultimate Ride 1 RICK'S BIKE SHOP 916 Mass., Lawrence, KS (913)841-6642 For gettin' down the road with your toys! Julie Axland RETAIL ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE OF THE MONTH TERRY BENNETT Denys Ashby RETAIL ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE OF THE MONTH MATTHEW B. MURRAY Rich Harshbarger REGIONAL RETAIL ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Congratulations Account Representatives of the Month CHEF DONNA WILLIAMS THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Christi Dool RETAIL ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE OF THE MONTH NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT OFFICER Dawn Estelle REGIONAL REVALU ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Sophie Wehbe WILLS ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE MANAGER Sophie Wenbe CAMPUS ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE OF THE MONTH University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 11B ___ Daniel Starling/KANSAN lim and Diane sought shelter in a parking lot of a building at 18th and Wyandotte streets after being turned away from a rehabilitation shelter Hunger Continued from p. 11 With the cuts came administrative crackdowns, "churning" recipients from the rolls for minor offenses. Food stamp recipients might have to fill application forms that can run down and require complex calculations. Poppendieck, who analyzed Depression-era food policy in her 1986 book, "Breadlines Knee-Deep in Wheat," sees the reliance on emergency programs as "a dramatic reversal in the direction in which social provision had been evolving in the United States." That direction, toward an increased federal role, resulted in greater standardization of benefits, safeguarded recipients' rights and enabled them to buy their own food, just like their neighbors. By contrast, volunteer programs vary from city to city and state to state. Regardless of how well they be treated, clients "have no enforceable rights whatsoever." Poppendieck said. "And far from making the lives of poor people similar to those of the rest of society, emergency food programs tend to segregate the poor into separate programs available only to those who assert their poverty. Unlike federal programs, non-profit efforts are fragile and fragmented, heavily dependent on volunteers, donations and good will, Poppindeck said. Many lack adequate facilities and are subject to neighborhood opposition. "How long can we keep these people off the ground or other non-profits to keep up the enormous effort required to respond to the emergency?" she said. In some quarters, there is talk of closing soup kitchens and food pantries to force government to do more. "Some days," said Nancy Amielde of the Western Massachusetts Food Bank, "would want to show down all the kitchens and pantries in America. “If that sounds too cruel, every time someone walks through a door needing food, I would want the first action to be to call a congressman or a woman here with two children she can't feed. Where should I send her?” "Put the onus back on them." Walker worries about the possible legacy of continued reliance on emergency services. "We are creating a large, disenfranchised population that may never find its way back to mainstream American life. People are not going to live on handouts all the time, good; then to go work for Citicorp." For non-prefit agencies, the struggle to keep up with demand for food leaves little time for advocacy. "You won't have to change much in society if those people never have the time to raise their voice," said Maria Lipski, a political science professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. For some service providers, competition for funding leads to compromises that may not always serve clients' interests. "To get more bang for your buck, you need bigger programs," said Bill Bolling, executive director of the Atlanta Community Food Bank. "But the bigger the program, the more dehumanizing it is. If you're feeding 50 people a day, you can have an accountable relationship. If you're feeding 500 a day, nothing can happen." Marc Mibodean, a former Boston Food Bank board member, calls the '80s "the decade of the sidewalk, the soup kitchen lines. Now, it's the '90s, and people can't believe these people are still there. The trend is to turn Relief act to fight hunger improve lot of truly needy The Associated Press Here are some highlights of the Mickey Leland Memorial Domestic Hunger Relief Act, HR 4110, the largest anti-hunger initiative since 1977. As introduced in the House of Representatives, the bill would: - Increase benefits for the Food Stamp Program and the Temporary Emergency Food Assistance Program by $600 million in fiscal 1991 and by $2.3 billion during the next three years. ■ Provide a 2 percent across-the-board increase in food stamp benefit levels, in addition to inflation Provide higher food stamp benefit levels for families whose housing costs exceed 50 percent of their income and pay up at highest risk of homelessness. Raise the fair market value of vehicles that food stamp recipients can own from $4,500 to $5,500 in fiscal 1991, and adjust for inflation thereafter. Allow relatives who buy and cook food separately to be considered separate food stamp households, with the exception of minor children living with their parents. The law now requires people to apply together with parents, siblings and adult children, thereby discouraging doubling up with relatives. ■ Exclude the first $50 monthly child support payment from consideration as income in determining food stamp benefits. The Food Stamp Program now counts these benefits from seeking child support, benefits and discourages custodial parents from seeking child support. away." Meanwhile, a new generation is coming of age. "I'm now teaching students who have grown up with soup kitchens and food pantries, and who consider such emergency provisions to be the normal way of dealing with destitution." Ponendkeck said. As she walks the streets of New York, Christina Walker, who recently resigned as executive director of the New ork Food and Hunger Holline, finds herself thinking about the people she photographs in their picture of this country when be up? It will be a different country. Yet kids will grow up and think this is the way we've always been." she said. "I think we did the right thing in the beginning, in thinking we must get these people in off the streets. But now it's snowed out of control. "A storefront Pentecostal church in a poor neighborhood with 50 congregants, themselves dirt-poor, scrounging food of questionable nutritional value from a bunch of nuts — that's become our safety net. "There really is a big trony here, one that lots of people are wrestling with. In setting out initially to fix what they become part of what's broken." Ride the Bus Downtown on Saturdays! Natural Way and NATURAL KU On Wheels WAY 820 Mass. 841-0100 The Etc. 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Valid only if you buy 250 or more 15 oz. to delivery. $2000 RU 170 Godfather's ▼ Pizza WE DELIVER 12B --- Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan THE PRINCETON REVIEW LSAT GMAT GRE THE PRINCETON REVIEW LSAT GMAT CRE For the Best Prep CALL 843-3131 Good Luck Non-Traditional Students from the OAKS (Organization of Adult Knowledge Seekers) Get on our mailing list. Call Linda at 864-4064 for more information. 1990 F1NAL FRENZY KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z CONSEILS DE LA CONSEIL DE L'AUDITÉRAL RÉGISTRE P D C J FREE FILMS SURVIVAL PACKS TOYS & GAMES ROOM! Take a break from the stress of finals at the SUA playroom in the Kansas Union ballroom, 5th level, Kansas Union. Wednesday, May 9 - Friday, May 11 2-3pm FREE BACK RUBS STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS DUNK TANK CELEBRATE! CINCO DE MAYO with DOS HOMBRES RESTAURANTE All Mexican Imports only $2! Good Luck to the Class of 1990! 815 New Hampshire 841-7286 Congratulations Graduates Make Reservations NOW to Celebrate at Royal Peking Restaurant Recommended by the Kansas City Star Polynesian Drinks Beer Wine Dining Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 11:30-3:00 and 4:30-10:00 Sunday 12:00-9:30 711 W. 23rd St 841.4500 841-4599 Next to Westlake Hardware Closed Mondays DJ keeps hand on campus' pulse By Mark McHugh Kansan staff writer Radio show provokes listener responses Jesse Jackson picked up the telephone receiver Saturday night after saying he wished that phone calls would stop coming into the station. After listening to the caller for about 10 seconds, he smiled. He was used to getting many calls, but they usually weren't for requests. "I catch flak more than I care to remember for being named Jesse Jackson," he said. "People always tell me, 'Oh, I voted for you in '84,' or they ask me about my political point on an issue because of that." "Sure. I can play it," Jackson said. This is not Jesse Jackson, the Rainbow Coalition leader who ran for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988, but Jesse Jackson, the KU student, who was named after his grandfather. KU's Jackson also is known as the "DJ Sir Light" on student station JIKH's Saturday night radio program, "The Black Music Show." He provides an open form that allows the audience to talk to guests. two weeks ago he received a flood of phone calls at the station. But they were not requests. The phone calls were in response to a sextist joke told by one of his guests. The phone rang for the next hour with calls from irate women listeners. Jackson said. His two guests said that they were anti-racist skinheads. Jackson said anti-racist skinbeads were those that opposed Nazi skinbadeas because they believed the Nazi movements was anti-American. "That was one of the most controversial shows I've had yet," Jackson said. The guests responded to questions from Jackson and listeners. One of the guests, Gary Goff, an anti-racist skinhead from Newark, N.J., said that the guests went on the show to discuss the differences between anti-racist skinheads and Nazi skinheads as well as racism in general. In another interview, Goff said that he liked being on the program because Jackson interviewed the guests thoroughly enough to enable listeners to understand more about skinheads and their beliefs. "I thought he set up the show well," he said. "People think about skinheads, and they only want to hear the bad parts. Jesse had a good format about what we anti-racists thought, and what we believe in. He wanted people to call in and ask questions so they could be more informed. I want to work with him more." Jackson, 28, does not mind the publicity he has had as a radio personality, but he said that he would like more privacy. "I'm always around people who want to talk to me but don't communicate with me as Jesse, a person who just wants to hang out and have a beer and just be a person," Jackson said. "I don't get treated like that often." have done it. Jackson has lived in Lawrence periodically for the past four years, after bouncing back and forth between Kansas, Denver, Seattle and New York City. here in Lawrence, I am known as that 'black dude from JK', or 'that weird DJ', or whatever. That is a label that goes before me." Jacqueline said of the coin, I would just like to be known as a person." H. S. Jackson lives alone in a one-bedroom apartment on Louisiana Street. “It’s not that I’m not cordial,” he said, referring to living alone. “I just need it for my psyche.” Jackson has found refuge in moving from place to place. He said that he did not feel like he had to settle with the lawyers and did all the securities that a job provided. Jackson said that because there were so few Black men in the media, particularly in Lawrence, he wanted to remain in the field and help raise the consciousness of people in the community. "That is why at 28, an age at which a lot of people burn out, I'm in Lawrence and I continue to do what I do." he said. figures. Jackson talked about the March 30 incident at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity house. Ann Dean, St. Louis sophomore, was struck and racially insulted at the fraternity house by a member while she was delivering pizzas, according to police reports. He said one reason racial tensions had arisen on campus and throughout the world was that some people were neglecting others' human rights. Jesse Jackson, alias "DJ Sir Light." "This issue is not one of sexism, race or class," Jackson said. "But the basic issue is human rights." Skilled interviewer In Jackson's sparsely furnished living room, there is a piece of graffiti that reads "Nemotion." glarmo that read The artist, a friend of Jackson's named Nemo, sent it to him. Daniel Starting/KANSAN "I in my humble opinion, he's a new Warhol," he said. "His philosophy of life, which is one I agree with, that you should take what happened, assimilate it, and move forward." "Jesse is the kind of person we like to do interviews with," he said. "Not only is he concerned with music but with attitudes and feelings. He seems to have his hand on the pulse of the University community." Mike Ulin, operations manager for KJHK, has known Jackson professionally for more than a year. "He's a socially conscious person," Swidler said. "He just seems to know Scott Swilder, a disc jockey at JHK, said that Jackson was the best interviewer on the staff and that its show was probably listened to more than any other. Swilder said Jackson is a good interviewer because he kept up with issues both on and off campus. what to ask, and his interviewing has gotten progressively better." He said that Jackson had some of the most interesting guests on his show. Jackson's guest list has included members of Black Men of Today, Greempeace representatives and Tarot card readers. Jackson said he felt that he must keep on learning through human interaction and that conducting his program allowed him to do so. Jackson, who is three semesters away from earning degrees in cultural anthropology and political science, said he thought he had learned more than any student who had just attended class for four years and walked away with a diploma. "Success to me is to be able to affect society in a certain way," Jackson said. When you have to wait until morning, nighttime is about eight hours too long. FIRST RESPONSE. 5-Minute Pregnancy Test Results first day of missed period 1 TEST 大 You've missed your period. You're trying to sleep, but you can't stop thinking about it. You've got to know now. So you use your FIRST RESPONSE® Pregnancy Test. Now you know. No more wondering. No more worrying. With the FIRST RESPONSE® Pregnancy Test, you can find out if you're pregnant in five minutes any time of the day—even on the day your period is due. It's over 99% accurate in laboratory testing and it's easy to use. If you have any questions, call us toll-free at 1-800-367-6022. FIRST RESPONSE. Home Diagnostic Kits FIRST RESPONSE, and the Human Rights Design are registered trademarks of Tambarelli Inc. Like succession NY 10142 ©1990 Tambarelli Inc. We'll put your mind at ease 9 University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 13B Oregon debates medical rationing Months of research will determine limits in state health care The Associated Press SALEM, Ore. — Life-and-death questions once left to God and the family doctor soon may be answered in Oregon by legislators who have been privatized, cost-analyzed printout of alimenties and treatments. The printout, ranking the relative benefits of 3,000 medical procedures, was completed this week after months spent by researchers determining how Oregonians get sick and injured. During the next two weeks, members of the legislative committee will weigh aspects such as quality of life, personal choice and the community's sense of compassion, said Paige Sipes-Metzler, chairman of the 11-member panel. On May 15, it will factor together these criteria with a cost-benefit analysis to make a final report. The next step is for legislators to take the list, search their souls, and draw a line. Above the line will be illnesses covered by the state's Medicaid program for the poor. Below it will be ailments the poor must live with and, sometimes, die with. Welcome to medical rationing, Oregon style. Proponents say it is a necessary evil in an age of limited budgets and $200,000 liver transplants. And Oregon's high-tech approach is being watched closely by other states facing the same high-tech question: Can we afford the miracles of modern medicine? "We can transplant hearts and lungs and livers and parts of the pancreas. We can do far more with trauma victims than ever before," said Connie Thomas of the Intergovernmental Health Policy Project, a research group in Washington, D.C. "But deciding how to use those technologies in a fair and cost-effective way has eluded us all." The glowing success of organ transplants, for instance, is tarnished by the fact that nearly all patients first undergo "wallet biopsies" to determine whether they can afford the costly surgery. Every wonder drug or surgical breakthrough raises uneasy questions about who will be excluded. Should society pay to transplant a chronic alcoholic's damaged liver even though he will go through the new one in a couple years? Should a bedridden 90-year-old person get triple-bypass heart surgery even though other aliments likely will kill her within a year? What if she is 60? Not just the poor Once, only the poor had to worry about being locked out of health care. But as medical costs rise, many middle-class citizens are feeling poor when the time comes to pay the doctor. Some facts about U. S. health-care spending this year is expected to exceed $600 billion, or about 12 percent of the gross national product, up from 7 percent in 1970, federal health officials said. Some 31.5 million people, or 13 percent of all citizens, have neither health insurance nor Medicare coverage, the Census Bureau reported. Even citizens with company health plans are being asked to pay more. And those plans may decrease in value as insurance companies ponder dropping costly procedures from standard coverage. Issue for the '90s Medical rationing looms as a dominant health-care issue of the 1990s, as U.S. citizens realize after decades of revolutionary medical advances that there are no miracles, just hard choices. "Health care is a world of limited resources and infinite demand," said Arthur Feinberg, regent of the American College of Physicians. "It comes down to a question of who lives, who dies and who decides." Doctors avoid the debate about who decides, saying their allegiance is to the individual patient regardless of society's cost. Congress may seem a logical place to tackle the issue, but miracles are not likely there either. National health care long has been batted about Washington, but the estimated annual price tag of $65 billion dampens enthusiasm. For now, the issue of health care sits with the states. Nowhere does it sit more heavily than in Oregon, the first state in the country to consider limiting the types of conditions that will be paid for by Medicaid. Oregon's battles The Oregon story began in 1897, when a cash-strapped Legislature halted Medicaid financing for most organ transplants, saving the money for other health needs such as prenatal care. Only two other states, Virginia and Arizona, exclude transplants. Oregon's decision drew little notice at first. Then, Coby Howard, a 7-year-old leukemia victim, died as his family tried to raise contributions for a bone marrow transplant. Suddenly health care allocation was an issue, kept alive by a stream of publicized hardship cases. Advocates for transplant patients and the poor demanded a new way of distributing state Medicaid dollars. In June 1989, the Legislature gave them one. It was less — and more — than they expected. Legislators tackled a basic inequity in the state-federal Medicaid program. Congress designed Medicaid to provide health care to the poor, but millions of poor people do not qualify. Oregon decided to expand its 60 percent coverage to 100 percent of the poverty level, adding as many as 120,000 people to Medicaid rolls. The Legislature also passed a bill to provide basic health insurance. Oregon's plan The idea was to stop rationing people out of health care and start rationing services instead. The policy was a way to decide which services to cut. The newly created Oregon Health Services Commission conducted 61 public meetings. More than 50 committees of medical specialists compiled thick reports, listing ailments along with the cost and effectiveness of treatments. A telephone survey asked Oregonians to rate illnesses in terms of how they would impair their lives. The ratings range from death at zero to perfect health at 100. This mountain of data was crunched into a complex formula, and an all-night computer run produced a list of costs and benefits for treating 3,000 illnesses, ranging from appendicitis to herpes. New developments keep rural doctors in step with trends The Associated Press LUBOCK Texas — Like most doctors, William Isaacs wants to keep up with discoveries and refine his technique. But he lives in Canadian, a Pan handle town on the south bank of the Canadian River, 100 miles northeast of Amarillo. The region's dark red soil supports farms and roads. Oil pumpjacks do the landscape. science. It's not the kind of place where doctors gather at conventions to discuss the latest news in detecting breast cancer or treating hypothermia. "Out here in Canadian, it's such an obstacle to travel out and get continuing education," said Isaacs, a family practitioner. "You have to leave your practice, hand it over to another doctor, and then bring it." It's almost too much trouble. "It works really well," said Carl Utterback, a family practitioner in Seminole. "I can see patients in the morning, and I can walk over to the hospital and have lunch, and eat lunch." In fact, I can absorb a few facts. Doctors in the program, called MEDNET, talk in front of cameras in a studio at Texas Tech. The television station reports videos still available to rural hospitals at lunch time. But a program sponsored by the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center in Lubbock is using satellite television to bring continuing education to doctors in Canadian and nine other rural West Texas towns. "It's a one-way video, but a two-way audio, so they talk back, make comments, ask questions," Ted Hartman, MEDNET user. 'I can see patients in the morning and I can walk over to the hospital and have lunch, and while I'm eating lunch, I can absorb a few facts.' — Carl Utterback family practitioner Hartman is optimistic that the network, which began the educational programs in December, will be expanded to the rest of the state. The satellite TV programs are only one facet of MEDNET, a three-year pilot program financed by a $1.9 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Resources from Texas Tech and a donation of $170,000 worth of communications equipment from AT&T. MEDNET also placed facsimile machines and computers in rural hospitals so they could receive documents quickly from medical school libraries. But doctors found that they could send printouts of ultra-resistant monitoring data to distant patients. Two rural women were taken to city hospitals to deliver babies because of problems detected on the fetal printouts, Hartman said. A MEDNET computer network among rural hospitals allows them to save money by buying supplies from the hospital. How rural hospitals to quickly send medical records to city hospitals when patients are transferred The University of Oklahoma Invites You to Enrich the Summer of '90 with Travel-Study New York Fashion Study Tour New York City The Eagle and the Bear--Soviet-American Relations Washington, D.C. 28th Annual Summer Session in France Grenoble, France 24th Annual Summer Spanish Session College Harla May 31-June 7 May 26-June 2 June 27-Aug.16 June 12-July 11 & July 16-Aug. 14 Field Techniques in Geography: Antigua in the Caribbean July 31-Aug.16 M FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: Continuing Education and Public Service Program Development Services (405) 325-5101 or (800) 522-0772 ext. 5101 (in OK) (800) 523-7363 ext. 5101 (outside OK) BODY OUTIQUE The Women's Fitness Facility SUMMER SPECIAL! 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"I AM HERE TONIGHT TO EXPRESS MY SOLIDARITY WITH THE GAY AND LESBIAN COMMUNITY IN YOUR STRUGGLE FOR CIVIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN AMERICA AND AROUND THE WORLD. I BELIEVE ALL AMERICANS WHO BELIEVE IN FREEDOM, TOLERANCE AND HUMAN RIGHTS HAVE A RESPONSIBILITY TO OPPOSE BIGOTRY AND PREJUDICE BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION." —CORELL All suits and sportcoats on sale now. CORETTA SCOTT KING AT A 1965 GAY RIGHTS FUNDRAISER Journey to the Orient Tokyo $940 Hong Kong 990 Taipei 960 Seoul 900 Bangkok 1000 DAI-IGHI TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. 800/952-8999 Ask about other destinations Ask for Kim or Mr. Toyota Family Style Dinners Every Sunday at Don's Steak House Make our kitchen table yours. "The best food in town." 2176 E. 23rd St. 843-1110 S SUNFLOWER Bike Clinics Saturdays from 10am - noon Derallluer and Brakes May 12 Hub, Bottom Bracket, and Headset May 19 Wheel Truing Sign up at 804 Massachusetts. A small fee will be charged. SUNFLOWER, 804 Massachusettia, 843-5000 Over 70% of KU students read Kansan classifieds. 864-4358 Use the Saturday Downtown Bus Service! NATURAL WAY Natural Way and KU On Wheels 820 Mass. 841-0100 14B Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan NATURAL WAY 620 - 622 Mass St. 841-0100 Rooms and Efficiencies 1 and 2 Bedrooms in well maintained Older Homes Starting at $165 and up Call 841-STAR (7827) S SUMMER SUBLEASE $375 2 Bedroom/2 Bath New Carpet & Appliances Mini-Blinds & Central Air Volleyball & Pool 843-6446 SouthPointe Apartments 2166 W. 26th GRADUATION GIFTS FOR HER FOR HIM FOR HER • Diamond Pendants • Rings • Pearls - Watches - Keychains - Gold Chains M KIZER CUMMINGS JEWELERS 800 Mass. 749-4333 VANDERBILT'S Levi's HEADQUARTERS DISCOUNT PRICES PREWASHED 501® Levi's compare to $29.95 501 PREWASHED $19'99 501 PREWASHED compare to $34.95 501 WHITEWASHED Get the perfect fit from the time you try these prewashed pairs. These lightweight jersey knit t-shirts are made with rich mesh sacking and made in a sweep jersey. Ir Quality. There's no need to mail for your pieces to take, we can present them in the latest available condition you need. These white washed t-shirts are made with rich mesh sacking and made in a sweep jersey. Ir Quality. Made in U.S.A. Full size range on sale at all VISA 711 West 23rd, THE MALLS, Lawrence OPEN 9:0, SAT., 9-6, SUN. 12:5 • 841-2109 Singapore fears attack Stable state to build more bomb shelters The Associated Press SINGAPORE — Much of the world plans reductions in military spending, but Singapore, a thriving city-state with no apparent enemies, is building more bomb shelters. About 200 shellers and the same number of air raid sirens will be built in the next year. Singapore should be ready for its first nationwide drill in 1992, said Shanmugam Jagakumar, home minister. "The more shelters, the better," he said. "This will mean more protection for the public." Southeast Asia has been among the world's more stable regions recently, but government leaders insist that security is still a problem despite the improvement in U.S.-Soviet relations. "If the United States significantly cuts back its military forces in the region, this will not be a signal for Singapore also to reduce our forces," he said. "It will be reason for concern over a potentially destabilizing change in the regional balance of power." Lee addressed Parliament as second defense minister. He also has the trade and industry portfolios viewed as a future prime minister. Singapore is the only country in the region that openly backs continued U.S. military presence. Officials in several other capitals express private support but public non-alignment. That will not change even if the superpowers reduce their military forces in the region, said Lee Hsien Kim, a spokesman of Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew. "Except for Singapore, the nations of Southeast Asia think the American security shield will stand forever, regardless of what "They can boast of their non-aligned purity while reaping the harvest made possible by the American military." Schreeder they do," said Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., leader of a House Armed Services Committee delegation that toured Southeast If the United States cannot renew the leases on the Philippine bases and is forced to leave, it will need help from friends in the region, she said. Singapore has offered the United States greater access to its air and naval facilities. In his speech to Parliament, Lee said the government would not cut defense spending, reduce the armed forces or end compulsory military training, whatever the United States did. Singapore is about the size of Chicago, with no natural resources except a strategic location between the Pacific and Indian Oceans and the skills of its 2.8 million people who account for 40 percent of whom are ethnic Chinese. The army, navy and air force have 55,000 regulars and conscripts plus about 200,000 reserves. Analysts rate the Singapore armed forces among the best trained and equipped in the region. Because it is so small, Singapore often holds major military exercises in Brunei, Taiwan or elsewhere. It conducts bilateral maneuvers with other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations — Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Sri Lanka but ASEAN as a whole does not function as a military alliance. "No other ASEAN country is slashing its defense expenditures, demobilizing its armed forces or acting on the assumption that it no longer faces any external pressures, we told Parliament, "It would be foreworded for Singapore to do so alone." Singapore is in the Five Power Defense Agreement with Australia, Great Britain, Malaysia and New Zealand. The 1971 pact provides for consultation and cooperation among members if Singapore or Malaysia is attacked or threatened. Defense spending is about 6 percent of Singapore's gross national product, which means the country pays 1.9 billion in the current budget. U. S. defense spending in 1988 was 6.1 percent of the gross national product, or $293.1 billion. Some defense funds go to a domestic arms industry that has grown so fast that it now seeks export orders and diversification. The industry was started less than 20 years ago and, included more than 40 companies under the Singapore Technologies umbrella. The government-backed companies evolved from make to market businesses designing howitizers and upgrading jet fighters. Singapore's total defense plan was drafted in 1983, while Vietnamese military forces occupied Cambodia. The plan aimed to civilian population with the military in a national emergency. The first air raid drill sent 3,000 volunteers swarming into a new subway station in 1988. Nine underground stations have been fortified to shelter 100,000 people. Shelters also are being built in schools, hospitals and other public facilities. Other civil defense training covers rescue methods, blood donation, mobilization of private motor vehicles, and distribution of food and water. Volcano vents its frustrations on worried Hawaii residents The Associated Press KALAPANA, Hawalii — Hawaiians stood by stolically yesterday morning as the angry volcano goddess Pete was calling out to the heart of this dying coastal town. It may be foolish to deny the natural process that created Klauea Volcano and now pumps tons of molten lava from it, but it's just as easy to do with the volcanic Madame Pele. Like the volcano, she is respected for her awesome power. The goddess' large presence in Hawaiian folklore shows how much respect the Hawaiian people have for their land, a product of ancient volcanic eruptions. Many kaimanaa, or local residents, don't worship Pete exclusively, but pay homage to her for the beauty they live in. “It’s more a respect for the land and the volcano than a religion,” said Reggie Okamura of the National Volcano Observatory. “I have some belief. It is inherent to anyone born and raised here.” Legend says if Pfele is not shown proper respect through the bestowing of gifts, or if people try to ruin the gift, you can hear the rear out of Kilpaes to vent her wrath. the number burned down since Kiliaea began erupting in January 1983. Ed Lorena has lived in the shadow of Kiliaue Volcano most of his 60 years and watched, along with others, as homes have been torched by the fiery lava. Five homes were destroyed Tuesday, bringing to 128 Several more homes were in danger of falling Wednesday. The volcano, about six miles away, has sent spewed lava to within less than 720 yards of the heart of the town: the Kalanaan Store and Drive-In. More than 50 were destroyed in the past month. In this community alone, where 125 homes stood, only 33 homes remain. Lorenz, a believer in Pele's power, said the goddess was as angry as he'd ever seen. "If she wasn't mad, she wouldn't damage any houses," Lorenz said. "I've seen a lot of flows, but this is one of the worst." Lorenz said Pole is upset with real Lorenz developers, geothermal energy drivers and mariguna grow- ers in the land and not offering her saffrances. The east side of Hawaii Island is one of the few remaining places in the state where land is reasonably flat, and many are looking to settle here. Geothermal companies are drilling in the Wao Kele O Puna rain forest, looking to convert heat from the volcano into energy. Many say Pale will not stop her destructive ways until geothermal exploration stops. "They're growing pakolo (mariuana) and making big money off her land," Lorenz said. "Now she's taking it all away. "How many millions of dollars are they making and they're not going to offer 'her nothing.' Walter Yamaguchi, who owns the Kalapa Store and Drive-In, makes food offerings to Pete daily. His store is often spared on several previous flowers. "Let her take it if she wants it," said Yamaguchi, 82. "She can do what she wants. It's hers if she wants it." Even Gov. John Wathee, who toured the area Tuesday, said the fate of Kalanana is in Pete's hands. "Nobody can tell Madame Pele when it all ends," the governor said. "Nobody can tell her what to do." Legend also says Pele gets upset when people try to run away from her and that she will find and destroy them. This doesn't seem to scare officials at Star of the Sea Church. Workers are preparing to relocate the pained church" from destruction. Not all in the congregation want to move the church. It says it say a lack of faith by the congregation and a lack of respect for Pele. In contrast, the Kalapana Mauna Loa Congregation Church, originally built in the 1800s and located at its present site next to the store for 102 years, is not moving. Communist emblem supported in Austria The Associated Press VIENNA, Austria — Communist symbols are vanishing from Eastern Europe, but Austria is keeping its hammer and sickle. But the hammer and sickle had nothing to do with communism when the symbol was adopted. Because neighboring nations in the crumbling Soviet bloc have been stripping wool sheaves, red stars and other Communist symbols from their coats of arms, the question also arose in Austria. In 1919, Austrian legislators met in Vienna to create a republic from the ruins of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. They adopted a coat of arms in which the Austrian eagle expressed commitment to the community holding it in his hands. The hammer for workers and a sickle for farmers. In 1945, Parlament voted to add broken shackles dangling from the eagle's legs, symbolizing release from Nazi domination. The debate about what to do now has grown so both inside and outside of Parliament. Popular sentiment appears to be against removing the implements from the eagle's claws. Of 24 letters from readers printed in March by the tabloid Kurier, only five were in favor of removing them. Josef Riegler, one of the five, said: "Even during my first visits abroad after World War II . . . I was often asked whether the Soviet occupiers had forced us to include the hammer and sickle in our state emblem. I heard several questions later from visitors to Vienna." Some of those opposed to change expressed anger at what they considered an attempt by politicians to magnify a small issue. Others, like Brigitte Michalko, were defiant. "Those who considered Us Communists up to now because of our coat of arms can continue to do so as far as I care." she said. The broken chains added to the existing confusion. Some saw them as an echo of the Communist Manifesto, which exhorts the proletariat to rise because there is nothing to lose but the chains. In February, the right-leaning Freedom Party began efforts in Parliament to discard the hammer and sickle. The party's resolution said they were symbols for contempt of humanity, death camps and suppression. If they remain on the national emblem, it said, Austria would be the only non-communist country in Europe whose state symbol symbolizes communism. Although the measure received wide publicity, it initially was considered more symbolic than serious. The Freedom Party has only 18 members in the 183-seat chamber, and few people thought the motion would receive the necessary two-thirds vote. The issue gained extra weight when a group of legislators from the Austrian People's Party, partner with the Socialists in the governing coalition, presented a similar motion. Sides were taken. The People's Party split on the issue, and the Socialists opposed any change. Felix Ernacura, a sponsor of the People's Party motion, said in an interview that changing the emblem avoids misunderstandings abroad. We'll Give You $150 To Step Up To Better Print Quality. 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Shop University Daily Kansan / Friday, May 4, 1990 15B Nuclear reactors to restart Weapons plants were closed in 1988 for safety The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Nuclear weapons reactors that were shut down for nearly two years because of safety and environmental concerns would be reactivated early next year according to a new Energy Department schedule. Energy Secretary James Watkins, announcing the planned restart of three reactors at the Savannah River plant in South Carolina, said the department also was reviewing a proposal to build a plutonium warhead triggers at its Rocky Flats plant in Colorado. "At this time, there does not seem to be any alternative for the nation other than keeping Rocky Flats on line to deal with warhead management." Watkins told a Senate Armed Services subcommittee Tuesday. he said the department planned to restart its K reactor at the Savannah River plant in December and, after a period of low-power testing, would begin producing tritium for nuclear weapons in January. waters and a river. The P and L reactors at Savannah River would be restarted in March and September, 1991, respectively. But Watkins expressed confidence that his department could now defeat any legal challenges, saying it would release draft environmental impact statements today on the remains of the Savannah River reactors. with production of weapons components from each to resume a month after their start-up. Walkins said All three reactors at Savannah River have been shut down since mid-1988, and operations at the Rocky Flats plant were suspended after an explosion brought the restocking of the nation's weapon stockpile to a halt. surgery weapons were issued. Watkins said the government had spent $7.5 billion in the past three "A month ago, for the first time, I began to feel comfortable about Savannah River," he told the Strategic Forces and Nuclear Determination Subcommittee. "I hadn't felt — Sen. James Exon subcommittee chairman 'I wish I could say we don't need any production of weapons material. That is not the case. The Soviet Union is going to be relying on its nuclear deterrent as a strategy more than ever before.' years to modernize the Savannah River and Rocky Flats plants to bring them up to environmental and safety standards. Environmentalists and antinuclear activists, particularly those living near the plants, called for a continued moratorium and have vowed to fight in court the reopening of the plants. "Several unresolved issues relating to restart of the Savannah River reactors remain on the table. It's much too soon for Secretary Watkins to announce a restart schedule," said Brian Costner, director of the Energy Research Foundation of Columbia, S.C., an environmental group. that way before. Everything has turned around down there." airlines around the department and appointed outside experts have not yet completed their reviews and approved the schedule for resuming operations at Rocky Flats, Watkins said he anticipated making a formal announcement on it next month. He also said he was looking at opening the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in New Mexico to its first wastewater treatment plant, and we waited in October or November. He said he envisioned only a "very modest amount of . . . wastes" moving to the New Mexico site initially, primarily to research its suitability as a permanent burial ground for such wastes. Despite lingering environmental concerns, senators at the hearing agreed that the United States could not afford to continue forestalling a resumption of weapons production. "I wish I could say we don't need any production of weapons material,"副subcommittee Chairman Sen. James Exon, D-Neb."That is not the case. The Soviet Union is going to be relying on its nuclear deterrent as a strategy more than ever before." Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass, said the Soviets had 11 weapons production reactors in operation, including three for making plutonium, despite a "marginally greater" stockpile of plutonium than the United States. "They have the capability to turn a switch on and make more. We don't," he said. Watkins declined to discuss in detail the state of the nation's tritium stockpile other than to say it was deteriorating at a rate of 5.5 percent a year with the Savannah River reactors shut down. "We're going through a very dramatic period now," he said before the hearing went behind closed doors for a classified briefing on the stockpile. "In the near term, we can meet the majority of our national security requirements." Nuclear lab seeks to help environment Solar power kills organic waste in contaminated water, breaks down toxic waste The Associated Press ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The silver trough, as long as a football field, was developed to harness the sun and help wean the nation off imported oil. For years, it stood abandoned in the desert, an obsolete relic of the 1700s. Now, in another time and another growing national crisis, researchers at Sandia National Laboratories have dusted off their sophisticated solar panels and put them back to work. This time, the panels are helping the environment. Sandia scientists think they have found an efficient way to use solar power to break down toxic waste, help clean up polluted dumps and cleanse contaminated water tables. Dugan said, "We never did this before because nobody thought of it before. Some might say it's a breakthrough. I think of it as an engineering advancement." "We're just helping nature, that's all. There's nothing artificial about this," said Virgil Dugan, Sandia's director of advanced energy technology. Companies are lining up to learn more about Sandia's gadget, Dugan said. The laboratory plans to have a though it seems there are two different applications," said Pat Eicker, manager of robotic science and technology at Sandia. As the need for ever-improved nuclear weapons lessens, the laboratories are directing their technological might to greater peacetime use. In the case of the abandoned solar collector, scientists realized they might be able to run contaminated water, such as polluted ground* - Pat Eicker Solar research is just one area where scientists at Sandia, one of the nation's three nuclear weapons laboratories, are finding ways to help with growing environmental problems. With expertise developed for weapons programs and Army machinery, "smart" robots are hurriedly being assembled to clean up the toxic chemical waste at Department of Energy weapons plants across the country. "It's the same technology, even 'The use of models to simulate situations and the use of sensors to facilitate work on nuclear weapons production is what motivated this research. But this has far-reaching applications.' Sandia National Laboratories manager of robotic science and technology water, through the sunlight-focusing machine and use its power to help break down organic toxic waste. break down organic The contaminated water is mixed with a catalyst, titanium dioxide, and pumped through a clear tube in the center of the long, parabolic solar trough. trooper. The tube glows like Darth Vader's sword as sunlight activates the titanium dioxide, which frees an electron. The electron grabs onto organic material, in this case the contaminates, and breaks them down into water, carbon dioxide and a mild, harmless acid. harmful cells. Until a full-scale experiment last June, scientists weren't sure if the solar machine would cause complete destruction of the pollutants. But it did. "You can drink the water that comes out at the end," said Mike Prairie, a senior technical staff member on the solar project. sanida has been testing the system with water contaminated by trichloroethylene, a common degreasing substance that contaminates ground water. Scientists believe the system will also work on PCBs, dioxins, pesticides, dyes, solvents and other organic, or carbon-based, materials. trial system out in a year, and Dugan thinks the system is about four years away from commercial use. Companies must now package their toxic waste and ship it to dump sites or incinerators. The solar system might be economical enough to allow even small firms to have on-site waste systems and also may be portable, Dugan said. It will likely be more efficient and cheaper than present ground water purification systems, he said. The solar panels won't help with the problem of nuclear waste, however, because it is inorganic. began eight years ago to find ways to use machines for the sometimes dangerous work of building nuclear and chemicalium and other hazard materials. Already the lab has created a "smart" manufacturing system that will help automate some production in weapons plants. It has also designed wheeled robotic vehicles for the Army. Work also is under way to create a system that can clean up toxic areas too dangerous for humans to venture into at Department of Energy weapons plants, such as Hanford, Wash.; Savannah River, Ga.; Oak Ridge, Teen.; Fernald, Ohio; and Pantex, Texas. Scientists said a robotic backhoe would be used at highly radioactive and toxic pits. It will be used along with a 40-foot robotic arm with sight and radar capabilities that can scan a dump, map pipes, vacuum sand and dirt, lift and remove drums and clean leaking underground storage tanks. "You've got to have some way to get in there and recover this stuff," Elicker said. "And it's so dangerous, people can't do it." Sandia's robotics researchers people because of the Department of Energy's rush to begin cleanups, Sandia researchers hastily built a one-tenth-scale model of a waste dump, along with a robotic arm. "The use of models to simulate situations and the use of sensors to facilitate work on nuclear weapons production is what motivated this research," Eicker said. "But this has far-reaching applications." Weapons labs work to adjust in time of peace The Associated Press offer. Federal officials have declassified some technologies from secret status and pumped money into programs to find ways to use their know-how in U.S. industry. ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — An outbreak of peace has Sandia National Laboratories and its two top-secret weapons lab cousins rolling out the welcome mats to encourage private industry to see what breakthroughs they have to offer. They call it technology transfer, and they see it as a way to maintain their vitality now that the nation is becoming more concerned about its economic competitiveness than its military might. "This lab is dedicated to enhancing the prosperity, prosperity and well-being of the nation, so if the major concern now is economic security, it's safe to say this lab will be involved," said Gerald Yonas, director of laboratory development at Sandia, one of three top-secret government defense labs. dense blobs. The others are Los Alamos National Laboratory at Los Alamos, N.M., and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory at Livermore, Calif. Yonas, who was former President Reagan's first chief scientist on the Strategic Defense Initiative, said Sandra did not have a "bunch of exciting widgets sitting on the shelf waiting to be dusted off." What the lab does have is experience, research and development capabilities and talent that can be offered to commercial industries. Electronics technology may be useful to semiconductor companies. Imaging technology, used to find hidden airplanes or mobile strategic targets, may be helpful to computer companies. A host of weapons systems could apply to medicine, from new ways to release medication to better diagnostic systems. "We can put sensors in a weapon and know exactly what it's doing," Yonas said. "The question is, can we use that on a human being?" And while Sandia's scientists know weapons, they do not know medicine. That's why they're inviting medical companies. "There's a whole new class of medical applications, but the health-care field doesn't know we exist." Yonas said. The walls began to come down after a defense authorization bill signed by President Bush in December modified the Atomic Energy Act to permit, and even encourage, the three Department of Energy labs to negotiate cooperative agreements directly with industries and universities. "The bill explicitly states that technology transfer is a mission of DOE's defense programs," said Dan Arvizu, Sandi's technology transfer and policy department manager. manager. promoted earlier, federal legislation promoted technology transfer from NASA and other scientific endeavors but specifically excluded the three national weapons labs. Everybody wanted to keep them under wraps because they were doing defense work," Yonas said. Peace, the "P-word" as Sandia scientists joke, made the change possible. "There was a lot of intense debate over whether this would dilute us from our defense mission," Yonas said. "But there was a lot of public discussion that economic competitiveness was a national issue, probably more so than the Soviet threat." "And if you're not working on the nation's important problems, you're not going to attract the top people." people. Sanda has $ 85 million this year, which will help with technology transfer, and has already identified 15 programs to target for industry. They include everything from developing a way for diabetes to measure their blood sugar without drawing blood to building a sophisticated thermal imaging security system that could be used to fight terrorism and drug smuggling. But opening up also has required a change in attitude at the lab, where work was cloaked in secrecy for decades, and a change in attitude within industry, Arvizu said. Although the government retains patent rights to inventions at the labs, the bill lets companies participating in research and development use innovations for five years before data is made available to the public and corporate competitors. Yonas, who helped develop Sandia's fusion energy research program before working on Star Wars, says he has seen commercial applications for the technology all along but until now has not been able to pursue the idea aggressively. Star Wars lasers, for example, could be used to efficiently sterilize medical supplies. A alongside photos of Yonas with Reagan, Yonas has an old license plate from Virginia: SDI GUY. Now he drives a car; he is known for finding his present challenge just as exciting as the earlier ones. "I've spent a lot of my life working on fusion and also on SDI and now on a new problem, economic competitiveness," Yonas "But I think we're on the verge here of a new era of industrial applications," he said. 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St., Lawrence, Kansas 66044 9131 841-0100 COURSES IN LAKE FOREST COLLEGE Summer Session 1990 June 7 - July 27 ART ENGLISH HISTORY RELIGION FOREIGN CIVILIZATION EDUCATION PSYCHOLOGY SOCIOLOGY & ANTHROPOLOGY THEATRE All courses carry four semester hours credits For information: SUMMER SESSION OFFICE LAKE FOREST COLLEGE 234-3100 EXT. 240 LAKE FOREST COLLEGE is accredited by the NORTH CENTRAL ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS LAKE FOREST COLLEGE Equal opportunity institution You should know: The rate of extinction of species from this earth was 1 every 4 years from 1600 to 1900. It's now estimated to be 1000 per year. KANSAN KANSAS CITY STUDENTS Do you need a second income for the summer? We can help! Work part-time in the evenings Monday through Friday doing commercial office cleaning. We have positions all over the Kansas City and Johnson County area. So if you are looking to get the most out of summer, we can give you the funds to do so. B-G Maintenance Management 1225 East 18th Street K.C. MO 9563 Nall, Overland Park 3500 Strong, K.C.K or call (816) 421-8088 Equal Opportunity Employer 42 16B Friday, May 4, 1990 / University Daily Kansan Dunk Tank! Wednesday, May 9 & Thursday, May 10 10 am to 3 pm 50c for 3 throws Location: in front of the Kansas Union Starring: Mike Reid, KU Bookstore Mgr. Michael Schreiner, New Student Senate President Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU Police Department Prof. David S. Holmes, Psychology Prof. Dennis M. Dailey, Social Welfare Michael Diggs, Student Senator Wayne Pearse, Maintenance Mgr., Kansas Union Bob Frederick, Athletic Director David St. Peter, SUA President 1990 FINAL FRENZY ON T. OREAD THE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS' OPEN HOUSE LET THE GAMES BEGIN Tuesday, May 8 - Saturday, May 12 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Five Free Films Outdoor Concert Survival Packs Free Coffee after 5 75c Bowling Games Free Candy Half-price Popcorn Free Textbooks Drawing Free Back Rubs Toys & Games Room Half-price Soft serve Ice cream